Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Daijō-kan> ?p ?o }
- Daijō-kan abstract "The Daijō-kan or Dajō-kan (太政官) or the Great Council of State was (i) (Daijō-kan) the highest organ of Japan's pre-modern Imperial government under Ritsuryō legal system during and after the Nara period or (ii) (Dajō-kan) the highest organ of Japan's government briefly after the Meiji Restoration, which was replaced by the Cabinet.It was consolidated in the Taihō Code of 702. The Asuka Kiyomihara Code of 689 marks the initial appearance of this central administrative body composed of the three ministers—the Daijō-daijin (Chancellor), the Sadaijin (Minister of the Left) and the Udaijin (Minister of the Right).The Imperial governing structure was headed by the Daijō-kan. This council and its subsidiary ministries handled all secular administrative affairs of the country, while the Jingi-kan or Department of Worship, oversaw all matters regarding Shintō ritual, clergy, and shrines.This structured organization gradually lost power over the course of the 10th and 11th centuries, as the Fujiwara clan, dominating the post of Imperial regent, began to dominate the Daijō-kan as well. It became increasingly common for the regent to hold the post of chancellor or other office simultaneously. By the 12th century, the council was essentially powerless as a separate entity, though it seems clear that the system was never formally dismantled. Over the course of centuries, the ritsuryō state produced more and more information which was carefully archived; however, with the passage of time in the Heian period, ritsuryō institutions evolved into a political and cultural system without feedback.By the time of Emperor Komei, the kuge aristocracy were joined in common goals by a number of newly powerful provincial figures from outside Kyoto. Together, this tenuous, undefined coalition of men worked together to restore the long latent prestige, persuasive power, and active strengths of a re-invigorated Imperial center. This combination of factors thrust an archaic hierarchy into the center of national attention, but with so many other high-priority matters demanding immediate attention, there was little time or energy to invest in reforming or re-organizing the Daijō-kan.".
- Daijō-kan wikiPageExternalLink books?id=18oNAAAAIAAJ&dq=nipon+o+dai+itsi+ran.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageExternalLink books?id=nCJwEDzyxNgC&client=firefox-a.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageExternalLink dajoukanshinchikuezu_e.html.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageExternalLink dajoukanshinchikuzu_e.html.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageExternalLink koseki_e.html.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageExternalLink naimusyo_e.html.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageExternalLink 10716445.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageID "2287896".
- Daijō-kan wikiPageLength "25075".
- Daijō-kan wikiPageOutDegree "121".
- Daijō-kan wikiPageRevisionID "678260304".
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Aide-de-camp_to_the_Emperor_of_Japan.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Asuka_Kiyomihara_Code.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Asuka_period.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Azuchi-Momoyama_period.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Azuchi–Momoyama_period.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Cabinet_of_Japan.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Cambridge_University_Press.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Category:Classical_Japan.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Category:Former_government_ministries_of_Japan.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Category:Government_of_feudal_Japan.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Category:Meiji_Restoration.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Category:Royal_Households.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Chamberlain_of_Japan.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Charter_Oath.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Chūnagon.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Code_of_Taiho.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Columbia_University_Press.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Conceptual_model.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Court_(royal).
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Daigaku-no-kami.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Daigaku_no_kami.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Daijō-daijin.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Daijō_Daijin.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Dainagon.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Edo_period.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_Komei.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_Kōmei.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_Meiji.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_Monmu.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Fujiwara_clan.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink George_Bailey_Sansom.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink H._Paul_Varley.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Heian_period.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Imperial_Household_Agency.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Isaac_Titsingh.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Japan.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Jibu-kyō.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Jijū.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Jingi-kan.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Jinnō_Shōtōki.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink John_Whitney_Hall.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Kamakura_period.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Kemmu_Restoration.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Kemmu_restoration.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Kenmu_Restoration.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Kodansha.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Kokushi_(official).
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Kuge.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Kugyō.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Kunaishō.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Kōdansha.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Kōkyū.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Lord_Keeper_of_the_Privy_Seal_of_Japan.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Master_of_Ceremonies_(Japan).
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_Constitution.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_Restoration.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_period.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Ministry_of_the_Imperial_Household.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Model_(abstract).
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Muromachi_period.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Nadaijin.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Naidaijin.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Nanboku-chō_period.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Nara_period.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Nihon_Ōdai_Ichiran.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Nipon_o_daï_itsi_ran.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Princeton_University_Press.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Provinces_of_Japan.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Ritsuryō.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Routledge.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink RoutledgeCurzon.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Asiatic_Society.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Asiatic_Society_of_Great_Britain_and_Ireland.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Sadaijin.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Sangi.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Sangi_(Japan).
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Sanjō_Sanetomi.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Sengoku_period.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Sessho_and_Kampaku.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Sesshō_and_Kampaku.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Shinto.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Shōnagon.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Stanford_University_Press.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Taihō_Code.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Takahashi_Ujibumi.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Timon_Screech.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Tokugawa_Hidetada.
- Daijō-kan wikiPageWikiLink Tokugawa_Ieharu.