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Inland Sea - History

Inland Sea - History: Encyclopedia II - Inland Sea - History

It is believed that in the last ice age the sea level was lower than today. After the ice age, sea water poured into a lower part between the Chugoku mountains and Shikoku mountains and formed the Island Sea as we know it today. From ancient times, the Inland Sea served a main transport line between its coastal areas, including what is today the Kansai region and Kyushu. It was also a main transport line between Japan and other countries, including Korea and China. Even after the creation of major highways such as the Nankaido and San ...

See also:

Inland Sea, Inland Sea - Geographical features, Inland Sea - Fauna, Inland Sea - History, Inland Sea - Industry, Inland Sea - Transport, Inland Sea - Major tourist sites, Inland Sea - Literature

Inland Sea, Inland Sea - Fauna, Inland Sea - Geographical features, Inland Sea - History, Inland Sea - Industry, Inland Sea - Literature, Inland Sea - Major tourist sites, Inland Sea - Transport

Inland Sea: Encyclopedia II - Inland Sea - History



Inland Sea - History

It is believed that in the last ice age the sea level was lower than today. After the ice age, sea water poured into a lower part between the Chugoku mountains and Shikoku mountains and formed the Island Sea as we know it today.

From ancient times, the Inland Sea served a main transport line between its coastal areas, including what is today the Kansai region and Kyushu. It was also a main transport line between Japan and other countries, including Korea and China. Even after the creation of major highways such as the Nankaido and San'yodo, the Inland Sea remained a major transport route. There are records that some foreign emissaries from China and Korea sailed on the Inland Sea.

Due to the importance of water traffic, regional powers often had their own private navies. In many documents, these navies are called suigun (水軍, water army), or simply pirates. Sometimes they were considered to be public enemies, but in most cases they were granted the right to self-governance as a result of their strength.

In the 12th century, Taira no Kiyomori planned to move the capital from Kyoto to a coastal village Fukuhara (today Kobe) to promote trade between Japan and the Song Dynasty of China. This transfer was unsuccessful, and soon after Kyoto became the capital again. Later, the Battle of Yashima took place off the coast of present-day Takamatsu.

During the feudal period, suigun seized power in most coastal areas. The Kono in Iyo province (today Ehime prefecture) and Kobayakawa (later Mori) in Aki province (today a part of Hiroshima prefecture) clans were two of the more famous suigun lords.

In the Edo period, the Inland Sea was one of the busiest transport lines in Japan. It was a part of a navigational route around Japan's islands via the Sea of Japan. Many ships navigated from its coastal areas to the area along the Sea of Japan. It was not only the main transport line between Kansai and Kyushu, but also for Hokuriku, Tōhoku, and even Hokkaido (which was called Ezo at the time). Major ports in the Edo period were Osaka, Sakai, Shimotsui, Ushimado, and Tomonoura. The Inland Sea also served many daimyo in the western area of Japan as their route to and from Edo, to fulfill their obligations under sankin kotai. Many used ships from Osaka. Thanks to transport through the Inland Sea, Osaka became the economic center of Japan. Each han had an office called Ozakayashiki in Osaka. These Ozakayashiki were among Japan's earliest forms of banks, facilitating domestic trade and helping to organize the income of the daimyo, which was in the form of koku, giant bales of rice.

The Inland Sea was also part of the official Chosendentsushi route, bringing Korean emissaries to the Shogunate.

After the Meiji Restoration, the coastal areas of the Inland Sea were rapidly industrialized. One of the headquarters of the Japanese Navy was built in the town of Kure. Since the Meiji period, development of land transport has been reducing the importance of the Inland Sea as a transport line. Remarkable land transportation innovations include the Sanyo Main Railroad Line in Honshu, Yosan Main Railroad Line in Shikoku, completed before World War II, and three series of bridges connecting Honshu and Shikoku, which were completed in the late 20th Century. The Inland Sea still serves, however, both an international cargo transport line and several local transport lines connecting Honshu with Shikoku and Kyushu.

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1868, 1934, 1945, 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 19th century, 20th Century, Akashi, Akashi-Kaikyo Bridge, Aki province, Awaji Island, Awajishima, Battle Royale, Battle of Yashima, Bungo Channel, China, Chugoku, Donald Richie, Edo, Edo period, Ehime, Ehime prefecture, Ferdinand von Richthofen, Fukuoka, Fukuyama, Great Seto Bridge, Hiroshima, Hiroshima prefecture, Hokkaido, Hokuriku, Honshu, Honshu-Shikoku Bridge Project, Hyogo, Innoshima, Itsukushima Shrine, Iwakuni, Iyo province, Japan, Japan Railway, Japanese Navy, Kagawa, Kanmon Straits, Kansai, Kii Channel, Kobe, Kojiki, Korea, Kotohira, Koushun Takami, Kurashiki, Kure, Kyoto, Kyushu, Manyoshu, March 16, Matsuyama, Meiji Restoration, Miyajima, Mori, Nankaido, Naruto Strait, Naruto whirlpool, Nihonshoki, Niihama, Oita, Okayama, Osaka, Osaka Bay, Osaka prefecture, Pacific, Pacific Ocean, Philipp Franz von Siebold, Sakai, Sakaide, San'yō Main Line, Sanyo Main Railroad Line, Sea of Japan, Shikoku, Shodoshima, Shōdoshima, Song Dynasty, Taira no Kiyomori, Takamatsu, Tamano, The Tale of Genji, The Tale of the Heike, Thomas Cook, Tokushima, Tokyo, Tōhoku, UNESCO, Ube, Wakayama prefecture, World Heritage Site, World War II, Yamaguchi, amphidromous, atomic bomb, ayu, finless porpoise, great white shark, han, horseshoe crab, ice age, koku, phytoplankton, red tides, sankin kotai, sea level, steel, straits, waka, waterway



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "History", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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