Tokugawa Shogunate Essay

1305 Words6 Pages

Devlin Mackay
Mr. Michaud
Social Studies
8 February 2023
The Tokugawa Shogunate The Tokugawa Shogunate was a military dictatorship on the island of Japan that was active from 1603 to 1867. Its founder Tokugawa Ieyasu created the Tokugawa Shogunate. During the reign of the Tokugawa Shogunate, it brought peace and economic growth to Japan. This rule froze the social order and made it prohibited. This means that a peasant was no longer a peasant, they were simply a citizen, and a merchant was also just a citizen.
The Tokugawa Shogunate wasn't afraid of the political stability of the country, however, they did not like the influence of outside ideas and empires such as the Spanish and roman. Because of this concern, the Shogunate adopted an isolated …show more content…

For travel, peasants had to request to travel. The ability of the farmers and warriors to support the economy was the most important value to their growing shogunate. Although they sheltered themselves from outside empires and influences, they took part in world trade and the sale of goods.

The political status of the shogunate was simple. Shogunate stands for military government, meaning the government is entirely run by the military, which is warriors and samurai. The Shogunate did not take part in elections, as they gave the heir to the throne based on blood. If the Shogun had children and if he died, the oldest of those children would take his place as the Shogun and vice versa. This form of government began from its inception in 1192 to 1867, which is a ludicrous amount of time for the empire to remain strong. The Shogun's power was limited to the control of the military across the …show more content…

The First Sino-Japanese war began in 1894 and went on for one year until 1895 and was the awakening of Japan first being considered a major world power. Both countries were trying to control the Korean peninsula. Japan had a more successful time with it because of the Korean people were far more open to Japanese trade, and they called themselves independent of the Chinese Empire. The Chinese murdered the pro-Japanese, Korean leader of the Rebellion in Shanghai and displayed his body to the people of Korea as a warning not to rebel, or they would have the same fate. On August 1st, 1894, the Japanese declared war and easily gained control of the Land and Sea. By March 1895 by overwhelming and outdoing the Chinese at everything over Shandong and Manchuria and fortifying the coast, which caused the Chinese to sue for peace. The Treaty of Shimonoseki had China recognize the independence of Korea and allowed Japan to annex Taiwan. China also paid war reparations to the Japanese and allowed the Japanese to trade anywhere on their land. Russia, France, Germany, and Herself demanded the Japanese give back the Liaodong Peninsula to China once Russia feared the possibility of Japanese