Timelines: JAPAN | Asia for Educators | Columbia University
- ️Asia for Educators, Columbia University
JAPAN—Timeline of Historical Periods
Early Period
ca. 4000 BCE
Jomon
Prehistoric culture characterized by handmade pottery with rope pattern design
ca. 300 BCE
Yayoi Culture
More advanced agricultural society, using metals and wheel-turned pottery
ca. 300 CE
Tomb Period
Kofun (250-538) | Asuka (538-710)
Great earthen grave mounds and their funerary objects, such as clay haniwa — terra cotta figurines of people and animals, models of buildings and boats — attest to emergence of powerful clan rulers. Among these was the Yamato clan, whose rulers began the imperial dynasty that has continued to the present.
Classical Period
552 CE
Introduction of Buddhism
645 CE
Taika Reform
Reorganization and reform based largely on learning imported from China: Buddhism, writing system, bureaucratic organization, legal theories
710-814 CE
Nara Period
Establishment of first permanent capital at Nara; emergence of Japanese patterns of administration and institutions. Beginning of classical period.
794-1185 CE
Heian Period; Late Heian (Fujiwara)
Great flowering of classical Japanese culture in new capital of Heian-kyo (Kyoto). Court aristocracy, especially women, produced great body of literature — poetry, diaries, the novel The Tale of Genji — and made refined aesthetic sensibility their society's hallmark.
Medieval Period
1185-1333 CE
Kamakura Period
Beginning of military rule, as samurai (warriors) replaced nobles as real rulers of Japan. Imperial court remained in Kyoto but shoguns governing organization based in Kamakura, south of modern Tokyo.
1333-1336 CE
Kemmu Restoration
1336-1573 CE
Ashikaga (Muromachi) Period
New warrior government in Kyoto retained weak control of the country, but from its base in Kyoto's Muromachi district became patron of newly flourishing artistic tradition, influenced by Zen Buddhist culture as well as samurai and court society.
Country at War
Warring factions engaged in lengthy, destructive civil wars
1568-1598 CE
Unification
1600-1867 CE
Tokugawa (Edo) Period
Country unified under military government which maintained 250 years of secluded peace, leading to development of vibrant urban, "middle-class" culture with innovations in economic organization, literature, and the arts.
Modern Period
1868-1912 CE
Meiji Restoration
Meiji Era
Emergence, with Western stimulus, into modern international world, marked by dramatic alterations in institutions, traditional social organization, and culture.
1912-1926 CE
Taisho Era
1926-1989 CE
Showa Era
1945-present*
Contemporary Japan:
Heisei Era (1989-present)
Reiwa (2019-present)
Prepared by Dr. Amy Vladeck Heinrich, Director, C.V. Starr East Asian Library, Columbia University, for the Columbia University Project on Asia in the Core Curriculum.
*2020