Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 6.djvu/383

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INDEX

  • Kanda festival of Tōkyō, vi. 10–12; character and duties of modern, 84, 87, 97; training, 86; earnings, 87, 88; redemption, 88.
  • Gemmiyo, empress, and plan of Nara, i. 133; interest in welfare of people, 136.
  • Gempei war, ii. 5, 279.
  • Genroku era, character, iii. 146, 147, iv. 1.
  • Gensho, empress, encourages agriculture, i. 123; interest in people's welfare, 136.
  • Geography of Japan, i. 2–4, 247.
  • Germany, interferes in Chinese war treaty, v. 60, 61; seizes Kiao-chow, 63.
  • Giyogi, Buddhist prelate, reconciles Shintō and Buddhism, i. 96; interest in internal improvements, 135.
  • Godaigo, emperor, attempts to rehabilitate imperial power, ii. 14–17; mistake, 17, plot against, 18; war against Takauji, 20–22; flight, 22; submission, 22; second flight, 23; character, 23; exile, 284.
  • Gohei, origin and significance, i. 56, 250, v. 121.
  • Gojo, court family, hereditary accomplishment, iv. 6.
  • Gokyogoku, Yoshitsume, treatise on landscape gardening, ii. 231.
  • Go-Murakami, emperor, ii. 106.
  • Goto family, metalworkers, vi. 138.
  • Goto, later Count, bears Tosa memorial to Kyōtō, iii. 239.
  • Go-toba, emperor, swordsmith, ii. 143, 146; patron of wrestling, iii. 67.
  • Go-tsuchi-mikado, emperor, iii. 60.
  • Government, ancient: patriarchal form, i. 50, 51; functions, 50–53; union of Church and State, 52, 54, 93; hereditary officials, 53; usurpations of office-holding clans, 85, 86, 100; national polity and Buddhism, 94–97; Shotoku on the monarchy, 99; first rehabilitation of imperialism, 101–103; Taikwa Reform, 101, 105; administrative reorganisation, 107; national polity and ethical teachings, 129.
  • Heian epoch: failure of Taikwa reforms, i. 157, 160–165; rebirth of hereditary officialism, 161, 165, 168; principles of Fujiwara regency, 167, ii. 10, 19; independent power of the provinces, i. 168–170; impotence of the central, 230–232, ii. 1, 2; decline of Fujiwara power, 2, 14; second rehabilitation of imperialism, 3; tendency toward delegated authority, 4, 11, 38, iii. 133, iv. 220.
  • Military epoch: control of the Taira, ii. 5, 19; Yoritomo establishes military feudalism, 6; principles of his rule, 7–10, 19; first Shōgun, 8; attitude toward imperial court, 9; power of Shōgun passes to Hōjō vicegerency, 11; Hōjō attitude toward imperial court, 11, 12, 19, 201–204, iv. 8; decline of the Hōjō, ii. 12–14; overthrow, 14–17; third rehabilitation of imperialism, 14, 17–19; Ashikaga control, 19–21; dual monarchy, 23; prin-

279