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WHAP CH 13
cindy ch 13
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Taika reforms | Attempt to remake the Japanese monarch into an absolutist Chinese-style emperor; included attempts to create professional bureaucracy and peasant conscript army. |
| Heian | Japanese city later called Kyoto; built to escape influence of Buddhist monks. |
| Tale of Genji | Written by Lady Murasaki; first novel in any language; evidence for mannered style of Japanese society. |
| Fujiwara | Mid-9th-century Japanese aristocratic family; exercised exceptional influence over imperial affairs; aided in decline of imperial power. |
| Bushi | Regional warrior leaders in Japan; ruled small kingdoms from fortresses; administered the law, supervised public works projects, and collected revenues; built up private armies. |
| Samurai | Mounted troops of the bushi; loyal to local lords, not the emperor. |
| Seppuku | Ritual suicide in Japan; also known as hari-kiri; demonstrated courage and was a means to restore family honor. |
| Gumpei wars | Waged for five years from 1180 on Honshu between the Taira and Minamoto families; ended in destruction of the Taira. |
| Bakufu | Military government established by the Minamoto after the Gumpei Wars; centered at Kamakura; retained emperor, but real power resided in military government and samurai. |
| Shoguns | Military leaders of the bakufu. |
| Hojo | A warrior family closely allied with the Minamoto; dominated the Kamakura regime and manipulated Minamoto rulers; ruled in name of emperor. |
| Ashikaga Takuaji | Member of Minamoto family; overthrew Kamakura regime and established Ashikaga Shogunate (1336-1573); drove emperor from Kyoto to Yoshino. |
| Onin War | Struggle between rival heirs of Ashikaga Shogunate (1467-1477); led to warfare between rival headquarters and Kyoto and destruction of old capital. |
| Daimyo | Warlord rulers of small states following Onin War and disruption of Ashikaga Shogunate; holdings consolidated into unified and bounded ministates. |
| Choson | Earliest Korean kingdom; conquered by the Han in 109 B.C.E. |
| Koguryo | Tribal people of northern Korea; established an independent kingdom in the northern half of the peninsula; adopted cultural Sinification. |
| Sinification | Extensive adaptation of Chinese culture in other regions. |
| Silla | Korean kingdom in the Southeast; became a vassal of the Tang and paid tribute; ruled Korea from 668. |
| Yi | Korean dynasty (1392-1910); succeeded Koryo dynasty after Mongol invasions; restored aristocratic dominance and Chinese influence. |
| Trung sisters | Leaders of a rebellion in Vietnam against Chinese rule in 39 C.E.; demonstrates importance of women in Vietnamese society. |
| Khmers and Chams | Indianized Vietnamese peoples defeated by Northern government at Hanoi. |
| Nguyen | Southern Vietnamese dynasty with capital at Hue that challenged northern Trinhdynasty with center at Hanoi. |
| Kami | Nature spirits of Japan. |
| Fujiwara | Japanese aristocratic family in mid-9th century; exercised exceptional influence over imperial affairs; aided in decline of imperial power. |
| Taira | Powerful Japanese family in 11th and 12th centuries; competed with Minamoto family; defeated after Gempei Wars. |
| Minamoto | Defeated the rival Taira family in Gempei Wars and established military government in 12th-century Japan. |
| Tribute system | System in which people surrounding China sent emissaries who offered tribute to the Chinese emperor and acknowledged the superiority of the emperor and China. |
| Trinh | Dynasty that ruled in north Vietnam at Hanoi, 1533 to 1772; rivals of Nguyen family in South. |