Tokugawa Japan: Peace, Isolation, and Hidden Power — Fexingo History

The Shogun's Forgotten Roads: Travel and Authority in Tokugawa Japan

7 min · 11. juli 2026
episode The Shogun's Forgotten Roads: Travel and Authority in Tokugawa Japan cover

Beskrivelse

When Tokugawa Ieyasu unified Japan in 1603, he inherited a country of fragmented domains and restless samurai. But instead of building walls, he built roads—specifically, the five great highways radiating from Edo, known as the Gokaidō. These roads, especially the Tōkaidō linking Edo to Kyoto, became arteries of control, commerce, and surveillance. In this episode, Lucas and Luna walk the Tōkaidō with woodblock-print artist Utagawa Hiroshige, stopping at post stations like Hakone and Shōno, where daimyo processions, peddlers, and pilgrims converged. They explore the sankin-kōtai system, which forced feudal lords to alternate residence between Edo and their domains, turning the highways into instruments of political stability. Along the way, they encounter sekisho (barrier stations) where travelers were checked, the hidden world of female travelers and prostitutes, and the unofficial travel guides known as kaidō chūkō. Through Hiroshige's famous 'Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō', they see how art captured a nation on the move—and how the shogun's roads held a country together for over two centuries. #TokugawaJapan #EdoPeriod #Gokaidō #Tōkaidō #Hiroshige #SankinKōtai #UtagawaHiroshige #JapaneseHistory #Edo #Kyoto #Hakone #Sekisho #TravelHistory #UkiyoE #FiftyThreeStations #PostStations #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Alle episoder

164 episoder

episode Tokugawa Japan's Hidden Diplomats: The Korean Missions and the Shogun's Silk Road cover

Tokugawa Japan's Hidden Diplomats: The Korean Missions and the Shogun's Silk Road

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Korean missions to Tokugawa Japan—the Chōsen Tsūshinshi. Between 1607 and 1811, twelve large diplomatic delegations traveled from Joseon Korea to Edo, bearing gifts, letters, and a delicate balance of power. These missions were more than etiquette: they were conduits for books, ceramics, medicine, and even firearms. Lucas traces the origins after the 1592-98 Imjin War, the negotiations by the Sō clan of Tsushima, and the changing reception as sakoku took hold. He highlights key figures like the scholar-official Yi Su-gwang, who exchanged knowledge with Japanese Confucians, and the 1719 mission that included the famed painter Kim Myeong-guk. The episode also covers the 1811 mission that never reached Edo—a sign of the shogunate's waning authority. Luna's questions draw out the human side: what Korean envoys thought of Japan's isolation, how they were treated in the provinces, and what cultural relics survive today. A rich look at a forgotten bridge between two insular worlds. #ChōsenTsūshinshi #JoseonKorea #TokugawaJapan #KoreanMissions #SōClan #Tsushima #YiSu-gwang #KimMyeong-guk #Sakoku #EdoPeriod #ImjinWar #Diplomacy #EastAsia #History #FexingoHistory #KoreanHistory #JapaneseHistory #CulturalExchange Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går7 min
episode Tokugawa Japan's Forgotten Pirates: The Murakami Fleet and the Battle of Itsukushima cover

Tokugawa Japan's Forgotten Pirates: The Murakami Fleet and the Battle of Itsukushima

When we think of Tokugawa Japan, we tend to imagine a land at peace, sealed off from the world. But long before the shoguns secured their grip, the seas around Japan were ruled by pirates. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the rise and fall of the Murakami family — the most powerful pirate clan of the Seto Inland Sea. They commanded hundreds of swift atakebune warships, controlled vital shipping lanes, and fought alongside legendary warlords like Mōri Motonari. At the Battle of Itsukushima in 1555, the Murakami fleet delivered a devastating surprise attack that helped shape the course of the Sengoku period. But as Tokugawa Ieyasu unified Japan and imposed sakoku, these once-indispensable sea lords faced a stark choice: dissolve into obscurity or become loyal coast guards for the new regime. Lucas traces the Murakamis' transformation from feared privateers to forgotten servants of the shogun, and reflects on how the Tokugawa peace rendered their kind obsolete. #TokugawaJapan #MurakamiPirates #SetoInlandSea #SengokuPeriod #BattleOfItsukushima #MōriMotonari #Atakebune #Sakoku #CoastDefense #EdoPeriod #Wakō #NavalHistory #JapaneseHistory #EastAsia #Piracy #FexingoHistory #HistoryPodcast #FeudalJapan Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går7 min
episode Tokugawa Japan's Hidden Cities: The Daimyo's Mansions and Power Displays cover

Tokugawa Japan's Hidden Cities: The Daimyo's Mansions and Power Displays

In this episode of Tokugawa Japan: Peace, Isolation, and Hidden Power, Lucas and Luna explore the vast estates of the daimyo in Edo — the yashiki that were both luxurious residences and instruments of control under the sankin-kōtai system. They discuss how the Tokugawa bakufu used these mansions as hostages, how daimyo competed in architectural grandeur to show status without threatening the shogun, and the surprising role of gardens as political statements. Specific examples include the Kōraku-en garden built by the Ikeda clan, the sprawling Satsuma estate in Mita, and the legendary Nihonbashi fish market that supplied these kitchens. The episode also touches on the hidden costs of maintaining these estates, which drained daimyo treasuries and prevented rebellion. A fascinating look at how urban space was weaponized for peace. #TokugawaShogunate #SankinKotai #Daimyo #EdoCastle #Yashiki #Korakuen #SatsumaDomain #Nihonbashi #JapaneseHistory #EdoPeriod #FeudalJapan #Bakufu #UrbanPlanning #Architecture #PowerDisplay #HostageSystem #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

15. juli 20268 min
episode Tokugawa Japan's Hidden Currency: The Rise of the Rice Economy cover

Tokugawa Japan's Hidden Currency: The Rise of the Rice Economy

When we think of Tokugawa Japan, we imagine samurai, castles, and sakoku isolation. But behind the shogun's power lay a surprising foundation: rice. Lucas and Luna explore how the Tokugawa bakufu built an entire economic system around koku, the rice-based unit of wealth that measured a daimyo's worth. They trace the rise of the Osaka rice market, the invention of rice tickets as proto-paper money, and the strange world of rice futures trading — centuries before Wall Street. They also dive into the dark side: how samurai on fixed rice stipends grew poorer as the economy monetized, leading to debt, rebellion, and the erosion of the warrior class. Along the way, they meet figures like Yodoya Tatsugorō, the merchant prince of Osaka, and uncover the tensions between the shogun's attempts to control grain prices and the market's own momentum. A story of power, grain, and the seeds of economic change. #TokugawaJapan #EdoPeriod #RiceEconomy #Koku #OsakaRiceMarket #YodoyaTatsugorō #Daimyo #Samurai #Bakufu #SankinKōtai #RiceTickets #FuturesTrading #EconomicHistory #JapaneseHistory #FexingoHistory #History #Podcast #HiddenPower Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

15. juli 20266 min
episode Tokugawa Japan's Forgotten Navy: The Shogun's Ships and Coast Defense cover

Tokugawa Japan's Forgotten Navy: The Shogun's Ships and Coast Defense

When we think of Tokugawa Japan, we think of sakoku — isolation — and assume the shoguns gave up on the sea. But the Tokugawa bakufu actually maintained a navy: warships, coastal patrols, and a secret shipbuilding program that built Japan's first Western-style vessels. This episode uncovers the forgotten story of the Shogun's Navy — from the early Edo period's coastal defense fleets to the crisis of the 1800s, when foreign black ships forced the shogun to build steam warships and even send a delegation across the Pacific. We meet key figures like the shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu, who sponsored Western shipbuilding, and the Tokugawa admiral Kimura Kaishū, who captained Japan's first trans-Pacific voyage. We explore the bakufu's naval reforms, the construction of the Kanrin Maru, and the little-known battles the shogun's navy actually fought — including the bombardment of Chōshū and the final naval clashes of the Boshin War. This is the story of a naval tradition that never quite sailed, but shaped Japan's encounter with the modern world. #TokugawaNavy #Sakoku #KanrinMaru #KimuraKaishū #EdoPeriod #BoshinWar #Bakufu #NavalHistory #Shogun #CoastDefense #WesternShipbuilding #BlackShips #Chōshū #JapaneseHistory #Sengoku #FexingoHistory #EastAsia #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14. juli 20267 min