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Yamato

Yamato is a term with multiple uses in Japanese history, geography, and culture. In historical contexts, it commonly refers to the Yamato period (roughly 250–710 CE), during which the Yamato state based in the Kinai region expanded influence and laid the foundations of the Japanese imperial line. The word is also used more broadly to describe the early Japanese people and the homeland that formed the basis of classical Japan.

Geographically, Yamato refers to Yamato Province (Yamato no Kuni), an old political division in what is now

In naval history, the battleship Yamato was the lead ship of the Yamato class, built for the

In popular culture, Space Battleship Yamato is a long-running Japanese science fiction franchise created in the

The name is also used in modern entities, such as Yamato Transport, a major Japanese logistics company,

Nara
Prefecture.
The
name
persists
in
various
place
names
and
is
sometimes
used
poetically
to
denote
Japan
itself
as
a
cultural
and
historical
concept.
Imperial
Japanese
Navy
in
the
1930s.
Considered
one
of
the
largest
battleships
ever
constructed,
it
served
in
World
War
II
and
was
sunk
in
1945
during
operations
off
Okinawa.
1970s.
The
series
centers
on
a
starship
named
Yamato
undertaking
a
mission
to
save
Earth,
and
it
has
been
influential
in
anime
and
has
been
adapted
into
various
media,
including
the
English-language
Star
Blazers.
and
Yamato
City
in
Kanagawa
Prefecture.
Across
contexts,
Yamato
remains
a
symbolically
potent
term
for
historical
Japan,
its
people,
and
its
enduring
cultural
imagery.