The Kofun period is a critical stage …

Years: 244 - 387

The Kofun period is a critical stage in Japan's evolution toward a more cohesive and recognized state.

This society is most developed in the easternmost part of the Inland Sea (Seto Naikai), and its armies establish a foothold on the southern tip of Korea.

Japan's rulers of the time even petition the Chinese court for confirmation of royal titles; the Chinese, in turn, recognize Japanese military control over parts of the Korean Peninsula

The earliest written records about Japan are from Chinese sources from this period.

Wa (the Japanese pronunciation of an early Chinese name for Japan) was first mentioned in CE 57.

Early Chinese historians described Wa as a land of hundreds of scattered tribal communities, not the unified land with a seven hundred-year tradition as laid out in the Nihongi, which puts the foundation of Japan at 660 BCE.

Third-century Chinese sources report that the Wa people live on raw vegetables, rice, and fish served on bamboo and wooden trays, have vassal-master relations, collect taxes, have provincial granaries and markets, clap their hands in worship (something still done in Shinto shrines), have violent succession struggles, build earthen grave mounds, and observe mourning.

Himiko, a female ruler of an early political federation known as Yamatai, flourishes during the third century.

While Himiko reigns as spiritual leader, her younger brother carries out affairs of state, which included diplomatic relations with the court of the Chinese Wei Dynasty (CE 220-65).

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