May 21, 2009 - New York City Department of Education

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Transcript May 21, 2009 - New York City Department of Education

Aim/Goal: How did the Tokugawa
Shogunate impact the history of Japan?
Do Now: Give a definition of the following:
Bushido
Samurai
Feudalism
Tokyo
Mt. Fuji
Homework: Compare the bushido code
during the Tokugawa Shogunate to that of
the Marine Corp code of honor.
Order and Unity Under the
Tokugawas
• After the Mongol invasion, there was
much fighting in Japan.
• In 1600 a new daimyo, Tokugawa
Ieyasu becomes the new Shogun. This
shogunate rules until 1868.
What would the Shogun
say?
Centralized Feudalism
• Tokugawa wanted to end the warfare
• Created a unified orderly society:
– Daimyo and families had to live in Tokyo the
Shogun could have access to them.
– Needed permission to marry or repair their
castles.
– Only samurai were allowed to serve in the
military or have a government job
– Follow the traditions of bushido.
Edo Castle
Zen Buddhism flourishes under the
Tokugawas
• Buddhist monks taught the samurai about
the religion.
• Zen: meditation/devotion to duty
• Zen shaped Japanese culture.
– Men learned to express devotion to nature
– People could seek enlightenment
– Meditation and ritual
– Valued: peace, simplicity and love of beauty
Zen Buddhist Temple
• Zen monks were the
leading scholars and
artists of feudal Japan.
This temple was a Zen
monastery and a peaceful
retreat for visiting
shoguns seeking advice.
• How does the setting of
this temple reflect Zen
values?
Primary Source Document
• Perfect Serenity: Kenko, Zen Buddhist priest
• “If we were never to fade away…but linger on forever in
the world, how things would lose their power to move us!
The most precious thing in life is its uncertainty. The
May fly waits not for the evening, the summer cicada
knows neither spring nor autumn. What a wonderfully
unhurried feeling it is to live even a single year in perfect
serenity. If that is not enough for you, you might live a
thousand years, and still feel it was but a single nights
dream We cannot live forever in this world.”
• How do Kenko’s words reflect what you know about
Buddhist beliefs?