開国
意味
Opening of a country; ending isolation. The act of a nation opening its borders to foreign trade and diplomacy.
A noun (also する verb) that in Japanese history refers specifically to the end of the Edo period's sakoku (isolationist) policy following Commodore Perry's arrival in 1853. In broader usage, it can apply to any nation abandoning isolationism. Its antonym is 鎖国 (sakoku, closed country). Today it is also used metaphorically to describe opening up markets, institutions, or communities.
例文
- 黒船来航は、幕府に開国を迫る大きな圧力となった。
- 開国から明治維新に至るまで、日本社会は急速に変容した。
- 長年の孤立政策を転換し、その国はついに開国への道を選んだ。
使い方ガイド
場面: history, politics, diplomacy, economics
トーン: neutral
起源と歴史
From 開 (kai, open) and 国 (koku/kuni, country). The term became central to Japanese political vocabulary during the 1850s when the shogunate faced pressure to abandon 鎖国 after over two centuries of isolation.
文化的背景
時代: Edo–Meiji
世代: Adults
社会的背景: Universal
関連フレーズ
フラッシュカード、クイズ、音声発音、間隔反復