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Itō Hirobumi

Prince Itō Hirobumi (伊藤 博文, 16 October 1841 – 26 October 1909) was a Japanese politician and statesman who served as the first Prime Minister of Japan. He was also a leading member of the genrō, a group of senior statesmen that dictated Japanese policy during the Meiji era. He was born as Hayashi Risuke, also known as Hirofumi, Hakubun, and briefly during his youth as Itō Shunsuke.

Not to be confused with Hirofumi Itō.

Itō Hirobumi

Meiji

Meiji

Meiji

Position established

Meiji

Saionji Kinmochi (Acting)

Meiji

Meiji

Kuroda Kiyotaka (Acting)

Meiji

Position established
Tokugawa Yoshinobu (as Shōgun)

Position established

Position established

Himself

Ōkuma Shigenobu

Hayashi Risuke

(1841-10-16)16 October 1841
Tsukari, Suō, Tokugawa shogunate (present-day Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan)

26 October 1909(1909-10-26) (aged 68)
Harbin, Heilongjiang, Qing dynasty

Hirobumi Itō Cemetery, Tokyo, Japan

Itō Umeko (1848–1924)

3 sons, 2 daughters

A London-educated samurai of the Chōshū Domain and a central figure in the Meiji Restoration, Itō Hirobumi chaired the bureau which drafted the Constitution for the newly formed Empire of Japan. Looking to the West for inspiration, Itō rejected the United States Constitution as too liberal and the Spanish Restoration as too despotic. Instead, he drew on British and German models, particularly the Prussian Constitution of 1850. Dissatisfied with Christianity's pervasiveness in European legal precedent, he replaced such religious references with those rooted in the more traditionally Japanese concept of a kokutai or "national polity" which hence became the constitutional justification for imperial authority.


During the 1880s, Itō emerged as the leading figure among the Meiji oligarchy.[2][3][4] By 1885, he became the first Prime Minister of Japan, a position he went on to hold four times (thereby making his tenure one of the longest in Japanese history). Even out of office as the nation's head of government, he continued to wield vast influence over Japan's policies as a permanent imperial adviser, or genkun, and the President of the Emperor's Privy Council. A staunch monarchist, Itō favored a large, all-powerful bureaucracy that answered solely to the Emperor and opposed the formation of political parties. His third term as prime minister was ended in 1898 by the opposition's consolidation into the Kenseitō party, prompting him to found the Rikken Seiyūkai party to counter its rise. In 1901, he resigned his fourth and final ministry upon tiring of party politics.


On the world stage, Itō presided over an ambitious foreign policy. He strengthened diplomatic ties with the Western powers including Germany, the United States and especially the United Kingdom. In Asia, he oversaw the First Sino-Japanese War and negotiated the surrender of China's ruling Qing dynasty on terms aggressively favourable to Japan, including the annexation of Taiwan and the release of Korea from the Chinese Imperial tribute system. While expanding his country's claims in Asia, Itō sought to avoid conflict with the Russian Empire through the policy of Man-Kan kōkan – the proposed surrender of Manchuria to Russia's sphere of influence in exchange for recognition of Japanese hegemony in Korea. However, in a diplomatic visit to Saint Petersburg in November 1901, Itō found Russian authorities completely unreceptive to such terms. Consequently, Japan's incumbent prime minister, Katsura Tarō, elected to abandon the pursuit of Man-Kan kōkan, which resulted in an escalation of tensions culminating in the Russo-Japanese War.


After Japanese forces emerged victorious over Russia, the ensuing Japan–Korea Treaty of 1905 made Itō the first Japanese Resident-General of Korea. He consented to the total annexation of Korea in response to pressure from the increasingly powerful Imperial Army. Shortly thereafter, he resigned as Resident-General in 1909 and assumed office once again as President of the Imperial Privy Council. Four months later, Itō was assassinated by Korean-independence activist and nationalist An Jung-geun in Harbin, Manchuria.[5][6] The annexation process was formalised by another treaty in 1910 which brought Korea under Japanese rule, following year after Itō's death. Through his daughter Ikuko, Itō was the father-in-law of politician, intellectual and author Suematsu Kenchō.

A portrait of Itō Hirobumi was on the obverse of the Series C from 1963 until a new series was issued in 1984.

1,000 yen note

The publishing company takes its name from Hakubun, an alternate pronunciation of Itō's given name.

Hakubunkan

Hayashi family

Count (7 July 1884)

Marquess (5 August 1895)

Prince (21 September 1907)

Japanese students in Britain

(1998). The Iwakura Mission to America and Europe: A New Assessment. Richmond, Surrey: Japan Library. ISBN 9781873410844. OCLC 40410662.

Nish, Ian

Edward, I. "Japan's Decision to Annex Taiwan: A Study of Itō-Mutsu Diplomacy, 1894–95". Journal of Asian Studies 37#1 (1977): 61–72.

Hamada Kengi (1936). Prince Ito. Tokyo: Sanseido Co.

Johnston, John T.M. (1917). World Patriots. New York: World Patriots Co.

Kusunoki Sei'ichirō (1991). Nihon shi omoshiro suiri: Nazo no satsujin jiken wo oe. Tokyo: Futami bunko.

Ladd, George T. (1908).

In Korea with Marquis Ito

Nakamura Kaju (1910). [ Prince Ito: The Man and the Statesman: A Brief History of His Life. New York: Japanese-American commercial weekly and Anraku Pub. Co.

https://archive.org/details/princeitomanand00nakagoog

Palmer, Frederick (1901). "Marquis Ito: The Great Man of Japan". Scribner’s Magazine 30(5), 613–621.

at Internet Archive

Works by or about Itō Hirobumi

Ideas about how to teach about Ito Hirobumi in a K–12 classroom

About Japan: A Teacher's Resource

. Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.

"Ito, Hirobumi, Prince" 

in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

Newspaper clippings about Itō Hirobumi