Title: Japan in the Modern World
1Japan in the Modern World
2Tokugawa Isolation and Commodore Perry
3Tokugawa Japan What was it like?
- Over 200 years of peace
- Both Daimyo and samurai become impoverished
- Samurai became bureaucrats
- Other samurai became merchantsbeginning of
market economy - Isolation from the rest of the world
- Buddhism and Confucianism are important
- Sankin Kotai alternate years of residence in Edo
lead to development of roads and businesses
4Threat posed by the West
- -- Superior guns and arms
- --Knowledge of imperialism in Asia
- --imposition of unequal treaties
- --business and missionary interests
5Japans Revolution involves restoring the Emperor
to direct rule
- outside daimyo lead revolt
- Aim to overthrow the Shogun and restore the
emperor to power - Aim to get rid of foreigners and unequal treaties
6Body of English merchant, Charles Richardson
killed in Japan
7British bombard Kagoshima
8French mission training Shogunal troops
9Alliance of Satsuma and Choshu
- Emperor wanted to restore his power
- Traditional enemies, Satsuma and Choshu unite
against the Tokugawa - Both outside Hans with tradition of disliking the
shogun - Rallying cry was Sonno Joirestore the emperor,
expel the barbarians
10The Last Shogun
11Satsuma Samurai plotting Restoration
12Shogunal forces burning the Satsuma Palace in Edo
13Saigo Takamori and the Boshin War
14The revolution inaugurates an era of reform
- Capital renamed Tokyo and Imperial court moves
there. - Daimyo return land to the emperor.
- Social classes abandoned, samurai disappear.
- Creation of conscript army universal
conscription based on Prussian model. - Creation of navy based on English model.
- Flag Adopted
15Flag of Japan the Rising Sun
16Commanders in Japanese army
17Japanese Navy
18Meiji Restoration
- Everything Western becomes the fashion
19Promotion of State Shinto
- Shinto shrines supported by the state
- Everyone must register in the shrine
- Separation from Buddhism
- Downplay of Buddhism
20Shinto Shrine Worship of the Emperor
21Promotion of Education
- Charter Oath of 1868 Knowledge shall be sought
throughout the world so as to strengthen the
foundations of Imperial rule - Creation of Western Education system elementary,
secondary and university - 1972 mandatory 4 years education for all
children boys and girls
22Imperial Rescript on Education on 1890
- Loyalty to the emperor and the state picture of
the emperor in each classroom - Self sacrifice to the state and family
- Filial piety applied to family AND national
family including teachers, officials and
employers - Taught what to think, not how to think
23Imperial Rescript on Education
24Problems in establishing the new system
- Saigo Takemori and the Satsuma Rebellion
25Saigo Takamori leads the Satsuma Rebellion
- Battle of Shiroyama Saigo and his army
26Rule by the Oligarchs
- Privileged clique
- Believers in Kokugaku (native studies)
- Create conscript military
- Abolish four classes of society
- Send missions abroad such as Iwakura Mission
27Iwakura Mission
- Headed by Iawkura Tomomi
- Twofold goalrevise unequal treaties and learn
about West - 1871-1873 failed in first and succeeded in second
28Road to the Meiji Constitution of 1889
- Society of Patriots (Aikokusha) founded 1878
- Jiyuto (Liberal Party) founded in 1881 (French
model) - Okuma Shigenobu founded the Constitutional
Progressive Party advocating the British system - Imperial Rule Party established in 1882
29Itagaki Taisuke cerates the Society of Patriots
(Aikokusha)
30Okuma Shigenobu creates the Constitutional
Progressive Party
31Representation
- 1875 Osaka Conference create independent
judiciary - 1878 conference of Prefectural Governors
established elected Prefectural assemblies - 1880 elected assemblies in villages and towns
- 1880 delegates from 24 prefectures created the
League for Establishing a National Assembly.
32Repression
- 1875 laws prohibit press criticism of government
- 1880 Public Assembly Law limits public
gatherings and requires police permission for all
meetings
33Constitution Gift of the Emperor to his People
- Imperial Diet elected House of Representatives
and House of Peers - Limited franchise males over 25, who pay 15 yen
national taxes about 1 of population. - New Peerage created from old Daimyo and Samurai
who helped the government - Diet approve legislation, initiate laws, submit
petitions to emperor - Sovereignty resides with emperor
34Opening Ceremony of Japanese Diet
35Industrialization
- Japanese abroad to look at Western models
- Westerners hired to teach and set up modern
factories - Goal equal the West
- Mercantile basis import raw materials and export
finished products - Zaibatsu government and business work together
- Establishment of the Bank of Japan
36Textiles were Japans largest export industry
37Inside the Tomioka Silk Reeling Mill
38Road to Imperialism
- Conflict with China over Okinawan sailors
attacked and killed in Taiwan (1873) first
expedition of new military abroad - Involvement in Korea
- Sino-Japanese war of 1894-95
- Triple Intervention return of Liaodong Peninsula
- Russo-Japanese war of 1904-1905
39Ryukyu Islands Claimed by both China and Japan
40The French-built Matsushima, flagship
- of the Imperial Japanese Navy during the
Sino-Japanese conflict
41Hall where Treaty of Shimonoseki was signed, 1895
42Ito Hirobumi and Li Hongzhang signers of Treaty
of Shimonoseki
43Triple intervention Russia, France, and Germany
- Force Japan to return the Liaotung peninsula to
China Port Arthur (Lushun)
44Japanese troops landing in Korea during the
Russo-Japanese War
45Japanese troops take Port Arthur
46Japanese Destroyer
47Japanese gun crew
48Treaty of Portsmouth 1905
- Japan lease Liaotung Peninsula
- Receive south half of Sakhalin Island
- Return Manchuria to China
- Free hand in Korea (exchange for US free hand in
Philippines)
49Annexation of Korea in 1910 as Japans second
colony
- Japan disbands the Korean army
50Japan officially makes Korea a colony the Korean
emperor accepts this in
51Yoshihito becomes Emperor Taisho (Great
righteousness) in 1912
52Taisho Emperor in Military uniform
- In Poor Health and did little
- Transfer of power to political parties from
Oligarchy called Taisho Democracy
53Emperor Taisho leading troops
54Rise of Party Politics
- Political crisis leads to creation of
conservative party Constitutional Association of
Friends - Seiyukai Party loses power in ensuing election.
55Japan in World War I
- Japan declares war on Germany
- Japan seizes German holding in China, and the
Pacific Islands
56Japan gives the Twenty-one Demands to China
- China to agree to Japanese control over Qingdao
and Manchuria - China cease letting foreigners have territory
- Japan have control over Chinas foreign policy
57Japan launches Siberian Expedition with 75,000
troops
- Aim is to occupy Manchuria and Eastern Siberia
- Last of the allied troops to withdraw in 1925
- Many soldiers remain in Manchuria as railway
guards
58The treaty of Versailles and the League of Nations
- Japan confirmed in holding ex-German possessions
in Asia - Protest demonstrations and riots triggered in
China and Korea - Japan joins the newly formed League of Nations
59League of Nations Headquarters in Switzerland
- Goals included disarmament
- end of warfare
- settling disputes with diplomacy and negotiation
- promoting global welfare
60Japan now a major player on the International
Scene
- Recognized as one of the big five
- Allowed to keep ex-German possessions in Pacific
and China
61Prosperity and problems at home
- Taisho Democracy-two party political system comes
of age - Hara Takashi first commoner to become prime
minister - New election laws
- Government funded public works programs
62Growing domestic problems in the midst of
prosperity
- Inflation
- Influx of foreign ideas
- Tightly controlled economy
- Emerging labor movement
- Call for universal suffrage by students and
others - Assassination of Hara in 1921
- Passage of new election law in 1925
63Growing despotism in the government
- Peace Preservation Law passed in 1925
- Forbade conspiracy or revolt again Kokutai
(National essence) - Criminalized socialism and communism
- Stressed moral obligation to make sacrifices for
the state - Brutal suppression of the Communist Party
- Respond with assassination attempt on Crown
Prince Hirohito
64Growth of Ultra nationalism and right-wing
politics
- Patriotic and intelligence-gathering
organizations take active role in politics - Foment pro war sentiments
- Support anti socialist and anti communist acts
65Kanto Earthquake on September 1, 1923
- Destroyed Yokohama, Chiba, Kanagawa, Shizuoka and
Tokyo - 105,385 people died
- 37,000 others missing
- 88 fires
- 570,000 homes destroyed
- 1.9 million homeless
- 1 billion US damage
66The Great Kanto Earthquake
67Hirohito The Showa Emperor 1926
68Growing Fascism in Japan Japanese Nationalism
- Emblem of the Imperial Navy and symbol of
Japanese Nationalism
69The steps to War
- Ideology of Nationalism Kokutai
- Growth of Military and Naval power
- Government by assassination
- Expansion into Manchuria (Manchuguo)
- Leaving the League of Nations
- Concept of the Greater East Asian Co-prosperity
Sphere
70War in China
- Japanese soldiers march into Nanjing
71Memorial to the Nanjing Massacre
72My favorite anti-war picture
73The War Continues China fights alone
74The War changes Pearl Harbor is bombed
75Southeast Asia falls prisoners build railways
76End of the War Bombs fall on Hiroshima
- Hiroshima bombed on August 6
- Russia declares war on Japan, August 8
- Nagasaki bombed, August 9
- Japan surrenders, August 14
77Japanese surrender
78Occupation sets seeds for Japanese economic
miracle
- General MacArthur
- Architect of the Occupation
79Japans Economic Miracle
- Educational and industrial infrastructure
- American aid
- 1947 American decision to create Japan as ally in
Asia - Japans non aggression constitution article 9
- Democracy, a new constitution
- Land reform
80Economic miracle continued
- Hard work
- Concentrating on consumer goods for export market
- Close government industry cooperation
- Negotiated sources of raw materials
- Protective legislation
81Japan today problems and stresses
- Falling birth rate
- Aging population
- Textbook controversy
- Rise of the tigers of Asia
- Economic problems
- Space and pollution
82Baseball in Japan
- Tokyo Big Six Baseball League Waseda University
beats Keio University
83Sumo in Japan