| Japan's earliest settlers were
fishers, hunters and gatherers who slogged over the land bridges from
Korea to the west and Siberia to the north. It's also thought that
seafaring migrants from Polynesia were part of the ethnic blend. By AD
300, the sun-worshipping Yamato kingdom had loosely unified the nation
through conquest and alliance. Buddhism was introduced from China in the
mid-6th century and soon became the state religion. Rivalry between
Buddhism and Shinto, the traditional religion of Japan, was diffused by
presenting Shinto deities as manifestations of Buddha.
With the empire more or less stable, particularly
after the conquest of the indigenous Ainu in the 9th century, Japan's
emperors began to devote more time to leisure and scholarly pursuits and
less time to government. Important court posts were dominated by the noble
but corrupt Fujiwara family. Out in the provinces, a new power was on the
rise: the samurai, or 'warrior class', readily turned to arms to
defend its autonomy, and began to muscle in on the capital, Heian
(modern-day Kyoto). The Taira clan briefly eclipsed the Fujiwara, and were
ousted in turn by the Minamoto family in 1185. After assuming the rank of shogun
(military leader), Minamoto Yoritomo set up his HQ in Kamakura, while the
emperor remained the nominal ruler in Kyoto. This was the beginning of a
long period of feudal rule by successive samurai families which lingered
until imperial power was restored in 1868. |


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| The feudal centuries can
be clunkily split into five main periods. The Kamakura Period (1185-1333)
saw repeated invasions by Kublai Khan's Mongol armies. Japan managed to
stave off the Mongols, but a weakened leadership lost the support of the samurai
(warrior class). Emperor Go-Daigo presided over the beginning of the
Muromachi Period (1333-1576), until a revolt masterminded by the
disgruntled warrior Ashikaga saw him flee to the hills. Ashikaga and his
descendants ruled with gradually diminishing effectiveness and Japan
slipped into civil war and chaos. The various factions were pacified and
unified during the Momoyama Period (1576-1600) by Oda Nobunaga and his
successor Toyotomi Hideyoshi. The quick spread of Christianity during the
Christian Century (1543-1640) was tolerated at first, then ferociously
quashed as the interloping religion came to be seen as a threat. During
the Tokugawa Period (1600-1867), Tokugawa Ieyasu defeated Hideyoshi's
young heir and set up his headquarters at Edo (now Tokyo). The emperor
continued to exercise purely nominal authority in Kyoto while the Tokugawa
family led Japan into a period of national seclusion. Japanese were
forbidden to travel overseas or to trade abroad and foreigners were placed
under strict supervision. The rigid emphasis of these times on submitting
unquestioningly to rules of obedience and loyalty has lasted, some would
say, to the present day.
By the turn of the 19th century, the Tokugawa
government was stagnant and corrupt. Foreign ships started to probe
Japan's isolation with increasing insistence, and famine and poverty
weakened support for the government. In 1867 the ruling shogun, Keiki,
resigned and Emperor Meiji resumed control of state affairs, seeing Japan
through a crash course in westernisation and industrialisation. In 1889
Japan created a Western-style constitution, the tenets of which seeped
into national consciousness along with a swing back to traditional values.
Japan's growing confidence was demonstrated by the ease with which it
trounced China in the Sino-Japanese War (1894-5) and Russia in the
Russo-Japanese War (1904-5). Under Meiji's son, Yoshihito, Japan sided
with the Allies in WWI. Rather than become heavily involved in the
conflict, however, Japan took the opportunity, through shipping and trade,
to expand its economy at top speed. Emperor Hirohito ascended to the
throne in 1926. A rising tide of nationalism was quickened by the world
economic depression that began in 1930. Popular unrest led to a strong
increase in the power of the militarists: Japan invaded Manchuria in 1931
and entered into full-scale hostilities against China in 1937.
Japan signed a tripartite pact with Germany and
Italy in 1940 and, when diplomatic attempts to gain US neutrality failed,
the Japanese launched themselves into WWII with a surprise attack on Pearl
Harbour on 7 December 1941. At first Japan scored rapid successes, pushing
its battle fronts across to India, down to the fringes of Australia and
out into the mid-Pacific. The Battle of Midway opened the US
counterattack, puncturing Japanese naval superiority and turning the tide
of war against Japan. By August 1945, with Japan driven back on all
fronts, a declaration of war by the Soviet Union and the release of atomic
bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, it was all over. Emperor Hirohito
announced unconditional surrender. Japan was occupied until 1952 by Allied
forces who aimed to demilitarise the country and dismantle the power of
the emperor. A recovery programme enabled the economy to expand rapidly,
and Japan became the world's most successful export economy, generating
massive trade surpluses and dominating such fields as electronics,
robotics, computing, car production and banking.
With the arrival of the 1990s, the old
certainties seemed to vanish: Japan's legendary economic growth slowed to
a virtual standstill; the conservative Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) was
swept out of power and then back in again the next year; a massive
earthquake in 1995 brought Kobe to its knees (a disaster made worse by a
government that was slow to react); and to top it off, a millennial cult
with doomsday ambitions engineered a poison gas attack on the Tokyo subway
system.
Things began to look up with the appointment of
Keizo Obuchi, who took over from Prime Minister Hashimoto. Hashimoto was
ousted after voter backlash over the spiralling economy. Obuchi ushered in
a few brief years of economic vitality, but the job took its toll and he
died, while still in office, from a massive stroke. His successor, LDP
stalwart Yoshiro Mori held the dubious honor of possessing the lowest
approval rating of any leader in recent Japanese history, until he
announced his resignation in early April 2001. Mori's succesor is the
eccentric Junichiro Koizumi, who brings a beguilling mix of nationalism
and reform to Japan's top job. Promising to end Japan's perceived culture
of high-level nepotism, he distinguishes himself from his many recent
predecessors by creating a high level of public expectation. Time, as
ever, will tell. |