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Beyond Christianity: A multicausal analysis of the Shimabara Rebellion, 1637 - 1638

JournalMéxico y la Cuenca del Pacífico
DOI10.32870/mycp.v5i13.501
OpenAlexW3208552208
Languagees
ISSN1665-0174
OA?yes
Statusdownloaded

Abstract

The Shimabara rebellion is commonly considered as a Christian insurrection. However, the motives that led the people from Shimabara and its surroundings to uprising go beyond religious matters. The relation between the people with the daimyo and the high taxes they latter demanded, combined with general famine product of poor harvests, were added to the religious persecution the Shogunate propelled to counter foreign influence in Japan, particularly the Portuguese influence. These factors led a group of peasants and ronin to rise in arms, initiating a revolt that went down in history as the most serious armed conflict the Japanese government faced during the Tokugawa era. This article addresses separately the principal actors involved in the rebellion, which were the rebels, the government and the foreign powers, emphasizing among the latter the role of the Catholic Church and the Dutch. The role each one of these actors played, their particular interest and their points of view become highly important elements that allow us understand in a broader sense what the Shimabara rebellion was.

Matched Nanban terms

  • places_events Shimabara rebellion

Provenance

  • openalex (W3208552208)
    2026-05-01T05:18:13.855451+00:00

Candidate PDF URLs

PSourceURLLast attemptLast error
30 openalex http://www.mexicoylacuencadelpacifico.cucsh.udg.mx/index.php/mc/article/download/501/499 2026-05-01T04:17:41.652386+00:00

Downloaded PDF

Open PDF · sha256: 7b56f9e1d7969fa4e7d02de0549e8cdc62705ca0c83f71858d047a0c70435d98

Extras

openalex_conceptsPersecution; Government (linguistics); Relation (database); Portuguese; Political economy; Political science; Principal (computer security); Sociology; Famine; History
openalex_topicsVietnamese History and Culture Studies; Asian Studies and History; Chinese history and philosophy
crossref_date2016-1-1
crossref_publisherUniversidad de Guadalajara