Sunday, November 24, 2019
The Bakufu Ruled Japan for Nearly 700 Years
The Bakufu Ruled Japan for Nearly 700 Years The bakufu wasà the military government of Japan between 1192 and 1868, headed by the shogun. Prior to 1192,à the bakufu- also known as shogonate- was responsible only for warfare and policing and was firmly subordinate to the imperial court. Over the centuries, however, the bakufus powers expanded, and it became, effectively, the ruler of Japan for nearly 700 years. Kamakura Period Saurai protecting royal carriage durring the Burning of the Sanjo Palace. Corbis / VCGà / Getty Images Beginning with the Kamakura bakufu in 1192, shoguns ruled Japan while emperorsà were mere figureheads.The key figure in the period, which lasted until 1333, wasà Minamoto Yoritomo, who ruled from 1192 to 1199 from his family seat at Kamakura, about 30 miles south of Tokyo. During this time, Japanese warlords claimed power from the hereditary monarchy and their scholar-courtiers, giving the samurai warriors- and their lords- ultimate control of the country. Society, too, changed radically, and a newà feudal systemà emerged. The Ashikaga Shogonate After years of civil strife, precipitated by the invasion of the Mongols in the late 1200s,à Ashikaga Takaujià overthrew the Kamakura bakufu andà established his own shogunate in Kyoto in 1336.à The Ashikaga bakufu- à or shogonate- ruledà Japan until 1573. Ahsikaga Takauji. æâ" ¥Ã¦Å" ¬Ã¨ ªÅ¾: ä ¸ æËŽ / Public domain /à Wikimedia Commonsà However, it was not a strong central governing force, and in fact, the Ashikaga bakufu witnessed the rise of powerful daimyoà all around the country. These regional lords reigned over their domains with very little interference from theà bakufu in Kyoto. Tokugawa Shoguns Toward the end of the Ashikaga bakufu,à and for years thereafter, Japan suffered through nearly 100 years of civil war, fueled mainly by the increasing power of the daimyo. Indeed, the civil war was sparked by the ruling bakufus struggle to bring the warringà daimyo back under central control. Tokugawa Ieyasu. KanÃ
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« / Public domain / Wikimedia Common In 1603, however, Tokugawa Ieyasu completed this task and established the Tokugawa shogunate- or bakufu- which would rule in the emperors name for 265 years. Life in Tokugawa Japan was peaceful but heavily controlled by the shogunal government, but after a century of chaotic warfare, the peace was a much-needed respite. Fall of the Bakufu When U.S.Commodore Matthew Perryà steamed into Edo Bay (Tokyo Bay) in 1853 and demanded thatà Tokugawa Japanà allow foreign powers access to trade, he unwittingly sparked a chain of events that led to Japans rise as a modern imperial power and the fall of the bakufu. Japans political elites realized that the U.S. and other countries were ahead of Japan in terms of military technology and felt threatened by western imperialism. After all, powerfulà Qing Chinaà had been brought to its knees by Britain just 14 years earlier in theà First Opium Warà and would soon lose the Second Opium War as well. Meiji Restoration Rather than suffer a similar fate, some of Japans elites sought to close the doors even tighter against foreign influence, but the more foresighted began to plan a modernization drive. They felt that it was important to have a strong emperor at the center of Japans political organization to project Japanese power and fend off Western imperialism. As a result, in 1868, the Meiji Restoration extinguished the bakufus authority and returned political power to the emperor. And, nearly 700 years of Japanese rule by the bakufuà came to a sudden end.
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