This article is about about the Japanese clan with origin in Korea. For the ruling family of the Yamato state and imperial Japan, see Imperial House of Japan. For The ruling family of Yamato Province, see Yamato no Kuni no Miyatsuko.
This article is missing information about Why does an immigrant clan share the same name as the royal family? Is it because they are scribes of the family?. Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page.(November 2023)
Yamato no Fuhito clan 和
Parent house
Buyeo clan (扶餘氏)
Titles
Various
Founder
Prince Junda
Founding year
6th century
The Yamato no Fuhito (和史), also known as Yamato clan (和氏), was an immigrant clan active in Japan since the Kofun period (250–538), according to the history of Japan laid out in the Nihon Shoki. The name fuhito comes from their occupation as scribes. They were descended from Prince Junda (Junda Taishi) who died in 513 in Japan. He was a son of the 25th king of Baekje, Mureyong. His brother Seong became the 26th king of Baekje and his nephew Prince Imseong also settled in Japan.[1][2]
With the 2002 FIFA World Cup coming, an event hosted by Japan and South Korea, Emperor Akihito told reporters "I, on my part, feel a certain kinship with Korea, given the fact that it is recorded in the Chronicles of Japan that the mother of Emperor Kammu [Niigasa] was of the line of King Muryong of Baekje."[3] According to the Shoku Nihongi, Niigasa was a descendant of Prince Junda, son of Muryeong.[4][5]
It was the first time that a reigning Japanese emperor himself mentioned Korean blood in the imperial line, although it was nothing unknown at the time. During the Japanese Empire, the Imperial family and its connections to Korea were often used under the pretext of assimilating Koreans (see Nissen dōsoron). This was done in order to encourage Korean subjects of the Japanese Empire to embrace Japanization and the Japanese Emperor's divinity.
^Ōuchi family tree, Ō uchi Tatarashi fuch ō (大内多々良氏譜牒)
^Shinsen Shōjiroku
^Watts, Jonathan."The emperor's new roots". The Guardian, 28 Dec 2001.
^Sin, Ki-uk (2004). Colonial modernity in Korea. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Univ. Asia Center. ISBN 978-0-674-00594-5. OCLC 600240397.
^Nihon Shoki Chapter 17
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