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Shogunate Japan

  • Period: 710 to 794

    The Nara Period

    The capital is located in Nara, a small town close to Kyoto, and a number of large Buddhist temples are built to protect the Emperor. A time of close ties with China
  • Period: 795 to 1185

    The Heian Period

    A time of rapid cultural change strongly influenced by China, led from modern-day Kyoto
  • Period: 1185 to

    The Feudal Period

    Japan is dominated by powerful military families, and the arts are highly decorated in style
  • Period: 1185 to 1333

    The Kamakura Period

    In the Kamakura Period, Minamoto no Yoritomo creates the first ‘warrior government’ or shogunate in 1193. The Minamoto family rules from Kamakura, a coastal town of Japan not far from modern-day Tokyo
  • Period: 1336 to 1576

    The Muromachi Period

    In the Muromachi Period, the Ashikaga clan rules as the shoguns. They move the capital to Kyoto in the Muromachi district.
  • Period: 1568 to

    The Momoyama Period

    The Momoyama Period (or Azuchi-Momoyama Period) were the final years of the Medieval Period, which ended the ‘Warring States’ and Medieval periods, when ‘three great unifiers’ united the country by force under a military government.
  • Period: to

    The Tokugawa Period

    In the Tokugawa (Edo) Period, Japan is united under the Tokugawa clan and society is reorganised around four classes: samurai, farmers, craftsmen and merchants. Life centres on Edo (Tokyo), the new capital of Japan