HISTORY OF JAPAN LIBRARY |
JAMES MURDOCH' HISTORY OF JAPAN FROM THE ORIGINSTO THE ARRIVAL OF THE PORTUGUESE IN 1542 ADCHAOTER VIJAPAN FROM TENCHI TO KWAMMU.(662 TO 782 A.D.)
THE Reformers
of 645 may well have cherished the hope that a strong centralised government would enable Japan to resume the prosecution of her enterprises in
the Korean peninsula and to carry them to a successful completion. At the very
time of the great Japanese coup d'état, another Chinese attack on
Koguryu was being foiled by the stubbornness of the warriors of Northern
Korea. Shortly after the accession of the Tang dynasty in 618 all three
peninsular States had professed themselves to be the vassals of the Middle
Kingdom, which continued for some time to extend its favours,
or its indifference, to all three in tolerably equal measure. However, as
usual. Silla diplomacy proved too astute for her rivals; and from about 64o
Silla influence was in the ascendant at the Court of Hsian. Pakche and Koguryu
now began to co-operate in their attacks on Silla; and the Chinese expedition
of 644-5 was dispatched partly to relieve Silla, and partly to effect the
conquest and the annexation of Koguryu to China. On this occasion the Chinamen
received another severe lesson; and although they were minded to make an end of
Koguryu, they became very cautious in their dealings with her. During the next
few years China kept pressing on the north-western frontier of her daring
little neighbour, but with little tangible results
beyond making a diversion in favour of Silla, at war
with both Pakche and Koguryu. So at last in 659 the Pang Court adopted the
counsel of Silla, and in conjunction with the latter resolved to make an end of
Pakche, as a preliminary to attacking Koguryu from the south as well as from the
north simultaneously.
A Chinese force
of 130,000 men was transported to the Pakche coast in 659, and this, in
co-operation with the Silla troops, effected the ruin of Pakche in the
following year, 660. The King and four of his sons were captured and sent to
China, while the country was divided into five prefectures, controlled by
governors selected from among the conquered people, with a Chinese Viceroy to
superintend them. However, a son of the King had been living as a sort of
hostage in Japan for a good many years; and when the Pakche patriot Poksin organised a revolt to some
good purpose, envoys were dispatched to the Japanese Court to ask that this
Prince should be sent over as King and at the same time to implore Japanese
aid. The appeal was by no means fruitless; an expedition was equipped, and Saimei, the Empress, then 65 years of age, proceeded to
Kyushu to superintend its dispatch. However, her death at this juncture (661)
delayed matters somewhat; but two months later the Korean Prince was dispatched
with 5,000 Japanese auxiliaries to support his cause, while liberal supplies of
provisions and munition of war were forwarded to the insurgents. As both China
and Silla were now fully occupied with their joint attack upon Koguryu, the
prospects of the Pakche patriots ought to have been more than fair. But just at
this point an intrigue proved fatal to Poksin, who
was ignominiously executed; and the death of Poksin rang the knell of the patriot cause. A Japanese expeditionary force of 27,000
men crossed the sea; but it met with premature disaster. A Chinese fleet of 170
sail encountered it at the mouth of the Pékchon river, and practically annihilated it. And this put an end to all official
Japanese attempts upon Korea for 930 years.
A few years
later (668) Koguryu fell before the combined Chinese and Silla attack; and the
latter State now found itself undisputed mistress of the greater part of the
peninsula. A united Korea becomes so strong that from time to time we find her
regarded as such a menace by Japan, that the national gods are invoked whenever
a Sillan invasion threatens.
One result of
the fall of Pakche in 660, and of Koguryu eight years later on, was the influx
of considerable bodies of Korean immigrants into Japan. In 665 as many as 400
Pakche plebeians were assigned land and houses in the district of Kanzaki in
Omi, while in the following year a still more considerable colony of them,
2,000 strong, was settled in “the East country. Without distinction of priests
or laymen they were all maintained at Government expense for three years.”
Three years later still, 700 more were established in Omi. And these are only a
few of the notices of immigrants we meet with at this time. From a decree of
681 it appears that these new subjects were exempted from all taxation for a
space of ten years; in 681 they were freed from the obligation of rendering
forced labour for ten years more. As for the Korean
nobles, they were put on the same footing as the .Japanese aristocrats; in 671
we hear of official rank being conferred on as many as 70 of them at once. In
short, the treatment meted out to the refugees was something more than merely
hospitable; it was exceedingly generous.
In the feudal
ages and down to the Meiji era we meet with frequent mention of the Eta, who
formed a very considerable fraction of the pariah class in Japan. The origin of
these people is mysterious and has been the subject not only of much curiosity,
but of a good deal of lively debate. Some will have it that they were of Korean
extraction. In the old records we have met with nothing that lends any support
to this supposition. Koreans of gentle birth were invariably treated as
gentlefolk in Japan; while their plebeian countrymen, so far from being
discriminated against, were accorded immunities and privileges which must have
made their condition a subject of envy to the native tillers of the soil and
the native craftsman and trader. Their position in the country of their
adoption was emphatically an honourable one,—honourable not only to themselves, but to Japan and the
Japanese.
Tenchi Tenno,
under whom this great influx of refugees took place, was perhaps the ablest
man, and was certainly one of the most enlightened sovereigns that ever sat
upon the throne of Japan. It was only, then, to be expected that his welcome
to these intelligent Koreans should have been as warm as that extended by the
Great Elector of Brandenburg to the Huguenots in 1685. Tenchi Tenno, as the
Prince Naka no Oye, had begun his public career with the
assassination of Soga no Iruka (645). Subsequent events, however, bore eloquent
testimony in support of the plea that the motive that prompted his crime was
neither a personal nor an interested one. The Prince really aimed at nothing
but the promotion of the public good, and the creation of a strong and just
central power that could make itself feared and respected, and perhaps
ultimately regarded with sincere affection by a unified and united people. He
might very well have assumed the Imperial dignity in 645; but he refused to do
so. In 654 it was his undoubted right to do so; but he once more stood aside,
and reinstated his mother on the throne, allowing her to enjoy all the glory
and all the splendour of the position, while he
contented himself with all the hard and thankless work. After her death in 661,
he went on quietly as Prince Imperial for several years, and it was only in 668
that he consented to assume the style of an Emperor of Japan. And even then he
continued to live in a house built of trees with the bark on. His premature
death in 671, seemingly hastened by the fatigues of unremitting toil, was
emphatically an irreparable national loss.
On this
occasion there was yet another of those dire and deadly succession disputes. In
addition to his Empress, Tenchi had had four consorts, by whom he had eight
children, and besides these he had had six others by four of the palace women.
Prince Ohotomo, the son of one of these women, seems to have been the ablest of
the family, for shortly before his father’s death he was appointed Chancellor
of the Empire, although then only twenty-two or twenty-three years of age. But
it was Tenchi's younger brother, afterwards Temmu Tenno, who had been nominated
Prince Imperial. The latter, forty-five years old at the death of Tenchi in
671, had been careful to strengthen his position by marriage. Of his nine
wives, four were daughters of Tenchi, and hence also nieces of his own, two
were daughters of Kamatari, and yet another a Soga lady. Still, in spite of all
this, his position was by no means a sure one; and when summoned to Tenchi’s
death-bed, he refused to accept the throne, and begged for permission to renounce
the world and practise religion. Meanwhile the
Ministers of the Right and of the Left and three other great nobles
confederated with Prince Ohotomo to support his cause, no matter what might
betide; and it was perhaps a knowledge of this that induced the messenger sent
to summon Temmu to his brother’s sick-bed to counsel him to “ think before he
spoke.” Be that as it might, the future Temmu Tenno deemed it expedient to
renounce the succession and the world,—for the time being at all events. On
that same day he “collected his private weapons and deposited them every one
in the Department” and ‘‘put on the priestly garb.” Two days later he set out
from the Shiga capital for Yoshino, escorted by the Great Ministers. When they
bade him good-bye at Uji some one said: “Give a tiger wings and let him go.”
A month later
Tenchi Tenno died, and his son, Prince Ohotomo, betaine Emperor of Japan (Kobun Tenno) at the capital of Otsu in Omi. The “winged
tiger” his uncle, however, was merely biding his time; and was evidently in
active communication with his partisans in all parts of the Empire. Six months
later, on the plea that the Omi Court had designs upon his life, he left
Yoshino for Owari and raised the standard of revolt. Then followed the most
desperate and extensive civil war that Japan had yet seen. For some time it
raged with varied but on the whole equal fortunes; but at last the rebel cause
proved triumphant and Kobun Tenno lost his life,
while some of his surviving supporters were executed and the others banished.
If Prince Ito’s theory is correct, Prince Ohotomo, the son of Tenchi Tenno, had
a much better title to the throne than Temmu, who was merely a younger brother
of Tenchi’s. It must not be overlooked that it was this Temmu who organised the historical commission of 681, and that it was
under a daughter of his that the Nihongi was completed in 720. Hence the
Nihongi’s account of the events of this time must be regarded with a certain
amount of suspicion.
“ Treason doth
never prosper. What’s the reason ?
For If it
prospers, none dare call it treason.”
The Nihongi,
compiled as it was by Temmu’s orders, and completed
under what was virtually a Temmu dynasty, naturally enough endeavours to exalt Temmu and the merits of his administration. Yet a careful perusal of
the annals of Temmu and a comparison of them with those of his elder brother
only serve to intensify our conviction of the extreme seriousness of the loss
sustained by the nation in the death of Tenchi Tenno. Between 672 and 686 the
Imperial mind was evidently much occupied with the grave question of millinery; even the dress of commoners, the method in which ladies should wear their
hair, and their seat on horseback became subjects of legislation. In 681 a
sumptuary law was promulgated, which ran to no fewer than 92 articles, and this
was only one of many such edicts issued during the reign. Several times the
Ministers were summoned to Court and “made to gamble”; and on another occasion
they were called upon to solve conundrums! In more important matters there was
a great deal of what the Japanese call Chorci Bo-kai (revising in the evening
the edict issued in the morning) legislation. For instance, in 683 the Emperor
made a decree, saying:
“Henceforth
copper coins must be used and not silver coins.” On the very following day it
was decreed that the use of the silver coins should not be discontinued! Temmu’s inconsistent attitude towards the endowments of
Buddhist temples has already been referred to.
On the death of
this Emperor in 686 there was yet another succession difficulty. He had made
six of his sons by different mothers vow eternal concord. But the succession
went to none of these, and a month after Temmu’s death one of them, Prince Ohotsu, was “executed”
because he aspired to the vacant throne. This was presently occupied by one of Temmu’s widows, who is known in history as the Empress Jito. On Prince Ito’s theory she had no right to the
position whatsoever. She abdicated in 697,—the second authentic instance of
the abdication of a Japanese sovereign,—and was succeeded by Mommu Tenno (697-707), her grandson, a boy of fourteen,—the earliest case of a minor on the throne. On his demise in 707, his mother,
a sister of Jito Tenno, and at the same time her
daughter-in-law, reigned for eight years (Gemmyo 708
-715), and then abdicated in favour of her daughter
(Gensho Tenno, 715-723), who in her turn surrendered the throne to her nephew,
Shomu Tenno. The latter, after a reign of 24 years, resigned the Imperial
dignity to his unmarried daughter, who, like Tenchi Tenno’s mother, occupied
the throne on two occasions. From the year 749 to 758 she appears as the
Empress Koken; from 765 to her death in 769 she is known as the Empress Shotoku.
The interval between 758 and 765 was occupied by the reign of the Emperor Junnin, a grandson of Temmu, and a son of Prince Toneri. At present, thanks to the Imperial House Law, the
succession question decides itself automatically, as has been said. Twelve
centuries ago this was by no means the case. In 756 the ex-Emperor Shomu had
died, leaving instructions that Michi-no-Oho, a grandson of Temmu Tenno, should
be made Prince Imperial. His injunctions were indeed carried out; but in less
than a year afterwards, the reigning Empress Koken stripped him of the title;
and when it was urged that the degraded Prince was her father’s nominee she
merely replied that she was dissatisfied with him and wished to have nothing
more to do with him. The Prince now known as the Emperor Junnin was thereupon installed as Heir to the Throne; but when the Empress abdicated
in his favour in 758, she kept control of all the
most important affairs of State, including the right of punishing culprits and
of according amnesty. And after a reign of six years Junnin gave such offence to the exEmpress that she summarily
deposed him, exiled him to the island of Awaji, where he was strangled, and
reascended the throne herself as the Empress Shotoku (765- 769). Her death in
769 brought what may be called the Temmu dynasty to a close. In the course of
it there had been eight sovereigns, four of whom had been females, four
abdications, one re-ascension of the throne, and one minor sovereign. To
elucidate matters more minutely we venture to trespass upon the patience of the
reader by the insertion of yet another very dry genealogical chart.
On the death of
the Empress Shotoku (769) “the Minister of the Left, Fujiwara no Nagate, and the Minister of the Right, Kibi-no-Mabi, deliberated as to which of the Princes of the Blood
should succeed her; but they found none of them capable of the position.
Thereupon Fujiwara no Momoka and Fujiwara no Yoshitsugu proposed Prince Shirakabe, and he was proclaimed
Emperor at the age of 02.” He was the son of Prince Sliiki, and the grandson of
Tenchi Tenno. “In the troubles of 672 Prince Ohotomo (Kobun Tenno) having been slain, and Temmu having been proclaimed Emperor, the relatives
of Tenchi Tenno had been held in small esteem; with the elevation of Konin to
the throne they regained their former splendour.”
It was at this
period in her history that Japan had her first great city and her first permanent
capital. In 710 Nara was laid out as a replica of the Chinese capital of Hsian,
and with its seven great Buddhist fanes, its Shinto shrines, its palace and
other public buildings, soon assumed an appearance of magnificence and splendour. With an interval of two years under Shomu Tenno
it continued to be the seat of the Court tor three-quarters of a century,—from
710 to 784; and thus in the history of Japan, and especially in the history of
Japanese literature, the eighth century is spoken of as the Nara epoch. It was
at the beginning of this epoch that the Kojiki was committed to writing (712), and that the Nihongi was compiled and
published (720), while this century has also given us the oldest Japanese
anthology. It has also given us some of our most valuable material for the
history of old Japan in the Code of Taiho, which, however, having being issued
in 702, ante-dates the Nara period by eight years. It was the work of a
Fujiwara statesman who was the grandfather of the young sovereign (Mommu) he professedly served.
This Code of
Taiho was, however, not the earliest body of Japanese law, for we are told that
that great worker Tenchi Tenno had compiled a code of law in twenty-two books,
which was revised and issued to all the provincial governors in the time of the
Empress Jito (686-697). But the Code of Taiho is the
earliest body of Japanese law that has come down to us, although unfortunately
it has not come down to us either in a complete or in its strictly original
form. How far it incorporated Tenchi’s code we are not in a position to say;
but what can be asserted with some confidence is that it was largely based upon
the famous Chinese Code of the Yung-Hwui period (650-655).
The old Japanese Penal Code of 702 has been lost, and exists today only in
scattered quotations in other old documents. The Civil Code has come down to us
almost in its entirety, but not in the original edition of 702. What we possess
is the edition of 833, which contains the text of 702 interwoven with the
official commentaries compiled in 718 and in 833. To disentangle the text from
the commentary is now and then a somewhat difficult task, but not an
insuperably hopeless one. The Code, even as we possess it, covering as it does
almost every branch of public and private law, from the organisation of the central and local government down to such matters as the regulation of
markets and funerals and the practice of medicine, is an invaluable treasure to
any painstaking historian endowed with a modicum of common-sense, and so, ever
mindful of the fact that there is often a wide gap between the enactment and
the enforcement of laws.
A word about
the primary authorities for the history of the period subsequent to 697 a.d. may not
be out of place. To begin with we have five official histories:
Two years
before Nara was laid out as a replica of the Chinese capital of Hsian, the
Japanese authorities reproduced another important adjunct of Chinese civilisation. In 708 the discovery of copper in the
Chichibu range in Musashi made it possible for them to establish a mint and to
strike coins of their own. This mint, which was in the province of Omi, began
by striking both silver and copper pieces; but although there was another issue
of silver coins as well as a first issue of gold ones in 760, copper became the
current coinage of the realm almost exclusively. At first the ratio between
silver and copper was one to four; later on, it was fixed at one to
twenty-five, and finally at one to ten. In 712 an edict fixed the price of rice
at six sho for one cash or mon. As a
koku of rice, which now costs about 15 yen or 30s., contains 100 sho it could then have been purchased for 16 or 17
of the earliest copper coins, which must thus have had a purchasing value of
about one thousand times what they would have at the present day. In this same
year, 712, official salaries were partly fixed in terms of the new money; a
holder of the eighth rank was to receive one hiki of cloth and 20 mon per annum. At the same
time various grades of official rank were offered to such as had amassed
amounts of cash from 5,000 mon upwards, while
in the following year it was enacted that no official could hope to rise beyond
the grade of rank he then held unless he was the possessor of 6,000 mon. In
contradistinction to this legislation we find the Emperor Kwammu enacting
severe penalties against hoarders of the coin of the realm (798)! Between 760
and 958 eleven new coinages were issued by the mints of Omi, Harima, Nagato,
and Dazaifu. With the exception of that of 765, each new issue was valued at
one to ten of the previous denominations, so that the Government, or those
interested in the matter, must have made a huge profit out of the transaction,
apart from the fact that the coins of the last eight issues were only about
half the size of those of the earlier ones.
The
establishment of a mint served to add not inconsiderably to the penal
legislation of Japan. Within a year of its erection counterfeiters were busily
at work. In 709 those who counterfeited silver coin were to be enslaved; and
two years later all counterfeiters were to be beheaded, and those accessory to
the crime made Government slaves. In the general amnesties of 784, 804, 827,
853, and 804 forgers were specially excepted.
With the year
958 the operations of the Government mint ceased for more than six centuries,
no coins being struck by or for the Kyoto authorities until Hideyoshi’s time in
1587. The fact seems to have been that by the middle of the tenth century the
native supplies of the red metal had become exhausted. This may well sound
strange when we are told that it was only on very rare occasions that the needs
of the mint absorbed as much as 20 tons of copper per annum, and that for
considerable periods it stood totally inactive. It was the Buddhist Church that
made it impossible for Japan to maintain her metallic currency. Temple
furnishings and utensils, bells, and idols came to absorb more and more of the
necessary material for it. The great bell of the To-dai-ji
at Nara, east in 732, weighs 49 tons; and although this still continues to be
the monster bell of Japan, and one of the monster bells of the world, it was
only the chief of many similar contemporary efforts. Altogether it is probable
that in old Japan very much more copper was consumed in the casting of bells
than in the minting of coin. And it must be remembered that bells were much
less voracious than idols. The To-dai-ji bell of 49
tons contained less than one-eleventh the amount of copper that went to the
fashioning of the To-dai-ji Daibutsu,
which weighed something between 550 and 560 tons. Daibutsu and bell together might thus very well have sufficed to have kept the mint
going for a full half-century more; and Daibutsu and
bell together, although dwarfing all individual rivals by the massiveness of
their proportions, represented but a mere fraction of the metallic wealth of
the Buddhist Church.
Just as the
Vatican Laocoon group provided Lessing with a starting-point for one of the
most suggestive and luminous criticisms of the principles and limitations of
the various fine arts ever written, it has often struck us that an ingenious
writer might well contrive to mass a fairly complete account of eighth century
Japan around the story of this Nara Dai butsu. For in
one way or another it appears to come info contact with almost every phase of
the contemporary national activity.
It will be
remembered that the nascent fortunes of Buddhism in Japan depended in no small
measure upon the efficacy or non-efficacy of the continental cult as a
prophylactic against pestilence. Now, five generations afterwards, the first
great epidemic of smallpox in Japan afforded it another rare opportunity to
add to its prestige, its power, the revenues of its priesthood, and the
consideration in which its religieux were held. This dire scourge had
been introduced into Kyfishu by a fisherman who had
returned from the Korean kingdom of Silla. Thence it gradually spread
eastwards, and in 735 it began to devastate the aristocratic circles in the
capital of Nara. Among the illustrious victims it claimed were the four
Fujiwara brothers, all sons of Fujiwara no Fubito (the compiler of the Code of Tai ho, and the grandfather and father-inlaw of
the reigning Emperor), from whom the various houses of Fujiwara stock descend.
Every effort was made to check the ravages of the epidemic, and among other devices
the propitiation of the gods was not neglected. Offerings were made at most of
the temples by the Emperor, and the Buddhist High-priest was called upon to
offer prayers in behalf of the sovereign and his people. It was at this
conjuncture that Shomu Tenno bethought himself of constructing a colossal
Buddha. However, the native gods had to be reckoned with, and so the famous Gyogi Rosatsu was sent to the
Sun-goddess in Ise to present her with a shari (xarira), or relic of Buddha, and to ascertain how
she would regard the Imperial project. After Gyogi had passed a week at the foot of a tree close to her gate, her chapel doors
flew open, and a loud voice pronounced an oracular sentence which was
interpreted in a favourable sense. On the night after Gyogi’s return the Emperor dreamt that the
Sun-goddess appeared to him in her own form, and said, “The Sun is Biroshana (Vairdkana),” and at
the same time announced her approval of his plan of erecting a Buddhist temple.
This Gyogi, it may be remarked, spent the best part of a long
life of 80 years (670--749) in promoting new industrial enterprises in Japan. He
is generally credited, although quite erroneously, with the introduction of the
potter’s wheel into the country. What is tolerably certain is that he followed
the tradition of Hosho (the founder of the Hosso sect
of Buddhists, of which he was the second patriarch) in building bridges, in
scaling mountains, and in opening up the hitherto untrodden wilds of Japan to settlement
and civilisation. His also was the idea of
reconciling' Buddhism and the aboriginal Shinto cult, and of making them lie
down together like the lion and the lamb. The operation was to be performed
with the strictest regard to the economy of space; and as a matter of fact that
Shinto lamb pretty soon found ample accommodation in the interior of the
Buddhist lion, for Gyogi taught that the aboriginal
divinities were merely so many Avatars or temporary manifestations of Buddha;
and, as the result of this, numerous Shinto shrines presently assumed the
appearance of Buddhist fanes, served by a staff of shaven- pa ted yellow-robed
ecclesiastics, who got fat upon their revenues. This was the beginning of that Ryobu Shinto or Shin-Butsu-Konko, which continued to
flourish down to the year of grace 1868.
But to return
to the Nara Daibutsu. The Emperor’s project was
interrupted by a serious revolt in Kyushu in 740; but, in 743, he issued an
edict ordering the people to contribute funds for the undertaking. Gyogi on his part scoured the greater part of the Empire
collecting contributions. In 744 the Emperor in person directed the
construction of the model; but this image, begun at Shigaraki in Omi, was never
completed. In 747, after the Emperor had gone back to Nara, he began the
casting of another image, when he carried earth with his own Imperial hands to
help to form the platform. Seven unsuccessful attempts to cast the image were
made; and then the services of Kimimaro, the grandson
of a Korean immigrant, as superintendent, were enlisted, and the huge idol was
at last successfully cast (749). The image, which represents Lochana Buddha in
a sitting posture, is fifty-three feet in height; and we are informed that the
metals used in its construction were 500 Japanese pounds of gold, 10,827 pounds
of tin, 1,954 pounds of mercury, and 986,180 pounds of copper, in addition to
lead. It is safe io assume that with the possible exception of the Byzantine
Empire, no country in contemporary Europe could have been capable of such a
gigantic effort. The question naturally arises, “How was it done ? ”
Ordinary sized
images were cast in a single shell. But the Daibutsu was not fashioned in this manner. The artists cast it in a number of
segments,—plates ten inches by twelve, and of a thickness of six inches. They
built up the walls of the mould as the lower part of
the casting cooled at the rate of a foot at a time, there having thus been
forty-one independent layers, for the head and the neck, some twelve feet in
height, were cast in a single shell. It is not surprising, then, to learn that
it was only at the eighth attempt that a full measure of success was achieved.
The 500
Japanese pounds of gold, as well as the mercury, were used for gilding purposes
solely. The Emperor was greatly concerned as to how this amount of the precious
metal could be procured, when a fortunate discovery set his mind at ease. At
the beginning of 749 gold was sent to the capital by the Governor of Mutsu, in
whose jurisdiction a mine had been found, and by the third month, as much as
900 ounces had been employed in gilding the great idol. Messengers were sent to
all the temples to inform the gods of the lucky find, and the Minister of the
Left, Tachibana no Moroye, went in person, and taking
his stand before the Buddha specially communicated to him the good news.
In the
following month Nara witnessed a strange and startling sight. Attended by the
Empress, by his only daughter, and by all the grandees of his Court, Shomu Tenno
proceeded to the To-dai-ji,—and there before the
Great Buddha, and facing him from the south,—that is, in the position of a
subject at an Imperial audience,—the Emperor professed himself to be the humble
servant of the Three Precious Things, —Buddha, the Law, and the Priesthood!
After such an object-lesson as this, it is but small winder that Shomu’s
subjects should come to consider a breach of the Statute of Mortmain to be, not
a crime, but a highly meritorious and exceedingly pious and profitable act. We
have inventories of the belongings of two of the chief metropolitan temples in
747; and it appears that besides immense treasures of various kinds, one of
them held no fewer than 46 manors and 5,000 acres of the most fertile land in
the Empire, while the other’s landed possessions were almost equally
extensive. Inasmuch as the monasteries and all their belongings were exempt
from the attentions of the revenue officers, and from all national or local
burdens, their domains, if only moderately well managed, must have brought them
an immense annual return. Furthermore these estates were rapidly expanding.
Peasant cultivators overborne with taxation were always eager to hand over
their plots to a temple, and to hold them as its tenants. They paid a rent, it
is true; but they no longer paid taxes, and the rent was to the taxes as the
little finger to the thigh-bone.
The small-pox
epidemic of 735-737 had been a rare godsend for the priests. Tn the latter
year, in consequence of this visitation, the Emperor decreed that each of the
provinces should erect a large monastery to be called Kokubunji, while shortly
afterwards he ordered the construction of a seven-storied pagoda by each local
government. Apart from the lucky chance of the outbreak of an epidemic, the
ascendency of the Buddhist priesthood was greatly favoured by the crude state of contemporary medical knowledge,—or, to put it more accurately
perhaps, by the dense ignorance of the time. In the eighth century disease was
attributed to two great causes,—namely, to evil spirits and to food and drink.
Smallpox and intermittent fever and all nervous diseases were the work of the
evil spirits of the dead or of demons; and in the treatment of these and of
similar maladies exorcism was the supreme remedy. Hence the priest-doctor had
abundant scope for the exercise of his craft—in the two fold sense of the word.
Under the Empress Koken, the daughter and successor of that very pietistic
Emperor Shomu, there were no fewer than one hundred and sixteen of these
clerical medicos attached to the Court, and every one of them with plenty to do
in the matter of evicting devils and unclean spirits, and of propitiating
avenging ghosts unmannerly enough to trouble the repose of the blue-blooded
aristocracy of Yamato. To the reader of the twentieth century all this may savour of comedy; but in old Japan it was really a very
serious matter indeed, and the would-be historian who fails to appreciate this
phase of the intellectual life of the time will assuredly misinterpret many of
the most significant entries in the old chronicles of Japan. It is amusing to
find the very highest ecclesiastics now and then figuring as the impotent
victims of those evil spirits and avenging manes over which they claimed to
exercise such a plenary power. What is to be made of the following notice, for
example?
“In 746 the
priest Gembo died in Kyushu. He had formerly been in
China, whence he brought to Japan more than 5,000 Buddhist books and many holy
images. The Emperor had granted him a purple kesa,
and had bestowed on him many tokens of respect. Gembo treated everybody with disdain; he had forbidden the laity to imitate the
manners and the usages of the monks. He was hated by everybody; and it is said
that the spirit of Hirotsugu had killed him as an act of revenge.”
This Gembo was the Northern Patriarch of the Hosso sect. After a sojourn of nineteen years in China he returned in 736. and soon
contrived to make himself a power in the Imperial Court. As it was improper for
the sovereign and his consorts to repair to temples frequented by the people, a
chapel (Nai-dojo) was erected within the precincts of the Palace, and priests
were summoned to perform their rites there. Gembo was
frequently employed in this office, and took scandalous advantage of his
position to debauch the ladies of the Court. Overtures were made by him to the
beautiful wife of the young and accomplished Fujiwara Hirotsugu, then acting as
Viceroy of Dazaifu. Hirotsugu had petitioned for Gembo’s removal before this; and on being informed by his wife of what had happened he mobilised the forces of the Viceroyalty to lend weight to
his reiterated demands. An army of some 21,000 men was dispatched to deal with
Hirotsugu, and he fell in making head against it. His spirit proved to be a
very rough one indeed, working all sorts of mischief; and so a temple was
erected to him in Hizen, and due provision made for
appeasing his vindictive ghost, which, as may be inferred from the above
citation, was popularly believed to have very effectually rid the lieges of Gembo and his sacerdotal arrogance.
Gembo, however, was
by no means the most formidable priestly rival that crossed the path of the
Fujiwara, at this time laboriously and strenuously engaged, not so much in
consolidating as in laying a basis for their power. At this date the great
clan, although indeed powerful, had by no means reached that position of
omnipotence with which it is erroneously credited in the eighth century, and to
which it actually attained in the middle of the ninth. The great Kamatari’s son, Fujiwara Fubito (659-720), had been the father- in-law of one sovereign and the grandfather and
father-in-law of yet another, and had certainly been influential in the councils
of the Empire. But it was not till 708 that he became Minister of the Left, and
his elevation to the position of Dajodaijin or
Chancellor was a posthumous one. This great office since its creation in 671
had always been occupied by Princes of the Blood; since Jito’s time (686-697) down to 745 by the sons and a grandson of the Emperor Temmu. The
death of Fubito’s four sons Muchimaro,
Fusasaki, Umakai, and Maro, all then occupying high
office, in 737 proved a serious check to the fortunes of the family.
Prince Suzuka, a grandson of Temmu Tenno, then became Chancellor
and held the office for eight years. In 738 the famous Tachibana no Moroye was appointed Minister of the Right, and after being
promoted Minister of the Left in 743 he wielded all but supreme power down to
756, the year before his death. He was no deadly rival of the Fujiwara,
however; in fact, it was to a very intimate and very peculiar blood and
marriage relationship with the great rising house that he owed the opportunity
for advancement which his sterling capacity as a statesman and administrator
enabled him to turn to such good account. Yet withal he owes his niche in the
Japanese temple of fame more to his literary than to his political abilities,
for it is as the compiler of the oldest anthology, the Manyoshu—that
his name is still a familiar household word in the Empire. Moroye’s son was a man of promising parts, but his implication in one of those wearisome
and ever-recurring succession plots occasioned his ruin in the very year of the
death of his father, an event which removed a serious rival from the stage
where several of the sons of the four Fujiwara who had died in 737 were now
aspiring to the role of protagonist.
However,
powerful as the Fujiwara were now becoming, they proved no match for an astute
and aspiring Buddhist priest during the next decade. When Shomu Tenno’s strong-minded daughter professedly abdicated in 758, her successor the Emperor Junnin lavished favours upon
Fujiwara Oshikatsu, to whom he mainly owed his position. But the real power
in the land was not the young Emperor, but the exEmpress Koken, and Koken’s spiritual adviser and right-hand man was the handsome monk
Dokyo, whom certain English writers have somewhat amusingly dubbed the Wolsey
of Japan!” In 762 Fujiwara Oshikatsu had been
promoted to The first grade of the first class of rank. When it is remembered
that his was one of the only three instances in the whole course of Japanese
history of a subject attaining this supremely exalted position in his lifetime,
the importance of this very bald entry in the annals will perhaps be recognised.
This very
unusual promotion gave great umbrage to Oshikatsu’s brother and cousins and other relatives then all eagerly engaged in the
scramble for power and place, and what was even more serious, it excited the
bitter jealousy of the good-looking, albeit shaven-pated, favourite of the exEmpress, who presently showed that lie was
even more adroit at political intrigue than his predecessor, Gembo, had been. Oshikatsu,
learning of Dokyo’s manoeuvres,
secretly possessed himself of the Imperial seal, and issued a commission to
raise troops with a view of making a summary end of the meddlesome monk. This
step at once roused the ex-Empress to vigorous action; and officers, among them
several Fujiwara, were charged with the punishment of Oshikatsu.
In the civil war that followed there was a good deal of fierce fighting round
the south-east corner of Lake Biwa before the Fujiwara chief was overpowered
and executed with thirty or forty of his chief supporters. On the plea that the
Emperor (Junnin) had entered into designs with Oshikatsu against her life, the ex-Empress now deposed the
sovereign (765) and exiled him to Awaji (where he was shortly afterwards
strangled), and emerging from her retirement ascended the throne for a second
time (Shotoku, 765-769).
Dokyo was now
the most powerful subject in the Empire,—head of the Church, spiritual
director and chief physician to the Empress, with a controlling voice in the
decision of all high questions of State, and feared and courted by every
official minded to make his way in the world. The relations between the monk
and the sovereign were perhaps even more equivocal than those which subsisted
between Mazarin and Anne of Austria; in fact gossip did not refrain from
asserting that Shotoku Tenno was Dokyo’s Imperial
mistress in more senses of the term than one. At last in 769 he was taken into
the Palace and magnificently lodged there, made Chancellor of the Empire with
the style of Dajo-daijin Zenji, and the title of
Ho-o, reserved for Emperors. Incredible as it may sound, the monk was aiming at
nothing less than supplanting the line of the Sun-Goddess on the Imperial
throne of Japan. It was a century when much could be effected by an adroit use
of dreams and omens and portents,—an age when the very air men breathed was
heavy with an enervating superstition in which the brood of the brazen-fronted
charlatan found the rarest and richest of opportunities. Dokyo began by
prompting an obsequious hanger-on of his own to assure him that Hachi-man, the
God of Usa in Buzen, had
appeared to him in a dream, and announced to him that the land would enjoy everlasting
repose if Dokyo became Emperor. Twenty years before this, in 749, the Empress
had also had a nocturnal visit from Hachiman Daijin, who instructed her to
erect a temple to him in the district of Hirakori in
Yamato. This fact no doubt bulked largely among the considerations leading
Dokyo to select the oracle of Hachiman as his instrument. The monk at once
repeated the story of his confederate, or rather tool, to the Empress, who,
however, proved less complaisant than he had expected. She told him that
although she held him in the highest estimation, she had no power to make him
Emperor, but that she would consult the god, and act according to his
decision. She thereupon summoned Wake no Kiyomaro, and after telling him that
Hachiman had appeared to her in a dream and ordered her to send him to Usa to consult the divinity about the choice of an Emperor,
dispatched him on the mission. Before he set out, Dokyo saw him privately, told
him the Empress was deliberating about his (Dokyo’s)
elevation to the throne, and that he (Kiyomaro) should be careful in his
report. If Dokyo became Emperor, Kiyomaro should be entrusted with the
administration of the Empire; if he did not bring a proper report,—here there
was an aposiopesis, and the monk glared fiercely and laid his hand on his swordhilt. Kiyomaro saw through the intrigue, and like the
fealess and daring man he was, he brought back the response: “In our Empire,
since the reign of the celestial spirits, and under their descendants, no one
not of their stock has ever been honoured with the
Imperial dignity. Thus it was useless for you to come here. Retrace your
steps; you have nothing to fear from Dokyo.” Thus baulked in his overweening
projects the priest was furious. He had Kiyomaro mutilated and condemned to
exile in the remote and inhospitable province of Osumi, meaning to have him
killed on the way to his place of banishment, as was not unusual at the time.
However, Dokyo’s kind intentions proved abortive, and
Kiyomaro found a strong friend in Fujiwara Momokawa,
“on whom the country of Higo depended.” In the following year the Empress died;
and Dokyo’s fall was then assured. At first he took
up his abode beside the Empress’s tomb; but at the beginning of the new regime
he was banished to Shimo-tsuke, where he became the
priest of “the god who presides over remedies” (Abbot of Yakushiji).
This startling
episode served to impress the statesmen of Japan with a due sense of the
advisability of circumscribing the power and pretensions of the ecclesiastics.
All the members of the Temmu dynasty had been far too much under the influence
of their ghostly advisers. On the death of the Empress Shotoku in 770 without
children, there were several male descendants of Temmu with good claims to the
throne; but they were all set aside, and a grandson of the great Tenchi was
invested with the Imperial dignity. This Prince, known as Konin Tenno
(770--782) was a mild and easy-going old gentleman of the age of sixty-two. He
mainly owed his elevation to that Fujiwara Momokawa who had done honour to himself by espousing the cause
of the disgraced patriot, Wake no Kiyomaro. Momokawa’s rank was a comparatively humble one; but his probity and his force of character
made him a man that had to be seriously reckoned with. In short, everything we
know about him tends to strengthen the conviction that he was one of the most
worthy descendants of the illustrious Kamatari. It is tolerably plain that it
was not in the person of the good-natured old man he had contrived to raise to
the throne that he expected to find the saviour of
the Empire. It was Konin’s successor that he had his eyes fixed upon. As Konin
was old, it was all-important that the succession question should be promptly
settled. The Empress at once began to plot in favour of her own son; and when the Emperor did not listen to her pleadings she tried
to get him poisoned. As a result, mother and son were sent into banishment.
Konin thereupon expressed the intention of transmitting the throne to his
daughter. But Japan had had more than enough to do with female rulers. During
the preceding seventy years or so, she had had four of them; and under every
one of them there had been a great advance in the authority wielded by the
priests. What was wanted upon the throne at this juncture was a man,—and not
only a man, but a strong man. Konin then expressed the wish to make his second
son, Hiyeda, Prince Imperial; and most of the Ministers
were inclined to agree with the choice. But Momokawa objected
strongly. When it was urged that the eldest son, Prince Yamabe, was
disqualified by reason of the low extraction of his mother, Momokawa hotly contended that the rank of the mother did
not enter into the question at all; and so vigorously did he press the cause of
the elder Prince, that Yamabe was designated as Konin’s successor.
This Prince
Yamabe, then thirty-four years of age, had for long been earning his own living
by honest and honourable work. He held a very low
rank,—no more than the junior grade of the fifth class. But as Rector of the
University (in which institution, as has been said, Buddhism found no footing),
he had showed fine ability as an administrator; and even at this date he had
the reputation of a Nimrod, for Yamabe set small store by a certain one of the
Buddhist commandments when he found himself in a game preserve. As things
turned out, Momokawa died at the early age of 48,
three years before his nominee came to the throne, for Konin Tenno lived longer
than was expected. By no one was Momokawa’s memory more fondly cherished than
by the schoolmaster he had virtually raised to the Imperial dignity. And the
schoolmaster Emperor, Kwammu, exerted himself to some purpose to vindicate Momokawa as a man of judgement and a reader of character.
Kwammu must be counted among the very few Emperors of Japan who have proved
themselves to be statesmen, and men possessed of a degree of native of acquired
ability sufficient to enable an obscure man to raise himself to a position of
fame and influence. Of the one hundred and twenty-three sovereigns of Japan Tenchi
Tenno and the Emperor Mutsuhito alone have shown themselves possessed of an
equal or superior measure of capacity as rulers.
Before taking
leave of the subject of the Sinicisation of Japan, it
may be well to advert to a few items of interest for which no place could be
conveniently found in the preceding narrative.
And first as
regards the names Nippon, Dai Nippon, and Japan. In the Kojiki not one of these names appears. In the Nihongi, “Nippon” does appears on
several occasions before the seventh century a.d., but the use of the term is anachronistic. “Dai Nippon”
first occurs in the Nihongi under the year 663 in a speech put into the
mouth of the King of Pakche. In 671 the word “Il-bun” (Japan) makes its first appearance
in Korean annals, while at the same date the Chinese bestowed the name of Jeupenn (hence “Zipangu ” and “Japan”) or Source of the
Sun upon the Archipelago in the Eastern Ocean. For the way in which this “ Jeupenn ” became “Nippon” on Japanese lips, see Professor
Chamberlain’s Moji no Shirube, p. 375. Thus the wholesale Sinicisation of old Yamato extended even to the very name of the country.
One thing which
greatly exercised the official mind in this age was the correct pronunciation
of Chinese. The earlier teachers of the classics had been Korean monks, who had
adopted the Go-on, or pronunciation of Wu, an old kingdom in the east and
south-east of China. But intercourse with the Tang Court at Hsian (now Segan Fu in Shensi) had led the Japanese to believe that the
Kan-on, or Northern pronunciation, should be adopted. So in 735 they brought
over a Northern scholar, and the students in the University were ordered to
place themselves under his instruction. He presently naturalised,
took the Japanese name of Kiyomura, and rose to be President of the University,
Head of the Gemba Bureau, and Governor of the province of Awa. This naturalised Chinaman probably owed his official
advancement to the influence of his friend Kibi no Mabi,
who after a sojourn of nineteen years at the Court of Hsian had returned to
Japan in 735, bringing with him the game of go (Japanese checkers), the
knowledge of the art of embroidery, and the biwa or fourstringed lute. To him also is sometimes ascribed the invention of the Katakana or
Japanese syllabary. In 701 the fete in honour of
Confucius had been celebrated for the first time, and it had been celebrated in
the University yearly at the equinoxes since that date, but it was not till the
ceremonies had been settled by Kibi no Mabi’s dictation that “the forms and etiquette came to be performed with propriety.”
His appointment as tutor to the strong-minded lady who afterwards figures as
the Empress Koken and the Empress Shotoku established his fortunes on a sure
foundation. In 752 he again proceeded to Hsian as second Ambassador, and on his
return he was appointed Viceroy of Kyushu, where he worked hard to promote the
prosperity of the provinces committed to his trust. Among his other services
to Kyushu was his organisation of the great school of
Dazaifu, in which he did not consider it inconsistent with his dignity to
deliver lectures to appreciative classes of students. In 766 he rose to be
Minister of the Left; and so became the first of the trio of outsiders who
attained to Ministerial rank in old Japan by sheer native ability. In every
respect he was a greater man than Sugawara no Michizane. And yet the latter is
now a god, with scores if not hundreds of shrines on whose altars young Japan
burns incense to him, while to young Japan the memory of Kibi no Mabi is of much less consequence than a kibidango.
In the Middle
Kingdom it has been the immemorial wont to reward meritorious services to the
State by the grant of posthumous honours, or
posthumous promotion in rank. This practice was introduced into Japan in 673,
on the occasion of the death of a certain Sakamoto Takara no Omi, who was then
advanced a step in consideration of his achievements in the great civil war of
the preceding year.
In Marco Polo
we meet with frequent mention of the burning of the dead in China, but such a
custom is no longer practised there except in the
case of priests. In Japan cremation is still practised,
although inhumation is much more common. In this country cremation was unknown
until 700, when the monk Dosho left orders for his
corpse to be committed to the flames. Two years later the body of the
ex-Empress Jito was cremated, and by the beginning of the ninth century the
burning of the dead was a general practice throughout the Empire.
Still one
point, but a very important point, remains to be noted. In the Tokugawa age,
among the Samurai or two-worded class the most
important of all the virtues was loyalty; hearty, unquestioned, whole-souled
devotion to one’s feudal superior. But among the commoners who constituted
nineteen-twentieths of the population of the Empire the virtue of loyalty was
overshadowed by the claims of filial piety. And (hat, antecedent to the rise of
that military class which it had been one of the aims of the Reformers of 645
to prevent, had been the virtue on which most stress had been laid by all
classes. In ante-Reform Japan it had not evidently been of such transcendent
consequence; at all events, under the year 562 the Nihongi tells us that
“at this time between father and child, husband and wife, there was no mutual
commiseration.” Now, between 749 and 758, the Empress Koken ordered each
household to provide itself with a copy of the Kokyo,
or Classic of Filial Piety, while every student in the Provincial Schools and
the University was bound to master it. Of this Kokyo (Chinese Hsiao Ching), which is assigned partly to Confucius and partly to Tseng Ts'an, although it probably belongs to a much later
date, Professor Giles remarks:—“Considering that filial piety is admittedly the
keystone of Chinese civilisation, it is disappointing
to find nothing more on the subject than a poor pamphlet of commonplace and
ill-strung sentences, which gives the impression of having been written to fill
a void?’ However, it ought not to be forgotten that what is the commonplace and the platitude of today may very
well have appealed to the imagination and the moral sense of the age in which
it was originally propounded with all the staggering force of a brilliant
discovery or a divine revelation. “The Master said: There are
three thousand offences against which the five punishments are directed, and
there is not one of them greater than being unfilial?” Din this into the ears of a child, day by day, from the time it begins to
lisp, and think of the result! And forty successive generations of Japanese
have been gathered to their fathers since Kibi no Mabi’s pupil made the Kokyo an indispensable item in the
limited amount of furnishings possessed by every Japanese household.
CHAPTER V. THE GREAT REFORM OF 645.CHAPTER VI. FROM TENHI TO KWAMMU. (662 TO 782 A.D.)CHAPTER VII. THE EMPEROR KWAMMU. (782 TO 805 A.D.) |