The Commercial History of Japan, 600–1200

W. Farris
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Abstract

Because Japan was overwhelmingly rural with few consumers, commerce did not play a significant role in the economy or most people’s lives during the six centuries from 600 to 1200. This period may be divided into three phases based upon the nature of commercial relations. The 8th century witnessed a construction boom led by a relatively centralized state. Besides building five capital cities and numerous other governmental and religious structures, the state minted copper cash. Low-ranking bureaucrats traded in lumber, cloth, and other commodities, often for profit. The commercially most advanced region in Japan was in and around the numerous capitals located in the Kinai (Kyoto-Osaka-Nara) region. Interregional trade bound local regions together and was a source of illegal profiteering for officials. Gift-giving and barter dominated the less developed provinces, mostly in eastern Japan. Across the ocean, Japan participated in exchange with China and Korea on a limited basis to 800. Beginning as early as 735, epidemics and famines decimated Japan’s population. The value of copper cash declined, as inflation commenced. Government revenues also dropped. Government-appointed tax farmers garnered tax items for the tiny elite at court, enriching themselves in the process. The Song Dynasty (960–1279) arose in China and began trading with the Japanese elite, providing a spur to Japan’s commercial development for the rest of period. Overseas merchants were forced by Japan’s ruling elite to stop at Dazaifu in northern Kyushu, where Chinese goods could be obtained for Japanese gold. Japan’s depopulation continued unabated, subject to particularly harsh epidemics between 990 and 1050. To reverse flight from the land, the court initiated a two-pronged land system consisting of tax-farmed provincial areas and estates cultivated by sharecroppers and paying rents to capital and local elites. The rents were paid in-kind, and to secure the value of goods such as rice, salt, lacquer, iron, tea, and many other products, values were pegged to a gold standard. Song merchants also received gold for their wares. To buy Japanese raw materials, the Chinese paid with their own copper cash, helping to remonetize the archipelago. By the 1170s, inflation took off in Japan. A Ningbo–Hakata trade route became established for Song merchants, with bulk items such as sulfur, lumber, and mercury traded from Japan to China. By the late 1100s, the warrior family known as the Ise Taira took control of overseas trade with China, bolstering the family’s power at the Kyoto court.
日本商业史,600-1200年
因为日本绝大多数是农村,消费者很少,所以从600年到1200年的六个世纪里,商业在经济或大多数人的生活中没有发挥重要作用。根据商业关系的性质,这一时期可分为三个阶段。公元8世纪,一个相对中央集权的国家掀起了一场建筑热潮。除了建造五个首都城市和许多其他政府和宗教机构外,国家还铸造铜钱。低级官僚进行木材、布料和其他商品的贸易,通常是为了利润。日本商业最发达的地区是位于京乃(京都-大阪-奈良)地区的众多首都及其周围。区域间贸易将地方地区联系在一起,是官员非法牟取暴利的一个来源。送礼和物物交换在欠发达省份占主导地位,主要在日本东部。在大洋彼岸,日本与中国和韩国的交流活动也只有800个。早在735年,流行病和饥荒就使日本人口大量减少。随着通货膨胀的开始,铜钱的价值下降了。政府收入也有所下降。政府指定的税务师为朝廷中为数不多的精英们收集税收项目,在这个过程中使自己富裕起来。宋朝(960-1279)在中国兴起,并开始与日本精英进行贸易,刺激了日本后来的商业发展。日本统治精英迫使海外商人在九州北部的大在府停留,在那里可以用日本黄金换取中国商品。日本的人口减少现象有增无减,但在1990年至1950年期间发生了特别严重的流行病。为了扭转从土地上逃离的局面,朝廷启动了一种双管齐下的土地制度,包括纳税的省级地区和佃农耕种的土地,并向资本和地方精英支付租金。租金以实物支付,为了确保大米、盐、漆器、铁、茶和许多其他产品的价值,价格与金本位挂钩。宋朝商人也可以用他们的商品换取黄金。为了购买日本的原材料,中国人用自己的铜钱支付,帮助群岛重新货币化。到了20世纪70年代,日本开始出现通货膨胀。宋代商人建立了一条宁波-博多贸易路线,将硫磺、木材和汞等大宗商品从日本运往中国。到11世纪晚期,伊势平氏武士家族控制了与中国的海外贸易,巩固了该家族在京都朝廷的权力。
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