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Tokyo Prefecture (1868–1943)

Tokyo Prefecture (東京府, Tōkyō-fu) was a Japanese government entity that existed between 1868 and 1943.[1]

Tokyo Prefecture
東京府
Prefecture of Japan
1868–1943
Coat of arms

Ginza, Tokyo City, in 1933
CapitalTokyo City
History
History 
• Established
2 October 1868
• Disestablished
1 July 1943
Political subdivisions3 cities
3 Districts
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofPart of the Tokyo Metropolis

History

 
Tokyo Prefectural Office and Tokyo City Hall, 1930s

When the prefecture was established with the merger of the two shogunate city administrations in the Meiji restoration in 1868, Tokyo initially consisted only of the former city area of the shogunate capital Edo. Beginning in 1871, the territory of Tokyo was expanded beyond Edo in several steps to reach roughly its present extent with the Tama transfer in 1893. The surrounding former shogunate domain (incl. hatamoto fiefs) in Musashi province was initially administrated by Musashi governors, but then split up between the prefectures Shinagawa, Kosuge and Ōmiya/Urawa. In 1871/72, the surrounding rural areas from these three prefectures and the Setagaya exclave of Hikone ex-domain/prefecture were merged into Tokyo.

The "system of large and small/major and minor districts" (大区小区制, daiku-shōku-sei) which was tied to the modernized family registration system (koseki) created an (unpopular) subdivision of all prefectures into numbered subunits.

Tokyo's administrative structure between 1871/72 and 1878
(not substantially different from other prefectures)
Level of government
(executive, legislature)
Organization in Tokyo
Empire
(appointed council,
no assembly)
Home Ministry
Prefecture
(appointed governor,
no assembly)
Tōkyō-fu ("Tokyo Prefecture")
[numbered] large/major districts (daiku) & small/minor districts (shōku)

In 1878, the ancient ritsuryō districts were reactivated as administrative units in rural areas, and the status of urban districts (-ku) was newly introduced for major cities. Under the gunkuchōson-hensei-hō (郡区町村編制法, "Law on the organization of -gun/-ku/-chō/-son"), both urban and rural districts were further subdivided into urban and rural units (-machi and -mura, i.e. towns and villages in the countryside, but neighbourhood-sized units in larger settlements; for example, there were 13 -machi/-chō and 93 -mura in Ebara District in the 1870s, including five (one "North", three "South", one "New") for Shinagawa alone; the >100 subdivisions of Ebara were merged into only 1 town and 18 villages in 1889, today there are only four special wards left in its former territory: Shinagawa, Meguro, Ōta, Setagaya). Initially, Tokyo contained only six [rural] districts, but other rural areas were added to Tokyo later (Izu & Ogasawara islands 1878/80, the three Tama districts 1893).

Tokyo's administrative structure between 1878 and 1889
Empire
(appointed cabinet from 1885,
no assembly)
Home Ministry
Prefecture
(appointed governor,
elected assembly)
Tōkyō-fu ("Tokyo Prefecture")
District
(appointed chief,
no (gun)/elected (ku) assembly)
15 [urban] districts (-ku) 6 [rural] districts (-gun)
Locality/[Proto-]Municipality
(with restrictions: elected chief,
elected assembly from 1880)
hundreds of urban and rural subdivisions/neighbourhoods, towns and villages (-machi/-chō and -mura)

When the modern municipalities were introduced in 1889, Tokyo was subdivided into c. 80 municipalities: 1 city, a handful of towns, and dozens of villages. With the Tama transfer of 1893, the number of municipalities in Tokyo grew to over 170. By 1943, there were only 87 municipalities left: 3 cities, 18 towns and 66 villages (see the List of mergers in Tokyo).

Tokyo's administrative structure between 1889 and 1943 (not different from Osaka, Kyoto)
Empire
(appointed cabinet,
Imperial Diet with two equal chambers:
one appointed, one elected)
Home Ministry
Prefecture
(appointed governor & "council",
elected assembly)
Tōkyō-fu ("Tokyo Prefecture")
(District)
(appointed chief & "council",
indirectly elected assembly)
Tōkyō-shi ("Tokyo City")
(until 1898 without independent administration: pref. governor=city mayor)
0→2 other cities (-shi)
Hachiōji 1917, Tachikawa 1940
6→9→8→3 Districts (-gun)
(until abolition in 1920s)
Subprefectures
(for island municipalities)
Municipality
(mayor appointed from assembly proposals + in cities: "council"
from 1920s: indirectly elected mayor [& "council"],
elected assembly)
>80→>170→84 towns (-machi) and villages (-mura)
  15→35 Wards (-ku)

Even after the Tama transfer, Tokyo City remained the dominant part of Tokyo in terms of population and economic strength. That increased further during the progressing industrialization and the explosive growth of the city in the early 20th century, only temporarily set back by the devastation brought about by the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake. The outskirts grew, but eventually Tokyo City's dominance within Tokyo only increased again as many of the explosively grown suburbs were merged into Tokyo City in 1932, including some of the largest towns in Japanese history with over 100,000 inhabitants each such as West Sugamo in North Toshima District and Shibuya in Toyotama District.

Various plans for a unification of the prefectural and city government were discussed over the decades. An early proposal in the 1890s by then Home Minister Nomura Yasushi envisioned to separate the rural areas of Tokyo as Musashi prefecture and transform only Tokyo City into a "Metropolis", but it failed in the Imperial Diet. Some plans, especially those by the commoner political parties and during the "Taishō democracy" of the 1920s, envisioned a "Metropolis" more similar to a special city: an enlarged, prefecture-level city with more local autonomy. While the city did gain some additional authority under the 1922 "six major cities law" (more formally: 六大都市行政監督ニ関スル法律, roku-daitoshi gyōsei kantoku ni kan suru hōritsu, "Law relating to the administrative supervision of the six major cities"), and the governments made plans for a "Metropolis" system – the 1932 "Greater Tokyo City" mergers had been part of a Metropolis plan from the Tokyo City Assembly –, the actual reform was carried out later as part of the Tōjō cabinet's wartime authoritarian centralization measures (or "simplification of local government"). Not only was the Home Ministry control over prefectures and municipalities tightened as in the whole country – municipal mayors became appointive similar to the Meiji era –; Tokyo's prefectural government and Tokyo City's municipal government were indeed unified into one "Metropolitan" government, but under still tighter central government supervision.

Thus, in 1943, 86 of Tokyo's 87 municipalities remained Tokyo's municipalities, Tokyo City was abolished, all municipalities and the 35 ex-city wards were now part of Tokyo Metropolis (東京都, Tōkyō-to) which continues to serve as prefectural government for all of Tokyo, but now additionally as the municipal government in former Tokyo City. The governor of Tokyo, previously chiji as in all prefectures, was now called chōkan ("head/chief" [often of a central government agency]) and tied even more closely to the Imperial government than the governors of other prefectures. He became a shinninkan (親任官), meaning he was appointed directly by the Emperor, in the same procedure as a member of the Cabinet, the governors of Chōsen/Korea or Taiwan/Formosa, or an Army General or Navy Admiral.

Tokyo's wartime administrative structure from 1943 (unique)
Empire
(appointed cabinet,
bicameral appointed/elected Diet)
Emperor/Cabinet/Home Ministry
Prefecture
(appointed governor,
elected assembly)
Tōkyō-to ("Tokyo Metropolis")
Municipality
(appointed mayor,
elected assembly)
2 cities (-shi)
84 towns (-machi) and villages (-mura)
  35 wards (-ku)

The "Metropolis" is not to be confused with the Tokyo metropolitan area which extends into prefectures other than Tokyo and, depending on definition, may or may not include all of the "Metropolis".

In 1944/45, the establishment of regional bureaus created new parallel local administrative structures, lacking even the limited control by elected assemblies that prefectures and municipalities featured. And on the local level, the pre-existing neighbourhood associations (see chōnaikai and Tonarigumi) had been tied into the totalitarian Yokusankai vision and were endowed with far-reaching authority to establish an authoritarian system of control reaching down even to individual citizens. But the war tide had turned, and soon, the occupation under Douglas MacArthur overturned the wartime centralization, and beyond that, introduced new far-reaching local autonomy rights for prefectures, municipalities and even citizens in the form of "direct demands" (chokusetsu seikyū: recalls, popular initiative referendums for prefectural/municipal by-laws [excluding taxation], petitions, etc.).

The title chōkan for the governor actually remained in place until 1947 when the Constitution and the Local Autonomy Law made Tokyo equal with other prefectures again and gave the residents of former Tokyo City (almost) the same rights as in other municipalities with the introduction of special wards. The first gubernatorial election, held in April 1947 as part of the 1st unified elections, was still held as Tōkyō-to chōkan senkyo, and the first elected governor (who had also been the penultimate appointed governor from 1946 to 1947) initially still took office as chōkan, but became chiji in May 1947.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b Tokyo Metropolitan Government, 東京都年表 (in Japanese); retrieved 2018-09-19.

Further reading

  • Jacobs, A.J. (8 October 2010). "Japan's Evolving Nested Municipal Hierarchy: The Race for Local Power in the 2000s" (PDF). Urban Studies Research. 2011: 5. doi:10.1155/2011/692764. Retrieved 22 August 2011.
  • Steiner, Kurt. (1965). Local Government in Japan.

External links

  • Historical Development of Japanese Local Governance, Parts 1–4
  • National Archives of Japan: 変貌–江戸から帝都そして首都へ– (henbō – Edo kara teito soshite shuto e –, "Transfiguration: From Edo to Imperial capital, then to [state/national] capital"; Japanese, includes some maps showing the territorial expansion 1868–1893 and the establishment of subdivisions of Tokyo)
  • tokubetsu-ku kyōgikai (特別区協議会; "Conference of special wards"; an association of the 23 special wards/"cities" that cover former Tokyo City since 1947): 東京23区のおいたち (Tōkyō-23ku no oitachi) (pdf; Japanese), retrieved 2019/06/22.
  • Maps of prefectures and their districts and capitals in the Kantō region [without islands except for Izu's Great Island=present-day Ōshima Town] in Meiji 4 (1871/72), 1876, 1889, 1900

tokyo, prefecture, 1868, 1943, modern, prefecture, tokyo, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, tokyo, pre. For the modern day prefecture see Tokyo This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Tokyo Prefecture 1868 1943 news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Tokyo Prefecture 東京府 Tōkyō fu was a Japanese government entity that existed between 1868 and 1943 1 Tokyo Prefecture東京府Prefecture of Japan1868 1943Coat of armsGinza Tokyo City in 1933CapitalTokyo CityHistoryHistory Established2 October 1868 Disestablished1 July 1943Political subdivisions3 cities3 DistrictsPreceded by Succeeded byMusashi Province TokyoToday part ofPart of the Tokyo Metropolis Contents 1 History 2 References 3 Further reading 4 External linksHistory Edit Tokyo Prefectural Office and Tokyo City Hall 1930s When the prefecture was established with the merger of the two shogunate city administrations in the Meiji restoration in 1868 Tokyo initially consisted only of the former city area of the shogunate capital Edo Beginning in 1871 the territory of Tokyo was expanded beyond Edo in several steps to reach roughly its present extent with the Tama transfer in 1893 The surrounding former shogunate domain incl hatamoto fiefs in Musashi province was initially administrated by Musashi governors but then split up between the prefectures Shinagawa Kosuge and Ōmiya Urawa In 1871 72 the surrounding rural areas from these three prefectures and the Setagaya exclave of Hikone ex domain prefecture were merged into Tokyo The system of large and small major and minor districts 大区小区制 daiku shōku sei which was tied to the modernized family registration system koseki created an unpopular subdivision of all prefectures into numbered subunits Tokyo s administrative structure between 1871 72 and 1878 not substantially different from other prefectures Level of government executive legislature Organization in TokyoEmpire appointed council no assembly Home MinistryPrefecture appointed governor no assembly Tōkyō fu Tokyo Prefecture numbered large major districts daiku amp small minor districts shōku In 1878 the ancient ritsuryō districts were reactivated as administrative units in rural areas and the status of urban districts ku was newly introduced for major cities Under the gunkuchōson hensei hō 郡区町村編制法 Law on the organization of gun ku chō son both urban and rural districts were further subdivided into urban and rural units machi and mura i e towns and villages in the countryside but neighbourhood sized units in larger settlements for example there were 13 machi chō and 93 mura in Ebara District in the 1870s including five one North three South one New for Shinagawa alone the gt 100 subdivisions of Ebara were merged into only 1 town and 18 villages in 1889 today there are only four special wards left in its former territory Shinagawa Meguro Ōta Setagaya Initially Tokyo contained only six rural districts but other rural areas were added to Tokyo later Izu amp Ogasawara islands 1878 80 the three Tama districts 1893 Tokyo s administrative structure between 1878 and 1889 Empire appointed cabinet from 1885 no assembly Home MinistryPrefecture appointed governor elected assembly Tōkyō fu Tokyo Prefecture District appointed chief no gun elected ku assembly 15 urban districts ku 6 rural districts gun Locality Proto Municipality with restrictions elected chief elected assembly from 1880 hundreds of urban and rural subdivisions neighbourhoods towns and villages machi chō and mura When the modern municipalities were introduced in 1889 Tokyo was subdivided into c 80 municipalities 1 city a handful of towns and dozens of villages With the Tama transfer of 1893 the number of municipalities in Tokyo grew to over 170 By 1943 there were only 87 municipalities left 3 cities 18 towns and 66 villages see the List of mergers in Tokyo Tokyo s administrative structure between 1889 and 1943 not different from Osaka Kyoto Empire appointed cabinet Imperial Diet with two equal chambers one appointed one elected Home MinistryPrefecture appointed governor amp council elected assembly Tōkyō fu Tokyo Prefecture District appointed chief amp council indirectly elected assembly Tōkyō shi Tokyo City until 1898 without independent administration pref governor city mayor 0 2 other cities shi Hachiōji 1917 Tachikawa 1940 6 9 8 3 Districts gun until abolition in 1920s Subprefectures for island municipalities Municipality mayor appointed from assembly proposals in cities council from 1920s indirectly elected mayor amp council elected assembly gt 80 gt 170 84 towns machi and villages mura 15 35 Wards ku Even after the Tama transfer Tokyo City remained the dominant part of Tokyo in terms of population and economic strength That increased further during the progressing industrialization and the explosive growth of the city in the early 20th century only temporarily set back by the devastation brought about by the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake The outskirts grew but eventually Tokyo City s dominance within Tokyo only increased again as many of the explosively grown suburbs were merged into Tokyo City in 1932 including some of the largest towns in Japanese history with over 100 000 inhabitants each such as West Sugamo in North Toshima District and Shibuya in Toyotama District Various plans for a unification of the prefectural and city government were discussed over the decades An early proposal in the 1890s by then Home Minister Nomura Yasushi envisioned to separate the rural areas of Tokyo as Musashi prefecture and transform only Tokyo City into a Metropolis but it failed in the Imperial Diet Some plans especially those by the commoner political parties and during the Taishō democracy of the 1920s envisioned a Metropolis more similar to a special city an enlarged prefecture level city with more local autonomy While the city did gain some additional authority under the 1922 six major cities law more formally 六大都市行政監督ニ関スル法律 roku daitoshi gyōsei kantoku ni kan suru hōritsu Law relating to the administrative supervision of the six major cities and the governments made plans for a Metropolis system the 1932 Greater Tokyo City mergers had been part of a Metropolis plan from the Tokyo City Assembly the actual reform was carried out later as part of the Tōjō cabinet s wartime authoritarian centralization measures or simplification of local government Not only was the Home Ministry control over prefectures and municipalities tightened as in the whole country municipal mayors became appointive similar to the Meiji era Tokyo s prefectural government and Tokyo City s municipal government were indeed unified into one Metropolitan government but under still tighter central government supervision Thus in 1943 86 of Tokyo s 87 municipalities remained Tokyo s municipalities Tokyo City was abolished all municipalities and the 35 ex city wards were now part of Tokyo Metropolis 東京都 Tōkyō to which continues to serve as prefectural government for all of Tokyo but now additionally as the municipal government in former Tokyo City The governor of Tokyo previously chiji as in all prefectures was now called chōkan head chief often of a central government agency and tied even more closely to the Imperial government than the governors of other prefectures He became a shinninkan 親任官 meaning he was appointed directly by the Emperor in the same procedure as a member of the Cabinet the governors of Chōsen Korea or Taiwan Formosa or an Army General or Navy Admiral Tokyo s wartime administrative structure from 1943 unique Empire appointed cabinet bicameral appointed elected Diet Emperor Cabinet Home MinistryPrefecture appointed governor elected assembly Tōkyō to Tokyo Metropolis Municipality appointed mayor elected assembly 2 cities shi 84 towns machi and villages mura 35 wards ku The Metropolis is not to be confused with the Tokyo metropolitan area which extends into prefectures other than Tokyo and depending on definition may or may not include all of the Metropolis In 1944 45 the establishment of regional bureaus created new parallel local administrative structures lacking even the limited control by elected assemblies that prefectures and municipalities featured And on the local level the pre existing neighbourhood associations see chōnaikai and Tonarigumi had been tied into the totalitarian Yokusankai vision and were endowed with far reaching authority to establish an authoritarian system of control reaching down even to individual citizens But the war tide had turned and soon the occupation under Douglas MacArthur overturned the wartime centralization and beyond that introduced new far reaching local autonomy rights for prefectures municipalities and even citizens in the form of direct demands chokusetsu seikyu recalls popular initiative referendums for prefectural municipal by laws excluding taxation petitions etc The title chōkan for the governor actually remained in place until 1947 when the Constitution and the Local Autonomy Law made Tokyo equal with other prefectures again and gave the residents of former Tokyo City almost the same rights as in other municipalities with the introduction of special wards The first gubernatorial election held in April 1947 as part of the 1st unified elections was still held as Tōkyō to chōkan senkyo and the first elected governor who had also been the penultimate appointed governor from 1946 to 1947 initially still took office as chōkan but became chiji in May 1947 1 References Edit a b Tokyo Metropolitan Government 東京都年表 in Japanese retrieved 2018 09 19 Further reading EditJacobs A J 8 October 2010 Japan s Evolving Nested Municipal Hierarchy The Race for Local Power in the 2000s PDF Urban Studies Research 2011 5 doi 10 1155 2011 692764 Retrieved 22 August 2011 Steiner Kurt 1965 Local Government in Japan External links EditHistorical Development of Japanese Local Governance Parts 1 4 National Archives of Japan 変貌 江戸から帝都そして首都へ henbō Edo kara teito soshite shuto e Transfiguration From Edo to Imperial capital then to state national capital Japanese includes some maps showing the territorial expansion 1868 1893 and the establishment of subdivisions of Tokyo tokubetsu ku kyōgikai 特別区協議会 Conference of special wards an association of the 23 special wards cities that cover former Tokyo City since 1947 東京23区のおいたち Tōkyō 23ku no oitachi pdf Japanese retrieved 2019 06 22 Maps of prefectures and their districts and capitals in the Kantō region without islands except for Izu s Great Island present day Ōshima Town in Meiji 4 1871 72 1876 1889 1900 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tokyo Prefecture 1868 1943 amp oldid 1116720119, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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