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==''Kinsei''==
 
==''Kinsei''==
Howell identifies Uchida Ginzô, author of the [[1903]] book ''Nihon kinseishi'', as the first to propose the term ''kinsei'' 近世, today widely translated as "early modern," as a distinct historical period. Up until then, when the term was used, it was used in a more general sense to mean "recent times" or "current times." Uchida proposed defining the ''kinsei'' period as beginning with the death of [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] in [[1616]] and ending with the arrival of [[Commodore Perry]] in [[1853]], marking these as the end, and beginning, respectively, of periods of transition. In other words, he saw 1616 as marking, very roughly, the beginning of a period when the many changes of the 1570s to 1610s (i.e. unification of Japan by [[Oda Nobunaga]], [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]], and Ieyasu, the end of the violence and disunity of the [[Sengoku period]], and the establishment of a new ''status quo'' under the Tokugawa shogunate) were largely over and settled. Similarly, like many scholars today, Uchida used 1853 as a rough dividing point to mark the beginning of a period of significant changes, beginning around 1853 and ending with - or continuing through - the [[abolition of the han|abolition of the domains]] in [[1871]]. Though it would not be until the 1950s that historians began using the term ''kindai'' 近代 to identify a specific, defined, "modern" historical period following ''kinsei'', Uchida nevertheless drew this same distinction - a dividing line at around 1853, 1868, or 1871 - terming what was then his contemporary period of "modern" history ''saikinsei'' 最近世, i.e. categorizing the two periods as "recent times" and "the most recent times."
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Howell identifies Uchida Ginzô, author of the [[1903]] book ''Nihon kinseishi'', as the first to propose the term ''kinsei'' 近世, today widely translated as "early modern," as a distinct historical period. Up until then, when the term was used, it was used in a more general sense to mean "recent times" or "current times." Uchida proposed defining the ''kinsei'' period as beginning with the death of [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] in [[1616]] and ending with the arrival of [[Commodore Perry]] in [[1853]], marking these as the end, and beginning, respectively, of periods of transition. In other words, he saw 1616 as marking, very roughly, the beginning of a period when the many changes of the 1570s to 1610s (i.e. unification of Japan by [[Oda Nobunaga]], [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]], and Ieyasu, the end of the violence and disunity of the [[Sengoku period]], and the establishment of a new ''status quo'' under the Tokugawa shogunate) were largely over and settled. Similarly, like many scholars today, Uchida used 1853 as a rough dividing point to mark the beginning of a period of significant changes, beginning around 1853 and ending with - or continuing through - the [[abolition of the han|abolition of the domains]] in [[1871]]. Though it would not be until the 1950s that historians began using the term ''kindai'' 近代 to identify a specific, defined, "modern" historical period following ''kinsei'', Uchida nevertheless drew this same distinction - a dividing line at around 1853, 1868, or 1871 - terming what was then his contemporary period of "modern" history ''saikinsei'' 最近世, i.e. categorizing the two periods as "recent times" and "the most recent times."<ref>Howell, p5.</ref>
    
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