Edit count of the user (user_editcount ) | 4 |
Name of the user account (user_name ) | 'Fanasiro' |
Age of the user account (user_age ) | 209870 |
Groups (including implicit) the user is in (user_groups ) | [
0 => '*',
1 => 'user'
] |
Rights that the user has (user_rights ) | [
0 => 'createaccount',
1 => 'read',
2 => 'edit',
3 => 'createtalk',
4 => 'writeapi',
5 => 'viewmywatchlist',
6 => 'editmywatchlist',
7 => 'viewmyprivateinfo',
8 => 'editmyprivateinfo',
9 => 'editmyoptions',
10 => 'abusefilter-log-detail',
11 => 'centralauth-merge',
12 => 'abusefilter-view',
13 => 'abusefilter-log',
14 => 'vipsscaler-test',
15 => 'collectionsaveasuserpage',
16 => 'reupload-own',
17 => 'move-rootuserpages',
18 => 'move-categorypages',
19 => 'createpage',
20 => 'minoredit',
21 => 'editmyusercss',
22 => 'editmyuserjson',
23 => 'editmyuserjs',
24 => 'purge',
25 => 'sendemail',
26 => 'applychangetags',
27 => 'spamblacklistlog',
28 => 'mwoauthmanagemygrants'
] |
Whether the user is editing from mobile app (user_app ) | false |
Whether or not a user is editing through the mobile interface (user_mobile ) | true |
Page ID (page_id ) | 1279768 |
Page namespace (page_namespace ) | 0 |
Page title without namespace (page_title ) | 'Hayato people' |
Full page title (page_prefixedtitle ) | 'Hayato people' |
Last ten users to contribute to the page (page_recent_contributors ) | [
0 => 'Fanasiro',
1 => 'Narky Blert',
2 => 'Nat965',
3 => '212.95.8.249',
4 => '212.95.8.174',
5 => 'Dekimasu',
6 => '219.100.136.14',
7 => '212.95.8.183',
8 => 'Timmyshin',
9 => 'Fraenir'
] |
Action (action ) | 'edit' |
Edit summary/reason (summary ) | 'Fixed typo' |
Old content model (old_content_model ) | 'wikitext' |
New content model (new_content_model ) | 'wikitext' |
Old page wikitext, before the edit (old_wikitext ) | 'The {{Nihongo|'''Hayato'''|隼人|}}, which is Japanese for "falcon-people",<ref>[[William George Aston]] says this in his note, see ''Nihongi: Chronicles of Japan from the Earliest Times to A.D. 697'', translated from the original Chinese and Japanese by [[William George Aston]]. Book II, note 1, page 100. Tuttle Publishing. Tra edition (July 2005). First edition published 1972. {{ISBN|978-0-8048-3674-6}}</ref> were possibly an[[Austronesian people]]<ref>角林, 文雄「隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族」、『京都産業大学日本文化研究所紀要』第3号、京都産業大学、1998年3月、 ISSN [[issn:13417207|13417207]]</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.at/books?id=7pEOicqsjv0C&pg=PA368&lpg=PA368&dq=hayato+people+austronesian&source=bl&ots=vxmYpxoe18&sig=3oddRauVhXgP3oKwOwSkAYrLLNw&hl=de&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjByt_GoK_ZAhXCYlAKHV4_D4kQ6AEIWTAJ#v=onepage&q=hayato%20people%20austronesian&f=false|title=Himiko and Japan's Elusive Chiefdom of Yamatai: Archaeology, History, and Mythology|last=Kidder|first=Jonathan Edward|date=2007|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|isbn=9780824830359|language=en}}</ref><ref>Kakubayashi, Fumio. 隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族' Hayato : An Austronesian speaking tribe in southern Japan.'. The bulletin of the Institute for Japanese Culture, Kyoto Sangyo University, 3, pp.15-31 ISSN 1341-7207</ref> of ancient [[Japan]] who lived in the [[Satsuma province|Satsuma]] and [[Ōsumi Province|Ōsumi]] regions of southern [[Kyushu]] until at least the [[Nara period]]. Due to the distinct nature of their manners and customs, they frequently resisted [[Imperial House of Japan|Yamato]] rule. After their subjugation they became subjects of the government under [[Ritsuryō]], and the [[Ministry of War (pre-modern Japan)|Ministry of the Military]] had an office known as the {{Nihongo||隼人司|Hayato-shi}} in charge of their governance. The name also came into use by samurai as a title, {{Nihongo||隼人助|hayato no suke}}. In modern times, Hayato is a Japanese male given name.
== History and culture ==
The Hayato may be the same as the [[Kumaso]] group of around the same time,<ref>One theory holds that the Hayato were descendants of the Kumaso. In recent years, though, the theory has taken root that because the "kuma" and "so" in "Kumaso" and the names of the Ata Hayato and Ōsumi Hayato all refer to regions of southern Kyushu, these may have been general names applied to several distinct cultural groups of rebellious local people by the Yamato court.{{cite book |last=Takemitsu |first=Makoto |script-title=ja:古事記・日本書紀を知る事典 |trans-title=Encyclopedia of the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki |publisher=東京堂出版 |year=1999 |isbn=4-490-10526-6 |page=223 |language=Japanese}}</ref> but while the Kumaso are mentioned in the more legendary portions of the [[Nihon Shoki]], the Hayato are recorded in various historical texts until the beginning of the [[Heian period]]. Though the Kumaso are generally portrayed as rebellious, Hayato are listed among the attendants of emperors and princes from as early as [[Emperor Nintoku]]'s reign.<ref>After the death of Emperor Nintoku one individual, named Sobakari in the Kojiki and Sashihire in the Nihon Shoki, assassinated the prince he served on the orders of another prince. However, he was then given sake and assassinated by the prince he had betrayed his master for. The story illustrates the use of Hayato as unofficial military forces.{{cite book |last=Sasayama |first=Haruo |script-title=ja:古代国家と軍隊 皇軍と私兵の系譜 |trans-title=The Nation and Army in Ancient Times: Genealogies of the Imperial and Private Armies |publisher=中公新書 |year=1975 |language=Japanese}}</ref> This, along with a mention of Hayato crying before the grave of [[Emperor Yūryaku]] after his death, suggests that the Hayato were naturalized as personal servants by the late 7th century.
Even after pledging allegiance to the Japanese court, the Hayato continued to resist its rule. After the establishment of [[Ōsumi Province]] in 713, the Ōsumi Hayato fought back in 720 with the [[Hayato Rebellion]], but were defeated in 721 by an army led by [[Ōtomo no Tabito]]. The [[Ritsuryō#Handen-Shūju|Handen-Shūju]] system was implemented in their lands in 800. The population of [[Yamato people|Yamato]] immigrants in Kagoshima prefecture in the early 8th century has been estimated at around 9,000 people and one-seventh of the total population.<ref>{{cite book |title=Story 日本の歴史 古代・中世・近世史編 |trans-title=Story: A History of Japan - Ancient Times, the Middle Ages, and Recent Times |author={{Nihongo|The Japanese Society for Historical Studies|日本史教育研究会}} |publisher=山川出版社 |year=2001 |page=62 |language=Japanese}}</ref> By this estimate, the Hayato population of the time can be calculated as consisting of around 54,000 people (not including Hayato emigrants to Honshū).<ref>Koyama Shūzō of the [[National Museum of Ethnology (Japan)|National Museum of Ethnology]] has mathematically estimated that the population of the Japanese islands during the Kofun period was approximately 5,400,000 people. Since the population even in the Nara period remained less than 6,000,000, the Hayato population may be assumed to be around one-hundredth of the total population of the islands. {{cite book |editor=Kōichi Mori |script-title=ja:日本の古代5『前方後円墳の世紀』 |trans-title=Ancient Japan Part 5: The Age of Keyhole Kofun |publisher=中央公論社 |year=1986 |isbn=4-12-402538-6 |page=131 |language=Japanese}}</ref>
The Hayato were made to emigrate to the [[Kinai]] region, and were active in the protection of the court, the arts, [[sumo]], and bamboo work.<ref>The Nihon Shoki records that in the court of Emperor Tenmu, in the late 7th century, the Hayato performed sumo in the court, but it is not described as different from the sumo of the Yamato themselves. In 682, the Ōsumi Hayato and Ata Hayato competed in sumo and the Ōsumi side won, and in 695 a bout of sumo between Hayato on the grounds of [[Asuka-dera]] drew a crowd of spectators.</ref> Many lived in [[Yamashiro Province]], in the south of modern Kyoto. There remains an area called {{Nihongo|Ōsumi|大住}} in [[Kyōtanabe, Kyoto]], where many Ōsumi Hayato lived. These were the Hayato governed by the ''Hayato-shi''.
It is suggested that the Hayato are of [[Austronesian]] origin.<ref>Kakubayashi, Fumio. 隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族' [http://ci.nii.ac.jp/naid/110000577490/en/ ''Hayato : An Austronesian speaking tribe in southern Japan''.]'. ''The bulletin of the Institute for Japanese Culture, Kyoto Sangyo University'', 3, pp.15-31 {{ISSN|1341-7207}}.</ref> Their culture and language are believed to have differed from those of other regions of Japan. In particular, their folk song and dance became famous in the Kinai region as the {{Nihongo|Hayato dance|隼人舞}}.<ref>The Hayato dance appears repeatedly in the Kojiki, Nihon Shoki, and Shoku Nihongi, performed on the occasion of paying tribute to the court and for the benefit of foreign visitors.</ref> An excavation of [[Heijō Palace]] discovered wooden shields with a distinctive reverse-S-shaped marking. These shields match those described in the ''[[Engishiki]]'', which the Hayato used in court ceremonial functions. The Hayato had roles in various state ceremonies, including those for the new year, imperial enthronement, and visiting foreign officials.
According to the [[Fudoki|ancient records]] of [[Hizen province]], the [[Gotō Islands]] were also inhabited by a people resembling the Hayato. The [[New Book of Tang]] describes a minor king of {{Nihongo|Haya|波邪}}, and this Haya has also been interpreted as referring to the Hayato.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Kadowaki |first1=Teiji |last2=Mori |first2=Kōichi |script-title=ja:古代史を解く『鍵(キーワード)』 |trans-title=Keys to Understanding Ancient History |publisher=学生社 |year=1995 |isbn=4-311-20194-X |pages=183–184 |language=Japanese}}</ref>
There are three types of graves archaeologically associated with the Hayato: the {{Nihongo|underground tunnel tombs|地下式横穴墓}} widely distributed around the border of Kagoshima and Miyazaki prefectures,<ref>These underground tunnel tombs are focused around Hyūga, Ōsumi, and Satsuma, but the underground stone-slab graves are found mainly in the Satsuma region. Therefore, it is theoried that the former were widely used by various Hayato, while the latter were used specifically by the Ata Hayato. {{cite book |title=日本の考古学 IV 古墳時代 (上) |trans-title=Archaeology in Japan IV: The Kofun Period (Part 1) |editor1=Yoshirō Kondō |editor2=Chōji Fujisawa |publisher=河出書房 |year=1966 |page=163 |language=Japanese}}</ref> the {{Nihongo|standing stone graves|立石土壙墓}} of the southern Satsuma peninsula, and the {{Nihongo|underground stone-slab graves|地下式板石積石室}} found north of the Satsuma peninsula. Another large group of tunnel tombs is located near the Ōsumi area of Kyotanabe. Because of the proximity and because the gravelly soil of the area is not suited to such tombs, these may also be associated with the Hayato.
In Japanese mythology, the deity [[Hoderi|Umisachihiko]] is considered the ancestor of the ruler of the Ata Hayato. The Hayato Dance may be intended to portray Umisachihiko's pain at being outdone by his younger brother Yamasachihiko.<ref>{{cite book |last=Tsugita |first=Masaki |title=古事記 (上) 全訳注 |trans-title=Complete Translated and Annotated Kojiki, Part 1 |publisher=講談社学術文庫 |volume=38 |year=2001 |origyear=1977 |isbn=4-06-158207-0 |page=205}}</ref>
== Regional distribution ==
;{{Nihongo|Ata Hayato|阿多隼人}}, or Satsuma Hayato
:A Hayato tribe who lived on the [[Satsuma Peninsula]]. Before the establishment of [[Satsuma Province]], the area was known as Ata. The ''[[Nihon Shoki]]'''s section on 682 calls them the Ata Hayato, while the section of the ''[[Shoku Nihongi]]'' on the year 709 refers to them as the Satsuma Hayato.
;{{Nihongo|Ōsumi Hayato|大隅隼人}}
:A Hayato tribe who lived in the northern [[Ōsumi Peninsula]], or by another theory the [[Kimotsuki, Kagoshima|Kimotsuki]] plain region.<ref>The latter theory is seen in volume 1 of the 1967 {{Nihongo|history of Kanoya City|鹿屋市史}}</ref> They are mentioned in ''Nihon Shoki'' article on 682.
;{{Nihongo|Tane Hayato|多褹隼人}}
:A Hayato tribe who lived in [[Tane Province]]. In 702, the court dispatched an army and conquered the region.
;{{Nihongo|Koshiki Hayato|甑隼人}}
:A Hayato tribe who lived on the [[Koshikijima Islands]]. They are mentioned in the ''Shoku Nihongi'''s section on 769.
;{{Nihongo|Hyūga Hayato|日向隼人}}
:A Hayato tribe who lived in [[Hyūga Province]]. The ''Shoku Nihongi'' records that in 710, their leader {{Nihongo|Sonokimi no Hosomaro|曾君細麻呂}} submitted to the court and was awarded the rank of {{Nihongo|outside|外}} {{Nihongo||従五位下|ju go-i no ge}}. However, this was before the separation of Ōsumi province from Hyūga Province in 713. The history of [[Usa Shrine]] records that later, in 719, the Ōsumi and Hyūga Hayato attacked Japan, perhaps a precursor to the rebellion of 720.
== Skeletal differences ==
Anthropological research on human skeletons of the [[Kofun period]] on southern Kyushu has shown that male skeletons found inland differ from those on the Miyazaki plain. Inland skeletons resembled those of [[Jōmon period|Jōmon people]] and northwestern Kyushu [[Yayoi people]],<ref>The Yayoi people of northwestern Kyushu are thought to be the descendants of the Jōmon people of the region, who adopted and naturalized into the Yayoi culture. The mention in the Hizen ancient records of Hayato-like people in the Gotō islands can also be explained if we consider that they too were descended from northwestern Kyushuan Yayoi people. {{cite book |last=Ueda |first=Masaaki |script-title=ja:エコール・ド・ロイヤル 古代日本を考える 『日本古代史の謎再考』 |publisher=学生社 |year=1983|page=52 |language=Japanese}}</ref> and some groups on the plain also resembled northern Kyushu Yayoi people.<ref>{{cite book |last=Matsushita |first=Takayuki |script-title=ja:南九州における古墳時代人骨の人類学的研究 |trans-title=Anthropological Research on Human Skeletal Remains from the Kofun Period in Southern Kyushu |year=1990 |language=Japanese}}</ref> Additionally, skeletons excavated from late Yayoi-period ruins on [[Tanegashima]] are smaller than those found on Kyushu, and show signs of [[artificial cranial deformation]].
== Notes ==
{{Reflist}}
== References ==
*{{cite book |last=Nakamura |first=Akizō |script-title=ja:隼人の古代史 |trans-title=Ancient History of the Hayato |publisher=平凡社新書 |isbn=978-4582851199 |language=Japanese}}
{{Wiktionary pipe|隼人|hayato}}
{{Ethnic groups in Japan}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hayato People}}
[[Category:Classical Japan]]
[[Category:Tribes of ancient Japan]]' |
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext ) | 'The {{Nihongo|'''Hayato'''|隼人|}}, which is Japanese for "falcon-people",<ref>[[William George Aston]] says this in his note, see ''Nihongi: Chronicles of Japan from the Earliest Times to A.D. 697'', translated from the original Chinese and Japanese by [[William George Aston]]. Book II, note 1, page 100. Tuttle Publishing. Tra edition (July 2005). First edition published 1972. {{ISBN|978-0-8048-3674-6}}</ref> were possibly an [[Austronesian people]]<ref>角林, 文雄「隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族」、『京都産業大学日本文化研究所紀要』第3号、京都産業大学、1998年3月、 ISSN [[issn:13417207|13417207]]</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.at/books?id=7pEOicqsjv0C&pg=PA368&lpg=PA368&dq=hayato+people+austronesian&source=bl&ots=vxmYpxoe18&sig=3oddRauVhXgP3oKwOwSkAYrLLNw&hl=de&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjByt_GoK_ZAhXCYlAKHV4_D4kQ6AEIWTAJ#v=onepage&q=hayato%20people%20austronesian&f=false|title=Himiko and Japan's Elusive Chiefdom of Yamatai: Archaeology, History, and Mythology|last=Kidder|first=Jonathan Edward|date=2007|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|isbn=9780824830359|language=en}}</ref><ref>Kakubayashi, Fumio. 隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族' Hayato : An Austronesian speaking tribe in southern Japan.'. The bulletin of the Institute for Japanese Culture, Kyoto Sangyo University, 3, pp.15-31 ISSN 1341-7207</ref> of ancient [[Japan]] who lived in the [[Satsuma province|Satsuma]] and [[Ōsumi Province|Ōsumi]] regions of southern [[Kyushu]] until at least the [[Nara period]]. Due to the distinct nature of their manners and customs, they frequently resisted [[Imperial House of Japan|Yamato]] rule. After their subjugation they became subjects of the government under [[Ritsuryō]], and the [[Ministry of War (pre-modern Japan)|Ministry of the Military]] had an office known as the {{Nihongo||隼人司|Hayato-shi}} in charge of their governance. The name also came into use by samurai as a title, {{Nihongo||隼人助|hayato no suke}}. In modern times, Hayato is a Japanese male given name.
== History and culture ==
The Hayato may be the same as the [[Kumaso]] group of around the same time,<ref>One theory holds that the Hayato were descendants of the Kumaso. In recent years, though, the theory has taken root that because the "kuma" and "so" in "Kumaso" and the names of the Ata Hayato and Ōsumi Hayato all refer to regions of southern Kyushu, these may have been general names applied to several distinct cultural groups of rebellious local people by the Yamato court.{{cite book |last=Takemitsu |first=Makoto |script-title=ja:古事記・日本書紀を知る事典 |trans-title=Encyclopedia of the Kojiki and Nihon Shoki |publisher=東京堂出版 |year=1999 |isbn=4-490-10526-6 |page=223 |language=Japanese}}</ref> but while the Kumaso are mentioned in the more legendary portions of the [[Nihon Shoki]], the Hayato are recorded in various historical texts until the beginning of the [[Heian period]]. Though the Kumaso are generally portrayed as rebellious, Hayato are listed among the attendants of emperors and princes from as early as [[Emperor Nintoku]]'s reign.<ref>After the death of Emperor Nintoku one individual, named Sobakari in the Kojiki and Sashihire in the Nihon Shoki, assassinated the prince he served on the orders of another prince. However, he was then given sake and assassinated by the prince he had betrayed his master for. The story illustrates the use of Hayato as unofficial military forces.{{cite book |last=Sasayama |first=Haruo |script-title=ja:古代国家と軍隊 皇軍と私兵の系譜 |trans-title=The Nation and Army in Ancient Times: Genealogies of the Imperial and Private Armies |publisher=中公新書 |year=1975 |language=Japanese}}</ref> This, along with a mention of Hayato crying before the grave of [[Emperor Yūryaku]] after his death, suggests that the Hayato were naturalized as personal servants by the late 7th century.
Even after pledging allegiance to the Japanese court, the Hayato continued to resist its rule. After the establishment of [[Ōsumi Province]] in 713, the Ōsumi Hayato fought back in 720 with the [[Hayato Rebellion]], but were defeated in 721 by an army led by [[Ōtomo no Tabito]]. The [[Ritsuryō#Handen-Shūju|Handen-Shūju]] system was implemented in their lands in 800. The population of [[Yamato people|Yamato]] immigrants in Kagoshima prefecture in the early 8th century has been estimated at around 9,000 people and one-seventh of the total population.<ref>{{cite book |title=Story 日本の歴史 古代・中世・近世史編 |trans-title=Story: A History of Japan - Ancient Times, the Middle Ages, and Recent Times |author={{Nihongo|The Japanese Society for Historical Studies|日本史教育研究会}} |publisher=山川出版社 |year=2001 |page=62 |language=Japanese}}</ref> By this estimate, the Hayato population of the time can be calculated as consisting of around 54,000 people (not including Hayato emigrants to Honshū).<ref>Koyama Shūzō of the [[National Museum of Ethnology (Japan)|National Museum of Ethnology]] has mathematically estimated that the population of the Japanese islands during the Kofun period was approximately 5,400,000 people. Since the population even in the Nara period remained less than 6,000,000, the Hayato population may be assumed to be around one-hundredth of the total population of the islands. {{cite book |editor=Kōichi Mori |script-title=ja:日本の古代5『前方後円墳の世紀』 |trans-title=Ancient Japan Part 5: The Age of Keyhole Kofun |publisher=中央公論社 |year=1986 |isbn=4-12-402538-6 |page=131 |language=Japanese}}</ref>
The Hayato were made to emigrate to the [[Kinai]] region, and were active in the protection of the court, the arts, [[sumo]], and bamboo work.<ref>The Nihon Shoki records that in the court of Emperor Tenmu, in the late 7th century, the Hayato performed sumo in the court, but it is not described as different from the sumo of the Yamato themselves. In 682, the Ōsumi Hayato and Ata Hayato competed in sumo and the Ōsumi side won, and in 695 a bout of sumo between Hayato on the grounds of [[Asuka-dera]] drew a crowd of spectators.</ref> Many lived in [[Yamashiro Province]], in the south of modern Kyoto. There remains an area called {{Nihongo|Ōsumi|大住}} in [[Kyōtanabe, Kyoto]], where many Ōsumi Hayato lived. These were the Hayato governed by the ''Hayato-shi''.
It is suggested that the Hayato are of [[Austronesian]] origin.<ref>Kakubayashi, Fumio. 隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族' [http://ci.nii.ac.jp/naid/110000577490/en/ ''Hayato : An Austronesian speaking tribe in southern Japan''.]'. ''The bulletin of the Institute for Japanese Culture, Kyoto Sangyo University'', 3, pp.15-31 {{ISSN|1341-7207}}.</ref> Their culture and language are believed to have differed from those of other regions of Japan. In particular, their folk song and dance became famous in the Kinai region as the {{Nihongo|Hayato dance|隼人舞}}.<ref>The Hayato dance appears repeatedly in the Kojiki, Nihon Shoki, and Shoku Nihongi, performed on the occasion of paying tribute to the court and for the benefit of foreign visitors.</ref> An excavation of [[Heijō Palace]] discovered wooden shields with a distinctive reverse-S-shaped marking. These shields match those described in the ''[[Engishiki]]'', which the Hayato used in court ceremonial functions. The Hayato had roles in various state ceremonies, including those for the new year, imperial enthronement, and visiting foreign officials.
According to the [[Fudoki|ancient records]] of [[Hizen province]], the [[Gotō Islands]] were also inhabited by a people resembling the Hayato. The [[New Book of Tang]] describes a minor king of {{Nihongo|Haya|波邪}}, and this Haya has also been interpreted as referring to the Hayato.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Kadowaki |first1=Teiji |last2=Mori |first2=Kōichi |script-title=ja:古代史を解く『鍵(キーワード)』 |trans-title=Keys to Understanding Ancient History |publisher=学生社 |year=1995 |isbn=4-311-20194-X |pages=183–184 |language=Japanese}}</ref>
There are three types of graves archaeologically associated with the Hayato: the {{Nihongo|underground tunnel tombs|地下式横穴墓}} widely distributed around the border of Kagoshima and Miyazaki prefectures,<ref>These underground tunnel tombs are focused around Hyūga, Ōsumi, and Satsuma, but the underground stone-slab graves are found mainly in the Satsuma region. Therefore, it is theoried that the former were widely used by various Hayato, while the latter were used specifically by the Ata Hayato. {{cite book |title=日本の考古学 IV 古墳時代 (上) |trans-title=Archaeology in Japan IV: The Kofun Period (Part 1) |editor1=Yoshirō Kondō |editor2=Chōji Fujisawa |publisher=河出書房 |year=1966 |page=163 |language=Japanese}}</ref> the {{Nihongo|standing stone graves|立石土壙墓}} of the southern Satsuma peninsula, and the {{Nihongo|underground stone-slab graves|地下式板石積石室}} found north of the Satsuma peninsula. Another large group of tunnel tombs is located near the Ōsumi area of Kyotanabe. Because of the proximity and because the gravelly soil of the area is not suited to such tombs, these may also be associated with the Hayato.
In Japanese mythology, the deity [[Hoderi|Umisachihiko]] is considered the ancestor of the ruler of the Ata Hayato. The Hayato Dance may be intended to portray Umisachihiko's pain at being outdone by his younger brother Yamasachihiko.<ref>{{cite book |last=Tsugita |first=Masaki |title=古事記 (上) 全訳注 |trans-title=Complete Translated and Annotated Kojiki, Part 1 |publisher=講談社学術文庫 |volume=38 |year=2001 |origyear=1977 |isbn=4-06-158207-0 |page=205}}</ref>
== Regional distribution ==
;{{Nihongo|Ata Hayato|阿多隼人}}, or Satsuma Hayato
:A Hayato tribe who lived on the [[Satsuma Peninsula]]. Before the establishment of [[Satsuma Province]], the area was known as Ata. The ''[[Nihon Shoki]]'''s section on 682 calls them the Ata Hayato, while the section of the ''[[Shoku Nihongi]]'' on the year 709 refers to them as the Satsuma Hayato.
;{{Nihongo|Ōsumi Hayato|大隅隼人}}
:A Hayato tribe who lived in the northern [[Ōsumi Peninsula]], or by another theory the [[Kimotsuki, Kagoshima|Kimotsuki]] plain region.<ref>The latter theory is seen in volume 1 of the 1967 {{Nihongo|history of Kanoya City|鹿屋市史}}</ref> They are mentioned in ''Nihon Shoki'' article on 682.
;{{Nihongo|Tane Hayato|多褹隼人}}
:A Hayato tribe who lived in [[Tane Province]]. In 702, the court dispatched an army and conquered the region.
;{{Nihongo|Koshiki Hayato|甑隼人}}
:A Hayato tribe who lived on the [[Koshikijima Islands]]. They are mentioned in the ''Shoku Nihongi'''s section on 769.
;{{Nihongo|Hyūga Hayato|日向隼人}}
:A Hayato tribe who lived in [[Hyūga Province]]. The ''Shoku Nihongi'' records that in 710, their leader {{Nihongo|Sonokimi no Hosomaro|曾君細麻呂}} submitted to the court and was awarded the rank of {{Nihongo|outside|外}} {{Nihongo||従五位下|ju go-i no ge}}. However, this was before the separation of Ōsumi province from Hyūga Province in 713. The history of [[Usa Shrine]] records that later, in 719, the Ōsumi and Hyūga Hayato attacked Japan, perhaps a precursor to the rebellion of 720.
== Skeletal differences ==
Anthropological research on human skeletons of the [[Kofun period]] on southern Kyushu has shown that male skeletons found inland differ from those on the Miyazaki plain. Inland skeletons resembled those of [[Jōmon period|Jōmon people]] and northwestern Kyushu [[Yayoi people]],<ref>The Yayoi people of northwestern Kyushu are thought to be the descendants of the Jōmon people of the region, who adopted and naturalized into the Yayoi culture. The mention in the Hizen ancient records of Hayato-like people in the Gotō islands can also be explained if we consider that they too were descended from northwestern Kyushuan Yayoi people. {{cite book |last=Ueda |first=Masaaki |script-title=ja:エコール・ド・ロイヤル 古代日本を考える 『日本古代史の謎再考』 |publisher=学生社 |year=1983|page=52 |language=Japanese}}</ref> and some groups on the plain also resembled northern Kyushu Yayoi people.<ref>{{cite book |last=Matsushita |first=Takayuki |script-title=ja:南九州における古墳時代人骨の人類学的研究 |trans-title=Anthropological Research on Human Skeletal Remains from the Kofun Period in Southern Kyushu |year=1990 |language=Japanese}}</ref> Additionally, skeletons excavated from late Yayoi-period ruins on [[Tanegashima]] are smaller than those found on Kyushu, and show signs of [[artificial cranial deformation]].
== Notes ==
{{Reflist}}
== References ==
*{{cite book |last=Nakamura |first=Akizō |script-title=ja:隼人の古代史 |trans-title=Ancient History of the Hayato |publisher=平凡社新書 |isbn=978-4582851199 |language=Japanese}}
{{Wiktionary pipe|隼人|hayato}}
{{Ethnic groups in Japan}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hayato People}}
[[Category:Classical Japan]]
[[Category:Tribes of ancient Japan]]' |
Unified diff of changes made by edit (edit_diff ) | '@@ -1,3 +1,3 @@
-The {{Nihongo|'''Hayato'''|隼人|}}, which is Japanese for "falcon-people",<ref>[[William George Aston]] says this in his note, see ''Nihongi: Chronicles of Japan from the Earliest Times to A.D. 697'', translated from the original Chinese and Japanese by [[William George Aston]]. Book II, note 1, page 100. Tuttle Publishing. Tra edition (July 2005). First edition published 1972. {{ISBN|978-0-8048-3674-6}}</ref> were possibly an[[Austronesian people]]<ref>角林, 文雄「隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族」、『京都産業大学日本文化研究所紀要』第3号、京都産業大学、1998年3月、 ISSN [[issn:13417207|13417207]]</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.at/books?id=7pEOicqsjv0C&pg=PA368&lpg=PA368&dq=hayato+people+austronesian&source=bl&ots=vxmYpxoe18&sig=3oddRauVhXgP3oKwOwSkAYrLLNw&hl=de&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjByt_GoK_ZAhXCYlAKHV4_D4kQ6AEIWTAJ#v=onepage&q=hayato%20people%20austronesian&f=false|title=Himiko and Japan's Elusive Chiefdom of Yamatai: Archaeology, History, and Mythology|last=Kidder|first=Jonathan Edward|date=2007|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|isbn=9780824830359|language=en}}</ref><ref>Kakubayashi, Fumio. 隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族' Hayato : An Austronesian speaking tribe in southern Japan.'. The bulletin of the Institute for Japanese Culture, Kyoto Sangyo University, 3, pp.15-31 ISSN 1341-7207</ref> of ancient [[Japan]] who lived in the [[Satsuma province|Satsuma]] and [[Ōsumi Province|Ōsumi]] regions of southern [[Kyushu]] until at least the [[Nara period]]. Due to the distinct nature of their manners and customs, they frequently resisted [[Imperial House of Japan|Yamato]] rule. After their subjugation they became subjects of the government under [[Ritsuryō]], and the [[Ministry of War (pre-modern Japan)|Ministry of the Military]] had an office known as the {{Nihongo||隼人司|Hayato-shi}} in charge of their governance. The name also came into use by samurai as a title, {{Nihongo||隼人助|hayato no suke}}. In modern times, Hayato is a Japanese male given name.
+The {{Nihongo|'''Hayato'''|隼人|}}, which is Japanese for "falcon-people",<ref>[[William George Aston]] says this in his note, see ''Nihongi: Chronicles of Japan from the Earliest Times to A.D. 697'', translated from the original Chinese and Japanese by [[William George Aston]]. Book II, note 1, page 100. Tuttle Publishing. Tra edition (July 2005). First edition published 1972. {{ISBN|978-0-8048-3674-6}}</ref> were possibly an [[Austronesian people]]<ref>角林, 文雄「隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族」、『京都産業大学日本文化研究所紀要』第3号、京都産業大学、1998年3月、 ISSN [[issn:13417207|13417207]]</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.at/books?id=7pEOicqsjv0C&pg=PA368&lpg=PA368&dq=hayato+people+austronesian&source=bl&ots=vxmYpxoe18&sig=3oddRauVhXgP3oKwOwSkAYrLLNw&hl=de&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjByt_GoK_ZAhXCYlAKHV4_D4kQ6AEIWTAJ#v=onepage&q=hayato%20people%20austronesian&f=false|title=Himiko and Japan's Elusive Chiefdom of Yamatai: Archaeology, History, and Mythology|last=Kidder|first=Jonathan Edward|date=2007|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|isbn=9780824830359|language=en}}</ref><ref>Kakubayashi, Fumio. 隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族' Hayato : An Austronesian speaking tribe in southern Japan.'. The bulletin of the Institute for Japanese Culture, Kyoto Sangyo University, 3, pp.15-31 ISSN 1341-7207</ref> of ancient [[Japan]] who lived in the [[Satsuma province|Satsuma]] and [[Ōsumi Province|Ōsumi]] regions of southern [[Kyushu]] until at least the [[Nara period]]. Due to the distinct nature of their manners and customs, they frequently resisted [[Imperial House of Japan|Yamato]] rule. After their subjugation they became subjects of the government under [[Ritsuryō]], and the [[Ministry of War (pre-modern Japan)|Ministry of the Military]] had an office known as the {{Nihongo||隼人司|Hayato-shi}} in charge of their governance. The name also came into use by samurai as a title, {{Nihongo||隼人助|hayato no suke}}. In modern times, Hayato is a Japanese male given name.
== History and culture ==
' |
New page size (new_size ) | 13261 |
Old page size (old_size ) | 13260 |
Size change in edit (edit_delta ) | 1 |
Lines added in edit (added_lines ) | [
0 => 'The {{Nihongo|'''Hayato'''|隼人|}}, which is Japanese for "falcon-people",<ref>[[William George Aston]] says this in his note, see ''Nihongi: Chronicles of Japan from the Earliest Times to A.D. 697'', translated from the original Chinese and Japanese by [[William George Aston]]. Book II, note 1, page 100. Tuttle Publishing. Tra edition (July 2005). First edition published 1972. {{ISBN|978-0-8048-3674-6}}</ref> were possibly an [[Austronesian people]]<ref>角林, 文雄「隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族」、『京都産業大学日本文化研究所紀要』第3号、京都産業大学、1998年3月、 ISSN [[issn:13417207|13417207]]</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.at/books?id=7pEOicqsjv0C&pg=PA368&lpg=PA368&dq=hayato+people+austronesian&source=bl&ots=vxmYpxoe18&sig=3oddRauVhXgP3oKwOwSkAYrLLNw&hl=de&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjByt_GoK_ZAhXCYlAKHV4_D4kQ6AEIWTAJ#v=onepage&q=hayato%20people%20austronesian&f=false|title=Himiko and Japan's Elusive Chiefdom of Yamatai: Archaeology, History, and Mythology|last=Kidder|first=Jonathan Edward|date=2007|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|isbn=9780824830359|language=en}}</ref><ref>Kakubayashi, Fumio. 隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族' Hayato : An Austronesian speaking tribe in southern Japan.'. The bulletin of the Institute for Japanese Culture, Kyoto Sangyo University, 3, pp.15-31 ISSN 1341-7207</ref> of ancient [[Japan]] who lived in the [[Satsuma province|Satsuma]] and [[Ōsumi Province|Ōsumi]] regions of southern [[Kyushu]] until at least the [[Nara period]]. Due to the distinct nature of their manners and customs, they frequently resisted [[Imperial House of Japan|Yamato]] rule. After their subjugation they became subjects of the government under [[Ritsuryō]], and the [[Ministry of War (pre-modern Japan)|Ministry of the Military]] had an office known as the {{Nihongo||隼人司|Hayato-shi}} in charge of their governance. The name also came into use by samurai as a title, {{Nihongo||隼人助|hayato no suke}}. In modern times, Hayato is a Japanese male given name.'
] |
Lines removed in edit (removed_lines ) | [
0 => 'The {{Nihongo|'''Hayato'''|隼人|}}, which is Japanese for "falcon-people",<ref>[[William George Aston]] says this in his note, see ''Nihongi: Chronicles of Japan from the Earliest Times to A.D. 697'', translated from the original Chinese and Japanese by [[William George Aston]]. Book II, note 1, page 100. Tuttle Publishing. Tra edition (July 2005). First edition published 1972. {{ISBN|978-0-8048-3674-6}}</ref> were possibly an[[Austronesian people]]<ref>角林, 文雄「隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族」、『京都産業大学日本文化研究所紀要』第3号、京都産業大学、1998年3月、 ISSN [[issn:13417207|13417207]]</ref><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.at/books?id=7pEOicqsjv0C&pg=PA368&lpg=PA368&dq=hayato+people+austronesian&source=bl&ots=vxmYpxoe18&sig=3oddRauVhXgP3oKwOwSkAYrLLNw&hl=de&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjByt_GoK_ZAhXCYlAKHV4_D4kQ6AEIWTAJ#v=onepage&q=hayato%20people%20austronesian&f=false|title=Himiko and Japan's Elusive Chiefdom of Yamatai: Archaeology, History, and Mythology|last=Kidder|first=Jonathan Edward|date=2007|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|isbn=9780824830359|language=en}}</ref><ref>Kakubayashi, Fumio. 隼人 : オーストロネシア系の古代日本部族' Hayato : An Austronesian speaking tribe in southern Japan.'. The bulletin of the Institute for Japanese Culture, Kyoto Sangyo University, 3, pp.15-31 ISSN 1341-7207</ref> of ancient [[Japan]] who lived in the [[Satsuma province|Satsuma]] and [[Ōsumi Province|Ōsumi]] regions of southern [[Kyushu]] until at least the [[Nara period]]. Due to the distinct nature of their manners and customs, they frequently resisted [[Imperial House of Japan|Yamato]] rule. After their subjugation they became subjects of the government under [[Ritsuryō]], and the [[Ministry of War (pre-modern Japan)|Ministry of the Military]] had an office known as the {{Nihongo||隼人司|Hayato-shi}} in charge of their governance. The name also came into use by samurai as a title, {{Nihongo||隼人助|hayato no suke}}. In modern times, Hayato is a Japanese male given name.'
] |
Whether or not the change was made through a Tor exit node (tor_exit_node ) | false |
Unix timestamp of change (timestamp ) | 1551103504 |