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  2. History of the Catholic Church in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Catholic...

    The Jesuits and the Mendicant Orders kept a lasting rivalry over the Japanese mission and attached to different imperial strategies. The Tokugawa shogunate finally decided to ban Catholicism in 1614, and in the mid-17th century demanded the expulsion of all European missionaries and the execution of all converts. [32]

  3. Okamoto Daihachi incident - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Okamoto_Daihachi_incident

    The conspiracy - motivated by the Christian daimyō Arima Harunobu's desire to retake Arima lands in Hizen that were lost in the Sengoku wars - did much to shake the confidence that the Tokugawa regime placed on its Christian subjects, and was attributed as one of the reasons the Tokugawa eventually took an anti-Christian stance, which ...

  4. Martyrs of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martyrs_of_Japan

    The Martyrs of Japan (Japanese: 日本の殉教者, Hepburn: Nihon no junkyōsha) were Christian missionaries and followers who were persecuted and executed, mostly during the Tokugawa shogunate period in the 17th century. The Japanese saw the rituals of the Christians causing people to pray, close their eyes with the sign of the cross and lock ...

  5. 205 Martyrs of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/205_Martyrs_of_Japan

    After the Tokugawa shogunate banned Christianity in 1620, it ceased to exist publicly. Many Catholics went underground, becoming hidden Christians (隠れキリシタン, kakure kirishitan), while others were killed. Only after the Meiji Restoration, was Christianity re-established in Japan.

  6. 16 Martyrs of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/16_Martyrs_of_Japan

    After the Tokugawa shogunate banned Christianity in 1620, it ceased to exist publicly. Many Catholics went underground, becoming hidden Christians (隠れキリシタン, kakure kirishitan), while others lost their lives. Only after the Meiji Restoration, was Christianity re-established in Japan.

  7. Kakure Kirishitan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kakure_Kirishitan

    The gion-mamori, the crest of the Gion Shrine, which depicts two crossing scrolls and a horn, was adopted by the Kakure Kirishitan as their crest under the Tokugawa shogunate [4] Kakure Kirishitan are the Catholic communities in Japan which hid themselves during the ban and persecution of Christianity by Japan in the 1600s. [3] [5]

  8. Tokugawa shogunate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tokugawa_shogunate

    Though Christianity was allowed to grow until the 1610s, Tokugawa Ieyasu soon began to see it as a growing threat to the stability of the shogunate. As Ōgosho ("Cloistered Shōgun"), [32] he influenced the implementation of laws that banned the practice of Christianity. His successors followed suit, compounding upon Ieyasu's laws.

  9. Urakami Yoban Kuzure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urakami_Yoban_Kuzure

    After the Shogunate issued a ban on the practice of Christianity, the believers became Hidden Christians, secretly defending their faith and passing it on to the next generation. Spread across the country, several Christian communities existed, but after the ban, they disappeared over the years and remained clandestinely only in the vicinity of ...