Ikegami-Sone Yayoi Settlement Reconstruction - ca. 400 BCE
Ikegami-Sone — A Yayoi Settlement Reconstruction - ca. 400 BCE
Edward's Osaka Castle Walks - mythic‑history edition

The Yayoi Age in Japan
Parallel Histories of China and the Korean Peninsula

China
Japan (Yayoi Period)
Korean Peninsula
Key Interactions & Influences
China
Japan (Yayoi Period)
Korean Peninsula
Early Transition (1000–400 BCE)
c. 1000–800 BCE Late Western Zhou Dynasty
Zhou Order in Decline
Regional lords grow in power. Iron tools and advanced bronze ware become widespread in north China.
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c. 1000–800 BCE
Late Jōmon → Early Yayoi Transition
Gradual shift to settled life in Kyushu and western Japan. Experimentation with plant cultivation; continued use of Jōmon pottery traditions.
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c. 1000–800 BCE Mumun Pottery Period
Farming & Early Social Stratification
Farming (millet, beans) spreads. Distinctive Mumun pottery culture expands across the peninsula. Early social stratification emerges.
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Farming & Pottery Transfer Continent to Japan Wet-Rice Agriculture Arrives
c. 800–400 BCE Spring & Autumn → Warring States
States Compete for Dominance
Iron technology advances rapidly. Urban centers, trade networks, and writing (Chinese characters) expand as regional states vie for power.
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c. 800–400 BCE
Beginnings of the Yayoi Period
Wet-rice agriculture is fully introduced from the Asian continent (via Korea/China). New tools, polished stone, and simple bronze objects appear.
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c. 800–400 BCE
Gojoseon Emerges
Gojoseon is established (traditionally c. 2333 BCE). Iron culture spreads, and interaction with Chinese states increases in the Liao River basin.
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Expansion & Chiefdoms (400 BCE – 9 BCE)
c. 400–221 BCE Late Warring States
Philosophies & Armies
Philosophies flourish (Confucianism, Legalism). Regional states build large armies and fortifications. Trade across long-distance routes thrives.
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c. 400–221 BCE
Yayoi Communities Expand
Villages grow; irrigation intensifies. Weaving and metallurgy (bronze, copper) develop. Social hierarchies begin to form.
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c. 400–221 BCE
Jin Confederacy (Mahan)
Early confederations (Mahan, Jin, Byeonhan) form in the south. Iron tools and wet-rice farming spread further.
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221–206 BCE Qin Dynasty (Unification)
Qin Shi Huang Unifies China
Unification in 221 BCE; standardizes weights, measures, coins, and writing. Begins roads and Great Wall construction.
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221–206 BCE
Chiefdoms Take Shape
Wealth differentiation is visible in burials containing bronze mirrors, jewelry, and imported goods. Regional leaders (kuni no miyatsuko - 国造) emerge.
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221–206 BCE
Gojoseon under Qin Pressure
Qin campaigns north of the Yalu river; Gojoseon is weakened but survives. Exchanges and movements across the peninsula increase.
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Metallurgy & Trade Links Bronze Mirrors & Iron Tools Imported to Japan
206–9 BCE (inc. 108 BCE) Han Dynasty (Early Western Han)
Han Influence Expands
Liu Bang establishes Han. Restores and expands trade routes (incl. Silk Road). Silk, lacquer, bronze, and iron goods circulate widely. Han attacks and conquers Wiman Gojoseon (108 BCE).
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206–9 BCE
Bronze Culture Flourishes
Large numbers of bronze mirrors from the continent arrive. Iron tools become more common. Exchange with distant regions (Shikoku, Kyushu, Korea).
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206–9 BCE (inc. 108 BCE)
Han Influence & Four Commanderies
Han conquers Wiman Gojoseon (108 BCE) and establishes the Four Commanderies (Lelang, etc.) in the north. Iron, bronze, writing, and administrative systems transmit to local elites.
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Complex Societies & State Formation (9 CE – 3rd Century CE)
9–23 CE Xin Dynasty (Wang Mang)
Wang Mang's Reforms
Wang Mang attempts land redistribution and issues new currency; a brief interregnum before the Later Han.
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9–23 CE
Complex Societies Develop
Large moated settlements appear. Rice surpluses support specialists and craft production.
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9–23 CE
Continued Continental Exchange
The presence of the Four Commanderies acts as a major channel for technology, people, and goods toward the southern peninsula and Japan across the sea.
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25–57 CE Later Han (Eastern Han)
Maritime Trade Expands
Confucianism becomes state ideology. Maritime trade via Guangdong and along the coasts expands.
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25–57 CE
Trade Networks Intensify
Active exchange of goods and ideas across the East China Sea. Advanced iron tools and irrigation spread.
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25–57 CE
Rise of Goguryeo
Goguryeo founded (traditionally 37 BCE). Strengthens in the north; begins expansion.
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57–108 CE Han Prosperity
Population and Trade Grow
Maritime links to Southeast Asia flourish (Nanhai trade). Formal diplomatic contacts with Japanese polities commence, establishing a foundation of exchange.
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57–108 CE
Early Diplomatic Contact
Powerful polities emerge in Kyushu and Kinai. In 57 CE, the King of Na receives a gold seal from the Han Emperor. In 107 CE, King Suishou of Wa sends 160 captives as tribute to the Han court, establishing crucial diplomatic ties.
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57–108 CE
Baekje and Silla Emerge
Baekje (18 BCE) in the west; Silla (57 BCE) in the southeast. Regional states begin to take definitive shape in the south.
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Writing & Administration Exchange of people, technologies, and ideas connected East Asia Religion & Ideas
1st–2nd centuries CE Later Han Continued
Buddhism Begins to Spread
Maritime trade continues. Buddhism begins to spread from China (1st century CE).
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1st–2nd centuries CE
The Civil War of Wa
Polities consolidate and clash for dominance. In the late 2nd century, the archipelago is engulfed in the "Wakoku Tairan" (Civil War of Wa), a prolonged period of conflict that ultimately forces the chiefdoms to seek a unified ruler.
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1st–2nd centuries CE
Three Kingdoms Developing
Goguryeo, Baekje, and Silla compete and grow. Iron production and trade expand.
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2nd–3rd centuries CE Late Han Decline
Authority Weakens
Corruption and uprisings weaken Han authority, setting the stage for fracture.
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2nd–3rd centuries CE
Queen Himiko & Yamatai
Following decades of war, Queen Himiko is chosen to rule the Yamatai confederacy. In 238 CE, she sends envoys to the Chinese Wei dynasty, receiving the title "Queen of Wa, Friendly to Wei" alongside 100 bronze mirrors. Social complexity peaks.
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2nd–3rd centuries CE
Regional States Flourish
Territorial expansion and diplomacy with China increase significantly.
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3rd century CE (late) Three Kingdoms Period
Wei, Shu, and Wu
Wei, Shu, and Wu divide China (220 CE). An era of both immense turbulence and rapid innovation.
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3rd century CE (late)
Transition to Kofun Period
After Himiko's death (c. 248 CE), large keyhole-shaped kofun (tumuli) begin to be built for emerging rulers. Iron, centralized authority, and horse culture advance rapidly.
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3rd century CE (late)
Toward Unified Kingdoms
Goguryeo, Baekje, and Silla strengthen the foundational institutions that will shape later Korea.
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Continue the Story at Osaka Castle

The arrival of rice agriculture, metalworking, and continental migrants during the Yayoi period didn’t just transform Japan — it reshaped the very ridge where Osaka Castle now stands. Villages expanded along the coastline, rivers and lakes. New technologies like metal flowed through its natural harbors, and emerging clans began competing for the power.

If you’d like to follow how these Yayoi innovations set the stage for Osaka’s rise — from early settlements to the political struggles that defined the region — Before Japan had a Name traces 7,000 years of that story across the same ground where it unfolded.