The Cambridge History of Japan, Nide 4John Whitney Hall Cambridge University Press, 1991 - 831 sivua This is the fourth of six volumes designed to explore the history of Japan from prehistoric to modern times. Volume 4 covers the years from 1550 to 1800, a short but surprisingly eventful period in Japanese history commonly referred to as Japan's Early Modern Age. At the start, in the sixteenth century, much of the country was being pulled apart by local military lords engaged in a struggle for land and local hegemony. These daimyo succeeded in dividing Japan into nearly autonomous regional domains. Before the end of the seventeenth century, however, the daimyo in turn were subjected to a powerful unification movement led by three colourful figures, Nobunaga, Hideyoshi, and Ieyasu. It was under Tokugawa Ieyasu, the last of the unifiers, that Japan was brought together under a single powerful command vested in the office of shogun. The Tokugawa hegemony lasted until 1868 when it was brought down by the Meiji Restoration. This volume attempts to flesh out the historical tale with insights into the way that people lived and worked. It examines the relationship between peasant and local lord, and between the lord, as a unit of local government, and the emerging shogunate. It offers new. |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 76
Sivu xii
... seventeenth century Cities and commerce in the early eighteenth century Cities and commerce in the late eighteenth century Conclusions 12 History and nature in eighteenth - century Tokugawa thought by TETSUO NAJITA , Department of ...
... seventeenth century Cities and commerce in the early eighteenth century Cities and commerce in the late eighteenth century Conclusions 12 History and nature in eighteenth - century Tokugawa thought by TETSUO NAJITA , Department of ...
Sivu 3
Valitettavasti tämän sivun sisältö on rajoitettu.
Valitettavasti tämän sivun sisältö on rajoitettu.
Sivu 11
Valitettavasti tämän sivun sisältö on rajoitettu.
Valitettavasti tämän sivun sisältö on rajoitettu.
Sivu 18
Valitettavasti tämän sivun sisältö on rajoitettu.
Valitettavasti tämän sivun sisältö on rajoitettu.
Sivu 26
Valitettavasti tämän sivun sisältö on rajoitettu.
Valitettavasti tämän sivun sisältö on rajoitettu.
Sisältö
Japans early modern transformation | 3 |
The role of local studies | 9 |
Formation of the early modern village | 16 |
Patterns of political development | 22 |
a new field of study | 30 |
A final word | 38 |
The sixteenthcentury unification | 86 |
The social and economic consequences of unification | 96 |
The Christian daimyo and the early Tokugawa | 365 |
Thought and religion 15501700 | 373 |
Thought | 395 |
Politics in the eighteenth century | 425 |
The Shōtoku era | 437 |
The village and agriculture during the Edo period | 478 |
The social composition of the early modern village | 486 |
Landtax revenue and government finances | 492 |
6 | 98 |
14 | 105 |
Commerce and the early modern cities | 110 |
20 | 113 |
30 | 119 |
The early modern social system | 121 |
The bakuhan system | 128 |
Formation of the Edo bakufu | 145 |
the authority structure | 156 |
40 | 164 |
The han | 183 |
The han and central control 16001651 | 191 |
The han and central control after 1651 | 201 |
Han finances | 213 |
Panorama Edo and | 217 |
Han politics | 225 |
Japans relations with China | 235 |
War and peace | 265 |
Edo Ukiyoe school Toyoharu | 283 |
Christianity and the daimyo | 301 |
Deus or Dainichi? | 307 |
Ōtomo Sōrin Yoshishige | 316 |
The Jesuit colony of Nagasaki | 326 |
The vicissitudes of Bungo | 335 |
The end of Ryūzōji Takanobu | 343 |
The collapse of the Ōtomo realm | 353 |
Hideyoshis antiChristian edicts | 359 |
Irrigation and land reclamation | 498 |
Technology and commercial agriculture | 504 |
Cooperative aspects of village society | 515 |
Political unification | 538 |
The military and economic base | 544 |
Cities and commerce in the early eighteenth century | 568 |
Cities and commerce in the late eighteenth century | 579 |
Conclusions | 590 |
History and nature in eighteenthcentury Tokugawa | 596 |
Nature | 621 |
History and nature in the late eighteenth century | 638 |
Epilogue | 656 |
material culture standard of living | 660 |
The house and lifestyles | 674 |
Food nutrition and other dietary factors | 680 |
Clothing | 689 |
Popular culture | 706 |
Education | 715 |
Books and publishing | 725 |
Kyoto the source | 733 |
The society of prostitutes | 742 |
The theater world | 749 |
The chōnin | 761 |
Works cited | 771 |
813 | |
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
administration Arai Hakuseki Arima authority bakuhan became Buddhist Bungo bushi castle towns China Chinese Christian Chu Hsi commercial common Confucian court daimyo early modern economic Edo bakufu Edo period established farmers fief force Frois fudai Furoisu Nihonshi Hakuseki Hideyoshi Hizen Japan Japanese Jesuits kami kampaku Kantō Keichō kenkyū Kinsei koku kokudaka Korean Kyōhō Kyoto Kyushu land lords Matsuda and Kawasaki Matsudaira merchants military Ming missionaries monjo Mōri Muromachi Nagasaki Nihon Oda Nobunaga officials Osaka Ōtomo Padre peasants political Portuguese provinces regime region rekishi religious rice Sakai samurai Satsuma scholars Sengoku senior councilors seventeenth century Shimazu Shinto shogun shogunate's shrines sixteenth century social society Sōrin status Tanuma temples Tenshō tion Tokugawa house Tokugawa Ieyasu Tokugawa period Tokugawa shogunate Tokyo Toyotomi Toyotomi Hideyoshi trade Tsuji Tsunayoshi Tsushima ujigami vassals village wakō warrior Wicki Xavier Yoshimune