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Ōkuma Shigenobu

Marquess Ōkuma Shigenobu (大隈 重信, March 11, 1838 – January 10, 1922) was a Japanese statesman and a prominent member of the Meiji oligarchy. He served as the second Prime Minister of the Empire of Japan in 1898 and from 1914 to 1916. Ōkuma was also an early advocate of Western science and culture in Japan, and founder of Waseda University. He is considered a centrist.

Ōkuma Shigenobu
大隈 重信
Prime Minister of Japan
In office
April 16, 1914 – October 9, 1916
MonarchTaishō
Preceded byYamamoto Gonnohyōe
Succeeded byTerauchi Masatake
In office
June 30, 1898 – November 8, 1898
MonarchMeiji
Preceded byItō Hirobumi
Succeeded byYamagata Aritomo
Personal details
Born(1838-03-11)March 11, 1838
Saga, Japan
DiedJanuary 10, 1922(1922-01-10) (aged 83)
Tokyo, Japan
Political partyRikken Kaishintō (1882–1896)
Shimpotō (1896–1898)
Kensei Hontō (1898–1908)
Independent (1908–1914)
Rikken Dōshikai (1914–1922)
SpouseŌkuma Ayako
Signature

Early life edit

Ōkuma Hachitarō was born on March 11, 1838, in Saga, Hizen Province (modern day Saga Prefecture),[1] the first son of Ōkuma Nobuyasu and Miiko.[2] His father was a samurai-class artillery officer of the Saga Domain,[1][3] and the family were a high-ranking samurai family who had a 300 koku territory.[2]

At the age of seven, he entered the domain school Kōdōkan and studied mainly Confucian literature, the teachings of Cheng–Zhu school in particular. In 1854, he rebelled against the education of the school with his fellow students. He was expelled the next year for rioting.[2] At this point, he had moved to a Dutch studies institution.[1]

The Dutch school was merged with the provincial school in 1861, and Ōkuma took up a lecturing position there shortly afterward. Ōkuma sympathized with the sonnō jōi movement, which aimed at expelling the Europeans who had started to arrive in Japan. However, he also advocated mediation between the rebels in Chōshū and the Tokugawa shogunate in Edo.[citation needed]

During a trip to Nagasaki, Ōkuma met a Dutch missionary named Guido Verbeck, who taught him the English language and provided him with copies of the New Testament and the American Declaration of Independence,[4] as well as works on scientific subjects. The political works are often said[who?] to have affected his political thinking profoundly,[citation needed] and encouraged him to support efforts to abolish the existing feudal system and work toward the establishment of a constitutional government.[5]

Ōkuma frequently traveled between Nagasaki and Kyoto in the following years and became active in the Meiji Restoration. In 1867, together with Soejima Taneomi, he planned to recommend resignation to the shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu.[1] Leaving Saga Domain without permission, they went to Kyoto, where the shōgun then resided.[6] However, Ōkuma and his companions were arrested and sent back to Saga. They were subsequently sentenced to one month imprisonment.

Meiji period political life edit

 
Ōkuma Shigenobu as a young man.

Following the Boshin War of the Meiji Restoration in 1868, Okuma was placed in charge of foreign affairs for the new Meiji government. At this time, he negotiated with British diplomat, Sir Harry Smith Parkes on the ban of Christianity and insisted on maintaining the government's persecution on Catholics in Nagasaki.[citation needed]

In 1873, the Japanese government removed the ban on Christianity.[citation needed]

He was soon given an additional post as head of Japan's monetary reform program. He made use of his close contacts with Inoue Kaoru to secure a position in the central government in Tokyo. He was elected to the first Diet of Japan in 1870 and soon became Minister of Finance, in which capacity he instituted property and taxation reforms that aided Japan's early industrial development.[7] He presided over the commission which represented the Japanese government at the 1873 Vienna World's Fair.[8]

He also unified the nation's currency, created the national mint, and a separate Minister of Industry; however, he was dismissed in 1881 after a long series of disagreements with members of the Satsuma and Chōshū clique in the Meiji oligarchy, most notably Itō Hirobumi, over his efforts to secure foreign loans, to establish a constitution, and especially over his exposure of illicit property dealings involving Prime Minister Kuroda Kiyotaka and others from Satsuma.

In 1882, Ōkuma co-founded the Constitutional Progressive Party (Rikken Kaishintō) which soon attracted a number of other leaders, including Ozaki Yukio and Inukai Tsuyoshi. That same year, Ōkuma founded the Tokyo Senmon Gakkō (東京専門学校) in the Waseda district of Tokyo. The school later became Waseda University, one of the country's most prominent institutions of higher education.[9]

Despite their continuing animosity, Itō again appointed Ōkuma to the post of Foreign Minister in February 1888 to deal with the difficult issue of negotiation revisions to the "unequal treaties" with the Western powers. The treaty he negotiated was perceived by the public as too conciliatory to the Western powers, and created considerable controversy. In 1889, Ōkuma was attacked by a member of the Gen'yōsha, who threw a bomb directly under Ōkuma's carriage.[10]: 253  Following two operations, Ōkuma's left leg was amputated at the hip.[10]: 253  He retired from politics at that time.

However, he returned to politics in 1896 by reorganizing the Rikken Kaishintō into the Shimpotō (Progressive Party).[citation needed] In 1897, Matsukata Masayoshi convinced Ōkuma to participate in his second administration as Foreign Minister and Agriculture and Commerce Minister, but again, he remained in office for only one year before resigning as a result of intrigues involving the prime minister.[8]

In June 1898, Ōkuma co-founded the Kenseitō (Constitutional Government Party), by merging his Shimpotō with Itagaki Taisuke's Jiyūtō, and was appointed by the Emperor to form the first partisan cabinet in Japanese history. The new cabinet survived for only four months before it fell apart due to internal dissension. Ōkuma remained in charge of the party until 1908, when he retired from politics.

 
Ōkuma Shigenobu during his premiership

After his political retirement, Ōkuma became president of Waseda University and chairman of the Japan Civilization Society, from which scholars' many translations of European and American texts were published. He also gathered support for Japan's first expedition to Antarctica.

Taishō period political life edit

 
Marquess Ōkuma Shigenobu in the year before his death

At the request of the Emperor, Ōkuma returned to politics during the constitutional crisis of 1914, when the government of Yamamoto Gonnohyōe was forced to resign in the wake of the Siemens scandal.[11] The 2nd Ōkuma administration was noted for its active foreign policy. Later that year, Japan declared war on the German Empire, thus entering World War I on the Allied side. However, the government suffered defeat in December, over the army budget.[11]

In 1915, Ōkuma and Katō Takaaki drafted the Twenty-One Demands on China. Ōkuma won re-election in March of that year, but his second administration was also short-lived. Following the Ōura scandal, Ōkuma's cabinet lost popular support, and its members held mass resignation in October 1915. Still, Ōkuma was persuaded to continue in office for a while, and during the year treaties were concluded with France, Russia and China.[11] Later in 1916, after a long argument with the Genrō, Ōkuma resigned as well, and retired from politics permanently, although he remained a member of the Upper House of the Diet of Japan until 1922. He was awarded the Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum in 1916, and was elevated to the title of kōshaku (侯爵) (marquis) in the kazoku peerage system the same year.

Ōkuma returned to Waseda, and died there in 1922.[12] An estimated 300,000 people attended his funeral in Tokyo's Hibiya Park. He was posthumously conferred with the Collar of the Order of the Chrysanthemum, the nation's highest honour. He was buried at the temple of Gokoku-ji in Tokyo.

Honours edit

From the corresponding article in the Japanese Wikipedia

Peerages edit

  • Count (May 9, 1887)
  • Marquess (July 14, 1916)

Decorations edit

Court order of precedence edit

  • Fifth rank, junior grade (1867)
  • Fourth rank, junior grade (1868)
  • Senior fourth rank (1870)
  • Third rank (July 22, 1871)
  • Senior third rank (December 26, 1887)
  • Second rank (February 17, 1888)
  • Senior second rank (June 20, 1898)
  • Junior First Rank (January 10, 1922)[13]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d Borton, p. 91.
  2. ^ a b c Itō, Yukio; 伊藤之雄 (2019). Ōkuma Shigenobu. 中央公論新社. pp. 17–18. ISBN 978-4-12-102550-0. OCLC 1201259749.
  3. ^ "大隈重信 | 近代日本人の肖像". National Diet Library (in Japanese). Retrieved December 10, 2021.
  4. ^ Brownas, heading "A Wider Window on the West"
  5. ^ Chisholm 1911, p. 61.
  6. ^ Tokugawa, p. 161. Unlike all 14 previous Tokugawa shōguns, Yoshinobu never set foot in Edo during his tenure.
  7. ^ Borton, p. 78.
  8. ^ a b Chisholm 1911, p. 62.
  9. ^ Beasley, p. 105.
  10. ^ a b Driscoll, Mark W. (2020). The Whites are Enemies of Heaven: Climate Caucasianism and Asian Ecological Protection. Durham: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-1-4780-1121-7.
  11. ^ a b c Chisholm 1922.
  12. ^ Beasley, p. 220.
  13. ^ "叙従一位位記:正二位大勲位侯爵大隈重信". Waseda University Library. Retrieved December 25, 2023.

References edit

  • Beasley, W.G. (1963). The Making of Modern Japan. London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson.
  • Borton, Hugh (1955). Japan's Modern Century. New York: The Ronald Press Company.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Okuma (Shigenobu)" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 20 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 61–62.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1922). "Okuma (Shigenobu)" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 31 (12th ed.). London & New York: The Encyclopædia Britannica Company. p. 1174.
  • Idditti, Smimasa. Life of Marquis Shigenobu Okuma: A Maker of New Japan. Kegan Paul International Ltd. (2006). ISBN 0-7103-1186-9
  • Idditti, Junesay. Marquis Shigenobu Okuma – A Biographical Study in the Rise of Democratic Japan. Hokuseido Press (1956). ASIN: B000IPQ4VQ
  • Lebra-Chapman, Joyce. Okuma Shigenobu: statesman of Meiji Japan. Australian National University Press (1973). ISBN 0-7081-0400-2
  • Oka Yoshitake, et al. Five Political Leaders of Modern Japan: Ito Hirobumi, Okuma Shigenobu, Hara Takashi, Inukai Tsuyoshi, and Saionji Kimmochi. University of Tokyo Press (1984). ISBN 0-86008-379-9
  • Tokugawa Munefusa (2005). Tokugawa yonhyakunen no naisho-banashi: raibaru bushō-hen Tokyo: Bungei-shunju
  • Brownas, Sidney DeVere. Nagasaki in the Meiji Restoration: Choshu Loyalists and British Arms Merchants. http://www.uwosh.edu/home_pages/faculty_staff/earns/meiji.html Retrieved on August 7, 2008.

External links edit

Political offices
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
1888–1889
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
1896–1897
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
1898
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Foreign Affairs
1915
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Home Affairs
1914–1915
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Home Affairs
1915
Succeeded by
Preceded by Minister of Agriculture and Commerce
1897
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Japan
1898
Succeeded by
Preceded by Prime Minister of Japan
1914–1916
Succeeded by
Academic offices
New office President of Waseda University
1907–1922
Succeeded by
Masasada Shiozawa

Ōkuma, shigenobu, this, japanese, name, surname, Ōkuma, marquess, 大隈, 重信, march, 1838, january, 1922, japanese, statesman, prominent, member, meiji, oligarchy, served, second, prime, minister, empire, japan, 1898, from, 1914, 1916, Ōkuma, also, early, advocate. In this Japanese name the surname is Ōkuma Marquess Ōkuma Shigenobu 大隈 重信 March 11 1838 January 10 1922 was a Japanese statesman and a prominent member of the Meiji oligarchy He served as the second Prime Minister of the Empire of Japan in 1898 and from 1914 to 1916 Ōkuma was also an early advocate of Western science and culture in Japan and founder of Waseda University He is considered a centrist MarquessŌkuma ShigenobuJunior First Rank大隈 重信Prime Minister of JapanIn office April 16 1914 October 9 1916MonarchTaishōPreceded byYamamoto GonnohyōeSucceeded byTerauchi MasatakeIn office June 30 1898 November 8 1898MonarchMeijiPreceded byItō HirobumiSucceeded byYamagata AritomoPersonal detailsBorn 1838 03 11 March 11 1838Saga JapanDiedJanuary 10 1922 1922 01 10 aged 83 Tokyo JapanPolitical partyRikken Kaishintō 1882 1896 Shimpotō 1896 1898 Kensei Hontō 1898 1908 Independent 1908 1914 Rikken Dōshikai 1914 1922 SpouseŌkuma AyakoSignature Contents 1 Early life 2 Meiji period political life 3 Taishō period political life 4 Honours 4 1 Peerages 4 2 Decorations 4 3 Court order of precedence 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksEarly life editŌkuma Hachitarō was born on March 11 1838 in Saga Hizen Province modern day Saga Prefecture 1 the first son of Ōkuma Nobuyasu and Miiko 2 His father was a samurai class artillery officer of the Saga Domain 1 3 and the family were a high ranking samurai family who had a 300 koku territory 2 At the age of seven he entered the domain school Kōdōkan and studied mainly Confucian literature the teachings of Cheng Zhu school in particular In 1854 he rebelled against the education of the school with his fellow students He was expelled the next year for rioting 2 At this point he had moved to a Dutch studies institution 1 The Dutch school was merged with the provincial school in 1861 and Ōkuma took up a lecturing position there shortly afterward Ōkuma sympathized with the sonnō jōi movement which aimed at expelling the Europeans who had started to arrive in Japan However he also advocated mediation between the rebels in Chōshu and the Tokugawa shogunate in Edo citation needed During a trip to Nagasaki Ōkuma met a Dutch missionary named Guido Verbeck who taught him the English language and provided him with copies of the New Testament and the American Declaration of Independence 4 as well as works on scientific subjects The political works are often said who to have affected his political thinking profoundly citation needed and encouraged him to support efforts to abolish the existing feudal system and work toward the establishment of a constitutional government 5 Ōkuma frequently traveled between Nagasaki and Kyoto in the following years and became active in the Meiji Restoration In 1867 together with Soejima Taneomi he planned to recommend resignation to the shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu 1 Leaving Saga Domain without permission they went to Kyoto where the shōgun then resided 6 However Ōkuma and his companions were arrested and sent back to Saga They were subsequently sentenced to one month imprisonment Meiji period political life edit nbsp Ōkuma Shigenobu as a young man Following the Boshin War of the Meiji Restoration in 1868 Okuma was placed in charge of foreign affairs for the new Meiji government At this time he negotiated with British diplomat Sir Harry Smith Parkes on the ban of Christianity and insisted on maintaining the government s persecution on Catholics in Nagasaki citation needed In 1873 the Japanese government removed the ban on Christianity citation needed He was soon given an additional post as head of Japan s monetary reform program He made use of his close contacts with Inoue Kaoru to secure a position in the central government in Tokyo He was elected to the first Diet of Japan in 1870 and soon became Minister of Finance in which capacity he instituted property and taxation reforms that aided Japan s early industrial development 7 He presided over the commission which represented the Japanese government at the 1873 Vienna World s Fair 8 He also unified the nation s currency created the national mint and a separate Minister of Industry however he was dismissed in 1881 after a long series of disagreements with members of the Satsuma and Chōshu clique in the Meiji oligarchy most notably Itō Hirobumi over his efforts to secure foreign loans to establish a constitution and especially over his exposure of illicit property dealings involving Prime Minister Kuroda Kiyotaka and others from Satsuma In 1882 Ōkuma co founded the Constitutional Progressive Party Rikken Kaishintō which soon attracted a number of other leaders including Ozaki Yukio and Inukai Tsuyoshi That same year Ōkuma founded the Tokyo Senmon Gakkō 東京専門学校 in the Waseda district of Tokyo The school later became Waseda University one of the country s most prominent institutions of higher education 9 Despite their continuing animosity Itō again appointed Ōkuma to the post of Foreign Minister in February 1888 to deal with the difficult issue of negotiation revisions to the unequal treaties with the Western powers The treaty he negotiated was perceived by the public as too conciliatory to the Western powers and created considerable controversy In 1889 Ōkuma was attacked by a member of the Gen yōsha who threw a bomb directly under Ōkuma s carriage 10 253 Following two operations Ōkuma s left leg was amputated at the hip 10 253 He retired from politics at that time However he returned to politics in 1896 by reorganizing the Rikken Kaishintō into the Shimpotō Progressive Party citation needed In 1897 Matsukata Masayoshi convinced Ōkuma to participate in his second administration as Foreign Minister and Agriculture and Commerce Minister but again he remained in office for only one year before resigning as a result of intrigues involving the prime minister 8 In June 1898 Ōkuma co founded the Kenseitō Constitutional Government Party by merging his Shimpotō with Itagaki Taisuke s Jiyutō and was appointed by the Emperor to form the first partisan cabinet in Japanese history The new cabinet survived for only four months before it fell apart due to internal dissension Ōkuma remained in charge of the party until 1908 when he retired from politics nbsp Ōkuma Shigenobu during his premiership After his political retirement Ōkuma became president of Waseda University and chairman of the Japan Civilization Society from which scholars many translations of European and American texts were published He also gathered support for Japan s first expedition to Antarctica Taishō period political life edit nbsp Marquess Ōkuma Shigenobu in the year before his death At the request of the Emperor Ōkuma returned to politics during the constitutional crisis of 1914 when the government of Yamamoto Gonnohyōe was forced to resign in the wake of the Siemens scandal 11 The 2nd Ōkuma administration was noted for its active foreign policy Later that year Japan declared war on the German Empire thus entering World War I on the Allied side However the government suffered defeat in December over the army budget 11 In 1915 Ōkuma and Katō Takaaki drafted the Twenty One Demands on China Ōkuma won re election in March of that year but his second administration was also short lived Following the Ōura scandal Ōkuma s cabinet lost popular support and its members held mass resignation in October 1915 Still Ōkuma was persuaded to continue in office for a while and during the year treaties were concluded with France Russia and China 11 Later in 1916 after a long argument with the Genrō Ōkuma resigned as well and retired from politics permanently although he remained a member of the Upper House of the Diet of Japan until 1922 He was awarded the Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum in 1916 and was elevated to the title of kōshaku 侯爵 marquis in the kazoku peerage system the same year Ōkuma returned to Waseda and died there in 1922 12 An estimated 300 000 people attended his funeral in Tokyo s Hibiya Park He was posthumously conferred with the Collar of the Order of the Chrysanthemum the nation s highest honour He was buried at the temple of Gokoku ji in Tokyo Honours editFrom the corresponding article in the Japanese Wikipedia Peerages edit Count May 9 1887 Marquess July 14 1916 Decorations edit Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun November 2 1877 Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun with Paulownia Flowers April 29 1910 Collar of the Order of the Chrysanthemum January 10 1922 posthumous Grand Cordon July 14 1916 Court order of precedence edit Fifth rank junior grade 1867 Fourth rank junior grade 1868 Senior fourth rank 1870 Third rank July 22 1871 Senior third rank December 26 1887 Second rank February 17 1888 Senior second rank June 20 1898 Junior First Rank January 10 1922 13 Notes edit a b c d Borton p 91 a b c Itō Yukio 伊藤之雄 2019 Ōkuma Shigenobu 中央公論新社 pp 17 18 ISBN 978 4 12 102550 0 OCLC 1201259749 大隈重信 近代日本人の肖像 National Diet Library in Japanese Retrieved December 10 2021 Brownas heading A Wider Window on the West Chisholm 1911 p 61 Tokugawa p 161 Unlike all 14 previous Tokugawa shōguns Yoshinobu never set foot in Edo during his tenure Borton p 78 a b Chisholm 1911 p 62 Beasley p 105 a b Driscoll Mark W 2020 The Whites are Enemies of Heaven Climate Caucasianism and Asian Ecological Protection Durham Duke University Press ISBN 978 1 4780 1121 7 a b c Chisholm 1922 Beasley p 220 叙従一位位記 正二位大勲位侯爵大隈重信 Waseda University Library Retrieved December 25 2023 References editBeasley W G 1963 The Making of Modern Japan London Weidenfeld and Nicolson Borton Hugh 1955 Japan s Modern Century New York The Ronald Press Company Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Okuma Shigenobu Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 20 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 61 62 Chisholm Hugh ed 1922 Okuma Shigenobu Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 31 12th ed London amp New York The Encyclopaedia Britannica Company p 1174 Idditti Smimasa Life of Marquis Shigenobu Okuma A Maker of New Japan Kegan Paul International Ltd 2006 ISBN 0 7103 1186 9 Idditti Junesay Marquis Shigenobu Okuma A Biographical Study in the Rise of Democratic Japan Hokuseido Press 1956 ASIN B000IPQ4VQ Lebra Chapman Joyce Okuma Shigenobu statesman of Meiji Japan Australian National University Press 1973 ISBN 0 7081 0400 2 Oka Yoshitake et al Five Political Leaders of Modern Japan Ito Hirobumi Okuma Shigenobu Hara Takashi Inukai Tsuyoshi and Saionji Kimmochi University of Tokyo Press 1984 ISBN 0 86008 379 9 Tokugawa Munefusa 2005 Tokugawa yonhyakunen no naisho banashi raibaru bushō hen Tokyo Bungei shunju Brownas Sidney DeVere Nagasaki in the Meiji Restoration Choshu Loyalists and British Arms Merchants http www uwosh edu home pages faculty staff earns meiji html Retrieved on August 7 2008 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ōkuma Shigenobu Yomiuri Shimbun Less than 30 of primary school students in Japan know historical significance of Ōkuma 2008 Photograph of Rabindranath Tagore and Count Okuma in Japan in the South Asian American Digital Archive SAADA Okuma Shigenobu New International Encyclopedia 1905 Newspaper clippings about Ōkuma Shigenobu in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Political offices Preceded byItō Hirobumi Minister of Foreign Affairs1888 1889 Succeeded byAoki Shuzō Preceded bySaionji Kinmochi Minister of Foreign Affairs1896 1897 Succeeded byNishi Tokujirō Preceded byNishi Tokujirō Minister of Foreign Affairs1898 Succeeded byAoki Shuzō Preceded byKatō Takaaki Minister of Foreign Affairs1915 Succeeded byIshii Kikujirō Preceded byHara Takashi Minister of Home Affairs1914 1915 Succeeded byŌura Kanetake Preceded byŌura Kanetake Minister of Home Affairs1915 Succeeded byIchiki Kitokurō Preceded byEnomoto Takeaki Minister of Agriculture and Commerce1897 Succeeded byYamada Nobumichi Preceded byItō Hirobumi Prime Minister of Japan1898 Succeeded byYamagata Aritomo Preceded byYamamoto Gonnohyōe Prime Minister of Japan1914 1916 Succeeded byTerauchi Masatake Academic offices New office President of Waseda University1907 1922 Succeeded byMasasada Shiozawa Portals nbsp Japan nbsp Asia nbsp Politics nbsp Education nbsp Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ōkuma Shigenobu amp oldid 1221076575, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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