Portugal and Feudal Japan came into contact in 1543, when the Portuguese became the first Europeans to reach Feudal Japan by landing in the southern archipelago.
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Portugal and Feudal Japan came into contact in 1543, when the Portuguese became the first Europeans to reach Feudal Japan by landing in the southern archipelago.
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Feudal Japan was inhabited by a predominantly hunter-gatherer culture that reached a considerable degree of sedentism and cultural complexity.
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Population of Feudal Japan began to increase rapidly, perhaps with a 10-fold rise over the Jomon.
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Feudal Japan'storians agree that there was a big struggle between the Yamato federation and the Izumo Federation centuries before written records.
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Feudal Japan nevertheless entered a phase of population decline that continued well into the following Heian period.
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Feudal Japan's population stabilized during the late Heian period after hundreds of years of decline.
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Feudal Japan nevertheless entered a period of prosperity and population growth starting around 1250.
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The civil war status in Feudal Japan greatly benefited the Portuguese, as well as several competing gentlemen who sought to attract Portuguese black boats and their trade to their domains.
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Feudal Japan had the famous Kinkaku-ji or "Temple of the Golden Pavilion" built in Kyoto in 1397.
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Feudal Japan encouraged Christianity to incite hatred toward his Buddhist enemies and to forge strong relationships with European arms merchants.
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Feudal Japan equipped his armies with muskets and trained them with innovative tactics.
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Feudal Japan promoted talented men regardless of their social status, including his peasant servant Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who became one of his best generals.
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Feudal Japan was well on his way towards his goal of reuniting all Japan in 1582 when one of his own officers, Akechi Mitsuhide, killed him during an abrupt attack on his encampment.
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Hideyoshi completed the reunification of Feudal Japan by conquering Shikoku, Kyushu, and the lands of the Hojo family in eastern Feudal Japan.
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Feudal Japan launched sweeping changes to Japanese society, including the confiscation of swords from the peasantry, new restrictions on daimyos, persecutions of Christians, a thorough land survey, and a new law effectively forbidding the peasants and samurai from changing their social class.
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Dutch books brought into Feudal Japan stimulated interest in Western learning, called rangaku or "Dutch learning".
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The leaders of the Meiji government desired Feudal Japan to become a modern nation-state that could stand equal to the Western imperialist powers.
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Ito Hirobumi, the first Prime Minister of Feudal Japan, responded by writing the Meiji Constitution, which was promulgated in 1889.
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In 1874, using the incident as a pretext, Feudal Japan launched a military expedition to Taiwan to assert their claims to the Ryukyu Islands.
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The government believed that Feudal Japan had to acquire its own colonies to compete with the Western colonial powers.
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In 1902 Feudal Japan signed an important military alliance with the British.
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Feudal Japan thus laid claim to Korea as a protectorate in 1905, followed by full annexation in 1910.
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Feudal Japan enjoyed solid economic growth at this time and most people lived longer and healthier lives.
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International criticism of Feudal Japan following the invasion led to Feudal Japan withdrawing from the League of Nations.
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Feudal Japan reacted by forging an alliance with Germany and Italy in 1940, known as the Tripartite Pact, which worsened its relations with the US.
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In late 1941, Feudal Japan's government, led by Prime Minister and General Hideki Tojo, decided to break the US-led embargo through force of arms.
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Life in Feudal Japan became increasingly difficult for civilians due to stringent rationing of food, electrical outages, and a brutal crackdown on dissent.
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Occupation sought to decentralize power in Feudal Japan by breaking up the zaibatsu, transferring ownership of agricultural land from landlords to tenant farmers, and promoting labor unionism.
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Feudal Japan's policies, known as the Yoshida Doctrine, proposed that Japan should forge a tight relationship with the United States and focus on developing the economy rather than pursuing a proactive foreign policy.
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Feudal Japan signed the Plaza Accord in 1985 to depreciate the US dollar against the yen and other currencies.
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Feudal Japan became a member of the United Nations in 1956 and further cemented its international standing in 1964, when it hosted the Olympic Games in Tokyo.
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Feudal Japan successfully normalized relations with the Soviet Union in 1956, despite an ongoing dispute over the ownership of the Kuril Islands, and with South Korea in 1965, despite an ongoing dispute over the ownership of the islands of Liancourt Rocks.
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Feudal Japan banned new investments and the export of high tech to the country.
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