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The '''Korean influence on Japanese culture''' refers to the impact of ] the ] on ]. Since the Korean Peninsula was the cultural bridge between ] and the Asian continent throughout much of Far Eastern history, these influences, whether hypothesized or ascertained, have been detected in a notable variety of aspects of Japanese culture. Korea played a significant role in in the introduction of ] to Japan from ] via the Kingdom of ]. The modulation of continental styles of art in Korea has also been discerned in early ] and ], ranging from the ] to various smaller objects such as ], ] and ].{{citation needed|date=October 2014}} | |||
'''Korean influence on Japanese culture''' refers to the impact of continental Asian influences transmitted through or originating in the ] on ]. Since the Korean Peninsula was the cultural bridge between ] and ] throughout much of East Asian history, these influences have been detected in a variety of aspects of Japanese culture, including technology, philosophy, art, and artistic techniques.<ref name=cart1>{{Cite web|url = https://www.worldhistory.org/article/982/ancient-korean--japanese-relations/ |title=Ancient Korean & Japanese Relations |last=Cartwright |first=Mark |date= November 25, 2016 |website=]}}</ref> | |||
Notable examples of Korean influence on Japanese culture include the prehistoric migration of Korean peninsular peoples to Japan near the end of Japan's ] and the introduction of ] to Japan via the Kingdom of ] in 538 AD. From the mid-fifth to the late-seventh centuries, Japan benefited from the immigration of people from Baekje and ] who brought with them their knowledge of iron metallurgy, stoneware pottery, law, and Chinese writing. These people were known as ].<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |script-title=ja:渡来人 |url=https://www.asuka-tobira.com/toraijin/toraijin.htm |access-date=2023-01-26 |website=www.asuka-tobira.com |language=ja}}</ref><ref name=":1">{{Cite web |last=第2版,世界大百科事典内言及 |first=日本大百科全書(ニッポニカ),ブリタニカ国際大百科事典 小項目事典,旺文社日本史事典 三訂版,百科事典マイペディア,デジタル大辞泉,精選版 日本国語大辞典,世界大百科事典 |title=渡来人(とらいじん)とは? 意味や使い方 |url=https://kotobank.jp/word/%E6%B8%A1%E6%9D%A5%E4%BA%BA-585287 |access-date=2023-02-06 |website=コトバンク |language=ja}}</ref> The modulation of continental styles of art in Korea has also been discerned in ] and ], ranging from the ] to smaller objects such as ]s, ]s and ]. Late in the sixteenth century, the ] produced considerable cross-cultural contact. Korean craftsmen who came to Japan at this time were responsible for a revolution in Japanese pottery making. | |||
== Art == | |||
During the ], the artisans from ] provided technological and ] guidance in the Japanese architecture and arts.<ref name="Kodansha encyclopedia of Japan">Kodansha encyclopedia of Japan. ], 1983, p. 146</ref> Therefore, the temple plans, architectural forms, and iconography were strongly influenced directly by examples in the ancient Korea.<ref>Donald F. McCallum. The Four Great Temples: Buddhist Archaeology, Architecture, and Icons of Seventh-Century Japan. University of Hawai'i Press, 2009</ref>{{Page needed|date=October 2014}}<ref>Neeraj Gautam. Buddha his life and teaching. Mahaveer & Sons, 2009</ref>{{Page needed|date=October 2014}} In deed, many of the Japanese temples at that time were crafted in the Baekje style.<ref>Donald William Mitchell. Buddhism: introducing the Buddhist experience. Oxford University Press, 2008, p.276</ref> Japanese nobility, wishing to take advantage of culture from across the sea, {{Citation needed span|text=imported artists and artisans from the Korean Peninsula (most, but not all, from Baekje) to build and decorate their first palaces and temples.|date=June 2011}} | |||
Many Korean influences on Japan originated in China, but were adapted and modified in Korea before reaching Japan. The role of ancient Korean states in the transmission of continental civilization has long been neglected, and is increasingly the object of academic study. However, Korean and Japanese nationalisms have complicated the interpretation of these influences. | |||
Among the earliest craft items extant in Japan is the ], a magnificent example of ] of that period.<ref>The Theosophical Path: Illustrated Monthly, C.J. Ryan. Art in China and Japan. New Century Corp.,July 1914, p. 10</ref><ref name="Fenollosa">{{cite book |author=] |title=Epochs of Chinese and Japanese Art: An Outline History of East Asiatic Design |publisher=] |year=1912 | page=49}}</ref> The shrine is a miniature two-story temple made of wood, to be used as a kind of reliquary.<ref name="Fenollosa"/> This shrine is so named because it was decorated with iridescent beetle(]) wings set into metal edging, a technique also Korean indigenous<ref name="Mizuno1974">Mizuno, Seiichi. Asuka Buddhist Art: Hōryū-ji. Weatherhill, 1974. New York, p.40</ref><ref>Stanley-Baker, Joan. Japanese Art. ], 1984, p. 32</ref> practiced in Korea<ref>Conrad Schirokauer,Miranda Brown,David Lurie,Suzanne Gay. A Brief History of Chinese and Japanese Civilizations. Wadworth engage Learning, 2003, p.40</ref><ref>Paine, Robert Treat; Soper, Alexander Coburn. The Art and Architecture of Japan. Yale University Press, 1981. pp. 33-35, 316.</ref> and this technique of tamamushi inlay is evidently native to Korea.<ref>Beatrix von Ragué. A history of Japanese lacquerwork. University of Toronto Press, 1976, p.6</ref> The shrine's ornamental gilt bronze openwork, inlaid with the iridescent wings of the tamamushi beetle, is of a Korean type.<ref>Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.), James C. Y. Watt, Barbara Brennan Ford. East Asian lacquer: the Florence and Herbert Irving collection. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1991, p.154</ref> | |||
== Prehistoric Korean peninsular influences on the Japanese archipelago == | |||
=== Architecture === | |||
Between 800 and 600 BC, new technology and cultural objects began appearing in Japan, starting in ].<ref name="barnes">Barnes (2015), pp. 271–273.</ref> Gradually the ] was supplanted across Japan by the ] that practiced wet-rice farming.<ref name="Nakazono"/> According to the historians Gina Barnes and Satoru Nakazono, this represented a cultural flow from southern Korea to Kyushu.<ref name="barnes"/><ref name="Nakazono"/> By contrast, Charles T. Keally argues that wet-rice farming, which was originally practiced in China, could also have come to Kyushu directly from China.<ref name="keally-yayoi">{{cite web |url=http://www.t-net.ne.jp/~keally/yayoi.html |title=Yayoi Culture |first=Charles T. |last=Keally |date=2006-06-03 |work=Japanese Archaeology |publisher=Charles T. Keally |access-date=2010-03-19}}</ref> | |||
The oldest Japanese Buddhist temple, ], constructed under the guidance of craftsmen from the ancient Korean kingdom of Baekje, from 588-596.<ref>Donald Fredrick McCallum, University of Hawaii Press, 2009 pp.40-46.</ref><ref>Kakichi Suzuki,''Early Buddhist architecture in Japan,'' Kodansha International, 1980, p.43</ref> was modeled upon the layout and architecture of Baekje.<ref>Herbert E. Plutschow. Historical Nara: with illustrations and guide maps. Japan Times, 1983, p. 41</ref> And one of the early great temples in Japan, such as the ] Temple was based on types from the ancient Korea.<ref>Asoke Kumar Bhattacharyya. Indian contribution to the development of Far Eastern Buddhist iconography. K.P. Bagchi & Co., 2002, p. 22</ref><ref name="LouisFrédéric2002">Louis Frédéric. Japan Encyclopedia. Harvard University Press, 2002, p.136</ref> | |||
In 601, ] began the construction of his palace, the first building in Japan to have a tiled roof. Next to it he built his temple, which became known as ]. He employed a number of skilled craftsmen, monks, and designers from ] for this project.<ref>Mizuno, Seiichi. Asuka Buddhist Art: Hōryū-ji. Weatherhill, 1974. New York, p.14</ref><ref>Nishi and Hozumi Kazuo. What is Japanese Architecture? Shokokusha Publishing Company, 1983. Tokyo</ref>{{Page needed|date=October 2014}} The temple became his personal devotional center where he studied with Buddhist priests ] and ] from the Korean kingdom of ]; it also housed people who practiced medicine, medical knowledge being another by-product of Buddhism. Next to the temple there were dormitories which housed student-monks and teacher-monks.<ref name="az"> Mark Schumacher. A to Z Photo Dictionary of Japanese Buddhist Statuary.</ref> | |||
The result was rapid growth in the Japanese population during the Yayoi period and subsequent ].<ref name="influence">Rhee, Aikens, Choi, and Ro, pp. 420–422.</ref> Japanese people also began to use metal tools, arrowheads, new forms of pottery, moats, burial mounds, and styles of housing which were of peninsular origin.<ref name="barnes"/><ref>Habu, p. 258.</ref> A significant cause of these dramatic changes in Japanese society was likely an influx of immigrants from southern Korea.<ref>Totman, p. 59.</ref> Historian Hiroshi Tsude estimated that as many as 1.8 million Koreans immigrated to Japan during the Yayoi period.<ref>{{harv|Farris|1998|p=109}}</ref> According to Satoru Nakazono, this period was "characterized by the systematic introduction of Korean peninsula culture".<ref name="Nakazono">Nakazono, p. 59.</ref> | |||
The first Horyu-ji burned to the ground in 670. It was rebuilt, and although it is thought to be smaller than the original temple, Horyu-ji today is much the same in design as the one originally built by Shotoku. Again, the temple was rebuilt by artists and artisans from Baekje.<ref name="az"/> The bracket work of a Baekje gilt bronze pagoda matches the Hōryū-ji bracket work exactly.<ref>Shin, Young-hoon. "Audio/Slide Program for Use in Korean Studies, ARCHITECTURE". Indiana University.</ref> The wooden pagoda at Horyu-ji, as well as the Golden Hall, are thought to be masterpieces of seventh-century Baekje architecture.<ref name="az"/> Two other temples, ] and ], were also probably built by artisans of Korea’s Baekje kingdom.<ref> Mark Schumacher. A to Z Photo Dictionary of Japanese Buddhist Statuary.</ref> | |||
According to Japanese historian Tadashi Nishitani, the ], an archeological site in ] dating from the late Yayoi period, appears virtually identical to villages in the Korean peninsula of the same period.<ref name="bronze">Rhee, Aikens, Choi, and Ro, pp. 430–432.</ref> By contrast, the burial mounds at Yoshinogari show signs of influence from the Chinese ].<ref>Barnes (2007), p. 105.</ref> During this period Japan imported great numbers of peninsular mirrors and daggers, which were the symbols of power in Korea. Combined with the curved jewel known as the ], Korea's "three treasures" soon became as prized by Japan's elites as Korea's, and in Japan they later became the ].<ref name="bronze"/> | |||
=== Sculptures === | |||
] | |||
One of the most famous of all Buddhist sculptures from the Asuka period found in Japan today is the "]" which, when translated, means "] ]."(Kudara is the Japanese name for the Korean kingdom of Baekje<ref>Peter C. Swann. A concise history of Japanese art. Kodansha International, 1979, p. 44</ref>) This wooden statue was either brought from Korean Baekje or carved by a Korean immigrant sculptor from Baekje.<ref>Peter C. Swann. The art of Japan, from the Jōmon to the Tokugawa period. Crown Publishers, 1966, p.238</ref><ref>Ananda W. P. Gurugé. Buddhism, the religion and its culture. M. Seshachalam, 1975</ref>{{Page needed|date=October 2014}}<ref>Jane Portal. Korea: art and archaeology. British Museum, 2000, p. 240</ref> It formerly stood as the central figure in the Golden Hall at the Horyu-ji. {{Citation needed span|text=It was moved to a glass case in the Treasure Museum after a fire destroyed part of the Golden Hall in 1949.|date=April 2010}} "This tall, slender, graceful figure made from camphor wood is reflective of the most genteel state in the Three Kingdoms period. From the openwork crown to the lotus pedestal design, the statue marks the superior workmanship of 7th century ] artists."{{citation needed|date=October 2014}} The first and foremost clue that clearly indicates Baekje handiwork is the crown's design, which shows the characteristic honeysuckle-lotus pattern found in artifacts buried in the tomb of King Munyong of Baekje (reigned 501-523).{{cn|date=October 2014}} The number of protrusions from the petals is identical, and the coiling of the vines appears to be the same. Crowns of a nearly identical type remain in Korea, executed in both gilt bronze and granite. The crown's pendants indicate a carryover from ] designs seen in fifth-century Korean crowns.{{Citation needed span|text=Guanyin's bronze bracelets and those of the ] at the Golden Hall also show signs of similar openwork metal techniques.|date=April 2010}} | |||
== Korean influences on ancient and classical Japan == | |||
] | |||
With the beginning of the Kofun period around 250 CE, the building of gigantic tomb called '']'' indicates the emergence of powerful warrior elites, fueled by more intensive agriculture and the introduction of iron technologies. Contact with the continental mainland increased, as Japan undertook intensive contacts with the southern Korean littoral ruling groups, in pursuit of securing supplies of iron and other material goods, while sending emissaries to China (in 238, 243 and 247). A pattern developed of intense military and political dealings with peninsular Korean powers that continued for four centuries.<ref>Totman, pp.62–63.</ref> For Hyung Il Pai, there was no clear Korean and Japanese national distinction for the period around the 4th century CE.<ref>Pai, pp. 234–235.</ref> | |||
The another Hōryū-ji statue, "]" is made of gilded wood in the Korean style.<ref>Evelyn McCune. The arts of Korea: an illustrated history. C. E. Tuttle Co., 1962, p.69</ref> The Kannon retains most of its gilt. It is in superb condition because it was kept in the Dream Hall(Yumedono) and wrapped in five hundred meters of cloth and never viewed in sunlight. The statue which had originally come from ]<ref>Asiatic Society of Japan. Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan. The Society, 1986, p. 155</ref> and was held to be sacred and had remained unseen until it was unwrapped at the demand of ], who was charged by the Japanese government to catalogue the art of the state and later became a curator at the Boston Museum.<ref>June Kinoshita. "Gateway to Japan", pp. 587-588. Kodansha International, 1998</ref> Fenellosa also considered the Kannon to be Korean, who described the Kudara Kannon as "the supreme masterpiece of ] creation".<ref name="Fenollosa"/><ref>Fenollosa, Ernest F. Epochs of Chinese and Japanese Art: An Outline History of East Asiatic Design. Heinemann, 1912, p.49</ref> According to the record Shogeishō (聖冏抄), a compilation of the ancient historical records and traditions about the Japanese Prince Regent ], which was written by a Japanese monk ] (1341-1420), the 7th Patriarchs of the ], Guze Kannon is a statue that is the representation of King ], which was carved under the order of the subsequent ].<ref>聖冏抄 ... 故威德王恋慕父王状所造顕之尊像 即救世観音像是也</ref> | |||
Cultural contact with Korea, which at the time was divided into ], played a decisive role in the development of Japanese government and society both during the Kofun period and the subsequent ].<ref name="farris">{{harv|Farris|1998|pp=69–70, 110, 116, 120–122}}</ref> Most innovations flowed from Korea into Japan, and not vice versa, primarily due to Korea's closer proximity to China.<ref>Ch'on, p. 11.</ref> Though many of the ideas and technologies which filtered into Japan from Korea were originally Chinese, historian William Wayne Farris notes that Korean peninsular peoples put "their distinctive stamp on" them before passing them on to Japan. Some such innovations were imported to Japan through trade, but in more cases they were brought to Japan by peninsular immigrants. The ] that eventually unified Japan accomplished this partly due to its success at gaining a monopoly on the importation of Korean peninsular culture and technology into Japan.<ref name="farris"/> According to Farris, Japanese cultural borrowing from Korea "hit peaks in the mid-fifth, mid-sixth, and late seventh centuries"<ref>{{harv|Farris|1998|p=120}}</ref> and "helped to define a material culture that lasted as long as a thousand years".<ref>{{harv|Farris|1998|p=68}}</ref> | |||
=== Immigration from ancient Korea to Japan === | |||
].]] | |||
During this period a significant factor behind the transfer of peninsular Korean culture to Japan was immigration from Korea. Most peninsular immigrants, generically known as ''kikajin'' in Japanese, came during a period of intense regional warfare which racked the Korean peninsula between the late fourth and late seventh centuries.<ref name="immigrants">{{harv|Farris|1998|pp=67, 109}}</ref> Japanese traditions held that the Yamato kingdom has sent military expeditions to assist Baekje as early as 369 CE, military aid that is said to have enabled the latter to secure control of Naktong against its enemies, ] and ].<ref>Pai, p.234.</ref> | |||
More examples of Korea's influence were noted in the ], whose reporter writes when looking at Japan's national treasures like the "]" sculpture which came from ]<ref>Mizuno, Seiichi. Asuka Buddhist Art: Hōryū-ji. Weatherhill, 1974. New York, p. 80</ref><ref>Asia, Volume 2. ], 1979</ref> and has been preserved at ] Temple ; "''It is also a symbol of Japan itself and an embodiment of qualities often used to define Japaneseness in art: formal simplicity and emotional serenity. To see it was to have an instant Japanese experience. I had mine. As it turns out, though, the Koryuji sculpture isn't Japanese at all. Based on Korean prototypes, it was almost certainly carved in Korea''"<ref name="NYT 2003">]</ref> and ''"The obvious upshot of the show's detective work is to establish that certain classic "Japanese" pieces are actually "Korean".''<ref name="NYT 2003"/> | |||
Many of these immigrants, who were welcomed by the Japanese government, were from Baekje and ]. These refugees brought their culture to Japan with them, and once there they often became leading officials, artists, and craftsmen.<ref>Kim, p. 74.</ref> Korean peninsular immigrants and their descendants played a significant role in Japan's ] to ],<ref>Nakamura, pp. 96–97.</ref> and some peninsular families are even said to have married into the ].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/04/080428-ancient-tomb.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080501083556/http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/04/080428-ancient-tomb.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=May 1, 2008|title=Japanese Royal Tomb Opened to Scholars for First Time|author=Tony McNicol|publisher=National Geographic News|date=April 28, 2008}}</ref><ref name="kim">Kim, p. 75.</ref> By 700, it has been conjectured, perhaps one third of all Japanese aristocrats may have been of relatively recent peninsular origin,<ref name="farris"/> including the Aya clan.<ref name="kim"/> Although peninsular immigrants settled throughout Japan, they were especially concentrated in ], the region where the Japanese capital was located. According to one estimate, from 80 to 90 percent of people in Nara had Baekje ancestry by the year 773, and recent anatomical analyses indicate that modern-day Japanese people living in this area continue to be more closely related to ethnic Koreans than any other in Japan.<ref name="clans">Rhee, Aikens, Choi, and Ro, pp. 441–442.</ref> | |||
In the 8th century, groups of Sculptors of Baekje and ] origins participated in the construction works of ] Temple.<ref>Jirô Sugiyama, Samuel Crowell Morse. Classic Buddhist sculpture: the Tempyô period. Kodansha International, 1982, p.164</ref> The bronze statue of ] at Tōdai-ji Temple was predominantly made by ].<ref name="The Association">College Art Association of America. Conference. Abstracts of papers delivered in art history sessions: Annual meeting. The Association, 1998, p.194</ref> The Great Buddha project was supervised by a Korean Baekje craftsman, Gongmaryeo (or Kimimaro in Japanese) and had many Silla craftsmen from Korea working from the beginning of the project.<ref name="The Association"/> The Great Buddha was finally cast, despite great difficulty by virtue of the skill of imported craftsmen from Silla in 752.<ref>Richard D. McBride. Domesticating the Dharma: Buddhist Cults and the Hwaŏm Synthesis in Silla Korea. University of Hawaii Press, 2008, p.90</ref> Furthermore, Silla sculpture seems to have exerted considerable influence on the styles of the early ] in Japan.<ref>Jirô Sugiyama, Samuel Crowell Morse. Classic Buddhist sculpture: the Tempyô period. Kodansha International, 1982, p.208</ref> | |||
The ], a clan with close ties to the Baekje elite, may also have been of Baekje ancestry.<ref name="soga">McCallum (2009), p. 19.</ref> Scholars who have argued in favor of the theory that the Soga had peninsular ancestry include Teiji Kadowaki and William Wayne Farris.<ref name="soga"/><ref>Farris (2009), p. 25.</ref> | |||
=== |
=== Arms and armament === | ||
During most of the Kofun period Japan relied on Korea as its sole source of iron swords, spears, armor, and helmets. ] and later Japan's first ], as well as subsequent innovations in producing them, arrived in Japan from Korea, particularly from Silla and Gaya.<ref name="armor">{{harv|Farris|1998|pp=72–76}}</ref> Japan's first crossbow was delivered by Goguryeo in 618.<ref name="war">{{harv|Farris|1998|pp=105, 109}}</ref> | |||
At a time in history when horses were a key military weapon, Baekje immigrants also established Japan's first horse-raising farms in what would become Japan's ]. One historian, Koichi Mori, theorizes that ]'s close friendships with Baekje horsemen played an important role in helping him to assume the throne.<ref>Mori Koichi, pp. 130–133.</ref> Japan's first trappings, such as bits, stirrups, saddles, and bridles were also imported from the peninsula by the early fifth century.<ref name="horse">{{harv|Farris|1998|pp=77–79}}</ref> | |||
In 660, following the fall of its ally, Baekje, the Japanese ] utilized Baekje's skilled technicians to construct at least seven fortresses to protect Japan's coastline from invasion.<ref>Comoe, p. 26.</ref> Japan's mountain fortifications in particular were based on peninsular models.<ref name="war"/><ref>Batten, pp. 27–28.</ref> | |||
In 588, the Korean painter Baekga (白加) was invited to Japan from Baekje, and in 610 the Korean priest Damjing came to Japan from ] and taught the Japanese the technique of preparing ] and painting materials.<ref>Bernard Samuel Myers. Encyclopedia of world art. Buddhism in Japan McGraw-Hill, 1959</ref>{{Page needed|date=October 2014}}<ref>Terukazu Akiyama. Japanese painting. Skira, 1977, p. 26</ref> | |||
=== Pottery === | |||
In the 15th century, facing slavery and persecution as ] took a stronger hold during the ] in Korea, many Buddhist-sympathetic artists began migrating to Japan. Once in Japan, they continued to use their Buddhist names instead of their birth (given) names, which eventually led to their origins being largely forgotten. These artists eventually married native women and raised children who were oblivious to their historical origins.{{citation needed|date=October 2014}} Many famous artists in Japan fall into this category. Yi Su-mun, who left for Japan in 1424 to escape persecution of Buddhists, painted the famous "Catching a Catfish with a Gourd". The famous ] of ] also arrived on the same vessel as Yi Su-mun.<ref name="InkPainting">Takaaki Matsushita. Ink Painting. Weatherhill, 1974, p. 64</ref> The Korean painter Yi Su-mun, who as artist in residence to the Asakura daimyo family of Echizen in central Japan, was to play an important role in the development of Japanese ]:<ref name="InkPainting"/> He is reputed to have been the founder of the painting lineage of ], which reached its apex at the time of the great Zen master ] and his followers.<ref>Art of Japan: paintings, prints and screens : selected articles from Orientations, 1984-2002. Orientations Magazine, 2002, p.86</ref><ref>Akiyoshi Watanabe, Hiroshi Kanazawa. Of water and ink: Muromachi-period paintings from Japan, 1392-1568, p.89</ref> | |||
]In the early fifth century high-fired stoneware pottery began to be imported from Kaya and Silla to Japan, and soon after stoneware technologies such as the ] and ] also made their way from Korea to Japan. This allowed the Japanese to produce their own stoneware, which came to be called ], and was eventually produced on a large scale throughout Japan. This new pottery came to Japan alongside immigrants from Korea, possibly southern Korea which was under attack from Goguryeo.<ref name="stone">{{harv|Farris|1998|pp=84–87}}</ref> | |||
=== Ovens === | |||
The Soga (曽我派), a group of Japanese painters active from the 15c through the 18c, also claimed lineage from the Korean immigrant painter Yi Su-mun, and certain stylistic elements seen within the paintings of the school suggest Korean influence.<ref>Thomas Lawton, Thomas W. Lentz. Beyond the Legacy: Anniversary Acquisitions for the Freer Gallery of Art and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery. University of Washington Pr, 1999, p.312</ref> Muncheong (or Bunsei in Japanese) was another Korean immigrant painter in the 15th century Japan, known only by the seal placed on his works extant in both Japan and Korea.<ref>Yang-mo Chŏng, Judith G. Smith, Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.) Arts of Korea. Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1998</ref>{{Page needed|date=October 2014}}{{Relevance-inline|date=February 2015}}<!-- Louis Frederic was an unreliable source of information in controversial areas like this, and even if he was -- how is this relevant? If this artist is only known by his seal on some works, then how can he be considered an "influence" on later Japanese culture? --> | |||
The stove known as the '']'' was of continental origin, having been invented in China but was modified in by the peninsular peoples before it was introduced to Japan. According to the historian William Wayne Farris, the introduction of the ''kamado'' "had a profound effect on daily life in ancient Japan" and "represented a major advance for residents of Japan's pit dwellings". The hearth ovens (''ro'':炉/''maiyōro'':埋甕炉) previously used to cook meals and heat homes were less safe, more difficult to use, and less heat efficient, and by the seventh century the ''kamado'' was in widespread use in Japan. According to Farris, Japanese people referred to the ''kamado'' as ''kara kamado'', which can be translated into English as "Korean ovens".<ref name="stone"/> However, in some parts of northeastern Japan, open-hearth ovens continued to be preferred.<ref>Totman, .</ref> | |||
== |
===Sewing=== | ||
According to the ], all the seamstresses of the village of Kume (來目) in Yamato province hailed from a sewing woman, Maketsu (眞毛津) who was given as tribute by the king of Baekje to the Yamato court.<ref>Tokyo National Museum, p.3.</ref> | |||
Various metal-working techniques such as iron-working, the ], the ], bronze bells used in ] Japan essentially originated in Korea.<ref>Farris, William Wayne. Sacred Texts and Buried Treasures: Issues in the Historical Archaeology of Ancient Japan. University of Hawaii Press, 1998, p. 69</ref> During the ], in the fifth century, large groups of craftspeople, who became the specialist gold workers, ]rs, ]s, and others arrived in ] Japan from the Baekje kingdom of Korea.<ref>Brian M. Fagan. The Oxford companion to archaeology. Oxford University Press, 1996, p.362</ref><ref>Japan. Bunkachō, Japan Society (New York, N.Y.), IBM Gallery of Science and Art. The Rise of a great tradition: Japanese archaeological ceramics of the Jōmon through Heian periods (10,500 BC-AD 1185). Agency for Cultural Affairs, Government of Japan, 1990, p.56</ref> | |||
=== Iron |
=== Iron tools and iron metallurgy === | ||
According to Farris, during the Kofun period, Korea was the source for most of Japan's iron tools, including chisels, saws, sickles, axes, spades, hoes, and plows.<ref name="tools">{{harv|Farris|1998|pp=79–82}}</ref> Historically, the source of iron ingots in Korea was cut off when Yamato forces suffered defeats with their peninsular allies in 405, and again, later in 475, and, immigrant smelters developed furnaces to reuse the available iron. Later, after 450 CE, the ] elite found substitutes in local sands available by ] to make up the shortfall.<ref>Totman, pp.67–68.</ref> Korean iron farming tools in particular contributed to a rise in Japan's population by possibly 250 to 300 percent.<ref>{{harv|Farris|1998|p=83}}</ref> | |||
Iron processing and sword making techniques in ancient Japan can be traced back to Korea. | |||
"Early, as well as current Japanese official history cover up much of this evidence. For example, there is an iron sword in the Shrine of the Puyo Rock Deity in Asuka, Japan which is the third most important historical Shinto shrine. This sword which is inaccessible to the public has a Korean Shamanstic shape and is inscribed with Chinese characters of gold, which include a date corresponding to 369 A.D. At the time, only the most educated elite in the ] Kingdom knew this style of Chinese writing".{{cn|date=October 2014}} | |||
However, it was the refugees who came after 400 from Gaya, a Korean state famous for its iron production, who established some of Japan's first native iron foundries. The work of these Gayan refugees eventually permitted Japan to escape from its dependency on importing iron tools, armor, and weapons from Korea.<ref name="gaya">Rhee, Aikens, Choi, and Ro, pp. 437–438, 446.</ref> The techniques of iron production which they brought to Japan are uniquely Korean and distinct from those used in China.<ref name="armor"/> | |||
=== Dams and irrigation === | |||
"Inariyama sword, as well as some other swords discovered in Japan, utilized the Korean 'Idu' system of writing." The swords "originated in Paekche and that the kings named in their inscriptions represent Paekche kings rather than Japanese kings." The techniques for making these swords were the same styles from Korea.{{cn|date=October 2014}} | |||
The Japanese adapted continental U-shaped hoes and techniques for creating irrigation ponds. Extensive works uncovered in the ] near Osaka display developments far in advance of Yayoi period, and the suggestion is that both the technology and pond construction techniques were introduced by peninsular peoples from southern Korea.<ref>Farris, </ref> | |||
=== |
=== Government and administration === | ||
The centralization of the Japanese state in the sixth and seventh centuries also owes a debt to developments on the Korean Peninsula. In 535 the Japanese government established military garrisons called "miyake" throughout Japan to control regional powers and in many cases staffed them with Korean immigrants.<ref>Kamada, pp. 133–142.</ref> Soon after a system of "be", government-regulated groups of artisans, was created, as well as a new level of local administration and a tribute tax. All of these were likely influenced by similar systems used in Baekje and other parts of Korea.<ref name="law">{{harv|Farris|1998|pp=101–102, 104–105}}</ref> Likewise ]'s ] of 603, a form a meritocracy implemented for Japanese government positions, was influenced by that of Baekje.<ref>Williams, p. 39.</ref><ref>Bowman, p. 124.</ref> | |||
It has been theorized that ] pottery derived from Final ] wares under the influence of the peninsular Korean Plain Pottery tradition.<ref>Mark Hudson, University of Hawaii Press, 1999, pp.120-123.</ref> Two basic kiln types — both still in use — were employed in Japan by this time. The bank, or climbing, kiln, of Korean origin, is built into the slope of a mountain, with as many as 20 chambers; firing can take up to two weeks. In the updraft, or bottle, kiln, a wood fire at the mouth of a covered trench fires the pots, which are in a circular-walled chamber at the end of the fire trench; the top is covered except for a hole to let the smoke escape. | |||
Immigrants from Korea also played a role in drafting many important Japanese legal reforms of the era,<ref name="law"/> including the ].<ref>Hane, p. 15.</ref> Half of the individuals actively involved in drafting Japan's ] of 703 were Korean.<ref name="law"/> | |||
In the 17th century CE, Koreans brought the art of ] to Japan.<ref>Emmanuel Cooper, 10,000 Years of Pottery, 2010, University of Pennsylvania Press, p.79</ref> Korean potters also established kilns at ], ], ], ], ], ] and Yatsushiro in Japan.<ref> News - Washington Oriental Ceramic Group (WOCG) : Newsletter {{quote|''In Japan Korean potters were given land and soon created new, advanced kilns in Kyushu -- Karatsu, Satsuma, Hagi, Takatori, Agano and Yatsushiro.''}}</ref><ref name="The Metropolitan Museum of Art">] {{quote|''1596 Toyotomi Hideyoshi invades Korea for the second time. In addition to brutal killing and widespread destruction, large numbers of Korean craftsmen are abducted and transported to Japan. Skillful Korean potters play a crucial role in establishing such new pottery types as Satsuma, Arita, and Hagi ware in Japan. The invasion ends with the sudden death of Hideyoshi.''}}</ref><!-- | |||
=== Writing === | |||
Scribes from the Korean state of Baekje who wrote Chinese introduced writing to Japan in the early fifth century.<ref name="henshall">Henshall, pp. 17, 228.</ref><ref>Miyake, p. 9.</ref><ref>Seeley, pp. 5–6, 23.</ref> The man traditionally credited as being the first to teach writing in Japan is the Baekje scholar ].<ref>Hane, p. 26.</ref> Though a small number of Japanese people were able to read Chinese before then, it was thanks to the work of scribes from Baekje that the use of writing was popularized among the Japanese governing elite.<ref name="henshall"/> For hundreds of years thereafter a steady stream of talented scribes would be sent from Korea to Japan,<ref>{{harv|Farris|1998|p=99}}</ref> and some of these scholars from Baekje wrote and edited much of the Nihon Shoki, one of Japan's earliest works of history.<ref>Ch'on, p. 18.</ref> | |||
{{See also|Satsuma ware}} | |||
]According to Bjarke Frellesvig, "There is ample evidence, in the form of orthographic 'Koreanisms' in the early inscriptions in Japan, that the writing practices employed in Japan were modelled on continental examples".<ref name="Frellesvig 13">Frellesvig, </ref> The history of how the early Japanese modified the Chinese writing system to develop a native ] orthography is obscure, but scribal techniques developed in the Korean peninsular played an important role in the process of developing ].<ref>Bentley, .</ref> The pronunciation of Chinese characters at this period thus may well reflect that current in the Baekje kingdom.<ref>Miyake, .</ref> Frellesvig states, "However, writing extensive text passages entirely or mostly phonographically, reflected in the widespread use of ''man'yōgana'', is a practice not attested in Korean sources which therefore seems to be an independent development which took place in Japan."<ref name="Frellesvig 13"/> Japanese ] share many symbols with Korean ], for example, suggesting the former arose in part at least from scribal practices in Korea, though the historical connections between the two systems are obscure.<ref name="LeeRamsey" >Lee and Ramsey, : "Simplified ''kugyŏl'' looks like the Japanese ''katakana''. Some of the resemblances are superficial ... ut many other symbols are identical in form and value ... We do not know just what the historical connections were between these two transcription systems. The origins of ''kugyŏl'' have still not been accurately dated or documented. But many in Japan as well as Korea believe that the beginnings of ''katakana'' and the orthographic principles they represent, derive at least in part from earlier practices on the Korean peninsular."</ref> | |||
=== Science, medicine, and math === | |||
It is documented that during ] (1592–1598) Japanese forces abducted a number of Korean craftsmen and artisans, among them a disputed number of potters. Regardless of the number, it is undisputed that at least some Korean potters were forcibly taken to Japan from Korea during the invasions, and that it is the descendants of these potters who started production of pottery in Satsuma.<ref>], paragraph 1</ref> --> | |||
In the wake of ]'s dispatch of ambassadors to Baekje in 553, several Korean soothsayers, doctors, and calendrical scholars were sent to Japan.<ref>Kamstra, .</ref> The Baekje Buddhist priest and physician ] came to Japan in 602, and, settling in the ''Genkōji'' temple(現光寺) where he played a notable role in establishing the ],<ref>Grayson, .</ref> instructed several court students in the Chinese mathematics of ] and ].<ref>Keller and Volkov, .</ref> He introduced the Chinese ] calendrical system (developed by Hé Chéng Tiān (何承天) in 443 C.E.) and transmitted his skill in medicine and pharmacy to Japanese disciples, such as Hinamitachi (日並立)<ref>Lu and Needham, .</ref><ref>Rosner, .</ref> | |||
According to ], nearly all 7th century astronomers in Japan came from Baekje, and only by the following century did the percentage of immigrant astronomers fall to 40% as local astronomers mastered the science.<ref>Sŏng-nae Pak, Jain Publishing Company, 2005 p.44 (Looks like it is self-published in a nationalist vanity press. Perhaps not RS)</ref> Native Japanese astronomers were gradually trained and by the eighth century only forty percent of Japanese astronomers were Korean.<ref name="pak">Pak, pp. 42–45.</ref> Furthermore, the ], a Japanese medical text written in 984, still contains many medical formulas of Korean origin.<ref>Pak, pp. 45–46.</ref> During this same period, Japanese farmers divided their arable land using a system of measurement devised in Korea.<ref>{{harv|Farris|1998|p=105}}</ref> | |||
=== |
=== Shipbuilding === | ||
Technicians sent from the Korean kingdom of Silla introduced advanced shipbuilding techniques to Japan for the first time.<ref name="kim"/><ref>Dorothy Perkins. Japanese history and culture, from abacus to zori. Facts on File, 1991, p.313</ref><ref name="koreanculture"/> An immigrant group 'the Inabe', closely associated with shipbuilding, was made up of carpenters who had come to Japan from Silla.<ref name="Shōtoku">Michael Como. Shōtoku: Ethnicity, Ritual, and Violence in the Japanese Buddhist Tradition. Oxford University Press, 2008, p.173</ref><ref>Michael Como. Weaving and Binding: Immigrant Gods and Female Immortals in Ancient Japan. University of Hawaii Press, 2009, p.92</ref> In the first half of the 9th century, the private fleet of the Silla merchant ] dominated the ] and maritime trade between China and Japan;<ref>Cho, Youngjoo, .</ref> the superiority of Korean shipbuilding technology was recognized by ], and as ambassador to China he chartered Korean vessels as they were more seaworthy for his embassy to the mainland in 838. A Japanese court edict issued in 839 ordered that Kyūshū construct a 'Silla ship', which were better that coping with stormy weather.<ref>Sansom, .</ref><ref>Farris,, in ''The Mariner's Mirror'', vol. 95, No. 3 August 2009 pp. 260–283.</ref> Baekje may also have contributed shipbuilding technology to Japan.<ref name="pak"/> | |||
Japanese archaeologists refer to Ono Fortress, Ki Fortress, and the rest as ]. Because of their close resemblance to the structures built on the peninsula during the same general period. The resemblance is not coincidental. The individuals credited by Chronicles of Japan for building the fortress were all former subjects of the ancient Korean Baekje Kingdom.<ref>Bruce Loyd Batten. Gateway to Japan: Hakata in War And Peace, 500-1300. University of Hawaii Press, 2006, pp.27-28</ref> Especially throughout ], Japanese appear to have favored Baekje fortification experts, putting their technical skills to use in fortifying Japan against a possible foreign invasion.<ref>Michael Como. Shōtoku: Ethnicity, Ritual, and Violence in the Japanese Buddhist Tradition , 2008, p. 26</ref> | |||
=== |
==== Navigation ==== | ||
Ancient Koreans were commercially active throughout East Asia, and their mastery of ] allowed them to pursue trade interests as far away as the ].<ref>Louis D. Hayes. Political Systems of East Asia: China, Korea, and Japan. M.E. Sharpe, 2012, p.85</ref> In 526, a Baekje Korean monk Gyeomik traveled to India via the southern sea route and mastered ], specializing in ] studies. He came back with a collection of Vinaya texts to Baekje, accompanied by the Indian monk Paedalta(Vedatta).<ref>Robert E. Buswell. Tracing Back the Radiance: Chinul's Korean Way of Zen. University of Hawaii Press, 1983, p.6</ref> | |||
The ] had introduced a Western ] ] in ], ] in 1590, worked by two Japanese friars who had learnt type-casting in Portugal. ], invented in China in the 11th. century, developed from clay to ceramic, and then bronze copper-tin alloy based movable type presses. Refinements of the technology were further improved in Korea.<ref name=" Donald Keene 1978"/> ] brought over to Japan Korean print technicians and their fonts in 1593 as part of his booty during his ]<ref>], ], ''Science and Civilisation in China: Vol.5, Chemistry and Chemical Technology,'' Cambridge University Press, 1985 pp.327, 341-342.</ref><ref name="Lane">] (1978). "Images of the Floating World." Old Saybrook, CT: Konecky & Konecky. P. 33.</ref> That same year, a Korean printing press with movable type was sent as a present for the Japanese Emperor ]. The emperor commanded that it be used to print an edition of the Confucian ].<ref name=" Donald Keene 1978">],''Japanese Literature of the Pre-Modern Era, 1600-1867,'' Grove Press, 1978, p.3.</ref> Four years later in 1597, apparently due to difficulties encountered in casting metal, a Japanese version of the Korean printing press was built with wooden instead of metal type, and in 1599 this press was used to print the first part of the ] (Chronicles of Japan).<ref name=" Donald Keene 1978"/> | |||
In the 9th century, Japanese had not mastered the skill and knowledge necessary for safe ocean navigation in their part of the world.<ref name="ZhenpingWang2005">Zhenping Wang. Ambassadors from the Islands of Immortals: China-Japan Relations in the Han-Tang period. University of Hawaii Press, 2005, p.79</ref><ref>Edwin O. Reischauer. Ennin's travels in Tʻang China. Ronald Press Company, 1955, p. 60</ref> Consequently, the Japanese monk-traveler Ennin tended to rely on the Korean sailors and traders on his travels,<ref name=" Mark Peterson, 2010">p. 46, Mark Peterson, Phillip Margulies (2010) referencing Edwin O. Reischauer. Ennin’s Diary: The record of Pilgrimage to China in Search the Law. New York: Ronald Press, 1955</ref> at the time when the men of Silla were the master of the seas achieving Korean maritime dominance in eastern Asia.<ref>The McGraw-Hill Encyclopedia of World Biography: An International Reference Work, Volume 2. McGraw-Hill, 1973, p.479</ref><ref>William Theodore De Bary. Sources Of East Asian Tradition: Premodern Asia, Volume 1. Columbia University Press, 2008, p.529</ref> The monk ]’s crossing to China on Japanese vessels and the whole catastrophic maritime record of the mission contrast sharply with the speed and efficiency with which Sillan ships quickly brought him back home to Japan.<ref name="Reischauer,1955">Edwin O. Reischauer. Ennin's travels in Tʻang China. Ronald Press Company, 1955, pp. 276-283</ref> Another indication of the gap in navigation skill between the Sillans and Japanese at this time was the employment by the ] of 60 Korean ] and sailors to help get the main party safely home.<ref name="Reischauer,1955"/> | |||
== Science == | |||
In the wake of ]'s dispatch of ambassadors to Baekje in 553, several Korean soothsayers, doctors, and calendrical scholars were sent to Japan.<ref>Jacques H. Kamstra, Brill Archive, 1967 p.60.</ref> The Baekje Buddhist priest and physician ] came to Japan in 1602, and, settling in the ''Genkōji'' temple(現光寺) where he played a notable role in establishing the ],<ref>James H. Grayson, Routledge, 2013 p.37.</ref> instructed several court students in the Chinese mathematics of ] and ].<ref>Agathe Keller, Alexei Volkov, in Alexander Karp, Gert Schubring (eds.) ''Handbook on the History of Mathematics Education,'' Springer 2014 pp.55-84, p.64.</ref> He introduced the Chinese ] calendrical system (developed by Hé Chéng Tiān (何承天) in 443 C.E.) and transmitted his skill in medicine and pharmacy to Japanese disciples, such as Hinamitachi (日並立)<ref>], ], (2002) Routledge, 2012 p.264.</ref><ref>Erhard Rosner, BRILL, 1988 p.13.</ref> | |||
== |
==== Maritime trade ==== | ||
It seems that ] between East China, Korea and Japan was, for the most part, in the hands of men from Silla,<ref name="Reischauer,1955"/> accompanied by Silla Korean hegemony over the maritime commerce of East Asia.<ref>Moshe Y. Sachs. Worldmark encyclopedia of the nations, Volume 1-5. Worldmark Press, 1984, p.176</ref> Here in the relatively dangerous waters on the eastern fringes of the world, the Koreans performed the same functions as did the traders of the calm ] on the western fringes.<ref name="Reischauer,1955"/> | |||
In the field of Korean and Japanese music history, it is well known that ancient Korea influenced ancient music of Japan.<ref>Vadime Elisseeff. The Silk Roads: Highways of Culture and Commerce. UNESCO, 2000, p.270</ref> Since the 5th century, musicians from Korea visited Japan with their music and instruments.<ref name="Lande2007">Liv Lande. Innovating Musical Tradition in Japan: Negotiating Transmission, Identity, and Creativity in the Sawai Koto School. University of California, 2007, pp.62-63</ref> ], literally "music of Korea", refers to the various types of Japanese court music derived from the ] later classified collectively as ''Komagaku''.<ref>Denis Arnold. Oxford Companions Series The New Oxford Companion to Music. Oxford University Press, 1983, p.968</ref> It is made up of purely instrumental music with wind- and stringed instruments(became obsolete), and music which is accompanied by mask dance. Today, Komagaku survives only as ] accompaniment and is not usually performed separately by the ].<ref>University of California, Los Angeles. Festival of Oriental music and the related arts. Institute of Ethnomusicology, 1973, p.30</ref> | |||
The ] is a great Japanese reservoir of the Oriental art of the 7th and 8th centuries when the art and culture of Asia reached the height of its development.<ref>Jirō Harada. The Shōsōin: an eighth century repository. Mayuyama, 1950, p.13</ref> Among the Shōsōin treasures at Todai-ji in ] there are more than 20 sheets of purchase orders (one dated as early as 752), indicating that the favorite luxury goods they imported from Korean Silla included perfume, medicine, cosmetics, fabric dying materials, metallic goods, musical instruments, carpets, and measuring tools.<ref name="NaraNationalMuseum,2002">Catalogue of the Exhibition of Shoso-in Treasures. Nara National Museum of Japan, 2002</ref> Some were made in Silla; Others were of foreign origin, probably from ], India or ].<ref name="NaraNationalMuseum,2002"/> | |||
===Instruments=== | |||
In the 8th century the {{nihongo|''Kudaragoto''|百済琴||extra=literally, "Baekje zither"}}, which resembles the western harp and originated in ], had been introduced from Baekje to Japan along with Korean music.<ref>''Daijisen'' entry for "Kudaragoto".</ref> It has twenty three strings, and was designed to be played in an upright position.<ref>Charles A. Pomeroy. Traditional crafts of Japan. Walker/Weatherhill, 1968</ref>{{Page needed|date=October 2014}} And the 12-string long zither ''Shiragigoto'' was introduced as early as 5th or 6th century from Silla to Japan.<ref name="Lande2007"/> Both fell out of popular use in the early ].<ref>''Daijisen'' entry for "Kudaragoto"; ''Britannica Kokusai Dai-hyakkajiten'' entry for "Shiragigoto".</ref> | |||
=== Buddhism === | |||
Some instruments in traditional Japanese music originated in Korea: ] is a six-hole traverse flute of Korean origin.<ref>William P. Malm. Traditional Japanese Music and Musical Instruments. Kodansha International, 2000, p.109</ref> It is used to perform Komagaku and ''Azuma asobi''<ref>Ben no Naishi, Shirley Yumiko Hulvey, Kōsuke Tamai. Sacred rites in moonlight. East Asia Program Cornell University, 2005, p.202</ref>(chants and dances, accompanied by an ensemble pieces). ] is an hourglass-shaped drum of Korean origin.<ref>William P. Malm. Traditional Japanese Music and Musical Instruments. Kodansha International, 2000, p.93</ref><ref>Shawn Bender, Taiko Boom: Japanese Drumming in Place and Motion. University of California Press, 2012, p.27</ref> The drum has two heads, which are struck using a single stick. It is played only in Komagaku. | |||
After striking an agreement on cultural exchanges, Japan received Confucian scholars from Baekje in the years 513 and 516.<ref name="shigeo">Kamata, pp. 151–155.</ref><ref>Kamstra, pp. 232–233.</ref> Later King Seong sent Buddhist sutras and a statue of Buddha to Japan, an event described by historian Robert Buswell as "one of the two most critical influences in the entire history of Japan, rivaled only by the nineteenth-century encounter with Western culture".<ref name="buswell">Buswell, pp. 2–4.</ref> The year this occurred, dated by historians to either 538 or 552, marks the official introduction of Buddhism into Japan, and within a year of this date Baekje provided Japan with nine Buddhists priests to aid in propagating the faith.<ref name="inoue">Inoue, pp. 170–172.</ref> | |||
Baekje continued to supply Japan with Buddhist monks for the remainder of its existence. In 587 the monk ] arrived from Baekje to serve as a tutor to ]'s younger brother and later settled down as the first abbot of Japan's ].<ref name="shigeo"/> In 595 the monk ] arrived in Japan from Goguryeo.<ref name="best">Best, pp. 31–34.</ref> He became a mentor to Prince Shōtoku and lived in ].<ref name="best"/> By the reign of the Japanese ] (592–628), there were over one thousand monks and nuns living in Japan, a substantial percentage of whom were Korean.<ref name="shigeo"/> | |||
A great many Buddhist writings published during Korea's ] (918–1392) were also highly influential upon their arrival in Japan.<ref name="goryeo">Lee (September 1970), pp. 20, 31.</ref> Such Korean ideas would play an important role in the development of ]. The Japanese monk ] was among those known to be influenced by Korean Buddhism, particularly by the ]n monk Gyeongheung. Robert Buswell notes that the form of Buddhism Korea was propagating throughout its history was "a vibrant cultural tradition in its own right" and that Korea did not serve simply as a "bridge" between China and Japan.<ref name="buswell"/> | |||
== Medieval artistic influence == | |||
== Literature == | |||
According to the scholar Insoo Cho, Korean artwork has had a "huge impact" on Japan throughout history, though until recently the subject was often neglected within academia.<ref>Cho, Insoo, p. 162.</ref> Beatrix von Ragué has noted that in particular, "one can hardly underestimate the role which, from the fifth to the seventh centuries, Korean artists and craftsmen played in the early art ... of Japan."<ref name="lacquer">von Ragué, pp. 5–7.</ref> | |||
Several ] have been active on the Japanese literary scene starting in the latter half of the twentieth century. The poetry of ], a Korean who lived in Japan, demonstrates Korean influence on Japanese literature.<ref>Premodern Japan: A Historical Survey by Mikiso Hane page 39</ref> | |||
=== Lacquerwork === | |||
] | |||
According to the historian Beatrix von Ragué, "the oldest example of the true art of lacquerwork to have survived in Japan" is ], a miniature shrine in Horyū-ji Temple.<ref name="lacquer"/> Tamamushi Shrine was created in Korean style, and was probably made by either a Japanese artist or a Korean artist living in Japan.<ref name="lacquer"/> It is decorated with an inlay composed of the wings of ] that, according to von Ragué, "is evidently native to Korea." However, Tamamushi Shrine is also painted in a manner similar to Chinese paintings of the sixth century.<ref name="lacquer"/> | |||
Japanese lacquerware teabowls, boxes, and tables of the ] (1568–1600) also show signs of Korean artistic influence. The mother-of-pearl inlay frequently used in this lacquerwork is of clearly Korean origin.<ref name="lacquer1">von Ragué, pp. 176–179.</ref> | |||
== Religion == | |||
During the ] of Japan, scholars and monks from the Korean kingdom of ] served both as teachers and as advisers to Japan's rulers.<ref name="Kodansha encyclopedia of Japan"/> In 552, King ] introduced to Japan a laudatory memorial consisting of the teachings of Buddhism, an image of ] in gold and copper and several volumes of the "]s".{{citation needed|date=October 2014}} After the initial entrance of some craftsmen, scholars, and artisans from Baekje, ] requested Korean men who were skilled in divination, calendar making, medicine and literature.<ref name="Mircea Eliade">Mircea Eliade, Charles J. Adams. The Encyclopedia of religion, Volume 9. Macmillan, 1987</ref> During the 6th century, ] went to great lengths to promote Buddhism in Japan with the help of the ], ], and ] kingdoms of ancient Korea.{{citation needed|date=October 2014}} | |||
== |
=== Painting === | ||
The immigration of Korean and Chinese painters to Japan during the Asuka period transformed Japanese art.<ref name="akiyama">Akiyama, pp. 19–20, 26.</ref> For instance, in the year 610 ], a Buddhist monk from Goguryeo, brought paints, brushes, and paper to Japan.<ref name="akiyama"/> Damjing is credited with introducing the arts of papermaking and of preparing pigments to Japan for the first time,<ref name="akiyama"/><ref name="hyoun">Lee (October 1970), pp. 18, 33.</ref><ref>Needham and Tsien, .</ref><ref>Needham and Wang, .</ref> and he is also regarded as the artist behind the wall painting in the main hall of Japan's Horyu-ji Temple which was later burned down in a fire.<ref>Pak, p. 41.</ref> | |||
Korean influence on Japanese laws is also attributed to the fact that Korean immigrants were on committees that drew up law codes. There were Chinese immigrants who were also an integral part in crafting Japan's first laws. Eight of the 19 members of the committee drafting the Taihō Code were from Korean immigrant families while none were from China proper. Furthermore, the structuring of local administrative districts and the tribute tax are based on Korean models.<ref>{{cite book| url=http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&vid=ISBN0824820304&id=dCNioYQ1HfsC&vq=yamato+paekche&dq=kofun+tumuli+korea&lpg=PA104&pg=PA105&sig=3Me7_8p9Tdh1KAYJFUpG7L-Q8ho| title=Sacred Texts and Buried Treasures: Issues on the Historical Archaeology of Ancient Japan| first=William Wayne| last=Farris| pages=105| isbn=0-8248-2030-4| publisher=University of Hawaii Press}}</ref> | |||
However, it was during the ] (1337–1573) of Japanese history that Korean influence on Japanese painting reached its peak. Korean art and artists frequently arrived on Japan's shores, influencing both the style and theme of Japanese ink painting. The two most important Japanese ink painters of the period were ], whose art displays many of the characteristic features of Korean painting, and Sumon, who was himself an immigrant from Korea. Consequently, one Japanese historian, Sokuro Wakimoto, has even described the period between 1394 and 1486 as the "Era of Korean Style" in Japanese ink painting.<ref name="ink">Ahn, pp. 195–201.</ref> | |||
Then during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, as a result of the ], the Japanese artists who were developing ] came into close contact with Korean artists. Though Japanese nanga received inspiration from many sources, the historian Burglind Jungmann concludes that Korean namjonghwa painting "may well have been the most important for creating the Nanga style". It was the Korean brush and ink techniques in particular which are known to have had a significant impact on such Japanese painters as ], ], and ].<ref name="envoys">Jungmann, pp. 205–211.</ref> | |||
== |
=== Music and dance === | ||
In ancient times the imperial court of Japan imported all its music from abroad, though it was Korean music that reached Japan first. The first Korean music may have infiltrated Japan as early as the third century. Korean court music in ancient Japan was at first called "sankangaku" in Japanese, referring to music from all the states of the Korean peninsula, but it was later termed "komagaku" in reference specifically to the court music of the Korean kingdom of Guguryeo.<ref name="music">Malm, pp. 33, 98–100, 109.</ref> | |||
] are generally used to represent meaning (as ]s), but have also been used to phonetically represent words in non-Chinese languages such as ] and ]. The practice of using Chinese characters to represent the sounds of non-Chinese words was probably first developed in China during the ], often to transcribe ] terms used by Buddhists. This practice spread to the Korean Peninsula during the ], initially through ], and later to ] and ]. These phonograms were used extensively to write local place-names in ancient Korea. | |||
]Musicians from various Korean states often went to work in Japan.<ref name="music"/> Mimaji, a Korean entertainer from Baekje, introduced Chinese dance and Chinese ] music to Japan in 612.<ref name="music"/><ref>Banham, p. 559.</ref> By the time of the ] (710–794), every musician in Japan's imperial court was either Korean or Chinese.<ref name="music"/> Korean musical instruments which became popular in Japan during this period include the flute known as the ], the zither known as the ], and the harp known as the shiragikoto.<ref name="koreanculture">Lee (August 1970), pp. 12, 29.</ref><ref name="music"/> | |||
Though much has been written about Korean influence on early Japanese court music, Taeko Kusano has stated that Korean influence on Japanese folk music during the ] (1603–1868) represents a very important but neglected field of study. According to Taeko Kusano, each of the Joseon missions to Japan included about fifty Korean musicians and left their mark on Japanese folk music. Most notably, the "tojin procession", which was practiced in ], the "tojin dance", which arose in modern-day ], and the "karako dance", which exists in modern-day ], all have Korean roots and utilize Korean-based music.<ref name="folk">Kusano, pp. 31–36.</ref> | |||
=== Silk weaving === | |||
{{Further|Sericulture}} | |||
According to William Wayne Farris, citing a leading Japanese expert on ancient cloth, the production of high-quality silk twill took off in Japan from the fifth century onward as a result of new technology brought from Korea.<ref name="silk">{{harv|Farris|1998|p=97}}</ref> Farris argues that Japan's Hata clan, who are believed to have been specialists in the art of silk weaving and silk tapestry, immigrated to Japan from the region of the Korean peninsula.<ref name="silk"/> By contrast, historian ] believes that the Hata clan were of Chinese descent.<ref>Hsu, .</ref> | |||
=== Jewelry === | |||
The history of how the early Japanese modified the Chinese writing system to develop a native ] orthography is obscure, but scribal techniques developed in the Korean peninsular played an important role in the process of developing ].<ref>John R. Bentley, BRILL, 2001 p.9.</ref> The established view is that immigrants from Korea and their descendants played a seminal early role in developing writing in Japan,<ref> Christopher Seeley, BRILL, 1991 p.23.</ref> The man’yogana system,one of the most cumbrous ever devised,<ref>], Hiroko Odagiri, Robert E. Morrell, Princeton University Press, 1988 p.19.</ref> would appear to owe a debt to Paekje in particular, the most culturally sophisticated of the Three Kingdoms,<ref>Marc Hideo Miyake, Routledge 2013 p.148.</ref> | |||
Japan at first imported jewelry made of glass, gold, and silver from Korea, but in the fifth century the techniques of gold and silver metallurgy also entered Japan from Korea, possibly from the Korean states of Baekje and Gaya.<ref name="jewelry">{{harv|Farris|1998|pp=96, 118}}</ref> Korean immigrants established important sites of jewelry manufacturing in ], ], and other places in Japan, allowing Japan to domestically produce its first gold and silver earrings, crowns, and beads.<ref name="other">Rhee, Aikens, Choi, and Ro, pp. 441, 443.</ref> | |||
=== Sculpture === | |||
Along with Buddhism, the art of Buddhist sculpture also spread to Japan from Korea. At first almost all ]s were imported from Korea, and these imports demonstrate an artistic style which would dominate Japanese sculpture during the ] (538–710).<ref name="donald">McCallum (1982), pp. 22, 26, 28.</ref> In the years 577 and 588 the Korean state of Baekje dispatched to Japan expert statue sculptors.<ref>{{harv|Farris|1998|pp=102–103}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
One of the most notable examples of Korean influence on Japanese sculpture is the Buddha statue in the ], sometimes referred to as the "Crown-Coiffed Maitreya".<ref name="maitreya">Jung, pp. 113–114, 119.</ref> This statue was directly copied from a Korean prototype around the seventh century.<ref name="donald"/><ref name="maitreya"/> Likewise, the Great Buddha sculpture of ],<ref name="pak"/><ref name="koreanculture"/><ref>McBride, 90.</ref> as well as both the ] and the ] sculptures of Japan's ], are believed to have been sculpted by Koreans.<ref name="koreanculture"/><ref name="fenollosa">Fenollosa, pp. 49–50.</ref><ref>Portal, 52.</ref> The Guze Kannon was described as "the greatest perfect monument of Corean art" by ].<ref name="fenollosa"/> | |||
=== Literature === | |||
The theory that the man’yogana system is indebted to influences from the kingdom of Paekche in particular, though concrete data has been lacking, apparently reflect a scholarly consensus<ref> John R. Bentley, ] Vol, 64, No 01, February 2001, pp 59-73, p.62.</ref> Requests for assistance from Paekje scholars are conserved in the ] and ], which names two such formative immigrant figures, Atikisi (阿直岐) and ] in this regard. The pronunciation of Chinese characters at this period thus may well reflect that current in the Paekje kingdom.<ref> Marc Hideo Miyake, Routledge 2013 pp.9ff.</ref> | |||
Concerning literature, ] has stated that, "Japanese scholars have made important progress in identifying the seminal contributions of Korean immigrants, and of Korean literary culture as brought to Japan by the early Korean diaspora from the Old Korean kingdoms, to the formative stages of early Japanese poetic art".<ref>Miller (1980), p. 776.</ref> ] has argued that Okura was born in the Korean kingdom of ] to a high court doctor and came with his émigré family to Yamato at the age of 3 after the collapse of that kingdom. It has been noted that the Korean genre of ], of which only 25<ref name="LeeRamsey" /> examples survive from the ] kingdom's Samdaemok (三代目), compiled in 888 CE, differ greatly in both form and theme from the '']'' poems, with the single exception of some of Yamanoue no Okura's poetry which shares their Buddhist-philosophical thematics.<ref name="Levy" >Levy, .</ref> Roy Andrew Miller, arguing that Okura's "Korean ethnicity" is an established fact though one disliked by the Japanese literary establishment, speaks of his "unique binational background and multilingual heritage".<ref>Miller (1997), .</ref> | |||
=== Architecture === | |||
==Imperial family== | |||
] | |||
According to the {{Nihongo|]|続日本紀}}, ], background of the naturalized clansmen {{Nihongo|]|和史}}, was a 10th-generation descendant of ] of Baekje who was chosen as a ] for ] and subsequently became the mother of ].<ref name="The Emperor's New Roots">{{cite news|last=Watts|first=Jonathan|title=The Emperor's New Roots|url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2001/dec/28/japan.worlddispatch|accessdate=2012-06-11|newspaper=The Guardian|date=Dec 28, 2001|quote = "I, on my part, feel a certain kinship with Korea, given the fact that it is recorded in the Chronicles of Japan that the mother of Emperor Kammu was of the line of King Muryong of Paekche," told reporters.}}</ref><ref name="Shoku Nihongi Vol 40">{{Cite book | |||
William Wayne Farris has noted that "Architecture was one art that changed forever with the importation of Buddhism" from Korea.<ref name="asukadera">{{harv|Farris|1998|p=103}}</ref> In 587 the Buddhist Soga clan took control of the Japanese government,<ref name="inoue"/> and the very next year in 588 the kingdom of Baekje sent Japan two architects, one carpenter, four roof tilers, and one painter who were assigned the task of constructing Japan's first full-fledged Buddhist temple.<ref>Mori Ikuo, p. 356.</ref><ref>Korean Buddhist Research Institute, p. 52.</ref> This temple was Asuka Temple, completed in 596, and it was only the first of many such temples put together on the Baekje model. According to the historian Jonathan W. Best "virtually all of the numerous complete temples built in Japan between the last decade of the sixth and the middle of the seventh centuries" were designed off Korean models.<ref name="best"/> Among such early Japanese temples designed and built with Korean aid are ] Temple and ] Temple.<ref name="asukadera"/> | |||
| editor = ] | |||
| editor2 = ] | |||
Many of the temple bells were also of Korean design and origin. As late as the early eleventh century Korean bells were being delivered to many Japanese temples including ]. In the year 1921, eighteen Korean temple bells were designated as national treasures of Japan.<ref name="goryeo"/> | |||
| year = 797 | |||
| title = 続日本紀 (Shoku Nihongi) | |||
In addition to temples, starting from the sixth century advanced stonecutting technology entered Japan from Korea and as a result Japanese tomb construction also began to change in favor of Korean models.<ref>Farris, pp. 92–93.</ref> Around this time the horizontal tomb chambers prevalent in Baekje began to be constructed in Japan.<ref>Pratt and Rutt, 190.</ref> | |||
| volume = 40 | |||
| language = Japanese | |||
| url =http://nihonshoki.s317.xrea.com/sh37_40.html | |||
| accessdate = 2012-06-11 | |||
| quote = 壬午。葬於大枝山陵。皇太后姓和氏。諱新笠。贈正一位乙継之女也。母贈正一位大枝朝臣真妹。后先出自百済武寧王之子純陀太子。皇后容徳淑茂。夙著声誉。天宗高紹天皇竜潜之日。娉而納焉。生今上。早良親王。能登内親王。宝亀年中。改姓為高野朝臣。今上即位。尊為皇太夫人。九年追上尊号。曰皇太后。其百済遠祖都慕王者。 | |||
| postscript = <!-- Bot inserted parameter. Either remove it; or change its value to "." for the cite to end in a ".", as necessary. -->}}{{inconsistent citations}}</ref> In the late 1980s, South Korean economist ] theorized that the Japanese imperial line has ancestry in the kingdom of Baekje.<ref name="Best 441">Best, Jonathan W. 1990. "Horseride Reruns: Two recent Studies of Early Korean-Japanese Relations" IN '']'' Vol. 16, No. 2. Page 441.</ref> | |||
== Cultural transfers during Hideyoshi's invasions of Korea == | |||
==See also== | |||
The invasions of Korea by Japanese leader ] between 1592 and 1598 were an extremely vigorous period of two-way cross-cultural transfer between Korea and Japan. Although Japan ultimately lost the war, Hideyoshi and his generals used the opportunity to loot valuable commodities from Korea and to kidnap skilled Korean craftsmen and take them back to Japan.{{citation needed|date=March 2022}} ] summed up the conflict by saying that, "While neither Japan nor Choson gained any advantages from this war, Japan gained cultural benefits from the importation of moveable type printing, technological benefits from ceramics, and diplomatic benefits from its contact with Ming China."<ref>, p. 335.</ref> | |||
=== Printing technology and books === | |||
] was invented in China in the eleventh century, and the technology was further refined in Korea.<ref name=" Donald Keene 1978"/> According to the historian Lawrence Marceau, during the late-sixteenth century, dramatic changes in Japanese printing technology were sparked by "two overseas sources". The first was the ] ] established by the ] in ] in 1590. The second was the looting of Korean books and book printing technology after the invasion of Korea.<ref>Marceau, p. 120.</ref> Before 1590, Buddhist monasteries handled virtually all book printing in Japan, and, according to historian Donald Shively, books and moveable type transported from Korea "helped bring about the end of the monastic monopoly on printing."<ref name="Shively">Shively, p. 726.</ref> At the start of the invasion in 1592, Korean books and book printing technology were one of Japan's top priorities for looting, especially metal moveable type. One commander alone, ], is said to have had 200,000 printing types and books removed from Korea's Gyeongbokgung Palace.<ref>Ha, pp. 328–329.</ref> In 1593, a Korean printing press with movable type was sent as a present for the Japanese Emperor ]. The emperor commanded that it be used to print an edition of the Confucian '']''. Four years later in 1597, apparently due to difficulties encountered in casting metal, a Japanese version of the Korean printing press was built with wooden instead of metal type. In 1599, this press was used to print the first part of the ].<ref name=" Donald Keene 1978">Keene, p. 3.</ref> Eighty percent of Japan's book production was printed using moveable type between 1593 and 1625, but ultimately moveable type printing was supplanted by ] and was rarely used after 1650.<ref name="Shively"/> | |||
=== Ceramics === | |||
Prior to the invasion, Korea's high-quality ceramic pottery was prized in Japan, particularly the Korean teabowls used in the ].<ref>Portal, pp. 140–141.</ref> Because of this, Japanese soldiers made great efforts to find skilled Korean potters and transfer them to Japan.<ref name="satsuma">Ha, pp. 330–331.</ref> For this reason, the Japanese invasion of Korea is sometimes referred to as the "Teabowl War"<ref name="maske"/> or the "Pottery War".<ref name="teabowl">{{cite web|url=http://www.koreafocus.or.kr/design2/layout/content_print.asp?group_id=102438|title=Flowering of Korean Ceramic Culture in Japan|author=Koo Tae-hoon|publisher=Korea Focus|date=2008}}</ref> | |||
Hundreds of Korean potters were taken by the Japanese Army back to Japan with them, either being forcibly kidnapped or else being persuaded to leave. Once settled in Japan, the Korean potters were put to work making ceramics.<ref name="teabowl"/> Historian Andrew Maske has concluded that, "Without a doubt the single most important development in Japanese ceramics in the past five hundred years was the importation of Korean ceramic technology as a result of the invasions of Korea by the Japanese under Toyotomi Hideyoshi."<ref name="maske">Maske, p. 43.</ref> ], ], ], ], and ] were all pioneered by Koreans who came to Japan at this time.<ref name="satsuma"/> | |||
=== Construction === | |||
Among the skilled craftsmen removed from Korea by Japanese forces were roof tilers, who would go on to make important contributions to tiling Japanese houses and castles.<ref name="hyoun"/><ref name="teabowl"/> For example, one Korean tiler participated in the expansion of ]. Furthermore, the Japanese daimyo ] had ] constructed using stonework techniques that he had learned during his time in Korea.<ref name="hyoun"/> | |||
=== Neo-Confucianism === | |||
], a Korean ] scholar, was kidnapped in Korea by Japanese soldiers and taken to Japan.<ref name="hang">Ha, pp. 324–325.</ref> He lived in Japan until the year 1600 during which time he formed an acquaintance with the scholar ] and instructed him in neo-Confucian philosophy.<ref name="hyoun"/><ref name="hang"/> Some historians believe that other Korean neo-Confucianists such as ] also had a major impact on Japanese neo-Confucianism at this time.<ref name="hyoun"/><ref>Chung, p. 22.</ref><ref>Jansen, p. 70.</ref><ref>Sato, p. 293.</ref> The idea was developed in particular by Abe Yoshio (阿部吉雄).<ref>Tucker, .</ref> | |||
By contrast, Willem van Boot called this theory in question in his 1982 doctoral thesis and later works.<ref>Lewis, .</ref> Historian Jurgis Elisonas stated the following about the controversy: | |||
<blockquote>"A similar great transformation in Japanese intellectual history has also been traced to Korean sources, for it has been asserted that the vogue for neo-Confucianism, a school of thought that would remain prominent throughout the Edo period (1600–1868), arose in Japan as a result of the Korean war, whether on account of the putative influence that the captive scholar-official Kang Hang exerted on Fujiwara Seika (1561–1619), the ''soi-disant'' discoverer of the true Confucian tradition for Japan, or because Korean books from looted libraries provided the new pattern and much new matter for a redefinition of Confucianism. This assertion, however is questionable and indeed has been rebutted convincingly in recent Western scholarship."<ref>Elisonas, .</ref></blockquote> | |||
== Historiography == | |||
The interpretation of the history of early contacts, and the nature of the relations, between Japan and the states of the Korean peninsula has long been complicated by reciprocal nationalisms which skew interpretations.<ref>Em, .</ref><ref name="pai"/> In the modern period, especially in the wake of Japan's annexation of Korea, a Tokugawa era theory developed which held that in antiquity Japan had ruled over Korea and its elites, and that the roots of the two people and polities were identical. This was called the "common ancestry theory" (''naisen dōsoron'':内鮮同祖論) and, based on early texts that spoke of Yamato invasions of the peninsula and the establishment of ], was used to justify Japan's colonial seizure of Korea (''seikanron'':征韓論) as was evidence from excavations at the ] that ancient Korea had been long been a colonized country.<ref>Xu, .</ref> In this perspective, while recognizing the great impact of Chinese civilization on both polities, the role of Korean peninsular peoples in the transmission of Sinic culture was underplayed and it was claimed that Japan had retained its indigenous uniqueness by consistently modifying the cultural elements flowing through Korea to Yamato.<ref name="ebrey">Ebrey and Walthall, .</ref> Korean nationalist historiography (''minjok sahak'') challenged Japanese versions of their history while often adopting the same prejudices, and asserted in turn, the country had national sovereignty in prehistoric times, and a racial and cultural superiority over other east Asian countries, reflecting the legacy of colonial Japan's own prejudices.<ref name="pai">Pai, .</ref><ref>Shin, : "the Japanese influenced Korean nationalist thinking ... The search for documentation of the unique and immutable core-the racial origins-of the Korean people appears similar to the Japanese obsession with the national essence (''kokutai'') in the 1930s."</ref> | |||
Recently, a growing consensus has been reached among historians on the importance of direct cultural transfers from Korea to Japan.<ref>Rhee, Aikens, Choi, and Ro, pp. 404–406.</ref> However, the issue of Korean influence on Japanese culture continues to be a sensitive matter to discuss. The excavation of many of Japan's earliest imperial tombs, which might shed important light on the subject, remains prohibited by the Japanese government.<ref name="tomb">{{harv|Farris|1998|p=56}}</ref> By contrast, the admission by ] ] that the Imperial Family of Japan included Korean ancestors helped to improve bilateral Korea-Japan relations.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www2.kenyon.edu/Depts/Religion/Fac/Adler/Reln275/Jap-Kor-art.htm|title=Japanese Art and Its Korean Secret|author=Holland Cotter|newspaper=The New York Times|date=April 6, 2003}}</ref> Recently, the Kyoto Cultural Museum has stated that, "In seeking the source of Japan’s ancient culture many will look to China, but the quest will finally lead to Korea, where China's advanced culture was accepted and assimilated. In actuality, the people who crossed the sea were the people of the Korea Peninsula and their culture was the Korean culture."<ref>Rhee, Aikens, Choi, and Ro, p. 405.</ref> | |||
As scholarship on pre-modern Korean contributions to Japanese culture has advanced, some academics have also begun studying reverse cultural flows from Japan to Korea during the same period of history. For example, historians note that, during Japan's Kofun period, Japanese-style bronze weapons and ] spread to Korea.<ref>"韓国に渡った日本文化", ''Asahi Shimbun'', March 19, 2010.</ref> | |||
== Contemporary cultural influence == | |||
Korea continues to exert cultural influence on Japan in some fields like food.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://travel.cnn.com/tokyo/life/japans-anti-korea-protests-lessons-monty-python-689826|title=Japan's anti-Korea protests: Lessons from Python|author=Richard Smart|publisher=CNN|date=October 3, 2011}}</ref> ] is seen as having a Korean origin and became popular in the 20th century.<ref>''Modern Japanese cuisine: food, power and national identity'', Katarzyna Joanna Cwiertka</ref><ref>Lie, John (2001). ''Multiethnic Japan''. Harvard University Press, 77 {{ISBN|0-674-01358-1}}</ref><ref>japan-guide.com "Yakiniku-ya specialize in Korean style barbecue, where small pieces of meat are cooked on a grill at the table. Other popular Korean dishes such as bibimba are also usually available at a yakiniku-ya."</ref><ref>Chantal Garcia Japanese BBQ a best kept L.A. secret, Daily Trojan, 11/10/04</ref><ref>Noelle Chun Yakiniku lets you cook and choose, The Honolulu Advertiser, August 20, 2004</ref><ref>Yakiniku and Bulgogi: Japanese, Korean, and Global Foodways 中國飲食文化 Vol.6 No.2 (2010/07)</ref> | |||
The ] of ] and ] have influenced Japanese music and television.<ref>Eun Mee Kim and Jiwon Ryoo, "South Korean Culture Goes Global: K-Pop and the Korean Wave," ''Korean Social Science Journal'', 2007, 143.</ref> While traditionally Japan has been seen as more of an influence on Korean pop culture and as having laid the foundations of K-pop,<ref>{{cite news| title=Why The Blueprint For K-Pop Actually Came From Japan | website=NPR | date=8 January 2019 | url=https://www.npr.org/2019/01/08/683339743/why-the-blueprint-for-k-pop-actually-came-from-japan | access-date=17 May 2023}}</ref> the rise and success of K-pop has increasingly come back to influence ] in many ways such as ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Netizens see K-pop's influence on J-pop as more Japanese idols benchmark K-pop idol content on YouTube |url=https://www.allkpop.com/article/2022/02/netizens-see-k-pops-influence-on-j-pop-as-more-japanese-idols-benchmark-k-pop-idol-content-on-youtube |access-date=2023-02-10 |website=allkpop}}</ref> | |||
== See also == | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | *] | ||
*] | *] | ||
*] | |||
== Notes == | == Notes == | ||
{{Reflist}} | {{Reflist|30em}} | ||
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== External links == | |||
* {{cite web|publisher=BC Culture |url=http://blogcritics.org/archives/2005/08/11/090643.php |title=Review: Brighter than Gold – A Japanese Ceramic Tradition Formed by Foreign Aesthetics |author=Purple Tigress |access-date=2008-01-10 |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080118054520/http://blogcritics.org/archives/2005/08/11/090643.php |archive-date=January 18, 2008 }} | |||
* {{cite web|url=http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ht/08/eaj/ht08eaj.htm |title=Japan, 1400–1600 A.D. |publisher=] |date=October 2002 |access-date=2010-02-15 |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080318162403/http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ht/08/eaj/ht08eaj.htm |archive-date=March 18, 2008 }} | |||
* {{cite web|url=http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/yayo/hd_yayo.htm |title=Yayoi Culture (ca. 4th century B.C.–3rd century A.D.) |publisher=]| access-date=2010-02-15}} | |||
* {{cite web|publisher=E-museum, Minnesota State University |title=Yayoi Era |location=Mankato, MN, U.S.A. |url=http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/prehistory/japan/yayoi/yayoi.html |access-date=2010-02-15 |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110226121349/http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/prehistory/japan/yayoi/yayoi.html |archive-date=February 26, 2011 }} | |||
* {{cite web|publisher=japan-guide.com|title=Japanese History: Jomon, Yayoi, Kofun: Early Japan (until 710)|date=9 June 2002 |url=http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e2131.html|access-date=2010-02-15|ref=JapanGuide}} | |||
* {{cite news|newspaper=New York Times, The|title=Japan and Korean Influences.|date=1901-07-07|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9A05E0D91139E733A25754C0A9619C946097D6CF|at=Magazine supplement}} (first paragraph only. PDF scan of full article here: ) | |||
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== References == | |||
* {{cite web|publisher=BC Culture |url=http://blogcritics.org/archives/2005/08/11/090643.php |title=Review: Brighter than Gold - A Japanese Ceramic Tradition Formed by Foreign Aesthetics |author=Purple Tigress |accessdate=2008-01-10 |date=August 11, 2005|ref=PurpleTigress}}. | |||
* {{cite web|title=Asuka Buddhist Art: Hōryū-ji|publisher=Weatherhill, New York|author=Mizuno, Seiichi|year=1974|ref=Mizuno1974}} | |||
* {{cite web|url=http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ht/08/eaj/ht08eaj.htm |title=Japan, 1400–1600 A.D. |publisher=]| date=October 2002|accessdate=2010-02-15|ref=Met}} | |||
* {{cite web|url=http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/yayo/hd_yayo.htm |title=Yayoi Culture (ca. 4th century B.C.–3rd century A.D.) |publisher=]| accessdate=2010-02-15|ref=Met2}} | |||
* {{cite web|publisher=E-museum, Minnesota State University|title=Yayoi Era|location=Mankato, MN, U.S.A.| url=http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/prehistory/japan/yayoi/yayoi.html| accessdate=2010-02-15|ref=MNSU}} | |||
* {{cite web|publisher=japan-guide.com|title=Japanese History: Jomon, Yayoi, Kofun: Early Japan (until 710)|url=http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e2131.html|accessdate=2010-02-15|ref=JapanGuide}} | |||
* {{cite web|publisher=Ronald Press Company |title=Ennin's travels in Tʻang China |author=] |accessdate=2008-01-10 |year=1955|ref=Reischauer,1955}} | |||
* {{cite web|publisher=Asia Society Museum|title=Asia Society - The Collection in Context|url=http://www.asiasocietymuseum.com|ref=AsiaSoc}} | |||
* {{cite web|title=Pottery - MSN Encarta <!-- BOT GENERATED TITLE -->|url=http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761568150_4/Pottery.html|work=|archiveurl=http://www.webcitation.org/query?id=1257012851343397|archivedate=2009-10-31|deadurl=yes|ref=Encarta}} | |||
* {{cite news|newspaper=New York Times, The|title=Japan and Korean Influences.|date=1901-07-07|url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9A05E0D91139E733A25754C0A9619C946097D6CF|at=Magazine supplement|ref=NYT1901}} (first paragraph only. PDF scan of full article here: ) | |||
* {{cite news|newspaper=New York Times, The|title=Japanese Art and Its Korean Secret|first=Holland|last=Cotter|date=2003-04-06|url=http://www.nytimes.com/2003/04/06/arts/art-architecture-japanese-art-and-its-korean-secret.html?pagewanted=1|archivedate=an unknown date|archiveurl=http://www2.kenyon.edu/Depts/Religion/Fac/Adler/Reln275/Jap-Kor-art.htm|ref=NYTArts}} | |||
* {{cite news|newspaper=National Geographic News|url=http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/04/080428-ancient-tomb.html|title=Japanese Royal Tomb Opened to Scholars for First Time|first=Tony|last=McNicol|date=2008-04-20|ref=NatGeo}} | |||
* {{cite book|author=] |title=Epochs of Chinese and Japanese Art: An Outline History of East Asiatic Design |publisher=] |year=1912}} | |||
* {{cite book|title=The Arts of Japan: Late Medieval to Modern|author=Seiroku Noma|editor=(translated by) Glenn T. Webb|location=New York City, New York, U.S.A.|publisher=Kodansha America|year=1966|edition=Paperback, 2003|ref=ArtsOfJapan}} | |||
* {{cite book|title=Early Buddhist architecture in Japan|publisher=Kodansha International|author=Kakichi Suzuki|year=1980|ref=BuddhistArchitectJpn}} | |||
] | |||
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Latest revision as of 06:39, 24 September 2024
Korean influence on Japanese culture refers to the impact of continental Asian influences transmitted through or originating in the Korean Peninsula on Japanese institutions, culture, language and society. Since the Korean Peninsula was the cultural bridge between Japan and China throughout much of East Asian history, these influences have been detected in a variety of aspects of Japanese culture, including technology, philosophy, art, and artistic techniques.
Notable examples of Korean influence on Japanese culture include the prehistoric migration of Korean peninsular peoples to Japan near the end of Japan's Jōmon period and the introduction of Buddhism to Japan via the Kingdom of Baekje in 538 AD. From the mid-fifth to the late-seventh centuries, Japan benefited from the immigration of people from Baekje and Gaya who brought with them their knowledge of iron metallurgy, stoneware pottery, law, and Chinese writing. These people were known as Toraijin. The modulation of continental styles of art in Korea has also been discerned in Japanese painting and architecture, ranging from the design of Buddhist temples to smaller objects such as statues, textiles and ceramics. Late in the sixteenth century, the Japanese invasions of Korea produced considerable cross-cultural contact. Korean craftsmen who came to Japan at this time were responsible for a revolution in Japanese pottery making.
Many Korean influences on Japan originated in China, but were adapted and modified in Korea before reaching Japan. The role of ancient Korean states in the transmission of continental civilization has long been neglected, and is increasingly the object of academic study. However, Korean and Japanese nationalisms have complicated the interpretation of these influences.
Prehistoric Korean peninsular influences on the Japanese archipelago
Between 800 and 600 BC, new technology and cultural objects began appearing in Japan, starting in Kyushu. Gradually the Jōmon culture was supplanted across Japan by the Yayoi culture that practiced wet-rice farming. According to the historians Gina Barnes and Satoru Nakazono, this represented a cultural flow from southern Korea to Kyushu. By contrast, Charles T. Keally argues that wet-rice farming, which was originally practiced in China, could also have come to Kyushu directly from China.
The result was rapid growth in the Japanese population during the Yayoi period and subsequent Kofun period. Japanese people also began to use metal tools, arrowheads, new forms of pottery, moats, burial mounds, and styles of housing which were of peninsular origin. A significant cause of these dramatic changes in Japanese society was likely an influx of immigrants from southern Korea. Historian Hiroshi Tsude estimated that as many as 1.8 million Koreans immigrated to Japan during the Yayoi period. According to Satoru Nakazono, this period was "characterized by the systematic introduction of Korean peninsula culture".
According to Japanese historian Tadashi Nishitani, the Yoshinogari site, an archeological site in Kyushu dating from the late Yayoi period, appears virtually identical to villages in the Korean peninsula of the same period. By contrast, the burial mounds at Yoshinogari show signs of influence from the Chinese Lelang Commandery. During this period Japan imported great numbers of peninsular mirrors and daggers, which were the symbols of power in Korea. Combined with the curved jewel known as the magatama, Korea's "three treasures" soon became as prized by Japan's elites as Korea's, and in Japan they later became the Imperial Regalia.
Korean influences on ancient and classical Japan
With the beginning of the Kofun period around 250 CE, the building of gigantic tomb called kofun indicates the emergence of powerful warrior elites, fueled by more intensive agriculture and the introduction of iron technologies. Contact with the continental mainland increased, as Japan undertook intensive contacts with the southern Korean littoral ruling groups, in pursuit of securing supplies of iron and other material goods, while sending emissaries to China (in 238, 243 and 247). A pattern developed of intense military and political dealings with peninsular Korean powers that continued for four centuries. For Hyung Il Pai, there was no clear Korean and Japanese national distinction for the period around the 4th century CE.
Cultural contact with Korea, which at the time was divided into several independent states, played a decisive role in the development of Japanese government and society both during the Kofun period and the subsequent Classical period. Most innovations flowed from Korea into Japan, and not vice versa, primarily due to Korea's closer proximity to China. Though many of the ideas and technologies which filtered into Japan from Korea were originally Chinese, historian William Wayne Farris notes that Korean peninsular peoples put "their distinctive stamp on" them before passing them on to Japan. Some such innovations were imported to Japan through trade, but in more cases they were brought to Japan by peninsular immigrants. The Yamato state that eventually unified Japan accomplished this partly due to its success at gaining a monopoly on the importation of Korean peninsular culture and technology into Japan. According to Farris, Japanese cultural borrowing from Korea "hit peaks in the mid-fifth, mid-sixth, and late seventh centuries" and "helped to define a material culture that lasted as long as a thousand years".
Immigration from ancient Korea to Japan
During this period a significant factor behind the transfer of peninsular Korean culture to Japan was immigration from Korea. Most peninsular immigrants, generically known as kikajin in Japanese, came during a period of intense regional warfare which racked the Korean peninsula between the late fourth and late seventh centuries. Japanese traditions held that the Yamato kingdom has sent military expeditions to assist Baekje as early as 369 CE, military aid that is said to have enabled the latter to secure control of Naktong against its enemies, Silla and Goguryeo.
Many of these immigrants, who were welcomed by the Japanese government, were from Baekje and Gaya. These refugees brought their culture to Japan with them, and once there they often became leading officials, artists, and craftsmen. Korean peninsular immigrants and their descendants played a significant role in Japan's cultural missions to Sui China, and some peninsular families are even said to have married into the Imperial Family. By 700, it has been conjectured, perhaps one third of all Japanese aristocrats may have been of relatively recent peninsular origin, including the Aya clan. Although peninsular immigrants settled throughout Japan, they were especially concentrated in Nara, the region where the Japanese capital was located. According to one estimate, from 80 to 90 percent of people in Nara had Baekje ancestry by the year 773, and recent anatomical analyses indicate that modern-day Japanese people living in this area continue to be more closely related to ethnic Koreans than any other in Japan.
The Soga clan, a clan with close ties to the Baekje elite, may also have been of Baekje ancestry. Scholars who have argued in favor of the theory that the Soga had peninsular ancestry include Teiji Kadowaki and William Wayne Farris.
Arms and armament
During most of the Kofun period Japan relied on Korea as its sole source of iron swords, spears, armor, and helmets. Cuirasses and later Japan's first lamellar armor, as well as subsequent innovations in producing them, arrived in Japan from Korea, particularly from Silla and Gaya. Japan's first crossbow was delivered by Goguryeo in 618.
At a time in history when horses were a key military weapon, Baekje immigrants also established Japan's first horse-raising farms in what would become Japan's Kawachi Province. One historian, Koichi Mori, theorizes that Emperor Keitai's close friendships with Baekje horsemen played an important role in helping him to assume the throne. Japan's first trappings, such as bits, stirrups, saddles, and bridles were also imported from the peninsula by the early fifth century.
In 660, following the fall of its ally, Baekje, the Japanese Emperor Tenji utilized Baekje's skilled technicians to construct at least seven fortresses to protect Japan's coastline from invasion. Japan's mountain fortifications in particular were based on peninsular models.
Pottery
In the early fifth century high-fired stoneware pottery began to be imported from Kaya and Silla to Japan, and soon after stoneware technologies such as the tunnel kiln and potter's wheel also made their way from Korea to Japan. This allowed the Japanese to produce their own stoneware, which came to be called sue ware, and was eventually produced on a large scale throughout Japan. This new pottery came to Japan alongside immigrants from Korea, possibly southern Korea which was under attack from Goguryeo.
Ovens
The stove known as the kamado was of continental origin, having been invented in China but was modified in by the peninsular peoples before it was introduced to Japan. According to the historian William Wayne Farris, the introduction of the kamado "had a profound effect on daily life in ancient Japan" and "represented a major advance for residents of Japan's pit dwellings". The hearth ovens (ro:炉/maiyōro:埋甕炉) previously used to cook meals and heat homes were less safe, more difficult to use, and less heat efficient, and by the seventh century the kamado was in widespread use in Japan. According to Farris, Japanese people referred to the kamado as kara kamado, which can be translated into English as "Korean ovens". However, in some parts of northeastern Japan, open-hearth ovens continued to be preferred.
Sewing
According to the Nihon Shoki, all the seamstresses of the village of Kume (來目) in Yamato province hailed from a sewing woman, Maketsu (眞毛津) who was given as tribute by the king of Baekje to the Yamato court.
Iron tools and iron metallurgy
According to Farris, during the Kofun period, Korea was the source for most of Japan's iron tools, including chisels, saws, sickles, axes, spades, hoes, and plows. Historically, the source of iron ingots in Korea was cut off when Yamato forces suffered defeats with their peninsular allies in 405, and again, later in 475, and, immigrant smelters developed furnaces to reuse the available iron. Later, after 450 CE, the Kinai elite found substitutes in local sands available by Placer mining to make up the shortfall. Korean iron farming tools in particular contributed to a rise in Japan's population by possibly 250 to 300 percent.
However, it was the refugees who came after 400 from Gaya, a Korean state famous for its iron production, who established some of Japan's first native iron foundries. The work of these Gayan refugees eventually permitted Japan to escape from its dependency on importing iron tools, armor, and weapons from Korea. The techniques of iron production which they brought to Japan are uniquely Korean and distinct from those used in China.
Dams and irrigation
The Japanese adapted continental U-shaped hoes and techniques for creating irrigation ponds. Extensive works uncovered in the Furuichi site near Osaka display developments far in advance of Yayoi period, and the suggestion is that both the technology and pond construction techniques were introduced by peninsular peoples from southern Korea.
Government and administration
The centralization of the Japanese state in the sixth and seventh centuries also owes a debt to developments on the Korean Peninsula. In 535 the Japanese government established military garrisons called "miyake" throughout Japan to control regional powers and in many cases staffed them with Korean immigrants. Soon after a system of "be", government-regulated groups of artisans, was created, as well as a new level of local administration and a tribute tax. All of these were likely influenced by similar systems used in Baekje and other parts of Korea. Likewise Prince Shōtoku's Twelve Level Cap and Rank System of 603, a form a meritocracy implemented for Japanese government positions, was influenced by that of Baekje.
Immigrants from Korea also played a role in drafting many important Japanese legal reforms of the era, including the Taika Reform. Half of the individuals actively involved in drafting Japan's Taihō Code of 703 were Korean.
Writing
Scribes from the Korean state of Baekje who wrote Chinese introduced writing to Japan in the early fifth century. The man traditionally credited as being the first to teach writing in Japan is the Baekje scholar Wani. Though a small number of Japanese people were able to read Chinese before then, it was thanks to the work of scribes from Baekje that the use of writing was popularized among the Japanese governing elite. For hundreds of years thereafter a steady stream of talented scribes would be sent from Korea to Japan, and some of these scholars from Baekje wrote and edited much of the Nihon Shoki, one of Japan's earliest works of history.
According to Bjarke Frellesvig, "There is ample evidence, in the form of orthographic 'Koreanisms' in the early inscriptions in Japan, that the writing practices employed in Japan were modelled on continental examples". The history of how the early Japanese modified the Chinese writing system to develop a native phonogram orthography is obscure, but scribal techniques developed in the Korean peninsular played an important role in the process of developing Man'yōgana. The pronunciation of Chinese characters at this period thus may well reflect that current in the Baekje kingdom. Frellesvig states, "However, writing extensive text passages entirely or mostly phonographically, reflected in the widespread use of man'yōgana, is a practice not attested in Korean sources which therefore seems to be an independent development which took place in Japan." Japanese katakana share many symbols with Korean Gugyeol, for example, suggesting the former arose in part at least from scribal practices in Korea, though the historical connections between the two systems are obscure.
Science, medicine, and math
In the wake of Emperor Kinmei's dispatch of ambassadors to Baekje in 553, several Korean soothsayers, doctors, and calendrical scholars were sent to Japan. The Baekje Buddhist priest and physician Gwalleuk came to Japan in 602, and, settling in the Genkōji temple(現光寺) where he played a notable role in establishing the Sanron school, instructed several court students in the Chinese mathematics of astronomy and calendrical science. He introduced the Chinese Yuán Jiā Lì (元嘉暦) calendrical system (developed by Hé Chéng Tiān (何承天) in 443 C.E.) and transmitted his skill in medicine and pharmacy to Japanese disciples, such as Hinamitachi (日並立)
According to Nakayama Shigeru, nearly all 7th century astronomers in Japan came from Baekje, and only by the following century did the percentage of immigrant astronomers fall to 40% as local astronomers mastered the science. Native Japanese astronomers were gradually trained and by the eighth century only forty percent of Japanese astronomers were Korean. Furthermore, the Ishinpō, a Japanese medical text written in 984, still contains many medical formulas of Korean origin. During this same period, Japanese farmers divided their arable land using a system of measurement devised in Korea.
Shipbuilding
Technicians sent from the Korean kingdom of Silla introduced advanced shipbuilding techniques to Japan for the first time. An immigrant group 'the Inabe', closely associated with shipbuilding, was made up of carpenters who had come to Japan from Silla. In the first half of the 9th century, the private fleet of the Silla merchant Jang Bogo dominated the Yellow Sea and maritime trade between China and Japan; the superiority of Korean shipbuilding technology was recognized by Fujiwara no Tsunetsugu, and as ambassador to China he chartered Korean vessels as they were more seaworthy for his embassy to the mainland in 838. A Japanese court edict issued in 839 ordered that Kyūshū construct a 'Silla ship', which were better that coping with stormy weather. Baekje may also have contributed shipbuilding technology to Japan.
Navigation
Ancient Koreans were commercially active throughout East Asia, and their mastery of navigation allowed them to pursue trade interests as far away as the East Indies. In 526, a Baekje Korean monk Gyeomik traveled to India via the southern sea route and mastered Sanskrit, specializing in Vinaya studies. He came back with a collection of Vinaya texts to Baekje, accompanied by the Indian monk Paedalta(Vedatta).
In the 9th century, Japanese had not mastered the skill and knowledge necessary for safe ocean navigation in their part of the world. Consequently, the Japanese monk-traveler Ennin tended to rely on the Korean sailors and traders on his travels, at the time when the men of Silla were the master of the seas achieving Korean maritime dominance in eastern Asia. The monk Ennin’s crossing to China on Japanese vessels and the whole catastrophic maritime record of the mission contrast sharply with the speed and efficiency with which Sillan ships quickly brought him back home to Japan. Another indication of the gap in navigation skill between the Sillans and Japanese at this time was the employment by the Japanese embassy of 60 Korean helmsmen and sailors to help get the main party safely home.
Maritime trade
It seems that commerce between East China, Korea and Japan was, for the most part, in the hands of men from Silla, accompanied by Silla Korean hegemony over the maritime commerce of East Asia. Here in the relatively dangerous waters on the eastern fringes of the world, the Koreans performed the same functions as did the traders of the calm Mediterranean on the western fringes.
The Shōsōin is a great Japanese reservoir of the Oriental art of the 7th and 8th centuries when the art and culture of Asia reached the height of its development. Among the Shōsōin treasures at Todai-ji in Nara there are more than 20 sheets of purchase orders (one dated as early as 752), indicating that the favorite luxury goods they imported from Korean Silla included perfume, medicine, cosmetics, fabric dying materials, metallic goods, musical instruments, carpets, and measuring tools. Some were made in Silla; Others were of foreign origin, probably from Southeast Asia, India or South Asia.
Buddhism
After striking an agreement on cultural exchanges, Japan received Confucian scholars from Baekje in the years 513 and 516. Later King Seong sent Buddhist sutras and a statue of Buddha to Japan, an event described by historian Robert Buswell as "one of the two most critical influences in the entire history of Japan, rivaled only by the nineteenth-century encounter with Western culture". The year this occurred, dated by historians to either 538 or 552, marks the official introduction of Buddhism into Japan, and within a year of this date Baekje provided Japan with nine Buddhists priests to aid in propagating the faith.
Baekje continued to supply Japan with Buddhist monks for the remainder of its existence. In 587 the monk P'ungguk arrived from Baekje to serve as a tutor to Emperor Yōmei's younger brother and later settled down as the first abbot of Japan's Shitennō-ji Temple. In 595 the monk Hyeja arrived in Japan from Goguryeo. He became a mentor to Prince Shōtoku and lived in Asuka Temple. By the reign of the Japanese Empress Suiko (592–628), there were over one thousand monks and nuns living in Japan, a substantial percentage of whom were Korean.
A great many Buddhist writings published during Korea's Goryeo dynasty (918–1392) were also highly influential upon their arrival in Japan. Such Korean ideas would play an important role in the development of Japanese Pure Land Buddhism. The Japanese monk Shinran was among those known to be influenced by Korean Buddhism, particularly by the Sillan monk Gyeongheung. Robert Buswell notes that the form of Buddhism Korea was propagating throughout its history was "a vibrant cultural tradition in its own right" and that Korea did not serve simply as a "bridge" between China and Japan.
Medieval artistic influence
According to the scholar Insoo Cho, Korean artwork has had a "huge impact" on Japan throughout history, though until recently the subject was often neglected within academia. Beatrix von Ragué has noted that in particular, "one can hardly underestimate the role which, from the fifth to the seventh centuries, Korean artists and craftsmen played in the early art ... of Japan."
Lacquerwork
According to the historian Beatrix von Ragué, "the oldest example of the true art of lacquerwork to have survived in Japan" is Tamamushi Shrine, a miniature shrine in Horyū-ji Temple. Tamamushi Shrine was created in Korean style, and was probably made by either a Japanese artist or a Korean artist living in Japan. It is decorated with an inlay composed of the wings of tamamushi beetles that, according to von Ragué, "is evidently native to Korea." However, Tamamushi Shrine is also painted in a manner similar to Chinese paintings of the sixth century.
Japanese lacquerware teabowls, boxes, and tables of the Azuchi–Momoyama period (1568–1600) also show signs of Korean artistic influence. The mother-of-pearl inlay frequently used in this lacquerwork is of clearly Korean origin.
Painting
The immigration of Korean and Chinese painters to Japan during the Asuka period transformed Japanese art. For instance, in the year 610 Damjing, a Buddhist monk from Goguryeo, brought paints, brushes, and paper to Japan. Damjing is credited with introducing the arts of papermaking and of preparing pigments to Japan for the first time, and he is also regarded as the artist behind the wall painting in the main hall of Japan's Horyu-ji Temple which was later burned down in a fire.
However, it was during the Muromachi period (1337–1573) of Japanese history that Korean influence on Japanese painting reached its peak. Korean art and artists frequently arrived on Japan's shores, influencing both the style and theme of Japanese ink painting. The two most important Japanese ink painters of the period were Shūbun, whose art displays many of the characteristic features of Korean painting, and Sumon, who was himself an immigrant from Korea. Consequently, one Japanese historian, Sokuro Wakimoto, has even described the period between 1394 and 1486 as the "Era of Korean Style" in Japanese ink painting.
Then during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, as a result of the Joseon missions to Japan, the Japanese artists who were developing nanga painting came into close contact with Korean artists. Though Japanese nanga received inspiration from many sources, the historian Burglind Jungmann concludes that Korean namjonghwa painting "may well have been the most important for creating the Nanga style". It was the Korean brush and ink techniques in particular which are known to have had a significant impact on such Japanese painters as Ike no Taiga, Gion Nankai, and Sakaki Hyakusen.
Music and dance
In ancient times the imperial court of Japan imported all its music from abroad, though it was Korean music that reached Japan first. The first Korean music may have infiltrated Japan as early as the third century. Korean court music in ancient Japan was at first called "sankangaku" in Japanese, referring to music from all the states of the Korean peninsula, but it was later termed "komagaku" in reference specifically to the court music of the Korean kingdom of Guguryeo.
Musicians from various Korean states often went to work in Japan. Mimaji, a Korean entertainer from Baekje, introduced Chinese dance and Chinese gigaku music to Japan in 612. By the time of the Nara period (710–794), every musician in Japan's imperial court was either Korean or Chinese. Korean musical instruments which became popular in Japan during this period include the flute known as the komabue, the zither known as the gayageum, and the harp known as the shiragikoto.
Though much has been written about Korean influence on early Japanese court music, Taeko Kusano has stated that Korean influence on Japanese folk music during the Edo period (1603–1868) represents a very important but neglected field of study. According to Taeko Kusano, each of the Joseon missions to Japan included about fifty Korean musicians and left their mark on Japanese folk music. Most notably, the "tojin procession", which was practiced in Nagasaki, the "tojin dance", which arose in modern-day Mie Prefecture, and the "karako dance", which exists in modern-day Okayama Prefecture, all have Korean roots and utilize Korean-based music.
Silk weaving
Further information: SericultureAccording to William Wayne Farris, citing a leading Japanese expert on ancient cloth, the production of high-quality silk twill took off in Japan from the fifth century onward as a result of new technology brought from Korea. Farris argues that Japan's Hata clan, who are believed to have been specialists in the art of silk weaving and silk tapestry, immigrated to Japan from the region of the Korean peninsula. By contrast, historian Cho-yun Hsu believes that the Hata clan were of Chinese descent.
Jewelry
Japan at first imported jewelry made of glass, gold, and silver from Korea, but in the fifth century the techniques of gold and silver metallurgy also entered Japan from Korea, possibly from the Korean states of Baekje and Gaya. Korean immigrants established important sites of jewelry manufacturing in Katsuragi, Gunma, and other places in Japan, allowing Japan to domestically produce its first gold and silver earrings, crowns, and beads.
Sculpture
Along with Buddhism, the art of Buddhist sculpture also spread to Japan from Korea. At first almost all Japanese Buddhist sculptures were imported from Korea, and these imports demonstrate an artistic style which would dominate Japanese sculpture during the Asuka period (538–710). In the years 577 and 588 the Korean state of Baekje dispatched to Japan expert statue sculptors.
One of the most notable examples of Korean influence on Japanese sculpture is the Buddha statue in the Koryu-ji Temple, sometimes referred to as the "Crown-Coiffed Maitreya". This statue was directly copied from a Korean prototype around the seventh century. Likewise, the Great Buddha sculpture of Todai-ji Temple, as well as both the Baekje Kannon and the Guze Kannon sculptures of Japan's Horyu-ji Temple, are believed to have been sculpted by Koreans. The Guze Kannon was described as "the greatest perfect monument of Corean art" by Ernest Fenollosa.
Literature
Concerning literature, Roy Andrew Miller has stated that, "Japanese scholars have made important progress in identifying the seminal contributions of Korean immigrants, and of Korean literary culture as brought to Japan by the early Korean diaspora from the Old Korean kingdoms, to the formative stages of early Japanese poetic art". Susumu Nakanishi has argued that Okura was born in the Korean kingdom of Baekje to a high court doctor and came with his émigré family to Yamato at the age of 3 after the collapse of that kingdom. It has been noted that the Korean genre of hyangga (郷歌), of which only 25 examples survive from the Silla kingdom's Samdaemok (三代目), compiled in 888 CE, differ greatly in both form and theme from the Man'yōshū poems, with the single exception of some of Yamanoue no Okura's poetry which shares their Buddhist-philosophical thematics. Roy Andrew Miller, arguing that Okura's "Korean ethnicity" is an established fact though one disliked by the Japanese literary establishment, speaks of his "unique binational background and multilingual heritage".
Architecture
William Wayne Farris has noted that "Architecture was one art that changed forever with the importation of Buddhism" from Korea. In 587 the Buddhist Soga clan took control of the Japanese government, and the very next year in 588 the kingdom of Baekje sent Japan two architects, one carpenter, four roof tilers, and one painter who were assigned the task of constructing Japan's first full-fledged Buddhist temple. This temple was Asuka Temple, completed in 596, and it was only the first of many such temples put together on the Baekje model. According to the historian Jonathan W. Best "virtually all of the numerous complete temples built in Japan between the last decade of the sixth and the middle of the seventh centuries" were designed off Korean models. Among such early Japanese temples designed and built with Korean aid are Shitennō-ji Temple and Hōryū-ji Temple.
Many of the temple bells were also of Korean design and origin. As late as the early eleventh century Korean bells were being delivered to many Japanese temples including Enjō-ji Temple. In the year 1921, eighteen Korean temple bells were designated as national treasures of Japan.
In addition to temples, starting from the sixth century advanced stonecutting technology entered Japan from Korea and as a result Japanese tomb construction also began to change in favor of Korean models. Around this time the horizontal tomb chambers prevalent in Baekje began to be constructed in Japan.
Cultural transfers during Hideyoshi's invasions of Korea
The invasions of Korea by Japanese leader Toyotomi Hideyoshi between 1592 and 1598 were an extremely vigorous period of two-way cross-cultural transfer between Korea and Japan. Although Japan ultimately lost the war, Hideyoshi and his generals used the opportunity to loot valuable commodities from Korea and to kidnap skilled Korean craftsmen and take them back to Japan. Tokutomi Sohō summed up the conflict by saying that, "While neither Japan nor Choson gained any advantages from this war, Japan gained cultural benefits from the importation of moveable type printing, technological benefits from ceramics, and diplomatic benefits from its contact with Ming China."
Printing technology and books
Moveable type printing was invented in China in the eleventh century, and the technology was further refined in Korea. According to the historian Lawrence Marceau, during the late-sixteenth century, dramatic changes in Japanese printing technology were sparked by "two overseas sources". The first was the movable type printing-press established by the Jesuits in Kyushu in 1590. The second was the looting of Korean books and book printing technology after the invasion of Korea. Before 1590, Buddhist monasteries handled virtually all book printing in Japan, and, according to historian Donald Shively, books and moveable type transported from Korea "helped bring about the end of the monastic monopoly on printing." At the start of the invasion in 1592, Korean books and book printing technology were one of Japan's top priorities for looting, especially metal moveable type. One commander alone, Ukita Hideie, is said to have had 200,000 printing types and books removed from Korea's Gyeongbokgung Palace. In 1593, a Korean printing press with movable type was sent as a present for the Japanese Emperor Go-Yōzei. The emperor commanded that it be used to print an edition of the Confucian Classic of Filial Piety. Four years later in 1597, apparently due to difficulties encountered in casting metal, a Japanese version of the Korean printing press was built with wooden instead of metal type. In 1599, this press was used to print the first part of the Nihon Shoki. Eighty percent of Japan's book production was printed using moveable type between 1593 and 1625, but ultimately moveable type printing was supplanted by woodblock printing and was rarely used after 1650.
Ceramics
Prior to the invasion, Korea's high-quality ceramic pottery was prized in Japan, particularly the Korean teabowls used in the Japanese tea ceremony. Because of this, Japanese soldiers made great efforts to find skilled Korean potters and transfer them to Japan. For this reason, the Japanese invasion of Korea is sometimes referred to as the "Teabowl War" or the "Pottery War".
Hundreds of Korean potters were taken by the Japanese Army back to Japan with them, either being forcibly kidnapped or else being persuaded to leave. Once settled in Japan, the Korean potters were put to work making ceramics. Historian Andrew Maske has concluded that, "Without a doubt the single most important development in Japanese ceramics in the past five hundred years was the importation of Korean ceramic technology as a result of the invasions of Korea by the Japanese under Toyotomi Hideyoshi." Imari porcelain, Satsuma ware, Hagi ware, Karatsu ware, and Takatori ware were all pioneered by Koreans who came to Japan at this time.
Construction
Among the skilled craftsmen removed from Korea by Japanese forces were roof tilers, who would go on to make important contributions to tiling Japanese houses and castles. For example, one Korean tiler participated in the expansion of Kumamoto Castle. Furthermore, the Japanese daimyo Katō Kiyomasa had Nagoya Castle constructed using stonework techniques that he had learned during his time in Korea.
Neo-Confucianism
Kang Hang, a Korean neo-Confucian scholar, was kidnapped in Korea by Japanese soldiers and taken to Japan. He lived in Japan until the year 1600 during which time he formed an acquaintance with the scholar Fujiwara Seika and instructed him in neo-Confucian philosophy. Some historians believe that other Korean neo-Confucianists such as Yi Toe-gye also had a major impact on Japanese neo-Confucianism at this time. The idea was developed in particular by Abe Yoshio (阿部吉雄).
By contrast, Willem van Boot called this theory in question in his 1982 doctoral thesis and later works. Historian Jurgis Elisonas stated the following about the controversy:
"A similar great transformation in Japanese intellectual history has also been traced to Korean sources, for it has been asserted that the vogue for neo-Confucianism, a school of thought that would remain prominent throughout the Edo period (1600–1868), arose in Japan as a result of the Korean war, whether on account of the putative influence that the captive scholar-official Kang Hang exerted on Fujiwara Seika (1561–1619), the soi-disant discoverer of the true Confucian tradition for Japan, or because Korean books from looted libraries provided the new pattern and much new matter for a redefinition of Confucianism. This assertion, however is questionable and indeed has been rebutted convincingly in recent Western scholarship."
Historiography
The interpretation of the history of early contacts, and the nature of the relations, between Japan and the states of the Korean peninsula has long been complicated by reciprocal nationalisms which skew interpretations. In the modern period, especially in the wake of Japan's annexation of Korea, a Tokugawa era theory developed which held that in antiquity Japan had ruled over Korea and its elites, and that the roots of the two people and polities were identical. This was called the "common ancestry theory" (naisen dōsoron:内鮮同祖論) and, based on early texts that spoke of Yamato invasions of the peninsula and the establishment of Mimana, was used to justify Japan's colonial seizure of Korea (seikanron:征韓論) as was evidence from excavations at the Lelang Commandery that ancient Korea had been long been a colonized country. In this perspective, while recognizing the great impact of Chinese civilization on both polities, the role of Korean peninsular peoples in the transmission of Sinic culture was underplayed and it was claimed that Japan had retained its indigenous uniqueness by consistently modifying the cultural elements flowing through Korea to Yamato. Korean nationalist historiography (minjok sahak) challenged Japanese versions of their history while often adopting the same prejudices, and asserted in turn, the country had national sovereignty in prehistoric times, and a racial and cultural superiority over other east Asian countries, reflecting the legacy of colonial Japan's own prejudices.
Recently, a growing consensus has been reached among historians on the importance of direct cultural transfers from Korea to Japan. However, the issue of Korean influence on Japanese culture continues to be a sensitive matter to discuss. The excavation of many of Japan's earliest imperial tombs, which might shed important light on the subject, remains prohibited by the Japanese government. By contrast, the admission by Emperor Akihito that the Imperial Family of Japan included Korean ancestors helped to improve bilateral Korea-Japan relations. Recently, the Kyoto Cultural Museum has stated that, "In seeking the source of Japan’s ancient culture many will look to China, but the quest will finally lead to Korea, where China's advanced culture was accepted and assimilated. In actuality, the people who crossed the sea were the people of the Korea Peninsula and their culture was the Korean culture."
As scholarship on pre-modern Korean contributions to Japanese culture has advanced, some academics have also begun studying reverse cultural flows from Japan to Korea during the same period of history. For example, historians note that, during Japan's Kofun period, Japanese-style bronze weapons and keyhole-shaped burial mounds spread to Korea.
Contemporary cultural influence
Korea continues to exert cultural influence on Japan in some fields like food. Yakiniku is seen as having a Korean origin and became popular in the 20th century.
The Korean Wave of K-pop and K-dramas have influenced Japanese music and television. While traditionally Japan has been seen as more of an influence on Korean pop culture and as having laid the foundations of K-pop, the rise and success of K-pop has increasingly come back to influence J-pop in many ways such as choreography.
See also
- Japanese influence on Korean culture
- Chinese influence on Korean culture
- Chinese influence on Japanese culture
- Culture of Japan
- Culture of Korea
Notes
- Cartwright, Mark (November 25, 2016). "Ancient Korean & Japanese Relations". World History Encyclopedia.
- 渡来人. www.asuka-tobira.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-01-26.
- 第2版,世界大百科事典内言及, 日本大百科全書(ニッポニカ),ブリタニカ国際大百科事典 小項目事典,旺文社日本史事典 三訂版,百科事典マイペディア,デジタル大辞泉,精選版 日本国語大辞典,世界大百科事典. "渡来人(とらいじん)とは? 意味や使い方". コトバンク (in Japanese). Retrieved 2023-02-06.
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- Tokyo National Museum, Pageant of Japanese Art: Textiles and Lacquer. Tokyo: Toto Bunka, 1952.
- Totman, Conrad, Japan: An Environmental History. London: IB Tauris, 2014.
- Tucker, Mary Evelyn, Moral and Spiritual Cultivation in Japanese Neo-Confucianism: The Life and Thought of Kaibara Ekken (1630–1714). Albany: State University of New York Press, 1989.
- von Ragué, Beatrix, A History of Japanese Lacquerwork. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1976.
- Wang Zhenping, Ambassadors from the Islands of Immortals: China-Japan Relations in the Han-Tang period. University of Hawaii Press, 2005.
- Williams, Yoko, Tsumi - Offence and Retribution in Early Japan. New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 2003.
- Xu, Stella, Reconstructing Ancient Korean History: The Formation of Korean-ness in the Shadow of History. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2016.
External links
- Purple Tigress. "Review: Brighter than Gold – A Japanese Ceramic Tradition Formed by Foreign Aesthetics". BC Culture. Archived from the original on January 18, 2008. Retrieved 2008-01-10.
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: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - "Japan, 1400–1600 A.D." Metropolitan Museum of Art. October 2002. Archived from the original on March 18, 2008. Retrieved 2010-02-15.
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: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - "Yayoi Culture (ca. 4th century B.C.–3rd century A.D.)". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 2010-02-15.
- "Yayoi Era". Mankato, MN, U.S.A.: E-museum, Minnesota State University. Archived from the original on February 26, 2011. Retrieved 2010-02-15.
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: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - "Japanese History: Jomon, Yayoi, Kofun: Early Japan (until 710)". japan-guide.com. 9 June 2002. Retrieved 2010-02-15.
- "Japan and Korean Influences". New York Times, The. 1901-07-07. Magazine supplement. (first paragraph only. PDF scan of full article here: )