Yamagata Aritomo
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| Prince Yamagata Aritomo | |
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| 14 June 1838 - 1 February 1922 | |
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Meiji-period postcard of Yamagata Aritomo |
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| Place of birth | Hagi, Chōshū domain Japan |
| Place of death | Tokyo, Japan |
| Allegiance | Empire of Japan |
| Service/branch | Imperial Japanese Army |
| Years of service | 1868 -1898 |
| Rank | Field Marshal |
| Battles/wars | Boshin War Satsuma Rebellion First Sino-Japanese War Russo-Japanese War |
| Awards | Order of Merit Order of the Golden Kite (1st class) Order of the Rising Sun (1st class with Paulownia Blossoms, Grand Cordon) Order of the Chrysanthemum. |
| Other work | Prime Minister of Japan |
- This is a Japanese name; the family name is Yamagata.
Prince Aritomo Yamagata (山縣 有朋 Yamagata Aritomo?, 14 June 1838–1 February 1922) was a field marshal in the Imperial Japanese Army and twice Prime Minister of Japan. He is considered one of the architects of the military and political foundations of early modern Japan. Yamagata Aritomo can be seen as the father of Japanese militarism.
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Yamagata was born in a lower-ranked samurai family from Hagi, the capital of the feudal domain of Chōshū (present-day Yamaguchi prefecture). He went to Shokasonjuku , a private school run by Yoshida Shōin, where he devoted his energies to the growing underground movement to overthrow the Tokugawa shogunate. He was a commander in the Kiheitai , a paramilitary organization created on semi-western lines by the Chōshū domain, and during the Boshin War he was appointed a staff officer.
After the Meiji Restoration, he was selected together with Saigō Tsugumichi to visit Europe in 1869 under government orders to research European military systems. Yamagata was strongly influenced by Prussian military and political ideas, which favored military expansion abroad and authoritarian government at home. He became War Minister in 1873. Yamagata energetically modernized the fledgling Imperial Japanese Army, which he modeled after the Prussian army, and began a system of military conscription in 1873.
As War Minister, Yamagata pushed through the foundation of the Imperial Japanese Army General Staff, which was the main source of Yamagata's political power and that of other military officers through the end of World War II. He was Commander of the General Staff in 1874-76, 1878-82, and 1884-85.
Yamagata led the newly modernized Imperial Army against the Satsuma Rebellion led by Saigō Takamori in 1877.
He also had Emperor Meiji write the Imperial Rescript to Soldiers and Sailors, in 1882. This document was considered the moral core of the Japanese army and naval forces until its end in 1945.
Yamagata was awarded the rank of field marshal in 1898. He showed his leadership on military issues as acting War Minister and Commanding General during the First Sino-Japanese War as the Supreme Commander of the IJA 1st Army Russo-Japanese War as the Chief Officer of the General Staff Office in Tokyo.
He is considered political and military ideological ancestor of the Hokushin-ron as he traced the first lines of a national defensive strategy against Russia after Russo-Japanese War.
During his long and versatile career, Yamagata held numerous important governmental posts. In 1882, he became president of the Board of Legislation (Sanjiin) and as Home Minister (1883–87) he worked vigorously to suppress political parties and repress agitation in the labor and agrarian movements. He also organized a system of local administration, based on a prefecture-county-city structure which is still in use in Japan today. In 1883 Yamagata was appointed to the post of Lord Chancellor, the highest bureaucratic position in the government system before the Meiji Constitution of 1889.
Yamagata became the third Prime Minister of Japan after the opening of the Imperial Diet under the Meiji Constitution from 24 December 1889 to 6 May 1891. During his first term, the Imperial Rescript on Education was issued.
Yamagata became Prime Minister for a second term from 8 November 1898 to 19 October 1900. In 1900, while in his second term as Prime Minister, he ruled that only an active military officer could serve as War Minister or Navy Minister, a rule that gave the military control over the formation of any future cabinet. He also enacted laws preventing political party members from holding any key posts in the bureaucracy.
In 1891 Yamagata received the largely honorific title of genrō, or official elder statesman. He was President of the Privy Council from 1893-94 and 1905-22.
In 1896, Yamagata led a diplomatic mission to Moscow, which produced the Yamagata-Lobanov Agreement confirming Japanese and Russian rights in Korea.
Yamagata was elevated to the peerage, and received the title of koshaku (prince) under the kazoku system in 1907.
From 1900 to 1909, Yamagata opposed Itō Hirobumi, leader of the civilian party, and exercised influence through his protégé, Katsura Tarō. After the death of Itō Hirobumi in 1909, Yamagata became the most influential politician in Japan and remained so until his death in 1922, although he retired from active participation in politics after the Russo-Japanese War. However, as president of the Privy Council from 1909 to 1922, Yamagata remained the power behind the government and dictated the selection of future Prime Ministers until his death.
Yamagata was a talented garden designer, and today the gardens he designed are considered masterpieces of Japanese gardens.[citation needed] An noted example is the garden of the villa Murin-an in Kyoto.
In 1906, Yamagata received the Order of Merit by King Edward VII. His Japanese decorations included the Order of the Golden Kite (1st class), Order of the Rising Sun (1st class with Paulownia Blossoms, Grand Cordon) and the Order of the Chrysanthemum.
- Craig, Albert M. (1961). Chōshū in the Meiji Restoration. Harvard University Press. ISBN 0739101935.
- Dupuy, Trevor N. (1992). Encyclopedia of Military Biography. I B Tauris & Co Ltd. ISBN 1-85043-569-3.
- Jansen, Marius B. (2000). The Making of Modern Japan. Belknap Press. ISBN 0674009916.
| Preceded by Kuroda Kiyotaka |
Prime Minister of Japan | Succeeded by Matsukata Masayoshi |
| Preceded by Okuma Shigenobu |
Prime Minister of Japan | Succeeded by Ito Hirobumi |
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H. Itō · Kuroda · Sanjōi · Yamagata · Matsukata · H. Itō · Kurodaa · Matsukata · H. Itō · Ōkuma · Yamagata · H. Itō · Saionjia · Katsura · Saionji · Katsura · Saionji · Katsura · Yamamoto · Ōkuma · Terauchi · Hara · Uchidaa · Takahashi · To. Katō · Uchidaa · Yamamoto · Kiyoura · Ta. Katō · Wakatsuki · G. Tanaka · Hamaguchi · Shideharaa · Hamaguchi · Wakatsuki · Inukai · Takahashia · Saitō · Okada · Gotōa · Okada · Hirota · Hayashi · Konoe · Hiranuma · N. Abe · Yonai · Konoe · Tojo · Koiso · K. Suzuki · Higashikuni · Shidehara · Yoshida · Katayama · Ashida · Yoshida · Hatoyama · Ishibashi · Kishia · Ishibashi · Kishi · Ikeda · Satō · K. Tanaka · Miki · T. Fukuda · Ōhira · M. Itōa · Z. Suzuki · Nakasone · Takeshita · Uno · Kaifu · Miyazawa · Hosokawa · Hata · Murayama · Hashimoto · Obuchi · Aokia · Obuchi · Mori · Koizumi · S. Abe · Y. Fukuda |
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Categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since November 2007 | Prime Ministers of Japan | Japanese generals | Marshals of Japan | People of the Boshin War | Members of the Order of Merit | 1838 births | 1922 deaths | People from Yamaguchi Prefecture | Kazoku | People of the First Sino-Japanese War | People of the Russo-Japanese War | People in Meiji period Japan