Title: Early Meiji Japan 18681912
1Early Meiji Japan1868-1912
2Meiji 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
3Meiji 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/Weste
rnization
Young Choshu leaders visit London 1860s
4Meiji Restoration1868
- Choshu and Satsuma draw up alliance
- Plot revolution
Satsuma/Choshu Plotters
- 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 Tokugawas rule
- Emperor to rule directly
5Meiji Restoration1868
- Declare Restoration of the Emperor to his
rightful place - Liberate the Emperor from Tokugawas rule
- Emperor to rule directly
- Emperor issues decree ending the rule of the
Tokugawa Shoguns
Young Emperor Meiji
6Meiji 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
7Meiji 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
Choshu ?
? Satsuma
8Meiji 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
9Imperial Role??
- Note Emperor Meiji is still the heir to the
Yamato clan dynasty - His ancestors had reigned from _at_ 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?
10Meiji OligarchyRuling Platform
- To 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!
11Meiji OligarchyRuling Platform
- 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
12Meiji Restoration Rapid Westernization /
modernization
- Japan launches wholesale Westernization drive
- Wholesale rejection
- of all things
- Japanese
- Even Japanese art takes ?
- on a strictly modern tone
13Meiji 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
14Meiji Art takes a modern turn
15Satsuma Rebellion 1877Reaction to too much
modernization
- Saigo Takamori a Meiji Oligarch
- Saw too much change
- Feared Japan was losing its soul
- Angered by Koreas 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
16Satsuma 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
17Meiji Program
Iwakura Mission departs from Japan, 1871
- Following the
- Iwakura Mission
- Japanese Business largely
- borrows American and
- British models
- Japanese Government patterns itself after Germany
- Sovereign monarch (Germanys Kaiser)
- Weak legislative branch (Germanys Diet)
- Constitution as a gift from the Emperor
- Powerful, professional, prestigious bureaucracy
18Meijis 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
19Political/economic theoryAlexander
GerschenkronLate 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
20Meiji OligarchySuccessful 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!!
21Meiji Constitution
- Prince Ito Hirobumi
- Iwakura Mission
- Meiji Constitution
- a gift from the Emperor
- Imperial Sovereignty
- Transcendental cabinet
- doesnt 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
22Bureaucracy 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
23Legislature 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 years budget
automatically rolls over - This power surprisingly became the source of an
expanded legislative role
24Cabinet in Meiji Constitution
- Transcendental
- Doesnt 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