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a decentralized government with rule by emperors or empresses. There was an early emphasis on the
warrior class of nobles. From prehistoric times Japan was greatly influenced by Chinese culture. Almost
every aspect of Japan's higher culture in the earliest centuries was borrowed from the Chinese:
government, legal code, writing system, literature, religion, and art. The Chinese writing system wasofficially adopted by the Japanese in the fifth century c.e. Scholars lament that the Japanese used Chinese
symbols to write spoken Japanese. As the Japanese language is phonetically quite different from the
Chinese, learning to write Japanese was and is a laborious undertaking. To overcome some of this
difficulty, many Chinese words were adopted by the Japanese, and scholars in Japan learned to read
Chinese, not speak it. Later, it will be the women of the court that will develop the written Japanese.
By the mid sixth century, Buddhism gained a foothold in Japan via Korea. By the late sixth century
Buddhism was the religion of the Japanese court and by the mid eighth century it was the state religion.
Little antagonism occurred between Shintoism and Buddhism in Japan, however. Frequently the same
shrine was sacred to both faiths. Japanese priests whether Buddhists or Shinto did not constitute a
hierarchy with coercive powers over people like in the West.
During the Tang Dynasty in China (seventh through the tenth centuries), Japanese borrowings
from China reached new heights: medical practices, military tactics, road building techniques, household
furniture, dress, Confucian writings, and family sacrificing to their ancestral spirits. The Japanese Imperial
system was almost an exact replica of the Chinese Imperial one.
In Japan, however, the imperial family was never dethroned as in China, but the imperial government was
never all pervasive, and the aristocracy had more power in Japanese society.
In very early Japanese society, women held a position of prominence. Some clans were headed by
women, and family structure was originally both matriarchal and matrilineal. This is remarkable only
because of the extreme subordination of Japanese women in later eras. However, the transition to a
patriarchal system was complete by the third century c.e., and polygamy was a common practice by that
time, especially in the upper classes. Society was pyramidal in structure, with the highest rank aristocratic
and hereditary. Slavery existed, but not in large numbers. Most slaves were simply personal servants.
The Ama - communities of women divers as their oral traditions suggest, were matrilineal,
matrilocal, and perhaps even matriarchal. Today women are still diving beneath the sea for pearls,
seaweed, and abalone. Some of them today make nearly $100,000. These modern-day ama live in
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matrilocal communities, as do the Korean women who dive on Cheju Island. Even though Confucians
ethical code had men claiming exclusive control of ritual, they also had contempt for manual labor.
Confucian ideas devalue working women, but the irony is that is the women who support their families
and run the village economy.Japan's history is divided into various historical periods with some overlapping. The Yamato
period from 660 b.c.e. to 710 c.e. begins its history, but we think that some of the information for this
period probably refers to the prehistoric Jomon Period.
Decentralized government was the structure with rule by both emperors and empresses. Before the eighth
century, half of the main rulers were women. We do have records and burial locations for some of these
incredible impressive imperial rulers. Jingu, in described in Japan's first mytho-history the Kojiki or
Records of Ancient Matters. She was a great warrior empress said to have led Japanese warriors on the
invasion of Korea. Empress Jito in the eighth century became a significant influence at court, and through
her broad tradition of royal mika, she communicated directly with the gods of kami. She may even have
had the rare experience for a shaman as conversing directly with the chief of all kami at Ise, the sun
goddess Amaterasu. Jito's advice was essential for guiding affairs of the Japanese state. In the Nara period,
Empress Koken ruled as the forty-sixth and forty-eighth imperial ruler, 749-58 and 764-770. After her first
reign she abdicated in favor of her male second cousin, but after six years took the crown from him, and
reacended the throne. Unfortunately, Empress Koken, ca. 749-58 was denigrated for her affair with a
Buddhist monk. She thus became the stereotypical example of a dangerous woman as recorded in the
Buddhists texts, even though the real struggle in her reign was between important aristocratic families at
court including the Fujiwara family, and their powerful Buddhist competitors. After Empress Koken's
reign, women never again ruled as empresses in their own right. The only exception was those women
who ruled during the Tokugawa Shogunate (1600-1868), when the imperial family was a virtual political
prisoner of the shoguns.
During this time also folk traditions concerning women stigmatized them for their association with
various polluting elements: menstrual blood, postpartum discharge, and sexual activity. All these female
facets were seen as the power of women for doing good or evil, but as usual the negative powers were
given more discussion in the sources. Over time, women's political and religious powers diminished due to
these folk traditions.
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Japanese women were active in the various religious practices and beliefs in Ancient and Medieval
Japan. There is universal recognition of the connections in Japanese myths, the power of female shamans,
and the sun goddess Amaterasu, the supreme deity in the Shinto Pantheon. Their role as shamans is a long
tradition that probably included the Neolithic period. Women alone could predict, prophesy, and mediatebetween this world and the other ones. Another aspect of shamanism was the tradition of mica, where
women were capable of hearing and transmitting instructions and advice of the gods. Sometimes these
mika were called Shinto princesses. They would be called upon in difficult cases to try to establish the
truth. The gods or kami spoke through the mika's voice after she went into a trance.
Himiko was an early eighth century shaman described in the Wei Chronicles. She was unmarried
and lived in relative seclusion, attended by many women. One male was allowed in the palace, who
transmitted her words to the Japanese. She was even known to bewitch people, and had a close connection
with the sun goddess. At her death a mound was raised more than one hundred paces in diameter to
commemorate her important place in the culture. A king was then placed on the throne, but people would
not obey him, so they made a relative of Himiko, a thirteen-year old girl, Iyo, as the queen. Order was then
restored.
Women participated equally in Japan's festivals and celebrations. One of the most important was
the festival of the Maid Star or Tanabata Festival, which was directed principally toward women. It is still
held today in Japan. Women especially in the countryside continued to play major roles in the celebration
of community and family religious rituals, even after the Japanese encounter with the Chinese.
Japan did not follow Chinese agnatic patterns in family registers, where the males were listed.
Instead the Japanese deified their local gods. The priority in Japan was to uphold the family and not the
lineage, so adoption into the line was widely practiced. This allowed women to hold and transmit
leadership of the family.
In the early centuries of Japanese history, Buddhism was a political as well as religious vehicle.
Buddhism helped enhance the legitimacy of the imperial family, but over time diminished the power of
women in the folk tradition. The Chinese always wanted to organize property holdings on male lineage,
but not necessarily in Japan. Even though roughly half of the reigning sovereigns were women in Japan
before the eighth century, many were devout Buddhists, while continuing to identify themselves with
mantic traditions.
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The next historical period in Japan was the Heian (pronounced hey-on) 784-1183. This was the
time when famous women writers wrote about life in the Japanese royal courts. At this time the capital was
moved to Heian-kyo, now known as Kyoto. The high status of girls and women occurred during these
centuries.The female children were prized, and infanticide was not committed on girls. Only a female child
could advance her family's position in society. A male was only as high-ranking as his father, but a woman
could become a concubine of the emperor, thereby winning titles for her father, brothers, sisters, and other
relatives. If she was skilled in the arts of koto, samisen, poetry and fashion, then she could be elevated to
empress. If the woman bore a son, upon his elevation to Emperor, then she would take on the important
role of Imperial Matriarch. The Matriarch ruled the roost, governing over all other women in the
household. She had her son's exclusive confidence. As many children at this time were elevated to the role
of Emperor, their mothers were often only twenty years old.
Other aspects definitely illustrated women's high status too. Women could own property. If
discrete, they could take lovers. Women did not have to be empresses to have power and freedom in Heian
Japan. Unlike most other periods of Japanese history, women were allowed to be as free-living as men.
Marriage was not the only option. Many of the empresses' courtiers never married, but had numerous
affairs. Children born from these affairs were accepted socially if they were recognized by their fathers.
These liaisons were not discouraged, did not make women cheap or wanton, and in fact, worldly women
were highly respected.
Uxorilocal or matrilocal marriages were common, though spouses regularly lived apart or with the
wife's family. The communal system of possession and/or matrilineal descent patterns prevailed. Marriages
were easily formed and broken, and polygamy was common. There is almost no evidence of wives leaving
property to their husbands. No property would change hands at marriage. Heian Japanese adhered to the
ideas that inheritance was to be given to close women relatives before distant males.
Education for the upper class women was a priority. Most women were versed in a musical
instrument. Fashion and proper use of cosmetics were important too. Poetry recitation and improvisation
were important too, with poetry the expected form of communication. Women were expected to know
1000 classic Japanese verses by heart. A woman's elegance was determined by her ability to quote the
perfect verse for any occasion. Competitions were held between courtiers to see who could write the
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perfect verse about the weather, the most notable subject matter. A well-turned pun was the height of
elegance.
We can thank the women writers of Heian Japan for how much we known about their daily lives.
As women wrote in kana, the syllabaries used today, instead of Chinese, these writings are highlyaccessible today. Dairies were written in daily to illustrate intimate details of court life in the tenth century.
One historian has remarked that Japan seems to have been relatively free of harem politics, so talented
ladies of leisure found other outlets for their energies. The two most famous women writers were Lady
Murasaki Shikibu and Sei Shonagon.
Murasaki Shikibu was the pen name of the woman who wrote the world's first novel, The Tale of
Genji. Very little is known of Murasaki's life. She was born to a minor branch of the Fujiwara family
sometime in the last quarter of the tenth century. Murasaki tells us that her father appreciated her talent that
she demonstrated at a very early age, but expressed to that he wished she had been born a boy. Ironically,
if a boy, it is unlikely she would have written the world's first novel. Historians of Japan are fond of
pointing out the in the eleventh century many aristocratic Japanese men wrote bad Chinese poetry, while
the women wrote wonderful Japanese works. Women did know Chinese, but they were not supposed to.
Murasaki, undoubtedly knew Chinese. The idea kana was a women's script, and thus inferior, did not
become widespread until well after the Heian period.
Sei Shonagon, the author of The Pillow Book was a contemporary of Murasaki's. Sei was the
daughter of an outstanding poet and provincial governor. She has the reputation of being the most natural
wit in Japanese literature. Her book contains a number of facts including lists of things and candid
comments on court, giving the reader a sense of knowing the intimate details of courtly life.
Religious changes occurred in the Heian period. By the twelfth century many Japanese were
adherents of Amidism Buddhism. Amida was the idea that belief alone and not intense self-discipline
could assure one's escape from the painful cycles of rebirth. One monk even stated that there was no
distinction between men and women, but the later Lotus sect repudiated this: "no women are to be found in
paradise. Women will have to first be reborn as men." Beliefs of women's inherent sinfulness increased as
time passed.
The next period in Japan was the Medieval Shogunate Period, including the Kamakura and other
families 1185-1600. The Shogunate is a time when warriors or samurai developed more power. Ultimately
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the office of shogun developed that rivaled the power of the emperor. The shogun began the de facto ruler
of Japan, in what is called a shogunate, and the emperor became the de jure or legal ruler only. This lasted
until 1871. Some women were prominent in the earliest shogunate periods, but when a strong warrior
culture develops, women's status usually declines.