Victoria II - Japan
Chapter One - Where Japan Came From
Chapter One - Where Japan Came From

The Empire was founded 660 B.C. by the first Emperor, Jimmu Tenno, who was the direct ancestor of the 20th Century ruling house.
Some scholars suggest this is fiction but those scholars were never invited to any of the cool parties and most of the populace ignore them.
Other scholars suggested that the Japanese race come from China, Korea, or Manchuria. Some suggested that the Japanese race came from Islanders or the Malay strain. Once again nobody listened to those scholars.
Of course, in some ways, the scholars were totally correct. The Chinese script was adopted by the Japanese in the early 5th Century and by the middle of the 6th Century over 100,000 Koreans and Chinese from Manchuria had come to live in Japan.
The reason was very simple. They were skilled in metals and in silkworms. And they were better educated than the Japanese populace that would end up assimilating them.
Buddhism would soon follow, coming from mainland Asia, and ended up existing stand by stand with Shintoism.
In fact some of the more powerful Clans within Japan tried to follow the example of China and did their best to make a Empire based on the mainland Dynasties.
Even if it meant destroying each other and putting the Imperial House under their thumb.
During this time period the Imperial House became a figurehead and plaything of those who wished for power.
But things change with time. And even the most powerful of the Clans could not stay in power for long.
Money in the form of silver and coppers coins started to replace rice as a means of exchange.
The Samurai class slowly lost control of the economic power as a merchant class started to grow.
And the peasants suffered. And started to revolt. Not totally unheard of in Japanese history.
But under the Tokugawa government it started to happen a lot. They had tried to isolate Japan. And they did so for hundreds of years. But it wasn’t working. Not in the way those in power hoped.
To be honest there are too many factors to list and explain here about why the Tokugawa Shogunate fell.
For example, the rules were somewhat relaxed in 1716 which allowed the import, and study, of works in Western languages. Japan was becoming exposed to Western ideas and culture.
Picture a mirror with hundreds of cracks in it. Each crack expanding, joining others, making more cracks.
The Russians started to colonize Alaska and put pressure on Japan for use of their ports and for trade to help support their newly created colonies.
Japan was at a turning point and it needed to start making decisions. The year 1836 would be a major junction for Japan. And the rest of the world.
- 5