Bibliographic Information

Japan and the Japanese

Aimé Humbert ; translated by Frances Cashel Hoey ; edited by Henry Walter Bates

(Cambridge library collection, . East and South-East Asian history)

Cambridge University Press, 2015

  • : pbk

Available at  / 5 libraries

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Note

Reprint. Originally published : London : R.Bentley, 1874

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Taking advantage of his diplomatic privilege in Japan to travel further and inquire deeper than other foreigners, Swiss envoy Aime Humbert (1819-1900) brought back stories of life under the Tokugawa shogunate in its final years. First published in the journal Le Tour du monde in 1866, his account of Japanese history and daily life was republished as Le Japon illustre in 1870. This 1874 English translation brought readers up to date by including additional chapters on the 1868 revolution and its aftermath. Humbert focused his narrative on the history and culture of four locations: Benten, the foreign settlement at Yokohama; Kyoto, where emperors had resided for centuries; Kamakura, the old centre of political power; and Yeddo, now Tokyo, the new capital of Japan. Featuring almost 200 illustrations taken from Humbert's collection of prints and photographs, this book captures descriptively and pictorially a country on the verge of dramatic political and social change.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Part I. Benten: 1. The inland sea
  • 2. Our neighbours
  • 3. The country and the people
  • 4. Domestic life
  • Part II. Kioto: 1. The origin of the Japanese people
  • 2. The genesis of Japan
  • 3. The early sovereigns of Japan
  • 4. Art and fashion in Kioto
  • 5. The decadence of Mikado
  • Part III. Kamakoura: 1. The residences of the Siogouns
  • 2. The temples of Kamakoura
  • 3. Buddhism in Japan
  • 4. Taikosama and the Tokaido
  • Part IV. Yeddo: 1. The great city
  • 2. The Taikouns
  • 3. The political system of the Taikouns
  • 4. The Hondjo
  • 5. Asaksa-Tera
  • 6. Education and literature at Yeddo
  • 7. Domestic solemnities
  • 8. Social institutions in Yeddo
  • 9. Sin-Yosiwara
  • 10. Religious festivals
  • 11. The Sibaia, or national drama of Japan
  • 12. Inaka
  • 13. The new order of things in Japan
  • 14. Conclusion.

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