Difference between revisions of "1635"

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==Timeline of 1635==
 
==Timeline of 1635==
 
*1635/1/9 The ''[[roju|rôjû]]'' issue a letter to [[red seal ships|red seal ship]] traders warning them not to leave port.
 
*1635/1/9 The ''[[roju|rôjû]]'' issue a letter to [[red seal ships|red seal ship]] traders warning them not to leave port.
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*1635/3/11 [[Yanagawa Affair]]: [[Shogun]] [[Tokugawa Iemitsu]] judges the allegations brought by [[Tsushima han]] ''[[karo|karô]]'' [[Yanagawa Shigeoki]] against his ''daimyô'' [[So Yoshinari|Sô Yoshinari]], regarding falsified diplomatic documents, in a grand court at the Ôhiroma of [[Edo castle]].
 
*1635/5/28 An edict is promulgated forbidding Japanese from traveling overseas, and from returning from overseas, marking the end of the red seal ships system.
 
*1635/5/28 An edict is promulgated forbidding Japanese from traveling overseas, and from returning from overseas, marking the end of the red seal ships system.
 
*1635/6/21 The ''[[Buke shohatto]]'' and ''[[shoshi shohatto]]'' are re-promulgated.
 
*1635/6/21 The ''[[Buke shohatto]]'' and ''[[shoshi shohatto]]'' are re-promulgated.
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==Other Events of 1635==
 
==Other Events of 1635==
*[[Tosen|Chinese ships]] are limited to [[Nagasaki]].
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*[[Chinese in Nagasaki|Chinese ships]] are limited to [[Nagasaki]].
 
*''[[Sankin kotai|Sankin kôtai]]'' obligations are made mandatory for all ''[[tozama]] daimyô''.
 
*''[[Sankin kotai|Sankin kôtai]]'' obligations are made mandatory for all ''[[tozama]] daimyô''.
 
*Fire destroys much of [[Kanazawa]].
 
*Fire destroys much of [[Kanazawa]].

Latest revision as of 23:17, 15 December 2015

Kan'ei 12 (寛永十二年)

Timeline of 1635

Other Events of 1635

  • Chinese ships are limited to Nagasaki.
  • Sankin kôtai obligations are made mandatory for all tozama daimyô.
  • Fire destroys much of Kanazawa.
  • The 1609 Kiyû Treaty between Korea and Tsushima han is revised.
  • The term Nihon-koku taikun (or Great Prince of Japan) is coined and begins to be used to refer to the shogun, thus avoiding the political/diplomatic ramifications of allowing him to be called King of Japan (which would imply that, like the Kings of Korea and Ryukyu, he acknowledged and submitted himself to the higher authority of the Chinese Emperor).
  • The kokudaka of the Kingdom of Ryûkyû is calculated at 90,883 koku.
  • The shogunate more formally articulates the duties of machi bugyô, jisha bugyô, and kanjô bugyô (finance magistrates).

Births and Deaths

Previous Year
1634
1635 Following Year
1636