NATIVE CULTURE AND CONTINENTAL INFLUENCES
Before going on to the meagre story
which is supplied to us by the early years of Japanese
history, it will be well to glean from the myths and
legends which tradition has preserved the lessons which
they contain. Although we may be unable to concede
the truth of these traditions in their entirety, and
believe in the celestial origin of the race and the
wonders of the divine age, we may be able to obtain
from them many important facts regarding the habits
and manner of life of the early Japanese.
We have often referred to the admirable
work Mr. Chamberlain has done in his translation of
the Kojiki, and in the scholarly notes he has
added. But in our present enquiries we must give
him still greater credit for the important lessons
which he has drawn from the myths and legends of the
Kojiki in his learned introduction. No
writer at the present day can afford to dispense with
the deductions which he has been able to draw from
the oldest writings of the Japanese, and from the traditions
of an older date which these writings have preserved.
Relying therefore chiefly on this learned introduction,(68)
we propose to enumerate in a summary manner the particulars
concerning the early Japanese life.
In the first place the government
of the early Japanese was of the tribal order.
The emperor was the chieftain of an expedition which
came from the island of Kyushu and established a government
by conquest. The chiefs of the various localities
were reduced to subjection and became tributary to
the emperor, or were replaced by new chiefs appointed
by the emperor. The government was therefore
essentially feudal in its characteristics. The
emperor depended for the consideration of his plans
and for their execution upon officers who were attached
to his court. There were guilds composed of those
who manufactured various articles, or who were employed
to execute special plans. Thus we have guilds
of clay image makers, guilds of ladies attendant on
the emperor, guilds of butlers, guilds of cooks, guilds
of guards, etc. To each of these there was
a captain who became by appointment hereditary chief.
We have no mention of money for the payment of services
rendered. The taxes were probably paid in kind.
And all transactions as far as they are mentioned
at all seem to have been of the nature of barter.
The religious notions of the prehistoric
Japanese were founded on the myths relating to their
ancestor. Notwithstanding the vast number of
deities who came into existence according to tradition,
most of them vanish as soon as they are named and
are no more heard of. Even deities like Izanagi
and Izanami, who are represented as taking so important
a part in events, are not perpetuated as objects of
worship in Japanese history, and have no temples erected
to their memory and no service prescribed or maintained
in their honor. The most important deity in the
Pantheon of the Japanese was Amaterasu-o-mi-kami,
who is also called in Chinese characters Tensho Daijin
or the Sun Goddess. She appears not only in the
myths concerning the origin of the Japanese race, but
as the grandmother of the divine prince Hiko-ho-no-ni-nigi,
who first came down to rule the Japanese empire.
In the Shinto temples at Ise the principal deity worshipped
at Geku is Uke-moche-no-Kami, and the secondary
deities Ninigi-no-Mikoto, who came down to found the
Japanese empire and was the grandmother of the Emperor
Jimmu, and two others. At the Naiku the principal
deity is Amaterasu-o-mi-kami (from heaven
shining great deity), also called the Sun Goddess,
and two secondary deities. The temples at Ise,
especially those that are dedicated to the Sun Goddess,
are the most highly regarded of any in Japan.
Other temples of considerable popularity are situated
in other parts of the empire. Thus there are Shinto
temples in Kyushu and in Izumo, which are old parts
of Japan settled long before Buddhism was introduced.
The Shinto religion must be regarded
as the primitive religion of the Japanese people.
It prevailed among them long before Buddhism was propagated
by priests from Korea. It differs from all known
systems of religion, in having no body of dogma by
which its adherents are held together. The greatest
advocate of Shintoism, Moto-ori, a writer of the
18th century, admits that it has no moral code.
He asserts that “morals(69) were invented by
the Chinese because they were an immoral people, but
in Japan there was no necessity for any system of morals,
as every Japanese acted rightly if he only consulted
his own heart.”
Reference is frequently made in the
early stories to divination, or the process of obtaining
the will of the gods by indirection. The oldest
method of divination was by using the shoulder-blade
of a deer. It was scraped entirely free from
flesh, and then placed over a fire made from cherry
wood. The divine will was determined by the cracks
caused by the fire in the bone. A later method
of divination was by using the shell of a tortoise
in the same way as the shoulder-blade of the deer was
used. They had superstitions about fighting with
the back to the sun; about using only one light in
the house at once; about breaking off the teeth of
a comb in the night-time; about the destination of
the first arrow shot in battle, etc.
The superstition of impurity being
attached to the mother at the birth of a child, and
to the house and those associated with it in which
a death occurred, is often mentioned. A mother,
when about to be delivered, was required to retire
alone into a separate dwelling or hut without windows.
This cruel custom has prevailed in the island of Hachijo(70)
down almost to the present time. A custom prevailed,
also, of abandoning the dwelling in which a death
had occurred. The dead body was removed to a mourning
hut, where amid sobs and weeping the mourners continued
to hold a carousal, feasting upon the food provided
for the dead. This abandonment of the house occupied
by the living may explain the custom, so often referred
to, of each new emperor occupying a different palace
from that of his predecessor. We have already
referred to the dreadful custom which prevailed until
the reign of the Emperor Suinin, of burying living
retainers around the sepulchre of their dead master.
The custom was replaced by burying clay images of
servants and animals around the tomb, and this continued
till about A.D. 700.
There is no evidence that children
received any kind of education other than a training
in the use of arms and implements. The art of
writing was brought over from Korea in A.D. 284.
Up to this time there is nothing to show that the
Japanese possessed any means of recording the events
which occurred. No books existed, and reading
and writing were unknown. The language spoken
by the people was an ancient form of that which now
prevails. The earliest examples of this language
are found in the songs preserved in the Kojiki
and Nihongi. As in every language, the
earliest preserved specimens are poetry, so in Japanese
the fragments which have been remembered and brought
down to us, are scraps of songs. The origin of
this language is, like the origin of the race, impossible
at present to verify. It seems plain that the
race came from the continent by way of Korea.
If this is to be taken as the origin of the race, then
the language which developed into the Japanese came
from the northern tribes of China and of Siberia.
There is no indication of the method
by which the early Japanese reckoned time. The
sun in the daytime and the cocks by night, must have
given them their division of hours. The year
made itself apparent by the changes of temperature.
It was not, however, till the introduction of calendars
from China that anything like an accurate system of
estimating and recording time was introduced.
The food of the primitive Japanese
was much more largely animal than it became in later
times. To the early Japanese there was no restriction
in the use of animal food, such as the Buddhists introduced.
Fish and shell-fish have always been, and doubtless
from the first were, principal articles of food.
The five grains, so called, are often referred to,
and are specially mentioned in the Shinto rituals,
whose origin goes back to prehistoric times.
These grains(71) are rice, millet, barley, and two
kinds of beans. Silkworms and their food plant,
the mulberry, are likewise spoken of. The only
kind of drink referred to is sake. It will
be remembered that in the myth concerning the Impetuous
Male Deity in Izumo, the old man and old woman were
directed to prepare eight tubs of sake, by
drinking which the eight-headed serpent was intoxicated.
In the traditional history of the emperors, they are
represented as drinking sake, sometimes even
to intoxication. And in the rituals recited when
offerings are made to their deities, the jars of sake
are enumerated among the things offered. The
Japanese writers claim that sake was a native
discovery, but there is a well supported belief that
in very early times they borrowed the art of manufacturing
it from the Chinese. There is at least a difficulty
in believing that this liquor should have been invented
independently in the two countries. Chopsticks
are mentioned in early Japanese times, and clay vessels
for food, and cups for drinking made of oak leaves.
On the whole, the conclusions to be drawn from the
earliest traditions concerning the Japanese lead us
to regard them as having attained a material degree
of civilization in all matters pertaining to food
and drink. Yet it cannot be regarded as other
than strange that milk, cheese and butter are nowhere
mentioned, and had never been used.
In the matter of clothing we have
little except hints to guide us in forming inferences.
The rituals enumerate(72) “bright cloth, soft
cloth, and coarse cloth.” Mr. Satow remarks(73)
on this enumeration that “in the earliest ages
the materials used were the bark of the paper-mulberry
(broussonetia papyrifera), wistaria tendrils
and hemp, but when the silkworm was introduced the
finer fabric naturally took the place of the humbler
in the offerings to the gods.” The paper-mulberry
which is now used for making paper, was in early times
twisted into a thread and woven into a very serviceable
cloth. Cotton(74) which now furnishes so large
a part of the clothing of the people is nowhere mentioned.
The skins of animals were doubtless used as clothing
before the introduction of Buddhism made the killing
of animals uncommon. In the legend of the purification
of Izanagi(75) we read of a girdle, of a skirt, of
an upper garment, of trousers, and of a hat.
What the shapes of these garments were we cannot tell,
but the number of different garments indicates a considerable
development in the ideas of clothing. In the same
myth, and in many other places, mention is made of
the bracelets which Izanagi wore on the left and right
arm. And when he wished to show his pleasure in
the daughter who had been produced in washing his
left eye, he invested her with his necklace taken
from his own neck. Jewelry seems in these prehistoric
times to have been more commonly worn than in modern
historical times. The jewels(76) used were the
magatama and kudatama which have been
found in the ancient burial places.
Rings have also been found which are
believed to date back to prehistoric times. From
the clay images which have come down to us it is now
ascertained that the rings were worn as ornaments to
the ears and never as rings to the fingers. These
rings are of copper or bronze, plated with gold or
silver. Combs and mirrors are spoken of, but how
the metal mirrors are made we do not know.
The only indications of the character
of the houses(77) used by the early Japanese are found
in the traditions respecting the primitive Shinto
temples. The early methods of building were perpetuated
in these temples, and in the eighteenth century a
very persistent effort was made for the revival of
pure Shinto. Under the influence of this movement
the temples at Ise and elsewhere were purified from
the contaminations which had been introduced by Buddhism.
After the close of the war which resulted in the restoration
of the emperor to his proper authority in 1868 a small
temple in the most severe Shinto style was built at
Kudan, one of the picturesque heights of Yedo, in
memory of the soldiers who perished in the conflict.
From a careful examination of all that can illustrate
the houses of the early Japanese, we infer that they
were of extreme simplicity. Stone was never used.
The structures were entirely of wood. Even the
palaces of the emperors were what we would call merely
huts. Four upright posts sunk in the ground formed
the corners. At the half-way intervals between
these posts, were planted four other posts; those
at the gable ends were high enough to sustain the
ridge pole. On the other sides on the top of the
posts were laid two plates. Abutting on these
plates and crossing each other at the ridge pole stood
the rafters, which sustained the thatched roof.
In the absence of nails and pins, the timbers were
fastened together by the tough tendrils of climbing
plants. A hole in the gable end permitted the
escape of the smoke from the fire built on the ground
floor. Around the sides of the interior stood
a raised couch on which the occupants sat by day and
slept at night. The other parts of the floor were
uncovered and consisted only of earth. They used
mats made from the skins of animals or from rushes,
on which they sat and slept. The doors of their
dwellings were fastened by means of iron hooks, and
swung on hinges unlike the modern Japanese door which
always is made to slide.
The agricultural plants spoken of
are numerous but leave unmentioned many of the plants
of first importance. Tea, now so extensively cultivated,
is nowhere spoken of. Tobacco was a late importation
and came in with the Portuguese in the sixteenth century.
Cotton was not introduced, as we have already said,
until the beginning of the ninth century. Potatoes,
including both the sweet potato and the white potato,
are unmentioned. The orange came to Japan according
to the received tradition at the close of the reign
of the Emperor Suinin (A.D. 29-70).
Very little is said of the implements
used by the primitive Japanese. Metal of any
kind was almost unknown. We read of swords and
fish-hooks, but these are the only implements referred
to which seem to have been made of metal. Pots
and cups of earthenware were used. The axes which
they must have used to cut down the trees for building
and for fuel must have been of stone, or sometimes
of deer’s horn. Archaeologists both native
and foreign have brought to light many ancient implements
of the Stone age. An interesting and detailed
account of these discoveries will be found in the
work on Japanese Archaeology by Henry Von Siebold,
Yokohoma, 1879.
The arms used by the warriors were
spears, bows and arrows, and swords. Numerous
arrow heads have been found which bear a striking likeness
to those found in Europe and America. Spear heads
of flint have also been found. That the people
were emerging from the Stone age is shown by the swords
made of metal which they are represented as habitually
using. They also seem to have had a small sword
or dagger, as in the myth of the traitorous plot entered
into by the empress and her brother against the Emperor
Suinin. Castles in the modern sense are not referred
to, although the same word shiro is used to
represent the stockades with which they protected
themselves. The castles of modern times, such
as those at Kumamoto, Owari, and Yedo, are without
doubt the outgrowth of the primitive stockade, and
the same name has continued to be applied in all the
successive changes.
Few domestic animals are mentioned.
The horse is spoken of as an animal for riding, but
not for driving. The same thing may be said of
the use of horses in Japan even until modern times.
The domestic fowl is referred to in the myth of the
disappearance of the Sun Goddess. Dogs are mentioned
in the later parts of the traditional period, but
not cats. The cow and the products of the cow
are not referred to. To these domestic animals
may be added the cormorant,(78) which was used for
fishing, in the same way that it is used in the eastern
parts of China and to a small extent in the waters
of Owari and Mino at the present time. The wild
animals of that day were the deer, the bear, the boar,
the hare, etc. These animals were hunted
for their flesh and for their skins.
The islands of Japan being largely
interspersed with water much of the travel even from
the earliest time was performed in boats. The
expedition of Jimmu from the island of Kyushu was
in part conducted in the boats which the colony had
constructed for the purpose. Whether these boats
were of the form now used in Japan it is impossible
to determine. It is probable however that the
present form of boat is an evolution of the primitive
boat, which was used by the prehistoric Japanese and
which was a part of the equipment with which their
ancestors came over from Korea to the islands of Japan.
Travel on land was principally on foot, although as
we have said the horse was used at this early day for
riding. No wheeled vehicle is mentioned.
The bullock cart used in later times was restricted
to the use of the imperial household, and probably
was introduced by the Buddhists. There were government
roads constructed from the home provinces in different
directions to those more distant. It is said that
this scheme was more fully carried out after the return
of the Empress Jingo from her conquest of Korea.
Let us now turn from these evidences
of native culture to the events of Japanese history
which have to do with the introduction of the civilization
from the continent. For three thousand years before
the Christian era China has been looked upon as one
of the cultured nations of the earth. No written
language has ever been or is now understood by so
many people as the Chinese. The Chinese were a
civilized people centuries before the Japanese had,
even according to their own uncertain legends, emerged
into the light as an empire. If we accept the
opinion which seems most reasonable, that the Japanese
came over to the Japanese islands from the continent
by way of Korea, and belong to the Mongol tribes of
central Asia, then we must assume that the Japanese
were closely related to a large section of the Chinese.
They have been from the beginning of their history
a receptive people. They have stood ready to welcome
the good things which were offered to them, coming
from whatever direction. They accepted eagerly
the Chinese written language and the philosophy with
which it came charged. They accepted Buddhism
with its priesthood and dogma and ritual, and permitted
it to crowd their native religion until it became
a pitiful minority. They have in recent times
accepted with a hearty impetuosity the civilization
of western nations, and are absorbing it as rapidly
as the habits and thoughts of a people can take in
so important a change.
We have already referred to the first
introduction(79) of Chinese literature into Japan.
It took place in the reign of the Emperor Ojin A.D.
284. The ambassador who brought the tribute from
Korea that year was Ajiki who was familiar with the
Chinese literature. He gave lessons in Chinese
to the crown prince. The next year the king of
Korea sent out an eminent scholar named Wani,(80)
who continued to give instruction to the crown prince.
From this time a knowledge of Chinese gradually spread
and scholars were attached to the government to make
a written record of the events which took place.
Historiographers were sent out during the reign of
the Emperor Hanzei, A.D. 404, who were directed to
make a record of all important events and forward
them to the court. These steps soon began to
show themselves in the absence of the wonderful and
legendary from the narrative of events. Beginning
with the reign of the Emperor Richu the ages of the
emperors which before his time had been of such a marvellous
length now drop to a reasonable and moderate period.
The nineteenth emperor was Inkyo,
the fourth son of the Emperor Nintoku. He was
of an amiable and philanthropic temperament, and accepted
the position of emperor with great reluctance.
His health was delicate, and he feared to take upon
himself such a responsibility. In the meantime
there was an interregnum, and the court officials
were anxious to have him enter upon the duties of
emperor. At last he consented and became emperor
A.D. 412. It was during his reign that confusion
arose concerning the family names, or rather, that
the confusion which had been long growing now had
its settlement. Family names had been a matter
of growth, and many persons claimed the right to use
a certain name who were in no wise entitled to it.
The emperor took a singular and effectual method to
settle the troublesome and personal questions that
arose. He summoned all those who claimed to belong
to any family whose claim was disputed to appear at
Amakashi and show that they were entitled to the names
they claimed. He placed jars of boiling water
and required each one to plunge his hand in the water.
He who was injured by the hot water was pronounced
a deceiver, and he who came off unhurt was pronounced
as entitled to the name. The emperor took occasion
to settle the questions concerning names, and put
the matter on a more stable basis. And as the
art of writing now began to be more common among the
people mistakes in regard to names did not again seriously
recur.
The emperor’s ill-health was
the occasion for the introduction of another of the
civilizing arts of the continent. When the annual
tribute from Korea was sent it so chanced that the
ambassador who came with it was a person versed in
the medical art. If we estimate this man’s
science or skill by that of the Chinese practitioner
of a later day, we should certainly not place a very
high value on it. It is narrated, however, that
he cured the imperial invalid, and by this means gained
great credit for his profession, and added another
to the obligations which Japan owed to the continent.
After the death of the Emperor Inkyo
there was a quarrel about the succession between his
two sons, Prince Kinashi-no-Karu and Prince Anaho-no-Oji.
The courtiers all favored the latter, who was the younger
brother, and he surrounded his elder brother in the
house of Monobe-no-Omai. Seeing no way of escape
he committed suicide.(81) The younger brother then
became the twentieth emperor, who is known under the
canonical name of Anko. He had another difficulty
growing out of social complications. He wanted
to make the younger sister of Okusaka-no-Oji, who
was the brother of the preceding Emperor Inkyo, the
wife of Ohatsuse-no-Oji, his own younger brother,
who afterwards became the Emperor Yuriyaku. He
sent as a messenger the court official, Ne-no-Omi,
to ask the consent of her elder brother, who gladly
gave it, and as a token of his gratitude for this
high honor he sent a rich necklace. Ne-no-Omi,
overcome with covetousness, kept the necklace for himself,
and reported to the emperor that Okusaka-no-Oji refused
his consent. The emperor was very angry, and
sent a detachment of troops against the supposed offender.
They surrounded the house and put him to death.
His chief attendants, knowing his innocence, committed
suicide by the side of their dead master. The
emperor then completed his design of taking the sister
of Okusaka-no-Oji as the wife of the Prince Ohatsuse-no-Oji,
and he also took his widow and promoted her to be
his empress.
Out of these circumstances arose serious
troubles. His new empress had a young son by
her first husband named Mayuwa-no-O, said to have been
only seven years old. With his mother he was
an inmate of the palace, and was probably a spoiled
and wayward boy. The emperor was afraid lest this
boy, when he came to understand who had been the cause
of the death of his father, would undertake to revenge
himself. He talked with the empress about his
fears and explained his apprehensions. The boy
accidentally heard the conversation, and was probably
stimulated thereby to do the very thing which the
emperor feared. Creeping stealthily into the room
where the emperor lay asleep he stabbed him and then
fled, taking refuge in the house of the Grandee Tsubura.
The emperor was fifty-six years of age at the time
of his death. This tragical event produced a great
excitement. The younger brother of the emperor,
Ohatsuse, amazed and angry because his two older brothers
were not, as he thought, sufficiently enraged by the
murder of the emperor, killed them both. Then
he attacked the Grandee Tsubura and the boy Mayuwa
in their refuge. Seeing no way of escape Tsubura,
at the request of the boy, first slew him and then
killed himself.
Subsequently Ohatsuse, who seemed
to have been of a violent disposition, murdered Ichinobe-no-Oshiha,
son of the seventeenth emperor, Richu. His two
sons, then merely boys, Oke and Woke (literally big
basket and little basket), hearing of this catastrophe
escaped into the province of Harima where they worked
as cow-herds. Ohatsuse was crowned as the twenty-first
emperor and is known by the canonical name of Yuriyaku
Tenno.
In the year A.D. 470 an ambassador
came from Go in China and by order of the emperor
was entertained by the Grandee Ne-no-Omi.
A court official, Toneri, was directed to see that
this duty was suitably performed. Now Ne-no-Omi,
it will be remembered, was the grandee who, on a former
occasion, was sent by the Emperor Anko to solicit the
hand of the Princess Hatahi-no-Oji for the present
emperor, who was then the crown prince. In order
to entertain the Chinese ambassador with becoming magnificence,
Ne-no-Omi robed himself in a gorgeous manner and
among other things put on the rich necklace which
he had stolen. Toneri reported to the emperor
the superb entertainment which Ne-no-Omi had
accorded to the Chinese ambassador, and especially
the necklace which he wore. The emperor innocently
asked that Ne-no-Omi should appear before him
in order that he might see his superb dress.
The empress, who was with her husband when Ne-no-Omi
came in, recognized the necklace which had been sent
by her brother to the late emperor. The theft
was charged and Ne-no-Omi compelled to confess.
The emperor proclaimed the innocence of Okusaka-no-Oji
and his great regret at the mistaken punishments.
There are many traditions current
in Japanese early history concerning this emperor.
In one he is represented in his imperial journeys to
have seen a house belonging to Lord Shiki built with
a raised roof like that of the imperial palace.
He was greatly enraged that any subject should dare
to take such a liberty, and sent his attendants to
burn the house down. The poor frightened lord
hastened to the emperor and humbly apologized for
his stupidity. And he presented to the emperor
in token of his humble submission a white dog clothed
with cloth and led by a string. So he was forgiven
and his house was spared.
In another legend he is said to have
come upon a beautiful girl by the river side washing
clothes. He stopped and conferred with her, and
said to her, “Do not thou marry a husband, I
will send for thee.” With this he returned
to the palace and forgot about his promise. But
the poor girl did not forget. Year after year
passed, till at last after eighty years of waiting
she was a very old woman. Then she thought, “My
face and form are lean and withered, there is no longer
any hope. Nevertheless, if I do not show the
Heavenly Sovereign how truly I have waited, my disappointment
will be unbearable.” And so with such gifts
as she could afford she presented herself before the
emperor. He wondering at her and her gifts asked
her, “What old woman art thou, and why art thou
come hither?” She replied, “Having in
such and such a month and such and such a year received
the Heavenly Sovereign’s commands, I have been
reverently awaiting the great command until this day,
and eighty years have passed by. Now, my appearance
is decrepit and there is no longer any hope.
Nevertheless, I have come forth in order to show and
declare my faithfulness.” Thereupon the
Heavenly Sovereign, greatly agitated, exclaimed, “I
had quite forgotten my command; and thou meanwhile,
ever faithfully awaiting my commands, hast vainly
let pass by the years of thy prime. It is too
pitiful.” He sent her back to her home with
such consolation as rich gifts could impart.
We give one more of the legends which
cling to the name of this emperor.
He was making an imperial progress
to the moor of Akizu for the purpose of hunting.
And as he sat down to rest a horse-fly bit his august
arm. But immediately a dragon-fly came and seized
the horse-fly and flew away. Thereupon he composed
an august song as follows:
Who is it tells in the great presence
that game is lying on the peak of Womuro, at Mi-Yeshinu?
Our Great Lord who tranquilly carries on the government,
being seated on the throne to await the game,
a horse-fly alights on and stings the fleshy part of
his arm fully clad in a sleeve of white stuff,
and a dragon-fly quickly eats up the horse-fly.
That it might properly bear its name, the land
of Yamato was called the Island of the Dragon-Fly.(82)
After a long reign Yuriyaku is said
in Kojiki to have died at the age of one hundred
and twenty-four.
The son of the Emperor Yuriyaku, Prince
Shiraka, succeeded him. He is known in history
as the Emperor Seinei. He lived only five years
after his accession and left no descendant to fill
the throne. Search was accordingly made for some
one of imperial blood who might become emperor.
It will be remembered that the Emperor Yuriyaku, before
his accession, had murdered Prince Ichinobe-no-Oshiwa,
son of the eighteenth emperor, and that his two sons,
then young boys, Princes Oke and Woke, made their
escape into the province of Harima. A new governor
of this province had just arrived and was in attendance
at the festivities in honor of the opening of a new
cave(83) by a citizen of the place. As usual there
was feasting, and drinking, and dancing. The
two young men Oke and Woke, who occupied menial positions
in this household, were called upon to dance.
After some hesitation they each in succession danced
and sang some of the songs which they had learned
in their boyhood.(84) The new governor recognized
these songs to be such as were taught at the court,
and on enquiring found the young men to be grandsons
of the Emperor Richu. He brought them to the
palace and presented them to their aunt Queen Ii-Toyo.
After a friendly contest between the two brothers,
the younger one, Prince Woke, became the twenty-third
emperor under the canonical name of Kenzo. His
reign was a very short one, only eight years according
to the Kojiki and three years according to
the Nihongi. The only incident of consequence
recorded of him is that he sought out the burial place
of his father, who had been murdered by the Emperor
Yuriyaku, and transferred his remains to a fitting
mausoleum. He also contemplated the desecration
of the mausoleum of the murderer as a mark of his
vengeance, but was dissuaded by his brother from the
undertaking.
He died without children and was succeeded
by his elder brother Prince Oke who became A.D. 488
the twenty-fourth emperor under the canonical name
of Ninken.
Concerning the emperor and several
of his successors there is little of interest to record.
The twenty-fifth emperor, Muretsu (A.D. 499), who was
a son of the emperor Ninken, was chiefly notable for
his cruelty. Some of the acts recorded of him
can only be equalled by those of the degenerate occupants
of the imperial throne of Rome in its worst days.
He reigned eleven years and died without children.
The twenty-sixth emperor was Keitai Tenno, who was
the fifth descendant from Ojin Tenno. The only
noticeable events in his reign were an expedition to
Korea to settle difficulties which had then intervened,
and an expedition to Chikushi, the northern part of
Kyushu, to repress tumults which had arisen. The
next emperors were Ankan Tenno and Senkuwa Tenno,
whose reigns were uneventful.
The twenty-ninth emperor was Kimmei
Tenno, (A.D. 540-571), who was the son of Keitai Tenno.
He reigned thirty-two years and died at the age of
sixty-three. It was during his reign, in A.D.
552, that an ambassador from Kudara, one of the three
provinces of Korea, presented to the emperor an image
of Shaka, and also Buddhist books explaining the doctrine.
He commended highly the new religion, and the emperor
was deeply impressed with its novelties. This
seems the more probable because up to this time Japan
looked upon China and Korea as leaders in civilization,
and therefore was disposed to regard what had obtained
a footing there as worthy of acceptance.
The prime-minister Soga-no-Iname favored
the new religion, and urged that the image of Shaka
which had been brought over should be duly set up and
worshipped. But the ministers Monobe-no-Okoshi
and Kumako opposed the proposition, saying, “Our
country has its own gods; and they perhaps will be
angry with us if we pay our devotions to a foreign
god.”
But the emperor settled the matter
by saying, “Let Iname try it.” He
gave the idol to Iname with the directions that he
should set it up and pray to it. Accordingly
Iname took the image of Shaka and established it in
a house of his own, which he created a temple, and
worshipped it.
But shortly after this an epidemic
broke out in the country, and Okoshi and Kumako declared
that it was due to the strange god which had been
received from the western barbarians, and besought
the emperor to have it thrown away. The image
therefore by the emperor’s command was thrown
into the sea near Naniwa,(85) and the temple in which
it had been erected was destroyed. This was the
first movement towards the introduction of Buddhism.
In the reign of the thirtieth emperor,
Bitatsu Tenno, A.D. 572, who was the son of Kimmei
Tenno, Kudara again made a contribution of Buddhist
emblems, viz.: books of Buddhist doctrine;
a priest of Ritsu sect; a priest; a nun; a diviner;
an image maker; and a Buddhist temple carpenter.
These were all housed in the temple of Owake-no-O at
Naniwa. Seven years after this two Japanese ambassadors
who had been sent to Kudara brought back with them
several Buddhist images of stone, which the Daijin
Umako obtained as his possession. He built several
Buddhist temples in which he placed the images and
other precious relics which he had secured. He
also built a pagoda and houses in which the priests
and nuns resided. When Umako was sick he asked
from the emperor that he might avail himself of the
Buddhist ritual. The emperor gave him this privilege,
but commanded him to restrict it to himself.
The Emperor Bitatsu died A.D. 585
at the age of forty-eight. His successor was
Emperor Yomei the thirty-first in order from the Emperor
Jimmu. He was by his mother a descendant of the
Soga family and his first wife was also a daughter
of the prime-minister, the Noble Iname who was also
of the Soga family. The bitter hostility between
the members of the court who favored Buddhism and
those who opposed it continued. The leader of
the former party was Umako now the prime-minister,
while the opponents of Buddhism were led by Moriya.
One of the occasions when their hostility broke out
was when the emperor was taken sick and he wished to
try the effect of the Buddhist Sampo, that is, the
three precious elements of Buddhism, Buddha, the rites
of Buddhism, and the Buddhist priests. Moriya
and his party advised against this conformity to Buddhism,
but Umako supported him in his wishes and introduced
a Buddhist priest into the palace to attend upon the
emperor. In spite of all this effort, however,
the emperor died, having reigned only three years.
The death of the emperor was the signal
for the breaking out of serious disturbances.
Moriya the champion of the old religion was killed
and his party overpowered. From this time Buddhism
may be said to have triumphed in Japan. The thirty-second
emperor, Sujun, was crowned A.D. 588. He was
the son of the Emperor Kimmei, and at the time of his
accession was sixty-nine years of age. The communication
with Korea continued, and more and more of the Buddhist
culture was introduced. Umako, who now had undisputed
sway in the government, sent out to Korea persons to
study the Buddhist faith, and consecrated many priests
and nuns and erected temples for the new worship.
But everything did not move smoothly.
Umako, with all his zeal and enthusiasm for Buddhism,
was suspected of personal ambition, and was looked
upon with distrust. A plot to assassinate the
emperor was planned by Umako, which terminated his
life, after a reign of only four years, in the seventy-third
year of his age.
The thirty-third sovereign was the
Empress Suiko, who was the sister of the Emperor Yomei.
Her coronation took place A.D. 593. Her reign
was chiefly remarkable for the active influence of
Umaydo-no-Oji (A.D. 572-622), who was the second son
of the Emperor Yomei, and who was made crown prince
under the empress, and aided her in the administration
of the political affairs of the government. This
prince is better known by his posthumous title of
Shotoku Taishi (great teacher of the divine virtue),
and is held in great reverence as the principal founder
and promoter of Buddhism in Japan. His name has
been linked with many legends, which are still current
after the lapse of fourteen hundred years. It
is said that as soon as he was born he was able to
speak, and was in all respects a very clever boy.
His memory was wonderfully acute. He had Napoleon
the Great’s talent of attending to several things
at the same time. He could hear the appeals of
eight persons at once, and give to each a proper answer.
From this circumstance he sometimes went by the name
of Yatsumimi-no-Oji, that is, Prince of Eight Ears.
The prince threw the whole influence
of the government in favor of Buddhism. Many
temples were built in different central districts for
the convenience of the new religion. Under his
influence the officers of the government rivalled
each other in founding temples and maintaining them
at their own expense. He took as his teacher
a priest who had recently come from Korea, and from
him for the first time learned the five Buddhist commandments:
1. Against stealin.
Against lyin. Against intemperanc. Against murde. Against
adultery.
He gave command to an artificer in
copper to make large images of Buddha for each of
the officers in the government. The king of Koma
in Korea hearing of this great undertaking sent a
contribution of three hundred ryo of gold.
The images were finished in due time and an imposing
religious ceremonial was held in honor of the event.
Many of the principal temples of Buddhism in different
parts of Japan take their origin from the time of
Shotoku Taishi, and no single character in history
is so intimately connected with the development of
Buddhism.
It was not only as a religious reformer,
however, that he deserves to be remembered. He
was a a most painstaking and enlightened ruler.
He studiously gathered from the Chinese the elements
and methods of government and adapted them to his
own country.(86) From his time the study of Chinese
literature became the essential culture of the active
minds of Japan.
Shotoku Taishi died A.D. 622, having
been the principal officer of the government for twenty-nine
years.
The impulse which Shotoku had given
to Buddhism did not subside. In the year following
his death officers were appointed to govern the growing
religious communities, called Sosho and Sozu, which
in dignity and power corresponded to archbishops and
bishops in Christian nomenclature. The first
archbishop was Kwankin, a priest from Kudara, and the
first bishop was Tokuseki of Kurabe. These officials
examined every priest and nun and made a register
of them. A census of Buddhism is also given which
belongs to this same period. According to this
there were forty-six Buddhist temples and 1385 priests
and nuns.
In the year A.D. 626, Soga-no-Umako
the daijin and a life-long friend and promoter
of Buddhism died, and two years later the Empress Suiko
died. So nearly all the prominent participants
in the events which had taken place since the first
entrance of Buddhism into Japan, had disappeared.
In the meantime a religion had taken possession of
a field in which it was destined to exert a wide influence
and undergo a national development.
Along with this religion had come
a literature and a culture, which when absorbed into
the life of this people gave them the permanent characteristics
which we now recognize as the Japanese civilization.
The freer and more frequent intercourse with China
and Korea brought with it not only a knowledge of
books and writing, but many improvements in arts and
many new arts and agricultural industries. When
the forces of the Empress Jingo returned from Korea
they brought with them persons skilled in many industrial
occupations. It is a tradition that a descendant
of the Kan dynasty in China had fled to Korea on the
fall of that dynasty, and in the twentieth year of
the Emperor Ojin (A.D. 290) had migrated to Japan
with a colony who were familiar with weaving and sewing.
In the thirty-seventh year of the same emperor an
officer was sent to China to obtain more weavers and
sewers. The cultivation of the mulberry tree and
the breeding of silk-worms(87) was introduced from
China in A.D. 457, and in order to encourage this
industry the empress herself engaged in it. At
this early period this important industry was begun,
or at least received an impulse which has been continued
down to the present time.
With these industrial arts came in
rapid succession the elements of a higher civilization.
Books on almanac-making, astronomy, geography and
divination were brought to Japan from Korea and China.
The Chinese calendar(88) was first used in the reign
of the Empress Suiko under the regency of Shotoku
Taishi. This almanac was based on the lunar periods
and the civil year began with the new moon occurring
about the beginning of February. But as the length
of the civil year is not an exact multiple of the
number of days contained in a lunation, the twelve
lunar months used by the Chinese and Japanese will
be about eleven days shorter than the solar year.
Hence to prevent the discrepancy from increasing and
throwing the seasons entirely out of their place in
the calendar, an intercalary month was inserted nearly
every third year. It was inserted not at the end
of the year but whenever the discrepancy had reached
the number of days in a lunation. The month thus
inserted was called by the same name as the preceding
with an explanatory prefix. From this period therefore
the dates of Japanese events may be relied upon with
some degree of certainty. For events occurring
before this period, a knowledge of which must have
been transmitted by oral tradition, the dates assigned
to them in the Nihongi must have been computed
by counting back to the supposed time according to
the calendar in use at the time of the writing.
The astronomy and geography introduced
into Japan along with almanac-making in the fifth
century were without question very primitive sciences.
At this time even in Europe the knowledge of these
sciences was not advanced beyond the imperfect notions
of the Greeks. It was not until the sixteenth
century, when the discoveries of the Portuguese and
the Spaniards and the English had revealed the shape
and the divisions of the earth, and the Jesuits had
carried this knowledge to China and Japan, that anything
like a correct astronomy or geography was possible.
By divination, which is mentioned as one of the sciences
brought over from Korea, was meant the determination
of future events or of lucky or unlucky conditions.
The most important civilizing force
introduced from China at this period was the formal
institutions of education. Although the first
establishment of a school dates from the reign of
the Emperor Tenji (A.D. 668-671), yet it was not till
the reign of the Emperor Mommu (A.D. 697-707) that
the university was regularly organized. Branch
schools were also established in the several provinces.
In the university there were departments for Chinese
literature, for medicine, for astronomy and almanac-making,
and for astrology. Under the first head were
included the art of writing the Chinese characters,
the practice of composition, the study of the Chinese
classics, and the reading of books of Chinese history.
In like manner the training of the students in medicine
chiefly consisted in making them familiar with the
methods which prevailed in China. The properties
of medicinal plants, the variations of the pulse in
health and disease and in the changing seasons, and
the anatomy of the human body were the chief subjects
of study. The human cadaver was never dissected,
but a knowledge of anatomy was obtained from diagrams
which were wholly hypothetical. In early times
medical officers were appointed to experiment with
medicines upon monkeys, and also to dissect the bodies
of monkeys. From these dissections, as well
as from the printed diagrams of Chinese books the
imperfect knowledge which they had reached was derived.
It was not till 1771 that Sugita Genpaku(89) and several
other Japanese scholars had an opportunity to dissect
the body of a criminal, and by personal observation
found the utter falsity of the Chinese diagrams on
which they had hitherto relied, and the correctness
of the Dutch books, which they had, contrary to the
laws of the country, learned to read.
The great reverence felt for Chinese
culture led to the introduction at an early date of
the Chinese system of official rank. The system
remained in force down to the restoration in 1868.
The officers were Daijo-daijin (Prime-Minister),
Sa-daijin (Minister of the Left), U-daijin
(Minister of the Right), together with eight boards,(90)
charged with the various duties of administration.
These boards were divided into sections, and the various
departments of the government were respectively performed
by them. In this way the administration became
thoroughly bureaucratic, in imitation of the Chinese
empire, to which the Japanese at this time looked
up with the most complete reverence.
In addition to these official boards,
six official ranks were also introduced from China.
These ranks were designated, first, virtue; second,
humanity; third, propriety; fourth, truth; fifth, righteousness,
and sixth, wisdom. Each of these ranks(91) was
divided into two orders termed respectively the Greater
and the Lesser. Thus there were twelve distinctions
in this system. It was introduced in the reign
of the Empress Suiko, A.D. 604, and is generally attributed
to the Regent Shotoku, who was a great admirer of
the continental civilization. It existed in this
form until the time of the Emperor Kotoku, when, A.D.
649, it was extended to nineteen distinctions.
These were not given to the individual in recognition
of talent, but to families to be by them transmitted
to their posterity as hereditary rank.
For many years during this period
of active intercourse with China and Korea, Dazaifu,
situated on the west coast of Kyushu, north of the
present situation of Nagasaki, was the recognized
port where strangers were received. This city
was the seat of a vice-royalty, having control over
the nine provinces of Kyushu. The office of vice-governor
was considered a place of honorable banishment to
which distinguished men who were distasteful at court
could be sent.
These continental influences continued
for many years and indeed have never ceased.
There has always existed a class of scholars who looked
upon Chinese learning as the supreme pinnacle to which
the human mind could attain. This was especially
true of the admirers of Confucius and Confucianism.
Although it was not until a much later period that
the culture of a Chinese philosophy attained its highest
mark, yet even in the early arrangement of the studies
in the university we see the wide influence which
the writings of the Chinese classics exerted.
We close this chapter with an event
which evinced the advance which Japanese civilization
had made, and aided greatly in promoting this advance
in the subsequent centuries. This event was the
publication of the Kojiki (Record of Ancient
Things) and the Nihongi (Chronicles of Japan).
A book still older than these is said to have been
composed in A.D. 620, but it perished in a fire in
A.D. 645, although a fragment is said to have been
rescued. The circumstances attending the preparation
of the Kojiki are given by Mr. Satow in his
paper(92) on the “Revival of Pure Shinto,”
and also by Mr. Chamberlain(93) in his introduction
to the translation. The Emperor Temmu had resolved
to take measures to preserve the true traditions from
oblivion. He had the records carefully examined
and compiled. Then these collated traditions were
one by one committed to one of the household officers,
Hiyeda-no-Are, who had a marvellously retentive memory.
Before the work of compilation was finished the emperor
died; but the Empress Gemmyo, who after an interval
succeeded him, carried it on to its completion in
A.D. 712. By her direction the traditions were
taken down from Are’s dictation in the form in
which we now have them. It is by no means a pleasing
or attractive work, even in the opinion of the Japanese.
It is bald and archaic in its form and composition.
It is, however, notable as being freer from the admixture
of Chinese learning, and therefore a better index
of the native culture of the race than the works which
followed it.(94) Much of it consists of mere genealogies
of the emperors and naked statements of leading events,
but there are besides this many legends and poems
which bear evidence of having been handed down in
essentially their present form. As an authority
for the chronology of the early events it is, of course,
of small value. It is evident that where a narrative
of events has been carried through many centuries by
tradition alone, without written records to check or
assist it, no dependence can be placed on the chronology
of the events, further than, perhaps, on the order
of sequence.
Only eight years after the publication
of the Kojiki, a second work termed Nihongi
or Chronicles of Japan was issued. It was prepared
by imperial command and appeared in A.D. 720 in the
reign of the Empress Gensho. It differs from
the older book in being composed in the Chinese idiom,
and in being much more tinctured with the ideas of
Chinese philosophy. These two works, so nearly
contemporaneous, both of them composed in so great
a degree of the legendary elements of Japanese history,
must be looked upon as marking a distinct epoch in
the story of Japan.