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Saigō Takamori

Saigō Takamori (Takanaga) (西鄕 隆盛 (隆永), January 23, 1828 – September 24, 1877) was a Japanese samurai and nobleman. He was one of the most influential samurai in Japanese history and one of the three great nobles who led the Meiji Restoration. Living during the late Edo and early Meiji periods, he later led the Satsuma Rebellion against the Meiji government. Historian Ivan Morris described him as "the quintessential hero of modern Japanese history".[1]

Saigō Takamori
A portrait of Takamori by Ishikawa Shizumasa
Native name
西郷 隆盛
Birth nameSaigō Kokichi
Other name(s)Saigō Nanshū
Saigō Kichinosuke
Kikuchi Gengo
Born(1828-01-23)January 23, 1828
Kagoshima, Satsuma Domain
DiedSeptember 24, 1877(1877-09-24) (aged 49)
Kagoshima, Empire of Japan
Buried
Nanshu Cemetery, Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan
AllegianceSatsuma Domain
Battles/wars
Spouse(s)
Suga Ijuin
(m. 1852; div. 1854)
Otoma Kane "Aigana"
(m. 1859⁠–⁠1862)
Iwayama Itoko
(m. 1865)
ChildrenSaigō Kikujirō (son)
Saigō Kikusō (daughter)
Saigō Toratarō (son)
Saigō Umajirō (son)
Saigō Torizō (son)
Relations
  • Saigō Kichibei (father)
  • Shiihara Masa (mother)
  • Saigō Jūdō (brother)
  • Saigō Kichijirō (brother)
  • Saigō Kohei (brother)
  • Ichiki Koto (sister)
  • Saigō Taka (sister)
  • Saigō Yasu (sister)
Japanese name
Hiraganaさいごう たかもり
Katakanaサイゴウ タカモリ
Kyūjitai西鄕 隆盛
Shinjitai西郷 隆盛
Transcriptions
RomanizationSaigō Takamori

Early life

Saigō Kokichi (西郷 小吉) was born in Kajiya, Kagoshima, Satsuma Domain, the eldest son of samurai squire (koshōkumi) Saigō Kichibē and his wife Masa.[2] He had six siblings and his younger brother was Marshal-Admiral Marquis Saigō Jūdō. His childhood name was Kokichi and he received the given name Takamori in adulthood.[2] He wrote poetry under the name Saigō Nanshū (西郷 南洲).[3]

Shogun Tokugawa Yoshinobu resigned, returning power to the Emperor in what came to be known as the Meiji Restoration. However, Saigō was one of the most vocal and vehement opponents to the negotiated solution, demanding that the Tokugawa be stripped of their lands and special status. His intransigence was one of the major causes of the subsequent Boshin War.

During the Boshin War, Saigō led the imperial forces at the Battle of Toba–Fushimi, and after led the imperial army toward Edo, where he accepted the surrender of Edo Castle from Katsu Kaishū.

Meiji bureaucrat

 
The Seikanron debate. Saigō Takamori is sitting in the center. 1877 woodblock print

Although Ōkubo Toshimichi and others were more active and influential in establishing the new Meiji government, Saigō retained a key role, and his cooperation was essential in the abolition of the han system and the establishment of a conscript army. In 1871 he was left in charge of the caretaker government during the absence of the Iwakura Mission (1871–73).

Saigō initially disagreed with the modernization of Japan and the opening of commerce with the West. He famously opposed the construction of a railway network, insisting that money should rather be spent on military modernization.[4]

Saigō did insist, however, that Japan should go to war with Korea in the Seikanron debate of 1873 due to Korea's refusal to recognize the legitimacy of the Emperor Meiji as head of state of the Empire of Japan, and insulting treatment meted out to Japanese envoys attempting to establish trade and diplomatic relations. At one point, he offered to visit Korea in person and to provoke a casus belli by behaving in such an insulting manner that the Koreans would be forced to kill him.[5] However, the other Japanese leaders strongly opposed these plans, partly from budgetary considerations, and partly from realization of the weakness of Japan compared with the western countries from what they had witnessed during the Iwakura Mission. Saigō resigned from all of his government positions in protest and returned to his hometown of Kagoshima.

Satsuma Rebellion (1877)

 
Portrait of Saigō Takamori, faithful depiction by the acquaintance Tokonami Masayoshi in 1887
 
Saigō preparing for war

Shortly thereafter, a private military academy known as the Shi-gakkō was established in Kagoshima for the faithful samurai who had also resigned their posts to follow him from Tokyo. These disaffected samurai came to dominate the Kagoshima government, and fearing a rebellion, the government sent warships to Kagoshima to remove weapons from the Kagoshima arsenal. This provoked open conflict, although with the elimination of samurai rice stipends in 1877, tensions were already extremely high. Although greatly dismayed by the revolt, Saigō was reluctantly persuaded to lead the rebels against the central government.

 
Saigō Takamori (upper right) directing his troops at the Battle of Shiroyama

The rebels fought two significant battles against the central government: the Siege of Kumamoto Castle and the Battle of Tabaruzaka. Saigō was initially confident of his ability to take Kumamoto Castle, but he had underestimated the effectiveness of the imperial conscripts defending the castle. After a failed assault, Saigō settled for a siege. Imperial reinforcements eventually forced their way through the rebel lines at the Battle of Tabaruzaka, lifting the siege. The remnants of Saigō's army retreated before the advancing imperials, who whittled it down relentlessly. Eventually Saigō and his final remaining samurai were encircled and annihilated at the Battle of Shiroyama.

Saigō's death brought the Satsuma Rebellion to an end.

Death

 
Woodblock print of Saigō Takamori by Hasegawa Sadanobu II which describes his career, November 1877

During the battle of Shiroyama, Saigō was badly injured in the hip. However, the exact manner of his death is unknown. There are no published reports by eyewitnesses. The accounts of his subordinates claim that he stood up and committed seppuku after his injury or that he requested that his friend Beppu Shinsuke assist his suicide. Three firsthand accounts of the condition of his deceased body exist. It is said that he was shot in the femur, then he thrust a sword into his stomach region, then had his head decapitated deliberately by a fellow citizen. All three accounts report that the body was decapitated. Two describe a bullet wound to the hip or thigh. As none of the eyewitness accounts mention a wound to the abdomen, or any fresh sword wound at all, it is unknown if Saigō pierced his stomach with his sword.[6] In debate, some scholars have suggested that neither is the case and that Saigō may have gone into shock following his wound, losing his ability to speak. Several samurai, upon seeing him in this state, would have severed his head, assisting him in the warrior's suicide that they knew he would have wished. Later, they would have said that he committed seppuku to preserve his status as a true samurai.[7]

It is not clear what was done with Saigō's head immediately after his death. Some legends say Saigō's manservant hid the head, and it was later found by a government soldier. The head was somehow retrieved by government forces and was reunited with Saigō's body, which was laid next to that of his deputies Kirino and Murata. This was witnessed by the American sea captain John Capen Hubbard. A myth persists that the head was never found.

Legends

 
Saigō Takamori Gunmusho (軍務所) banknote, issued in 1877 to finance his war effort. Japan Currency Museum

Multiple legends sprang up concerning Saigō, many of which denied his death. It was believed by some that he had fled to Russia, or ascended to Mars.[8] It was even recorded that his image appeared in a comet near the close of the 19th century, an ill omen to his enemies. Unable to overcome the affection that the people had for this paragon of traditional samurai virtues, the Meiji-era government pardoned him posthumously on February 22, 1889. The Japanese people appreciated the fact that he remained loyal to his virtues until his death in 1877.

Artworks depicting Saigō

 
Monument of Satsu Do Toubaku no Mitsuyaku
(Gion, Kyoto, Japan)
 
Saigō Takamori's statue near the southern entrance of Ueno Park.
 
The deathplace monument at Shiroyama-chō, Kagoshima

A famous bronze statue of Saigō in hunting attire with his dog stands in Ueno Park, Tokyo. Made by Takamura Kōun, it was unveiled on December 18, 1898. Saigō met the noted British diplomat Ernest Satow in the 1860s, as recorded in the latter's A Diplomat in Japan, and Satow was present at the unveiling as recorded in his diary.

A reproduction of the same statue stands on Okinoerabujima, where Saigō had been exiled.[9]

A Japanese hand fan commemorating the event, which survives in the collection of the Staten Island Historical Society in New York, features a depiction of Saigō Takamori in a scene labeled (in English) "The Battle Near the Citadel of Kumamoto".[10]

Family

Ancestry

Ancestors of Saigō Takamori
16. Saigō Kakuzaemon
8. Saigō Kichibei
4. Saigō Takamitsu
18. Machida Shizaemon
9. Machida NN
2. Saigō Kichibei
5. Yotsumoto NN
1. Saigō Takamori[11]
6. Shiihara Kuninori
3. Shiihara Masa

Wives and children

  • Ijūin Suga
  • Aikana
  • Saigō Itoko
    • Marquess Saigō Toratarō (son): Colonel in the army, studied at Prussian Military Academy
    • Saigō Umajirō (son)
    • Saigō Torizō (son)

Siblings

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Hoffman, Michael (December 10, 2016). "Meiji Restoration leader's lessons of sincerity". The Japan Times. Retrieved June 29, 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ a b Asashi Nihon rekishi jinbutsu jiten. Asahi Shinbunsha, 朝日新聞社. Asahi Shinbunsha. 1994. 西郷隆盛. ISBN 4-02-340052-1. OCLC 33014222.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. ^ Ravina, Mark. The Last Samurai: The Life and Battles of Saigō Takamori. John Wiley and Sons, 2011. Names, Romanizations, and Spelling (page 1 of 2). Retrieved from Google Books on August 7, 2011. ISBN 1-118-04556-4, ISBN 978-1-118-04556-5.
  4. ^ On Saigō and the establishment of a railway
  5. ^ Ravina, Mark (2003). The last Samurai - The life and Battles of Saigō Takamori. Wiley Online library. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-471-70537-6.
  6. ^ Ravina, Mark J. “The Apocryphal Suicide of Saigō Takamori: Samurai, Seppuku, and the Politics of Legend.” Journal of Asian Studies 69.3 (2010): 691-721.
  7. ^ Andrew M. Beierle (ed.). "The Real Last Samurai". Emory Magazine. Emory University. Retrieved April 10, 2009.
  8. ^ RAVINA, MARK J. (2010). "The Apocryphal Suicide of Saigō Takamori: Samurai, "Seppuku", and the Politics of Legend". The Journal of Asian Studies. 69 (3): 691–721. doi:10.1017/S0021911810001518. ISSN 0021-9118. JSTOR 40929189. S2CID 155001706.
  9. ^ Man, John. "In the Footsteps of the Real Last Samurai." SOAS World. 37 (Spring 2011). p30.
  10. ^ "Fan, 1877–1890". Online Collections Database. Staten Island Historical Society. Retrieved December 2, 2011.
  11. ^ "西郷氏(隆盛系)" Saigō-shi (Takamori-kei) [Saigo clan (Takamori's family)]. Reichsarchiv (in Japanese). Retrieved January 5, 2019.

References

External links

saigō, takamori, this, japanese, name, surname, saigō, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, january, 2018, learn, w. In this Japanese name the surname is Saigō 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 January 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Saigō Takamori Takanaga 西鄕 隆盛 隆永 January 23 1828 September 24 1877 was a Japanese samurai and nobleman He was one of the most influential samurai in Japanese history and one of the three great nobles who led the Meiji Restoration Living during the late Edo and early Meiji periods he later led the Satsuma Rebellion against the Meiji government Historian Ivan Morris described him as the quintessential hero of modern Japanese history 1 Saigō TakamoriA portrait of Takamori by Ishikawa ShizumasaNative name西郷 隆盛Birth nameSaigō KokichiOther name s Saigō NanshuSaigō KichinosukeKikuchi GengoBorn 1828 01 23 January 23 1828Kagoshima Satsuma DomainDiedSeptember 24 1877 1877 09 24 aged 49 Kagoshima Empire of JapanBuriedNanshu Cemetery Kagoshima Prefecture JapanAllegianceSatsuma DomainBattles warsBoshin War Battle of Toba Fushimi Satsuma Rebellion Siege of Kumamoto Castle Battle of Tabaruzaka Battle of Shiroyama Spouse s Suga Ijuin m 1852 div 1854 wbr Otoma Kane Aigana m 1859 1862 wbr Iwayama Itoko m 1865 wbr ChildrenSaigō Kikujirō son Saigō Kikusō daughter Saigō Toratarō son Saigō Umajirō son Saigō Torizō son RelationsSaigō Kichibei father Shiihara Masa mother Saigō Judō brother Saigō Kichijirō brother Saigō Kohei brother Ichiki Koto sister Saigō Taka sister Saigō Yasu sister Japanese nameHiraganaさいごう たかもりKatakanaサイゴウ タカモリKyujitai西鄕 隆盛Shinjitai西郷 隆盛TranscriptionsRomanizationSaigō Takamori Contents 1 Early life 2 Meiji bureaucrat 3 Satsuma Rebellion 1877 4 Death 5 Legends 6 Artworks depicting Saigō 7 Family 7 1 Ancestry 7 2 Wives and children 7 3 Siblings 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksEarly life EditSaigō Kokichi 西郷 小吉 was born in Kajiya Kagoshima Satsuma Domain the eldest son of samurai squire koshōkumi Saigō Kichibe and his wife Masa 2 He had six siblings and his younger brother was Marshal Admiral Marquis Saigō Judō His childhood name was Kokichi and he received the given name Takamori in adulthood 2 He wrote poetry under the name Saigō Nanshu 西郷 南洲 3 Shogun Tokugawa Yoshinobu resigned returning power to the Emperor in what came to be known as the Meiji Restoration However Saigō was one of the most vocal and vehement opponents to the negotiated solution demanding that the Tokugawa be stripped of their lands and special status His intransigence was one of the major causes of the subsequent Boshin War During the Boshin War Saigō led the imperial forces at the Battle of Toba Fushimi and after led the imperial army toward Edo where he accepted the surrender of Edo Castle from Katsu Kaishu Meiji bureaucrat Edit The Seikanron debate Saigō Takamori is sitting in the center 1877 woodblock print Although Ōkubo Toshimichi and others were more active and influential in establishing the new Meiji government Saigō retained a key role and his cooperation was essential in the abolition of the han system and the establishment of a conscript army In 1871 he was left in charge of the caretaker government during the absence of the Iwakura Mission 1871 73 Saigō initially disagreed with the modernization of Japan and the opening of commerce with the West He famously opposed the construction of a railway network insisting that money should rather be spent on military modernization 4 Saigō did insist however that Japan should go to war with Korea in the Seikanron debate of 1873 due to Korea s refusal to recognize the legitimacy of the Emperor Meiji as head of state of the Empire of Japan and insulting treatment meted out to Japanese envoys attempting to establish trade and diplomatic relations At one point he offered to visit Korea in person and to provoke a casus belli by behaving in such an insulting manner that the Koreans would be forced to kill him 5 However the other Japanese leaders strongly opposed these plans partly from budgetary considerations and partly from realization of the weakness of Japan compared with the western countries from what they had witnessed during the Iwakura Mission Saigō resigned from all of his government positions in protest and returned to his hometown of Kagoshima Satsuma Rebellion 1877 EditMain article Satsuma Rebellion Portrait of Saigō Takamori faithful depiction by the acquaintance Tokonami Masayoshi in 1887 Saigō preparing for war Shortly thereafter a private military academy known as the Shi gakkō was established in Kagoshima for the faithful samurai who had also resigned their posts to follow him from Tokyo These disaffected samurai came to dominate the Kagoshima government and fearing a rebellion the government sent warships to Kagoshima to remove weapons from the Kagoshima arsenal This provoked open conflict although with the elimination of samurai rice stipends in 1877 tensions were already extremely high Although greatly dismayed by the revolt Saigō was reluctantly persuaded to lead the rebels against the central government Saigō Takamori upper right directing his troops at the Battle of Shiroyama The rebels fought two significant battles against the central government the Siege of Kumamoto Castle and the Battle of Tabaruzaka Saigō was initially confident of his ability to take Kumamoto Castle but he had underestimated the effectiveness of the imperial conscripts defending the castle After a failed assault Saigō settled for a siege Imperial reinforcements eventually forced their way through the rebel lines at the Battle of Tabaruzaka lifting the siege The remnants of Saigō s army retreated before the advancing imperials who whittled it down relentlessly Eventually Saigō and his final remaining samurai were encircled and annihilated at the Battle of Shiroyama Saigō s death brought the Satsuma Rebellion to an end Death Edit Woodblock print of Saigō Takamori by Hasegawa Sadanobu II which describes his career November 1877 During the battle of Shiroyama Saigō was badly injured in the hip However the exact manner of his death is unknown There are no published reports by eyewitnesses The accounts of his subordinates claim that he stood up and committed seppuku after his injury or that he requested that his friend Beppu Shinsuke assist his suicide Three firsthand accounts of the condition of his deceased body exist It is said that he was shot in the femur then he thrust a sword into his stomach region then had his head decapitated deliberately by a fellow citizen All three accounts report that the body was decapitated Two describe a bullet wound to the hip or thigh As none of the eyewitness accounts mention a wound to the abdomen or any fresh sword wound at all it is unknown if Saigō pierced his stomach with his sword 6 In debate some scholars have suggested that neither is the case and that Saigō may have gone into shock following his wound losing his ability to speak Several samurai upon seeing him in this state would have severed his head assisting him in the warrior s suicide that they knew he would have wished Later they would have said that he committed seppuku to preserve his status as a true samurai 7 It is not clear what was done with Saigō s head immediately after his death Some legends say Saigō s manservant hid the head and it was later found by a government soldier The head was somehow retrieved by government forces and was reunited with Saigō s body which was laid next to that of his deputies Kirino and Murata This was witnessed by the American sea captain John Capen Hubbard A myth persists that the head was never found Legends Edit Saigō Takamori Gunmusho 軍務所 banknote issued in 1877 to finance his war effort Japan Currency Museum Multiple legends sprang up concerning Saigō many of which denied his death It was believed by some that he had fled to Russia or ascended to Mars 8 It was even recorded that his image appeared in a comet near the close of the 19th century an ill omen to his enemies Unable to overcome the affection that the people had for this paragon of traditional samurai virtues the Meiji era government pardoned him posthumously on February 22 1889 The Japanese people appreciated the fact that he remained loyal to his virtues until his death in 1877 Artworks depicting Saigō Edit Monument of Satsu Do Toubaku no Mitsuyaku Gion Kyoto Japan Saigō Takamori s statue near the southern entrance of Ueno Park The deathplace monument at Shiroyama chō Kagoshima A famous bronze statue of Saigō in hunting attire with his dog stands in Ueno Park Tokyo Made by Takamura Kōun it was unveiled on December 18 1898 Saigō met the noted British diplomat Ernest Satow in the 1860s as recorded in the latter s A Diplomat in Japan and Satow was present at the unveiling as recorded in his diary A reproduction of the same statue stands on Okinoerabujima where Saigō had been exiled 9 A Japanese hand fan commemorating the event which survives in the collection of the Staten Island Historical Society in New York features a depiction of Saigō Takamori in a scene labeled in English The Battle Near the Citadel of Kumamoto 10 Family EditAncestry Edit Ancestors of Saigō Takamori16 Saigō Kakuzaemon8 Saigō Kichibei4 Saigō Takamitsu18 Machida Shizaemon9 Machida NN2 Saigō Kichibei5 Yotsumoto NN1 Saigō Takamori 11 6 Shiihara Kuninori3 Shiihara Masa Wives and children Edit Ijuin Suga Aikana Saigō Kikujirō son Mayor of Kyoto City studied politics at Johns Hopkins University Saigō Kikusō daughter Saigō Itoko Marquess Saigō Toratarō son Colonel in the army studied at Prussian Military Academy Saigō Umajirō son Saigō Torizō son Siblings Edit Marshal Admiral Marquess Saigō Judō younger brother Navy Minister Saigō Kichijirō younger brother Killed in action in the Boshin War Saigō Kohei younger brother Killed in action in the Satsuma Rebellion Ichiki Koto younger sister Saigō Taka younger sister Saigō Yasu younger sister Aikana 1837 1902 Saigō Itoko 1843 1922 Saigō Kikujirō 1861 1928 Saigō Toratarō 1866 1919 Saigō Judō 1843 1902 See also EditSeikanronNotes Edit Hoffman Michael December 10 2016 Meiji Restoration leader s lessons of sincerity The Japan Times Retrieved June 29 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Asashi Nihon rekishi jinbutsu jiten Asahi Shinbunsha 朝日新聞社 Asahi Shinbunsha 1994 西郷隆盛 ISBN 4 02 340052 1 OCLC 33014222 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Ravina Mark The Last Samurai The Life and Battles of Saigō Takamori John Wiley and Sons 2011 Names Romanizations and Spelling page 1 of 2 Retrieved from Google Books on August 7 2011 ISBN 1 118 04556 4 ISBN 978 1 118 04556 5 On Saigō and the establishment of a railway Ravina Mark 2003 The last Samurai The life and Battles of Saigō Takamori Wiley Online library p 184 ISBN 978 0 471 70537 6 Ravina Mark J The Apocryphal Suicide of Saigō Takamori Samurai Seppuku and the Politics of Legend Journal of Asian Studies 69 3 2010 691 721 Andrew M Beierle ed The Real Last Samurai Emory Magazine Emory University Retrieved April 10 2009 RAVINA MARK J 2010 The Apocryphal Suicide of Saigō Takamori Samurai Seppuku and the Politics of Legend The Journal of Asian Studies 69 3 691 721 doi 10 1017 S0021911810001518 ISSN 0021 9118 JSTOR 40929189 S2CID 155001706 Man John In the Footsteps of the Real Last Samurai SOAS World 37 Spring 2011 p30 Fan 1877 1890 Online Collections Database Staten Island Historical Society Retrieved December 2 2011 西郷氏 隆盛系 Saigō shi Takamori kei Saigo clan Takamori s family Reichsarchiv in Japanese Retrieved January 5 2019 References EditHagiwara Kōichi 2004 図説 西郷隆盛と大久保利通 Illustrated life of Saigō Takamori and Ōkubo Toshimichi Kawade Shobō Shinsha 2004 ISBN 4 309 76041 4 Japanese Jansen Marius B and Gilbert Rozman eds 1986 Japan in Transition from Tokugawa to Meiji Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 05459 9 OCLC 12311985 Jansen Marius 2000 The Making of Modern Japan Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 00334 7 OCLC 44090600 Ravina Mark 2004 The Last Samurai The Life and Battles of Saigo Takamori Hoboken New Jersey Wiley ISBN 978 0 471 08970 4 OCLC 427566169 Yates Charles 1995 Saigo Takamori The Man Behind The Myth New York NY Kegan Paul International ISBN 0 7103 0484 6 Ravina Mark J The Apocryphal Suicide of Saigō Takamori Samurai Seppuku and the Politics of Legend Journal of Asian Studies 69 3 2010 691 721 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saigō Takamori category Saigo Takamori Portraits of Modern Japanese Historical Figures National Diet Library Portals History Education Politics Biography Asia Japan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saigō Takamori amp oldid 1149167438, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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