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The Orient's Realm of...
Japan
General Region
The Japanese as a people are late-comers in Asian history. Before the unification of their hundred or so separate tribal communities, there was a long period of migration and settlement. Japan only appears in texts by 57 AD, when referred by Chinese histories as "Wa." Aside from Chinese accounts, on 700 AD, “The Record of Ancient Matters” and the “Chronicles of Japan” report a legendary history of Japan that will become the basis of traditional accounts of the history of Japan. The “Chronicles” will set as 660 BC as the year in which Jinmu, descendant of the Shinto sun goddess Ametarasu and the first Emperor of Japan, founded the Japanese Empire.
Humans had lived in Japan from about 30,000 B.C.. During the Ice Ages, Japan territory was connected to the Korean peninsula and to Siberia, and therefore, early settlers of the Japanese archipelago probably moved into it from the East Asian Siberian mainland during the Palaeolithic period. These communities brought the territory from a stone-age culture into an agricultural and metal-working culture. The very first Japanese kingdom that provided the basis of future Japanese civilization arose in the low-lying plains on the island of Honshu, specifically the Yamato plain in the south—a region that gave its name to the first official name for Japan, Yamato. By the seventh century, the Yamato court was reorganized along the Chinese model, sponsoring Buddhism, and adopting the Chinese calendar. All of these changes were administered by Prince Shotoku (in Japanese, Shotoku Taishi, 573-621).
With the age of the warriors installed in Kamakura on the XIIth century Japan will take distance from the past and in some ways from its Asian background, and will discover its national identity. Taking roots on the peaceful and prosperous time of Heian period (794-1185), new forms of cultural expression took shape and evolved within this age and after: storytelling, poetry, theater, garden aesthetics, tea ceremony, flower arrangement, wabi-sabi aesthetics, architectural styles, etc., which conveyed Japanese unique sensibility. By the medium of these forms, we have access to a culturally autonomous Japan. As many authors will agree, in the warrior age, Japan “finally found itself”. ![]() ![]()
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