Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Lucky day inquiry - Why was the Japanese emperor seized power by the shogunate for more than 500 years without being abolished?

Why was the Japanese emperor seized power by the shogunate for more than 500 years without being abolished?

This truth is simple and clear.

China lives in the mainland, and ethnic relations are relatively complicated.

After Qin Shihuang unified China, the world thought he was the only one in the world, so the world was decided by people, not by God.

The first queen, the world thinks that the world belongs to the first emperor, not to the second one, so she replaced it.

After the Han dynasty, the "divine right of monarchy" once again confirmed that Wang Mang and Wei Jin did not dare to usurp the throne openly, and they all adopted Zen, which seemed legal, but actually usurped the throne.

After the Jin Dynasty, foreigners invaded the south, but did not recognize that the emperor was destined to return, so later generations were ruled by Hu and Han alternately, or coexisted.

It can be seen from the change of dynasties in China after the Jin Dynasty.

Jin (Southern and Northern Dynasties), Sui (Zen Tang), Tang (Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms), Song (Liao, Jin, Yuan), Ming (Qing).

As can be seen from the above, since the Han Dynasty, the change of the internal political power of the Han nationality is "the position of dharma Zen", which shows the power of "divine right of monarchy".

When the non-Han regime entered the Central Plains, it was not bound by the idea of "divine right of monarchy" at first, but was seized by force.

Japan's idea of "divine right of monarchy" is more deeply rooted than that of the Han nationality, living alone in an isolated island and rarely being attacked by foreigners. Therefore, even if the shogunate is in power and the emperor is overhead, he will not dare to usurp the throne easily, and because it has not been destroyed by foreign countries, the imperial power system can continue. After World War II, it was in consideration of this idea of Japanese nationals that the United States retained the Japanese Mikado system for easy control.