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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2011
Japan's gradual interest in Korea and the expansion on this peninsula goes back to the third century A.D. The establishment of the Japanese sphere of influence in Korea, and the domination of Mimana in Southern Korea, were dictated by economic, cultural, and military reasons of Ancient Japan, or the Yamato country. This in the middle of the fourth century A.D. became the strongest and most powerful of many clan (uji) rivals in the central Sovereign, Tennō in the Japanese archipelago.
page 54 note 1 The name of Ancient Japan, Yamato, was written: ; in a.d. 735 sharacters were changed to ; Chinese name: Wêi-kuo .
page 54 note 2 Early Japanese History, Part A, pp. 18–19.
page 56 note 1 ETN., vol. v, p. 256. Dates according to the corrected chronology; see Chronological Table.
page 57 note 2 ETN., vol. i, p. 261. It means that Sotsuhiko was sent with military expedition to Shiragi, a.d. 399.
page 57 note 2 Vide Nishimura's, Yamato, pp. 433–4Google Scholar.
page 57 note 3 ETN., vol. i, p. 256.
page 58 note 1 I.e. five years.
page 58 note 2 ETN., vol. i, p. 267.
page 58 note 3 ETN., vol. i, p. 267.
page 58 note 4 ETN., vol. i, p. 268.
page 59 note 1 Confer also Kume K. Nippon-Kodai-shi, vol. ii, chapter 62nd.
page 59 note 2 Vide historical researches of Kume, Yoshida, and Naka concerning the early Japanese-Korean relation. For the English readers it will be very interesting to see Japan's Continental Expansion, by Professor Kuno, I., vol. i, pp. 199–214Google Scholar.
page 59 note 3 Dates in parenthesis according to the_offieial_Japanese_chronology.
page 62 note 1 Cf. for details Wedemeyer's, Japanische Frühgeschichte, pp. 16–24Google Scholar; Togo, Yoshida, Nikkan-koshi-dan, pp. 328–40, Tokyo, 1893 ().Google Scholar
page 62 note 2 Kume, , Dai-nippon-hodai-shi, , pp. 18–25, Tokyo, 1915, 2 vols.Google Scholar; in the Waseda University series (12 vols).