Japanese Modernization Tokugawa Japan • Independent country • 1630’s expelled all foreigners • Dutch allowed access to Nagasaki port.

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Transcript Japanese Modernization Tokugawa Japan • Independent country • 1630’s expelled all foreigners • Dutch allowed access to Nagasaki port.

Japanese
Modernization
Tokugawa Japan
• Independent
country
• 1630’s expelled
all foreigners
• Dutch allowed
access to
Nagasaki port
Gunboat Diplomacy
1853
• President Filmore sends
Matthew Perry to
negotiate trade treaties
– Why? They want to resupply and repair ships
and it is a strategic location
– He brings his warships
What did the U S want?
• Coaling stations
• More trading
partners
• Open trade
ports
• A haven for
ship-wrecked
sailors
Treaty of Kanagawa
1854
• Shogun signs because of American
show of strength
• Established treaty port
• Established consulates
• By 1860, Britain, Russia, France,
and the Netherlands
• Tokugawa ends isolation
Japan Learns a Lesson
• In 1862, just before the start of the Meiji
period, Tokugawa sent officials and
scholars to China to study the situation
there. A Japanese recorded in his diary
from Shanghai…
• The Chinese have become servants to the
foreigners. Sovereignty may belong to
China but in fact it's no more than a colony
of Great Britain and France.
Civil War in Japan
• Treaty results
– Some seeing it as a sign of weakness of the
Shogun
– Others want modernization
• 1860’s
– Economic hardships
– Increased prices
– Peasant protests
• Shoguns want to keep old ways
• Royalists want to see emperor restored to
power
• Highly idealistic samurai who felt that the
arrival of Westerners was an attack on the
traditional values of Japan.
• They believed that:
• Japan was sacred ground.
• The emperor, now a figurehead in
Kyoto, was a God
• Were furious at the Shogun for signing
treaties with the West.
• Their slogan  Revere the Emperor,
Expel the Barbarians!
• Japan emerges a more centralized state
The Shogunate is Overthrown
The last Shogun Tokugawa Yoshinobu
Meiji Restoration
1868-1912
• End of Shogunate and privileges of
samurai
• Emperor Mutsuhito takes throne
– 15 years old
– Rules for 45 years
– Meiji means Enlightened Rule
– Modernization needed
• Choose your own occupation
Land
Redistribution
Abolish
Feudal
System
Written
Constitution
Westernize
Schools
Meiji
Reforms
Modern
Banking
System
Japan took 35
years what took
Britain 150 years
to achieve
Modernize
Army
Modern
Navy
Industrialize
Emperor
Worship
Intensifies
Economic/Industrial changes..
• Catch up with the “West”
• Missions to find the “Best”
• By 1900—foundations in place for
light industry, heavy industry, and
transportation
• Zaibatsu—powerful families in banking
and industry who controlled the
factories
Social Changes
• Social classes gone
• Compulsory education
• Adopt western styles
Rulers wear Western Dress
Emperor Meiji
Empress
Haruko
(1868- 1912)
Political Changes
• Draft instituted—
modern army
• Centralized
government
• Constitution
• Diet=legislative
assembly
– Modeled after
Germany’s government
Selective “Borrowing”
• Popular board game
• Start by leaving
Japan and studying in
various Western
capitals
• End by returning to
Japan and becoming a
prominent government
official
• Japan became an imperialist power in
the 1890’s as industrialization created
new needs:
– Food sources
– Outlets for surplus population
– Raw materials
– Demand for coal,
iron, etc.
– Markets
– Honor [nationalism]
Sino-Japanese War
1894-1895
• Korea claimed by China prior to war
• Uprisings in Korea
• Japan wanted privileges there
• Tensions escalate into war
• Japan defeats China with its
westernized army
– Japan acquires Taiwan
– Japan gains Sphere of Influence over
Korea
Russo-Japanese War
1904
• Over rights to Liaotung
Peninsula
• Japanese victory
– Uses surprise attack
• 1st time an Asian nation
defeated a European nation
• Establishes Japan as a
power to be dealt with
• Treaty of Portsmouth
• Nicholas II see
demonstrations at home after
defeat
Japan Annexes Korea 1910
America Becomes Competition
U. S. Fleet
Japan continues to Grow