Read Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852’1912 Online
Authors: Donald Keene
Tags: #History/Asia/General
rangakusha
(scholars of Dutch learning)
ranjatai
(ancient log of incense wood)
Red Flag incident
Redesdale, Lord.
See
Mitford A. B.
Reed, Edward James
regalia, imperial
Reigen, Emperor
reign-name.
See neng
ō
Reizei Tametada (court poet)
religion.
See also
Buddhism; Christianity; Shint
ō
Repeated Victories on Land and Sea, the Glorious Rising-Sun Flag
(kabuki play)
republican government
Rescript on Education
(Motoda)
Residency General
retinues, size of
revenue bill
revolts; against Meiji Restoration; led by Enomoto; by peasants; Shinp
ū
ren; Tonghak
rice
Richardson, Charles
rickshaw coolies
“righteous army” (Korea)
Rikken jiy
ū
-t
ō
.
See
Jiy
ū
-t
ō
Rikken kai shint
ō
(Constitutional Reform Party)
Rikken seiy
ū
kai.
See
Seiy
ū
kai
Rikken teiseit
ō
(Constitutional Imperial Rule Party)
Rinn
ō
jinomiya.
See
Yoshihisa Prince
Risshi-sha (Self-Help Society)
rituals.
See
ceremonies and rituals
roads
Roches, Léon (French minister to Japan): and Yoshinobu; on Meiji’s education; and shogunate; response of, to killing of French sailors; audience of, with Meiji
Rockhill, William H.
Rokumeikan (residence for foreign guests)
Roosevelt, Theodore: friendship message to Meiji from; hatred of Russians; meetings of with Kaneko; as mediator in Russo-Japanese War; recommendation of for invasion of Sakhalin; awarding of Nobel Peace Prize to; message to Takahira from
Rosen, Baroness
Rosen, Roman (Russian minister to Japan); and negotiations with Japan; knowledge of Japanese troop movements; on world opinion against Russia; on Meiji
Rösler, K. F. H.
Russia: trade with; fleet of; treaties with; encampment on Tsushima Islands; Meiji on; and China; and Sino-Japanese War; and Korea; agreement with Japan secret provisions of; Far East policy of and Anglo-Japanese Alliance; military strength of; administration of territories in Far East; attack of on British trawlers; unpopularity of Russo-Japanese War in; Japanese agents in; as prime hypothetical enemy.
See also
Putiatin E. V.; Russo-Japanese War; Sakhalin
Russian Socialist Party
Russification
Russo-Japanese War;
Ō
tsu incident as precursor to; causes of; actions and negotiations before outbreak of; Japan’s preparations for; declarations of; treatment of Russian prisoners of war during; defeat of Russian fleet in; Meiji’s involvement in; and Meiji’s rescript on naval victory; peace negotiations during; Japan’s objectives for; protests against peace treaty, in Japan; and Britain; repercussions of Japan’s victory in; war fever during
Russo-Japanese War Poem A
(Oakley)
Ry
ō
jo (chief abbot of Kakush
ō
-in)
Ry
ū
ky
ū
Islands
Ry
ū
ky
ū
kingdom (
later
domain)
Sabatin Alexander
Sachi no i (Sachi’s Well, Well of Good Fortune)
Sachiko, Princess
Sachinomiya.
See
Meiji
Sadaedang (Serving the Great Party)
Sadamaro, Prince (Yorihito)
Sadanaru, Prince
Saegusa Shigeru
Saeki Riichir
ō
Saga Castle
Saga rebellion
Sagara Nagaoki (major)
Saig
ō
Takamori (army minister,
later
interior minister): and Sanj
ō
’s exile; and Ch
ō
sh
ū
domain; and shogunate; at meeting on government reform; as commander of imperial forces; and Katsu; at surrender of Edo Castle; advocacy of
haihan chiken
by; and Ministry of the Imperial Household; on Meiji’s Westernized dress; and Household Guards; on Korea; and Et
ō
on actions against native Taiwanese; and China; opposition of to government; private schools founded by; and Satsuma Rebellion; and Meiji; last stand of; mission of to
Ō
kuma; posthumous promotion of; and new cabinet; as interior minister; and revenue bill; treatment of for corpulence; exalted reputation of; students as troops under.
See also
Kagoshima: army of
VIEWS:
on clash between shogunate and imperial armies; on changes in imperial household; on Meiji’s “mission” to distant parts of Japan; on sending troops to Korea; on maneuvers; on government assassination plot; on emperor’s rule
Saig
ō
Tsugumichi (Takamori’s younger brother, interior minister)
Saikoku risshi hen
(Self-Help; Smiles)
Sa’in (legislative branch of government).
See also
House of Peers; House of Representatives
Saionji Kinmochi (minister to Austria,
later
minister to Germany,
later
prime minister); suggestion of, for Meiji’s trip to West; and revised treaty; mission of to Korea; as acting prime minister; on financial retrenchment bill; and Meiji’s acceptance of Order of the Garter; cabinet of; as holder of simultaneous government posts; resignation of
Sakai (publisher)
Sakai Tadaaki (shogunate official)
Sakai Toshihiko
Sakamoto Ry
ō
ma (Tosa intellectual)
saké
Sakhalin: border dispute over; treaty settling possession of; prospects of Japanese invasion of; Russia’s ownership of; Russia’s cession of southern half of; decoration for boundary stone on
Sakuma Sh
ō
zan (Confucian scholar)
samurai: lowered prestige of; impact of
haihan chiken
on; as backbone of intelligentsia; as chamberlains; as observers of Franco-Prussian War; predicament of; Meiji’s first visit to house of; stipends for; unrest among; resentment of modernization among; of Akizuki; of Kumamoto desertion to Saig
ō
’s army; plan of for
Ō
kubo’s assassination; political influence of; Sanj
ō
on; loss of morality among; welcome for czarevitch by; as class Meiji on
San Francisco
Sanj
ō
Sanetomi (imperial envoy,
later
vice president); mission of to shogunate; and Meiji; actions against; debate over fate of; on Christians; at Charter Oath ceremonies; as chief editor of history of Japan; as minister of the right; at proclamation of
haihan chiken
; and Korea; nervous breakdown suffered by; bulletin of, to commanding officers in Saga; Shimazu’s attack on; at n
ō
performance; and
Ō
yama Tsunayoshi; at strategy meetings; message of, to Ry
ū
ky
ū
high officials; description of; and sale of government properties; and Yamagata’s proposal on constitution; consideration of Kuroda as minister of the right by; as interim prime minister; death of; and Hoshi
VIEWS:
on Meiji’s leaving T
ō
ky
ō
on Meiji’s second visit to east; on Korean incident; on Shinp
ū
ren revolt; on constitutional government; on avoidance of war with China; on proposal for Shint
ō
agency
Sanj
ō
Sanetsumu (military liaison officer)
Sank
ō
-ji faction
Sansom, George
Sasaki Nobutsuna
Sasaki Sadako
Sasaki Takayuki (councillor); abolition of office of; and Meiji; proposal of for Shint
ō
agency; diaries of; and princesses; and Ozaki’s dismissal
VIEWS:
on Meiji’s assumption of personal rule; on financial crisis; on changes to court protocol; on cabinet collapse; on Kuroda as minister of the right; on treaty revision; on Meiji’s taking advice from court women; on regulations on public gatherings
Sasamori Gisuke (samurai)
Sassa Masayuki
Satow, Ernest: on K
ō
mei’s final illness; on Yoshinobu’s decision to cede power to court; visit of to Ky
ō
to; on killing of French sailors; on
seppuku
; attack on; on Parkes; on decline of Edo; on draft constitutions
Satsuma domain: as intermediary between emperor and shogunate; British battle with; alliance of with Ch
ō
sh
ū
domain; pact of with Tosa domain; Meiji’s review of troops from;
r
ō
nin
’s actions in Edo; Kido on; and politicians’ actions against
Ō
kuma; councillors from; domination of police force by; men’s role in government of
Satsuma Rebellion; prelude to; first clash of; and Meiji; entrance of Kagoshima troops into Kumamoto during; first shots of; objective of; government army’s first victory in; destruction caused by; aftermath of; influence of on Risshi-sha
Satte, Meiji’s visit to
Sawa Nobumoto (chamberlain)
scenery
schools: Meiji’s visits to; elementary; private; agricultural; organization of system for; Meiji’s gifts to
Scidmore, Eliza Ruhamah
Second Japan Socialist Party Congress
Security Police Law
seii taish
ō
gun
(great general and subduer of barbarians)
“Seikan no eki” (The Battle of Song-hwan; Meiji)
Seikan-t
ō
(political party)
Seiy
ū
kai (political party)
Self-Defense Unit (Korea)
Senate.
See
Genr
ō
-in
Sench
ū
hassaku
(Eight Proposals Composed Aboard Ship; Sakamoto)
Senny
ū
-ji (Shingon temple)
Seoul, Korea
seppuku
.
See also junshi
Setch
ū
bai
(Plum Blossoms in the Snow; Suchiro)
settlement houses
sett
ō
(ceremonial sword)
Shafuhen
(The Ricksha Man;
Ō
numa)
Shakai minsh
ū
-t
ō
(Social-Democratic Party)
Shantung Province, China
Shiba Shir
ō
(adviser to Miura)
Shiga Naoya
Shigeko, Princess (Umenomiya)
shih
ō
hai
(ceremony of worship of the four directions)
Shima Yoshitake (Saga samurai)
Shimada Ichir
ō
Shimada Sakon
Shimazu Hisamitsu (adviser to cabinet,
later
minister of the left): action of against rebels; K
ō
mei’s desire of support from; and Et
ō
; hostility of toward government; as spokesman for antiforeign partisans; attack on Sanj
ō
Sanetomi by; austerity plan of
Shimazu Mochihisa (daimyo of Satsuma)
Shimazu Nariakira (daimyo of Satsuma)
Shimazu Tadakuni
Shimazu Tadayoshi (daimyo of Satsuma)
Shimoda
Shimogamo Shrine
Shimo-ina district
Shimotsu Ky
ū
ya
Shimpo-t
ō
(political party)
Shinagawa Yajir
ō
(interior minister)
Shinohara Kunimoto
shinpei
(volunteer soldiers)
Shinp
ū
ren (Keishin-t
ō
, political party)
Shinsengumi (elite swordsmen)
Shinsh
ū
Band (anarchist group)
Shint
ō
: priesthood of; separation of from Buddhism; Meiji’s relationship with; proposal for government agency on; effects of revival of
Shintomi Theater
Shirakami Genjir
ō
(army private)
Shirakawa Sukenori (head of Office of Shint
ō
Worship)
Shishinden (Hall for State Ceremonies)
Shizuko, Princess
Sh
ō
Hitsu (Tai’s younger brother)
Sh
ō
In (Tai’s second son)
Sh
ō
Tai (king of Ry
ū
ky
ū
kingdom): on relations with Japan; audience of, with Meiji; and China; forced removal of; and abolition of Ry
ū
ky
ū
; illness of; in Yokohama; treatment of in exile