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From Revolutionary to Semi-Bureaucrat: The “Regularisation” of Cadres*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2009

Extract

When the victorious Tokugawa rulers of early seventeenth-century Japan brought an end to decades of warfare, the warrior class, the samurai, no longer had any wars to fight. However, the ideals of the samurai warrior did not die quickly, and new generations of samurai continued to learn the “martial arts” and to give obeisance to the model of the loyal and fearless warrior. In fact, however, under peaceful Tokugawa rule, the samurai gradually became an administrator-bureaucrat and took up the study of the “literary arts” which were more suited to his daily activities than studies of the martial arts.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1967

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References

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