Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 6.djvu/381

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INDEX

  • Feudalism, foreshadowed, i. 161, 165, 169–172; complete establishment, ii. 610, 26, 28; Iyeyasu's measures, iii. 92–94; organisation, iv. 9–11, 188, 263; criminal survivals, 87; overthrow, 187–194, 196–201, 211–215, v. 11. See also Government (Military epoch, Tokugawa epoch), Military class.
  • Filial piety, laws to enforce, iv. 113; and prostitution, vi. 94. See also Ancestral worship.
  • Finances, lack of capital, i. 23, v. 24, 251; embarrassment of Tokugawa, iii. 147–150, 161; conditions at beginning of modern era, v. 2; creation of a surplus, 7; specie reserve, 7; foreign opinions, 9; foreign loans, 10; gold standard, 10, 249; national debt, 11–14, 250; revenue and expenditures, 14–21; national wealth and income, 21; distribution of wealth, 22; gold output, 23; development of resources, 23, 25, 26. See also Banking, Loans, Money, Taxation.
  • Fishing industry, vi. 239.
  • Flags, use, ii. 160, 283.
  • Flowers, love of, i. 194, vi. 65; principles of arrangement, iii. 9–15; receptacles, 14; various fêtes, vi. 53, 64, 66, 72, 98.
  • Food, primæval, i. 49; during Nara epoch, 146; during Heian epoch, 213–217; during Military epoch, ii. 106; culinary art during Military epoch, 111; table etiquette, 112–114.
  • Foreign relations, spirit of expansion, i. 2–4, vi. 167; beginning of modern, i. 9; Occidental attitude toward Japan, 15, v. 69–71; Chinese war and hegemony in the Far East, i. 16–18; ambition as to world power, 17–19; desire for equal status with the Occident, 18, 19; handicaps, 23–25; Iyeyasu ignores, iii. 94; policy of isolation begun, 99, 128; measures to preserve isolation, 159–163; protests against isolation, 163; foreign advice against isolation, 164; arrival of Commodore Perry, 165; reception, 165–168, 172; departure and return, 171; treaty with United States, 172; people deceived as to the treaty, 173, 175, 179; reception of first foreign representative, 174; end of isolation, 175, 179; anti-foreign agitation, 175, 183, 214; parties on question of, 176; foreign policy of the imperial court, 179, 181, 187–192, 213; policy of Ii, 183, 185, 253; public faith of Japan doubted, 185–187, 198–204, 255; real and assumed policy of shogunate, 185–187, 198, 210, 213; military class antagonism to foreign intercourse, 191, 193; assassination of foreigners and liberals, 192, 193, 201, 212; considerations on anti-foreign agitation, 193–197; expulsion of foreigners ordered, 219, 221, 223, 224; results of Richardson murder, 218, 220, 222, 224; Shimo-no-seki episode,

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