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Yayoi period

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Yayoi period (弥生時代, Yayoi jidai) started in the late Neolithic period in Japan, continued through the Bronze Age, and towards its end crossed into the Iron Age.[1]

Since the 1980s, scholars have argued that a period previously classified as a transition from the Jōmon period should be reclassified as Early Yayoi.[2] The date of the beginning of this transition is controversial, with estimates ranging from the 10th to the 3rd centuries BC.[1][3]

The period is named after the neighbourhood of Tokyo where archaeologists first uncovered artifacts and features from that era in the late 19th century. Distinguishing characteristics of the Yayoi period include the appearance of new Yayoi pottery styles, improved carpentry and architecture, and the start of an intensive rice agriculture in paddy fields.[4] A hierarchical social class structure dates from this period and has its origin in China. Techniques in metallurgy based on the use of bronze and iron were also introduced from China via Korea to Japan in this period.[5]

The Yayoi followed the Jōmon period and Yayoi culture flourished in a geographic area from southern Kyūshū to northern Honshū. Archaeological evidence supports the idea that during this time, an influx of farmers (Yayoi people) from the Korean Peninsula to Japan overwhelmed and mixed with the native predominantly hunter-gatherer population (Jōmon).

Features

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Yoshinogari site reconstruction
Reconstructed Yayoi-style dwellings at Yoshinogari

The Yayoi period is, generally, accepted to date from circa 300 BC to 300 AD.[6][7][8][9][10] However, although highly controversial, radiocarbon evidence, from organic samples attached to pottery shards, may suggest a date up to 500 years earlier, between ca. 1000 BC and 800 BC.[1][11] During this period, Japan largely transitioned to a more settled, agricultural society, adopting methods of farming and crop production that were introduced to the country (initially in the Kyūshū region) from Korea.[12][13][14]

The earliest archaeological evidence of the Yayoi Period is found on northern Kyūshū,[15] though that is still debated. Yayoi culture quickly spread to the main island of Honshū, mixing with native Jōmon culture.[16] The name Yayoi is borrowed from a location in Tokyo, where pottery of the Yayoi period was first found.[14] Yayoi pottery was simply decorated and produced, using the same coiling technique previously used in Jōmon pottery.[17] Yayoi craft specialists made bronze ceremonial bells (dōtaku), mirrors, and weapons. By the 1st century AD, Yayoi people began using iron agricultural tools and weapons.

As the Yayoi population increased, the society became more stratified and complex. They wove textiles, lived in permanent farming villages, and constructed buildings with wood and stone. They also accumulated wealth through land ownership and the storage of grain. Such factors promoted the development of distinct social classes. Contemporary Chinese sources described the people as having tattoos and other bodily markings which indicated differences in social status.[18] Yayoi chiefs, in some parts of Kyūshū, appear to have sponsored, and politically manipulated, trade in bronze and other prestige objects.[19] That was made possible by the introduction of an irrigated, wet-rice agriculture from the Yangtze estuary in southern China via the Ryukyu Islands or Korean Peninsula.[10][20]

Direct comparisons between Jōmon and Yayoi skeletons show that the two peoples are noticeably distinguishable.[21] The Jōmon tended to be shorter, with relatively longer forearms and lower legs, more deep-set eyes, shorter and wider faces, and much more pronounced facial topography. They also have strikingly raised brow ridges, noses, and nose bridges. Yayoi people, on the other hand, averaged 2.5–5 cm (0.98–1.97 in) taller, with shallow-set eyes, high and narrow faces, and flat brow ridges and noses. By the Kofun period, almost all skeletons excavated in Japan except those of the Ainu are of the Yayoi type with some having small Jōmon admixture,[22] resembling those of modern-day Japanese.[23]

History

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Origin of the Yayoi people

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Northern Kyushu is the part of Japan closest to the Asian mainland.

The origin of Yayoi culture and the Yayoi people has long been debated. The earliest archaeological sites are Itazuke or Nabata in the northern part of Kyūshū. Contacts between fishing communities on this coast and the southern coast of Korea date from the Jōmon period, as witnessed by the exchange of trade items such as fishhooks and obsidian.[24] During the Yayoi period, cultural features from Korea and China arrived in this area at various times over several centuries, and later spread to the south and east.[25] This was a period of mixture between immigrants and the indigenous population, and between new cultural influences and existing practices.[26]

Chinese influence was obvious in the bronze and copper weapons, dōkyō, dōtaku, as well as irrigated paddy rice cultivation. Three major symbols of Yayoi culture are the bronze mirror, the bronze sword, and the royal seal stone.

Between 1996 and 1999, a team led by Satoshi Yamaguchi, a researcher at Japan's National Museum of Nature and Science, compared Yayoi remains found in Japan's Yamaguchi and Fukuoka prefectures with those from China's coastal Jiangsu province and found many similarities between the Yayoi and the Jiangsu remains.[27][28]

A Yayoi period dōtaku bell, 3rd century AD

Further links to the Korean Peninsula have been discovered, and several researchers have reported discoveries/evidence that strongly link the Yayoi culture to the southern part of the Korean Peninsula. Mark J. Hudson has cited archaeological evidence that included "bounded paddy fields, new types of polished stone tools, wooden farming implements, iron tools, weaving technology, ceramic storage jars, exterior bonding of clay coils in pottery fabrication, ditched settlements, domesticated pigs, and jawbone rituals".[29] The migrant transfusion from the Korean peninsula gains strength because Yayoi culture began on the north coast of Kyūshū, where Japan is closest to Korea. Yayoi pottery, burial mounds, and food preservation were discovered to be very similar to the pottery of southern Korea.[30]

Shinju-kyo bronze mirror excavated in Tsubai-otsukayama kofun, Yamashiro, Kyoto

However, some scholars argue that the rapid increase of roughly four million people in Japan between the Jōmon and Yayoi periods cannot be explained by migration alone. They attribute the increase primarily to a shift from a hunter-gatherer to an agricultural diet on the islands, with the introduction of rice. It is quite likely that rice cultivation and its subsequent deification allowed for a slow and gradual population increase.[31] Regardless, there is archaeological evidence that supports the idea that there was an influx of farmers from the continent to Japan that absorbed or overwhelmed the native hunter-gatherer population.[30]

Some pieces of Yayoi pottery clearly show the influence of Jōmon ceramics. In addition, the Yayoi lived in the same type of pit or circular dwelling as that of the Jōmon. Other examples of commonality are chipped stone tools for hunting, bone tools for fishing, shells in bracelet construction, and lacquer decoration for vessels and accessories.

According to several linguists, Japonic or proto-Japonic was present on large parts of the southern Korean peninsula.[32][33] These Peninsular Japonic languages, now extinct, were eventually replaced by Koreanic languages.[34] Similarly Whitman suggests that the Yayoi are not related to the proto-Koreans but that they (the Yayoi) were present on the Korean peninsula during the Mumun pottery period. According to him and several other researchers, Japonic/proto-Japonic arrived in the Korean peninsula around 1500 BC[35][36] and was brought to the Japanese archipelago by Yayoi wet-rice farmers at some time between 700 and 300 BC.[37][38] Whitman and Miyamoto associate Japonic as the language family of both Mumun and Yayoi cultures.[39][36] Several linguists believe that speakers of Koreanic/proto-Koreanic arrived in the Korean Peninsula at some time after the Japonic/proto-Japonic speakers and coexisted with these peoples (i.e. the descendants of both the Mumun and Yayoi cultures) and possibly assimilated them. Both Koreanic and Japonic had prolonged influence on each other and a later founder effect diminished the internal variety of both language families.[40][41][42]

Languages

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Most linguists and archaeologists agree that the Japonic language family was introduced to and spread through the archipelago during the Yayoi period.

Emergence of Wo in Chinese history texts

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The golden seal said to have been granted to the "King of Na in Wo" by Emperor Guangwu of Han in 57 AD. It is inscribed King of Na of Wo in Han Dynasty (漢委奴國王)

The earliest written records about people in Japan are from Chinese sources from this period. Wo, the pronunciation of an early Chinese name for Japan, was mentioned in 57 AD; the Na state of Wo received a golden seal from the Emperor Guangwu of the Later Han dynasty. This event was recorded in the Book of the Later Han compiled by Fan Ye in the 5th century. The seal itself was discovered in northern Kyūshū in the 18th century.[43] Wo was also mentioned in 257 in the Wei zhi, a section of the Records of the Three Kingdoms compiled by the 3rd-century scholar Chen Shou.[44]

Early Chinese historians described Wo as a land of hundreds of scattered tribal communities rather than the unified land with a 700-year tradition as laid out in the 8th-century work Nihon Shoki, a partly mythical, partly historical account of Japan which dates the foundation of the country at 660 BC. Archaeological evidence also suggests that frequent conflicts between settlements or statelets broke out in the period. Many excavated settlements were moated or built at the tops of hills. Headless human skeletons[45] discovered in Yoshinogari site are regarded as typical examples of finds from the period. In the coastal area of the Inland Sea, stone arrowheads are often found among funerary objects.

Third-century Chinese sources reported that the Wa people lived on raw fish, vegetables, and rice served on bamboo and wooden trays, clapped their hands in worship (something still done in Shinto shrines today),[46] and built earthen-grave mounds. They also maintained vassal-master relations, collected taxes, had provincial granaries and markets, and observed mourning. Society was characterised by violent struggles.[citation needed]

Yamataikoku

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Hashihaka kofun, Sakurai, Nara

The Wei Zhi (Chinese: 魏志), which is part of the Records of the three Kingdoms, first mentions Yamataikoku and Queen Himiko in the 3rd century. According to the record, Himiko assumed the throne of Wa, as a spiritual leader, after a major civil war. Her younger brother was in charge of the affairs of state, including diplomatic relations with the Chinese court of the Kingdom of Wei.[47] When asked about their origins by the Wei embassy, the people of Wa claimed to be descendants of the Taibo of Wu, a historic figure of the Wu Kingdom around the Yangtze Delta of China.

For many years, the location of Yamataikoku and the identity of Queen Himiko have been subject of research. Two possible sites, Yoshinogari in Saga Prefecture and Makimuku in Nara Prefecture have been suggested.[48] Recent archaeological research in Makimuku suggests that Yamataikoku was located in the area.[49][50] Some scholars assume that the Hashihaka kofun in Makimuku was the tomb of Himiko.[51] Its relation to the origin of the Yamato polity in the following Kofun period is also under debate.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c Shōda, Shinya (2007). "A Comment on the Yayoi Period Dating Controversy". Bulletin of the Society for East Asian Archaeology. 1.
  2. ^ Habu 2004, p. 258.
  3. ^ Mizoguchi, Koji (2013). The Archaeology of Japan: From the Earliest Rice Farming Villages to the Rise of the State. Cambridge University Press. pp. 35–36. ISBN 978-0-521-88490-7.
  4. ^ Seike, Kiyoshi (1977). The art of Japanese joinery. Yuriko Yobuko, Rebecca M. Davis (1st ed.). New York: J. Weatherhill. p. 8. ISBN 0-8348-1516-8. OCLC 3071841.
  5. ^ Farris, William Wayne (1996). "Ancient Japan's Korean Connection". Korean Studies. 20 (1): 1–22. doi:10.1353/ks.1996.0015. JSTOR 23719600. S2CID 162644598.
  6. ^ Hays, J. (n.d.). Yayoi people, life, and culture (400 B.C.-A.D. 300). Facts and Details. https://factsanddetails.com/japan/cat16/sub105/entry-5285.html
  7. ^ "Yayoi Period (300 BCE – 250 CE)". Japan Module. Pitt.
  8. ^ "Timelines: Japan". Asia for Educators. Columbia University.
  9. ^ "Bronze mirror". Pitt Rivers Museum Body Arts. Oxford.
  10. ^ a b Keally, Charles T. (2006-06-03). "Yayoi Culture". Japanese Archaeology. Charles T. Keally. Retrieved 2010-03-19.
  11. ^ Shoda, Shin'ya (2010). "Radiocarbon and Archaeology in Japan and Korea: What has Changed Because of the Yayoi Dating Controversy?". Radiocarbon. 52 (2). Cambridge University Press (CUP): 421–427. Bibcode:2010Radcb..52..421S. doi:10.1017/s0033822200045471. ISSN 0033-8222.
  12. ^ "The Yayoi Period: Analyzing its Culture Through Agricultural Tools". Japan Times. 16 August 2012.
  13. ^ Picken, Stuart D. B. Historical Dictionary of Japanese Business. Scarecrow Press. p. 13.
  14. ^ a b Imamura, Keiji. Prehistoric Japan: New Perspectives on Insular East Asia. University of Hawaii Press. p. 13.
  15. ^ "Annual Report on Research Activity 2004". JP: Rekihaku.
  16. ^ Seiji Kobayashi. "Eastern Japanese Pottery During the Jomon-Yayoi Transition: A Study in Forager-Farmer Interaction". Kokugakuin Tochigi Junior College. Archived from the original on 2009-09-23.
  17. ^ Yayo, Met museum
  18. ^ Lock, Margaret (1998). "Japanese". The Encyclopedia of World Cultures CD-ROM. Macmillan. Archived from the original on December 13, 2012. Retrieved July 10, 2015.
  19. ^ Pearson, Richard J. Chiefly Exchange Between Kyushu and Okinawa, Japan, in the Yayoi Period. Antiquity 64(245) 912–22, 1990.
  20. ^ Earlier Start for Japanese Rice Cultivation, Dennis Normile, Science, 2003 (archive)
  21. ^ 縄文人の顔と骨格-骨格の比較 Archived 2007-12-23 at the Wayback Machine, Information technology Promotion Agency
  22. ^ "Repository" (PDF). University of the Ryukyus. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2020-09-25. Retrieved 2009-05-30.
  23. ^ Diamond, Jared (June 1, 1998). "Japanese Roots". Discover Magazine. 19 (6 June 1998). Archived from the original on 2007-11-24. Retrieved 14 December 2013.
  24. ^ Mizoguchi (2013), p. 54.
  25. ^ Kidder, J. Edward Jr. (1993). "The earliest societies in Japan". In Brown, Delmer (ed.). Cambridge History of Japan, vol. 1: Ancient Japan. Cambridge University Press. pp. 48–107. ISBN 978-0-521-22352-2. p. 81.
  26. ^ Mizoguchi (2013), p. 53.
  27. ^ "Long Journey to Prehistorical Japan" (in Japanese). National Science Museum of Japan. Archived from the original on 21 April 2015.
  28. ^ "Yayoi linked to Yangtze area: DNA tests reveal similarities to early wet-rice farmers". The Japan Times. March 19, 1999.
  29. ^ Mark J. Hudson (1999). Ruins of Identity Ethnogenesis in the Japanese Islands. University Hawai'i Press. ISBN 0-8248-2156-4.
  30. ^ a b Jared Diamond (June 1, 1998). "Japanese Roots". Discover Magazine. 19 (6, June 1998). Retrieved 2008-05-12. Unlike Jomon pottery, Yayoi pottery was very similar to contemporary South Korean pottery in shape. Many other elements of the new Yayoi culture were unmistakably Korean and previously foreign to Japan, including bronze objects, weaving, glass beads, and styles of tools and houses.
  31. ^ Mizoguchi (2013), p. 119.
  32. ^ Janhunen, Juha (2010). "Reconstructing the Language Map of Prehistorical Northeast Asia". Studia Orientalia (108). ... there are strong indications that the neighbouring Baekje state (in the southwest) was predominantly Japonic-speaking until it was linguistically Koreanized.
  33. ^ Vovin, Alexander (2013). "From Koguryo to Tamna: Slowly riding to the South with speakers of Proto-Korean". Korean Linguistics. 15 (2): 222–240.
  34. ^ Beckwith (2004), pp. 27–28.
  35. ^ Whitman (2011), p. 157.
  36. ^ a b Miyamoto (2016), pp. 69–70.
  37. ^ Serafim (2008), p. 98.
  38. ^ Vovin (2017).
  39. ^ Whitman, John (2011-12-01). "Northeast Asian Linguistic Ecology and the Advent of Rice Agriculture in Korea and Japan". Rice. 4 (3): 149–158. Bibcode:2011Rice....4..149W. doi:10.1007/s12284-011-9080-0. ISSN 1939-8433.
  40. ^ Janhunen (2010), p. 294.
  41. ^ Vovin (2013), pp. 222, 237.
  42. ^ Unger (2009), p. 87.
  43. ^ "Gold Seal (Kin-in)". Fukuoka City Museum. Retrieved 2007-11-10.
  44. ^ 魏志倭人伝 Archived 2010-10-16 at the Wayback Machine, Chinese texts and its Japanese translation
  45. ^ Huffman, James L. (2010-02-04). Japan in World History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-970974-8.
  46. ^ Wikisource
  47. ^ 魏志倭人伝, Chinese texts of the Wei Zhi, Wikisource
  48. ^ Karako-kagi Archaeological Museum (2007). "ヤマト王権はいかにして始まったか". Comprehensive Database of Archaeological Site Reports in Japan. Retrieved 2016-09-01.
  49. ^ 古墳2タイプ、同時に出現か・奈良の古墳群で判明 [permanent dead link], Nikkei Net, March 6, 2008
  50. ^ 最古級の奈良・桜井“3兄弟古墳”、形状ほぼ判明 卑弥呼の時代に相次いで築造 Archived 2008-03-08 at the Wayback Machine, Sankei Shimbun, March 6, 2008
  51. ^ Edwards, Walter (1996). "In Pursuit of Himiko. Postwar Archaeology and the Location of Yamatai". Monumenta Nipponica. 51 (1): 74. doi:10.2307/2385316. ISSN 0027-0741. JSTOR 2385316.

Books cited

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Further reading

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  • Schirokauer, Conrad (2013). A Brief History of Chinese and Japanese Civilizations. Boston: Wadsworth Cengage Learning.
  • Silberman, Neil Asher (2012). The Oxford Companion to Archaeology. New York: Oxford University Press.
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