HISTORY OF JAPAN LIBRARY |
JAMES MURDOCH' HISTORY OF JAPAN FROM THE ORIGINSTO THE ARRIVAL OF THE PORTUGUESE IN 1542 ADCHAPTER VIII .THE LEARNED EMPERORS. (806 TO 850 A.D.)
SINCE 645 one
Emperor of Japan had been deposed and died in exile, while there had been six
cases of abdication. In five of these the sovereign had been a female, and two
of these ex-Empresses had reassumed the cares of State and had died in
possession of the throne. So far, the only Emperor who had seen fit to retire
to the ease of private life had been the ultra-devout and priest-ridden Shomu,
the professed servant of the “Three Sacred Things.” Konin Tenno had not
abdicated in spite of his three-score years and twelve, while Kwammu proved
himself to be truly of the breed of those great workers whose fondest
aspiration it is to meet their fate in harness at the post of duty. His three
sons and successors on the throne were of much less vigorous fibre. All abdicated in turn—Heijo at 35, Saga at 37, and
Junna at 47; and in 824 there were two ex-Emperors with their respective
Courts. Among the several causes which led not merely to the decline, but to
the utter wreck and ruin of the Imperial power and prestige, this tendency to
shirk the onerous duties of the throne was surely not one of the least. It was
well calculated to provide ambitious and unscrupulous subjects with the best of
opportunities for self-aggrandisement. In the first
half of the ninth century the evil effects of the practice were perhaps not so
very conspicuously apparent. But within a hundred and fifty years thereafter
it was impossible for even the dullest capacity to misinterpret the results.
In 987, when the sixty-sixth sovereign, Ichijo, was placed on the throne at the
age of seven, there were no fewer than three ex-Emperors. Of these Reizei had
abdicated at 19, Enyu at 24, and Kwazan at 18. On the very face of it, it at once becomes
evident that the sovereign is being used as a puppet; and that the king-maker
is at work on a scale and with a dexterity that make the Soga of old Yamato
appear in the light of crude and small-souled bunglers.
During the
first year or so of the reign of Heijo Tenno (806-809) the nation had some
reason to believe that the new sovereign was no unworthy son of his illustrious
sire. Doubtless in accordance with the dying instructions of Kwammu, the work
of retrenchment and reform was vigorously prosecuted, the two favoured and pampered departments of the Nakatsu-kasa-Sho and the Kunai-Sho coming in for a large measure of
unappreciated attention. But Heijo soon fell under the spell of female society,
and abdicated after a short reign of three years. This step was far from
pleasing to his Fujiwara favourite, the Lady Kusuri, however; and together with her younger brother,
Nakanari, she formed an intrigue to restore the capital to Nara, and Heijo to
the throne. The ex-Emperor started for the Eastern country to raise troops, and
a civil war seemed imminent. It was on this occasion that Saka-no-Uye no Tamura Maro and his lieutenant Fumiya no Watamaro proved themselves arbiters of the Imperial
fortunes. They seized all the strategic positions, and effectually stamped out
the incipient revolt. Heijo had to return to Nara and shave his head, Nakanari
was put to death, while the Lady Kusuri poisoned
herself.
Saga Tenno (810
-823), Heijo’s uterine brother and Kwammu’s favourite son, was undoubtedly a highly accomplished man of brilliant parts. One of the
finest scholars of the age, he was counted as one of the famous Sawpit su (Three Pens), the others being his relative by marriage
Tachibana nayanari, known at the Chinese Court as the
“talented Tachibana,” and the monk Kukai, or Kobo Daishi. All Kwammu’s sons
were deeply versed in Chinese literature, did everything to encourage its
study, and exerted themselves to complete the Sinicisation of Japan. Unfortunately it was as much the luxury and the magnificence as the
culture of the Chinese Court that appealed to them. Chinese dress and etiquette
were now introduced into the palace of Kyoto, and the expenses of high life in
the Japanese capital increased enormously. Princes and courtiers soon found the
strain upon their ordinary and official incomes becoming excessive, and had
perforce to cast about for some other means of procuring the additional revenue
necessary for keeping afloat in the devouring whirlpool of Court and
fashionable society. Most commonly relief was found in obtaining a special grant
of tax-free land from the sovereign. In Saga Tenno’s time, thousands of acres
of the best land in the home provinces had been alienated and withdrawn from
obligation to the national fisc in this way. Under his brother and successor,
Junna (824-833), vast areas in Musashi, Shimotsuke,
Shimosa, Bizen, and Nagato had been granted away in a
similar fashion, while under Saga’s son, Nimmyo Tenno (834 -850), the abuse
became still more notorious. These luxury-loving sovereigns were indeed sowing
the wind, and their ill-starred descendants and successors were destined to
reap something worse than the whirlwind in consequence. These estates were the
notorious Shoen, or nontaxpaying manors. In the
Nara age it was mainly the manors of the Buddhist temples that had been so
extensive as to afford any grave cause for apprehension. Kwammu Tenno had taken
due steps to render this special national menace innocuous, while he had also
taken care to prevent the assignment of such estates to princes, or courtiers,
or nobles. Before fifty years had passed since his ashes became cold, his
excellent work in this respect had been virtually undone. Junna Tenno (824-833)
still further depleted the national treasury by alienating the revenues of
three of the most opulent provinces. Princes of the Blood were nominated
Governors (Taishu) of Kodzuke,
Hitachi, and Kazusa, and the taxes of the finest half of the Kwanto were thenceforward supposed to be deposited in special
warehouses in Kyoto, to enable a trio of the numerous Imperial relatives to
maintain the dignity of their position in 1he capital.
All these
Emperors,—Saga, Junna, and Nimmyo,—were men of more than average mental
capacity; none of them were vicious, and all were workers. Yet it is they who
must in no small measure be held responsible for the subsequent decline of the
Imperial authority. It would be unjust to hold their Ministers to account for
this, since there is nothing to indicate that during this half-century the
sovereign was under the ascendency of any servant. Nay, we find Ministers,
Fujiwaras among them, pointing out the need of retrenchment and a stricter
handling of the national resources.
The simple fact
is that the energies of these three rulers were sadly misdirected. Their
unbalanced craze for Chinese fashions, for Chinese manners, and above all for
Chinese literature proved utterly detrimental to the best interests of the throne
of Japan. At the Court of Hsian learning was patronised and encouraged as it has rarely been at any Court. There the rewards of the
exercise of supreme literary ability were truly munificent For more than one
aspiring plebeian it had opened the path to the highest office in the Empire.
In Japan this never had been the case, for except in the case of the priesthood
learning and office alike had been strictly confined to a numerically
insignificant ring of courtiers and aristocrats. At this time the Japanese
sovereigns were paying Hsian the sincerest kind of flattery, and hence the
attention devoted to learning in Kyoto presently came to be all-engrossing. All
claims to consideration and social distinction were based mainly on the
courtier’s ability to read Chinese fluently, to write Chinese characters
artistically, to turn Chinese stanzas neatly, and to produce what passed for
elegant Chinese prose composition in the latitude of Kyoto. Matter, real
thought, was of the slightest consequence; what was all-important was what was
regarded as refinement, polish, distinction of style. All this in truth was at
best but a sterile culture. But for admission to office and advancement in the
world it was now an absolutely necessary equipment.
In 757 the
University—apart from the departments of music, astrology, and medicine, which
each then received 25 acres—was endowed with 75 acres of rice-land. In Kwammu’s
time (794), yet another 250 acres in Echizen were added; and subsequently still
further private and official endowments were contributed. Now in Junna’s time
(824-833), extra estates, 250 acres in extent, were granted to it.
But the
University was soon destined to be eclipsed by certain of the private schools
which were established about this time. The Bunsho-in, founded by Sugawara in
823, and placed under the superintendence of Oye no Otohito and Sugawara no Kiyo-gimi,
soon became filled to overflowing. In 825, Fujiwara no Fuyutsugu erected a
special school, as well as a charityhospital for the benefit of his poorer
clansmen. A few years later it received an Imperial endowment; and a ceremony
of annually presenting its graduates for the public service was also
introduced. Then there were the Sogaku-in, founded in
831 by Arihara no Yukihira, a grandson of Heijo
Tenno, and the Junna-in, the Palace of the Emperor Junna converted into a
school, in 841. Both these institutions were for the education of the sons of
the less important Imperial relatives. Lastly, in 850, the consort of Saga
Tenno erected the Gakkwan-in, “in which young
persons of her family—that of Tachibana —might be educated in the Chinese
classics and histories.” All these institutions, be it observed, were for the
official and aristocratic classes exclusively. At this time there was only one
single school in the whole of the Empire open to vulgar plebeians—the So-geishu-chi-in, organised by Kobo
Daishi in connection with the Toji monastery to the
south of the capital.
What was
especially needed at this time was a strong and efficient central
administration with thoroughly capable and trustworthy agents in the various
provincial posts. But during these three reigns there was no Chancellor of the
Empire; down to 833, only a single one of the Two Great Ministers of the Left
and the Right, while at one time all three great offices had been vacant for
two years. For the sovereign to act as his own Prime Minister would have
perhaps been highly beneficial if he had been a Kwammu and had construed the
duties of his Imperial office as Kwammu had done. But Saga, Junna, and Nimmyo
found it more congenial to act as the arbiters of taste and fashion in clothes
and exotic belles-lettres than to spend laborious days holding
provincial and district officers to a strict discharge of their onerous
responsibilities. Instead of forming a school of administrators with a stern
sense of public duty and a creed of honest work, they reared an ever-pullulating
brood of greedy, needy, frivolous dilettanti,—as often as not foully
licentious, utterly effeminate, incapable of any worthy achievement, but withal
the polished exponents of high breeding and correct “form.” Now and then a
better man did occasionally emerge ; but one just man is impotent to avert the
doom of an intellectual Sodom. And the one just man not infrequently appeared
in the shape of a portentously learned but hopelessly arid and frigid pedant.
And it was from those formed in the great aristocratic schools of Kyoto that
the public service was to be recruited. A pretty showing, indeed, these
pampered minions and bepowdered poetasters might be expected to make as
administrators in the wilds of Echigo or the Kwanto! Even if honestly inclined,—which in the majority of
cases he was not,—such an official found himself unfitted by his training to
grapple with the stern realities of the situation. One result was that great
stretches of the Empire were soon seething with disorder that occasionally
threatened to assume the dimensions of anarchy. As early as 862, the Inland Sea
pirates had had the audacity to pillage the Bizen tax-rice on its way to the capital, after killing the officer in charge. In
866, Settsu, Idzumi, Harirna, Bizen, Bingo, Aki, Suwo,
Nagato, and all the provinces of the Nankaido were
infested by swarms of freebooters, whose outrages were ceaseless. A little
later on, and the state of affairs had become as bad in many other sections of
the country. Just as the contemporary descents of the Vikings contributed to
the growth of the feudal system in France, so this unbridled lawless ness
greatly favoured the spread of those manors (Sho-yen)
which ultimately rung the knell of the Imperial power and the old civilian
government of Kyoto. The rampant disorder supplied an additional motive for,
and intensified the natural tendency to, commendation. The peaceable
cultivator, despairing of adequate protection from the responsible authorities,
was only too eager to find a refuge as a thrall on one of those great tax-free
estates where the strong man in possession, or his agent, was more or less
capable of repelling force by force.
In Prince Ito’s
Commentaries on the Constitution we read: “In the reign of the Emperor Tenchi
(662-671 a.d.), the Council of State (Dajo-kwan) was first established, and after that, the
control over affairs of State was confided to the Chancellor of the Empire (Dajo-daijin), to the Minister of the Left (Sa-daijin) and to the Minister of the Right (U-daijin); while the First Adviser of State (Dai-nagon) took part in advising, and the Minister of the Nakatsukasa-Sho inspected and affixed his seal to Imperial
Rescripts. Under the Council of State were placed the eight departments. Thus
the organisation of the Government was nearly
complete. In later times, Court favourites took sole
charge of the affairs of State, and even such petty officials as Kurando gradually came to assume the issuing of Imperial
Orders; and important-measures of State were also executed on the authority of
an ex-Emperor, or the private wishes of the Empress, or of written notes of
ladies of the Court. The result was a complete slackening of the reins of
power.”
It was at this
time that the Kurando were instituted; but
they could not justly be characterised as “petty
officials” at that date, nor indeed for several generations. In 810, after attempt
to repossess himself of the throne, Saga Tenno, finding that he could not rely
upon the fidelity of many of the superior officials, entrusted the two
Commandants of the Imperial Guards,—Fujiwara Fuyutsugu and Kose Notari,—with
the duty of drawing up and seeing to the due promulgation of Imperial decrees
and of taking cognisance of all suits. In 897,
Fujiwara Tokihira was made Betto of the Kurando-dokoro, an appointment which added greatly to the
prestige of the Board. At first all the members were nobles of high rank; but
later on three members of the fifth rank and four of the sixth rank were added
to it; while a staff of sixty or seventy subordinates came to be employed.
The Kurando was not the most important administrative
innovation of this half-century, however. The hopeless inefficiency of the
police and the criminal courts made some serious attempt at reform imperative,
and in 839 a special Board,—the Kebiishi-cho,—was
instituted to meet the urgent needs of the situation. It had full power to
arrest, to try, and to punish; and its officials (1 Betto,
4 Suke, and 4 Tai-i) were provided with the means of
making themselves respected by evil-doers. At first, its operations were
confined to the capital; presently disturbances in the Kwanto led to the installation of some of its officials there, and in 857 a Kebiishi-cho was assigned to every province. Presently it
was enacted that the ordinances of the Kebiishi should be of equal validity with those issuing from the Imperial Chancery. As
the Kebiishi was—what the provincial governorship was
not—a military office empowered and in a position to supplement the arguments
of moral suasion when they proved insufficient with something more convincing,
it became a position worth striving for. Contests for the post of Kebiishi-Bettd were frequent, and gave rise to more than
one civil commotion. The institution of this office gave clear indication that
it was coming to be recognised that Japan, and
especially provincial Japan, could no longer be ruled by the ink-brush alone.
As has often been insisted upon, one of the main objects of the Reformers of
645 had been to prevent the rise of a military class. For two hundred years
their efforts had been crowned with success. Now, perforce towards the close of
the ninth century, a large measure of authority has to be entrusted to the
warrior in mail; and the ultimate rise, if not the ascendency, of a military
class becomes merely a question of time.
It was in this
century that the age-long contest with the aborigines was brought to a close.
In 812, ten years after Saka-no-Uye no Tamura Maro’s
triumphant return to the capital, the Ainu had once more risen and resumed
their devastating forays. Fumiya no Watamaro was
dispatched against them in the capacity of Scii-tai
Shogun, and succeeded in stamping out the revolt in a single vigorous
campaign. About 855 a civil war broke out among the aborigines; and this so
weakened them that when they again rose, in 878, they were comparatively
easily dealt with. They then succeeded in burning the Castle of Akita, and in
inflicting two subsequent defeats upon the Japanese commander, in one of which
he lost 500 men. But when that excellent officer Fujiwara Yasunori was
dispatched to deal with them, tranquillity was soon
restored. By a rare display of firmness, tact, and magnanimity, Yasunori
brought them to reason and subjection without the loss of a single Japanese
soldier. And this was the end of the Ainu question; although Ainuland in
possession of its new masters continued to be fruitful in vexed problems of its
own, the solution of which exercised an important reflex effect upon the
fortunes of the Empire at large.
At the
conclusion of the campaign of 812, the northern aborigines were for the first
time definitely placed upon the same footing as ordinary Japanese subjects.
They were assigned Kobunden (Mouth-share land) in
their native seats, and organised in mura, or
parishes, each with a headman, while over all these was a general officer (a
Japanese) of tolerably high official rank. Previous to 812 the Ainu prisoners
of war had invariably been distributed in communities among the several
provinces of the Empire. In the eighth century we meet with instances of such
settlements being established in the far-distant Shikoku and Kyushu; and we
have already seen that the provincial budgets now and then bore an appropriation
for the support of the “barbarian prisoners of war.”
It is with
considerable diffidence that I venture to advance the hypothesis that it is in
these transplanted and isolated communities of Ainu that we must seek for one,
if not the main, source of the Eta, who formed a large part of the pariah class
of feudal Japan. These “barbarian prisoners of war” had all been hunters and flesh-eaters;
their chief articles of barter with Japanese traders had been, we know, hides
and skins and the trophies of the chase. They had none of the Yamato
superstitious squeamishness about contact, either vicarious or direct, with
the dead; while being almost entirely uninfluenced by Buddhistic ideas, they
were equally ready to kill a mad dog or to decapitate a criminal. As has been
already remarked, serious crime was then increasing apace in Japan on account
of the reluctance to take life and of the difficulty of tilling the position of
public executioner. The captive Ainu would here be available to render highly
necessary, but not very highly esteemed, services. In removing and disposing of
the carcases of oxen and horses and other animals
that had died a natural death—(as they were usually allowed to do)—these
strong-stomached savages would also find occupation; their chief or their only
reward, perhaps, being the skin of the dead animal. At all events, dealing with
skins or leather until after it was tanned was unclean in feudal Japan, and
tanning was a monopoly of the Eta. So also was all the work in connection 'with
the common execution-grounds.
What seems a
fatal objection to this hypothesis admits of a very easy and a very ready
answer. It is urged that there was little or nothing of the Ainu physiognomy to
be seen in the Eta communities of 1898. How far that is really true I cannot
pretend to say. But after 812, no more communities of Ainu prisoners of Avar
were settled anywhere outside of the two provinces of Mutsu and Dewa. And
Japanese outcasts and famine-stricken peasants now and then driven to cannibalism
would be glad to pocket their pride of race, and with their female dependents
take refuge in the Ainu communities (which as a rule appear to have been
tolerably well off), and intermarry there. If this went on for centuries, it is
easy to understand how the physiognomy of the Eta, although originally pure
Ainu, would gradually approximate to that of the general population around
them.
CHAPTER VII. THE EMPEROR KWAMMU. (782 TO 805 A.D.)CHAPTER VIII. THE LEARNED EMPERORS. (806 TO 850 A.D.)CHAPTER IX. THE GREAT HOUSE OF FUJIWARA. |