Japan

日本国 (Japanish)

Nippon-koku or Nihon-koku

Flag Landsong

Kimigayo 君が代 (His Richly Highness's Rede) Headstead

(and Biggest stead) Eastheadstead Other Tungs Japanish, Ainu, Okinawish Folkthedes Japanish, Ainu, Okinawish Inborn name Nihongo/Nippongo Lawmoot

- Caser

- Firstthane Kingsfolk Ledeweard

Naruhito

Shinzo Abe Reeving body

- Upper House

- Lower House Land-Moot

House of Lords

House of Selectmen Landswathe 145,936 miles² Ledescore

- In full

- Huddlemete (2013)

126,860,000

882.7 miles² Full Homeland Output

- In full

- By fellow 2017 guessing:

$5.1 foursand

$40,408 Yield ¥ (JPY)

Japan or Dawnland (English: Japan, Greater Anglish: Dawnland, Japanish: 日本, Nihon, Nippon, Root of the Sun; other names inhold じっぽん, Jippon, 和, Wa, or 大和, Yamato) is an itune in the Frithful Highsea, east of China and Korea, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to Taiwan in the south. Japan's name in Chinish tokens is often overset as "Land of the Rising Sun", and comes as one of the easternmost rikes in the world. It is made of over 6,000 ilands, the main 4 of which are Hokkaidō, Honshū, Shikoku, and Kyūshū.

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Landlore Edit

Most of Japan's ilands are hilly, among them Firebarrows, (highest peak: Fuji Barrow). The land is given to molten rock outflows, earthquakes, and tidewaves. Woodland makes up some 7/10ths of the land, with only a few steads fit for farming. Beside this rugged landscape, it is one of the most huddled lands in the world: its revetown, Tōkyō, is the world's greatest, with over thirty micklered indwellers. The land has a wet loftlay with four yeartides; rain falls heavily in the Forelithe throughout the ilands. The north-west has some of the world's heaviest snowfalls in the winter from cold damp winds blowing over from Siberia.

Folk Edit

Japan has only one folkstock, with only a few Chinish and Korish outlanders. The far north is home to the arland Ainu folk, although only a few Ainu speakers are left. Japanish is the rikish tung. Although not akin to Chinish, Japanish is written with rune tokens orded from China. The two most treaded worships are the homeborn Shintō, and the Bhuddish faith, brought over from China awhile the 5th yearhundred. Japan has among the longest-living folk in the world.

Rikecraft Edit

It is a Lawbound Kingdom with a kine-rede and a chosen Lawmoot (one of the oldest in Asia). The lawmoot has nearly always been held by the Freebeing-Folkmightish Mootband. The kingdom is dealt among 47 greatshires.

Landgeld Edit

Japan has the third-greatest landgeld in the world by buying might (next greatest on namewordly ground) and one of the world's leading workly kiths. It is the world's fourth greatest outseller and fifth greatest inbuyer of goods.

Craft Edit

Among Japan crafts are:

Bunraku (a kind of play with dolls)

(a kind of play with dolls) Eastern litwriting

Bloomsetting

Haiku (a kind of leeth )

(a kind of ) Kabuki (a kind of play)

(a kind of play) Mealwork

Noh (a kind of play)

(a kind of play) The Teaway

Eretide Edit

In the days before writing the ilands were dwelt upon by the Jōmon and Yayoi folk. The Jōmon may have been the forefathers of the Ainu, who now live only in the northernmost herns of the ilands. Slowly the folk became a kith led by overlords who were said to be ervers of the sun goddess Amaterasu.

Beginning in the 500s, Japan took up many Chinish trends, like their ways of writing and worship. The Buddhish lieftroth forblew, and with the thought of fleeing its might the overlords shifted the headtown from Nara to Heian-kyō ("Frithburg," nowadays Kyōto). In spite of this the overlords became mere kingheads, losing their true rikemight to wyelords, though they never lost their throne. Japan thus became a feudal kith led by clans of highborn knights known as samurai (Japanish for "knight").

By the H16th, Japan was beset by nearly unbroken borough-hild. It was brought to one again in the year 1600 by Ieyasu Tokugawa, who became the sei-i taishōgun or simply shōgun (Japanish, "Great Wildman-Taming Herethane") and shifted the headtown to Edo (now Tokyo). The leadership of the Tokugawa clan was marked by 268 years of frith, one of the longest spans in the eretide of the world, and also aloofness from the outside world. The overwhelming lieftroth of this time was Kong Fuzi-troth, which was the root of the law. This tharlreveship ended in 1854 once the B.F.A. sent ships to Yokohama bidding Japan to open its doors to trade. After the Meiji tide of 1868, the Caser took full strength over Japanish Bewritter and forlet the height of shōgun; Japan took up many Evelandish and Americkish thews and quickly became a worldmight.

In the H20th its kith was more and more overtaken by the leadership of tharlrevers, who took over wide swaths of East Japan. Throughout The Twith World Wye, Japan was sworn with Theechland. It was thereafter held by the Banded Folkdoms of Americksland, and by law forswore its own right to make wye, keeping only a small selfwarding wyeband. In frith, Japan has become a leader in craftlore, and has the third strongest wealthdom of the world (after Americksland and China).