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Yamato people information


Yamato
大和民族
Yamato-no-Takeru, prince of the Yamato dynasty
Regions with significant populations
Yamato people Japan
Languages
Japanese
Religion
Traditionally
Shinto and Japanese Buddhism
Largely
Irreligion
Minority
Christianity, Japanese new religions
Related ethnic groups
  • Ryukyuan people
  • Yayoi people
  • Ainu people
  • Jōmon people

The Yamato people (大和民族, Yamato minzoku, lit.'Yamato ethnicity') or the Wajin (和人 / 倭人, lit.'Wa people')[1] is a term to describe the ethnic group that comprises over 98% of the population of Japan. Genetic and anthropometric studies has showed that the Yamato are an admixture of the migratory Kofun and Yayoi, who arrived from mainland East and Southeast Asia via the Korean Peninsula, as well as the indigenous Jōmon that were already living on the Japanese archipelago for thousands of years prior.[2]

It can also refer to the first people that settled in Yamato Province (modern-day Nara Prefecture). Generations of Japanese historians, linguists, and archeologists have debated whether the word is related to the earlier Yamatai (邪馬臺). The Yamato clan set up Japan's first and only dynasty. The clan became the ruling faction in the area, and incorporated native Japanese, Chinese and Korean migrants.[3] The clan leaders also elevated their own belief system that featured ancestor worship into a national religion known as Shinto.[3]

The term came to be used around the late 19th century to distinguish the settlers of mainland Japan from minority ethnic groups inhabiting the peripheral areas of the then Japanese Empire, including the Ainu, Ryukyuans, Nivkh, as well as Chinese, Koreans, and Austronesians (Taiwanese indigenous peoples and Micronesians) who were incorporated into the Empire of Japan in the early 20th century. The term was eventually used as race propaganda. After Japan's surrender in World War II, the term became antiquated for suggesting pseudoscientific racist notions that have been discarded in many circles.[4] Ever since the fall of the Empire, Japanese statistics only count their population in terms of nationality, rather than ethnicity.

  1. ^ David Blake Willis and Stephen Murphy-Shigematsu: Transcultural Japan: At the Borderlands of Race, Gender and Identity,, p. 272: "Wajin," which is written with Chinese characters that can also be read "Yamato no hito" (Yamato person).
  2. ^ Tetsuya, Ishikura (7 October 2021). "DNA study points to three ancestral populations for modern Japanese". The Asahi Shimbun. Archived from the original on 6 October 2021. Retrieved 4 April 2023.
  3. ^ a b Tignor, Robert (2013). Worlds Together, Worlds Apart Volume 1: Beginnings through the Fifteenth Century. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. p. 346. ISBN 978-0-393-12376-0.
  4. ^ Tessa Morris-Suzuki (1998). "Debating Racial Science in Wartime Japan". Osiris. 13: 354–375. doi:10.1086/649291. JSTOR 301889. PMID 11640198. S2CID 39701840.

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