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BOOK THE SECOND

NARA PERIOD[1] (EIGHTH CENTURY)

CHAPTER I

PROSE OF THE NARA PERIOD—THE "KOJIKI"


Strictly speaking, this period begins A.D. 710, when Nara was made the seat of the Mikado's government, and ends A.D. 794, when the capital was removed to Nagaoka, in the province of Yamashiro, a site which was abandoned a few years later for that of the existing city of Kiōto. For the present purpose it is sufficiently accurate to make the Nara period coincide with the eighth century.

With the establishment of the capital at Nara, the old system by which every Mikado built himself a new palace in a fresh locality was discontinued. This was not only in itself an important progressive measure, but it was an evidence of the advance in civilisation which had been made during the previous two centuries. Under the influence of Chinese political ideas, the

  1. I have followed the convenient Japanese practice of calling the periods of history by the names of the places which were the seat of government at the time.

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