Japan TOKUGAWA PERIOD, 1600-1867
The six-story Himeji Castle, built in 1601-9, considered
one of the grandest of the surviving castles, Hyogo Prefecture
Courtesy Eliot Frankeberger
Rule of Shogun and Daimyo
An evolution had taken place in the centuries from the
time of
the Kamakura bakufu, which existed in equilibrium
with the
imperial court, to the Tokugawa, when the bushi
became the
unchallenged rulers in what historian Edwin O. Reischauer
called a
"centralized feudal" form of government. Instrumental in
the rise
of the new bakufu was Tokugawa Ieyasu, the main
beneficiary
of the achievements of Nobunaga and Hideyoshi. Already
powerful,
Ieyasu profited by his transfer to the rich Kanto area.
He
maintained 2.5 million koku of land, had a new
headquarters
at Edo, a strategically situated castle town (the future
Tokyo),
and had an additional 2 million koku of land and
thirtyeight vassals under his control. After Hideyoshi's death,
Ieyasu
moved quickly to seize control from the Toyotomi family.
Ieyasu's victory over the western daimyo at the
Battle
of Sekigahara (1600) gave him virtual control of all
Japan. He
rapidly abolished numerous enemy daimyo houses,
reduced
others, such as that of the Toyotomi, and redistributed
the spoils
of war to his family and allies. Ieyasu still failed to
achieve
complete control of the western daimyo, but his
assumption
of the title of shogun helped consolidate the alliance
system.
After further strengthening his power base, Ieyasu was
confident
enough to install his son Hidetada (1579-1632) as shogun
and
himself as retired shogun in 1605. The Toyotomi were still
a
significant threat, and Ieyasu devoted the next decade to
their
eradication. In 1615 the Toyotomi stronghold at Osaka was
destroyed
by the Tokugawa army.
The Tokugawa (or Edo) period brought 200 years of
stability to
Japan. The political system evolved into what historians
call
bakuhan, a combination of the terms bakufu
and
han (domains) to describe the government and
society of the
period. In the bakuhan, the shogun had national
authority
and the daimyo had regional authority, a new unity
in the
feudal structure, which had an increasingly large
bureaucracy to
administer the mixture of centralized and decentralized
authorities. The Tokugawa became more powerful during
their first
century of rule: land redistribution gave them nearly 7
million
koku, control of the most important cities, and a
land
assessment system reaping great revenues.
The feudal hierarchy was completed by the various
classes of
daimyo. Closest to the Tokugawa house were the
shinpan, or "related houses." They were
twenty-three
daimyo on the borders of Tokugawa lands,
daimyo all
directly related to Ieyasu. The shinpan held mostly
honorary
titles and advisory posts in the bakufu. The second
class of
the hierarchy were the fudai, or "house
daimyo,"
rewarded with lands close to the Tokugawa holdings for
their
faithful service. By the eighteenth century, 145
fudai
controlled such smaller han, the greatest assessed
at
250,000 koku. Members of the fudai class
staffed most
of the major bakufu offices. Ninety-seven
han formed
the third group, the tozama (outside vassals),
former
opponents or new allies. The tozama were located
mostly on
the peripheries of the archipelago and collectively
controlled
nearly 10 million koku of productive land. Because
the
tozama were least trusted of the daimyo,
they were
the most cautiously managed and generously treated,
although they
were excluded from central government positions.
The Tokugawa not only consolidated their control over a
reunified Japan, they also had unprecedented power over
the
emperor, the court, all daimyo, and the religious
orders.
The emperor was held up as the ultimate source of
political
sanction for the shogun, who ostensibly was the vassal of
the
imperial family. The Tokugawa helped the imperial family
recapture
its old glory by rebuilding its palaces and granting it
new lands.
To ensure a close tie between the imperial clan and the
Tokugawa
family, Ieyasu's granddaughter was made an imperial
consort in
1619.
A code of laws was established to regulate the
daimyo
houses. The code encompassed private conduct, marriage,
dress, and
types of weapons and numbers of troops allowed; required
alternateyear residence at Edo; prohibited the construction of
ocean-going
ships; proscribed Christianity; and stipulated that
bakufu
regulations were the national law. Although the
daimyo were
not taxed per se, they were regularly levied for
contributions for
military and logistical support and for such public works
projects
as castles, roads, bridges, and palaces. The various
regulations
and levies not only strengthened the Tokugawa but also
depleted the
wealth of the daimyo, thus weakening their threat
to the
central administration. The han, once
military-centered
domains, became mere local administrative units. The
daimyo
did have full administrative control over their territory
and their
complex systems of retainers, bureaucrats, and commoners.
Loyalty
was exacted from religious foundations, already greatly
weakened by
Nobunaga and Hideyoshi, through a variety of control
mechanisms.
Data as of January 1994
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