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Tokugawa Akitake

Tokugawa Akitake (徳川 昭武, October 26, 1853 – July 3, 1910) was a younger half-brother of the Japanese Shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu and final daimyō of Mito Domain. He represented the Tokugawa shogunate at the courts of several European powers during the final days of Bakumatsu period Japan.

Tokugawa Akitake
徳川 昭武
11th Daimyō of Mito
In office
1868–1871
MonarchEmperor Meiji
Preceded byTokugawa Yoshiatsu
Succeeded by-domain abolished-
Personal details
Born(1853-10-26)October 26, 1853
Edo, Japan
DiedJuly 3, 1910(1910-07-03) (aged 56)
Tokyo, Japan
Parent
The Japanese delegation to the Exposition Universelle with young Tokugawa Akitake on an armchair (c. 1867)
Tokugawa Akitake (center left) in Belgium (c. 1868)

Biography edit

Early life edit

Tokugawa Akitake was born as Matsudaira Yohachimaro (松平 余八麿), the 18th son of Tokugawa Nariaki, at the Mito Domain's secondary Edo residence in Komagome [ja] in 1853, the same year of the Perry Expedition to Japan. Due to concerns of safety, he was moved to Mito Domain at the age of six months, and returned to Edo in 1863. The same year, he was sent to Kyoto as a figurehead representative of Mito Domain, due to the illness (and death in 1864) of his elder half brother Matsudaira Akikuni. Kyoto was in a very disturbed situation at the time, with pro-shogunate forces battling pro-Sonnō jōi rōnin and samurai from anti-shogunate western domains in the streets and at the Kinmon Incident, and he was forced to change residences frequently for safety. On the death of the 14th shōgun, Tokugawa Iemochi in 1866, he was recalled to Edo, and his name was changed from Matsudaira Akinori (松平 昭徳) to Tokugawa Akitake. In 1867, he was proclaimed head of the Shimizu-Tokugawa clan, one of the Gosankyō branches of the Tokugawa who were permitted to rise to the position of shōgun.

Diplomatic career edit

In late 1866, aged only 14 years, Tokugawa Akitake was designated as special emissary to France and led the Japanese delegation to the 1867 World Fair in Paris, where Japan had a pavilion [1] Shibusawa Eiichi was appointed to accountant and secretary for Tokugawa Akitake in 1866 and assigned to join the delegation to Paris. He kept concise diary during the mission.[2] The mission left Yokohama on January 11, 1867, and reached Paris two months later.[3] [4] The fair aroused considerable interest in Europe, and allowed many visitors to come in contact with Japanese art and techniques for the first time.[5]

His mission to meet Napoleon III was successful, and when the fair was ended, Tokugawa Akitake met with William III of the Netherlands, Victor Emmanuel II of Italy, and Queen Victoria during the travel to several European countries.[6][7] With Leopold II of Belgium, he inspected troops wearing a traditional Japanese battle surcoat which was photographed at that occasion.[8] He came back to France and pursued studies. [9] On hearing of the start of the Boshin War, he made emergency plans to return to Japan but Tokugawa Akitake was ordered to remain in France by shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu, and it was not until August 1868 that he received word from the new Meiji government authorizing his return to Japan. He made a final tour of France, visiting Normandy, the Loire river valley and Nantes, and on his return to Paris, received another letter from the Meiji government advising of the death of his half-brother Tokugawa Yoshiatsu and ordering him to assume the post of daimyō to assure the stability of Mito Domain. He departed from Marseille in December 1868.

Meiji period edit

Tokugawa Akitake succeeded Tokugawa Yoshiatsu to become the 11th head of the Mito Tokugawa clan on his return to Japan.[10] However, the title of daimyō was officially abolished in 1869, and he continued at Mito as domain governor. His request for land development in Hokkaido to resettle ex-samurai from the domain was granted on August 17, 1869, and he was assigned lands in Tomamae-gun, Teshio-gun, Kamikawa-gun, Nakagawa-gun in Teshio no kuni along with Rishiri-gun in Kitami no kuni. With the abolition of the han system in 1871, he was required by the government to leave in Mito and to live in Tokyo. He relocated to the former shimoyashiki secondary residence of the Mito Clan located in Mukōjima.

Tokugawa Akitake was appointed a second lieutenant in Imperial Japanese Army in 1875, and served as an instructor during the early days of the Imperial Japanese Army Toyama School. He was married to Nakanoin Eiko the same year. In 1876, he was sent to the United States, as the emissary in charge of the Japanese exhibition at the 1876 World Fair in Philadelphia. He then returned to France again for studies accompanied with his brother Tsuchiya Shigenao and half-brother Matsudaira Nobunori.[10] During his eight-year absence from France, the Second French Empire had been replaced by the French Third Republic. From 1881, he ended his studies at the École Polytechnique, but before returning to Japan, he made a tour of Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Italy and Belgium together with his half-nephew Tokugawa Atsuyoshi, the son of the ex-shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu.

Heirs edit

In 1883, his wife Eiko died soon after giving birth to a daughter. Tokugawa Akitake retired and moved to the clan's Tojōtei villa in Matsudo, Chiba Prefecture, in 1884. Lacking an heir, he adopted Tokugawa Atsuyoshi as his successor to the Mito Tokugawa line. Atsuyoshi died at the age of 44 in 1898. Atsuyoshi's son Tokugawa Kuniyuki was 11 years old at that time, and became the 13th head of the Mito Tokugawa under Akitake's tutelage.

However, Akitake subsequently had a son, Tokugawa Takesada, who was born to a concubine in 1888. Takesada was made a viscount (shishaku) under the kazoku peerage system in 1892 and founded the separate Matsudo Tokugawa line.

In 1903, Tokugawa Akitake was awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasure, 2nd class. He died at Koumetei mansion in 1910.[11]

Family edit

  • Father: Tokugawa Nariaki
  • Mother: Madenokoji Toshiko
  • Wife: Eiko, daughter of Nakanoin Michitomi
  • Concubine: Oyae no Kata
  • Children:
    • Akiko married Yorinaga Matsudaira by Eiko
    • Masako married Mori Motofuji by Oyae
    • Takemaro (died in womb) by Oyae
    • Tokugawa Takesada (1888–1957) by Oyae
    • Naoko married Narimitsu Matsudaira by Oyae
    • Atsuko married Kyogoku Takaosa by Oyae
    • Takeomaro (died in womb) by Oyae

Honours edit

From the Japanese Wikipedia

Honours edit

  • Viscount (1892)
  • Grand Cordon of the Order of the Sacred Treasure (1910; posthumous) (Second Class: 1903)

Order of precedence edit

  • Junior fifth rank (1863)
  • Junior fourth rank (1866)
  • Third rank (1881)
  • Second rank (1897)
  • Senior second rank (1902)
  • First rank (1910; posthumous)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Marcouin 1990, p. 36.
  2. ^ Shibusawa 1944, pp. 436–450.
  3. ^ Totman 1980, p. 280.
  4. ^ Shibusawa 1944, pp. 450–485.
  5. ^ Polak 2001, p. 35.
  6. ^ Shibusawa 1944, pp. 497–502.
  7. ^ Including a gold pocket watch with enameled portrait of Tokugawa Akitake inside, objects related to the 1867 delegation are in the collection of Tokugawa Akitake artifacts at his villa in Matsudo, Chiba, now a public history museum called Tojōkan. The residential building as well as gardens are restored.
  8. ^ For the 1867 World Fair, attire including formal kimono and accessories were tailored. "Hi-rashaji Mitsuba-aoi-mon jin-baori", or a traditional battle surcoat made with red wool and brocade, embroidered hollyhock family crest on the back, was among those for formal conference, lined with gilt thread brocade.
  9. ^ Shibusawa 1944, pp. 612–696.
  10. ^ a b Japan National Diet Library
  11. ^ Shibusawa 1944, p. 487.

References edit

  • Shibusawa Eiichi (1944). Ryūmonsha (ed.). Shibusawa Eiichi Denki Shiryō [Biographic Documents of Eiichi Shibusawa] (in Japanese). Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten. ASIN B000JBKGHC. In fifty-eight volumes with ten supplements.
  • Totman, Conrad D. (1980). The Collapse of the Tokugawa Bakufu, 1862–1868 (Reissue ed.). University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-0614-9.
  • Sumi Yutaka. (1984). 徳川昭武 万博殿様一代記 Tokugawa Akitake bampaku tonosama ichidaiki (Japanese) Chuōkōronsha (Chukō shinsho 750), Tokyo: ISBN 978-4-1210-0750-6.
  • Marcouin, Francis; Omoto Keiko (1990). Quand le Japon s'ouvrit au monde (in French). Paris: Gallimard. ISBN 2-07-076084-7.
  • Omoto Keiko, フランシス マクワン (1996) 日本の開国―エミール・ギメ あるフランス人の見た明治 Nihon no kaikoku: Emīru Gime, aru Furansujin no mita Meiji. Sogensha, Osaka: ISBN 978-4-4222-1114-5
  • Miyaji Masato. Matsudo Kyōiku Iinkai ed. (1999). 徳川昭武幕末滞欧日記 Tokugawa Akitake Bakumatsu Taiō Nikki (Japanese) Yamakawa Shuppansha, Tokyo: ISBN 978-4-6345-2010-3.
  • Miyanaga Takashi. (2000). プリンス昭武の欧州紀行―慶応3年パリ万博使節 Purinsu Akitake no Ōshūkikō--Keiō 3-nen Pari Bampaku Shisetsu (Japanese) Tokyo: Yamakawa Shuppansha, ISBN 978-4-6346-0840-5.
  • Polak, Christian (2001). Soie et lumières: L'âge d'or des échanges franco-japonais (des origines aux années 1950) (in French). Tokyo: Chambre de Commerce et d'Industrie Française du Japon, Hachette Fujin Gahōsha (アシェット婦人画報社). ISBN 4-573-06210-6. OCLC 50875162.
  • __________. (2002). 絹と光: 知られざる日仏交流100年の歴史 (江戶時代-1950年代) Kinu to hikari: shirarezaru Nichi-Futsu kōryū 100-nen no rekishi (Edo jidai-1950-nendai) (French and Japanese) Tokyo: Ashetto Fujin Gahōsha, 2002. ISBN 978-4-573-06210-8; OCLC 50875162.
  • Nish, Ian. (2008). The Iwakura Mission to America and Europe: A New Assessment (Meiji Japan) Routledge ISBN 978-0-4154-7179-4

External links edit

  •   Media related to Tokugawa Akitake at Wikimedia Commons
  • . Archived from the original on 2008-10-27. (Japanese)
  • "Matsudoshi Tojo Rekishikan (Tojo Museum of History)". Retrieved 2015-11-26. About the Tojō villa in Matsudo. (Japanese)
  • "所蔵品の紹介 (昭武ゆかりの品) "Akitake yukari no shina"". Matsudo Tojō Rekishikan. 2013-11-25. Retrieved 2015-11-27. From the collection "Heirloom from Akitake". (Japanese)
  • "徳川昭武関係資料 Tokugawa Akitake kankei shirō". 2013-11-25. Retrieved 2015-11-26. Documents related to Tokugawa Akitake (Japanese)

tokugawa, akitake, this, japanese, name, surname, tokugawa, 徳川, 昭武, october, 1853, july, 1910, younger, half, brother, japanese, shōgun, tokugawa, yoshinobu, final, daimyō, mito, domain, represented, tokugawa, shogunate, courts, several, european, powers, duri. In this Japanese name the surname is Tokugawa Tokugawa Akitake 徳川 昭武 October 26 1853 July 3 1910 was a younger half brother of the Japanese Shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu and final daimyō of Mito Domain He represented the Tokugawa shogunate at the courts of several European powers during the final days of Bakumatsu period Japan Tokugawa Akitake徳川 昭武11th Daimyō of MitoIn office 1868 1871MonarchEmperor MeijiPreceded byTokugawa YoshiatsuSucceeded by domain abolished Personal detailsBorn 1853 10 26 October 26 1853Edo JapanDiedJuly 3 1910 1910 07 03 aged 56 Tokyo JapanParentTokugawa Nariaki father The Japanese delegation to the Exposition Universelle with young Tokugawa Akitake on an armchair c 1867 Tokugawa Akitake center left in Belgium c 1868 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Diplomatic career 1 3 Meiji period 1 4 Heirs 2 Family 3 Honours 3 1 Honours 3 2 Order of precedence 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Tokugawa Akitake was born as Matsudaira Yohachimaro 松平 余八麿 the 18th son of Tokugawa Nariaki at the Mito Domain s secondary Edo residence in Komagome ja in 1853 the same year of the Perry Expedition to Japan Due to concerns of safety he was moved to Mito Domain at the age of six months and returned to Edo in 1863 The same year he was sent to Kyoto as a figurehead representative of Mito Domain due to the illness and death in 1864 of his elder half brother Matsudaira Akikuni Kyoto was in a very disturbed situation at the time with pro shogunate forces battling pro Sonnō jōi rōnin and samurai from anti shogunate western domains in the streets and at the Kinmon Incident and he was forced to change residences frequently for safety On the death of the 14th shōgun Tokugawa Iemochi in 1866 he was recalled to Edo and his name was changed from Matsudaira Akinori 松平 昭徳 to Tokugawa Akitake In 1867 he was proclaimed head of the Shimizu Tokugawa clan one of the Gosankyō branches of the Tokugawa who were permitted to rise to the position of shōgun Diplomatic career edit In late 1866 aged only 14 years Tokugawa Akitake was designated as special emissary to France and led the Japanese delegation to the 1867 World Fair in Paris where Japan had a pavilion 1 Shibusawa Eiichi was appointed to accountant and secretary for Tokugawa Akitake in 1866 and assigned to join the delegation to Paris He kept concise diary during the mission 2 The mission left Yokohama on January 11 1867 and reached Paris two months later 3 4 The fair aroused considerable interest in Europe and allowed many visitors to come in contact with Japanese art and techniques for the first time 5 His mission to meet Napoleon III was successful and when the fair was ended Tokugawa Akitake met with William III of the Netherlands Victor Emmanuel II of Italy and Queen Victoria during the travel to several European countries 6 7 With Leopold II of Belgium he inspected troops wearing a traditional Japanese battle surcoat which was photographed at that occasion 8 He came back to France and pursued studies 9 On hearing of the start of the Boshin War he made emergency plans to return to Japan but Tokugawa Akitake was ordered to remain in France by shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu and it was not until August 1868 that he received word from the new Meiji government authorizing his return to Japan He made a final tour of France visiting Normandy the Loire river valley and Nantes and on his return to Paris received another letter from the Meiji government advising of the death of his half brother Tokugawa Yoshiatsu and ordering him to assume the post of daimyō to assure the stability of Mito Domain He departed from Marseille in December 1868 Meiji period edit Tokugawa Akitake succeeded Tokugawa Yoshiatsu to become the 11th head of the Mito Tokugawa clan on his return to Japan 10 However the title of daimyō was officially abolished in 1869 and he continued at Mito as domain governor His request for land development in Hokkaido to resettle ex samurai from the domain was granted on August 17 1869 and he was assigned lands in Tomamae gun Teshio gun Kamikawa gun Nakagawa gun in Teshio no kuni along with Rishiri gun in Kitami no kuni With the abolition of the han system in 1871 he was required by the government to leave in Mito and to live in Tokyo He relocated to the former shimoyashiki secondary residence of the Mito Clan located in Mukōjima Tokugawa Akitake was appointed a second lieutenant in Imperial Japanese Army in 1875 and served as an instructor during the early days of the Imperial Japanese Army Toyama School He was married to Nakanoin Eiko the same year In 1876 he was sent to the United States as the emissary in charge of the Japanese exhibition at the 1876 World Fair in Philadelphia He then returned to France again for studies accompanied with his brother Tsuchiya Shigenao and half brother Matsudaira Nobunori 10 During his eight year absence from France the Second French Empire had been replaced by the French Third Republic From 1881 he ended his studies at the Ecole Polytechnique but before returning to Japan he made a tour of Germany Austria Switzerland Italy and Belgium together with his half nephew Tokugawa Atsuyoshi the son of the ex shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu Heirs edit In 1883 his wife Eiko died soon after giving birth to a daughter Tokugawa Akitake retired and moved to the clan s Tojōtei villa in Matsudo Chiba Prefecture in 1884 Lacking an heir he adopted Tokugawa Atsuyoshi as his successor to the Mito Tokugawa line Atsuyoshi died at the age of 44 in 1898 Atsuyoshi s son Tokugawa Kuniyuki was 11 years old at that time and became the 13th head of the Mito Tokugawa under Akitake s tutelage However Akitake subsequently had a son Tokugawa Takesada who was born to a concubine in 1888 Takesada was made a viscount shishaku under the kazoku peerage system in 1892 and founded the separate Matsudo Tokugawa line In 1903 Tokugawa Akitake was awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasure 2nd class He died at Koumetei mansion in 1910 11 Family editFather Tokugawa Nariaki Mother Madenokoji Toshiko Wife Eiko daughter of Nakanoin Michitomi Concubine Oyae no Kata Children Akiko married Yorinaga Matsudaira by Eiko Masako married Mori Motofuji by Oyae Takemaro died in womb by Oyae Tokugawa Takesada 1888 1957 by Oyae Naoko married Narimitsu Matsudaira by Oyae Atsuko married Kyogoku Takaosa by Oyae Takeomaro died in womb by OyaeHonours editFrom the Japanese Wikipedia Honours edit Viscount 1892 Grand Cordon of the Order of the Sacred Treasure 1910 posthumous Second Class 1903 Order of precedence edit Junior fifth rank 1863 Junior fourth rank 1866 Third rank 1881 Second rank 1897 Senior second rank 1902 First rank 1910 posthumous See also editFrance Japan relations 19th century Notes edit Marcouin 1990 p 36 Shibusawa 1944 pp 436 450 Totman 1980 p 280 Shibusawa 1944 pp 450 485 Polak 2001 p 35 Shibusawa 1944 pp 497 502 Including a gold pocket watch with enameled portrait of Tokugawa Akitake inside objects related to the 1867 delegation are in the collection of Tokugawa Akitake artifacts at his villa in Matsudo Chiba now a public history museum called Tojōkan The residential building as well as gardens are restored For the 1867 World Fair attire including formal kimono and accessories were tailored Hi rashaji Mitsuba aoi mon jin baori or a traditional battle surcoat made with red wool and brocade embroidered hollyhock family crest on the back was among those for formal conference lined with gilt thread brocade Shibusawa 1944 pp 612 696 a b Japan National Diet Library Shibusawa 1944 p 487 References editShibusawa Eiichi 1944 Ryumonsha ed Shibusawa Eiichi Denki Shiryō Biographic Documents of Eiichi Shibusawa in Japanese Tokyo Iwanami Shoten ASIN B000JBKGHC In fifty eight volumes with ten supplements Totman Conrad D 1980 The Collapse of the Tokugawa Bakufu 1862 1868 Reissue ed University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0 8248 0614 9 Sumi Yutaka 1984 徳川昭武 万博殿様一代記 Tokugawa Akitake bampaku tonosama ichidaiki Japanese Chuōkōronsha Chukō shinsho 750 Tokyo ISBN 978 4 1210 0750 6 Marcouin Francis Omoto Keiko 1990 Quand le Japon s ouvrit au monde in French Paris Gallimard ISBN 2 07 076084 7 Omoto Keiko フランシス マクワン 1996 日本の開国 エミール ギメ あるフランス人の見た明治 Nihon no kaikoku Emiru Gime aru Furansujin no mita Meiji Sogensha Osaka ISBN 978 4 4222 1114 5 Miyaji Masato Matsudo Kyōiku Iinkai ed 1999 徳川昭武幕末滞欧日記 Tokugawa Akitake Bakumatsu Taiō Nikki Japanese Yamakawa Shuppansha Tokyo ISBN 978 4 6345 2010 3 Miyanaga Takashi 2000 プリンス昭武の欧州紀行 慶応3年パリ万博使節 Purinsu Akitake no Ōshukikō Keiō 3 nen Pari Bampaku Shisetsu Japanese Tokyo Yamakawa Shuppansha ISBN 978 4 6346 0840 5 Polak Christian 2001 Soie et lumieres L age d or des echanges franco japonais des origines aux annees 1950 in French Tokyo Chambre de Commerce et d Industrie Francaise du Japon Hachette Fujin Gahōsha アシェット婦人画報社 ISBN 4 573 06210 6 OCLC 50875162 2002 絹と光 知られざる日仏交流100年の歴史 江戶時代 1950年代 Kinu to hikari shirarezaru Nichi Futsu kōryu 100 nen no rekishi Edo jidai 1950 nendai French and Japanese Tokyo Ashetto Fujin Gahōsha 2002 ISBN 978 4 573 06210 8 OCLC 50875162 Nish Ian 2008 The Iwakura Mission to America and Europe A New Assessment Meiji Japan Routledge ISBN 978 0 4154 7179 4External links edit nbsp Media related to Tokugawa Akitake at Wikimedia Commons The 1867 Japanese mission to Europe Archived from the original on 2008 10 27 Japanese Matsudoshi Tojo Rekishikan Tojo Museum of History Retrieved 2015 11 26 About the Tojō villa in Matsudo Japanese 所蔵品の紹介 昭武ゆかりの品 Akitake yukari no shina Matsudo Tojō Rekishikan 2013 11 25 Retrieved 2015 11 27 From the collection Heirloom from Akitake Japanese 徳川昭武関係資料 Tokugawa Akitake kankei shirō 2013 11 25 Retrieved 2015 11 26 Documents related to Tokugawa Akitake Japanese Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tokugawa Akitake amp oldid 1174932595, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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