Japan was ruled by the Tokugawa Shogunate, essentially a Feudalistic confederacy that remained closed to the rest of the world, until the Meiji Restoration.
The Meiji Restoration in Japan marked the overthrow of the Shogunate. The Shogunate was a military governor of Japan. Though in principle Shoguns had to be appointed by the Emperor, in practice their power passed from father to son or seized control of the government through military force. This arrangement effectively removed the Emperor from the structures of power. The Meiji Restoration made the Emperor the head of the government, though he did not direct governmental affairs. The government of Japan ceased to be a hereditary position, as it had been under the Shogunate. The emperor ruled Japan through a series of governments chosen by his subjects, similar to the constitutional monarchy of Great Britain.
Imperrial Japan had ruled Korea before the World War 2. Korea was annexed by force to Japan in 1910 in the Meiji Era. President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill, and President Chiang Kai-shek at the Cairo tripartite summit in 1943 agreed that Koreans be liberated from Japanese colonial rule and be allowed to be independent "in due course." President Roosevelt is assumed to have related this decision to the Joseph Stalin of the the Soviet Union at the Tehran summit talks among the U.S. president and the U.K prime minister, and Churchill, President Chiang was left behind Cairo during the Tehran.
Japan ruled Korea between 1910 and 1945.
Only China and Japan had ruled Korea
Japan
The Tokugawa Bakufu was ruled by a shogun, or military leader. The government of Meiji Japan was led by an Emperor.
The Meiji Restoration in Japan marked the overthrow of the Shogunate. The Shogunate was a military governor of Japan. Though in principle Shoguns had to be appointed by the Emperor, in practice their power passed from father to son or seized control of the government through military force. This arrangement effectively removed the Emperor from the structures of power. The Meiji Restoration made the Emperor the head of the government, though he did not direct governmental affairs. The government of Japan ceased to be a hereditary position, as it had been under the Shogunate. The emperor ruled Japan through a series of governments chosen by his subjects, similar to the constitutional monarchy of Great Britain.
The Emperor ruled Japan.
The term samurai was initially used to mean Japan's noble heroes (bushi), however it came to apply to every one of the individuals from the country's champion class who rose to control in the twelfth century and ruled the Japanese government until the Meiji Restoration in 1868.
Imperrial Japan had ruled Korea before the World War 2. Korea was annexed by force to Japan in 1910 in the Meiji Era. President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill, and President Chiang Kai-shek at the Cairo tripartite summit in 1943 agreed that Koreans be liberated from Japanese colonial rule and be allowed to be independent "in due course." President Roosevelt is assumed to have related this decision to the Joseph Stalin of the the Soviet Union at the Tehran summit talks among the U.S. president and the U.K prime minister, and Churchill, President Chiang was left behind Cairo during the Tehran.
Taisho.
Japan rules itself, although it has been ruled by others in the past.
Yes, Korea became independent from China after 1895
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Japan ruled Korea between 1910 and 1945.
After Cromwell: the Restoration.
Only China and Japan had ruled Korea