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Medieval Japan

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Medieval Japan * Today, 1200 years later, the Imperial household still uses the costumes of the Heian period for the formal occasions of coronations and weddings. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Medieval Japan


1
Medieval Japan
2
Prehistoric Japan
  • Civilization came to Japan relatively late.
  • Jomon period (8000-300 bce)
  • Gatherers, hunters, fishers
  • Settled communities with gardens cemeteries and
    domesticated dogs
  • Elaborate pottery
  • Yayoi period (300 bce-300 ce)
  • Introduction of rice culture with immigrants from
    China
  • Clan culture
  • Access to bronze and iron
  • Development of nature religion precursor to
    Shintoism

3
Jomon Pottery
Middle Jomon
Late Jomon
Early Jomon
4
Jomon Goddess Statues
5
Jomon Fashion
The clothes of this period were made of hemp and
loosely fastened. There was no distinction
between male and female clothing.
6
Naiyodoni Dotaku bronze bells
7
Yamato or Kofun Periodca. 300-710 ce
  • Yamato great kings
  • Kofun giant tomb mounds
  • Military aristocracy
  • Capital at Naniwa (Osaka)
  • Imported Chinese culture via Korea
  • Writing
  • Confucianism
  • Buddhism

8
Kofun
  • Shaped either as a circle or a keyhole, hills
    were built over burial chambers.
  • The dead were accompanied by such objects as iron
    tools and weapons, jewelry, pottery, mirrors and,
    clay figurines called haniwa.

9
Haniwa
10
Yamato Fashion
Yamato clothing consisted of two pieces, an upper
and lower piece. The upper piece had tight
sleeves. During this period the art of raising
silk worms was introduced in Japan by Chinese
settlers. At this time, they had no skills or
techniques for dyeing clothes, so the silk fabric
remained white.
11
Japanese Writing
  • Adapted from Chinese calligraphy, but a totally
    different language
  • Kanji ideogrammatic use of Chinese characters
  • Manyo-kana ideogrammatic and syllabic
  • Kana syllabic
  • Hiragana onna de or womens writing --
    cursive, does not require knowledge of Chinese
  • Katakana -- cursive, derived from Chinese

12
Prince Shotoku573-621
  • Regent during reign of Empress Suiko (r. 592-628)
  • Wrote the Seventeen Article Constitution, the
    earliest piece of Japanese writing and basis for
    Japanese government throughout history
  • Led Japanese court in adopting Chinese calendar
    and sponsoring Buddhism

Prince ShotokuKamakura period, early 14th
centuryGilt bronze
13
Daibutu at Nara
The Daibutu, literally Large Buddha, is known by
the Japanese as "Daibutu-sama" or "Daibutu-san
the largest bronze casting in the world 745-755ad
14
Asuka Period645-710
  • Capital in the Asuka District
  • Establishment of Imperial Power under Taika
    Reform Edict
  • Temple building and sculpture introduced with
    Buddhism -- heavily influenced by Korean and
    Chinese models

15
Asuka Fashion
During the Asuka and Nara periods sewing methods
developed more, and clothing became longer and
wider. Courtier's clothes were divided into three
groups formal clothes, court clothes and
uniforms, the colors varying with rank.
16
Taika Reform Edicts 645Fusion of Buddhism and
Shinto
  • Influence of Chinese culture -- institutions,
    language, philosophy concept of national unity
    symbolized by Emperor's dual role
  • Shinto religious leader with elaborate rituals,
    ceremonial functions
  • Chinese-like secular Emperor
  • Emperor ruled by Decree of Heaven with absolute
    authority and by descent from Amaterasu, the sun
    goddess
  • United provinces ruled by central bureaucracy
  • Government control of land culture

17
Ise Jingu Grand Shrines of Ise
Shinto
18
Shinto
  • Shinto is a general term for the activities of
    the Japanese people to worship all the deities
    (kami) of heaven and earth
  • Towards the end of the 6th century, the 31st
    Emperor Yomei prayed before an image of Buddha
    for the first time as an emperor for recovery of
    his illness. In accepting Buddhism, a foreign
    religion, the Japanese realized the existence of
    a tradition of their own faith.
  • The Japanese called the worship ritutals 'Way of
    Kami(the deity or the deities)'.

19
The Grand Shrines at Ise
  • The present buildings reproduce the temple first
    ceremoniously rebuilt in 692 CE by Empress Jito.
  • The first temple had been built by her husband
    Emperor Temmu (678-686), the first Mikado to rule
    over a united Japan.        
  • Emperor Temmu had established Ise as the
    principal cult shrine of Imperial Japan, but the
    site itself, and the cedar trees that grew on it,
    were already sacred before then.               
  • Besides trees, at the Ise Shrine are many
    subsidiary shrines of rocks from the sea which
    are regarded as the abodes (iwakura or rock
    abodes) of deities.

Jingu http//www.isejingu.or.jp/english/
20
  • The Grand Shrine at Ise is Japan's most important
    Shinto shrine and serves as the center of all
    shrines nationwide.
  • Situated near the banks of the Isuzu River, the
    shrine is surrounded by 800-year-old Ise Grand
    Shrine cedars.
  • The smooth pebble-lined approach to the shrine
    lends the site a majestic air.

21
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22
  • The shrine consists of two groups of buildings
    the Imperial Shrine (Kotai Jingu), also known as
    the Naiku (inner shrine), and the Toyouke Shrine
    (Toyouke Daijingu ), the Geku or outer shrine.
  • The Geku is dedicated to the Goddess of Cereals
    Toyouke Omikami (Abundant Food Great Deity).)
  • The Naiku is dedicated to the Sun Goddess
    Amaterasu Omikami (Heaven-Illuminating Great
    Deity
  • Both shrines are constructed of wood, and every
    twenty years both are totally rebuilt on an
    adjoining site.
  • The only building on the empty site, which
    retains its sacredness for the intervening twenty
    years, is a small wooden hut (oi-ya) with post
    about seven feet high known as shin-no-mihashira
    (sacred central post). The new shrine will be
    erected over and around this post.

Oi-ya
23
Ise Shrine, Geku (outer shrine), inner precint
showing outer fence
24
The Naiku
  • The most revered of all Shinto shrines, the
    Naiku, is located at Ise.
  • The Naiku enshrines Amaterasu Omikami, the
    ancestral goddess of Japan's imperial house and
    the great ancestral deity of the Japanese people.

25
Amaterasu
Utagawa Kunisada (1786-1865). Amaterasu Emerges
from the Light.(colored woodcut, nd).
26
Buddhism
Golden Kondo Hall 7th century style, rebuilt in
early 8th century
27
Buddhist Horyuji Temple ca. 607-711Nara
28
Horyuji Temple
Golden Kondo Hall 7th century style, rebuilt in
early 8th century
Pagoda (Stupa). Horyuji. 7th century style,
rebuilt in early 8th century
29
Horyuji Temple
Shaka TriadGolden Kondo Hall, 623
Guardian of the North Bishamonten (Vaisravana).
30
Buddha Sculptures
Nara - Temple Horyu-ji 7th c.
Nara - Temple Chugu-ji 7th c.
31
COURTLYJAPAN
32
Nara Period 710-794
  • 710 first permanent capital established at Nara
  • 712 Kojiki A Record of Ancient Matters first
    book of orally preserved historic legends
  • Emperors embraced Buddhism leading to rapid and
    dramatic expansion
  • 759 The Manyoshu
  • 784 Rise in political power of Buddhist
    monasteries led to capital being moved to Nagaoka

33
Earliest Japanese Literature
  • 712 The Kojiki (Record of Ancient Matters) --
    an anthology of myths, legends, and other stories
  • 713 The Fudoki (Records of Wind and Earth),
    compiled by provincial officials describe the
    history, geography, products, and folklore of the
    various provinces.
  • 720 Nihon shoki (Chronicle of Japan) -- a
    chronological record of history.

Kojiki album cover Kitaro
34
The Kojiki
  • The Kojiki (Record of Ancient Matters) is
    traditionally viewed as Japan's first book. It
    was written in 712 by the courtier Ono Yasumaro
    (? - 723) at the behest of Empress Gemmei
    (661-721) and is in three volumes.
  • The Kojiki recounts the history of Japan from its
    mythological origins to the era of the Empress
    Suiko (554-628) in the Yamoto era and includes
    myths, legends, Imperial genealogy, history, and
    poetry.
  • Ono Yasumaru's work was based on the oral
    recitations of Hieda no Are

Kojiki album cover Kitaro
35
Izanami and Izanagi, the creator kami
36
The Meoto-Iwa, or Wedded Rocks, Shima Peninsula.
Legend holds that the spirits of Izanagi and
Izanami, Japan's creator gods, are housed in the
rocks, which are connected to one another by a
straw rope.
37
The Manyoshu
  • Collected ca. 759
  • Anthology of over 4500 poems
  • Includes wide variety of poems courtly, rustic,
    dialectical, military, travel
  • Identified and anonymous poets
  • Syllabic poetry 5-7-5
  • Choka indeterminate number of lines culminating
    in a 7-syllable couplet
  • Tanka 31 syllable poem 5,7,5,7, 7

38
Wakawa-Japanese ka-poetry
  • Waka were first composed orally to celebrate
    victories in battle and love, or for religious
    reasons
  • Around the 8th century the fixed forms Choka
    (long poem) and Tanka (short poem) emerged. These
    Waka are based on a set number of Mora
    (syllables).
  • During the first great age of written waka in the
    seventh and eighth centuries, nagauta or choka
    'long poems were composed for performance on
    public occasions at the imperial court.
  • At the same time, tanka 'short poems', consisting
    of five 'lines' in the pattern of 5-7-5-7-7
    syllables, became a useful shorthand for private
    communication between friends and lovers, and the
    ability to compose a tanka on a given topic
    became an essential skill for any gentleman or
    lady at court.
  • It was not uncommon for parties to be thrown just
    to recite waka. One ritual was the Utokai. At
    Utokai parties each guest would come with an
    original waka and recite it to the group. All of
    the waka would then be judged by the host and the
    winner would be welcomed to eat at the head
    table.

39
Nara Fashion
During the Nara and the previous Asuka periods,
techniques for dyeing silk were developed.
Clothing consisted of many pieces including upper
and lower garments, jackets, a front skirt, and a
back skirt.
40
Heian Japan
41
Heian Japan
  • 794-1185
  • Capital at Heian present-day Kyoto
  • Highly formalized court culture
  • Aristocratic monopoly of power
  • Literary and artistic flowering
  • Ended in civil wars and emergence of samurai
    culture

42
The Kokinshu(Collection of Ancient and Modern
Times)
  • Anthology commissioned by Emperor Daigo (r.
    897-930)
  • 1111 tanka poems in 20 books
  • Set the pattern for later anthologies
  • Books divided by subjectlove, seasons,
    felicitations, parting, travel, names of things,
    etc.
  • Poetic sequences linked narrations
  • Renga 'linked verse' pairs or groups of poets
    would compose jointly, with one poet supplying
    the initial 5-7-5 of a verse and another the
    concluding 7-7, often building up to hundred
    verse sequences.
  • The initial 5-7-5 of a renga became a poetic form
    on its own, the haiku

A confused array of red leaves in the current
of Tatsuta River. Were I to cross, I would
break the fabric of a rich brocade
43
Kokinshu Poets
Fun'ya-no-Yasuhide
Ono no Komachi
Lady Ise
Ki no Tsurayuki
Ariwara no Narihira
Otomo-no-Kuronushi
44
Thirty-six Immortal Poets
The Thirty-six Immortal Poets (detail), Edo
period (1615-1868)Ikeda Koson (18021867)Two-pan
el folding screen ink and color on silk 68 x 68
3/4 in. (172.8 x 174.6 cm)Property of Mary
Griggs Burke
45
Heian Style
  • A culture more independent of Chinese influence
  • miyabi courtlinessmakoto simplicityaware
    melancholymono no aware evanescence
  • Emphasis on the exquisite and evanescent
  • Literary poems, letters, pillow books
  • Extreme sensitivity to nature
  • Nocturnal
  • Importance of convention and fashion

46
Heian Fashion
47
Gagaku
  • Music and dance which was originally performed
    and practiced in the Imperial court, having
    established itself there in the early half of the
    9th century.
  • It is usually referred to as the oldest extant
    orchestral music in the world. The present day
    gagaku repertory consists of the following four
    categories
  • Kangen Instrumental music consisting of an
    ensemble
  • Bugaku Dance which is accompanied by part or all
    of the gagaku ensemble. These dances are divided
    into right and left styles.The dances can be
    solo, duets, or quartets with very colorful (and
    expensive) costumes and props.
  • Songs The songs of gagaku, rouei and saibara,
    are simple melodies (mostly derived from ancient
    folk songs) accompanied by a scaled down version
    of the kangen ensemble.
  • Ritual music for Shinto ceremonies

48
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49
Heian Painting Yamato-e
  • Otoko-e
  • strong calligraphic outlines on figures with
    washed colors so that these strong lines would
    not be overwhelmed by the color
  • the medium for action subjects involving war or
    conflict
  • primarily concerned with the public life outside
    the court or house.
  • Onna-e
  • rich colors and subtle outlines.
  • the medium for courtliness, appropriate to the
    literature of miyabi, such as The Tale of Genji.
  • "cutaway" painting, in which interior scenes are
    painted by "cutting away" the roof.
  • primarily concerned with the Japanese life that
    goes on inside the court or house

50
Onna-e style from Genji-monogatari
51
Otoko-e style from the Shigisan engi emaki
52
Heian Literature
  • Men continued to write Chinese-style poetry
  • Women began to write in Japanese prose
  • First novel Genji Monogatari by Lady Murasaki
    Shikibu
  • Diaries
  • The Pillowbook by Sei Shonagan
  • As I Crossed a Bridge of Dreams by Lady
    Sarashina

53
Lady Murasaki Shikibu
54
Murasaki Shikibu
From a series of the 36 Immortal Poets
Katsukawa Shunsho 18th c.
55
The Tale of GenjiLady Murasaki
  • Picture of life at the 10th c. Heian court
  • Relates the lives and loves of Prince Genji and
    his children and grandchildren
  • Unesco Global Heritage Pavilion The Tale of Genji

56
Sei Shonagan
Katsukawa Shunsho 18th c.
Hisashi Otsuka, 2003
57
Heian Society
  • Patriarchal but women inherited matrilineal and
    matrilocal
  • Polygamous
  • Sexuality viewed as normal and necessary part of
    life
  • Men exercised political power, but marriages
    created political alliances, and women could
    exercise significant political influence

58
Origins of the Samurai
  • Failure of the central government in Kyôto to
    maintain adequate administration
  • Samurai became active in managing provincial
    governments
  • The first bushidan, or warrior bands, were
    family organizations, military units recruited by
    chieftains from among their kinsmen.
  • By the 11th century, however, bushidan had
    developed into more permanent entities structured
    on lord-vassal ties between fighting men
  • Taira and Minamoto clans emerged in the 10th
    and 11th centuries

59
Samurai
  • Literally, "one who serves"
  • Also known as bushi ("military gentry") -- the
    warrior elite of pre-modern Japan that emerged in
    the provinces from at least the early 10th
    century and became the ruling class of the
    country from the late 12th century until the
    Meiji Restoration of 1868.

60
Bushido
  • Code of honor and conduct of the Japanese
    nobility requiring unwavering loyalty on the part
    of the vassal.
  • Borrowed heavily from Zen Buddhism and
    Confucianism.
  • Emphasized loyalty to ones superior, personal
    honor, and the virtues of austerity,
    self-sacrifice, and indifference to pain.
  • Commerce and the profit motive were to be
    scorned.
  • Formulated in the Kamakura period and put into
    writing in the 16th c.

61
Samurai Fashion
During this period, the aristocratic culture of
the Heian period decayed and the Samurai gained
power. Clothes were modified to be simpler and
easier to move around in to fit the more active
lifestyle of the Samurai.
62
Samurai Castle
Seven Samurai Sanjuro Rashomon The Hidden
Fortress Yojimbo by Akira Kurosawa The
Samurai Trilogy by Hiroshi Inagaki
63
Gempei War Period Civil Wars
  • 1156 Hôgen Disturbance--Taira (or Heike) and
    Minamoto (or Genji) on both sides
  • 1160 Heiji Disturbance-- Taira were solidly
    aligned against the Minamoto. A Taira victory
    enabled the clan to become the new aristocracy at
    court from 1160 until the early 1180s
  • 1180 Taira-Minamoto War -- Minamoto chieftains
    rose in the provinces that led to the defeat of
    the Taira

64
Heike Monogatari
  • Tales of the Heike War
  • Told by professional storytellers, biwa hoshi ,
    whose job it was to establish definitive
    versions of various tales and commit them to
    memory their profession came to be known as
    heikyoku ("Tales of the Heike Narration").
  • By the 13th century heikyoku constituted the
    leading contemporary performing art form in
    14th-15th century
  • During this period, the various tales were
    written down so the composition of the Heike
    monogatari can be said to have taken place
    between 1200 and 1600.

65
Kamakura Shogunate 1192-1333
  • The victor in the Taira-Minamoto War was
    Minamoto no Yoritomo established the first true
    warrior government in Japanese history, the
    Kamakura shogunate (1192-1333)
  • Shogun the title that Yoritomo demanded when he
    defeated the Taira Sei i tai shogun , "barbarian
    conquering supreme general."
  • Feudalistic Society

66
Japanese Feudalism
  • Classes
  • Warriors
  • Daimyo feudal landowners
  • Samurai knight/retainers loyal to the Daimyos
  • Bushi warriors
  • Peasants bound as serfs to the land who paid
    harvest rent to samurai
  • A third class of merchants, craftsmen and
    entertainers arose as peace settled in.
    Merchants, especially, became powerful as they
    became rich.

67
Mongol Invasion of Japan
  • Defining moment for the Kamakura dynasty
  • In 1258, Kublai Khan had conquered the Korean
    peninsula and in 1266, he declared himself
    Emperor of China.
  • In 1266, representatives of the Mongolian court
    came to Japan and demanded its immediate
    surrender -- Japan refused.
  • In 1274, Kublai Khan sent a vast fleet to invade
    Japan but it was destroyed by a hurricanethe
    Japanese called this fortunate hurricane
    kamikaze, or "wind from the gods."
  • Again in 1281, Kublai launched the largest
    amphibious assault in the history of the ancient
    and medieval worlds. Another hurricane struck,
    and the bulk of the Chinese army sank with the
    fleet.

68
Noh Drama
  • Emerged in the 14th c.
  • Frozen in the 17th c.
  • Invention attributed to Kanami Kiyotsugu
    (1333-1384)
  • Perfected by his son, Zeami Morokiyo (1363-1443)

A scene from Aoi no ue based on The Tale of
Genji
69
Noh Theatre
70
Noh Characters
  • Conventional roles in all dramas
  • Shite principal character -- the only true
    person
  • Waki secondary character -- introduces story
    and asks questions often a priest
  • Tsure shadowy companion to shiite and/or waki
  • Kokata child
  • Kyogen clown -- usually lower class

71
Noh Masks
  • Woman Mask
  • Male Mask
  • Old Man Mask
  • Demon Mask

72
Noh Conventions
  • Very short, plotless, tragic in mood
  • Highly stylized with very slow pace 200-300
    lines of play can take an hour to perform
  • Integrate singing, speech instruments, and
    dancing
  • No limitation in time or space
  • Highly allusive, poetic, symbolic language
  • Less about characters than emotions

73
Yugen haunting poetic quality, suggesting quiet
elegance and grace, and subtle and fleeting beauty
74
Types of Noh Plays
  • A Days Entertainment contains
  • A god play
  • A warrior play
  • A woman play
  • A realistic play
  • A demon play
  • Kyogen Plays placed between Noh plays as comic
    relief
  • No music
  • Broad humor
  • About 20 minutes long

A Kyogen play Boshibari
75
In Japan, during the Fifteenth Century the bonds
of loyalty between the Ashikaga Shogunate and the
daimyo or lords grew increasingly frayed until
the outbreak of the Onin War (1467-77) and the
descent of Japanese society into the Warring
States period of the 16th Century.
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