1200-1400 A.D.
WITH the establishment of the Shogunate, or military
vice-royalty by Yoritomo of the Minamoto family at Kamakura, in 1186 A.D., begins a new phase of Japanese life, whose main features continued till the Meiji
restoration of the present day.
This Kamakura epoch is important as the connecting-link
between the Fujiwara on the one hand and the Ashikaga and Tokugawa epochs on
the other. It is characterised by the development in full form of the notion of
feudal rights and individual consciousness. And it is interesting, like all
transition periods, by the fact that it contains, in solution as it were, those
developments whose complete self-display had to await a later era.
[paragraph continues] Here we find the idea of individualism struggling to express itself
among the decaying débris of an aristocratic rule, inaugurating an age of
hero-worship and heroic romance akin to the spirit of European individualism in
the time of chivalry, its woman-worship restricted by Oriental notions of
decorum, and its religion - by reason of the freedom and ease of the Jodo sect
- lacking the severe asceticism of that over-awing popedom which held the
Western conscience in iron fetters. The division of the country into feudal
tenures, headed by the noble and powerful family of Minamoto at Kamakura, led each province to find amongst its own lords and knights some central figure
who represented for it the highest personification of manhood. The influx upon
the people who lived in the trans-Hakone region of the so-called Eastern
Barbarians with their simple bravery and unsophisticated ideas, broke down the
effeminate complexity left by the over-refined
formalism of the Fujiwaras. Each local knight strove hard
as against all others, not only in martial prowess, but in the power of
self-conquest, courtesy, and charity, which were qualities considered above
muscular might, as the marks of true courage.
"To know the sadness of things" was the motto of
the time, so bringing to birth the great ideal of the Samurai, whose raison
d’être was to suffer for the sake of others, Indeed, the very etiquette of
this knightly class during the Kamakura period points as unmistakably to the
conception of the monk, as the life of any Indian woman to that of the nun.
Some of the Samurai, or military officers, grouped around their chiefs or
daimyos, and followed in turn by their own clansmen, wore a priestly garment
over their armour, and many even went the length of shaving the head. There was
nothing incongruous with religion in the art of war, and the noble who
renounced the world
became one of the militant monks of his new order. The
Indian idea of the Guru, or giver of spiritual life, was here projected upon
the Samurai's war-lord, whoever he might be, and a surging passion of loyalty
to "the banner-chief," became the motive of a career. Men would
devote their lives to the avenging of his death, as in other countries women
have died for their husbands, or the worshipper for his gods.
It is possible that this fire of monasticism has been the
great influence in robbing Japanese chivalry of its romantic element. The
idealising of women would seem to have been an instinctive note of early
Japanese life. Were we not of the race of the Sun-goddess? Only after the
Fujiwara epoch, with its exploration of the realm of religious emotion, the
devotion of man to woman amongst us assumes its true Eastern form, of a worship
the more powerful because the shrine is secret, an inspiration the stronger
because
its source is hidden. A reserve as of religion seals the
lips of Kamakura poets, but it must not be thought on that account that the
Japanese woman was not adored. For the seclusion of Oriental zenanas is a
veiled sainthood. It may have been in the Crusades that the troubadours learnt
this secret of the strength of mystery. It will be remembered that their most
binding tradition was the obscurity in which the name of "my lady"
was involved. Dante, at any rate, as a singer of love, is entirely an Eastern
poet singing of Beatrice, the Oriental woman.
This was an age, then, of silence as to love, but it was
also an age of epic heroism, in the midst of which looms large the romantic
figure of Yoshitsune, of the house of Minamoto, whose life recalls the tales of
the round table, and is lost, like that of the knight of Pendragon, in poetic
mist, so as to furnish the imagination of a later day with
plausible grounds for identifying him with Genghis Khan in
Mongolia, whose wonderful career begins about fifteen years after the
disappearance of Yoshitsune in Yezo. His name is also pronounced Ghengi Khei,
and some of the names of the generals of the great Mogol conqueror bear
resemblance to those of the knights of Yoshitsune. We have also Tokiyorie, the
regent of the Shoguns, who, like Haroun-al-Raschid, travelled through the
Empire alone as a simple monk, inquiring into the state of the country. These
episodes give rise to a literature of adventure, which, centring on some heroic
character, is rigorous in its rude simplicity, in contrast to the elegant
effeminacy of preceding Fujiwara writings.
Buddhism had to be simplified in order to meet the
requirements of this new age. The Jodo ideal now appeals to the public mind,
through grosser representations of retribution. Pictures of purgatory
and the horrors of hell are for the first time presented,
in order to over-awe the rising populace, who under this new régime were
becoming more prominent than before. At the same time, the Samurai, or knightly
class, adopted as its ideal the teaching of the Zen sect (perfected under the
Sung dynasty, by the Southern Chinese mind), that salvation was to be looked
for in self-control and strength of will. Thus the art of this period lacks
both the idealised perfection of the Nara and the refined delicacy of the
Fujiwara, epochs, but is characterised by the vigour of its return to the line,
and by the virility and strength of its delineation.
Portrait statues, so significant a production of the heroic
age, now claim the foremost place in sculpture. Among these may be mentioned
the statues of monks of the Kegon sect in Kofukuji in Nara, and several others.
Even the Buddhas and devas assume personal
characteristics, as may be seen from the great Nioo of
Nandaimon in Nara. The fine bronze Buddha of Kamakura is not exempt from the
human tenderness which is absent from the more abstract bronzes of Nara and Fujiwara.
Painting lent itself, besides portraiture, to the
illustration of the heroic legends, generally in the form of makimonos, or
rolls, in which the pictures are interspersed with the written text. No
subjects were too high or too low for the artists of the day to illustrate, as
the formalist canons of aristocratic distinction were discarded in the new-born
enthusiasm of individual consciousness; but what they most delighted to paint
was the spirit of motion. Nothing is more illustrative of this than the
wonderful street scenes, depicted in the makimono owned by Prince Tokugawa, of
Bandainagon, or the three battle-scenes of the Heiji stories, owned by the
Emperor, Baron Iwasaki, and the Boston
Museum. These are falsely attributed to Keion, an artist
whose very existence is without foundation.
The gorgeous succession of depictments of the terrors of
hell in the makimonos of Jigokusoshi and Tenjinengi of Kitano - where the
warlike spirit of the time seems to delight in the awful spectacle of
destruction and sublime horror - suggests the imagery of Dante's Inferno.
NOTES
Shogunate. - Shogun is an abbreviation of Seyi
tai Shogun, or Commander-in-Chief of the Armies that fight the Barbarians.
This title was first conferred on Yoritomo of the Minamoto family, who
destroyed the Tairas. The long succession of military regents of Japan, after this date, were called Shoguns, and of them, the Minamotos reigned in Kamakura, the
Ashikagas in Kyoto, and the Tokugawas in Yedo (Tokio).
Sakti. - A Sanscrit word meaning force or power,
the cosmic energy. It is always symbolised by the feminine, as Durga, Kali, and
others. All women are supposed to be its embodiment.
Sûtras. - Sûtra, in Sanscrit, means thread,
and is
a term applied to certain of the
ancient texts, which consist of aphorisms or part-aphorisms, and are
necessarily obscure by reason of their conciseness. They belong to the old
system of memorising, and are really a series of suggestions covering the whole
ground of an argument, in which catch sentence is intended to revive the memory
of certain steps. The corresponding word in Chinese is warp, that which
is to be woven upon.