Everything about Kuroda Kiyotaka totally explained
Count, (
16 October 1840 -
23 August 1900), also known as
Kuroda Ryōsuke (黒田 了介), was a
Japanese
politician of the
Meiji era, and the second
Prime Minister of Japan from
30 April 1888 to
25 October 1889.
Biography
As a Satsuma samurai
Kuroda was born to a
samurai-class family serving the
Shimazu daimyo of
Kagoshima,
Satsuma domain in
Kyūshū.
In 1862, Kuroda was involved in the
Namamugi Incident, in which
Satsuma retainers killed a British national who refused to bow down to the
daimyo's procession. This led to the
Anglo-Satsuma War in 1863, which Kuroda played an active role. Immediately after the war, he went to
Edo where he studied gunnery.
Returning to Satsuma, Kuroda became an active member of the
Satsuma-Chōshū joint effort to overthrow the
Tokugawa shogunate. Later, as a military leader in the
Boshin War, he became famous for sparing the life of
Enomoto Takeaki, who had stood against Kuroda's army at the
Battle of Hakodate.
Political and Diplomatic Career
Under the new
Meiji government, Kuroda became a pioneer-diplomat to
Karafuto, claimed by both Japan and
Russia in 1870. Terrified of Russia's push eastward, Kuroda returned to Tokyo and advocated quick development and settlement of Japan's northern frontier. In 1871 he traveled to
Europe and the
United States for five months, and upon returning to Japan in 1872, he was put in charge of colonization efforts in
Hokkaidō.
In 1874, Kuroda was named director of the
Hokkaidō Colonization Office, and organized a colonist-militia scheme to settle the island with unemployed ex-
samurai and retired soldiers who would serve as both farmers and as a local militia. He was also promoted to
lieutenant general in the
Imperial Japanese Army. Kuroda invited
agricultural experts from overseas countries with a similar climate to visit Hokkaidō, and to provide advice on what crops and production methods might be successful.
Kuroda was dispatched as an envoy to
Korea in 1875, and negotiated the
Treaty of Ganghwa in 1876. In 1877, he was sent as part of the force to suppress the
Satsuma Rebellion. In
1878, he became leader of
Satsuma domain following the assassination of
Okubo Toshimichi.
Shortly before he left office in Hokkaidō, Kuroda became the central figure in the Hokkaidō Colonization Office Scandal of 1881. As part of the government's privatization program, Kuroda attempted to sell the assets of the Hokkaidō Colonization Office to a trading consortium created by some of his former Satsuma colleagues for a nominal price. When the terms of the sale were leaked to the press, the resultant public outrage caused the sale to fall through. Also in 1881, Kuroda's wife died of a
lung disease, but on rumors that Kuroda had killed her in a drunken rage, the body was exhumed and examined. Kuroda was cleared of charges, but rumors of his problems with
alcohol abuse persisted.
Kuroda was appointed
Minister of Agriculture and Commerce in 1887.
Prime Minister
Kuroda Kiyotaka became the 2nd
Prime Minister of Japan, after
Itō Hirobumi in 1888. During his term, he oversaw the promulgation of the
Meiji Constitution. However, the vexing issue of Japan's inability to secure revision of the
unequal treaties created considerable controversy. After drafts of proposed revisions drawn up his foreign minister
Okuma Shigenobu became public in 1889, Kuroda was forced to resign.
Later life
Kuroda served as
Minister of Communications in 1892 under the 2nd Ito Cabinet. In 1895 he became a
genrō, and chairman of the
Privy Council. He died of a
brain hemorrhage in 1900.
References
- Austin, Michael R. Negotiating with Imperialism: The Unequal Treaties and the Culture of Japanese Diplomacy. Harvard University Press (2006). ISBN 0-674-02227-0
- Jansen, Marius B. Emergence of Meiji Japan, The (Cambridge History of Japan). Cambridge University Press (2006). ISBN 0-521-48405-7
- Jansen, Marius B. The Making of Modern Japan. Belknap Press; New Ed edition (October 15, 2002). ISBN 0-674-00991-6
- Keane, Donald. Emperor Of Japan: Meiji And His World, 1852-1912. Columbia University Press (2005). ISBN 0-231-12341-8
- Sims, Richard. Japanese Political History Since the Meiji Renovation 1868-2000. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0-312-23915-7
Further Information
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