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Kido Takayoshi

Kido Takayoshi (木戸 孝允, born Wada Kogorō (和田 小五郎); August 11, 1833 – May 26, 1877), formerly known as Katsura Kogorō (桂 小五郎), was a Japanese statesman, samurai and shishi who is considered one of the three great nobles who led the Meiji Restoration.

Kido Takayoshi
木戸 孝允
Kido Takayoshi in western dress (after Meiji Restoration)
Personal details
Born
Wada Kogorō (和田 小五郎)

(1833-08-11)August 11, 1833
Hagi, Chōshū Domain, Japan
DiedMay 26, 1877(1877-05-26) (aged 43)
Kyoto, Japan
Resting placeKyoto Ryozen Gokoku Shrine
Spouse
(m. 1868⁠–⁠1877)
RelationsKatsura Takako (adoptive father)
Childrennone
Parents
  • Wada Masakage (father)
  • Seiko (mother)
RelativesWada Suteko (half-sister)
Wada Yaeko (half-sister)
Kuruhara Haruko (sister)
Katsura Katsuzaburō (adopted son)
Kido Shojirō (adopted son)
Kido Takamasa (nephew)
Kōichi Kido (grandnephew)
Residence(s)Kyoto, Japan
Alma materMeirinkan
Shōka Sonjuku
Occupationstatesman
Professionpolitics
Known forOne of the Three Great Nobles of the Restoration
Other namesKatsura Kogorō (桂 小五郎)
Niibori Matsusuke (新堀 松輔)
Kido Kanji (木戸 貫冶)
Kido Junichirō (木戸 準一郎)
Kido Kōin (木戸 孝允)
Notable worksThe Diary of Kido Takayoshi Volume 1 (1868-1871)
The Diary of Kido Takayoshi Volume 2 (1874-1877)

Early life

Born Wada Kogorō on August 11, 1833 in Hagi, Chōshū Domain (present-day Yamaguchi Prefecture) as the son of a samurai physician Wada Masakage (和田 昌景) and his second wife Seiko (清子). In 1840, due to his brother-in-law already being the head of the Wada family, he was later adopted into the Katsura family at age seven and was known as Katsura Kogorō (桂 小五郎).[1]

The Katsura family's stipend was originally 150 koku, but due to the late nature of his adoption which took place as his adoptive father Katsura Takako (桂 孝古) was already on his deathbed, who died ten days later, it was reduced to 90 koku. Katsura Kogorō thus became the head of the Katsura family. A year later in 1841, his adoptive mother also died, months later he was returned to his old home. In 1848, he lost his mother and elder half-sister Yaeko to illnesses.

Katsura was educated at Meirinkan, in which he later became increasingly unhappy with and defied his father in order to be educated at Shōka Sonjuku in 1849, the academy of Yoshida Shōin, from whom he adopted the philosophy of Imperial loyalism. In 1851, his father had died.

In 1852, Katsura went to Edo (present-day Tokyo) to study swordsmanship, established ties with radical samurai from the Mito Domain (present-day Mito, Ibaraki Prefecture), learned artillery techniques with Egawa Tarōzaemon, and (after observing the construction of foreign ships in Nagasaki and Shimoda), returned to Chōshū to supervise the construction of the domain's first western-style warship.

Overthrow of the Tokugawa

After 1858, Katsura Kogorō was based at the domain's Edo residence, where he served as a liaison between the domain bureaucracy and radical elements among the young, lower-echelon Chōshū samurai who supported the Sonnō jōi movement. Coming under suspicion by the shogunate for his ties with Mito loyalists after the attempted assassination of Andō Nobumasa, he was transferred to Kyōto. However, while in Kyōto, he was unable to prevent the 30 September 1863 coup d'état by the forces of the Aizu and Satsuma domains, who drove the Chōshū forces out of the city.

Ikedaya incident

According to his personal diary regarding the Ikedaya incident, Katsura was at the loyalist meeting with the Ishin Shishi at the Ikedaya inn in the evening on July 8, 1864, he claimed that they had only met to discuss how to rescue Furutaka Shuntaro from the Shinsengumi. Katsura later left the inn earlier, before the attack by the Shinsengumi troops on that night.

However, there were rumors varied that Katsura was tipped off by his geisha lover Ikumatsu (幾松), that the Shinsengumi were coming for him and wisely chose not show up for the meeting, or that he climbed out the window of the upper floor of the inn during the attack by the Shinsengumi and escaped over the roofs.

He spent the next five days in hiding under Nijō Bridge along the Kamo River, posing as a beggar, his lover would bring him rice balls from the shop of the Chōshū merchant Imai Tarōemon and later aided in his escape.

Kinmon incident

Katsura was involved but not present in the Hamaguri Gate Rebellion on 20 August 1864, with the unsuccessful attempt to capture Emperor Kōmei by the Chōshū forces at Hamaguri Gate in order to restore the Imperial household to its position of political supremacy, the Chōshū forces clashed with Aizu and Satsuma forces who led the defense of the Imperial palace. During the attempt, the Chōshū rebels put Kyoto on fire, starting with the residence of the Takatsukasa family, and that of a Chōshū official.

The rebellion resulted in 28,000 houses being burnt down, with casualties of about 400 from the Chōshū forces, including his adopted son Katsuzaburō, and only 60 from Aizu and Satsuma forces, forcing Katsura into hiding again with his geisha lover. He would later use the name Niibori Matsusuke as an alias in 1865 to continue his work against the Tokugawa bakufu.

Satchō Alliance

After radical elements under Takasugi Shinsaku gained control of Chōshū politics, Katsura, under the new name Kido Junichirō (木戸 準一郎) was instrumental in establishing the Satchō Alliance with Saigō Takamori and Ōkubo Toshimichi through the mediation of Sakamoto Ryōma in 1866, which proved to be critical in the Boshin War and the subsequent Meiji Restoration. Around the same time, he adopted Shojirō, another nephew who was the second son of his younger sister, Kuruhara Haruko, as his heir.

Meiji statesman

 
Portrait of Kido Takayoshi (木戸孝允, 1833 – 1877)

Following the overthrow of the Tokugawa bakufu in 1868, Kido claimed a large role in the establishment of the new Meiji government. As a san'yo (Imperial Advisor) he helped draft the Five Charter Oath, and initiated policies of centralization and modernization. He helped direct the Abolition of the han system. In August 1868, he had his lover Ikumatsu adopted into a samurai family of Okabe Tomitarō, and later made her his wife. He was later renamed to Kido Takayoshi (木戸 孝允) in 1869.

On 23 December 1871, he accompanied the Iwakura Mission on its round-the-world voyage to America and Europe,[2] and was especially interested in Western educational systems and politics. On his return to Japan on 13 September 1873, he would become a strong advocate of the establishment of constitutional government. Realizing that Japan was not in any position to challenge the Western powers in its present state, he also returned to Japan just in time to prevent an invasion of Korea (Seikanron).

Kido lost his dominant position in the Meiji oligarchy to Ōkubo Toshimichi, and resigned from government in protest of the Taiwan Expedition of 1874, which he had strenuously opposed.[3]

Following the Osaka Conference of 1875, Kido agreed to return to the government, and became chairman of the Assembly of Prefectural Governors that the Ōsaka Conference had created. He was also responsible for the education of the young Emperor Meiji.

 
Kido Takayoshi (1833-1877)
 
Sketch by Kido Takayoshi, depicting him as "Minister from the countryside."

Death

 
Tomb of Kido Takayoshi at Kyoto Ryozen Gokoku Shrine, Kyoto, Japan

During the middle of the Satsuma Rebellion in 1877, he died of illnesses that had been plaguing him for a long time, which consisted of a combination of some form of mental disease and physical exhaustion, years of excessive alcohol consumption as well as an illness assumed to be tuberculosis or beriberi. With his dim consciousness, Kido shook Okubo's hand and said, "Is Saigo still uncomfortable?" He is enshrined at Kyoto Ryozen Gokoku Shrine, where his tomb is located.

Legacy

His heir Shojirō, who had studied for ten years in England before returning to Japan in 1882, however died of illness on the ship during the return journey near Ceylon. Kuruhara Hikotarō, another Kido's nephew and Shojirō's eldest brother, succeeded him as the new heir of the Kido family on 18 November 1884 and was known as the Marquis Kido Takamasa.

Kido Takayoshi was enshrined as the Shinto deity of scholarship and the martial arts at the Kido Shrine in about 1886[4] at Kido Park, Yamaguchi, Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan.[5]

His widow Matsuko survived him and died in 1887 at the age of 43.

Kido's diary reveals an intense internal conflict between his loyalty to his home domain, Chōshū, and the greater interest of the country. He wrote often of having to fight rumors at home that he had betrayed his old friends; the idea of a nation was still relatively new in Japan and so the majority of samurai cared more for securing privileges for their own domain.

Together with Saigō Takamori and Ōkubo Toshimichi, he was known as the Ishin-no-Sanketsu (維新の三傑), which means, roughly, "Three Great Nobles of the Restoration". His younger sister's grandson was Tokyo politician Kōichi Kido (木戸 幸一).

In popular culture

Kido, referred to by his initial name Katsura Kogorō, was among the historical personalities present in the manga and anime Rurouni Kenshin by Nobuhiro Watsuki, as well as its OVA adaptation Rurouni Kenshin: Trust & Betrayal. While still portrayed as a ruthless radical leader of the Chōshū clan, he serves as a benevolent mentor of sorts to the young Himura Kenshin, who worked under him as the Hitokiri Battōsai. He nonetheless regrets having Kenshin do the dirty work for him after Kenshin's affair with Yukishiro Tomoe (in Tsuiokuhen, he actively encouraged Tomoe to stand by Kenshin to serve as a calming influence), which ultimately boiled over into her conflicting loyalties to the shogunate agent and her emerging feelings for Kenshin. He is voiced by Tomokazu Seki in the OVA, and portrayed by Issey Takahashi in the 2021 live-action adaptation film Rurouni Kenshin: The Beginning.

Japanese actor Ken Ishiguro portrayed him in the 2004 jdorama Shinsengumi! as the old time friend of the protagonist Kondo Isami and also the leader of the Chōshū han.

Japanese actor Shōsuke Tanihara portrayed him in the 2009 jdorama Ryōmaden as the leader of the Chōshū han.

He is also the basis for the character of Katsura Kotarou in the manga and anime Gin Tama by Hideaki Sorachi.

He also appears in the video game Ryū ga Gotoku Ishin!, portrayed by the Yakuza character Shun Akiyama, and voiced by Kōichi Yamadera.

Honours

Notable works

  • The Diary of Kido Takayoshi Volume 1 (1868-1871)
  • The Diary of Kido Takayoshi Volume 2 (1874-1877)

Gallery of former residence of Kido Takayoshi at Hagi, Japan

Notes

  1. ^ Ellen P. Conant (2006). Challenging Past And Present: The Metamorphosis of Nineteenth-Century Japanese Art. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 178–180. ISBN 978-0-8248-2937-7.
  2. ^ Edmond Papinot (1906). Dictionnaire d'histoire et de géographie du Japon (in French). p. 315.
  3. ^ Kokushi daijiten Vol. 4, pp. 170–171.
  4. ^ "Kido Shrine | Yamaguchi City - a strategic base of the Meiji Restoration. | Traveling website of Yamaguchi City - a city of celebrating the 150 year anniversary of the Meiji Restoration". ishin150-yamaguchi.com (in Japanese). Retrieved April 20, 2018.
  5. ^ "Kido Park / maple | YAMAGUCHI JAPAN TRAVEL GUIDE". www.visit-jy.com. Retrieved April 20, 2018.

Reference and further reading

  • Akamatsu, Paul. Meiji 1868: Revolution and Counter-Revolution in Japan. Trans. Miriam Kochan. New York: Harper & Row, 1972.
  • Beasley, William G. (1972). The Meiji Restoration. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804708159; OCLC 579232
  • Beasley, W. G. The Rise of Modern Japan: Political, Economic and Social Change Since 1850. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1995.
  • Craig, Albert M. Chōshū in the Meiji Restoration. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1961. OCLC 482814571
  • Jansen, Marius B. and Gilbert Rozman, eds. (1986). Japan in Transition: from Tokugawa to Meiji. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691054599; OCLC 12311985
  • Kido, Takayoshi. (1983). The Diary of Kido Takayoshi (Sidney DeVere Brown and Akiko Hirota, translators), Vol. I (1868–1871), Vol. II (1871–1874), Vol. III (1874–1877). Tokyo: University of Tokyo Press.
  • Nish, Ian. (1998) The Iwakura Mission to America and Europe: A New Assessment. Richmond, Surrey: Japan Library. ISBN 9781873410844; ISBN 0415471796; OCLC 40410662

External links

  • Selected Diary Entries of Kido March 21, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  • National Diet Library photo & bio
  • Meiji Dignitaries is a portrait of Takayoshi and others from 1877


kido, takayoshi, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2009, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, 木戸. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Kido Takayoshi 木戸 孝允 born Wada Kogorō 和田 小五郎 August 11 1833 May 26 1877 formerly known as Katsura Kogorō 桂 小五郎 was a Japanese statesman samurai and shishi who is considered one of the three great nobles who led the Meiji Restoration Junior First RankKido Takayoshi木戸 孝允Kido Takayoshi in western dress after Meiji Restoration Personal detailsBornWada Kogorō 和田 小五郎 1833 08 11 August 11 1833Hagi Chōshu Domain JapanDiedMay 26 1877 1877 05 26 aged 43 Kyoto JapanResting placeKyoto Ryozen Gokoku ShrineSpouseKido Matsuko m 1868 1877 wbr RelationsKatsura Takako adoptive father ChildrennoneParentsWada Masakage father Seiko mother RelativesWada Suteko half sister Wada Yaeko half sister Kuruhara Haruko sister Katsura Katsuzaburō adopted son Kido Shojirō adopted son Kido Takamasa nephew Kōichi Kido grandnephew Residence s Kyoto JapanAlma materMeirinkan Shōka SonjukuOccupationstatesmanProfessionpoliticsKnown forOne of the Three Great Nobles of the RestorationOther namesKatsura Kogorō 桂 小五郎 Niibori Matsusuke 新堀 松輔 Kido Kanji 木戸 貫冶 Kido Junichirō 木戸 準一郎 Kido Kōin 木戸 孝允 Notable worksThe Diary of Kido Takayoshi Volume 1 1868 1871 The Diary of Kido Takayoshi Volume 2 1874 1877 In this Japanese name the surname is Kido Japan portalPolitics portalHistory portalBiography portal Contents 1 Early life 2 Overthrow of the Tokugawa 2 1 Ikedaya incident 2 2 Kinmon incident 2 3 Satchō Alliance 3 Meiji statesman 4 Death 5 Legacy 6 In popular culture 7 Honours 8 Notable works 9 Gallery of former residence of Kido Takayoshi at Hagi Japan 10 Notes 11 Reference and further reading 12 External linksEarly life EditBorn Wada Kogorō on August 11 1833 in Hagi Chōshu Domain present day Yamaguchi Prefecture as the son of a samurai physician Wada Masakage 和田 昌景 and his second wife Seiko 清子 In 1840 due to his brother in law already being the head of the Wada family he was later adopted into the Katsura family at age seven and was known as Katsura Kogorō 桂 小五郎 1 The Katsura family s stipend was originally 150 koku but due to the late nature of his adoption which took place as his adoptive father Katsura Takako 桂 孝古 was already on his deathbed who died ten days later it was reduced to 90 koku Katsura Kogorō thus became the head of the Katsura family A year later in 1841 his adoptive mother also died months later he was returned to his old home In 1848 he lost his mother and elder half sister Yaeko to illnesses Katsura was educated at Meirinkan in which he later became increasingly unhappy with and defied his father in order to be educated at Shōka Sonjuku in 1849 the academy of Yoshida Shōin from whom he adopted the philosophy of Imperial loyalism In 1851 his father had died In 1852 Katsura went to Edo present day Tokyo to study swordsmanship established ties with radical samurai from the Mito Domain present day Mito Ibaraki Prefecture learned artillery techniques with Egawa Tarōzaemon and after observing the construction of foreign ships in Nagasaki and Shimoda returned to Chōshu to supervise the construction of the domain s first western style warship Overthrow of the Tokugawa EditAfter 1858 Katsura Kogorō was based at the domain s Edo residence where he served as a liaison between the domain bureaucracy and radical elements among the young lower echelon Chōshu samurai who supported the Sonnō jōi movement Coming under suspicion by the shogunate for his ties with Mito loyalists after the attempted assassination of Andō Nobumasa he was transferred to Kyōto However while in Kyōto he was unable to prevent the 30 September 1863 coup d etat by the forces of the Aizu and Satsuma domains who drove the Chōshu forces out of the city Ikedaya incident Edit Main article Ikedaya incident According to his personal diary regarding the Ikedaya incident Katsura was at the loyalist meeting with the Ishin Shishi at the Ikedaya inn in the evening on July 8 1864 he claimed that they had only met to discuss how to rescue Furutaka Shuntaro from the Shinsengumi Katsura later left the inn earlier before the attack by the Shinsengumi troops on that night However there were rumors varied that Katsura was tipped off by his geisha lover Ikumatsu 幾松 that the Shinsengumi were coming for him and wisely chose not show up for the meeting or that he climbed out the window of the upper floor of the inn during the attack by the Shinsengumi and escaped over the roofs He spent the next five days in hiding under Nijō Bridge along the Kamo River posing as a beggar his lover would bring him rice balls from the shop of the Chōshu merchant Imai Tarōemon and later aided in his escape Kinmon incident Edit Main article Kinmon incident Katsura was involved but not present in the Hamaguri Gate Rebellion on 20 August 1864 with the unsuccessful attempt to capture Emperor Kōmei by the Chōshu forces at Hamaguri Gate in order to restore the Imperial household to its position of political supremacy the Chōshu forces clashed with Aizu and Satsuma forces who led the defense of the Imperial palace During the attempt the Chōshu rebels put Kyoto on fire starting with the residence of the Takatsukasa family and that of a Chōshu official The rebellion resulted in 28 000 houses being burnt down with casualties of about 400 from the Chōshu forces including his adopted son Katsuzaburō and only 60 from Aizu and Satsuma forces forcing Katsura into hiding again with his geisha lover He would later use the name Niibori Matsusuke as an alias in 1865 to continue his work against the Tokugawa bakufu Satchō Alliance Edit After radical elements under Takasugi Shinsaku gained control of Chōshu politics Katsura under the new name Kido Junichirō 木戸 準一郎 was instrumental in establishing the Satchō Alliance with Saigō Takamori and Ōkubo Toshimichi through the mediation of Sakamoto Ryōma in 1866 which proved to be critical in the Boshin War and the subsequent Meiji Restoration Around the same time he adopted Shojirō another nephew who was the second son of his younger sister Kuruhara Haruko as his heir Meiji statesman Edit Portrait of Kido Takayoshi 木戸孝允 1833 1877 Following the overthrow of the Tokugawa bakufu in 1868 Kido claimed a large role in the establishment of the new Meiji government As a san yo Imperial Advisor he helped draft the Five Charter Oath and initiated policies of centralization and modernization He helped direct the Abolition of the han system In August 1868 he had his lover Ikumatsu adopted into a samurai family of Okabe Tomitarō and later made her his wife He was later renamed to Kido Takayoshi 木戸 孝允 in 1869 On 23 December 1871 he accompanied the Iwakura Mission on its round the world voyage to America and Europe 2 and was especially interested in Western educational systems and politics On his return to Japan on 13 September 1873 he would become a strong advocate of the establishment of constitutional government Realizing that Japan was not in any position to challenge the Western powers in its present state he also returned to Japan just in time to prevent an invasion of Korea Seikanron Kido lost his dominant position in the Meiji oligarchy to Ōkubo Toshimichi and resigned from government in protest of the Taiwan Expedition of 1874 which he had strenuously opposed 3 Following the Osaka Conference of 1875 Kido agreed to return to the government and became chairman of the Assembly of Prefectural Governors that the Ōsaka Conference had created He was also responsible for the education of the young Emperor Meiji Kido Takayoshi 1833 1877 Sketch by Kido Takayoshi depicting him as Minister from the countryside Death Edit Tomb of Kido Takayoshi at Kyoto Ryozen Gokoku Shrine Kyoto Japan During the middle of the Satsuma Rebellion in 1877 he died of illnesses that had been plaguing him for a long time which consisted of a combination of some form of mental disease and physical exhaustion years of excessive alcohol consumption as well as an illness assumed to be tuberculosis or beriberi With his dim consciousness Kido shook Okubo s hand and said Is Saigo still uncomfortable He is enshrined at Kyoto Ryozen Gokoku Shrine where his tomb is located Legacy EditHis heir Shojirō who had studied for ten years in England before returning to Japan in 1882 however died of illness on the ship during the return journey near Ceylon Kuruhara Hikotarō another Kido s nephew and Shojirō s eldest brother succeeded him as the new heir of the Kido family on 18 November 1884 and was known as the Marquis Kido Takamasa Kido Shrine Yamaguchi Yamaguchi Prefecture Japan Kido Takayoshi was enshrined as the Shinto deity of scholarship and the martial arts at the Kido Shrine in about 1886 4 at Kido Park Yamaguchi Yamaguchi Prefecture Japan 5 His widow Matsuko survived him and died in 1887 at the age of 43 Kido s diary reveals an intense internal conflict between his loyalty to his home domain Chōshu and the greater interest of the country He wrote often of having to fight rumors at home that he had betrayed his old friends the idea of a nation was still relatively new in Japan and so the majority of samurai cared more for securing privileges for their own domain Enlightenment aristocracy Woodblock print nishiki e ink and color on paper Prince Arisugawa Taruhito Enomoto Takeaki Ōkuma Shigenobu Kuroda Kiyotaka Saigō Takamori Yamagata Aritomo Iwakura Tomomi Sanjō Sanetomi Ōkubo Toshimichi Kido Takayoshi Shimazu Hisamitsu Katsu Kaishu Itō Hirobumi Kusumoto Masataka Itagaki Taisuke Gotō Shōjirō and Prince Komatsu Akihito Together with Saigō Takamori and Ōkubo Toshimichi he was known as the Ishin no Sanketsu 維新の三傑 which means roughly Three Great Nobles of the Restoration His younger sister s grandson was Tokyo politician Kōichi Kido 木戸 幸一 In popular culture EditKido referred to by his initial name Katsura Kogorō was among the historical personalities present in the manga and anime Rurouni Kenshin by Nobuhiro Watsuki as well as its OVA adaptation Rurouni Kenshin Trust amp Betrayal While still portrayed as a ruthless radical leader of the Chōshu clan he serves as a benevolent mentor of sorts to the young Himura Kenshin who worked under him as the Hitokiri Battōsai He nonetheless regrets having Kenshin do the dirty work for him after Kenshin s affair with Yukishiro Tomoe in Tsuiokuhen he actively encouraged Tomoe to stand by Kenshin to serve as a calming influence which ultimately boiled over into her conflicting loyalties to the shogunate agent and her emerging feelings for Kenshin He is voiced by Tomokazu Seki in the OVA and portrayed by Issey Takahashi in the 2021 live action adaptation film Rurouni Kenshin The Beginning Japanese actor Ken Ishiguro portrayed him in the 2004 jdorama Shinsengumi as the old time friend of the protagonist Kondo Isami and also the leader of the Chōshu han Japanese actor Shōsuke Tanihara portrayed him in the 2009 jdorama Ryōmaden as the leader of the Chōshu han He is also the basis for the character of Katsura Kotarou in the manga and anime Gin Tama by Hideaki Sorachi He also appears in the video game Ryu ga Gotoku Ishin portrayed by the Yakuza character Shun Akiyama and voiced by Kōichi Yamadera Honours EditGrand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun May 24 1877 Junior First Rank May 22 1901 posthumous Notable works EditThe Diary of Kido Takayoshi Volume 1 1868 1871 The Diary of Kido Takayoshi Volume 2 1874 1877 Gallery of former residence of Kido Takayoshi at Hagi Japan Edit House of Takayoshi Kido Gate of former residence of Kido Takayoshi Garden of former residence of Kido Takayoshi Childhood room of Kido Takayoshi Edoya Lane near former residence of Kido TakayoshiNotes Edit Ellen P Conant 2006 Challenging Past And Present The Metamorphosis of Nineteenth Century Japanese Art University of Hawaii Press pp 178 180 ISBN 978 0 8248 2937 7 Edmond Papinot 1906 Dictionnaire d histoire et de geographie du Japon in French p 315 Kokushi daijiten Vol 4 pp 170 171 Kido Shrine Yamaguchi City a strategic base of the Meiji Restoration Traveling website of Yamaguchi City a city of celebrating the 150 year anniversary of the Meiji Restoration ishin150 yamaguchi com in Japanese Retrieved April 20 2018 Kido Park maple YAMAGUCHI JAPAN TRAVEL GUIDE www visit jy com Retrieved April 20 2018 Reference and further reading EditAkamatsu Paul Meiji 1868 Revolution and Counter Revolution in Japan Trans Miriam Kochan New York Harper amp Row 1972 Beasley William G 1972 The Meiji Restoration Stanford Stanford University Press ISBN 9780804708159 OCLC 579232 Beasley W G The Rise of Modern Japan Political Economic and Social Change Since 1850 New York St Martin s Press 1995 Craig Albert M Chōshu in the Meiji Restoration Cambridge Harvard University Press 1961 OCLC 482814571 Jansen Marius B and Gilbert Rozman eds 1986 Japan in Transition from Tokugawa to Meiji Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691054599 OCLC 12311985 Kido Takayoshi 1983 The Diary of Kido Takayoshi Sidney DeVere Brown and Akiko Hirota translators Vol I 1868 1871 Vol II 1871 1874 Vol III 1874 1877 Tokyo University of Tokyo Press Nish Ian 1998 The Iwakura Mission to America and Europe A New Assessment Richmond Surrey Japan Library ISBN 9781873410844 ISBN 0415471796 OCLC 40410662External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kido Takayoshi Selected Diary Entries of Kido Archived March 21 2014 at the Wayback Machine National Diet Library photo amp bio Meiji Dignitaries is a portrait of Takayoshi and others from 1877 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kido Takayoshi amp oldid 1156499434, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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