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Ancient, China developed all of the hallmarks of advanced civilization, including written
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language, advanced cities, specialized labor and bronze technology, as much as 2000 years
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before Japan.
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As a result, China and its culture had an enormously large influence on the younger
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culture, sharing its philosophies, political structures, architecture, Buddhism, clothing
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styles and even its written language.
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In fact, the earliest known written account of Japan was found in a Chinese book.
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With such a powerful influence, it is perhaps not surprising that when Japan was described
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early in its development (both by themselves and from the Chinese), it was from a Chinese
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perspective.
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And when the Chinese looked east to Japan, they looked in the direction of the dawn.
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By the time the first Japanese ambassador was sent to the Chinese Han eastern capital
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in 57 AD, the Japanese were called Wa (Wo), a name of uncertain origin, but appears to
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be referencing squatting or kneeling, so essentially the people were being called submissive and
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eventually the country itself was known as wakoku or the “country of the wa”.
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According to contemporary Chinese accounts, these early Japanese had countless violent
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succession struggles.
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However, in the first century AD, one clan, the Yamato, began to dominate its neighbors,
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and by the 5th century AD, Yamato became a synonym for Japan.
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As a single, central government emerged, Japan increasingly followed Chinese culture, including
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its methods of administration.
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Specifically, by about 600 AD, the Prince Regent of Japan, Shotoku (574-622 AD), who
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was a big fan of Chinese culture, introduced a wide array of Chinese influences to Japan.
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This included models of etiquette and rank after Confucianism, using the Chinese calendar,
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building Buddhist temples, and even sending students to China to study Confucianism and
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Buddhism.
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In addition to all this, Shotoku is widely credited in Japan with coining the name Nippon
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("Sun Origin") for Japan.
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This supposedly occurred around 607 when Shotoku sent a letter to emperor Yangdi “from the
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Son of Heaven in the land where the sun rises to the Son of Heaven in the land where the
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sun sets.”
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Moving on to more popular usage, in 645 AD, according to Japanese history, a palace coup
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led to the introduction of the Taika (meaning "great change") Reform.
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Intended to further centralize the government, the reform eliminated private ownership of
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lands and put them under the control of the centralized government – with the "people
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direct subjects of the throne."
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As part of this reform, Nippon, Nihon (both meaning "origin of the sun") and Dai Nippon
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(Great Japan) were used "in diplomatic documents and chronicles" in place of Wa (Wo).
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On the other side, the Chinese claim in the Old Book of Tang that it was a Japanese envoy
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who didn't like the Wonguo name and changed it to “Origin of the Sun” (Nippon).
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In yet another Chinese account from the 8th century, it is claimed that it was the Chinese
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Empress Wu Zetian who was the one who told the envoy to change the name to Nippon.
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Finally, in yet another Chinese account of the transformation, found in the official
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history of the Tang dynasty, the Xin Tang Shu, reported:
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“In . . . 670, an embassy came to the Court [from Japan] to offer congratulations on the
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conquest of Koguryo.
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Around this time, the Japanese who had studied Chinese came to dislike the name Wa and changed
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it to Nippon.
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According to the words of the Japanese envoy himself, that name was chosen because the
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country was so close to where the sun rises.”
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Whatever the exact version of the story, it would seem around the late 7th century the
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name change occurred officially and stuck.
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And so it is that for the last 1400 years or so, pretty much just because Japan is east
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of China, the world has referred to Japan as Nippon, the land of the rising sun.