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Japan
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5: 06/07 00:34 ID:fqhZAOoA
こんなのチェックし切れん。

Please don't ignore the citations I have already posted above. And please take the time to read these as well. Finally, if you could show some citations about your point of view, I would appreciate it. Thanks!
Sue ware introduced from southern Korea. [20].
Gaya, Silla, and possibly Baekje pottery styles were imitated by the people of Japan. [21].
“ca. late 300s?rly 400s A.D. High-fired gray pottery is introduced from Kaya Federation in Korea to Japan, where it is initially produced by or with the help of immigrant potters for the ruling elite. This ware, known in Japan as Sueki, is made using the potter's wheel and fired in a single tunnel-like chamber kiln (anagama) built along a hill slope and able to reach 1100?ºC, temperatures high enough for stoneware and porcelain.” [22].
Korean style Sue ware was made in the Kyoto area during the tumulus period. [23].
Seto-ware, inspired by Korea [24].
Local handicrafts evolved from both Chinese and Korean prototypes. [25].
Korean potters instrumental in training Japanese in continental pottery styles and starting Japan’s porcelain industry. [26].
Some Japanese castles incorporated Korean castle architecture. [27].
Satsuma pottery was Korean inspired. [28].
Early Japanese temple compounds were based on Paekche prototypes from the sixth and seventh century. [29].
Asuka period art had a Korean influence. [30].
Green-ash glazed stoneware made during the Hakuho-Nara periods were inspired by Chinese and Korean works. [31].
There was a Korean influence on Japanese culture and dress. [32]. The paintings at the Takamatsu tomb show woman dressed in clothing reminiscent of Korean dress [33].
The Hata clan was from Silla. [34].
Nyorin Kannon, Miroku Bodhisattva, and the image at the Chugu-ji nunnery all show the influence of Korean art of that day.
Tori Busshi, the grandson of Korean immigrants. [35].
Japanese tomb painting inspired by Chinese and Korean culture. [36].
Yumendo Kannon, has Korean influences. [37].
New type tombs in the seventh century are allied with well-established Korean customs and distantly related to Chinese ones. [38].
The kondo of Horyu-ji temple has paintings from Korean and Chinese prototypes. [39]. In the Kinto hall, a Koguryeo monk painted murals. [40]. The temple itself resembles ones excavated in the former Koguryeo kingdom and follows Paekche layouts. [41]. The pagoda is Tang style or Korean styles.
Korean-style swords made in the southern Yamato basin in the fifth century CE. [42].
Virtually all early grave goods have Korean or Chinese prototypes. [43].
The Be system, adopted from Paekche, that contributed most significantly to centralization of the Yamato polity in the sixth century. [44].
Fifth century tombs in Japan follow the Paekche-style corridor tombs. [45].
Japan absorbed and imitated centralized government institutions in Korea and espcially China. [46]. Emperor Tenji focused on establishing new systems from the Chinese and Korean models. [47].
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