
of KUMAMOTO
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<Ancient Times>
A Treasury of Ancient Culture
With its moderate temperature, abundant water supply
and endless hills,Kumamoto has been a site for human settlement
for about twenty eight thousand years. Throughout Kumamoto,
we can find relics of the old Stone Age and Jomon Period.
Rice cultivation began earlier in the Yayoi Period compared
to other areas, while bronze and iron implements were
also found in parts that show certain similarity to those
in Mainland China. At Tensui-machi in Tamana-gun, the
oldest iron axe ever found in Japan was excavated, and
Yayoi culture flourished in that age appeared in the area.In
the Burial Mound Age, the Burial Mound, square at the
head and rounded at the foot, were first built at the
base of Uto Peninsula over a period of four centuries.
Burial Mounds of this kind were constructed all around
Kumamoto. Around that time, lived prosperous and powerful
people called The Hinokimi. Relics from the latter part
of the age of burial mounds (in the sixth and the seventh
centuries),appear to indicate that the powerful had interchange
with China, as evidenced at the Eda-Funayama burial mound
located in Tensui-machi. Decorated burial mounds with
pictures and patterns drawn inside the grave got so popular
that such unique local practices as standing statues of
people and artifacts both made from stone are found on
the mound. After Iwai, Kuninomiyatsuko(the local governor)
of Tsukushi-province, rebelled in 527, Miyake, an area
under direct imperial control, was subsequently established
to become part of the national political system. During
the Ritsuryo(Ancient Ordinance)period, Kumamoto was the
only major state in Kyushu. Around that time, Kukuchi
Castle(in Kikuka-machi and Kikuchi-city) was constructed.
You will find the natural features of Kumamoto sung in
"Man-yoshu" Lyrics(Collection of Myriad Leaves) in the
eighth century.
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<Middle Ages>
Warriors Making Names for Themselves Over the Country
During the Heian period, Fourteen counties and ninety-nine
villages were founded in the province of Higo. In the
golden age of Shoen(private tracts of land), about ten
including Aso-sho, Kanokogi-sho, and Yamaga-sho were founded,
and the warrier groups of the larger Shoen started to
accumulate power. Then came the era of warriors. During
the Kamakura period, warriors were appointed as head of
the estates, and such clans as the Asos, the Kikuchis,
and the Shodais exercised their local power. Sagara, a
former Shogunate vassal from Kamakura, entered Kuma district(in
southern Kumamoto) and left traces of original Buddhist
culture. In the Nambokucho era (durung which the imperial
throne was divided into the northern and the southern
courts), reflecting the state of the nation, Kyushu split
into two groups who clashed with each other. Kikuchi extended
his sphere of influence, then Aso, Nawa, and Sagara also
wielded power. However, when Kikuchi lost its grip on
power in the final stages of the Muromachi period, Otomo
in Bungo(Oita), Ryuzoji in Hizen (Saga & Nagasaki), and
Shimazu in Satsuma(Kagoshima) began to extend their sphere
of influence, and the province of Higo was plundered by
these big three daimyos, or feudal lords, during the Sengoku(Civil
War) era. Thereafter, Shimazu took control of Higo until
Hideyoshi Toyotomi's conquest of Kyushu.
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<Early Modern Ages>
The Era of Mature
Culture
When Hideyoshi Toyotomi conquered Kyushu in 1587, he
appointed Narimasa Sasa as head of the province. However,
after Sasa fell from power following local uprising, Kiyomasa
Kato ruled the northern part of the prefecture, while
Yukinaga Konishi held authority in the south, and Sagara
had kept the position in Kuma. After the fall of Konishi
in 1600, in the battle of Sekigahara, Kiyomasa Kato, builder
of Kumamoto Castle, unified Higo. He achieved much for
the region, including works of civil engineering and flood
prevention. Kato was followed by Hosokawa who entered
Higo in 1632, and who ruled 540 thousand "koku" of Higo
until the Meiji Restoration. Hosakawa devoted his energies
to encouraging culture, such as Higo-Koryu, the Higo style
tea ceremony, the Noh drum culture of Kita-Ryu,and Kinshun-Ryu,the
Higo-Rokka,or six flowers, which must never be taken out
of the house, the house of Tsukasa Yoshida in Sumo, and
Higo-zogan, or damascening. The great swordsman Musashi
Miyamoto came to Higo on the invitation of the third ruler,
Tadatoshi Hosokawa, and spant his final days in years
in Kumamoto writing Grin-no sho(The Book of Five Elements).
Amakusa is located near Nagasaki, and Christianity made
great inroads here because Konishi was a Christian daimyo.
In Amakusa, Collegio (Amakusa School) was established,
and elements of Kirishitan(of western-style brought with
Christianity) culture such as Latin and astronomy flourished.
However, Christianity was officially outlawed in 1613.
In 1637, as the oppression to Christianity became increasingly
severe, thirty thousand farmers suffering under the brutal
tax system staged an uprising. This bacame known as the
Amakusa and Shimabara rebellions. The year after the rebellion,
Japan adopted its isolationist policy. The rebellion was
the key factor in its adoption. After the rebellion, Amakusa
came to be a Shogunate demesne until the Meiji Restoration.
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<Recent Times>
Building a Modern Nation
In 1869, the Shogunate returned the land and people to
the Emperor. In 1871, the old domains were replaced by
prefectures. Kumamoto domain became Kumamoto Prefecture,
Hitoyoshi domain became Hitoyoshi Prefecture, and Amakusa
was temporarily incorporated into Nagasaki Prefecture.
In 1876, the present Kumamoto Prefecture was founded.
Kumamoto Prefecture laid plans to modernize based on Western
culture. In 1871, Kumamoto Medical School and Kumamoto
School of Western Studies were founded. However, the samurai
class became increasingly disgruntled with the new government,
and in 1876, the Shinpuren rebellion ignited. In 1877,
the Seinan Civil War began, with Kumamoto the main battlefield.
The teacher's lodgings in Kumamoto School of Western Studies
was where Tsunetami Sano was permitted to found Hakuaisha
during the Seinan Civil War, and was also the birth place
of the Japan Red Cross Society. In 1887, the No. 5 High
School was founded. Soseki Natsume and Yagumo Koizumi
ware teaching there, and the school produced many talented
people who went out into the world.
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