Nakasendo Way

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Home / Glossary Terms / Honor the emperor

Honor the emperor

‘Honor the emperor’ (“sonno”) was a revolutionary idea in the late Edo period because it implied that attention, loyalty, and service was due to the emperor and that loyalty to the shogun was secondary or, more radically, contradictory to honoring the emperor. The idea was an important stimulus to the growth of nationalism in Japan and a major force which unified opposition to the Tokugawa regime and led to the Meiji restoration.

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From the glossary

  • Sword Hunt

    Military authorities in the feudal period occasionally staged sword hunts to disarm peasants. The most famous one was staged in 1588 by Toyotomi Hideyoshi and was a device to both pacify the nation and clearly distinguish the ruling samurai class, which could bear swords, from the rest of the population who could not. One local district is recorded as giving up nearly 1100 long swords, 1500 short ones, 500 guns and 700 knives. Toyotomi’s edict also required all samurai (the only class allowed to carry swords) to live in the castle of their lord. This led to the evolution of castle towns since the samurai required services which only merchants and artisans could provide.

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