The history of
Japan includes the history of the islands of Japan and the
Japanese people, spanning the ancient history of the region to the modern history of Japan as a nation state.
Following the last ice age, around
12,000 BC, the rich ecosystem of the
Japanese archipelago fostered human development. The earliest-known pottery found in Japan belongs to the
Jōmon period. The first known written reference to Japan is in the brief information given in
Book of Han in the
1st century AD. The main cultural and religious influences came from
China.The current
Imperial House emerged in the sixth century and the first permanent imperial capital was founded in 710 at
Heijō-kyō (modern
Nara), which became a center of
Buddhist art, religion and culture. The development of a strong centralized government culminated in the establishment of a new imperial capital at
Heian-kyō (modern
Kyoto) and the
Heian period is considered a golden age of classical
Japanese culture. Over the following centuries the power of the reigning emperor and the court nobility gradually declined and the once centralized state became increasingly fractured. By the time of the fifteenth century political power was subdivided into several hundred local units, or so called "domains" controlled by local daimyō, each with his own force of samurai warriors. After a long period of civil war,
Tokugawa Ieyasu completed the unification of Japan and was appointed shogun by the emperor in 1603. He distributed the conquered land among his supporters, and set up his "bakufu" (literally "tent office" i.e. military rule) at Edo (modern
Tokyo) while the nominal sovereign, the emperor, continued to reside in the old capital of Kyoto. The
Edo period was prosperous and peaceful. Japan terminated the
Christian missions and cut off almost all contact with the outside world
.
In the 1860s the shogunate came to an end, power was returned to the emperor and the
Meiji period began.
The new national leadership systematically ended feudalism and transformed an isolated, underdeveloped island country, into a world power that closely followed
Western models.
Democracy was problematic, because Japan's powerful military was semi-independent and overruled—or assassinated—civilians in the
1920s and
1930s.
The military invaded
Manchuria in 1931 and escalated the conflict to all-out war on China in
1937. Japan controlled the coast and major cities and set up puppet regimes, but was unable to entirely defeat China. Its attack on
Pearl Harbor in
December 1941 led to war with the
United States and its allies. After a series of naval victories by mid-1942, Japan's military forces were overextended and its industrial base was unable to provide the needed ships, armaments, and oil. But even with the navy sunk and the main cities destroyed by
U.S. air attacks, the military held out until
August 1945 when the twin shock of the atomic bombings of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the
Soviet invasion of Manchuria made it possible for the emperor to force the military to surrender.
The U.S. occupied Japan until
1952. Under the supervision of the U.S. occupation forces a new constitution was drafted and enacted in
1947 that transformed Japan into a parliamentary monarchy. After
1955, Japan enjoyed very high economic growth rates, and became a world economic powerhouse, especially in engineering, automobiles and electronics with a highly developed infrastructure, a very high standard of living and the highest life expectancy in the world.
Emperor Shōwa died in
1989 and his son
Emperor Akihito ascended the throne marking the beginning of a new era. Since the
1990s economic stagnation has been a major issue, with an earthquake and tsunami in
2011 causing massive economic dislocations and loss of nuclear power.
- published: 05 Aug 2015
- views: 24296