Tokugawa Japan: Peace, Isolation, and Hidden Power — Fexingo History
Long before modern intelligence agencies, the Tokugawa shogunate operated a sophisticated network of spies, informants, and censorship bureaus that monitored everything from daimyo loyalty to foreign ships on the horizon. This episode dives into the bakufu's information control system: the metsuke and ōmetsuke inspectors who shadowed officials, the onmitsu agents who moved through Edo's streets in disguise, and the censorship boards that burned books and suppressed 'dangerous' ideas. We look at the controversial figure of Matsudaira Sadanobu, who tightened press controls during the Kansei Reforms; the case of Hayashi Shihei, whose book on coastal defense was banned and whose publisher was thrown in prison; and the surprisingly porous reality of sakoku, where Dutch and Chinese reports still flowed into Nagasaki. How did a regime built on peace maintain its grip through paper, ink, and informants? And what happened when information itself became a weapon? #TokugawaJapan #EdoPeriod #Bakufu #Metsuke #Onmitsu #MatsudairaSadanobu #HayashiShihei #KanseiReforms #Sakoku #Censorship #Espionage #NagasakiBugyo #Rangaku #Shogun #Daimyo #History #FexingoHistory #IntelligenceHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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