Shogunate System Of Japan
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The Shogunate system in Japan, established in the late 12th century and enduring until the mid-19th century, was a feudal regime under which the shoguns, or military dictators, held actual power while the emperor remained a symbolic figure. The system began with Minamoto no Yoritomo's establishment of the Kamakura Shogunate in 1185, marking a shift from court aristocracy to military governance. This was followed by the Ashikaga and the Tokugawa Shogunates, each governing during relatively stable periods punctuated by internal strife and power struggles between rival feudal lords, known as daimyo. The Tokugawa Shogunate, the last and most enduring, established a rigid class structure and isolationist policies, maintaining peace through strict social order and foreign policy controls. The shogunate system was eventually dismantled during the Meiji Restoration in 1868, as Japan modernized and centralized its government, transitioning to imperial rule and opening to the world.
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