The Mikado's Empire/Buku 1/Bab 11

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XL

THE THRONE AND THE NOBLE FAMILIES.

FROM the beginning of the Japanese empire, until the century aft- er the introduction of Buddhism, the mikados were the real rulers of their people, having no hedge of division between them and their subjects. The palace was not secluded from the outer world. No screen hid the face of the monarch from the gaze of his subjects. No bureauocracy rose, like a wall of division, between ruler and ruled. No hedge or net of officialdom hindered free passage of remonstrance or petition. The mikado, active in word and deed, was a real ruler, leading his armies, directing his Government. Those early days of comparative national poverty when the mikado was the warrior-chief of a conquering tribe ; and, later, when he ruled a little kingdom in Central Japan, holding the distant portions of his quasi -empire in tribute ; and, still later, when he was the head of an undivided em- pire— mark the era of his personal importance and energy. Then, in the mikado dwelt a manly soul, and a strong mind in a strong body. This era was the golden age of the imperial power. He was the true executive of the nation, initiating and carrying out the enterprises of peace or war. As yet, no military class had arisen to make themselves the arbiters of the throne ; as yet, that throne was under no proprie- torship ; as yet, there was but one capital and centre of authority.

Gradually, however, there arose families of nobility who shared and dictated the power, and developed the two official castes of civilian and military officials, widening the distance between the sovereign and his subjects, and rendering him more and more inaccessible to his people. Then followed in succession the decay of his power, the cre- ation of a dual system of government, with two capitals and centres of authority ; the domination of the military classes ; the centuries of anarchy ; the progress of feudalism ; the rending of the empire into hundreds of petty provinces, baronies, and feudal tenures. Within the time of European knowledge of Japan, true national unity has scarcely been known. The political system has been ever in a state


102 THE MIKADO'S EMPIRE.

of unstable equilibrium, and the nation but a conglomeration of units, in which the forces of repulsion ever threatened to overcome the forces of cohesion. Two rulers in two capitals gave to foreigners the im- pression that there were two "emperors" in Japan— an idea that has been incorporated into most of the text -books and cyclopedias of Christendom. Let it be clearly understood, however, that there never was but one emperor in Japan, the mikado, who is and always was


The Mikado on bis Throne. Time, from the Seventh to the Twelfth Century.

the only sovereign, though his measure of power has been very dif- ferent at various times. Until the rise and domination of the milita- ry classes, he was in fact, as well as by law, supreme. How the mi- kado's actual power ebbed away shall form the subject of this and the following chapter.

From the death of Nintoku Tenno, the last of the long-lived mika- dos, to Kimmei (540-571), in whose time continental civilization was introduced, a period of one hundred and forty-one years, fourteen em- perors ruled, averaging a little over ten years each. From Kimmei


THE THRONE AND THE NOBLES. 103

to Gotoba (A.D. 1198) fifty-three emperors reigned, averaging eleven years each. (See list of emperors, p. 123.)

In A.D. 603, the first attempt to create orders of nobility for the nobles, already numerously existing, was made by the Empress Suiko. Twelve orders were instituted, with symbolic names, after the Chinese custom — such as Virtue, Humanity, Propriety, etc. — distinguished by the colors of the caps worn. In 649, this system was changed for that having nine ranks, with two divisions. In each of the last six were two subdivisions, thus in reality making thirty grades. The first grade was a posthumous reward, given only to those who in life had held the second. Every officer, from the prime minister to the offi- cial clerks, had a rank attached to his office, which was independent of birth or age. All officers were presented, and all questions of pre- cedence were settled, in accordance with this rank.

The court officials, at first, had been very few, as might be imagined in this simple state of society without writing. The Jin Gi Kuan, which had existed from very ancient times, supervised the ceremonies of religion, the positions being chiefly held by members of the Naka- tomi family. This was the highest division of the Government. In A.D. 603, with the introduction of orders of nobility, the form of gov- ernment was changed from simple feudalism to centralized monarchy, with eight ministries, or departments of state, as follows :

1. Nakatsukasa no Sho (Department of the Imperial Palace).

2. Shiki bu Sho (Department of Civil Office and Education).

3. Ji bu Sho (Department of Etiquette and Ceremonies).

4. Mini bu Sho (Department of Revenue and Census).

5. Hio bu Sho (Department of War).

6. Gio bu Sho (Department of Justice).

7. 0 kura Sho (Department of Treasury).

8. Ku nai Sho (Department of Imperial Household).

The Jin Gi Kuan (Council of Religion ; literally, Council of the Gods of Heaven and Earth), though anciently outranking the Dai Jo Kuan (Great Government Council), lost its prestige after the introduction of Buddhism. The Dai Jo Kuan, created A.D. 786, superintended the eight boards and ruled the empire by means of local governors ap- pointed from the capital. In it were four ministers :

1. Dai Jo Dai Jin (Great Minister of the Great Government).

2. Sa Dai Jin (Great Minister of the Left).

3. U Dai Jin (Great Minister of the Right).

4. Nai Dai Jin (Inner Great Minister).


104 THE MIKADO'S EMPIRE.

Of the eight departments, that of War ultimately became the most important. A special department was necessary to attend to the pub- lic manners and forms of society, etiquette being more than morals, and equal to literary education. The foreign relations of the empire were then of so little importance that they were assigned to a bureau of the above department. The treasury consisted of imperial store- houses and granaries, as money was not then in general use. Rice was the standard of value, and all taxes were paid in this grain.

The introduction of these orders of nobility and departments of state from China brought about the change from the species of feu- dalism hitherto existing to centralized monarchy, the rise of the noble families, and the fixing of official castes composed, not, as in most ancient countries, of the priestly and warrior classes, but, as in China, of the civilian and military.

The seeds of the mediaeval and modern complex feudalism, which lasted until 1872, were planted about this time. A division of all the able-bodied males into three classes was now made, one of which was to consist of regular soldiers permanently in service. This was the " military class," from which the legions kept as garrisons in the remote provinces were recruited. The unit of combination was the go, consisting of five men. Two go formed a kua, five kua a tai, two tai a rid, ten rid a dan. These terms may be translated " file," " squad," " company," " battalion," " regiment." The dan, or regi- ment, could also be regularly divided into four detachments. The generals who commanded the army in the field were in many cases civil officials, who were more or less conversant with the rude military science of the day. In their time, success in war depended more on disciplined numbers and personal valor, and was not so much a prob- lem of weight, mathematics, machinery, and money as in our day. The expeditions were led by a shogun, or general, who, if he com- manded three regiments, was called a tai -shogun, or generalissimo. The vice-commanders were called fuku-shogun. Thus it will be seen that the term " shogun " is merely the Japanese word for " general." All generals were shoguns, and even the effete figure-head of the great usurpation at Yedo, with whom Commodore Perry and those who fol- lowed him made treaties, supposing him to be the " secular emperor," was nothing more.

Muster-rolls were kept of the number of men in the two remaining classes that could be sent in the field on an emergency ; and whenever an insurrection broke out, and a military expedition was determined


THE THRONE AND THE NOBLES. 105

upon, orders were sent to the provinces along the line of march to be ready to obey the imperial command, and compare the quota required with the local muster-rolls. An army would thus be quickly assem- bled at the capital, or, starting thence, could be re-enforced on the route to the rebellious province. All that was necessary were the or- ders of the emperor. When war was over, the army was dissolved, and the army corps, regiments, and companies were mustered out of service into their units of combination, go of five men. The general, doffing helmet, made his votive offering to the gods, and returned to garrison duty.

Until about the twelfth century, the Japanese empire, like the old Roman, was a centre of civilization surrounded by barbarism, or, rath- er, like a wave advancing ever farther northward. The numerous re- volts in Kiushiu, Shikoku, and even in the North and East of Hondo, show that the subjugation of these provinces was by no means com- plete on their first pacification. The Kuanto needed continual mili- tary care, as well as civil government; while the northern provinces were in a chronic state of riot and disorder, being now peaceful and loyally obedient, and anon in rebellion against the mikado. To keep the remote provinces in order, to defend their boundaries, and to col- lect tribute, military occupation became a necessity ; and, accordingly, in each of the distant provinces, especially those next to the frontier, beyond which were the still unconquered savages, an army was per- manently encamped. This, in the remote provinces, was the perma- nent military force. Throughout the country was a reserve militia, or latent army ; and in the capital was the regular army, consisting of the generals and " the Six Guards," or household troops, who form- ed the regular garrison of Kioto in peace, and in war became the nu- cleus of the army of chastisement.

This system worked well at first, but time showed its defects, and wherein it could be improved. Among that third of the population classed as soldiers, some naturally proved themselves brave, apt, and skillful; others were worthless in war, while in the remaining two- thirds many who were able and willing could not enter the army. About the end of the eighth century a reform was instituted, and a new division of the people made. The court decided that all those among the rich peasants who had capacity, and were skilled in arch- ery and horsemanship, should compose the military class, and that the remainder, the weak and feeble, should continue to till the soil and apply themselves to agriculture. The above was one of the most sig-


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THE MIKADO'S EMPIRE.


nificant of all the changes in the history of Japan. Its fruits are seen to-day in the social constitution of the Japanese people. Though there are many classes, there are but two great divisions of the Japa- nese, the military and the agricultural. It wrought the complete sev- erance of the soldier and the fanner. It lifted up one part of the peo- ple to a plane of life on which travel, adventure, the profession and the pursuit of arms, letters, and the cultivation of honor and chivalry

were possible, and by which that brightest type of the Japanese man, the samurai, was produced. This is the class which for centuries has monopolized arms, polite learn- ing, patriotism, and intellect of Japan. They are the men whose minds have been ever open to learn, from whom sprung the ideas that once made, and which later over- threw, the feudal system,which wrought the mighty reforms that swept away the shogunate in 1868, restored the mikado to ancient power, who intro- duced those ideas that now J rule Japan, and sent their sons =^~ abroad to study the civilization

A Samurai, in Winter Traveling-dress. Qf the Wegt To the samurai

Japan looks to-day for safety in war, and progress in peace. The samurai is the soul of the nation. In other lands the priestly and the military castes were formed. In Japan one and the same class held the sword and the pen — liberal learning and secular culture. The other class — the agricultural — remained unchanged. Left to the soil to till it, to live and die upon it, the Japanese farmer has remained the same to-day as he was then. Like the wheat that for successive ages is planted as wheat, sprouts, beards, and fills as wheat, the peas- ant, with his horizon bounded by his rice-fields, his water-courses, or the timbered hills, his intellect laid away for safe -keeping in the priests' hands, is the son of the soil ; caring little who rules him, un- less he is taxed beyond the power of flesh and blood to bear, or an


THE T1IKONE AND THE NOBLES. 107

V


A Japanese Farmer. (Seed-beds of rice protected from the birds by strings and slips of

wood.)*

overmeddlesome officialdom touches his land to transfer, sell, or re- divide it : then he rises as a rebel. In time of war, he is a disinter- ested and a passive spectator, and he does not fight. He changes masters with apparent unconcern. Amidst all the ferment of ideas induced by the contact of Western civilization with Asiatic within the last two decades, the farmer stolidly remains conservative : he knows not, nor cares to hear, of it, and hates it because of the heavier taxes it imposes upon him.

  • In the above sketch by Hokusai, the farmer, well advanced in life, bent and

bald, is looking: dubiously over a piece of newly tilled land, perhaps just reclaim- ed, which he defends from the birds by the device of strings holding strips of thin wood and bamboo stretched from a pole. With his ever-present bath-towel and headkerchief on his shoulders, his pipe held behind him, he stands in medi- tative attitude, in his old rice-straw sandals, run down and out at the heels, his well-worn cotton coat, darned crosswise for durability and economy, wondering whether he will see a full crop before he dies, or whether he can pay his taxes, and fill his children's mouths with rice. The writing at side is a proverb which has two meanings: it may be read, "A new field gives a small crop," or "Hu- man life is but fifty years." In either case, it has pregnant significance to the farmer. The pathos and humor are irresistible to one who knows the life of these sons of toil.


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To support the military, a certain portion of rice was set apart per- manently as revenue, and given as wages to the soldiers. This is the origin of the pensions still enjoyed by the samurai, and the burden of the Government and people, which in 1876, after repeated reductions, amounts to nearly $20,000,000.

Let us notice how the noble families originated. To this hour these same families, numbering one hundred and fifty -five in all, dwell in Tokio or Kioto, intensely proud of their high descent from the mikados and the heavenly gods, glorying in their pedigree more than the autochthons of Greece gloried in their native soil. The ex- istence of this feeling of superiority to all mankind among some of the highest officials under the present mikado's government has been the cause of bitter quarrels, leading almost to civil war. Under the altered circumstances of the national life since 1868, the officials of ancient lineage, either unable to conceal, or desirous of manifesting their pride of birth, have on various occasions stung to rage the ris- ing young men who have reached power by sheer force of merit. Between these self-made men, whose minds have been expanded by contact with the outer world, and the high nobles nursed in the at- mosphere of immemorial antiquity, and claiming descent from the gods, an estrangement that at times seems irreconcilable has grown. As the chasm between the forms and spirit of the past and the pres- ent widens, as the modern claims jostle the ancient traditions, as vig- orous parvenuism challenges effete antiquity, the difficulty of harmo- nizing these tendencies becomes apparent, adding another to the cat- alogue of problems awaiting solution in Japan. I have heard even high officers under the Government make the complaint I have indi- cated against their superiors; but I doubt not that native patience and patriotism will heal the wound, though the body politic must suffer long.

The kuge, or court nobles, sprung from mikados. From the first, polygamy was common among both aborigines and conquerors. The emperor had his harem of many beauties who shared his couch. In very ancient times, as early, as Jimmu, it was the custom to choose one woman, called kogo, who was wife or empress in the sense of re- ceiving special honor, and of having her offspring most likely to suc- ceed to the throne. In addition to the wife, the mikado had twelve concubines, whose offspring might fill the throne in case of failure of issue by the wife. To guard still further against desinence, four fam- ilies of imperial descent were afterward set apart, from which an heir


THE THRONE AND THE NOBLES. 109

to the throne or a husband of the mikado's daughter might be sought In either case the chosen one became mikado. Only those sons, brothers, or grandsons of the sovereign, to whom the title was spe- cially granted by patent, were called princes of the blood. There were five grades of these. Surnames were anciently unknown in Ja- pan; individuals only having distinguishing appellatives. In 415, families were first distinguished by special names, usually after those of places. Younger sons of mikados took surnames and founded ca- det families. The most famous in the Japanese peerage are given below. By long custom it came to pass that each particular family held the monopoly of some one high office as its prerogative. The Nakatomi family was formerly charged with the ceremonies of Shinto, and religious offices became hereditary in that family. The Fujiwara (Wistaria meadow) family is the most illustrious in all Japan. It was founded by Kamatari, who was regent of the empire (A.D. 645-649), who was said to have been descended from Ame no ko yane no mikoto, the servant of the grandfather of Jimmu. The influence of this family on the destinies of Japan, and the prominent part it has played in history, will be fully seen. At present ninety-five of the one hundred and fifty -five families of kuge are of Fujiwara name and descent. The office of Kuambaku, or Regent, the highest to which a subject could attain, was held by members of this family exclusively. The Sugawara family, of which six families of kuge are descendants, is nearly as old as the Fujiwara. Its members have been noted for scholarship and learning, and as teachers and lecturers on religion.

The Taira family was founded by Takamochi, great grandson of the Emperor Kuammu (A.D. 782-805), and became prominent as the great military vassals of the mikado. But five kuge families claim descent from the survivors.

The Minamoto family was founded by Tsunemoto, grandson of the Emperor Seiwa (839-880). They were the rivals of the Taira. Seventeen families of kuge are descended from this old stock. The office of Sei-i Tai Shogun, or Barbarian-chastising Great General, was monopolized by the Minamoto, and, later, by other branches of the stock, named Ashikaga and Tokugawa.

Though so many offices were created in the seventh century, the kuge were sufficiently numerous to fill them. The members of the Fujiwara family gradually absorbed the majority, until almost all of the important ones at court, and the governorships of many provinces, were filled by them. When vacancies occurred, no question was


110 THE MIKADO'S EMPIRE.

raised as to this or that man's fitness for the position : it was simply one of high descent, and a man of Fujiwara blood was sure to get the appointment, whether he had abilities or not. This family, in spite of its illustrious name and deeds, are to be credited with the forma- tion of a "ring" around the mikado, which his people could not break, and with the creation of one of the most accursed systems of nepotism ever seen in any country. Proceeding step by step, with craft and signal ability, they gradually obtained the administration of the government in the mikado's name. Formerly it had been the privilege of every subject to petition the sovereign. The Fujiwara ministers gradually assumed the right to open all such petitions, and decide upon them. They also secured the appointment of younger sons, brothers, nephews, and kinsmen to all the important positions. They based their hold on the throne itself by marrying their daugh- ters to the mikado, whose will was thus bent to their own designs. For centuries the empresses were chiefly of Fujiwara blood. In this way, having completely isolated the sovereign, they became the virtual rulers of the country and the proprietors of the throne, and dictated as to who should be made emperor. Every new office, as fast as cre- ated, was filled by them. In the year 888, the title of Kuambaku (literally, " the bolt inside the gate," but meaning " to represent to the mikado ") was first used and bestowed on a Fujiwara noble. The Kuambaku was the highest subject in the empire. He was regent during the minority of the emperor, or when an empress filled the throne. The office of Kuambaku, first filled by Fujiwara Mototsune, became hereditary in the family, thus making them all powerful. In time the Fujiwaras, who had increased to the proportions of a great clan, were divided into five branches called the Sekke, or Regent fam- ilies, named Konoye, Kujo, Nijo, Ichijo, and Takadzukasa.

So long as the succession to the throne was so indefinite, and on such a wide basis, it was easy for this powerful family to choose the heir whenever the throne was empty, as it was in their power to make it empty when it so suited them, by compelling the mikado to abdicate.

In A.D. 794 the capital was removed to Kioto, seven miles from Lake Biwa, and there permanently located. Before that time it was at Kashiwabara, at Nara,* or at some place in the Home Provinces

  • The ancient town of Nara, one of the most interesting in all Japan, lies about

twenty miles due east of Ozaka, in Yamato. The town and neighborhood abound with antiquities, mikado's tombs, grand old temples, and colossal images of Buddha. Seven sovereigns, of whom four were females, ruled at Nara from A.D.


THE THRONE AND THE NOBLES. \\\

(kinai) of Yamato, Yamashiro, or Settsu. So long as the course of empire was identified with that of a central military chief, who was the ruler of a few provinces and suzerain of tributaries, requiring him to be often in camp or on the march, government was by the sword rather than by the sceptre, and the permanent location of a capi- tal was unnecessary. As the area of dominion increased and became more settled the government business grew apace, in amount and complexity, and division of labor was imperative, and a permanent capital was of prime importance. The choice was most felicitous. The ancient city of Heianjo, seven miles south-west of the southern end of Lake Biwa, was chosen. The Japanese word meaning capital, or large city, is miako, of which kid or kioto is the Chinese equiva- lent. The name Heianjo soon fell into disuse, the people speaking of the city as the miako. Even this term gave way in popular usage to Kioto. Miako is now chiefly used in poetry, while the name most generally applied has been and is Kioto, the miako by excellence. Kioto remained the capital of Japan until 1 868, when the miako was removed to Yedo, which city having become the kid, was re-named Tokio, or Eastern capital. The name Yedo is no longer in use among the Japanese. No more eligible site could have been chosen for the purpose. Kioto lies not mathematically, but geographically and prac- tically in respect of the distribution of population and habitable area, in the centre of Japan. It is nearly in the middle of the narrowest neck of land between the Sea of Japan and the Pacific Ocean. It lies at the foot, and stands like a gate between the great mountain ranges, diverging north and south, or east and west. Its situation at the base of the great central lake of Biwa, or Omi, forty miles from whose northern point is the harbor and sea-port of Tsuruga, makes it

708-782. Their reigns were prosperous and glorious, and were distinguished for the cultivation of the arts, literature, and religion. Here, in 711, the Kojiki was written, and in 713, by orders of the imperial court, sent to all the governors of provinces ; a book, in sixty-six volumes, descriptive of the provinces, cities, mount- ains, rivers, valleys, and plains, plants, tre.es, birds, and quadrupeds, was begun, and finished in 1634. Only fragments of this fine work are now extant. In the period 708-715 copper was discovered. In 739, the colossal gilded copper image of Buddha, fifty-three feet high, was cast and set up. Many envoys from China, and Buddhist priests from Siam, India, and China, visited Nara, one of the lat- ter bringing a library of five thousand volumes of Buddhist literature. In 749 it was forbidden by imperial edict to slaughter animals in Japan. A large col- lection of the personal and household articles in the possession of the mikados of the eighth century was exhibited at Nara in June, 1875, the inventories made at that ancient period being accessible for comparison.


112 THE MIKADO'S EMPIRE.

acccessible to the ships coining from the entire west coast and from Yezo. On the west and east the natural mountain roads and passes slope down and open toward it. Forty miles to the south are the great harbors lining the bay of Ozaka, the haven of all ships from northern or southern points of the eastern coast. Easy river com- munications connect Ozaka with Kioto.

The rniako is beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole empire of Japan. The tone of reverential tenderness, of exulting joy, the sparkling of the eyes with which Japanese invariably speak of Kioto, witness to the fact of its natural beauty, its sacred and classic associa- tions, and its place in the affections of the people. The city stands on an elliptical plain walled in on all sides by evergreen hills and mountains, like the floor of a huge flattened crater no longer choked with lava, but mantled with flowers. On the south the river Kamo, and on the north, east, and west, flowing in crystal clearness, the afflu- ents of Kamo curve around the city, nearly encircle it, uniting at the south-west to form the Yodo River. Through the centre and in sev- eral of the streets the branches of the river flow, giving a feeling of grateful coolness in the heats of summer, and is the source of the cleanliness characteristic of Kioto. The streets run parallel and cross at right angles, and the whole plan of the city is excellent. The mikado's palace is situated in the north-eastern quarter. Art and nature are wedded in beauty. The monotony of the clean squares is broken by numerous groves, temples, monasteries, and cemeteries. On the mountain overlooking the city peep out pagodas and shrines. The hill-slopes blossom with gardens. The suburbs are places of de- light and loveliness. The blue Lake of Biwa,. the tea-plantations of Uji, the thousand chosen resorts of picnic groups in the adjacent shady hills, the resorts for ramblers, the leafy walks for the poet, the groves for the meditative student or the pious monk, the thousand historical and holy associations invest Kioto with an interest attaching to no other place in Japan. Here, or in its vicinity, have dwelt for seventeen centuries the mikados of Japan.

As the children and descendants of the mikados increased at the capital there was formed the material for classes of nobility. It was to the interest of these nobles to cherish with pride their traditions of divine descent. Their studied exaltation of the mikado as their head was the natural consequence. The respect and deference of dis- tant tributary princes wishing to obtain and preserve favor at court served only to increase the honor of these nobles of the capital. The


THE THRONE AND THE NOBLES. 113

fealty of the distant princes was measured not only by their trib- ute and military assistance, but by their close conformity to the cus- toms of the miako, which naturally became the centre of learning and civilization.

Previous to the era of Sujin, the observance of the time of begin- ning the new year, as well as the celebration of the sacred festivals to the gods, was not the same throughout the provinces. The acceptance of a uniform calendar promulgated from the capital was then, as now, a sign of loyalty of far greater significance than would appear to us at first sight. This was forcibly shown in Yokohama, as late as 1872, after the mikado had abolished the lunar, and ordered the use of the solar, or Gregorian, calendar in his dominions. The resident Chi- nese, in an incendiary document, which was audaciously posted on the gates of the Japanese magistrate's office, denounced the Japanese for having thus signified, by the adoption of the barbarians' time, that they had yielded themselves up to be the slaves of the " foreign devils."

The mikado has no family name. He needs none, because his dynasty never changes. Being above ordinary mortals, no name is necessary to distinguish him from men. He need be personally dis- tinguished only from the gods. When he dies, he will enter the company of the gods. He is deified under some name, with Tenno (son, or king, of heaven) affixed. It was not proper (until 1872, when the custom was abrogated) for ordinary people to pronounce the name of the living mikado aloud, or to write it in full : a stroke should be left out of each of the characters.

Previous to the general use of Chinese writing, the mikados, about fifty in all, had long names ending in " mikoto," a term of respect equiv- alent to " augustness," and quite similar to those applied to the gods. These extremely long names, now so unmanageable to foreign, and even to modern native, tongues, gave place in popular use to the great- ly abbreviated Chinese equivalents. A complete calendar of the names of the gods and goddesses, mikados and empresses and heroes, was made out in Chinese characters. It is so much more convenient to use these, that I have inserted them in the text, even though to do so seems in many an instance an anachronism. The difference in learned length and thundering sound of the Japanese and the Chinese form of some of these names will be easily seen and fully appreciated after a glance, by the Occidental reader who is terrified at the uncouthness of both, or who fears to trust his vocal organs to attempt their pro-


114 THE MIKADO'S EMPIRE.

nunciation. Amaterasu 6 mikami becomes Ten Sho Dai Jin ; Oki- naga Tarashi Hime becomes Jingu Kogo.

After the Chinese writing became fashionable, the term mikoto was dropped. The mikados after death received a different name from that used when living : thus Kan Yamato Iware hiko no mikoto became, posthumously, Jimmu Tenno.

The Golden Age of the mikado's power ceased after the introduc- tion of Buddhism and the Chinese system of officialdom. The de- cadence of his personal power began, and steadily continued. Many of the high ministers at court became Buddhists, as well as the mi- kados. It now began to be a custom for the emperors to abdicate after short reigns, shave off their hair in token of renunciation of the world, become monks, and retire from active life, taking the title Ho-o (ho, law of Buddha; 6, mikado = cloistered emperor). During the eighth century, while priests were multiplying, and monasteries were everywhere being established, the court was the chief propaganda. The courtiers vied with each other in holy zeal and study of the sacred books of India, while the minds of the empresses and boy-emperors were occupied with schemes for the advancement of Buddhism. In 741, the erection of two great temples, and of a seven-storied pagoda in each province, was ordered. The abdication after short reigns made the mikados mere puppets of the ministers and courtiers. In- stead of warriors braving discomforts of the camp, leading armies in battle, or fighting savages, the chief rulers of the empire abdicated, after short reigns, to retire into monasteries, or give themselves up to license. This evil state of affairs continued, until, in later centuries, effeminate men, steeped in sensual delights, or silly boys, who droned away their lives in empty pomp and idle luxury, or became the tools of monks, filled the throne. Meanwhile the administration of the empire from the capital declined, while the influence of the military classes increased. As the mikado's actual power grew weaker, his nominal importance increased. He was surrounded by a hedge of etiquette that secluded him from the outer world. He never appeared in public. His subjects, except his wife and concubines and highest ministers, never saw his face. He sat on a throne of mats behind a curtain. His feet were never allowed to touch the earth. When he went abroad in the city, he rode in a car closely curtained, and drawn by t bullocks. The relation of emperor and subject thus grew mythic- al, jand the way was paved for some bold usurper to seize the actual- ity of power, while the name remained sacred and inviolate.