Uji (clan)

This is about the early Japanese kin groups. For other uses, see Uji (disambiguation).

Uji () were Japanese kin groups of the Kofun period.[1]

Uji were similar to the traditional Japanese clans;[2] however, the pre-Taika uji did not have many of the characteristics which are commonly understood to be part of Japanese clans.[3] For example, the Nakatomi clan and the Fujiwara clan were each uji.[4]

The uji was not only a social, economic and political unit. It also had religious significance in the 5th–7th centuries.[5] The family chief has the title of Uji no kami[4] (氏上) although uji no osa (氏長), uji no chōja (氏長者), and uji no mune (氏宗) were also used depending on the time period. At the beginning of the Heian period uji no chōja was used most often.[6]

History

The Uji formed a decentralized ruling structure.

According to Chinese records, the clans divided in rising urban centers occupied the Yamato Plains (the region between the present-day cities of Nara and Osaka). The clans were responsible for the protection and the taxation of these independent territories. Each clan was ruled by a headman or warlord and worshiped its own unique ujigami or clan spirit. The most thorough ancient description of the uji clan system comes from early Chinese records during the Kofun period (300–552 CE) .[7]

As pointed out in the History of Wei, the peace was preserved among the "Wa people" as long as a queen, who was a member of the powerful Yamato clan, played the role of mediator between the various clans. Since pre-classical Japan lacked a centralized government, an official language and a written body of laws, the Shinto religious beliefs determined the hereditary lineage of the uji members.[8]

The powerful Yamato clan, the Imperial Family, consolidated its power during the late sixth and early seventh century, Prince Shōtoku, created the Seventeen Article Constitution in 604 CE. This constitution did not constitute an official legal text but it was an attempt to create a bureaucracy to undercut the political domination of the great clans.[9]

References

  1. ^ "Uji clans, titles and the organization of production and trade" at HeritageofJapan.wordpress.com; retrieved 2013-5-12.
  2. ^ Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Uji" in Japan Encyclopedia, p. 1010.
  3. ^ Hall, John Whitney. (1988). The Cambridge history of Japan, Vol. II, p. 128.
  4. ^ a b Papinot, Jacques Edmond Joseph. (1906). Dictionnaire d’histoire et de géographie du Japon; Papinot, (2003). "Ryūzōji", Nobiliare du Japon, p. 67 [PDF 71 of 80)]; retrieved 2013-5-12.
  5. ^ Kitagawa, Joseph Mitsuo. (1987). On understanding Japanese religion, p. 37.
  6. ^ Matsubara, Hideichi; Iyanaga, Shôkichi; Akiyama, Terukazu; Yoshikawa, Itsuji; Fujimura, Michio; Fujimura, Jun'ichirō; Yoshida, Shōichirō; Ishii, Susumu; Iyanaga, Teizō (1995). "36. Uji no kami". Dictionnaire Historique du Japon. 20 (1): 16.
  7. ^ Lu, David. (1997). Japan: A Documentary History The Dawn of History to the Late Tokugawa Period, p. 9.
  8. ^ From the Wei zhi, as reproduced in the original Chinese text, Shinwa kara Rekishi e (From Myths to History): Chuo Koronsha, Nihon no Rekishi ( A history of Japan), Vol. 1 (1965), pp. 214–220.
  9. ^ Nikon Shoki (Chronicles of Japan) in Kokushi Taikei (Major compilation of National History), new and enlarged, Vol. 1, No. 2 (1967), pp 142–146.