Difference between revisions of "Capitals of Japan"
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− | *Naniwa | + | Up until the mid-7th century or so, the Imperial Court maintained no permanent capital, and in fact often relocated the Court to a new capital to avoid the spiritual pollution that came with the death of an [[Emperor]]. Between [[400]] and [[646]] CE, the [[Yamato state]] had 23 emperors, and 31 imperial capitals.<ref>Takashi Fujitani, ''Splendid Monarchy'', UC Press (1998), 46.</ref> |
− | *Asuka (653- | + | |
− | * | + | ==List of Imperial Capitals of Japan== |
− | *Fujiwara (694-710) | + | *[[Naniwa]] (651?-653?)<ref>Due to archaeological debates and instances of dual capitals, this list is not complete or yet trustworthy. Naniwa was capital more times than is listed.</ref> |
− | * | + | *[[Asuka]] (653-667) |
− | *Kuni (740-?) | + | *[[Otsu|Ôtsu]] (667-672) |
− | *Shigaraki (?-745) | + | *[[Fujiwara-kyo|Fujiwara-kyô]] (694-710) |
− | *Nagaoka (784-794) | + | *[[Heijo|Heijô]] (now [[Nara]]) (710-740) |
− | *Heian (794-1868) | + | The following three capitals have overlapping and rather confusing dates: |
+ | **[[Kuni-kyo|Kuni]] (740-742?) | ||
+ | **[[Shigaraki]] (742?-745) | ||
+ | **Naniwa (745?) | ||
+ | *Heijô (now Nara) (745-784) | ||
+ | *[[Nagaoka-kyo|Nagaoka]] (784-794) | ||
+ | *Heian (now [[Kyoto]]) (794-1868) | ||
+ | *[[Tokyo]] (1868 to present) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Shogunal Seats== | ||
+ | *[[Kamakura]] ([[1192]]-[[1333]]) | ||
+ | *Kyoto (Muromachi district)([[1336]]-[[1573]]) | ||
+ | *[[Edo]] ([[1603]]-[[1868]]) | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Sources== | ||
+ | *William Wayne Farris' ''Sacred Texts and Buried Treasure''. Pages 123-200 | ||
+ | *Cambridge History of Japan Volume One: Ancient Japan. Pages 40-44 | ||
+ | <references/> | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Resource Articles]] | ||
+ | {{draft}} |
Latest revision as of 19:21, 15 March 2015
Up until the mid-7th century or so, the Imperial Court maintained no permanent capital, and in fact often relocated the Court to a new capital to avoid the spiritual pollution that came with the death of an Emperor. Between 400 and 646 CE, the Yamato state had 23 emperors, and 31 imperial capitals.[1]
List of Imperial Capitals of Japan
- Naniwa (651?-653?)[2]
- Asuka (653-667)
- Ôtsu (667-672)
- Fujiwara-kyô (694-710)
- Heijô (now Nara) (710-740)
The following three capitals have overlapping and rather confusing dates:
Shogunal Seats
Sources
- William Wayne Farris' Sacred Texts and Buried Treasure. Pages 123-200
- Cambridge History of Japan Volume One: Ancient Japan. Pages 40-44
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