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Anti-Kirishitan Surveillance in Early Modern Japan

JournalSurveillance & Society
PublisherSurveillance Studies Network
DOI10.24908/ss.v16i4.8616
OpenAlexW2905470340
Languageen
ISSN1477-7487
OA?yes
Statuspending

Abstract

From 1614 to 1873 Christianity was outlawed in Japan. The Tokugawa Shogunate, which ruled Japan for most of this period, built rigorous and complicated systems of surveillance in order to monitor their population’s religious habits. This paper seeks to describe the evolution of Edo period (1603–1868) anti-Christian religious surveillance. The first two sections of the paper explore the development of surveillance under the first three Tokugawa leaders. The following sections focus on the evolution of these systems (the recruitment of informants, temple registration, the composition of registries, and tests of faith) in subsequent periods and includes some short passages from previously untranslated contemporaneous documents. Finally, the paper offers some thoughts on the efficacy of anti-Christian surveillance, arguing that the toleration of the existence of hidden communities resulted from changes in Christian behaviour that made them harder to discover and a willingness on the part of the authorities to tolerate illegal activity due to economic disincentive and a reduction in the threat that Christianity posed.

Matched Nanban terms

  • anchor Kirishitan

Provenance

  • openalex (W2905470340)
    2026-04-30T19:58:45.333842+00:00

Candidate PDF URLs

PSourceURLLast attemptLast error
30 openalex https://ojs.library.queensu.ca/index.php/surveillance-and-society/article/download/8616/84…

Extras

openalex_conceptsChristianity; Toleration; Faith; Period (music); Christian faith; Population; History; Political science; Order (exchange); Law
openalex_topicsJapanese History and Culture; Chinese history and philosophy; China's Socioeconomic Reforms and Governance