Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1600 | Battle of Sekigahara. Tokugawa Ieyasu defeats a coalition of daimyo and establishes hegemony over most of Japan |
| British and Dutch East India companies founded |
1603 | Tokugawa Ieyasu granted title of shogun |
|
|
1605 | Tokugawa Ieyasu resigns as shogun, and is succeeded by his son Hidetada |
|
|
1607 |
| Korean Yi Dynasty sends an embassy to Japan | Jamestown settlement begin in America |
1609 | Dutch trade begins with the establishment of a trading post in Hirado |
|
|
1611 | Ryukyu Islands become a vassal state of Satsuma domain |
|
|
1612 | Shogunate issues directives aimed at restricting Christianity |
|
|
1615 | Battle of Osaka. Tokugawa Ieyasy seiges Osaka Castle, all opposition from forces loyal to the Toyotomi family. Tokugawa authority becomes paramount throughout Japan |
|
|
1616 | Tokugawa Ieyasu dies |
| William Shakespere dies |
| European trade limited to ports of Hirado and Nagasaki |
|
|
1620 |
|
| The Mayflower lands in New Plymouth, Massachusetts |
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1623 | Tokugawa Iemitsu becomes the third shogun |
|
|
1624 | English factory at Hirado closes. Spanish ships are prohibited from calling at Japanese ports; |
|
|
| Persecution of Christians intensifies |
|
|
1629 |
|
| Colony of Massachusetts founded |
1635 | Tokugawa Iemitsu formalizes the system of mandatory alternate residence ("sankin kotai") in Edo |
|
|
1636 | Buildings on the artificial island of Dejima at Nagasaki are completed | Dutch settle in Ceylon | Harvard University established |
1637 | Shimabara Uprising (1637-38) mounted by overtaxed peasants |
| First printing press established in America |
1639 | Edicts establishing National Seclusion (Sakoku Rei) are completed. All Westerners except the Dutch are prohibited from entering Japan |
|
|
1642 |
|
| English Civil War begins |
1644 |
| Manchu Dynasty begins in China |
|
1657 | Meireki fire kills more than 100,000 people in Edo |
|
|
1660 |
|
| Restoration of monarchy in England |
1661 |
|
| Louis XIV assumes power in France |
1681 |
|
| First street (oil) lamps appear in London |
1683 |
| Dutch traders are admitted to Canton, China |
|
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1688 | Beginning of the Genroku era (1688-1704), a time of cultural flowering known in the theatrical art of kabuki and bunraku |
|
|
1702 |
|
| War of Spanish Succession begins (continues to 1713) |
1703 | Forty-Seven Ronin Incident |
|
|
1707 |
|
| Act of Union unites England and Scotland |
1720 |
| Tibet becomes a Chinese protectorate | Spain occupies Texas (until 1722) |
1773 |
|
| Boston Tea Party |
1774 | The anatomical text Kaitai shinsho, the first complete Japanese translation of a Western medical work, is published by Sugita Gempaku and Maeno Ryotaku |
| |
1775 |
|
| American War of Independence begins (to 1783) |
1787 | Matsudaira Sadanobu becomes senior shogunal councillor (roju) and institutes the Kansei Reforms |
|
|
1788 |
| British settlement of Australia begins |
|
1789 | Shogunate issues debt moratorium (kienrei) to save retainers from destitution |
| French Revolution |
|
|
| U.S. Post Office established |
1792 | Adam Erikovich Laxman arrives at Nemuro in eastern Ezo (now Hokkaido). |
| Denmark becomes the first country to abolish the slave trade |
1794 |
|
| Slavery abolished in French colonies |
1799 | Shogunate gains administrative control over the southern part of Ezo |
|
|
1803 |
|
| Louisiana Purchase |
1804 | Russian envoy Nikolai Petrovich Rezanov reaches Nagasaki, and unsuccessfully seeks the establishment of trade relations with Japan |
| Napoleon crowns himself Emperor of France |
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1806 |
|
| Official end of the Holy Roman Empire |
1808 | Phaeton Incident: British warship Phaeton enters Nagasaki Harbor and exacerbates fears of Western encroachment |
|
|
1823 |
|
| United States Monroe Doctrine |
1825 | Shogunate issues the Order for the Repelling of Foreign Ships |
|
|
1833 | Tempo Famine |
| Slavery abolished in the British Empire |
1837 | Rebellion of Oshio Heihachiro |
|
|
| Morrison Incident: U.S. merchant ship carrying Japanese castaways is fired upon as it attempts to enter Uraga Bay near Edo (now Tokyo) and Kagoshima Bay in Kyushu |
|
|
1839 |
| Opium War (1839-1842) |
|
1841 | Tempo Reforms | Great Britain claims sovereignty over Hong Kong |
|
| Nakahama Manjiro, a fisherman shipwrecked on a Pacific island, is rescued by an American whaler and taken to the United States | New Zeland becomes a British colony |
|
1844 | Dutch warship arrives in Nagasaki with a letter from the king of the Netherlands advising the shogunate to open the country to Western trade | U.S. and China sign Treaty of Peace, Amity, and Commerce |
|
1846 | Shogunate and domains give greater attention to coastal defenses as foreign ships and whaling vessels enter Japanese territorial waters |
| Mexican War begins (to 1848) |
1848 |
|
| Gold discovered in California |
1850 |
| Taiping Rebellion breaks out in China (1850-64) | California joins the Union |
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1853 | Four warships of the US East India Squadron, commanded by Commodore Matthew Perry, enter Uraga Bay |
|
|
1854 | Treaty of Peace and Amity between the United States and the Empire of Japan (Kanagawa Treaty) signed; similar treaties concluded with Great Britain (1854), Russia (1855), and the Netherlands (1856) |
|
|
1855 | Ansei earthquake kills more than 5000 people in Edo |
|
|
1856 | US Consul General Townsend Harris arrives at Shimoda to initiate trade negotiations with the shogunate |
|
|
| Yoshida Shoin teaches imperial loyalist philosophy to young samurai in Choshu domain |
|
|
1858 | Ansei commercial treaties are concluded between the Shogunate and the United States, the Netherlands, Russia, Great Britain, and France | Treaty of Tientsin concludes Anglo-Chinese War (1856-58) |
|
| Ii Naosuke becomes senior adviser (tairo) to the shogun, and initiates the Ansei Purge of his political enemies | Government of India Act formally transfer control over India to the British Crown |
|
1859 | British merchant Thomas Blake Glover arrives in Japan and supplies military arms to the domains of Satsuma and Choshu | French forces occupy Saigon | Construction of the Suez Canal begins (continues until 1869) |
1860 | Ii Naosuke assassinated |
|
|
| Shogunal mission departs for the United States |
|
|
1861 |
|
| Unification of Italy |
1862 | Shogun Tokugawa Iemochi marries Princess Kazu, sister of Emperor Komei in an attempt to ease the mounting tension between the Shogunate and the Imperial Court (kobugattai movement) |
| United States Civil War |
| Shogunate rescinds the system of mandatory alternate attendance |
|
|
1863 | British warships attack the Satsuma domain in retaliation for the murder by Satsuma retainers of an Englishman the previous year | Cambodia is made a protectorate of France | Abraham Lincoln delivers the Gettysburg Address |
1864 | Pro-imperial and Pro-shogunal forces clash in Mito domain |
|
|
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1866 | Shogunal army engages forces of Choshu domain in the second of the Choshu Expeditions; the Shogunate's failure to bring the campaign to a successful conclusion severely damages its prestige |
| Prussia defeats Austria in the Six Weeks War |
| Satsuma and Choshu form a secret alliance against the shogunate |
|
|
1867 | The last shogun, Tokugawa Yoshinobu returns political authority to Mutsuhito (Emperor Meiji) who changes the name of the era to Meiji (or enlightened rule) |
| Russia sells Alaska to the U.S. for $7.2 million |
1868 | Restoration of Imperial rule (Osei Fukko) declared | U.S. President Andrew Johnson is impeached for violating the the Tenure-of-Office Act, and is acquitted by the Senate | |
| Fragmented Tokugawa forces and dissident domains lodge the Boshin War |
|
|
| Emperor Meiji moves from Kyoto to Edo, now named Tokyo, or Eastern Capital |
|
|
1869 | Daimyo return domain lands and population registers to the Emperor. Domains are designated public land with uniform procedures for tax collection. Daimyo are appointed as local governors and receive government stipends |
| United States trans-continental railroad completed |
| Samurai divided into two ranks: a) shizoku; b) sotsu, and their stipends are reduced |
|
|
| Ezo is renamed Hokkaido |
|
|
1870 | Commoners (heimin) are permitted to assume surnames |
| Franco-Prussian War (1870-71) |
| Telegraph line links Tokyo and Yokohama, postal service is established a year later |
|
|
1871 | Domains converted to Prefectures (72 prefectures, later reduced to 46). Daimyo (formerly domain governors) moved to Tokyo. Prefectural governors appointed by the central government |
| Germany is unified |
| Samurai are permitted to cut their topknots and cast off their swords; samurai and aristocrats are permitted to marry commoners; the designations eta and hinin, assigned to the lowest social classes are abolished |
|
|
| First Japanese-language daily newspaper, Yokohama Mainichi Shimbun, begins publication |
|
|
1871-73 | Iwakura mission departs Japan on an 18-month tour to study the social systems of the United States and European nations |
|
|
1872 | Universal compulsory elementary education established |
|
|
| Army and Navy ministries established |
|
|
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1873 | Gregorian calendar adopted |
|
|
| Conscription Ordinance instituted: 3 years active, 4 years reserve service for men. However, the system includes loopholes: a) ¥270 payment; b)exemption for government officials, students, household heads, physicians and physically disabled |
|
|
| Samurai stipend taxed; converted to government bonds in 1876 |
|
|
| Home Ministry established |
|
|
| Seikanron debates divides new Meiji government |
|
|
1874 | Taiwan Expedition. Japan gains recognition of its claim to the Ryukyu Islands |
| Great Britain annexes the Fiji Islands |
| Meirokusha Society founded |
|
|
| Itagaki Taisuke submits the Tosa Memorial calling for the establishment of an elected national assembly |
|
|
1874-77 | Samurai protest movements: Saga Rebellion (1874); Shimpuren (1876); Akizuki (1876); Hagi Rebellion (1876); Satsuma Rebellion (1877) |
|
|
1875 | Japan signs the Treaty of St. Petersburg with Russia: Japan claims Kurile Islands and relinquishes Sakhalin Islands to Russia |
| William Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan produce their first operetta |
1876 | Treaty of Kangwa: Japan gains extra-territorial rights in Korea | Korea gains independence |
|
1878 | Home Minister Okubo Toshimichi assassinated by disaffected former samurai of Satsuma |
| Paris World Exhibition |
| Prefectural assemblies established |
|
|
1879 | Ryukyu Islands incorporated into Japan and becomes Okinawa prefecture |
|
|
1881 | Jiyuto (Liberal Party) formed by Itagaki Taisuke |
|
|
1881-85 | Matsukata Deflation |
|
|
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1882 | Kaishinto (Progessive Party) formed by Okuma Shigenobu | Korea and the U.S. establish formal diplomatic relations | Great Britain occupies Cairo |
1883-85 |
| Sino-French War; China recognizes Vietnam as a protectorate of France |
|
1885 | Cabinet system adopted with Ito Hirobumi as the first Prime Minister; the new cabinet supersedes the Dajokan (Grand Council of State) as the central organ of the Japanese state |
| Canadian Pacific Railway completed |
| Tianjin (Tientsin) Convention: agreement reached between China and Japan concerning their interests in Korea |
|
|
1886 |
| Great Britain annexes Burma |
|
1888 | Privy Council established |
| Eastman produces Kodak camera |
1889 | Meiji Constitution promulgated |
| Gustave Eiffel completes Tower in Paris |
| First Election law of 1889 limits voting to the House of Representatives to men over 25 who paid ¥15 or more in national tax (about 1% of the population) |
| First American skyscraper built in Chicago |
1890 | Imperial Rescript on Education |
|
|
1893 | Artist Kuroda Seiki returns from study in Paris and introduces impressionism to Japan | Tonghak Rebellion, a peasant uprising, breaks out in Korea. (China and Japan intervene in 1894, commencing the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895) |
|
|
| France annexes Laos |
|
1894 | Anglo-Japanese Commercial Treaty abolishes extraterritoriality and restores partial tariff autonomy to Japan | Sino-Japanese War (1894-95) |
|
1895 | Treaty of Shimonoseki concludes Sino-Japanese War: China recognizes the independence of Korea; Japan gains Formosa (Taiwan), and Pescadores Islands; Liaodong Peninsula now controlled by Japan (Japan gives this up a few months later, only to have Russia gain the leasehold in 1898); China pays ¥364 million indemnity; and Japan gains same extra-territorial rights as Western countries | Queen Min of Korea is assassinated by Japanese troops |
|
1898 | Jiyuto and Kaishinto become Kenseito (Constitutional Party); later becomes Minseito in 1927 | Hundred Days of Reform of Kang Yuwei | Spanish-American War: Spain cedes Puerto Rico, Philippines, Guam to the United States; United States annexes Hawaii |
1899 | Extra-territoriality privileges (in place since 1858) removed by foreign governments |
|
|
1900 | Rikken Seiyukai (Friends of Constitutional Government Party) formed by Ito Hirobumi | Boxer Rebellion in China |
|
1901 | Future Emperor Hirohito born (first emperor since 1758 not born of an imperial concubine) |
| Commonwealth of Australia established |
1902 | Anglo-Japanese Alliance signed |
|
|
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1904-05 | Russo-Japanese War. Treaty of Portsmouth in 1905 concludes hostilities: Russia recognizes Japan's interests in Korea; Japan gains southern part of Sakhalin Islands; Russian lease on Liaodong Peninsula; and South Manchurian Railway line between Port Arthur and Mukden |
|
|
1905 | Hibiya Incident | Korea becomes a Japanese protectorate. In 1910, Japan's role is expanded and Korea is annexed |
|
1906 | Japan Socialist Party formed | South Manchurian Railway incorporated | Major earthquake hits San Francisco |
1907 |
| King Kojong of Korea is forced to resigned, and Japan gains control of Korea's internal affairs | U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt bans Japanese from immigrating to the United States |
1908 | Japan gains U.S. recognition of its special status in Manchuria |
| First Model T Ford is made |
1909 | Ito Hirobumi assassinated on his arrival in Manchuria by a Korean nationalist |
| Washington D.C. receives 2,000 flowering cherry saplings from Japan |
1910 | High Treason Incident: Kotoku Shusui implicated in a plot to assassinate the Meiji Emperor | Korea is made a colony of Japan | Beginning of Mexican revolution (to 1917) |
1911 | Tariffs imposed by the Western powers in the "unequal treaties" are abolished | Republic of China established in 1912 with Sun Yat-Sen as president | Roald Amundsen first to reach the South Pole |
1912 | Meiji Emperor, Mutsuhito dies. His son Yoshihito ascends to the throne marking the beginning of the Taisho period (1912-26) | Yuan Shikai becomes president of the Republic of China (1912-16) | SS Titanic sinks |
1914-18 | During WWI, Japan sides with the "Allies"; seizes German island colonies in the Pacific and German concessions in the Shandong peninsula |
|
|
1915 | Twenty-One Demands addressed to China |
|
|
1916 |
| China is controlled by warlords (1916-21) |
|
1917 |
|
| Bolshevik Revolution |
1918 | Hara Takashi (Kei) becomes the first Party Prime Minister |
| Women over 30 given the right to vote in Great Britain |
| High rice prices incites riots throughout Japan |
|
|
1918-32 | Era of Party Cabinet rule (exception: "transcendental" cabinets of 1922-24) |
|
|
1919 | Japan wins German concessions in China and the Pacific from the Treaty of Versailles, but its request for inclusion of a racial equality clause is denied | March First Movement in Korea |
|
1920 | Tax qualification for suffrage reduced to ¥3 (still restricted to men) |
| Women gain the right to vote in the United States |
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1921 |
| Chinese Communist Party founded |
|
1922 | Japan Communist Party established |
|
|
| Elder statesman (genro) Yamagata Aritomo dies |
|
|
1923 | Elder statesman Matsukata Masayoshi dies. Saionji Kimmochi, who dies in 1940, is the last surviving genro |
|
|
| Great Kanto earthquake |
|
|
1924 | Japan Communist Party disbanded and re-organized underground in 1926 |
| Vladimir Ilyich Lenin dies |
1925 | Universal suffrage for men | Korean Communist Party founded | Mein Kampf published |
| Peace Preservation Law |
|
|
1926 | Taisho Emperor dies. His son, Hirohito, ascends the throne marking the beginning of the Showa period (1926-1989) | Northern Expedition in China (1926-28) |
|
1927 | Severe depression (in place since the 1920s) causes many commercial banks to collapse |
| Charles Lindbergh's first solo flight across the Atlantic |
1928 | Japanese Kwantung Army assassinate Chang Tso-lin, warlord of Manchuria in an attempt to justify the presence of Japanese troops |
|
|
1929 | Japan returns to the gold standard |
| United States stock market crashes |
early 1930s | Keynesian financial reforms implemented: (1) devaluation of the yen to reduce price of Japanese goods; (2) interest rates reduced in half to stimulate private economic investment; (3) government spending on military procurements and public works increased |
|
|
1930 | Prime Minister Hamaguchi Osachi mortally wounded by a right-wing radical |
|
|
1931 | Manchurian Incident: The Kwantung Army dynamites a section of the South Manchurian Railroad in Mukden, and claim that it was caused by Chinese bandits. This is used to justify the subsequent takeover of Mukden, and Japan's move into southern Manchuria. |
| Empire State Building built in New York |
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1932 | Shanghai Incident: Japan sends troops to Shanghai to 'protect' Japanese citizens | Kim Il Sung active in anti-Japanese guerilla warfare in Manchuria |
|
| Japan establishes the puppet-state of Manchuko (in Manchuria) with former Chinese Emperor Pu-Yi as the head of state |
|
|
| May 15th Incident: Prime Minister Inukai Tsuyoshi is assassinated during an attempted coup by young naval officers |
|
|
| End of Party Cabinents |
|
|
1933 | Kwantung Army moves into Inner Mongolia |
| Franklin Roosevelt introduces the New Deal |
| Japan withdraws from the League of Nations |
| Adolf Hitler becomes Chancellor of Germany |
1934 | Washington Naval Treaty of 1922 and London Naval Treaty of 1930 abrogated by Japan | Chinese Communists' Long March to Yan'an (1934-35) | Discovery of nuclear fission |
1936 | 226 Incident: Young military officers launch an abortive coup d'etat |
|
|
| Japan withdraws from the London Naval Conference |
|
|
1937 | Second Sino-Japanes War (1937-45) | Japanese colonial government institutes wartime assimiliation and mobilization | Golden Gate Bridge completed in San Francisco |
| Nanking Massacre |
|
|
1938 | National Mobilization Law: Government provides subsidies for war production; controls activitities of civil and labor organizations, corporations, news media outlets; and limits industrial and consumer commodities, contracts, and price |
| Germany occupies Austria |
1939 | Nomonhan Incident: Japanese and Soviet troops clash at the Manchurian and Mongolian border; this incident follows a clash a year earlier on the borders between Korea, Manchuria, and Siberia |
| Germany invades Czechoslovakia and Poland |
| Unions and other worker organizations are dissolved |
|
|
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1940 | Tripartite Pact signed by Germany, Japan, and Italy |
| Battle of Britain |
1941 | Japan signs a neutrality pact with the Soviet Union | Japan moves troops into southern French IndoChina. | Germany invades the Soviet Union |
| Prime Minister Konoe Fumimaro resigns; General Tojo Hideki becomes Prime Minister |
| Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor |
1942 | Japan gains control of Dutch East Indies |
| Battle of Midway |
1943 | Cairo Declaration proclaims that Japan will be stripped of all land seized or occupied since 1914 |
| Surrender of German army at Stalingrad |
1944 |
|
| D-Day landing in Normandy |
1945 | American troops land in Okinawa |
| Yalta Conference: Stalin secretly pledges to Churchill and Roosevelt that the Soviet Union will enter the war against Japan once Germany is defeated |
| Soviet Union informs Japan that it will not renew its neutrality pact |
| Germany surrenders after Hitler commits suicide |
| Potsdam Declaration calls for Japanese "unconditional surrender" or its "utter destruction" |
|
|
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
8/6/1945 | Atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima. Another bomb is dropped on Nagasaki days later. |
|
|
8/8/1945 | Soviet Union declares war on Japan |
|
|
8/15/1945 | Emperor announces end of hostilities; words such as "surrender" and "defeat" are not mentioned |
|
|
9/2/1945 | Instrument of Surrender signed on USS Missouri; Allied Occupation under General Douglas MacArthur as SCAP (Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers) begins |
|
|
Oct-45 | SCAP opens its office in Tokyo. Fundamental civil liberties granted. Trade Union Law guarantees the right to organize, bargain collectively, and strike |
|
|
Nov-45 | Political parties, including Japan Communist Party and Japan Socialist Party, are re-established |
|
|
1946 | Emperor Showa renounces his divinity | Civil war erupts in China (continues until 1949) | Construction of first electronic digital computer |
| May 1946: Yoshida Shigeru (of the Liberal Party) becomes Prime Minister |
|
|
| Constitution promulgated. It goes into effect on May 3, 1947 |
|
|
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1947 | General Strike scheduled for February 1 is banned by SCAP |
| U.S. announces the Truman Doctrine |
| Katayama Tetsu (of the Socialist Party) becomes Prime Minister; he resigns in February 1948 |
|
|
1948 | Yoshida Shigeru (of the Liberal Party) becomes Prime Minister (again) | Founding of the Republic of Korea in the southern Korean and the Democratic Republic of Korea under Kim Il Sung in the north | Creation of the State of Israel |
1949 | Dodge Line (anti-inflationary measures) introduced; exchange rate set at ¥360=$1 | Communist victory in China | Communist rule established in Hungary. Creation of West and East Germany |
|
|
| Formation of NATO |
1950 | SCAP orders the creation of a Police Reserves Corps | Korean War breaks out |
|
1951 | President Truman dismisses General MacArthur. General Matthew Ridgeway appointed as SCAP |
|
|
| San Francisco Peace Treaty. Japan regains its status as an independent country and demands for payment of war reparations are henceforth abolished. Japan also signs a mutual security treaty with the United States |
|
|
1952 | End of Allied Occupation of Japan |
| Accession of Elizabeth II of Great Britain |
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1953 |
| Korean War ends in cease fire | Death of Joseph Stalin |
mid 1950s | Minamata disease caused by mercury pollution breaks out in Kumamoto prefecture |
|
|
1955 | Liberal Democratic Party established. Maintains a majority in the Japanese Diet until 1993 |
| Formation of Warsaw Pact |
1956 | Japan admitted to the United Nations |
| Suez Crisis |
1957 | Former War Criminal Kishi Nobusuke becomes Prime Minister |
| Launch of the first space satellite, Sputnik I |
1960 | 1951 mutual security treaty with the U.S. is replaced with a revised treaty of security and mutual cooperation |
|
|
| President Eisenhower's trip to Japan to sign the new treaty is cancelled in the face of popular protest |
|
|
| Ikeda Hayato becomes Prime Minister and announces a income doubling plan |
|
|
1961 |
|
| Berlin Wall built |
1962 |
|
| Cuban Missle Crisis |
1964 | Japan joins the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) | Publication of the Thoughts of Chairman Mao | Civil Rights Bill passed in the United States |
| Summer Olympics held in Tokyo. Bullet train commences operation |
|
|
| Soka Gakkai (a lay Nichiren Buddhist organization) forms the Clean Government Party (Komeito) |
|
|
| Sato Eisaku (half brother of Kishi Nobusuke) becomes Prime Minister |
|
|
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1965 | "Itai-itai" disease caused by cadmium pollution breaks out in Toyama prefecture | Republic of Korea normalizes relations with Japan |
|
|
| Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution in China (to 1976) |
|
1968 | Kawabata Yasunari awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature |
| Martin Luther King Jr. is assassinated |
1972 | Nixon Shocks: U.S. opens relations with China and devalues dollar | East Pakistan becomes Bangladesh |
|
| U.S. returns control of Okinawa (excluding military bases) to Japan. Okinawa becomes the 47th prefecture |
|
|
1973 | First oil crisis (to 1974) |
|
|
1974 | Tanaka Kakuei (Prime Minister since 1972) resigns due to charges of public corruption. Miki Takeo becomes Prime Minister |
| U. S. President Richard Nixon resigns in the wake of the Watergate scandal |
| Ex-Prime Minister Sato Eisaku awarded the Nobel Peace Prize |
|
|
1976 |
| Death of Mao Zedong and Zhou Enlai | Concorde begins transatlantic flights |
1978 |
|
| John Paul II becomes Pope |
1980 | Nakasone Yasuhiro become Prime Minister | Kwangju Massacre in Korea |
|
mid 1980s | Economy surges resulting in a "bubble" of speculative investment and loans |
|
|
1987 | Takeshita Noboru becomes Prime Minister |
|
|
1988 | A 3% consumption tax is instituted | Summer Olympics held in Seoul, Korea |
|
1989 | Showa Emperor dies. His son Akihito ascends to the throne marking the beginning of the Heisei period | Tiananmen demonstrations and crackdown in China | Soviet Union army withdraws from Afghanistan |
| Prime Minister Takeshita resigns following involvement in a political scandal. He is replaced by Uno Sosuke who after two months in office resigns after an affair with a geisha becomes public. He is replaced by Kaifu Toshiki |
| Opening of Berlin Wall |
| Liberal Democratic Party established loses its majority in the Upper House of the Diet |
|
|
1990 |
|
| Reunification of Germany |
1991 | Kiichi Miyazawa becomes Prime Minister |
|
|
1992 | National Self-Defense Force (NSDF) participates in United Nations Peace Keeping Operations |
|
|
1993 | Crown Prince Naruhito marries Owada Masako | Former political dissident Kim Young Sam is elected president of the Republic of Korea |
|
| Liberal Democratic Party loses its majority power in the Diet. Government is headed by a socialist prime minister Murayama Tomiichi) for the first time since 1947 |
|
|
1994 | Oe Kenzaburo awarded Nobel Prize for Literature | Kim Il Sung dies. His son Kim Jong Il succeeds him as president of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea |
|
Year | Japan | Asia | World |
1995 | Earthquake hits Kobe |
|
|
| Adherents of Aum Shinrikyo religion launch a deadly attack on Tokyo subways |
|
|
1996 | Hashimoto Ryutaro (of the LDP) becomes Prime Minister |
|
|
1997 |
| Hong Kong returned to China |
|
|
| Deng Xioping dies |
|
|
| Former political dissident Kim Dae Jung is elected president of the Republic of Korea |
|
1998 | Winter Olympic Games held in Nagano prefecture |
|
|
| Keizo Obuchi becomes Prime Minister |
|
|
1999 | The rising sun flag and the hinomaru anthem are officially declared legal symbols of Japan | Chinese government begins crackdown on the supporters of Falungong movement |
|
| LDP forms a coalition government with the Komeito (Clean Government Party) |
|
|
2000 | Mori Yoshino becomes Prime Minister | Representatives of North (DPRK) and South (ROK) Korea engage in unification talks |
|
| Empress Dowager Nagako dies. She was chosen as Hirohito's wife when she was 14 years old. |
|
|
| Unemployment rate reaches an all-time high of 4.9% |
|
|
2001 | New-born princess to Prince Naruhito and Princess Masako lends attention to revision of the existing Imperial Family Law to allow for female succession to the imperial throne | China enters the World Trade Organization | September 11 attacks on World Trade Center and Pentagon. United States, Britain and allied nations launch war on Taliban and Al Qaeda in Afghanistan |