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Japanese Philosophies and Religions On page ___ of your SS Notebook, SUMMARIZE in a few sentences each the key ideas of Shinto, Zen, and Bushido.

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Presentation on theme: "Japanese Philosophies and Religions On page ___ of your SS Notebook, SUMMARIZE in a few sentences each the key ideas of Shinto, Zen, and Bushido."— Presentation transcript:

1 Japanese Philosophies and Religions On page ___ of your SS Notebook, SUMMARIZE in a few sentences each the key ideas of Shinto, Zen, and Bushido.

2 Shintoism

3 Zen Buddhism

4 Bushido

5 Japan: The Meiji Restoration and Imperialism Copy down all notes that are NOT in italics on page ___ of your SS Notebook. (You do not need to copy titles.)

6 The Tokugawa Shogunate Tokugawa Ieyasu became the Shogun in 1603 and his descendants ruled until 1868. ISOLATION: By the mid-1600s no foreigners were allowed in Japan except one small Dutch community and occasional Chinese and Korean merchants. The Dutch were only allowed to have ships come once per year! The Tokugawa Shogunate is known for great art and literature.

7 Opening of Japan In 1853 U.S. Navy Commodore Matthew Perry arrived with gunships in Japan. Japanese officials did not want to open trade with the West, but realized that the U.S. military was more powerful than their own. (read letters to/from Emperor?) Japan agreed to open several ports to the U.S. (and then other European nations).

8 End of the Tokugawa Shogunate Rebel daimyo (lords) attacked western ships in 1863 and lost. When they failed to win, they were convinced they needed to change Japan. The rebels then overthrew the Shogun in 1868 and restored the Emperor as the true leader of Japan.

9 The Meiji Restoration The Emperor Meiji led a new era of reform and modernization, called “The Meiji Restoration.” Goal was western-style government (read Charter Oath of Emperor Meiji!!) Emperor selected upper house representatives, lower house elected. Government funded industrialization and education. Women were able to get an education and many moved into factory work. Japan brought in many westerners as teachers.

10 Japanese Imperialism Japan didn’t only westernize its government style and its economy. Japan also became an imperialist nation. 1876 – forced Korea to open ports to Japanese. 1894 – Sino-Japanese War: Japan wins control of some Chinese territory and China gives up all claims on Korea. (read declarations of war?)

11 Japanese Imperialism 1904 – Russo-Japanese War: Japan takes territory in China and islands from Russia.

12 Japanese Imperialism 1908 – Japan takes complete control of Korea (until end of WW II in 1945) – Koreans were forced to learn Japanese – Koreans were used as slave labor Overall, a very brutal occupation


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