尊王攘夷
意味
Revere the emperor, expel the barbarians. The political slogan of late Edo-period activists advocating imperial restoration and the exclusion of foreign powers.
This four-kanji compound was the rallying cry of anti-shogunate activists in the 1850s–1860s. 尊王 (sonnō) means to honour and revere the emperor, while 攘夷 (jōi) means to repel and expel foreigners. The movement contributed to the Meiji Restoration of 1868, though ironically the new Meiji government subsequently opened Japan to Western influence. Primarily a historical and academic term.
例文
- 幕末の志士たちは尊王攘夷を掲げて倒幕運動を推進した。
- 尊王攘夷の思想は明治維新の原動力となった。
- 歴史の授業で尊王攘夷運動について詳しく学んだ。
使い方ガイド
場面: history, politics, Japanese history, academia
トーン: neutral
起源と歴史
A four-character compound combining 尊王 (revere the king/emperor; from Chinese political philosophy) and 攘夷 (expel the barbarians; 攘 = to repel, 夷 = foreigner, barbarian). Adopted as a political slogan in the turbulent late Edo period.
文化的背景
時代: Edo–Meiji
世代: All ages (historical context)
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