Bakumatsu < 2026 >

For over 200 years, Japan had lived in sakoku (isolation) under the Tokugawa Shogunate. This changed in when U.S. Commodore Matthew Perry arrived with heavily armed "Black Ships," demanding Japan open its ports for trade. The Shogunate, realizing they could not win a military conflict against Western technology, signed treaties that many Japanese viewed as humiliating "unequal" agreements. A Nation Divided The crisis split Japan into two primary warring ideologies:

The story of the (literally "the end of the curtain") is the dramatic 15-year saga (1853–1868) that transformed Japan from a secluded feudal society into a modern global power . It was an era of intense political intrigue, bloody street fights, and the final, fading glory of the samurai. The Spark: The Black Ships Bakumatsu

Idealistic samurai, mostly from the southern domains of Satsuma and Chōshū , who wanted to overthrow the Shogun, return power to the Emperor, and kick out the Westerners. For over 200 years, Japan had lived in

Pro-Shogunate forces who believed in reforming the current government and cooperating with the Imperial Court to handle foreign threats. Chaos in the Streets The Shogunate, realizing they could not win a