The early Mandarin Chinese word for
Japan was recorded by Marco Polo as Cipangu. However, the Cantonese
word for Japan, from which the word Japan was probably originally
born, is Jatbun. In Malay the Cantonese word became Japang and was
thus encountered by Portuguese traders in Malacca in the 16th
century. It is thought the Portuguese traders were the first to bring
the word to Europe. It was first recorded in English in 1577 spelled
Giapan.Traditional Japanese legend maintains that Japan
was founded in 600 bc by the Emperor Jimmu, a direct descendant of
the sun goddess and ancestor of the present ruling imperial family.
About ad 405, the Japanese court officially adopted the Chinese
writing system. Together with the introduction of Buddhism in the
sixth century, these two events revolutionized Japanese culture and
marked the beginning of a long period of Chinese cultural influence.
From the establishment of the first fixed capital at Nara in 710
until 1867, the emperors of the Yamato dynasty were the nominal
rulers, but actual power was usually held by powerful court nobles,
regents, or "shoguns" The first recorded contact with the
West occurred about 1542, when a Portuguese ship, blown off its
course to China, landed in Japan. During the next century, traders
from Portugal, the Netherlands, England, and Spain arrived, as did
Jesuit, Dominican, and Franciscan missionaries. During the early part
of the 17th century, Japan's shogunate suspected that the traders and
missionaries were actually forerunners of a military conquest by
European powers. This caused the shogunate to place foreigners under
progressively tighter restrictions. Ultimately, Japan forced all
foreigners to leave and barred all relations with the outside world
except for severely restricted commercial contacts with Dutch and
Chinese merchants at Nagasaki. This isolation lasted for 200 years,
until Commodore Matthew Perry of the U.S. Navy forced the opening of
Japan to the West with the Convention of Kanagawa in 1854. Within
several years, renewed contact with the West profoundly altered
Japanese society. The shogunate was forced to resign, and the emperor
was restored to power. The "Meiji restoration" of 1868
initiated many reforms. The feudal system was abolished, and numerous
Western institutions were adopted, including a Western legal system
and constitutional government along quasi-parliamentary lines. In
1898, the last of the "unequal treaties" with Western
powers was removed, signaling Japan's new status among the nations of
the world. In a few decades, by creating modern social, educational,
economic, military, and industrial systems, the Emperor Meiji's
"controlled revolution" had transformed a feudal and
isolated state into a world power. Japans greatest leader was named
Ieyasu Tokogawa. Japanese leaders of the late 19th century regarded
the Korean Peninsula as a "dagger pointed at the heart of
Japan." It was over Korea that Japan became involved in war with
the Chinese Empire in 1894-95 and with Russia in 1904-05. The war
with China established Japan's domination of Korea, while also giving
it the Pescadores Islands and Formosa (now Taiwan). After Japan
defeated Russia in 1905, the resulting Treaty of Portsmouth awarded
Japan certain rights in Manchuria and in southern Sakhalin, which
Russia had received in 1875 in exchange for the Kurile Islands. Both
wars gave Japan a free hand in Korea, which it formally annexed in
1910.
Andrea,
ReplyDeleteWhen you are talking about time, BC and AD should be capitalized because they are describing a specific period of time.
Overall, you did a pretty good job. I would have liked to know what happened after 1910.
word count: 532
score: 23/25
Love mommy :)