Yayoi Period

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  • Period: 300 BCE - c. 250 CE
  • Japanese: 弥生時代 (Yayoi jidai)

The Yayoi Period is marked by the introduction of wet rice cultivation and certain other technologies, innovations in societal organization, and behavior, which accompanied an influx of new settlers into the Japanese archipelago. The period takes its name from a neighborhood in Tokyo where ceramic artifacts from this period were first discovered.

While theories surrounding horseriders from the Asian mainland, arriving via Korea, once were dominant, recent scholarship has cast doubt upon that argument. Debate continues as to whether the shift from Jômon to Yayoi was chiefly the result of mass migrations from the mainland, or of a looser form of cultural interactions and exchanges, though almost assuredly it was some combination of the two which occurred.

Some scholars argue that rice cultivation was first introduced by people from the Asian mainland who first traveled to the Yaeyama Islands from the Jiangnan region of China (i.e. south of the Yangtze River basin) around 500-300 BCE, and who then made their way, via the Kuroshio current, to Kyushu.[1] Some sources point to earlier carbon dating evidence, and place the beginning of the Yayoi period several centuries earlier, possibly as early as c. 900 BCE.[2]

Technologies including intensive agriculture, ironworking, and bronze casting, along with new techniques for weaving and woodworking, appear earliest in Kyushu, and are gradually seen to have spread north into the rest of the archipelago. Jômon culture persisted in Tôhoku and Hokkaidô for centuries afterwards, while the Ryûkyû Islands similarly followed its own distinct path.[3] In most of Japan, people began to cultivate rice in wet rice paddies, as well as other grains including barley and millet; use of seafood and marine products, as well as fruits, nuts, and other forest products, expanded as well.

Settlements grew larger and more complex, and physical, violent conflict between communities seems to have increased dramatically. Some communities began to construct walls, stockades, and watchtowers, and to locate their homes in strategically defensible positions; remains with evidence of violent injury by axe, arrow, or the like have also been found. There is also evidence of the emergence of class divisions within communities, as leaders or elites began to receive more elaborate burials, and were buried alongside larger groups of grave goods. By the end of the Yayoi period, relatively distinct polities emerged, with local chieftains, or "kings," some of which traded with, or otherwise were in contact with, polities on the Korean Peninsula and the Chinese mainland; some appear in ancient Chinese records, which made reference to the Kingdom of Na, the Kings of Wa, etc. One community particularly prominent in these records is called Yamatai, and is said to have been ruled by a queen named Himiko (or Pimiko); debate continues as to whether this powerful political center was located in Kyushu, in the Kinai, or elsewhere.

The end of the Yayoi period is marked by the expansion of these developments, with the beginnings of a firmer consolidation of power in the Yamato plain, and the construction of grand burial tomb-mounds called kofun, after which the succeeding period, the Kofun period, is named.

Previous Period
Jômon period
Yayoi Period Following Period
Yamato Period (Kofun Period)

References

  • Conrad Schirokauer, David Lurie, and Suzanne Gay, A Brief History of Japanese Civilization, Wadsworth Cengage (2013), 8-11.
  1. Kreiner, Josef. "Ryukyuan History in Comparative Perspective." in Kreiner (ed.) Ryukyu in World History. Bonn: Biersche Verlagsanstalt, 2001. p2.
  2. Schirokauer et al., 8.
  3. See Periods of Okinawan History.