Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 6.djvu/402

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INDEX

  • development of building and stage, 112–114, 116, 121; entrée of actor, 112, 114; choragic element, 115; plays, 116–118; social status of actors, 118, 122; pay of actors, 119; their ostentation, 119; financial condition, 120. See also Drama.
  • Tōan, Teshima, popular lecturer, iv. 135.
  • Toba, emperor, and Toku, i. 259.
  • Tōkaidō district, develops strength during feudal anarchy, ii. 30.
  • Tokihira, Fujiwara chief, and Michizane, i. 179, 256.
  • Tokiyori, Hōjō vicegerent, fiscal policy, ii. 121.
  • Toku, imperial concubine, power, i. 259.
  • Tokudaiji, noble family, hereditary privileges, iv. 5.
  • Tokugawa epoch, character, i. 158, ii. 37, iv. 3. See also Government.
  • Tokugawa family, branch of the Minamoto, administrative control, i. 158; divine ancestry, 159. See also Government (Tokugawa epoch), Shōgun, Iyeyasu and other Shōguns by name.
  • Tōkyō, imperial capital, iv. 196. See also Yedo.
  • Tomonobu, Kamiyama, fealty, ii. 192.
  • Tomoye, Yoshinaka's mistress, ii. 18.
  • Toribe-no-Yoroza and his dog, ii. 46.
  • Torii, significance, v. 120.
  • Tōru, Minamoto chief, famous villa, i. 201.
  • Torurihime, Yoshitsune's mistress, ii. 218.
  • Tosa clan, fief surrendered, iv. 1 89, 190; agitation for representation, 222–224. See also Yōdō.
  • Toyasu, Tokugawa house, hereditary privileges, iv. 8, 35.
  • Trade, domestic, ancient, i. 106, vi. 125, 126; condition of the mercantile class, ii. 41, iii. 141–152, iv. 151–157, vi. 165–167, 190; commercial probity, ii. 198, vi. 212–214, 220; signboards, iv. 26; and the military class, 155–157, vi. 154, 172; mediæval transportation service, iv. 169–171, 196; modern mercantile marine, v. 106, regulation of prices, vi. 126, 135; ancient conditions of sale, 139; regulations in Kyōtō, 145; changes in Military epoch, 149, 153; licensed monopolies, 151, 179, 184; Ashikaga oppression, 151–153, 166; enforced transfer of shops, 176; improvements under Hideyoshi, 165–167; marketing fief income rice, 177–180; rice exchanges and speculation, 180; branch houses, 193; distribution on credit basis, 194, 195; mediæval merchant marine, 197, 198, 239; mediæval laws against fraud, 199; pedlars, 202; tea, during Tokugawa epoch, 203–205. See also Banking, Barter, Guilds, Manufactures, Money, and next title.
  • Trade, foreign, early continental, i. 69–75, 106, vi. 127, 148;

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