Emperor Kotoku made innovations, imitated the Tang system and moved towards centralization. Introduce the land equalization system and rent adjustment system, implement the household registration bookkeeping system, refer to the Tang order to compile the Dabao order code, and plan the two cities of Ping 'an and Pingcheng according to the layout of Chang 'an City. Japan sent envoys to the Tang Dynasty for thirteen times, and the size of each mission was more than 100. In addition to envoys and sailors, there are also overseas students, scholars, doctors, acoustics people, jade students, forging, casting and skilled workers.
Japanese celebrities who visited the Tang Dynasty included Kibi No Asomi Makibi and Abe Zhongma Road, overseas students and monks Konghai and Ren Yuan. Konghai is the author of Wen Jing and Mi Fei and the first Japanese Chinese dictionary, named Transfer to Vientiane. In order to seek Buddhism, Ren Yuan traveled to many counties in the Tang Dynasty and brought back a large number of Buddhist scriptures and implements from Japan. Wei, a Buddhist monk of Baekje, spread the Jingchu Nuo dance he learned in the Tang Dynasty to Japan, and called it a "witch". Japanese characters Hiragana and Katakana also evolved from China's cursive script and regular script radicals respectively.
At the invitation of Japanese monks, monk Jian Zhen went to Japan for six times and finally succeeded. He brought Buddhist scriptures, which promoted the spread of China culture and the prosperity of Buddhism in Japan.
Extended data:
Japan at that time
After the establishment of the Japanese imperial system, it has been absorbing culture from the Asian continent through the countries on the Korean Peninsula. In 587 AD, Suwoz, the leader of the Hao nationality, defeated the Ministry of Sports, assassinated the emperor in 592 AD, and made Queen Tanya emperor and regent. The Japanese entered the Asuka period. Prince Yi Sheng established twelve official posts and promulgated Article 17 of the Constitution, trying to establish a country with the emperor as the center. After the death of the prince, the Su family was in power for a long time.
In 645, eldest brother, prince and Nakatomino Kamatari assassinated the Soviet Union and seized power because of "regime change". Prince Emperor Kotoku, the eldest brother, succeeded to the throne, carried out the reform of modernization, imitated the political system of Tang Dynasty in China, and tried to create a country ruled by law. In 7 10, Emperor Yuan and Ming moved the capital to Pingchengjing, Japan entered Nara era, and the country ruled by law became more and more mature. At this time, the territory of the Yamato regime gradually expanded, conquering parts of Northeast China and South Kyushu.
In the late Nara era, the political situation was turbulent and the legal system was loose. In 794, Emperor Kanmu moved its capital to Heian Jing (present-day Kyoto), and the period from then to the establishment of the Kamakura shogunate 1 192 was Heian period, during which Japanese pseudonyms and national culture were formed. The newly written "Records of Surnames among Xie Nian" records 1 182 clans living in Kyoto and Kiki, among which 163 in Han, 104 in Baekje and 4 1 in Koguryo.
At the end of Heian, Genji, whose sphere of influence was in the east, and Shi Ping, whose sphere of influence was in the west, formed two huge military forces. 1 159, there was a rebellion in Pingzhi. Although Genji's strength has been greatly weakened, it still has great strength in the East. Due to the Austrian separatist forces such as Genji and Fujiwara, and the minister Zheng Tai who was dissatisfied with the overhead court, civil wars were frequent. After a long war between Yuan and Ping, Ping was driven out of Kyoto and moved to Fuyuan, and was completely annihilated in the Battle of Tampu in 1 185.