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Emperor Meiji

Mutsuhito (Japanese: 睦仁, 3 November 1852 – 30 July 1912), posthumously honored as Emperor Meiji[a] (明治天皇, Meiji-tennō), was the 122nd emperor of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. Reigning from 1867 to his death, he was the first monarch of the Empire of Japan and presided over the Meiji era. His reign is associated with the Meiji Restoration, a series of rapid changes that witnessed Japan's transformation from an isolationist, feudal state to an industrialized world power.

Emperor Meiji
明治天皇
Portrait by Edoardo Chiossone, 1888
Emperor of Japan
Reign13 February 1867 – 30 July 1912
Enthronement12 September 1868
PredecessorKōmei
SuccessorTaishō
ShōgunTokugawa Yoshinobu (1866–1868)
Daijō-daijinSanjō Sanetomi (1871–1885)
Prime ministers
BornMutsuhito, Prince Sachi
(祐宮睦仁親王)
(1852-11-03)3 November 1852
Kyoto Gyoen National Garden, Kyoto, Yamashiro Province, Tokugawa shogunate
Died30 July 1912(1912-07-30) (aged 59)
Meiji Palace, Tokyo City, Tokyo Prefecture, Empire of Japan
Burial13 September 1912
Fushimi Momoyama no Misasagi (伏見桃山陵), Kyoto, Kyoto Prefecture, Japan
Spouse
(m. 1869)
Issue
among others...
Era dates
Keiō:[1] 1 May 1865 – 23 October 1868
Meiji:
23 October 1868 – 30 July 1912
Posthumous name
Tsuigō:
Emperor Meiji (明治天皇)
HouseImperial House of Japan
FatherEmperor Kōmei
MotherNakayama Yoshiko
ReligionShinto
Signature

At the time of Emperor Meiji's birth in 1852, Japan was a feudal pre-industrial country dominated by the isolationist Tokugawa shogunate and the daimyō subject to it, who ruled over the country's 270 decentralized domains.[4] By the time of his death, Japan had undergone an extensive political, economic, and social revolution and emerged as one of the great powers on the world stage. The New York Times summarized this transformation at the emperor's funeral in 1912: "the contrast between that which preceded the funeral car and that which followed it was striking indeed. Before it went old Japan; after it came new Japan."[5]

Background edit

 
Emperor Kōmei (father of Emperor Meiji)
 
Nakayama Yoshiko (mother of Emperor Meiji)

The Tokugawa shogunate had established itself in the early 17th century.[6] Under its rule, the shōgun governed Japan. About 180 lords, known as daimyōs, ruled autonomous realms under the shōgun, and occasionally the shōgun called upon the daimyōs for gifts but did not tax them. The shōgun controlled the daimyōs in other ways too; only the shōgun could approve daimyōs marriages, and the shōgun could divest a daimyō of his lands.[7]

Tokugawa Ieyasu, who had officially retired from his position by 1605, was the first Tokugawa shōgun. Upon retirement, Tokugawa Ieyasu and his son Tokugawa Hidetada, the titular shōgun, issued a code of behavior for the nobility in 1605. Under the code, the Emperor was required to devote his time to scholarship and the arts.[8] The Emperors under the shogunate appear to have adhered closely to this code by studying Confucian classics and devoting time to poetry and calligraphy.[9] Emperors were taught only the rudiments of Japanese and Chinese history and geography.[9] The shōgun did not seek the consent or advice of the Emperor for his actions.[10]

Emperors almost never left their palace compound, or Gosho in Kyoto, except after an Emperor retired or to take shelter in a temple if the palace caught on fire.[11] Few Emperors lived long enough to retire; of the Meiji Emperor's five predecessors, only his grandfather and great-grandfather lived beyond the age of 40.[10] The Imperial Family suffered very high rates of infant mortality; all five of the Emperor's brothers and sisters died as infants, and only five of his own 15 children reached adulthood.[10]

Soon after taking control in the early seventeenth century, shogunate officials (known generically as bakufu) ended almost all Western trade with Japan, and barred Christian missionaries from the islands under the Sakoku Edict of 1635. In addition to the substantial Chinese trade, only the Dutch continued trade with Japan, maintaining a post on the island of Dejima by Nagasaki.[12] However, by the early 19th century, European and American vessels appeared in the waters around Japan with increasing frequency.[13]

Emperor Meiji was known to not only dearly love his grandchildren, but to be fond of the son of Gojong of Korea, the last crown prince of Korea, Yi Un.[14]

Early life edit

Prince Mutsuhito was born on 3 November 1852 in a small house on his maternal grandfather's property at the north end of the Gosho. At the time, birth was culturally believed to be a source of pollution, so the imperial prince was not born in the Palace. Instead, it was common for members of the Imperial Family to be born in a structure, often temporary, near the pregnant woman's father's house. The Prince Mutsuhito's mother, Nakayama Yoshiko, was a concubine (Japanese: 権の典侍, romanizedgon no tenji) to his father Emperor Kōmei, and she was the daughter of the acting major counselor, Nakayama Tadayasu.[15] The young prince was given the title Sachi-no-miya, or Prince Sachi.[16]

The young prince was born into an era of great change in Japan. This change was symbolised dramatically in July 1853 when Commodore Matthew Perry and his American Naval squadron (what the Japanese dubbed "the Black Ships"), sailed into the harbour at Edo (known since 1868 as Tokyo).[17] Perry sought to open Japan up to international trade and warned the Japanese of military consequences if they did not agree.[18] For the first time in at least 250 years, the shogunate took the highly unusual step of consulting with the Imperial Court because of the crisis brought on by Perry's arrival.[19] Emperor Kōmei's officials advised that they felt they should agree to trade with the Americans and asked that they be informed in advance of any steps to be taken upon Perry's return.[20] The Japanese government decided that their military was no match for the American military and thus allowed trade and submitted to what it dubbed the "Unequal Treaties".[21] "Unequal Treaties" meant giving up tariff authority and the right to try foreigners in its own courts.[18] The shogunate's willingness to consult with the Court was short-lived: in 1858, word of a treaty arrived with a letter stating that due to shortness of time, it had not been possible to consult.[22] Emperor Kōmei was so incensed that he threatened to abdicate—though even this action would have required the consent of the shōgun.[23]

Much of the Emperor's boyhood is known only through later accounts, which his biographer Donald Keene points out are often contradictory. One contemporary described Mutsuhito as healthy and strong, somewhat of a bully, and exceptionally talented at sumo. Another states that the prince was delicate and often ill. Some biographers state that he fainted when he first heard gunfire, while others deny this account.[24] On 16 August 1860, Sachinomiya was proclaimed prince of the blood and heir to the throne and was formally adopted by his father's consort. Later that year on 11 November, he was proclaimed as the crown prince and given an adult name, Mutsuhito.[25] The prince began his education at the age of seven.[26] He proved an indifferent student, and later in life wrote poems regretting that he had not applied himself more in writing practice.[27]

Reign edit

Unrest and accession edit

 
Emperor Meiji wearing the sokutai, 1872
 
Silver coin: 1 Japanese Trade Dollar, Meiji 9 – 1876

By the early 1860s, the shogunate was under several threats. Representatives of foreign powers sought to increase their influence in Japan. Many daimyōs were increasingly dissatisfied with bakufu handling foreign affairs. Large numbers of young samurai, known as shishi or "men of high purpose", began to meet and speak against the shogunate. The shishi revered Emperor Kōmei and favoured direct violent action to cure societal ills. While they initially desired the death or expulsion of all foreigners, the shishi would later begin to advocate the modernisation of the country.[28] The bakufu enacted several measures to appease the various groups in an effort to drive a wedge between the shishi and daimyōs.[29]

Kyoto was a major centre for the shishi and the shishi had influence over the Emperor Kōmei. In 1863, the shishi persuaded him to issue an "Order to expel barbarians". The Order placed the shogunate in a difficult position since they had no intention of enforcing the order because they did not have the power to carry it out. Several attacks were made on foreigners or their ships, and foreign forces retaliated. Bakufu forces were able to drive most of the shishi out of Kyoto, and an attempt by them to return in 1864 was driven back. Nevertheless, unrest continued throughout Japan.[29]

The prince's awareness of the political turmoil is uncertain.[30] During this time, he studied waka poetry, first with his father, then with the court poets.[31] In 1866, a new shōgun, Tokugawa Yoshinobu, took office as the prince continued his classical education. Tokugawa Yoshinobu was a reformer who desired to transform Japan into a Western-style state. Yoshinobu was the final shōgun and met with resistance from among the bakufu, even as unrest and military actions continued. In mid-1866, a bakufu army set forth to punish rebels in southern Japan. The army was defeated.[32]

Emperor Kōmei fell seriously ill at the age of 36 and died on 30 January 1867. British diplomat Sir Ernest Satow wrote, "it is impossible to deny that [Emperor Kōmei's] disappearance from the political scene, leaving as his successor a boy of fifteen or sixteen [actually fourteen], was most opportune".[33]

In a brief ceremony in Kyoto, the crown prince formally ascended to the throne on 3 February 1867.[34] The new Emperor continued his classical education, which did not include matters of politics. In the meantime, the shōgun, Yoshinobu, struggled to maintain power. He repeatedly asked for the Emperor's confirmation of his actions, which he eventually received, but there is no indication that the young Emperor was himself involved in the decisions. The shishi and other rebels continued to shape their vision of the new Japan, and although they revered the Emperor, they had no thought of having him play an active part in the political process.[35]

The political struggle reached its climax in late 1867. An agreement was reached by which Yoshinobu would maintain his title and some of his power, but the lawmaking power would be vested in a bicameral legislature based on the British model. The agreement fell apart and on 9 November 1867, Yoshinobu officially tendered his resignation to the Emperor and formally stepped down ten days later.[36] The following month, the rebels marched on Kyoto, taking control of the Imperial Palace.[37] On 4 January 1868, the Emperor ceremoniously read out a document before the court proclaiming the "restoration" of Imperial rule,[38] and the following month, documents were sent to foreign powers:[37]

The Emperor of Japan announces to the sovereigns of all foreign countries and to their subjects that permission has been granted to the shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu to return the governing power in accordance with his own request. We shall henceforward exercise supreme authority in all the internal and external affairs of the country. Consequently, the title of Emperor must be substituted for that of Tycoon, in which the treaties have been made. Officers are being appointed by us to the conduct of foreign affairs. It is desirable that the representatives of the treaty powers recognize this announcement.
Mutsuhito[39]

On 23 October 1868 the era was changed from Keiō to Meiji, or "enlightened rule", which was later used for the Emperor's posthumous name. This marked the beginning of the custom of posthumously naming the Emperor after the era during which he ruled.

In a conflict known as the Boshin War, Yoshinobu's followers briefly resisted and bakufu holdouts were finally defeated in late 1869.[37]

Consolidation of power edit

 
Emperor Meiji receives Dutch Minister-Resident Dirk de Graeff van Polsbroek in 1868.
 
The sixteen-year-old Emperor, traveling from Kyoto to Tokyo at the end of 1868
 
First-ever photograph of Emperor Meiji at the Yokosuka Naval Arsenal by Baron Raimund von Stillfried on 1 January 1872

Despite the ouster of the bakufu, no effective central government had been put in place by the rebels. On March 23 the Dutch Minister-Resident Dirk de Graeff van Polsbroek and the French Minister-Resident Léon Roches were the first European envoys ever to receive a personal audience with the new Emperor Meiji in Edo (Tokyo).[40][41] This audience laid the foundation for (modern) Dutch diplomacy in Japan.[42] Subsequently, De Graeff van Polsbroek assisted the emperor and the government in their negotiations with representatives of the major European powers.[43][42] On 7 April 1868, the Emperor was presented with the Charter Oath, a five-point statement of the nature of the new government. The statement was designed to win over those who had not yet committed themselves to the new regime. This document, which the Emperor then formally promoted, abolished feudalism and proclaimed a modern democratic government for Japan. The Charter Oath would later be cited by Emperor Shōwa in the Humanity Declaration as support for the imposed changes in Japanese government following World War II.[44] For the first time since early childhood, he left the Imperial precincts in Kyoto in mid-May to take command of the forces pursuing the remnants of the bakufu armies. Traveling in slow stages due to through roads being lined with crowds, he took three days to travel from Kyoto to Osaka.[45] There was no conflict in Osaka; the new leaders wanted the Emperor to be more visible to his people and to foreign envoys. At the end of May, after two weeks in Osaka (in a much less formal atmosphere than in Kyoto), the Emperor returned to his home.[46] Shortly after his return, it was announced that the Emperor would begin to preside over all state business, reserving further literary study for his leisure time.[47] Only from 1871 onward did the Emperor's studies include materials on contemporary affairs.[48]

On 19 September 1868, the Emperor announced the name of the city of Edo was to be changed to Tokyo, meaning "eastern capital". He was formally crowned in Kyoto on 15 October (a ceremony which had been postponed from the previous year due to the civil unrest). Shortly before the coronation, he announced that the new era, or nengō, would be called Meiji or "enlightened rule". Heretofore the nengō had often been changed multiple times in an Emperor's reign; from now on, it was announced, there would only be one nengō per reign.[49]

Soon after his coronation, the Emperor journeyed to Tokyo by road, visiting it for the first time. He arrived in late November and began an extended stay by distributing sake among the population. The population of Tokyo was eager for an Imperial visit. Tokyo had been the site of the shōgun's court and the city's population feared that with the abolition of the shogunate, the city might fall into decline.[50] It would not be until 1889 that a final decision was made to move the capital to Tokyo.[51] While in Tokyo, the Emperor boarded a Japanese naval vessel for the first time, and the following day gave instructions for studies to see how Japan's navy could be strengthened.[52] Soon after his return to Kyoto, a rescript was issued in the Emperor's name (but most likely written by court officials). It indicated his intent to be involved in government affairs. And indeed he attended cabinet meetings and innumerable other government functions, though rarely speaking, almost until the day of his death.[53]

Political reform edit

 
Emperor Meiji in later life. Emperor Meiji wore a large beard in his later years, which is his well-known image.

The successful revolutionaries organized themselves into a Council of State, and subsequently into a system where three main ministers led the government. This structure would last until the establishment of a prime minister, who would lead a cabinet in a western fashion, in 1885.[54] Initially, not even the retention of the Emperor was certain; revolutionary leader Gotō Shōjirō later stated that some officials "were afraid the extremists might go further and abolish the Mikado".[55] Japan's new leaders sought to reform the patchwork system of domains governed by the daimyōs. In 1869, several of the daimyōs who had supported the revolution gave their land property to the Emperor and were reappointed as governors, with considerable salaries. By the following year, all other daimyōs had followed suit.

In 1871, as Japan was organized into 72 prefectures the Emperor announced that domains were entirely abolished. The daimyōs were compensated with annual salaries equal to ten percent of their former revenues (from which they now did not have to deduct the cost of governing), but were required to move to the new capital, Tokyo. Most daimyōs retired from politics.[56]

The new administration gradually abolished most privileges of the samurai, including their right to a stipend from the government. However, unlike the daimyōs, many samurai suffered financially from this change. Most other class-based distinctions were abolished. Legalized discrimination against the burakumin ended. However, these classes continue to suffer discrimination in Japan to the present time.[57]

 
Leaders of sixteen countries in a gathering envisage a desirable future world.

The 1889 constitution created a new parliament, although it had no real power.[citation needed] Power had passed from the Tokugawa into the hands of those daimyōs and other samurai who had led the Restoration.[citation needed] Japan was thus controlled by the Genrō, an oligarchy which comprised the most powerful men of the military, political and economic spheres. The Emperor showed greater political longevity than his recent predecessors, as he was the first Japanese monarch to remain on the throne past the age of 50 since Emperor Ōgimachi's abdication from the throne in 1586.[citation needed]

 
Illustration of Emperor Meiji by The Illustrated London News, published in the New-York Tribune (1905)

The Japanese take pride in the Meiji Restoration, as it and the accompanying industrialization allowed Japan to become the preeminent power in the Pacific and a major player in the world within a generation. Yet, Emperor Meiji's role in the Restoration, as well as the amount of personal authority and influence he wielded during his reign, remains debatable. He kept no diary, wrote almost no letters (unlike his father) and left "no more than three or four" photographs.[citation needed] The accounts of people who had met or were close to him usually contain little substantial information or are mutually contradictory.[58]

Due to the lack of reliable sources of the period, mysteries surrounding Emperor Meiji's personality and role in the Restoration remain a matter of historical dispute.[59] James C. Baxter argues that the Emperor was a figurehead without real power who rarely interfered with what had been agreed upon in advance by the Meiji oligarchy.[60][61] Conversely, Herbert Bix describes Meiji as a powerful autocrat whom the Genrō struggled to restrain while accommodating his anti-democratic inclinations.[62] R.Starr characterizes Meiji as a highly individualistic and forthright person who was no puppet to any group in his government, and although progressive, not 'liberal' or 'democratic'.[63] Yet another group of historians contend he was never a full dictator, but remain divided on whether his personal power was "far closer to the absolutist end".[64] or he merely played a mediating role in the Genrō's decision making.[65]

 
A portrait of Emperor Meiji in his older years from The Spell of Japan (1914) by Isabel Weld Perkins

He composed the following poem in waka form:

よもの海
みなはらからと思ふ世に
など波風のたちさわぐらむ[66]
Yomo no umi
mina harakara to
omofu yo ni
nado namikaze no
tachi sawaguramu[citation needed]
The seas of the four directions—
all are born of one womb:
why, then, do the wind and waves rise in discord?[citation needed]

This poem was later recited by his grandson, Emperor Shōwa in an Imperial Conference in September 1941 before the attack on Pearl Harbor to tell that he wanted to avoid the war.[citation needed]

The Illustrated London News published an article with a cover illustration of Emperor Meiji in the New-York Tribune on 19 March 1905. The description text said:

The victorious Emperor of Japan - beloved ruler of a new world power. The Emperor, who was born on 3 November 1852, succeeded to the throne on 3 February 1867, on the suppression of the Shogun dynasty, which had for generations wielded the power which the imperial family held only in name. Mutsuhito has proved the most practical of modern monarchs, for in less than forty years he has brought his country from semi-barbarism to the status of a first class power.[67]

Senior life and death edit

 
Emperor Meiji's last exercise supervision
 
Funeral of Emperor Meiji, 1912
 
French envoys received by Count Akiyama Yoshifuru (front left) at the funeral of Emperor Meiji

Near the end of his life several leftists, including Shūsui Kōtoku, were executed (1911) on charges of having conspired to murder the sovereign. This conspiracy was known as the High Treason Incident (1910).[citation needed]

Emperor Meiji, suffering from diabetes, nephritis, and gastroenteritis, died of uremia. Although the official announcement said he died at 00:42 on 30 July 1912, the actual death was at 22:40 on 29 July.[68][69] He was succeeded by his eldest son, Emperor Taishō.

By 1912, Japan had gone through a political, economic, and social revolution and emerged as one of the great powers in the world. The New York Times summed up this transformation at the Emperor's funeral in 1912 as: "the contrast between that which preceded the funeral car and that which followed it was striking indeed. Before it went old Japan; after it came new Japan."[5]

After the Emperor's death in 1912, the Japanese Diet passed a resolution to commemorate his role in the Meiji Restoration. An iris garden in an area of Tokyo where Emperor Meiji and the Empress had been known to visit was chosen as the building's location for the Shinto shrine Meiji Jingū. The shrine does not contain the Emperor's grave, which is at Fushimi-momoyama south of Kyoto.[70]

Family and issue edit

Soon after Meiji's ascension, the Emperor's officials presented Ichijō Haruko to him as a possible bride. The future Empress was the daughter of an Imperial official, and was three years older than the groom, who would have to wait to wed until after his genpuku (manhood ceremony). The two married on 11 January 1869.[71] Known posthumously as Empress Dowager Shōken, she was the first Imperial Consort to receive the title of kōgō (literally, the Emperor's wife, translated as Empress Consort), in several hundred years. Although she was the first Japanese Empress Consort to play a public role, she bore no children. However, the Meiji Emperor had fifteen children by five official ladies-in-waiting. Only five of his children, a prince born to Lady Naruko (1855–1943), the daughter of Yanagiwara Mitsunaru, and four princesses born to Lady Sachiko (1867–1947), the eldest daughter of Count Sono Motosachi, lived to adulthood. Although Meiji was the last Emperor to have concubines, this function was not officially abolished until 1924.[citation needed]

Spouse edit

Image Position Name Birth Death Father Issue
  Empress Ichijō Masako (一条勝子)
later Empress Dowager Shōken (昭憲皇太后)
9 May 1849 9 April 1914 Tadaka Ichijō None

Concubines edit

Image Name Birth Death Father Issue
Hamuro Mitsuko (葉室光子) 3 February 1853 22 September 1873 Gon-Dainagon: Hamuro Nagamasa  • First Prince: Wakamitsuteru-hiko no Mikoto
Hashimoto Natsuko (橋本夏子) 19 March 1856 14 November 1873  • Shōnagon: Higashibojo Natsunaga
 • Dainagon: Hashimoto Saneakira
(Foster father)
 • First Princess: Wakatakayori-hime no Mikoto
  Yanagiwara Naruko (柳原愛子) 26 June 1859 16 October 1943 Gon-Chunagon: Yanagihara Mitsunaru  • Second Princess: Imperial Princess Ume-no-Miya Shigeko
 • Second Prince: Imperial Prince Take-no-Miya Yukihito
 • Third Prince: Imperial Prince Haru-no-Miya Yoshihito (later Emperor Taisho)
Chigusa Kotoko (千種任子) 1855 1944 Sakon'e gon no shōshō : Chigusa Aritō  • Third Princess: Imperial Princess Shige-no-Miya Akiko
 • Fourth Princess: Imperial Princess Masu-no-Miya Fumiko
  Sono Sachiko (園祥子) 23 December 1867 7 July 1947 Ukon'e no gon no chūjō: Sono Motosachi  • Fifth Princess: Imperial Princess Hisa-no-Miya Shizuko
 • Fourth Prince: Imperial Prince Aki-no-Miya Michihito
 • Sixth Princess: Imperial Princess Tsune-no-miya Masako
 • Seventh Princess: Imperial Princess Kane-no-miya Fusako
 • Eighth Princess: Imperial Princess Fumi-no-miya Nobuko
 • Fifth Prince: Imperial Prince Mitsu-no-miya Teruhito
 • Ninth Princess: Imperial Princess Yasu-no-miya Toshiko
 • Tenth Princess: Imperial Princess Sada-no-miya Tokiko

Issue edit

Emperor Meiji had fifteen children (five sons and ten daughters), five of them (a son and four daughters) reached adulthood.

He had eighteen grandchildren (eleven grandsons and seven granddaughters).

Image Status Name Birth Death Mother Marriage Issue
01 First Prince Wakamitsuteru-hiko no Mikoto
(稚瑞照彦尊)
(Stillbirth)
18 September 1873 18 September 1873 Hamuro Mitsuko
01 First Princess Wakatakayori-hime no Mikoto
(稚高依姫尊)
(Stillbirth)
13 November 1873 13 November 1873 Hashimoto Natsuko
02 Second Princess Ume-no-Miya Shigeko
(梅宮薫子内親王)
25 January 1875 8 June 1876 Yanagiwara Naruko
02 Second Prince Take-no-Miya Yukihito
(建宮敬仁親王)
23 September 1877 26 July 1878 Yanagiwara Naruko
  03 Third Prince Haru-no-Miya Yoshihito
(明宮嘉仁親王)
(later Emperor Taishō)
31 August 1879 25 December 1926 Yanagiwara Naruko 10 May 1900 Sadako Kujō  • Hirohito, Emperor Shōwa
 • Yasuhito, Prince Chichibu
 • Nobuhito, Prince Takamatsu
 • Takahito, Prince Mikasa
03 Third Princess Shige-no-Miya Akiko
(滋宮韶子内親王)
3 August 1881 6 September 1883 Chigusa Kotoko
04 Fourth Princess Masu-no-Miya Fumiko
(増宮章子内親王)
26 January 1883 8 September 1883 Chigusa Kotoko
05 Fifth Princess Hisa-no-Miya Shizuko
(久宮静子内親王)
10 February 1886 4 April 1887 Sono Sachiko
04 Fourth Prince Aki-no-Miya Michihito
(昭宮猷仁親王)
22 August 1887 12 November 1888 Sono Sachiko
  06 Sixth Princess Tsune-no-miya Masako
(常宮昌子内親王)
30 September 1888 8 March 1940 Sono Sachiko 30 April 1908 Prince Tsunehisa Takeda  • Prince Tsuneyoshi Takeda
 • Princess Ayako Takeda
  07 Seventh Princess Kane-no-miya Fusako
(周宮房子内親王)
28 January 1890 11 August 1974 Sono Sachiko 29 April 1909 Prince Naruhisa Kitashirakawa  • Prince Nagahisa Kitashirakawa
 • Princess Mineko Kitashirakawa
 • Princess Sawako Kitashirakawa
 • Princess Taeko Kitashirakawa
  08 Eighth Princess Fumi-no-miya Nobuko
(富美宮允子内親王)
7 August 1891 3 November 1933 Sono Sachiko 6 May 1909 Prince Yasuhiko Asaka  • Princess Kikuko Asaka
 • Princess Takahiko Asaka
 • Prince Tadahito Asaka
 • Princess Kiyoko Asaka
05 Fifth Prince Mitsu-no-miya Teruhito
(満宮輝仁親王)
30 November 1893 17 August 1894 Sono Sachiko
  09 Ninth Princess Yasu-no-miya Toshiko
(泰宮聡子内親王)
11 May 1896 5 March 1978 Sono Sachiko 18 May 1915 Prince Naruhiko Higashikuni  • Prince Morihiro Higashikuni
 • Prince Moromasa Higashikuni
 • Prince Akitsune Higashikuni
 • Prince Toshihiko Higashikuni
10 Tenth Princess Sada-no-miya Tokiko
(貞宮多喜子内親王)
24 September 1897 11 January 1899 Sono Sachiko

Honours edit

 
A bronze statue of Meiji Emperor

National honours edit

Foreign honours edit

He received the following orders and decorations:[73]

Timeline and gallery edit

 
Emperor Meiji reviewing the military at the Russo-Japanese War Victory Parade held on April 30, 1906 in Tokyo

The Meiji era ushered in many far-reaching changes to the ancient feudal society of Japan. A timeline of major events might include:

Gallery edit

Film depictions edit

 
Studio still snap from the 1957 Japanese film "Meiji Tenno to Nichiro Daisenso (Emperor Meiji and the Great Russo-Japanese War)"(Shintoho). Emperor Meiji of Kanjūrō Arashi.

Emperor Meiji is portrayed by Toshirō Mifune in the 1980 Japanese war drama film The Battle of Port Arthur (sometimes referred as 203 Kochi).[84] Directed by Toshio Masuda, the film depicted the Siege of Port Arthur during the Russo-Japanese War, and also starred Tatsuya Nakadai (as General Nogi Maresuke), and Tetsurō Tamba (as General Kodama Gentarō).

Emperor Meiji also appears in the 2003 film The Last Samurai, played by Nakamura Shichinosuke II. In the film, the Emperor is portrayed as a weak, inexperienced leader under the firm control of his councilors, who intend to have him sign a treaty that would give the United States special trading rights that would enrich them, but also cement foreign domination of Japan. The Emperor's determination is only shown at the end of the movie, when he is inspired by a visit from Capt. Nathan Algren (played by Tom Cruise), who fought alongside the rebel samurai, to reject the treaty and dismiss his advisors, declaring that Japan will modernize, but not at the cost of its traditions and history.

Notes edit

  1. ^ English: /ˈmi/, Japanese: [meꜜːʑi] Since the modern era, when an emperor of Japan dies, he is given a posthumous name. Such a name is a combination of the era during which he reigned and coincides with the emperor's contribution to the throne while he was alive. Therefore, he was publicly known during his life merely as "The Emperor", but he has been historically known as "Emperor Meiji" after his death. The name was officially given to him on 27 August 1912.[2] He obtained the current title in reference to the Meiji era, which spanned almost the entirety of his reign. His personal name (which is not used in any formal or official context, except for his signature) was Mutsuhito. He was also the first emperor to reign under the "one emperor, one era name"-system (一世一元), under which an era ends only on emperor's death or abdication, whereas before, an era could change mid-reign after a significant event, such as a disaster.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ On 1 May 1865 (the seventh day of the fourth month in the second year of Genji), Emperor Kōmei changed the era name from Genji to Keiō. Although Emperor Kōmei died on 30 January 1867 (the 25th day of the 12th month in the second year of Keiō), and Emperor Meiji ascended to the throne on 13 February 1867 (the ninth day of the first month in the third year of Keiō), Keiō still continued until 23 October 1868 (the eighth day of the ninth month in the fourth year of Keiō), when Emperor Meiji changed the era name from Keiō to Meiji.
  2. ^ Keene 2002, p. 706.
  3. ^ "Explainer - Japan new imperial era name, Reiwa: Origins, Selection, Meaning". Reuters. 1 April 2019. Retrieved 2 February 2023.
  4. ^ Keene 2002, p. 200.
  5. ^ a b c "The Funeral Ceremonies of Meiji Tenno", reprinted from the Japan Advertiser Article 8—No Title], New York Times. 13 October 1912.
  6. ^ Jansen 1995, p. vii
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Bibliography edit

External links edit

Emperor Meiji
Born: 3 November 1852 Died: 30 July 1912
Regnal titles
Preceded by Emperor of Japan
3 February 1867 – 30 July 1912
Succeeded by

emperor, meiji, mutsuhito, japanese, 睦仁, november, 1852, july, 1912, posthumously, honored, 明治天皇, meiji, tennō, 122nd, emperor, japan, according, traditional, order, succession, reigning, from, 1867, death, first, monarch, empire, japan, presided, over, meiji,. Mutsuhito Japanese 睦仁 3 November 1852 30 July 1912 posthumously honored as Emperor Meiji a 明治天皇 Meiji tennō was the 122nd emperor of Japan according to the traditional order of succession Reigning from 1867 to his death he was the first monarch of the Empire of Japan and presided over the Meiji era His reign is associated with the Meiji Restoration a series of rapid changes that witnessed Japan s transformation from an isolationist feudal state to an industrialized world power Emperor Meiji明治天皇Portrait by Edoardo Chiossone 1888Emperor of JapanReign13 February 1867 30 July 1912Enthronement12 September 1868PredecessorKōmeiSuccessorTaishōShōgunTokugawa Yoshinobu 1866 1868 Daijō daijinSanjō Sanetomi 1871 1885 Prime ministersSee list Itō Hirobumi Kuroda Kiyotaka Sanjō Sanetomi acting Yamagata Aritomo Matsukata MasayoshiŌkuma Shigenobu Saionji Kinmochi Katsura TarōBornMutsuhito Prince Sachi 祐宮睦仁親王 1852 11 03 3 November 1852Kyoto Gyoen National Garden Kyoto Yamashiro Province Tokugawa shogunateDied30 July 1912 1912 07 30 aged 59 Meiji Palace Tokyo City Tokyo Prefecture Empire of JapanBurial13 September 1912Fushimi Momoyama no Misasagi 伏見桃山陵 Kyoto Kyoto Prefecture JapanSpouseMasako Ichijō m 1869 wbr Issueamong others Yoshihito Emperor Taishō Masako Princess Takeda Fusako Princess Kitashirakawa Nobuko Princess Asaka Toshiko Princess HigashikuniEra datesKeiō 1 1 May 1865 23 October 1868Meiji 23 October 1868 30 July 1912Posthumous nameTsuigō Emperor Meiji 明治天皇 HouseImperial House of JapanFatherEmperor KōmeiMotherNakayama YoshikoReligionShintoSignatureAt the time of Emperor Meiji s birth in 1852 Japan was a feudal pre industrial country dominated by the isolationist Tokugawa shogunate and the daimyō subject to it who ruled over the country s 270 decentralized domains 4 By the time of his death Japan had undergone an extensive political economic and social revolution and emerged as one of the great powers on the world stage The New York Times summarized this transformation at the emperor s funeral in 1912 the contrast between that which preceded the funeral car and that which followed it was striking indeed Before it went old Japan after it came new Japan 5 Contents 1 Background 2 Early life 3 Reign 3 1 Unrest and accession 3 2 Consolidation of power 3 3 Political reform 3 4 Senior life and death 4 Family and issue 4 1 Spouse 4 2 Concubines 4 3 Issue 5 Honours 5 1 National honours 5 2 Foreign honours 6 Timeline and gallery 6 1 Gallery 7 Film depictions 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksBackground edit nbsp Emperor Kōmei father of Emperor Meiji nbsp Nakayama Yoshiko mother of Emperor Meiji The Tokugawa shogunate had established itself in the early 17th century 6 Under its rule the shōgun governed Japan About 180 lords known as daimyōs ruled autonomous realms under the shōgun and occasionally the shōgun called upon the daimyōs for gifts but did not tax them The shōgun controlled the daimyōs in other ways too only the shōgun could approve daimyōs marriages and the shōgun could divest a daimyō of his lands 7 Tokugawa Ieyasu who had officially retired from his position by 1605 was the first Tokugawa shōgun Upon retirement Tokugawa Ieyasu and his son Tokugawa Hidetada the titular shōgun issued a code of behavior for the nobility in 1605 Under the code the Emperor was required to devote his time to scholarship and the arts 8 The Emperors under the shogunate appear to have adhered closely to this code by studying Confucian classics and devoting time to poetry and calligraphy 9 Emperors were taught only the rudiments of Japanese and Chinese history and geography 9 The shōgun did not seek the consent or advice of the Emperor for his actions 10 Emperors almost never left their palace compound or Gosho in Kyoto except after an Emperor retired or to take shelter in a temple if the palace caught on fire 11 Few Emperors lived long enough to retire of the Meiji Emperor s five predecessors only his grandfather and great grandfather lived beyond the age of 40 10 The Imperial Family suffered very high rates of infant mortality all five of the Emperor s brothers and sisters died as infants and only five of his own 15 children reached adulthood 10 Soon after taking control in the early seventeenth century shogunate officials known generically as bakufu ended almost all Western trade with Japan and barred Christian missionaries from the islands under the Sakoku Edict of 1635 In addition to the substantial Chinese trade only the Dutch continued trade with Japan maintaining a post on the island of Dejima by Nagasaki 12 However by the early 19th century European and American vessels appeared in the waters around Japan with increasing frequency 13 Emperor Meiji was known to not only dearly love his grandchildren but to be fond of the son of Gojong of Korea the last crown prince of Korea Yi Un 14 Early life editPrince Mutsuhito was born on 3 November 1852 in a small house on his maternal grandfather s property at the north end of the Gosho At the time birth was culturally believed to be a source of pollution so the imperial prince was not born in the Palace Instead it was common for members of the Imperial Family to be born in a structure often temporary near the pregnant woman s father s house The Prince Mutsuhito s mother Nakayama Yoshiko was a concubine Japanese 権の典侍 romanized gon no tenji to his father Emperor Kōmei and she was the daughter of the acting major counselor Nakayama Tadayasu 15 The young prince was given the title Sachi no miya or Prince Sachi 16 The young prince was born into an era of great change in Japan This change was symbolised dramatically in July 1853 when Commodore Matthew Perry and his American Naval squadron what the Japanese dubbed the Black Ships sailed into the harbour at Edo known since 1868 as Tokyo 17 Perry sought to open Japan up to international trade and warned the Japanese of military consequences if they did not agree 18 For the first time in at least 250 years the shogunate took the highly unusual step of consulting with the Imperial Court because of the crisis brought on by Perry s arrival 19 Emperor Kōmei s officials advised that they felt they should agree to trade with the Americans and asked that they be informed in advance of any steps to be taken upon Perry s return 20 The Japanese government decided that their military was no match for the American military and thus allowed trade and submitted to what it dubbed the Unequal Treaties 21 Unequal Treaties meant giving up tariff authority and the right to try foreigners in its own courts 18 The shogunate s willingness to consult with the Court was short lived in 1858 word of a treaty arrived with a letter stating that due to shortness of time it had not been possible to consult 22 Emperor Kōmei was so incensed that he threatened to abdicate though even this action would have required the consent of the shōgun 23 Much of the Emperor s boyhood is known only through later accounts which his biographer Donald Keene points out are often contradictory One contemporary described Mutsuhito as healthy and strong somewhat of a bully and exceptionally talented at sumo Another states that the prince was delicate and often ill Some biographers state that he fainted when he first heard gunfire while others deny this account 24 On 16 August 1860 Sachinomiya was proclaimed prince of the blood and heir to the throne and was formally adopted by his father s consort Later that year on 11 November he was proclaimed as the crown prince and given an adult name Mutsuhito 25 The prince began his education at the age of seven 26 He proved an indifferent student and later in life wrote poems regretting that he had not applied himself more in writing practice 27 Reign editUnrest and accession edit Main articles Meiji era Meiji Restoration Government of Meiji Japan and Meiji Constitution nbsp Emperor Meiji wearing the sokutai 1872 nbsp Silver coin 1 Japanese Trade Dollar Meiji 9 1876By the early 1860s the shogunate was under several threats Representatives of foreign powers sought to increase their influence in Japan Many daimyōs were increasingly dissatisfied with bakufu handling foreign affairs Large numbers of young samurai known as shishi or men of high purpose began to meet and speak against the shogunate The shishi revered Emperor Kōmei and favoured direct violent action to cure societal ills While they initially desired the death or expulsion of all foreigners the shishi would later begin to advocate the modernisation of the country 28 The bakufu enacted several measures to appease the various groups in an effort to drive a wedge between the shishi and daimyōs 29 Kyoto was a major centre for the shishi and the shishi had influence over the Emperor Kōmei In 1863 the shishi persuaded him to issue an Order to expel barbarians The Order placed the shogunate in a difficult position since they had no intention of enforcing the order because they did not have the power to carry it out Several attacks were made on foreigners or their ships and foreign forces retaliated Bakufu forces were able to drive most of the shishi out of Kyoto and an attempt by them to return in 1864 was driven back Nevertheless unrest continued throughout Japan 29 The prince s awareness of the political turmoil is uncertain 30 During this time he studied waka poetry first with his father then with the court poets 31 In 1866 a new shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu took office as the prince continued his classical education Tokugawa Yoshinobu was a reformer who desired to transform Japan into a Western style state Yoshinobu was the final shōgun and met with resistance from among the bakufu even as unrest and military actions continued In mid 1866 a bakufu army set forth to punish rebels in southern Japan The army was defeated 32 Emperor Kōmei fell seriously ill at the age of 36 and died on 30 January 1867 British diplomat Sir Ernest Satow wrote it is impossible to deny that Emperor Kōmei s disappearance from the political scene leaving as his successor a boy of fifteen or sixteen actually fourteen was most opportune 33 In a brief ceremony in Kyoto the crown prince formally ascended to the throne on 3 February 1867 34 The new Emperor continued his classical education which did not include matters of politics In the meantime the shōgun Yoshinobu struggled to maintain power He repeatedly asked for the Emperor s confirmation of his actions which he eventually received but there is no indication that the young Emperor was himself involved in the decisions The shishi and other rebels continued to shape their vision of the new Japan and although they revered the Emperor they had no thought of having him play an active part in the political process 35 The political struggle reached its climax in late 1867 An agreement was reached by which Yoshinobu would maintain his title and some of his power but the lawmaking power would be vested in a bicameral legislature based on the British model The agreement fell apart and on 9 November 1867 Yoshinobu officially tendered his resignation to the Emperor and formally stepped down ten days later 36 The following month the rebels marched on Kyoto taking control of the Imperial Palace 37 On 4 January 1868 the Emperor ceremoniously read out a document before the court proclaiming the restoration of Imperial rule 38 and the following month documents were sent to foreign powers 37 The Emperor of Japan announces to the sovereigns of all foreign countries and to their subjects that permission has been granted to the shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu to return the governing power in accordance with his own request We shall henceforward exercise supreme authority in all the internal and external affairs of the country Consequently the title of Emperor must be substituted for that of Tycoon in which the treaties have been made Officers are being appointed by us to the conduct of foreign affairs It is desirable that the representatives of the treaty powers recognize this announcement Mutsuhito 39 On 23 October 1868 the era was changed from Keiō to Meiji or enlightened rule which was later used for the Emperor s posthumous name This marked the beginning of the custom of posthumously naming the Emperor after the era during which he ruled In a conflict known as the Boshin War Yoshinobu s followers briefly resisted and bakufu holdouts were finally defeated in late 1869 37 Consolidation of power edit Main article Meiji Restoration nbsp Emperor Meiji receives Dutch Minister Resident Dirk de Graeff van Polsbroek in 1868 nbsp The sixteen year old Emperor traveling from Kyoto to Tokyo at the end of 1868 nbsp First ever photograph of Emperor Meiji at the Yokosuka Naval Arsenal by Baron Raimund von Stillfried on 1 January 1872Despite the ouster of the bakufu no effective central government had been put in place by the rebels On March 23 the Dutch Minister Resident Dirk de Graeff van Polsbroek and the French Minister Resident Leon Roches were the first European envoys ever to receive a personal audience with the new Emperor Meiji in Edo Tokyo 40 41 This audience laid the foundation for modern Dutch diplomacy in Japan 42 Subsequently De Graeff van Polsbroek assisted the emperor and the government in their negotiations with representatives of the major European powers 43 42 On 7 April 1868 the Emperor was presented with the Charter Oath a five point statement of the nature of the new government The statement was designed to win over those who had not yet committed themselves to the new regime This document which the Emperor then formally promoted abolished feudalism and proclaimed a modern democratic government for Japan The Charter Oath would later be cited by Emperor Shōwa in the Humanity Declaration as support for the imposed changes in Japanese government following World War II 44 For the first time since early childhood he left the Imperial precincts in Kyoto in mid May to take command of the forces pursuing the remnants of the bakufu armies Traveling in slow stages due to through roads being lined with crowds he took three days to travel from Kyoto to Osaka 45 There was no conflict in Osaka the new leaders wanted the Emperor to be more visible to his people and to foreign envoys At the end of May after two weeks in Osaka in a much less formal atmosphere than in Kyoto the Emperor returned to his home 46 Shortly after his return it was announced that the Emperor would begin to preside over all state business reserving further literary study for his leisure time 47 Only from 1871 onward did the Emperor s studies include materials on contemporary affairs 48 On 19 September 1868 the Emperor announced the name of the city of Edo was to be changed to Tokyo meaning eastern capital He was formally crowned in Kyoto on 15 October a ceremony which had been postponed from the previous year due to the civil unrest Shortly before the coronation he announced that the new era or nengō would be called Meiji or enlightened rule Heretofore the nengō had often been changed multiple times in an Emperor s reign from now on it was announced there would only be one nengō per reign 49 Soon after his coronation the Emperor journeyed to Tokyo by road visiting it for the first time He arrived in late November and began an extended stay by distributing sake among the population The population of Tokyo was eager for an Imperial visit Tokyo had been the site of the shōgun s court and the city s population feared that with the abolition of the shogunate the city might fall into decline 50 It would not be until 1889 that a final decision was made to move the capital to Tokyo 51 While in Tokyo the Emperor boarded a Japanese naval vessel for the first time and the following day gave instructions for studies to see how Japan s navy could be strengthened 52 Soon after his return to Kyoto a rescript was issued in the Emperor s name but most likely written by court officials It indicated his intent to be involved in government affairs And indeed he attended cabinet meetings and innumerable other government functions though rarely speaking almost until the day of his death 53 Political reform edit nbsp Emperor Meiji in later life Emperor Meiji wore a large beard in his later years which is his well known image The successful revolutionaries organized themselves into a Council of State and subsequently into a system where three main ministers led the government This structure would last until the establishment of a prime minister who would lead a cabinet in a western fashion in 1885 54 Initially not even the retention of the Emperor was certain revolutionary leader Gotō Shōjirō later stated that some officials were afraid the extremists might go further and abolish the Mikado 55 Japan s new leaders sought to reform the patchwork system of domains governed by the daimyōs In 1869 several of the daimyōs who had supported the revolution gave their land property to the Emperor and were reappointed as governors with considerable salaries By the following year all other daimyōs had followed suit In 1871 as Japan was organized into 72 prefectures the Emperor announced that domains were entirely abolished The daimyōs were compensated with annual salaries equal to ten percent of their former revenues from which they now did not have to deduct the cost of governing but were required to move to the new capital Tokyo Most daimyōs retired from politics 56 The new administration gradually abolished most privileges of the samurai including their right to a stipend from the government However unlike the daimyōs many samurai suffered financially from this change Most other class based distinctions were abolished Legalized discrimination against the burakumin ended However these classes continue to suffer discrimination in Japan to the present time 57 nbsp Leaders of sixteen countries in a gathering envisage a desirable future world The 1889 constitution created a new parliament although it had no real power citation needed Power had passed from the Tokugawa into the hands of those daimyōs and other samurai who had led the Restoration citation needed Japan was thus controlled by the Genrō an oligarchy which comprised the most powerful men of the military political and economic spheres The Emperor showed greater political longevity than his recent predecessors as he was the first Japanese monarch to remain on the throne past the age of 50 since Emperor Ōgimachi s abdication from the throne in 1586 citation needed nbsp Illustration of Emperor Meiji by The Illustrated London News published in the New York Tribune 1905 The Japanese take pride in the Meiji Restoration as it and the accompanying industrialization allowed Japan to become the preeminent power in the Pacific and a major player in the world within a generation Yet Emperor Meiji s role in the Restoration as well as the amount of personal authority and influence he wielded during his reign remains debatable He kept no diary wrote almost no letters unlike his father and left no more than three or four photographs citation needed The accounts of people who had met or were close to him usually contain little substantial information or are mutually contradictory 58 Due to the lack of reliable sources of the period mysteries surrounding Emperor Meiji s personality and role in the Restoration remain a matter of historical dispute 59 James C Baxter argues that the Emperor was a figurehead without real power who rarely interfered with what had been agreed upon in advance by the Meiji oligarchy 60 61 Conversely Herbert Bix describes Meiji as a powerful autocrat whom the Genrō struggled to restrain while accommodating his anti democratic inclinations 62 R Starr characterizes Meiji as a highly individualistic and forthright person who was no puppet to any group in his government and although progressive not liberal or democratic 63 Yet another group of historians contend he was never a full dictator but remain divided on whether his personal power was far closer to the absolutist end 64 or he merely played a mediating role in the Genrō s decision making 65 nbsp A portrait of Emperor Meiji in his older years from The Spell of Japan 1914 by Isabel Weld PerkinsHe composed the following poem in waka form よもの海 みなはらからと思ふ世に など波風のたちさわぐらむ 66 Yomo no umi mina harakara to omofu yo ni nado namikaze no tachi sawaguramu citation needed The seas of the four directions all are born of one womb why then do the wind and waves rise in discord citation needed This poem was later recited by his grandson Emperor Shōwa in an Imperial Conference in September 1941 before the attack on Pearl Harbor to tell that he wanted to avoid the war citation needed The Illustrated London News published an article with a cover illustration of Emperor Meiji in the New York Tribune on 19 March 1905 The description text said The victorious Emperor of Japan beloved ruler of a new world power The Emperor who was born on 3 November 1852 succeeded to the throne on 3 February 1867 on the suppression of the Shogun dynasty which had for generations wielded the power which the imperial family held only in name Mutsuhito has proved the most practical of modern monarchs for in less than forty years he has brought his country from semi barbarism to the status of a first class power 67 Senior life and death edit nbsp Emperor Meiji s last exercise supervision nbsp Funeral of Emperor Meiji 1912 nbsp French envoys received by Count Akiyama Yoshifuru front left at the funeral of Emperor MeijiNear the end of his life several leftists including Shusui Kōtoku were executed 1911 on charges of having conspired to murder the sovereign This conspiracy was known as the High Treason Incident 1910 citation needed Emperor Meiji suffering from diabetes nephritis and gastroenteritis died of uremia Although the official announcement said he died at 00 42 on 30 July 1912 the actual death was at 22 40 on 29 July 68 69 He was succeeded by his eldest son Emperor Taishō By 1912 Japan had gone through a political economic and social revolution and emerged as one of the great powers in the world The New York Times summed up this transformation at the Emperor s funeral in 1912 as the contrast between that which preceded the funeral car and that which followed it was striking indeed Before it went old Japan after it came new Japan 5 After the Emperor s death in 1912 the Japanese Diet passed a resolution to commemorate his role in the Meiji Restoration An iris garden in an area of Tokyo where Emperor Meiji and the Empress had been known to visit was chosen as the building s location for the Shinto shrine Meiji Jingu The shrine does not contain the Emperor s grave which is at Fushimi momoyama south of Kyoto 70 Family and issue editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Emperor Meiji news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Soon after Meiji s ascension the Emperor s officials presented Ichijō Haruko to him as a possible bride The future Empress was the daughter of an Imperial official and was three years older than the groom who would have to wait to wed until after his genpuku manhood ceremony The two married on 11 January 1869 71 Known posthumously as Empress Dowager Shōken she was the first Imperial Consort to receive the title of kōgō literally the Emperor s wife translated as Empress Consort in several hundred years Although she was the first Japanese Empress Consort to play a public role she bore no children However the Meiji Emperor had fifteen children by five official ladies in waiting Only five of his children a prince born to Lady Naruko 1855 1943 the daughter of Yanagiwara Mitsunaru and four princesses born to Lady Sachiko 1867 1947 the eldest daughter of Count Sono Motosachi lived to adulthood Although Meiji was the last Emperor to have concubines this function was not officially abolished until 1924 citation needed Spouse edit Image Position Name Birth Death Father Issue nbsp Empress Ichijō Masako 一条勝子 later Empress Dowager Shōken 昭憲皇太后 9 May 1849 9 April 1914 Tadaka Ichijō NoneConcubines edit Image Name Birth Death Father Issue Hamuro Mitsuko 葉室光子 3 February 1853 22 September 1873 Gon Dainagon Hamuro Nagamasa First Prince Wakamitsuteru hiko no Mikoto Hashimoto Natsuko 橋本夏子 19 March 1856 14 November 1873 Shōnagon Higashibojo Natsunaga Dainagon Hashimoto Saneakira Foster father First Princess Wakatakayori hime no Mikoto nbsp Yanagiwara Naruko 柳原愛子 26 June 1859 16 October 1943 Gon Chunagon Yanagihara Mitsunaru Second Princess Imperial Princess Ume no Miya Shigeko Second Prince Imperial Prince Take no Miya Yukihito Third Prince Imperial Prince Haru no Miya Yoshihito later Emperor Taisho Chigusa Kotoko 千種任子 1855 1944 Sakon e gon no shōshō Chigusa Aritō Third Princess Imperial Princess Shige no Miya Akiko Fourth Princess Imperial Princess Masu no Miya Fumiko nbsp Sono Sachiko 園祥子 23 December 1867 7 July 1947 Ukon e no gon no chujō Sono Motosachi Fifth Princess Imperial Princess Hisa no Miya Shizuko Fourth Prince Imperial Prince Aki no Miya Michihito Sixth Princess Imperial Princess Tsune no miya Masako Seventh Princess Imperial Princess Kane no miya Fusako Eighth Princess Imperial Princess Fumi no miya Nobuko Fifth Prince Imperial Prince Mitsu no miya Teruhito Ninth Princess Imperial Princess Yasu no miya Toshiko Tenth Princess Imperial Princess Sada no miya TokikoIssue edit Emperor Meiji had fifteen children five sons and ten daughters five of them a son and four daughters reached adulthood He had eighteen grandchildren eleven grandsons and seven granddaughters Image Status Name Birth Death Mother Marriage Issue 01 First Prince Wakamitsuteru hiko no Mikoto 稚瑞照彦尊 Stillbirth 18 September 1873 18 September 1873 Hamuro Mitsuko 01 First Princess Wakatakayori hime no Mikoto 稚高依姫尊 Stillbirth 13 November 1873 13 November 1873 Hashimoto Natsuko 02 Second Princess Ume no Miya Shigeko 梅宮薫子内親王 25 January 1875 8 June 1876 Yanagiwara Naruko 02 Second Prince Take no Miya Yukihito 建宮敬仁親王 23 September 1877 26 July 1878 Yanagiwara Naruko nbsp 03 Third Prince Haru no Miya Yoshihito 明宮嘉仁親王 later Emperor Taishō 31 August 1879 25 December 1926 Yanagiwara Naruko 10 May 1900 Sadako Kujō Hirohito Emperor Shōwa Yasuhito Prince Chichibu Nobuhito Prince Takamatsu Takahito Prince Mikasa 03 Third Princess Shige no Miya Akiko 滋宮韶子内親王 3 August 1881 6 September 1883 Chigusa Kotoko 04 Fourth Princess Masu no Miya Fumiko 増宮章子内親王 26 January 1883 8 September 1883 Chigusa Kotoko 05 Fifth Princess Hisa no Miya Shizuko 久宮静子内親王 10 February 1886 4 April 1887 Sono Sachiko 04 Fourth Prince Aki no Miya Michihito 昭宮猷仁親王 22 August 1887 12 November 1888 Sono Sachiko nbsp 06 Sixth Princess Tsune no miya Masako 常宮昌子内親王 30 September 1888 8 March 1940 Sono Sachiko 30 April 1908 Prince Tsunehisa Takeda Prince Tsuneyoshi Takeda Princess Ayako Takeda nbsp 07 Seventh Princess Kane no miya Fusako 周宮房子内親王 28 January 1890 11 August 1974 Sono Sachiko 29 April 1909 Prince Naruhisa Kitashirakawa Prince Nagahisa Kitashirakawa Princess Mineko Kitashirakawa Princess Sawako Kitashirakawa Princess Taeko Kitashirakawa nbsp 08 Eighth Princess Fumi no miya Nobuko 富美宮允子内親王 7 August 1891 3 November 1933 Sono Sachiko 6 May 1909 Prince Yasuhiko Asaka Princess Kikuko Asaka Princess Takahiko Asaka Prince Tadahito Asaka Princess Kiyoko Asaka 05 Fifth Prince Mitsu no miya Teruhito 満宮輝仁親王 30 November 1893 17 August 1894 Sono Sachiko nbsp 09 Ninth Princess Yasu no miya Toshiko 泰宮聡子内親王 11 May 1896 5 March 1978 Sono Sachiko 18 May 1915 Prince Naruhiko Higashikuni Prince Morihiro Higashikuni Prince Moromasa Higashikuni Prince Akitsune Higashikuni Prince Toshihiko Higashikuni 10 Tenth Princess Sada no miya Tokiko 貞宮多喜子内親王 24 September 1897 11 January 1899 Sono Sachiko Honours edit nbsp A bronze statue of Meiji EmperorNational honours edit Founder and Sovereign of the Order of the Rising Sun 10 April 1875 Founder and Sovereign of the Order of the Chrysanthemum 27 December 1876 Founder and Sovereign of the Order of Meiji 4 January 1888 Founder and Sovereign of the Order of the Paulownia Flowers 4 January 1888 Founder and Sovereign of the Order of the Precious Crown 4 January 1888 Founder and Sovereign of the Order of the Golden Kite 12 February 1890 72 Foreign honours edit He received the following orders and decorations 73 nbsp nbsp Austria Hungary Grand Cross of the Royal Hungarian Order of St Stephen 16 May 1881 nbsp Belgium Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold 20 November 1880 nbsp Denmark Knight of the Order of the Elephant 18 May 1887 74 nbsp French Third Republic Grand Cross of the National Order of the Legion of Honour 20 March 1883 nbsp German Empire Knight of the Order of the Black Eagle 29 May 1879 with Collar 10 June 1895 nbsp Kingdom of Bavaria Knight of the Royal Order of St Hubert 1894 75 nbsp Brunswick Grand Cross of the Order of Henry the Lion 18 June 1907 nbsp nbsp nbsp Ernestine duchies Grand Cross of the Saxe Ernestine House Order 1873 76 nbsp Mecklenburg Grand Cross of the House Order of the Wendish Crown with Crown in Ore and Collar 2 February 1885 nbsp Saxe Weimar Eisenach Grand Cross of the Order of the White Falcon 27 December 1882 nbsp Wurttemberg Grand Cross of the Order of the Wurttemberg Crown 23 December 1896 nbsp Kingdom of Greece Grand Cross of the Order of the Redeemer 13 May 1891 nbsp Kingdom of Hawaii Grand Cross of the Order of Kamehameha I with Collar 15 March 1881 77 nbsp Kingdom of Italy Knight of the Supreme Order of the Most Holy Annunciation 26 July 1879 78 Grand Cross of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus 26 July 1879 Grand Cross of the Order of the Crown of Italy 26 July 1879 nbsp Korean Empire Collar of the Order of the Golden Ruler 5 September 1900 nbsp Principality of Montenegro Grand Cross of the Order of Prince Danilo I 18 February 1885 nbsp Netherlands Grand Cross of the Order of the Netherlands Lion 26 July 1881 nbsp Ottoman Empire Order of Distinction 13 June 1890 nbsp Kingdom of Portugal Grand Cross of the Sash of the Three Orders 16 April 1904 nbsp Qing dynasty Order of the Double Dragon Grade I Class I 20 December 1898 nbsp Russian Empire Knight of the Order of Saint Andrew the Apostle the First called 5 September 1879 nbsp Restoration Spain Knight of the Order of the Golden Fleece 14 November 1883 79 nbsp Siam Knight of the Order of the Royal House of Chakri 22 December 1887 80 nbsp nbsp Sweden Norway Knight of the Royal Order of the Seraphim 11 December 1881 81 nbsp United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland Stranger Knight Companion of the Most Noble Order of the Garter 15 May 1906 82 Timeline and gallery edit nbsp Emperor Meiji reviewing the military at the Russo Japanese War Victory Parade held on April 30 1906 in TokyoThe Meiji era ushered in many far reaching changes to the ancient feudal society of Japan A timeline of major events might include 3 November 1852 Emperor Meiji then known as the Prince Mutsuhito Sachinomiya is born to the imperial concubine Nakayama Yoshiko and Emperor Kōmei 1853 A fleet of ships headed by Commodore Matthew Perry arrives in Japan on 8 July 83 Death of the shōgun Tokugawa Ieyoshi appointment of Tokugawa Iesada as shōgun 1854 55 Treaties are signed with the United States by the shogunate Late 1850s 1860s The Sonnō jōi movement is in full force 1858 The shogunate signs treaties with the Netherlands Imperial Russia and Great Britain Death of the shōgun Tokugawa Iesada appointment of Tokugawa Iemochi as shōgun March 1860 The Tairō Ii Naosuke is assassinated in the Sakuradamon incident 11 November Sachinomiya is formally proclaimed Crown Prince and given the personal name Mutsuhito 1862 Namamugi Incident 1864 65 Bombardment of Shimonoseki by British American French and Dutch ships fighting ensues between the shogunate and Chōshu 1866 Death of the shōgun Tokugawa Iemochi appointment of Tokugawa Yoshinobu as shōgun 31 January 1867 Death of Emperor Kōmei from hemorrhagic smallpox unofficial accession of Mutsuhito to the throne 4 January 1868 Formal restoration of imperial rule end of 265 years of rule by the Tokugawa shogunate 12 September Formal enthronement of the Emperor 23 October The era name is changed to Meiji 6 November The capital is moved from Kyoto Prefecture to Edo renamed Tokyo 5 November 1872 The Emperor receives the Grand Duke Alexei Alexandrovich of Russia Late 1860s 1881 Period of rebellion and assassination in Japan 11 January 1869 Marriage of the Emperor to Ichijo Haruko thenceforth the Empress Dowager Shōken 4 September The Emperor receives The Duke of Edinburgh 1871 The abolition of the han system is proclaimed 1873 Edo Castle is destroyed in a conflagration the Emperor moves to the Akasaka Palace His first children are born but die at birth 1877 The Satsuma Rebellion 1878 Assassination of Ōkubo Toshimichi 31 August 1879 Prince Yoshihito the future Emperor Taishō and the Emperor s only surviving son is born 1881 Receives the first state visit of a foreign monarch King Kalakaua of Hawaii 1889 Meiji Constitution promulgated Itō Hirobumi becomes first Prime Minister of Japan 1894 Sino Japanese War Japanese victory establishes Japan as a regional power 29 April 1901 Became grandfather when Emperor Taishō s first son the Prince Hirohito Michi no miya future Emperor Shōwa was born 1904 1905 Russo Japanese War Japanese victory earns Japan the status of a great power 1910 The Annexation of Korea by the Empire of Japan Korea under Japanese rule 1945 30 July 1912 The Emperor dies aged 59 5 Gallery edit nbsp Meiji Memorial Picture Gallery nbsp The Triumphal Grand Army Review by Kobayashi Mango nbsp Conference on Drafting a Constitution by Goseda Horyu nbsp Visiting a Silver Mine by Gomi Seikichi nbsp Chrysanthemum Garden Party by Nakazawa Hiromitsu nbsp Ceremony for the Promulgation of the Constitution by Wada Eisaku nbsp Emperor at Imperial Headquarters by Minami KunzoFilm depictions edit nbsp Studio still snap from the 1957 Japanese film Meiji Tenno to Nichiro Daisenso Emperor Meiji and the Great Russo Japanese War Shintoho Emperor Meiji of Kanjurō Arashi Emperor Meiji is portrayed by Toshirō Mifune in the 1980 Japanese war drama film The Battle of Port Arthur sometimes referred as 203 Kochi 84 Directed by Toshio Masuda the film depicted the Siege of Port Arthur during the Russo Japanese War and also starred Tatsuya Nakadai as General Nogi Maresuke and Tetsurō Tamba as General Kodama Gentarō Emperor Meiji also appears in the 2003 film The Last Samurai played by Nakamura Shichinosuke II In the film the Emperor is portrayed as a weak inexperienced leader under the firm control of his councilors who intend to have him sign a treaty that would give the United States special trading rights that would enrich them but also cement foreign domination of Japan The Emperor s determination is only shown at the end of the movie when he is inspired by a visit from Capt Nathan Algren played by Tom Cruise who fought alongside the rebel samurai to reject the treaty and dismiss his advisors declaring that Japan will modernize but not at the cost of its traditions and history Notes edit English ˈ m eɪ dʒ i Japanese meꜜːʑi Since the modern era when an emperor of Japan dies he is given a posthumous name Such a name is a combination of the era during which he reigned and coincides with the emperor s contribution to the throne while he was alive Therefore he was publicly known during his life merely as The Emperor but he has been historically known as Emperor Meiji after his death The name was officially given to him on 27 August 1912 2 He obtained the current title in reference to the Meiji era which spanned almost the entirety of his reign His personal name which is not used in any formal or official context except for his signature was Mutsuhito He was also the first emperor to reign under the one emperor one era name system 一世一元 under which an era ends only on emperor s death or abdication whereas before an era could change mid reign after a significant event such as a disaster 3 References edit On 1 May 1865 the seventh day of the fourth month in the second year of Genji Emperor Kōmei changed the era name from Genji to Keiō Although Emperor Kōmei died on 30 January 1867 the 25th day of the 12th month in the second year of Keiō and Emperor Meiji ascended to the throne on 13 February 1867 the ninth day of the first month in the third year of Keiō Keiō still continued until 23 October 1868 the eighth day of the ninth month in the fourth year of Keiō when Emperor Meiji changed the era name from Keiō to Meiji Keene 2002 p 706 Explainer Japan new imperial era name Reiwa Origins Selection Meaning Reuters 1 April 2019 Retrieved 2 February 2023 Keene 2002 p 200 a b c The Funeral Ceremonies of Meiji Tenno reprinted from the Japan Advertiser Article 8 No Title New York Times 13 October 1912 Jansen 1995 p vii Gordon 2009 pp 14 15 Keene 2002 p 3 a b Gordon 2009 pp 3 4 a b c Gordon 2009 p 2 Gordon 2009 pp 4 5 Gordon 2009 p 19 Gordon 2009 p 47 Herbert P Bix Hirohito and the making of modern Japan New York 2016 p 35 ISBN missing Keene 2002 p 10 Keene 2002 p 14 Keene Donald 2005 Emperor of Japan Meiji and his world 1852 1912 Columbia University Press p 18 ISBN 0231123418 OCLC 1059567148 a b Gordon 2009 pp 50 51 Keene Donald 2005 Emperor of Japan Meiji and his world 1852 1912 Columbia University Press ISBN 0231123418 OCLC 1059567148 Keene 2002 p 18 Gordon Andrew 2003 A modern history of Japan from Tokugawa times to the present Oxford University Press pp 51 52 ISBN 0195110609 OCLC 49704795 Keene Donald 2005 Emperor of Japan Meiji and his world 1852 1912 New York Chichester Columbia University Press p 18 ISBN 978 0231123419 OCLC 1059567148 Keene 2002 pp 39 41 Keene 2002 p xii Keene 2002 pp 51 52 Keene 2002 p 46 Keene 2002 p 48 Gordon 2009 pp 53 55 a b Gordon 2009 pp 55 56 Keene 2002 p 73 Keene 2002 p 78 Gordon 2009 pp 57 58 Keene 2002 pp 94 96 Keene 2002 p 98 Keene 2002 pp 102 104 Takano p 256 a b c Gordon 2009 p 59 Keene 2002 p 121 Keene 2002 p 117 Emperor of Japan Meiji and his world 1852 1912 p 133 Donald Keene The last Samurai japanische Geschichtsdarstellung im popularen Kinofilm pp 90 91 Daniel Scherer 2009 a b From Dejima to Tokyo Dirk de Graeff van Polsbroek This study is the first complete history of Dutch diplomatic locations in Japan It has been commissioned by the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Tokyo Archived from the original on 8 March 2023 Retrieved 18 March 2023 Het geheugen van Nederland Jansen 1995 p 195 Keene 2002 p 143 Keene 2002 pp 145 146 Keene 2002 p 147 Keene 2002 p 171 Keene 2002 pp 157 159 Keene 2002 pp 160 163 Gordon 2009 p 68 Keene 2002 pp 163 165 Keene 2002 p 168 Gordon 2009 p 64 Jansen 1994 p 342 Gordon 2009 p 63 Gordon 2009 p 65 Keene 2002 p xi Keene 2002 pp xiii 332 Baxter James C 1994 The Meiji Unification Through the Lens of Ishikawa Prefecture Harvard Univ Asia Center p 4 ISBN 978 0674564664 Takahashi Hiroshi 2008 Akihito and the Problem of Succession In Shillony Ben Ami ed The Emperors of Modern Japan Brill pp 2 139 ISBN 978 9004168220 Bix Herbert P 2001 Hirohito and the making of modern Japan New York Perennial pp 29 ISBN 978 0060931308 Starrs R 2011 Politics and Religion in Modern Japan Red Sun White Lotus Springer pp 71 73 ISBN 978 0230336681 Retrieved 25 November 2018 Miyoshi Masao 1991 Off Center Power and Culture Relations Between Japan and the United States Front Cover Harvard University Press p 170 ISBN 978 0674631762 Retrieved 25 November 2018 Connors Lesley 2010 The Emperor s Adviser Saionji Kinmochi and Pre War Japanese Politics Routledge p 58 ISBN 978 1136900235 Retrieved 25 November 2018 Frans Stiene ed 26 April 2016 Meiji Emperor Poems PDF Translated by Joao Magalhaes No 121 Archived PDF from the original on 19 September 2023 Retrieved 19 September 2023 The Illustrated London News 19 March 1905 The victorious Emperor of Japan beloved ruler of a new world power New York Tribune Takashi Fujitani 1998 Splendid monarchy power and pageantry in modern Japan University of California Press p 145 ISBN 978 0 520 21371 5 広報 No 589 明治の終幕 PDF in Japanese Sannohe town hall Archived from the original PDF on 18 May 2011 Retrieved 18 May 2011 Adika Alon 3 August 2013 The Emperor and the general a visit to Fushimi Momoyama The Japan Times Online Retrieved 22 February 2019 Keene 2002 pp 105 107 M1 Chamberlain Basil Hall 1905 Things Japanese Being Notes on Various Subjects Connected with Japan for the use of Travellers and Others p 114 刑部芳則 2017 明治時代の勲章外交儀礼 PDF in Japanese 明治聖徳記念学会紀要 p 141 Jorgen Pedersen 2009 Riddere af Elefantordenen 1559 2009 in Danish Syddansk Universitetsforlag p 303 ISBN 978 87 7674 434 2 Hof und Staats Handbuch des Konigreichs Bayern 1906 Konigliche Orden p 8 Staatshandbucher fur das Herzogtum Sachsen Coburg und Gotha 1884 Herzogliche Sachsen Ernestinischer Hausorden p 32 Kalakaua to his sister 15 March 1881 quoted in Greer Richard A editor 1967 The Royal Tourist Kalakaua s Letters Home from Tokio to London Archived 19 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine Hawaiian Journal of History vol 5 pp 76 77 Italia Ministero dell interno 1900 Calendario generale del Regno d Italia Unione tipografico editrice p 54 Caballeros de la insigne orden del toison de oro Guia Oficial de Espana in Spanish 1887 p 147 Retrieved 21 March 2019 phrarachsasnipyipun PDF Royal Thai Government Gazette in Thai 30 December 1887 Archived from the original PDF on 8 May 2019 Retrieved 8 May 2019 Sveriges Statskalender in Swedish 1909 p 613 retrieved 6 January 2018 via runeberg org No 27913 The London Gazette 15 May 1906 p 3325 Considered by German Japanologist Johannes Justus Rein and described by Francis L Hawks and Commodore Matthew Perry in their 1856 work Narrative of the Expedition of an American Squadron to the China Seas and Japan Performed in the Years 1852 1853 and 1854 under the Command of Commodore M C Perry United States Navy as the Opening of Japan The Battle of Port Arthur 203 Koshi in the Internet Movie DatabaseBibliography editGordon Andrew 2009 A Modern History of Japan From Tokugawa Times to the Present 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 533922 2 Jansen Marius 1994 Sakamoto Ryoma and the Meiji Restoration Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0 231 10173 8 1995 The Emergence of Meiji Japan Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 48405 3 Keene Donald 2002 Emperor of Japan Meiji and His World 1852 1912 Columbia University Press ISBN 978 0231123402 OCLC 46731178 Wilson George M 1992 Patriots and Redeemers Motives in the Meiji Restoration University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226900919 OCLC 23869701External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Meiji Emperor Meiji Shrine Archived 31 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine Meiji Emperor Mutsu Hito Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 Mutsuhito Emperor of Japan The New Student s Reference Work 1914 Newspaper clippings about Emperor Meiji in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBWEmperor MeijiImperial House of JapanBorn 3 November 1852 Died 30 July 1912Regnal titlesPreceded byKōmei Emperor of Japan3 February 1867 30 July 1912 Succeeded byTaishō Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emperor Meiji amp oldid 1186390790, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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