Alternate Attendance Parades in the Japanese Domain of Satsuma, Seventeenth to Eighteenth Centuries: Pottery, Power and Foreign Spectacle

Q2 Arts and Humanities
Rebekah Clements
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Abstract

Abstract This study examines the practice of ‘alternate attendance’ (sankin kōtai), in which the daimyo lords of Tokugawa Japan (1600–1868) marched with their retainers between their home territories and the shogunal capital of Edo, roughly once a year. Research on alternate attendance has focused on the meaning of daimyo processions outside their domains (han), along Japan's highways and in the city of Edo. Here I argue that, even as daimyo embarked upon a journey to pay obeisance to the shogun, the ambiguous nature of sovereignty in early modern Japan meant that alternate attendance could also be used for a local agenda, ritually stamping the daimyo's territory with signs of his dominance, much like what has been highlighted in the study of royal processions in world history. I focus on the seventeenth to eighteenth centuries, providing a case study of visits made by the Shimazu family, lords of Satsuma domain, to a village of Korean potters within their territory, whose antecedents had been brought as captives during the Imjin War of 1592–8. During daimyo visits, a relationship of mutual benefit and fealty between the Shimazu and the villagers was articulated through gift-giving, banqueting, dance and displays of local wares. This in turn was used to consolidate Shimazu power in their region.
17至18世纪日本萨摩地区的交替出席游行:陶器、权力和外国奇观
本研究考察了“交替出勤”(sankin kōtai)的做法,即日本德川(1600-1868)的名门领主与他们的随从大约每年一次在他们的家乡和江户幕府首都之间行进。关于交替出席的研究主要集中在他们的领地(汉族)之外的大名游行的意义上,沿着日本的高速公路和江户市。在这里,我认为,即使大名踏上了拜拜幕府将军的旅程,近代早期日本主权的模糊本质意味着交替出席也可以用于地方议程,在大名的领土上印上他统治的标志,就像世界历史上研究皇室游行时所强调的那样。我把重点放在17世纪到18世纪,提供了一个案例研究,关于萨摩地区的领主岛津家族访问他们领土内的一个朝鲜陶工村,这些陶工的祖先是在1592-8年的临津战争期间被俘虏的。在大名来访期间,岛津人和村民之间的互惠和忠诚关系通过赠送礼物、宴会、舞蹈和展示当地商品得以表达。这反过来又被用来巩固岛津在他们地区的权力。
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来源期刊
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: The Royal Historical Society has published the highest quality scholarship in history for over 150 years. A subscription includes a substantial annual volume of the Society’s Transactions, which presents wide-ranging reports from the front lines of historical research by both senior and younger scholars, and two volumes from the Camden Fifth Series, which makes available to a wider audience valuable primary sources that have hitherto been available only in manuscript form.
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