Shoguns, samurai and the Japanese Middle Ages

43문장 100% 한국어 번역 5명 참여 출처 : 칸아카데미

Shoguns, samurai and the Japanese Middle Ages

[Instructor] As we get into the late Heian period you start to have the emergence of a increasingly powerful warrior class.

And all of that comes to a head in the year 1185, when the Heian period ends and a general by the name of Minamoto Yoritomo comes to power.

And what's significant here is the notion of an emperor continues to exist, but all of the power resides in what you can essentially consider a military dictator or a shogun.

And the system that emerges is known as the bakufu system or the shogunate.

And Minamoto Yoritomo was the first shogun.

So you can see here, the emperor still was there but the shogun was where all of the power was.

And this is really the beginning of medieval Japan.

It's the beginning of the Kamakura period named for where the capital of the Kamakura period was.

Now what's distinctive about medieval Japan and the bakufu system is that it becomes much more decentralized than what we had under the Heian period.

It's often called a feudal system because it has parallels to what was going on in Europe at around the same time.

Where at the top you had this military ruler, the shogun and then beneath the shogun you had this decentralized structure of these lords, essentially that controlled significant regions of Japan.

They were called the daimyo.

And there were roughly 300 daimyo in Japan roughly county sized districts.

And the daimyo, in order conquer land or to protect their own land they would support a warrior class known as the samurai.

And so they would take their agricultural surplus from their lands and use that to support this warrior class.

And this warrior class, the samurai they were analogous to knights in medieval Europe and just as the knights had chivalry in Europe the samurai in Japan had bushido which eventually emerges as their code of conduct.

Despite that decentralized nature they were able to fend off invasions from Kublai Khan.

So as we've mentioned in other videos in the 1270s, Kublai Khan is conquering much of China and he also attempts to conquer Japan.

This right over here is a picture of the Mongols shooting arrows at a samurai warrior.

Now one of the key factors that keeps Kublai Khan from taking over Japan is on two different occasions as they send their boats from what we now consider to be Korea to Japan they encounter significant storms that destroy most of the boats.

And so the Mongols who are able to get to land are significantly depleted and they're pushed back by the samurai warriors.

Now the Kamakura period continues on until 1333 when there is a brief, only a few years restoration of the power of the emperor.

But a few years after that another shogun comes to power and that is Ashikaga Takauji.

And this is the beginning now of the Muromachi period.

The Muromachi period is often known as the Ashikaga period or the Ashikaga shogunate, but it's named Muromachi for the district of Kyoto at which it had its capital.

And even though over the course of the Muromachi period the emperor at different points was subsumed into the power of the shogun.

This is considered especially the later Muromachi period as one of the more fragmented times of Japanese history.

You had many civil wars.

You had a lot of internal conflict and it was only at the end as we get to the end of the 16th Century that Japan gets reunified.

And one of the key factors that allows it to get reunified is that in the middle of the 16th Century Portuguese traders show up and they introduce guns to Japan.

And one daimyo in particular is able to take significant advantage of those guns and that is Oda Nobunaga.

Oda Nobunaga as I mentioned was a powerful daimyo one of these lords who controlled what you could kind of consider to be a county of Japan and using these guns.

He's able to put most of the other daimyos, most of the other lords into submission, and he begins to significantly unify Japan.

Now he is eventually assassinated and his successor Toyotomi Hideyoshi continues to unify Japan even further.

When he dies, Tokugawa Ieyasu takes power and he's able to consolidate even further and definitively becomes the ruling shogun of Japan.

Now even though this period that we're entering the Edo period and it's named for the castle Edo from which the Tokugawa shogunate ruled.

Even though this continues to be a shogunate with a shogun in power at the top, the bakufu system.

The reason why this is considered the beginning of the modern period or the early modern period is that Japan was finally unified again.

Now one thing that we will see as we get into the 19th Century as we get into the end of the Edo period.

And then you have the Meiji restoration where you have imperial rule again is that Japan is very good at borrowing technology and ideas from other cultures and then making it their own.

We saw that in the classical period where they imported ideas of Confucianism, Buddhism imperial government from the Chinese.

But adding their own flavor to it and we will see it again as we get into the 19th Century when Japan is one of the first countries not just in Asia but in the world to truly industrialize by learning many of the technologies that get pioneered in the west.

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Shoguns, samurai and the Japanese Middle Ages발음듣기

[Instructor] As we get into the late Heian period you start to have the emergence of a increasingly powerful warrior class.발음듣기

And all of that comes to a head in the year 1185, when the Heian period ends and a general by the name of Minamoto Yoritomo comes to power.발음듣기

And what's significant here is the notion of an emperor continues to exist, but all of the power resides in what you can essentially consider a military dictator or a shogun.발음듣기

And the system that emerges is known as the bakufu system or the shogunate.발음듣기

And Minamoto Yoritomo was the first shogun.발음듣기

So you can see here, the emperor still was there but the shogun was where all of the power was.발음듣기

And this is really the beginning of medieval Japan.발음듣기

It's the beginning of the Kamakura period named for where the capital of the Kamakura period was.발음듣기

Now what's distinctive about medieval Japan and the bakufu system is that it becomes much more decentralized than what we had under the Heian period.발음듣기

It's often called a feudal system because it has parallels to what was going on in Europe at around the same time.발음듣기

Where at the top you had this military ruler, the shogun and then beneath the shogun you had this decentralized structure of these lords, essentially that controlled significant regions of Japan.발음듣기

They were called the daimyo.발음듣기

And there were roughly 300 daimyo in Japan roughly county sized districts.발음듣기

And the daimyo, in order conquer land or to protect their own land they would support a warrior class known as the samurai.발음듣기

And so they would take their agricultural surplus from their lands and use that to support this warrior class.발음듣기

And this warrior class, the samurai they were analogous to knights in medieval Europe and just as the knights had chivalry in Europe the samurai in Japan had bushido which eventually emerges as their code of conduct.발음듣기

Despite that decentralized nature they were able to fend off invasions from Kublai Khan.발음듣기

So as we've mentioned in other videos in the 1270s, Kublai Khan is conquering much of China and he also attempts to conquer Japan.발음듣기

This right over here is a picture of the Mongols shooting arrows at a samurai warrior.발음듣기

Now one of the key factors that keeps Kublai Khan from taking over Japan is on two different occasions as they send their boats from what we now consider to be Korea to Japan they encounter significant storms that destroy most of the boats.발음듣기

And so the Mongols who are able to get to land are significantly depleted and they're pushed back by the samurai warriors.발음듣기

Now the Kamakura period continues on until 1333 when there is a brief, only a few years restoration of the power of the emperor.발음듣기

But a few years after that another shogun comes to power and that is Ashikaga Takauji.발음듣기

And this is the beginning now of the Muromachi period.발음듣기

The Muromachi period is often known as the Ashikaga period or the Ashikaga shogunate, but it's named Muromachi for the district of Kyoto at which it had its capital.발음듣기

And even though over the course of the Muromachi period the emperor at different points was subsumed into the power of the shogun.발음듣기

This is considered especially the later Muromachi period as one of the more fragmented times of Japanese history.발음듣기

You had many civil wars.발음듣기

You had a lot of internal conflict and it was only at the end as we get to the end of the 16th Century that Japan gets reunified.발음듣기

And one of the key factors that allows it to get reunified is that in the middle of the 16th Century Portuguese traders show up and they introduce guns to Japan.발음듣기

And one daimyo in particular is able to take significant advantage of those guns and that is Oda Nobunaga.발음듣기

Oda Nobunaga as I mentioned was a powerful daimyo one of these lords who controlled what you could kind of consider to be a county of Japan and using these guns.발음듣기

He's able to put most of the other daimyos, most of the other lords into submission, and he begins to significantly unify Japan.발음듣기

Now he is eventually assassinated and his successor Toyotomi Hideyoshi continues to unify Japan even further.발음듣기

When he dies, Tokugawa Ieyasu takes power and he's able to consolidate even further and definitively becomes the ruling shogun of Japan.발음듣기

Now even though this period that we're entering the Edo period and it's named for the castle Edo from which the Tokugawa shogunate ruled.발음듣기

Even though this continues to be a shogunate with a shogun in power at the top, the bakufu system.발음듣기

The reason why this is considered the beginning of the modern period or the early modern period is that Japan was finally unified again.발음듣기

Now one thing that we will see as we get into the 19th Century as we get into the end of the Edo period.발음듣기

And then you have the Meiji restoration where you have imperial rule again is that Japan is very good at borrowing technology and ideas from other cultures and then making it their own.발음듣기

We saw that in the classical period where they imported ideas of Confucianism, Buddhism imperial government from the Chinese.발음듣기

But adding their own flavor to it and we will see it again as we get into the 19th Century when Japan is one of the first countries not just in Asia but in the world to truly industrialize by learning many of the technologies that get pioneered in the west.발음듣기

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