Japanese Legal History Lecture : Public Law / Kaoru Nakata Kodansha Gakujutsu Bunko

※Please note that product information is not in full comprehensive meaning because of the machine translation.
Japanese title: 文庫 日本史 日本法制史講義 公法篇 / 中田薫 講談社学術文庫
Out of stock
Item number: 3Z237094
Released date: 11 Jul 2024
Maker: Kodansha
著: 中田薫
解説・編集: 北康宏

Product description ※Please note that product information is not in full comprehensive meaning because of the machine translation.

Japanese History (br) kodansha Gakujutsu Bunko / This book is a complete history of Japan from ancient times to the Edo period. However, it is not a history of political changes and wars such as the Taika Reform and the Honnoji Incident. For example, it is not a history of Omi, Muraji, and Tomonomiyatsuko during the Yamato Imperial Court period, through the Ritsuryo system (a system of centralized government based on the ritsuryo code), through the organization of the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun), through the organization of the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun), through the organization of the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun), through the system of taxation from Soyocho (a tax system) to Nengu (land tax), the land system including Shoen (manor in medieval Japan), and the court system. It is said that Ishimoda Sho had a good time telling Susumu Sato. "Unlike Sato-kun, I listened to Nakata-san's lecture." It is said that "Nakata-san" was the person who led such a conversation between the two giants who built the foundation of the study of Japanese history after the war. This book is a lecture record of the Koho edition of the lecture on Japanese Legal History given at Tokyo Imperial University, one of "Nakata-san's lectures". This book is a lecture record of the lecture on Japanese Legal History given at Tokyo Imperial University, one of "Nakata-san's lectures". Kaoru Nakata (1877-1967) was the founder of the study of legal history in Japan. He left a great influence not only on legal history but also on Japanese history, as is clear from the above-mentioned conversation. He was well versed in laws not only in Western Europe but also in China and other parts of the world, and as well as on legal history, he left a great influence on Japanese history. Akatsuki was well versed in laws not only in Western Europe but also in China and other parts of the world, and established the foundation of the image of Japanese history later on through logical analysis of premodern laws and society based on strict modern legal concepts. He was well versed in laws not only in Western Europe but also in China and other parts of the 1935 1935 Kaoru Nakata source book