Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 6.djvu/386

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INDEX

  • Honen Shonin, founder of Pure Land sect, v. 147.
  • Hongwan-ji, Buddhist monastery, destroyed, ii. 33.
  • Horses and equipment of primæval Japan, i. 47; small, ii. 159.
  • Hoshi Tōru, character, iv. 249; political control, 249, 251, 254; assassination, 256.
  • Hospitality, iv. 25.
  • Hostage, mother as, ii. 213.
  • Hotta, chief of Bitchiu, Shōgun minister, foreign policy, iii. 174, 182.
  • Hyde-Clarke, Mr., on origin of Japanese, i. 36.
  • Hyōgō, foreign men-of-war at, iii. 230; opened to foreign commerce, 234. See also Fukuhara.
  • Hypnotism and Shinto miracles, v. 233.
  • Iba Sōtaro, assassin of Hoshi Tōru, iv. 256.
  • Ibaraki-ya Kosai, rich merchant, iv. 154.
  • Ichijo, emperor, immoral, i. 233; interest in people's welfare, 235.
  • Ichijo, noble family, hereditary privileges, iv. 5, 35.
  • Ichikawa Tatsumaro, rationalist, v. 112, 254.
  • Ideographs, adaptation of Chinese, to Japanese language, i. 26, 76, 250; introduction, 75; effect on Japanese language, 77–80; principles, 257.
  • Ideguchi Yenka and revival of Shintō, v. 172.
  • Ii, chief of Kamon, Shōgun minister, iii. 182; reasserts Shōgun autocracy, 183, 184, 189; foreign policy, 183, 185, 253; punishes anti-Shōgun conspirators, 189; assassination, 192, 255.
  • Ii, Tokugawa house, hereditary privilege, iv. 28.
  • Ikenobo, Buddhist priest, master of flower arrangement, iii. 11.
  • Ikko sect of Buddhism, military power, ii. 31.
  • Immigration, successive periods of primæval, i. 30, 35, 42, 44, 45; Chinese and Korean colonists, 75, 83, 252.
  • Immortality, ancient belief in, i. 49, 54, 55, 58; Shintō belief, v. 124–126; Japanese Buddhist belief, 142–147, 151.
  • Iname, Soga no, prime minister, embraces Buddhism, i. 91.
  • Incenses, comparing of, origin, iii. 1–3; practice, 3–9.
  • Industry, dependence on governmental initiative, i. 24, 83, 90, iv. 216. See also Manufactures, Trade.
  • Ingyo, emperor, i. 66, v. 232.
  • Inheritance. See Property.
  • Inns in Tokugawa epoch, iv. 171. See also Travel.
  • Inouye, later Count, member of Chōshiu clan, reformer, iii. 236; leader in Revolution of 1867, iv. 204.
  • Insurance, mediæval marine, vi. 198.
  • Intellectual awakening in eighteenth century, iii. 143–145, 155.
  • Iron age, represented by the dolmens, i. 41, 45.
  • Ise, great shrine, v. 115.
  • Ishida Kampei, popular lecturer, iv. 135.

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