Difference between revisions of "Emperor Meiji" - New World Encyclopedia

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{{nihongo|'''Emperor Meiji'''|明治天皇|Meiji Tennō|literally 'Emperor of Enlightened Rule'}} ([[November 3]], [[1852]]&ndash;[[30 July]] [[1912]]), was the 122nd [[Emperor of Japan|imperial ruler]] of [[Japan]], according to the traditional order of succession. His personal name was {{nihongo|'''Mutsuhito'''|睦仁}}. At the time of his birth in [[1852]], [[Japan]] was an isolated, pre-[[industrialisation|industrial]], [[feudalism|feudal]] country dominated by the [[Tokugawa Shogunate]] and the [[daimyo]], who ruled over the country's more than 250 decentralized [[Han (Japan)|domains]]. By the time of his death in [[1912]], Japan had undergone a political, social, and industrial revolution at home (See '''[[Meiji Restoration]]''') and emerged as one of the [[great power]]s on the world stage.  
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{{nihongo|'''Emperor Meiji'''|明治天皇|Meiji Tennō|literally 'Emperor of Enlightened Rule'}} (November 3, 1852 -  July 30, 1912), was the 122nd imperial ruler of [[Japan]], according to the traditional order of succession. His personal name was {{nihongo|'''Mutsuhito'''|睦仁}}. At the time of his birth in 1852, [[Japan]] was an isolated, pre-[[industrialisation|industrial]], [[feudalism|feudal]] country dominated by the Tokugawa Shogunate and the ''daimyo'', who ruled over the country's more than two-hundred-and-fifty decentralized domains. During the reign of the Meiji Emperor, from 1867 to 1912, Japan was transformed from a feudal country into one of the greatest powers of the modern world. (See [[Meiji Restoration]].)  
 +
 
 +
Emperor Meiji himself embodied the imposition of Western innovations and ideas on traditional Japanese culture; he wore Western clothes and ate Western foods, but composed over 100,000 poems in the traditional Japanese style during his lifetime.  
  
 
== Life ==
 
== Life ==
 +
Emperor Meiji was born on November 3,1852, in [[Japan]], the sole surviving son of Emperor Kōmei by the lady-in-waiting Nakayama Yoshiko (1834 - 1907), a daughter of Lord Nakayama Tadayasu, sometime minister of the left (''sadaijin'') and a scion of the Fujiwara clan.  He was born eight months before the arrival of Commodore [[Matthew Galbraith Perry]] and the [[United States]] squadron of "Black Ships" in Edo (Tokyo) Bay and two years before the first of the unequal treaties which the Tokugawa shogunate signed with Perry. Originally titled ''Sachi no miya'' (Prince Sachi), the future emperor spent most of his childhood at the Nakayama household in [[Kyoto]], as it was customary to entrust the upbringing of imperial children to prominent court families.
 +
===Meiji Restoration:Ascent to the Throne===
 +
He was formally adopted by Asako Nyōgō (later Empress Dowager Eishō), the principal consort of Emperor Kōmei, on July 11, 1860. On the same day he also received the personal name Mutsuhito, the rank of shinnō (imperial prince, and thus a potential successor to the throne) and the title of ''Kōtaishi'' (Crown Prince).  Crown Prince Mutsuhito acceded to the throne on February 3, 1867  at the age of fourteen. Later that year, the Japanese era name was changed to Meiji, or “enlightened rule,” which was later used for his posthumous name. This marked the beginning of the tradition of proclaiming one era for the entire reign of an emperor, and posthumously naming him after the era over which he ruled. 
 +
 +
The ascension of the Mutsuhito to the throne signified the return of power from the Tokugawa shogunate to the Emperor.  The Meiji Restoration marked the dissolution of Japanese feudalism and the forging of a new, modern state.  Emperor Meiji personally held little political power, but he was a paramount symbol of the unity of Japan.  In 1868 he launched the Westernization of Japan by taking the “Charter Oath of Five Principles.”  Though he did not actually initiate the reforms, he officially ordered the abolition of the feudal land system in 1871; the creation of a new school system in 1872; the adoption of the cabinet system of government in 1885; the promulgation of the Meiji Constitution in 1889; and the opening of the Diet in 1890. 
 +
 +
The constitution adopted in 1889 created a Diet with an upper house selected primarily from the aristocracy, and an elected lower house, to advise the government.  A Cabinet of close advisors was directly responsible to the Emperor but not to the Diet and was considered above politics.  In practice, the Emperor allowed a group of close advisors, known as the “''genro'',” or elder statesmen, to choose premiers.  Under the direction of these advisors (including  Ito Hirobumi, Yamagata Aritomo , and Inoue Kaoru) Japan became a modern industrial state and demonstrated its military power in the first [[Sino-Japanese War]] (1894-95) and the [[Russo-Japanese War]] (1904-5).
 +
===Marriage===
 +
On 2 September 2,1867, Emperor Meiji married Empress Masako(later Haruko) (May 28, 1849 – April 19, 1914), the third daughter of Lord Tadaka Ichijō, at one time the  Minister of the Left (sadaijin). Known posthumously as Empress Shoken, she was the first imperial consort to receive the title of ''kōgō'' (literally, the emperor's wife, translated as “empress consort”), in several hundred years.  She devoted herself to promoting national welfare and women’s education, and was respectfully known as the “Mother of the Nation.” She also helped to establish the Japanese [[Red Cross]], and being especially interested in the activities of the Red Cross during peace time , she donated a fund to the international Red Cross, “The Empress Shoken Fund.” It is currently utilized for international welfare activities. Although she was the first Japanese empress consort to play a public role, she bore no children. However, Emperor Meiji had fifteen children by five official ladies-in-waiting. Only five of his children, a prince born to Lady Naruko (1855 - 1943), the daughter of Yanagiwara Mitsunaru, and four princesses born to Lady Sachiko (1867 - 1947), the eldest daughter of Count Sono Motosachi, lived to adulthood.
 +
<blockquote>'''Imperial Rescript on Education of the Meiji Emperor'''
 +
 +
''Know ye, Our subjects:
 +
Our Imperial Ancestors have founded Our Empire on a basis broad and everlasting and have deeply and firmly implanted virtue; Our subjects ever united in loyalty and filial piety have from generation to generation illustrated the beauty thereof. This is the glory of the fundamental character of Our Empire, and herein also lies the source of Our education.
 +
Ye, Our subjects, be filial to your parents, affectionate to your brothers and sisters; as husbands and wives be harmonious, as friends true; bear yourselves in modesty and moderation; extend your benevolence to all; pursue learning and cultivate arts, and thereby develop intellectual faculties and perfect moral powers; furthermore advance public good and promote common interests; always respect the Constitution and observe the laws; should emergency arise, offer yourselves courageously to the State; and thus guard and maintain the prosperity of Our Imperial Throne coeval with heaven and earth.
 +
So shall ye not only be Our good and faithful subjects, but render illustrious the best traditions of your forefathers. The Way here set forth is indeed the teaching bequeathed by Our Imperial Ancestors, to be observed alike by Their Descendants and the subjects, infallible for all ages and true in all places.It is Our wish to lay it to heart in all reverence, in common with you, Our subjects, that we may thus attain to the same virtue.''
 +
The 30th day of the 10th month of the 23rd year of Meiji.
 +
(October 30, 1890)
 +
</blockquote>
 +
 +
Emperor Meiji was the first Japanese monarch to remain on the throne past the age of fifty since the abdication of Emperor Ōgimachi in 1586.  Near the end of his life several anarchists, including Kotoku Shusui, were executed on charges of having conspired to murder the sovereign. This conspiracy was known as the High Treason Incident.
  
Emperor Meiji was the surviving son of [[Emperor Komei|Emperor Kōmei]] by the [[lady-in-waiting]] Nakayama Yoshiko ([[1834]]&ndash;[[1907]]), the daughter of Lord Nakayama Tadayasu, sometime minister of the left (sadaijin) and a scion of the [[Fujiwara]]. He was born eight months before the arrival of Commodore [[Matthew Calbraith Perry]] and the [[United States]] [[squadron]] of "[[Black Ships]]" in [[Edo]] [[Tokyo Bay|Bay]] and two years before the first of the unequal treaties which the Tokugawa shogunate signed with Perry. Originally titled ''Sachi no miya'' (Prince Sachi), the future emperor spent most of his childhood at the Nakayama household in [[Kyoto]], as it was customary to entrust the upbringing of imperial children to prominent court families.
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Emperor Meiji died July 30,1912 and was buried in the Fushimi Momoyama Ryo (Graveyard) in Kyoto, his soul being enshrined in Meiji Jingu (Meiji Shrine).
  
He was formally adopted by Asako Nyōgō (later Empress Dowager Eishō), the principal consort of Emperor Kōmei, on [[11 July]] [[1860]]. He also received the personal name Mutsuhito, the rank of shinnō (imperial prince, and thus a potential successor to the throne) and the title of ''Kōtaishi'' ([[Crown Prince]]) on the same day. Crown Prince Mutsuhito acceded to the throne on [[3 February]], [[1867]] at the age of fourteen. Later that year, the [[Japanese era name|era]] was changed to Meiji, or “enlightened rule”, which was later used for his posthumous name. This marked the beginning of the tradition of proclaiming one era for the entire reign of an emperor, and posthumously naming him after the era over which he ruled.
+
== The Waka Poetry of the Emperor Meiji ==
 +
Emperor Meiji learned from his father and began writing waka poems at the age of eight.  During his lifetime he composed approximately 100,000 poems and was known as “Sage of Poetry.”  ''Waka'', also called ''tanka'', are very short poems containing thirty-one syllables.  The writing of ''tanka'' poetry was traditionally called “''Shikishima no Michi''” (The Way of ''Shikishima'', a poetic name for Japan) and has been practiced for over a  thousand years.  Hisorically, the writing of ''waka'' was promoted by the Imperial Court. Emperor Meiji wrote waka in the course of his daily life rather than as works of art to be appreciated by others, giving them a sincerity and heart-felt expression that touch the heart of the reader. Only about five hundred of Emperor Meiji’s waka have been made public. 
 +
<blockquote>
 +
  For the times to come
 +
 +
And of meeting what must be met
 +
 +
All of our people
  
On [[2 September]] [[1867]], Emperor Meiji married [[Empress Shōken|Masako]] (later Haruko) ([[28 May]] [[1849]]&ndash;[[19 April]] [[1914]]), the third daughter of Lord Ichijō Tadaka, sometime minister of the left (sadaijin). Known posthumously as [[Empress Shoken]], she was the first imperial consort to receive the title of ''kōgō'' (literally, the emperor's wife, translated as [[empress consort]]), in several hundred years. Although she was the first Japanese empress consort to play a public role, she bore no children. However, Emperor Meiji had fifteen children by five official ladies-in-waiting. Only five of his children, a prince born to Lady Naruko ([[1855]]&ndash;[[1943]]), the daughter of Yanagiwara Mitsunaru, and four princesses born to Lady Sachiko ([[1867]]&ndash;[[1947]]), the eldest daughter of [[Count]] Sono Motosachi, lived to adulthood. They were:
+
Must be taught to walk along
 +
 +
The path of sincerity
  
* Crown Prince Yoshihito (''Haru no miya Yoshihito Shinnō''), 3rd son, ([[31 August]] [[1879]]&ndash;[[25 December]] [[1926]]) (see [[Emperor Taisho|Emperor Taishō]]).
+
PINE
* Princess Masako (''Tsune no miya Masako Naishinnō''), 6th daughter, ([[30 September]] [[1888]]&ndash;[[8 March]] [[1940]]), titled ''Tsune no miya'' (Princess Tsune) until marriage; m. at Imperial Palace, Tokyo, [[30 April]] [[1908]] [[Prince Takeda Tsunehisa]] (''Takeda no miya Tsunehisa ō'', [[22 September]] [[1882]]&ndash;[[23 April]] [[1919]]), and had [[issue]] ([[offspring]]).
+
In a world of storms
* Princess Fusako (''Kane no miya Fusako Naishinnō''), 7th daughter, ([[28 January]] [[1890]]&ndash;[[11 August]] [[1974]]), titled ''Kane no miya'' (Princess Kane) until marriage; m. at Imperial Palace, Tokyo [[29 April]] [[1909]] [[Prince Kitashirakawa Naruhisa]] (''Kitashirakawa no miya Naruhisa ō'', [[1 April]] [[1887]]&ndash;[[2 April]] [[1923]]), and had issue.
+
Let there be no wavering
* Princess Nobuko (''Fumi no miya Nobuko Naishinnō''), 8th daughter, ([[7 August]] [[1891]]&ndash;[[3 November]] [[1933]]); titled ''Fumi no miya'' (Princess Fami) until marriage; m. at Imperial Palace, Tokyo [[6 May]] [[1909]] [[Prince Asaka Yasuhiko]] (''Asaka no miya Yasuhiko ō'', [[2 October]] [[1887]]&ndash;[[13 April]] [[1981]]), and had issue. 
+
Of our human hearts;  
* Princess Toshiko (''Yasu no miya Toshiko Naishinnō''),  9th daughter, ([[11 May]] [[1896]]&ndash;[[5 March]] [[1978]]); titled ''Yasu no miya'' (Princess Yasu) until marriage; m. at Imperial Palace, Tokyo [[18 May]], [[1915]] [[Prince Higashikuni Naruhiko]] (''Higashikuni no miya Naruhiko ô'', [[3 December]] [[1887]]&ndash;[[20 January]] [[1990]]), and had issue.
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Remain as the pine tree
 +
With root sunk deep in stone.
  
== Meiji Restoration ==
+
MOUNTAIN
{{main|Meiji Restoration}}
+
High in the sky
 +
There can be seen towering
 +
A tall mountain,
 +
Were one but wish to climb it
 +
A path of ascent exists.
 +
SUN
 +
The morning sun
 +
Rise so splendidly
 +
Into the sky; Oh,that we could attain
 +
Such a clear reviving soul!
 +
SKY
 +
The spacious sky
 +
Spans serene and clear
 +
So blue above,
 +
Oh, that our soul could grow
 +
And become so open!
 +
UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD
 +
It is our hope
 +
That all the world's oceans
 +
Be joined in peace,
 +
So why do the winds and waves
 +
Now rise up in angry rage?
 +
translated by Professor Harold Wright, Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio. </blockquote>
  
Emperor Meiji was the symbolic leader of the Meiji Restoration, in which the [[Tokugawa shogunate]] was abolished by Imperial forces following the [[Boshin War]]. The [[Five Charter Oath|Charter Oath]], a five-point statement of the nature of the new government, abolished [[feudalism]] and proclaimed a modern democratic government for Japan. Although a [[Diet of Japan|parliament]] was formed, it had no real power, and neither did Emperor Meiji. Power had passed from the Tokugawa into the hands of those Daimyo and other samurai who had led the Restoration. Japan was thus controlled by the ''[[Genro]],'' an [[oligarchy]], which comprised the most powerful men of the military, political, and economic spheres.  Emperor Meiji, if nothing else, showed greater political longevity than his recent predecessors, as he was the first Japanese monarch to remain on the throne past the age of 50 since the abdication of [[Emperor Ogimachi|Emperor Ōgimachi]] in [[1586]].
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== Progeny==
  
The Meiji Restoration is a source of pride for the Japanese, as it and the accompanying industrialization allowed Japan to become the preeminent power in the [[Pacific]] and a major player in the world within a [[generation]]. Yet, Emperor Meiji's role in the Restoration is debatable. He certainly did not control Japan, but how much influence he wielded is unknown. It is unlikely it will ever be clear whether he supported the [[Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895)|Sino-Japanese War]] ([[1894]]-[[1895]]) or the [[Russo-Japanese War]] ([[1904]]-[[1905]]). One of the few windows we have into Meiji's own feelings is his [[poetry]], which seems to indicate a [[pacifism|pacifist]] streak, or at least a [[man]] who wished [[war]] could be avoided.
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* Crown Prince Yoshihito (''Haru no miya Yoshihito Shinnō''), third son, (August 31,  1879  - December 25,  1926) (later  Emperor Taisho) 
 +
* Princess Masako (''Tsune no miya Masako Naishinnō''), sixth daughter, ( September 30,  1888  - March 8, 1940), titled ''Tsune no miya'' (Princess Tsune) until marriage; married at the Imperial Palace, Tokyo,  April 30, 1908 to Prince Takeda Tsunehisa  (''Takeda no miya Tsunehisa ō'',  September 22, 1882  -  April 23, 1919 ), and had  issue (offspring).
 +
* Princess Fusako (''Kane no miya Fusako Naishinnō''), seventh daughter, (January 28,  1890  - August  11,  1974), titled ''Kane no miya'' (Princess Kane) until marriage; married at the Imperial Palace, Tokyo,  April 29, 1909 to  Prince Kitashirakawa Naruhisa  (''Kitashirakawa no miya Naruhisa ō'',  April 1,1887  - April 2, 1923), and had issue.
 +
* Princess Nobuko (''Fumi no miya Nobuko Naishinnō''), eighth daughter, (August 7,  1891  - November 3,1933 ); titled ''Fumi no miya'' (Princess Fami) until marriage; married at the Imperial Palace, Tokyo  May 6,  1909 to Prince Asaka Yasuhiko  (''Asaka no miya Yasuhiko ō'',  October 2, 1887  - April 13,  1981 ), and had issue. 
 +
* Princess Toshiko (''Yasu no miya Toshiko Naishinnō''),  ninth daughter, (May 11, 1896  - March 5, 1978 ); titled ''Yasu no miya'' (Princess Yasu) until marriage; married at the Imperial Palace, Tokyo  May 18 ,  1915 to  Prince Higashikuni Naruhiko  (''Higashikuni no miya Naruhiko ô'', December  3, 1887  - January 20, 1990 ), and had issue.
  
Near the end of his life several anarchists, including [[Kotoku Shusui]], were executed on charges of having conspired to murder the sovereign. This conspiracy was known as the [[High Treason Incident]].
 
  
== Trivia ==
 
* Emperor Meiji was a character in the 2003 film ''[[The Last Samurai]]'' starring [[Tom Cruise]].  Meiji was portrayed by Shichinosuke Nakamura.
 
  
== Further reading ==
+
== References ==
* ''Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World'', 1852-1912 by Donald Keene, Columbia University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-231-12340-X
+
*Jansen, Marius B. (Editor) Emergence of Meiji Japan, The (Cambridge History of Japan S.).  Cambridge University Press, 2006
 +
*Keene, Donald. Emperor of Japan .Columbia University Press, 2002
 +
*Keene, Donald. ''Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World'', 1852-1912. Columbia University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-231-12340-X
 +
*Sims, Richard. Japanese Political History Since the Meiji Renovation 1868-2000. Palgrave Macmillan, 2001
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==

Revision as of 23:13, 3 November 2006

Template:Infobox Ruler Japan Emperor Meiji (明治天皇 Meiji Tennō, literally 'Emperor of Enlightened Rule') (November 3, 1852 - July 30, 1912), was the 122nd imperial ruler of Japan, according to the traditional order of succession. His personal name was Mutsuhito (睦仁). At the time of his birth in 1852, Japan was an isolated, pre-industrial, feudal country dominated by the Tokugawa Shogunate and the daimyo, who ruled over the country's more than two-hundred-and-fifty decentralized domains. During the reign of the Meiji Emperor, from 1867 to 1912, Japan was transformed from a feudal country into one of the greatest powers of the modern world. (See Meiji Restoration.)

Emperor Meiji himself embodied the imposition of Western innovations and ideas on traditional Japanese culture; he wore Western clothes and ate Western foods, but composed over 100,000 poems in the traditional Japanese style during his lifetime.

Life

Emperor Meiji was born on November 3,1852, in Japan, the sole surviving son of Emperor Kōmei by the lady-in-waiting Nakayama Yoshiko (1834 - 1907), a daughter of Lord Nakayama Tadayasu, sometime minister of the left (sadaijin) and a scion of the Fujiwara clan. He was born eight months before the arrival of Commodore Matthew Galbraith Perry and the United States squadron of "Black Ships" in Edo (Tokyo) Bay and two years before the first of the unequal treaties which the Tokugawa shogunate signed with Perry. Originally titled Sachi no miya (Prince Sachi), the future emperor spent most of his childhood at the Nakayama household in Kyoto, as it was customary to entrust the upbringing of imperial children to prominent court families.

Meiji Restoration:Ascent to the Throne

He was formally adopted by Asako Nyōgō (later Empress Dowager Eishō), the principal consort of Emperor Kōmei, on July 11, 1860. On the same day he also received the personal name Mutsuhito, the rank of shinnō (imperial prince, and thus a potential successor to the throne) and the title of Kōtaishi (Crown Prince). Crown Prince Mutsuhito acceded to the throne on February 3, 1867 at the age of fourteen. Later that year, the Japanese era name was changed to Meiji, or “enlightened rule,” which was later used for his posthumous name. This marked the beginning of the tradition of proclaiming one era for the entire reign of an emperor, and posthumously naming him after the era over which he ruled.

The ascension of the Mutsuhito to the throne signified the return of power from the Tokugawa shogunate to the Emperor. The Meiji Restoration marked the dissolution of Japanese feudalism and the forging of a new, modern state. Emperor Meiji personally held little political power, but he was a paramount symbol of the unity of Japan. In 1868 he launched the Westernization of Japan by taking the “Charter Oath of Five Principles.” Though he did not actually initiate the reforms, he officially ordered the abolition of the feudal land system in 1871; the creation of a new school system in 1872; the adoption of the cabinet system of government in 1885; the promulgation of the Meiji Constitution in 1889; and the opening of the Diet in 1890.

The constitution adopted in 1889 created a Diet with an upper house selected primarily from the aristocracy, and an elected lower house, to advise the government. A Cabinet of close advisors was directly responsible to the Emperor but not to the Diet and was considered above politics. In practice, the Emperor allowed a group of close advisors, known as the “genro,” or elder statesmen, to choose premiers. Under the direction of these advisors (including Ito Hirobumi, Yamagata Aritomo , and Inoue Kaoru) Japan became a modern industrial state and demonstrated its military power in the first Sino-Japanese War (1894-95) and the Russo-Japanese War (1904-5).

Marriage

On 2 September 2,1867, Emperor Meiji married Empress Masako(later Haruko) (May 28, 1849 – April 19, 1914), the third daughter of Lord Tadaka Ichijō, at one time the Minister of the Left (sadaijin). Known posthumously as Empress Shoken, she was the first imperial consort to receive the title of kōgō (literally, the emperor's wife, translated as “empress consort”), in several hundred years. She devoted herself to promoting national welfare and women’s education, and was respectfully known as the “Mother of the Nation.” She also helped to establish the Japanese Red Cross, and being especially interested in the activities of the Red Cross during peace time , she donated a fund to the international Red Cross, “The Empress Shoken Fund.” It is currently utilized for international welfare activities. Although she was the first Japanese empress consort to play a public role, she bore no children. However, Emperor Meiji had fifteen children by five official ladies-in-waiting. Only five of his children, a prince born to Lady Naruko (1855 - 1943), the daughter of Yanagiwara Mitsunaru, and four princesses born to Lady Sachiko (1867 - 1947), the eldest daughter of Count Sono Motosachi, lived to adulthood.

Imperial Rescript on Education of the Meiji Emperor

Know ye, Our subjects: Our Imperial Ancestors have founded Our Empire on a basis broad and everlasting and have deeply and firmly implanted virtue; Our subjects ever united in loyalty and filial piety have from generation to generation illustrated the beauty thereof. This is the glory of the fundamental character of Our Empire, and herein also lies the source of Our education. Ye, Our subjects, be filial to your parents, affectionate to your brothers and sisters; as husbands and wives be harmonious, as friends true; bear yourselves in modesty and moderation; extend your benevolence to all; pursue learning and cultivate arts, and thereby develop intellectual faculties and perfect moral powers; furthermore advance public good and promote common interests; always respect the Constitution and observe the laws; should emergency arise, offer yourselves courageously to the State; and thus guard and maintain the prosperity of Our Imperial Throne coeval with heaven and earth. So shall ye not only be Our good and faithful subjects, but render illustrious the best traditions of your forefathers. The Way here set forth is indeed the teaching bequeathed by Our Imperial Ancestors, to be observed alike by Their Descendants and the subjects, infallible for all ages and true in all places.It is Our wish to lay it to heart in all reverence, in common with you, Our subjects, that we may thus attain to the same virtue. The 30th day of the 10th month of the 23rd year of Meiji. (October 30, 1890)

Emperor Meiji was the first Japanese monarch to remain on the throne past the age of fifty since the abdication of Emperor Ōgimachi in 1586. Near the end of his life several anarchists, including Kotoku Shusui, were executed on charges of having conspired to murder the sovereign. This conspiracy was known as the High Treason Incident.

Emperor Meiji died July 30,1912 and was buried in the Fushimi Momoyama Ryo (Graveyard) in Kyoto, his soul being enshrined in Meiji Jingu (Meiji Shrine).

The Waka Poetry of the Emperor Meiji

Emperor Meiji learned from his father and began writing waka poems at the age of eight. During his lifetime he composed approximately 100,000 poems and was known as “Sage of Poetry.” Waka, also called tanka, are very short poems containing thirty-one syllables. The writing of tanka poetry was traditionally called “Shikishima no Michi” (The Way of Shikishima, a poetic name for Japan) and has been practiced for over a thousand years. Hisorically, the writing of waka was promoted by the Imperial Court. Emperor Meiji wrote waka in the course of his daily life rather than as works of art to be appreciated by others, giving them a sincerity and heart-felt expression that touch the heart of the reader. Only about five hundred of Emperor Meiji’s waka have been made public.

For the times to come

And of meeting what must be met

All of our people

Must be taught to walk along

The path of sincerity

PINE In a world of storms Let there be no wavering Of our human hearts; Remain as the pine tree With root sunk deep in stone.

MOUNTAIN High in the sky There can be seen towering A tall mountain, Were one but wish to climb it A path of ascent exists. SUN The morning sun Rise so splendidly Into the sky; Oh,that we could attain Such a clear reviving soul! SKY The spacious sky Spans serene and clear So blue above, Oh, that our soul could grow And become so open! UNIVERSAL BROTHERHOOD It is our hope That all the world's oceans Be joined in peace, So why do the winds and waves Now rise up in angry rage?

translated by Professor Harold Wright, Antioch College, Yellow Springs, Ohio.

Progeny

  • Crown Prince Yoshihito (Haru no miya Yoshihito Shinnō), third son, (August 31, 1879 - December 25, 1926) (later Emperor Taisho)
  • Princess Masako (Tsune no miya Masako Naishinnō), sixth daughter, ( September 30, 1888 - March 8, 1940), titled Tsune no miya (Princess Tsune) until marriage; married at the Imperial Palace, Tokyo, April 30, 1908 to Prince Takeda Tsunehisa (Takeda no miya Tsunehisa ō, September 22, 1882 - April 23, 1919 ), and had issue (offspring).
  • Princess Fusako (Kane no miya Fusako Naishinnō), seventh daughter, (January 28, 1890 - August 11, 1974), titled Kane no miya (Princess Kane) until marriage; married at the Imperial Palace, Tokyo, April 29, 1909 to Prince Kitashirakawa Naruhisa (Kitashirakawa no miya Naruhisa ō, April 1,1887 - April 2, 1923), and had issue.
  • Princess Nobuko (Fumi no miya Nobuko Naishinnō), eighth daughter, (August 7, 1891 - November 3,1933 ); titled Fumi no miya (Princess Fami) until marriage; married at the Imperial Palace, Tokyo May 6, 1909 to Prince Asaka Yasuhiko (Asaka no miya Yasuhiko ō, October 2, 1887 - April 13, 1981 ), and had issue.
  • Princess Toshiko (Yasu no miya Toshiko Naishinnō), ninth daughter, (May 11, 1896 - March 5, 1978 ); titled Yasu no miya (Princess Yasu) until marriage; married at the Imperial Palace, Tokyo May 18 , 1915 to Prince Higashikuni Naruhiko (Higashikuni no miya Naruhiko ô, December 3, 1887 - January 20, 1990 ), and had issue.


References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Jansen, Marius B. (Editor) Emergence of Meiji Japan, The (Cambridge History of Japan S.). Cambridge University Press, 2006
  • Keene, Donald. Emperor of Japan .Columbia University Press, 2002
  • Keene, Donald. Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852-1912. Columbia University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-231-12340-X
  • Sims, Richard. Japanese Political History Since the Meiji Renovation 1868-2000. Palgrave Macmillan, 2001

External links

Preceded by:
Emperor Kōmei
Emperor of Japan
1867-1912
Succeeded by:
Emperor Taishō

da:Meiji-kejseren de:Mutsuhito et:Mutsuhito es:Emperador Meiji fr:Meiji (empereur du Japon) ko:메이지 천황 it:Meiji imperatore del Giappone ka:მუცუჰიტო la:Meidius lt:Meiji mr:मैजी nl:Meiji (keizer) ja:明治天皇 no:Mutsuhito pl:Mutsuhito pt:Meiji do Japão ru:Император Мэйдзи sr:Муцухито fi:Mutsuhito sv:Meiji zh:明治天皇


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