Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 6.djvu/376

 * salvation by faith, 147–149, 258–259; Nichiren sect, 149; rites, 162–164, 169; modern influence of Christianity on, 166; relation to the State, 166–169, 174–176, 249; maintenance, 189. See also Religion, Shintō.
 * Bunshi family, educational monopoly, i. 126.
 * Buretsu, emperor, cruelty, i. 85.
 * Bushi. See Military class.
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 * , vi. 33, 53.
 * Censors of Tokugawa shogunate, iv. 31.
 * Cha-no-yu. See Tea Ceremonial.
 * Chikamatsu Monzayemon, dramatist, iv. 149, vi. 111.
 * China, claim to Loochoo Islands, i. 3; age of the empire, 4; conditions, 4; decadence, 5, 13; and Japan during period of isolation, 8; hegemony in the Far East, 17, 74, vi. 159, 162; ancient intercourse with Japan, i. 69; influence on Japan, 71, 75, 103, 106, 126, 151, ii. 109; colonists to ancient Japan, i. 75, 83; early references to Japan, 80; renewed intercourse with Japan, ii. 108; Japanese piratical forays, iii. 104; Formosa incident, iv. 209; claim to Riukiu Islands, v. 41–43; attitude toward her buffer states, 43; Boxer insurrection, 67; Japanese hopes for, 75; trade with Japan, vi. 127, 144, 148, 150, 158–162, 171–173, 238. See also Chinese war.
 * Chinese war, approximate cause, i. 17, v. 44–53; ultimate cause, i. 17, v. 54; results, i. 18, v. 62–65; cost, i. 20; conduct, 21; outbreak, v. 53; influence of Japanese domestic politics, 55; progress, 56–59; casualties, 59; treaty of peace, 59; European interference, 60.
 * Chisuga, Prince, foreign policy, iii. 221.
 * Chōnen, a priest, account of a journey to China, i. 72.
 * Chori, officer controlling outcast class, ii. 43, 49.
 * Chōshiu province, anti-foreign agitation, iii. 214; fires on foreign ships, 223; attack on Kyōtō, 225; attacked by foreign ships, 226; shogunate expeditions against, 227, 233; edict against, 234; relation to Satsuma province, 234–237; fief surrendered to the sovereign, iv. 189, 190.
 * Christianity, introduction and early success, ii. 32, iii. 102, 108–110; opposition, ii. 32; attitude of Nobunaga, 33, iii. 113; false methods, 103, 116; suspected of political designs, 113, 117, 119, 125; Hideyoshi's attitude, 113–119; militant spirit, 115, 126; persecution of, 116, 118, 122; quarrel of Franciscans and Jesuits, 117; defiance to secular authority, 118–121; Iyeyasu's attitude, 119–126; growth, 122; extermination decreed, 123; Jesuit monopoly abolished, 123; Japanese attitude toward, defended,