Early Meiji Japan 1868-1912

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Early Meiji Japan 1868-1912 13a

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Early Meiji Japan 1868-1912. 13a. Choshu incident 1863 Choshu tries to sink Western ships Choshu marches against Kyoto to capture Emperor but fails Tokugawa fails to punish Choshu. Meiji Restoration: Lead-up. Review: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Early Meiji Japan 1868-1912

Page 1: Early Meiji Japan 1868-1912

Early Meiji Japan1868-1912

13a

Page 2: Early Meiji Japan 1868-1912

Meiji Restoration: Lead-up

• Choshu incident 1863– Choshu tries to sink

Western ships– Choshu marches against

Kyoto to capture Emperor but fails

• Tokugawa fails to punish Choshu

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Meiji Restoration: Lead-up

Review: • 1864: Ships from England,

France, Holland and the US all attack the Choshu – Choshu leaders recognize futility

of resistance – for now

– Map out new response including modernization/Westernization

Young Choshu leaders visit London 1860s

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Meiji Restoration1868Choshu and Satsuma

draw up alliance

Plot revolution

• Young Samurai decide to reform Japan

• March on Kyoto and seize new young Emperor Meiji

• Declare Restoration of the Emperor to his rightful place– Liberate the Emperor from Tokugawa’s rule

– Emperor to rule directly

Satsuma/Choshu Plotters

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Meiji Restoration1868

• Declare Restoration of the Emperor to his rightful place– Liberate the Emperor from

Tokugawa’s rule

– Emperor to rule directly

• Emperor issues decree ending the rule of the Tokugawa Shoguns

Young Emperor Meiji

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Meiji Restoration

• Tokugawa Shogunate counter attacks

• Satsuma/Choshu alliance wins

• Meiji Emperor assumes leadership with Satsuma and Choshu based committee of advisors– New Government made up of young Samurai with a

smattering of nobles

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Meiji Restoration

Why Satsuma and Choshu?• Two richest Han

• Choshu: 100 + years of illegal, secret investment in commercial enterprises – They were secretly running a merchant trade

• Satsuma: Profitable sugar monopoly

• Both: Secretly and illegally traded with Western nations for technology and military equipment

Satsuma

Choshu

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Meiji Leadership

• Collective leadership with the Emperor

• 20-30 young leaders– Mostly samurai– Mostly from Satsuma or Choshu– Includes some reformers among the royal

court

• Known as the Meiji Oligarchy

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Imperial Role??

• Note: Emperor Meiji is still the heir to the Yamato clan dynasty– His ancestors had reigned from

@ 300 CE

– Since the beginning of the Kamakura period, Shoguns ruled while the emperor reigned

• Meiji Restoration: Still the Yamato heir is relevant. – Does he rule or reign?

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Meiji Oligarchy:Ruling PlatformTo survive Japan must modernize…Become a Rich nation with a Strong Army:

Fukoku Kyohei• Japan must learn from the West• Japan must Adapt to a Western-dominated world

• By learning and adapting, Japan can become modern• By becoming modern they can become rich• By becoming rich they can build a strong army• With a strong army they can become truly independent

Fukoku Kyohei!

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Meiji OligarchyRuling Platform

Iwakura Mission

• Japan sends diplomatic mission to Western nations• San Francisco across the US• London Continental Europe• Goals: • Build relationships: earn Western respect• Gain knowledge: patterns of business, science, and government

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Meiji Restoration: Rapid Westernization / modernization

Japan launches wholesale Westernization drive

Wholesale rejection

of all things

Japanese

Even Japanese art takes on a strictly modern tone

Page 13: Early Meiji Japan 1868-1912

Meiji Restoration: Rapid Westernization / modernization

Abolish Caste Structure

• Strip Daimyo of Han and special privilege

• Compensate Daimyo for lost land with cash

Abolish Samurai class and privileges

• Adopt conscript army of commoners

• Forbid wearing of swords

• Assign many former samurai as government officials

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Meiji Art takes a

modern turn

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Satsuma Rebellion – 1877:Reaction to too much modernization

Saigō Takamori: a Meiji Oligarch• Saw too much change• Feared Japan was losing its soul

• Angered by Korea’s refusal (1873) to recognize Emperor (they called him a king)

• Wanted war with Korea– (got unequal treaty with Korea, 1874)

• Oligarchy saw war with Korea as a distraction – would not attack

• Saigo stormed out

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Satsuma Rebellion: 1877• Saigo leads failed attack against the too-modern

Meiji government• Tries to reinstitute special role of Samurai• Failed last throe of traditional Japan

Basis for “The Last Samurai”

movie with Tom Cruise

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Meiji Program• Following the

Iwakura Mission– Japanese Business largely

borrows American and

British models

– Japanese Government patterns itself after Germany

• Sovereign monarch (Germany’s Kaiser)

• Weak legislative branch (Germany’s Diet)

• Constitution as a gift from the Emperor

• Powerful, professional, prestigious bureaucracy

Iwakura Mission departs from Japan, 1871

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Meiji’s Economic Plan

Government supported rapid development

• Market-based economy• Former Daimyo stripped of land but paid

compensation– Daimyo fortunes become source of CAPITAL for new

manufacturing firms– Merchant fortunes also fund new manufacturing

• Government plays strong role in directing investment

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Political/economic theory:

Alexander Gerschenkron:“Late Development State”

Late developing nations need strong government• Private business cannot compete with advanced

foreign competitors• Strong Government must coordinate and lead

development• Strong, development state necessary to succeed

A government strong enough to succeed in late development, generally is too strong for participatory democracy

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Meiji Oligarchy:Successful Late Developing State

• Dramatic Economic take-off

• Motivated by feelings of insecurity

• Driven by need to achieve equality with West

• Spurred by desire to become powerful and thus independent

Fukoku Kyohei!!

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Meiji Constitution

Prince Ito Hirobumi– Iwakura Mission

Meiji Constitution– a gift from the Emperor

• Imperial Sovereignty

• Transcendental cabinet– doesn’t answer to parliament

(Diet)

• Independent military– Answers only to the Emperor– Strong position in Cabinet

• Elite Bureaucracy– Well educated– Powerful, professional,

prestigious– Insulated from electoral

pressure

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Bureaucracy in Japan

• Difficult Civil Service Exam

• Political appointments minimal

• Elite educational requirements– Tokyo National University, Dept. of Law

• Extraordinary policy-making authority– Patterned after Kaiser Wilhelm's Germany– Similar to France – elite education

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Legislature in Meiji Constitution

• Diet– Two Houses– Commoners and Lords– Commons elected (but only 5% male suffrage)

– Little power except BUDGET• On budget, if impasse occurs, last year’s budget

automatically rolls over• This power surprisingly became the source of an

expanded legislative role

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Cabinet in Meiji Constitution

• Transcendental– Doesn’t answer to Diet– Only to Emperor

• Special Military Ministers– In later periods military ministers had to be active duty

officers– Cabinet was incomplete without military ministers– Gave military extraordinary power to drive government