Tokugawa Japan: Peace, Isolation, and Hidden Power — Fexingo History
When Tokugawa Ieyasu seized power in 1603, he moved the political capital to Edo, but Kyoto remained the imperial seat and the nation's cultural heart. This episode explores how the Tokugawa shogunate managed Kyoto — a city of 350,000 people, home to the emperor, hundreds of temples, and powerful merchant families. We look at the Kyoto shoshidai, the shogun's deputy who kept a watchful eye on the court; the Genroku-era explosion of arts in the city, from Nishijin textiles to Rinpa painting; and the strict restrictions placed on the emperor, who lived on a fixed stipend in the Imperial Palace while the shogun ruled from afar. We also cover the devastating Great Fire of Tenmei in 1788, which destroyed much of the city, and how the bakufu's response revealed tensions between Kyoto's old aristocracy and Edo's new bureaucracy. Finally, we touch on the 1864 Hamaguri Gate Rebellion, when Chōshū samurai tried to seize the emperor, igniting the turmoil that ended the Tokugawa era. Specific figures include Tokugawa Ieyasu, Emperor Go-Mizunoo, shoshidai Itakura Katsushige, and the merchant-financier Shimai Sōshitsu. #TokugawaJapan #Kyoto #EdoPeriod #Shoshidai #ImperialCourt #Genroku #NishijinTextiles #Rinpa #GreatFireOfTenmei #HamaguriGate #ItakuraKatsushige #EmperorGoMizunoo #ShimaiSoshitsu #FexingoHistory #History #EastAsianHistory #JapaneseHistory #Sakoku Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
150 episodes
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