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Yamato Kingship information


Yamato State (marked in green).

The Yamato Kingship (ヤマト王権, Yamato Ōken) was a tribal alliance centered on the Yamato region (Nara Prefecture) from the 4th century to the 7th century, and ruled over the alliance of noble families in the central and western parts of the Japanese archipelago.[1] The age is from the 4th to the 7th century, later than the Yamatai Kingdom. After the Taika Reform, the ōkimi as an emperor, at that time, was in power, and the Yamato period ended.[2][3] The time period is archaeologically known as the Kofun period. Regarding its establishment, due to the relationship between Yamatai and Yamato's succession to the king's power, there are very different views on it.

The Yamato Kingship refers to the regime that emerged in the Nara region (Yamato region) since the 4th century. But the term does not imply the origin of Japan, which is disputed in Japanese history. At the same time as the rise of the Nara Kingship, there were probably several or even dozens of power centers in the Japanese archipelago. This is an issue that Japanese academia attaches great importance to.[4]

In the course of the development of the tribes from the state of separation to the direction of union between the 2nd and 3rd centuries, the Japanese royal power had become the center of the tribes. In order to establish its position as a united ally, the Japanese royal power attached importance to foreign relations, paid tribute to China's Eastern Jin and Liu Song dynasties, and made every effort to maintain close relations with the countries on the Korean peninsula (Baekje and Gaya), monopolizing various technologies imported by foreigners. In the second half of the 5th century, it was able to overwhelm the gentry in the capital and the local clans.[5]

  1. ^ "「大和朝廷」ではなく、「ヤマト王権」という用語を使うのはなぜですか。|株式会社帝国書院".
  2. ^ Fred S. Kleiner, Christin J. Mamiya (2005). Gardner's art through the ages. Belmont, CA: Thomson/Wadsworth. p. 222. ISBN 0-534-64095-8.
  3. ^ Rowthorne, Chris (2003). Lonely Planet Japan. Hawthorn: Lonely Planet Publications. pp. 34. ISBN 1-74059-162-3.
  4. ^ Henshall, Kenneth (2012-04-17). A History of Japan: From Stone Age to Superpower. Springer. ISBN 978-0-230-34662-8.
  5. ^ Totman, Conrad (2014-09-11). A History of Japan. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-119-02235-0.

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Yamato Kingship

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The Yamato Kingship (ヤマト王権, Yamato Ōken) was a tribal alliance centered on the Yamato region (Nara Prefecture) from the 4th century to the 7th century...

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Yamato Province

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historians emphasize the fact that during the early Kofun Period the Yamato Kingship was in close contention with other regional powers, such as Kibi Province...

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Yamato period

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The Yamato period (大和時代, Yamato-jidai) is the period of Japanese history when the Imperial court ruled from modern-day Nara Prefecture, then known as...

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Yamato

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of Japan Yamato period, when the Japanese Imperial court ruled from Yamato Province Yamato Kingship, the government of the Yamato period Yamato clan, clan...

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Princess Yamato Totohi Momoso

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the emergence of the Yamato Kingship. The Imperial Household Agency designates the Hashihaka kofun as the tomb of Princess Yamato Totohi Momoso, the daughter...

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Yaoyorozu no Kami

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communed with the eighty myriad deities for help reorganizing the Yamato Kingship in a time of crisis. This doctrine says that there are countless Kami...

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Okimi

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Siroshimesu Ōkimi (治天下大王, Chi Tenka Daiō), was the title of the head of the Yamato Kingship, or the monarch title of Wakoku (Old Japan). This term was used from...

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Kami

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pacified by the Yamato Kingship became the Kunitsugami, and the deity worshipped by the imperial family and powerful clans of the Yamato Kingship became the...

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Nakatomi clan

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enshrined.) When the Yamato kingship expanded control into the easterly dominions, Kashima (Kashima, Ibaraki) became a crucial base. Yamato armies and generals...

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Five kings of Wa

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pe.kr/homepage4/data/450815.pdf Kishimoto, Naofumi (2013-05-01). "Dual Kingship in the Kofun Period as Seen from the Keyhole Tombs". Journal of Urban Culture...

Word Count : 2281

Wakoku

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name, which some believe to be a reference to Japan. Wa (Japan) Wajin Yamato Kingship Goguryeo–Wa War Yayoi period Kofun period Yamatai Five kings of Wa...

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History of Shinto

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were spread throughout the archipelago as a national festival by the Yamato Kingship in the Kofun era. Rituals were held at the first Shinto shrines such...

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Hashihaka Kofun

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the emergence of the Yamato Kingship. The Imperial Household Agency designates the Hashihaka kofun as the tomb of Princess Yamato Totohi Momoso, the daughter...

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Takemikazuchi

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enshrined.) When the Yamato kingship expanded control into the easterly dominions, Kashima (Kashima, Ibaraki) became a crucial base. Yamato armies and generals...

Word Count : 1902

Relations between Gaya and ancient Japan

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Yamato Japan and the Gaya Confederacy, which were located directly across the Korea Strait from one another, had very close diplomatic and commercial ties...

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Toraijin

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friendship as well as economic and military alliances with Yamato Kingship. The Wa elites, such as Yamato elites in Kinki, Tsukushi elites in Fukuoka and Kibi...

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Zenpokoenfun

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groups jointly played a role in the Yamato Kingship. After death, they deified as the guardian deity of the Yamato royal power and also proposed that the...

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Makimuku ruins

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from outside the Yamato region.。 The following remarks also reinforce the view that the site is the birthplace of the Yamato Kingship or the royal capital...

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Shinabe clans

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Shinabe (品部) were a caste in the Yamato kingship. It is a type of Bemin clan which is dedicated to a specific occupation rather than farming. They paid...

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Ainu people

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period onward, Emishi who did not fall under the governance of the Yamato Kingship were singled out as northern Emishi. They began to be referred to as...

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Kofun system

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to represent a new level of social complexity and the advent of the Yamato Kingship The concept was proposed in 1991 by Archaeologist Hiroshi Tsuide. In...

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Dei of Wa

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Wa before San, Chin, and Sai. Yamato Kingship Wakoku Five kings of Wa Kishimoto, Naofumi (2013-05-01). "Dual Kingship in the Kofun Period as Seen from...

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Iwai Rebellion

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The Iwai Rebellion (磐井の乱, Iwai no Ran) was a rebellion against the Yamato court that took place in Tsukushi Province, Japan (now nearby Ogōri city in Fukuoka...

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Rikishi

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Shoki, and with them, the first accounts of matches held during the Yamato kingship period. At the same time the function of sumo wrestler began to appear...

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Bemin

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The Bemin (部民) was a caste during the Yamato period of ancient Japan. Most of them were farmers, but some had special skills and were known as Shinabe...

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Yamatai Honshu Theory

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continuous with the Yamato Kingship, with its capital in roughly the same region, and the Yamatai transformed into the Yamato Kingship when the Kofun period...

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The civil war of the Keitai and Kinmei dynasties

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presented the idea that the Yamato dynasty (Yamato Kingship (ヤマト王権, Yamato Ouken)) was divided into two separate dynasties in the Yamato Dynasty. This idea was...

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Yamatai Kyushu Theory

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Yamato Kingship moved the capital east to the Kinai region, before eventually moving it to Kyoto, and finally Tokyo, the current capital. The Yamato District...

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