There wasn't any emperor, when Tokugawa Ieyasu united Japan, the Edo Period began and Japan isolated itself from the rest of the world. During that time Japan was ruled by shoguns. There were two forms of government, in one the daimyo (feudal lord), ruled a piece of land and he had to swear loyalty to the shogun. In the other form, the shogun ruled with the Bakufu that was like a council who advised the shogun . Both types of government worked together.
After Japan surrendered unconditionally to the US, General MacArthur strongly opposed including the Emperor in any war crimes tribunals. He wanted the responsibility to remain within the Japanese military leadership who were effectively controlling the entire country, and the Emperor as well.
There term 'Emporer' can refer to any Dynastic ruling party, so, in terms of Complete Monarchies, here is a list of Dynastic countries: Saudi Arabia Nepal United Kingdom ( Constitutional ) Many African tribes
Even before dropping the Atomic bombs at Hiroshima and Nagasacki, America and Britain demanded unconditional surrender of the Japanese Nation, with the one exception that the Japanese Emperor could retain his position. After the bombs were dropped and the Emperor of Japan signaled that he wanted peace, the Allies drew up their terms of surrender. In order to assure that the Japanese did not rebuild their military power, the Peace Treaty imposed restrictions requiring the complete disarmament of Japan, including restricting any Naval shipbuilding. To this day, Japan has a very small military force, and the US maintains military bases and troops throughout Japan. Japan has not had the financial burden of maintaining a defensive military, but it has also not threatened any other nation since the end of WWII.
after World War II (after 1945).
It is the biggest city in and capital of Japan. It is the home of the emperor. It is one of the largest and richest cities in the world.
Japan is still technically a monarchy. The emperor, Akihito, has been in power since 1989, His father was emperor for over 60 years. The emperor actually has little temporal power.
Japan doesn't have any of those. It has an emperor, but it's a constitutional monarchy and the actual power lies in the hands of the prime minister.
There wasn't any emperor, when Tokugawa Ieyasu united Japan, the Edo Period began and Japan isolated itself from the rest of the world. During that time Japan was ruled by shoguns. There were two forms of government, in one the daimyo (feudal lord), ruled a piece of land and he had to swear loyalty to the shogun. In the other form, the shogun ruled with the Bakufu that was like a council who advised the shogun . Both types of government worked together.
After Japan surrendered unconditionally to the US, General MacArthur strongly opposed including the Emperor in any war crimes tribunals. He wanted the responsibility to remain within the Japanese military leadership who were effectively controlling the entire country, and the Emperor as well.
Yes, Japan does have cyclones. The term for cyclones in this area of the world is typhoons.
There term 'Emporer' can refer to any Dynastic ruling party, so, in terms of Complete Monarchies, here is a list of Dynastic countries: Saudi Arabia Nepal United Kingdom ( Constitutional ) Many African tribes
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grace rocks the world of worlds
the emperors affected japan by giving the citizens of early japan courage and by splitting each land to the daiymo so there wouldnt be any conflicts and that effected japan by making it so that era of japan lived for a longer time then it would have been.
Japan was on the winning side in WW1. It didn't loose any land.
No, the Japanese military did not drop any bombs on the USA after the atomic bombs were used on Japan. The bombs and pending invasion by the Soviets and the Americans (and allies) motivated the Emperor Hirohito to surrender to the Allied Forces.