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Triumph of the Peace Party in Japan in 1873
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2011
Extract
The first major schism to rend the inner core of the ruling group which had been in control in Japan since the Restoration in 1868, occurred in 1873 through differences of opinion over the proposal to send an expedition to Korea. For several years previous to 1873 there had been a growing demand, particularly on the part of the ex-samurai group, to make war on Korea. The dynamics, in this case, were neither obscure nor occult; they simply represented another example of the intimate relation which often exists between domestic policy and foreign policy.
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References
1 Herbert Norman, E., Japan's emergerne as a modern state (New York: Institute Pacific Relations, 1940), especially pp. 81–85.Google Scholar
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32 The government could not execute what it had decided because it was bound by a written agreement not to undertake major changes without Iwakura's approval. Article 2 required that the Iwakura mission and the stay-at-home members mutually report important incidents; article 5 provided that internal changes be avoided until after the return of the mission, and that if by any chance reforms were necessary, they must first ask Iwakura by letter. The complete text of this agreement is given in Tokutomi [chirō, op. cit., pp. 274–75.
33 Ichirō, Tokutomi, op. cit., p. 305.Google ScholarIdditti, Smimasa (op. cit., p. 155)Google Scholar however says that Sanjō reserved the right to submit the cabinet's opinion to the Emperor pending the return of Iwakura. Essentially the same view is presented in Uyehara, George Etsujiro, The political development of Japan (London, 1910), p. 74.Google ScholarHamada, Genji in his Prince lio (Tokyo, 1936), p. 68Google Scholar says the Saigō bloc had secured a tentative approval to dispatch an expedition to Korea.
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38 Ibid., p. 306.
39 Ibid., pp. 306–07. Hamada, Gengi (op. cit., pp. 68–69)Google Scholar says: When finally the Emperor gave his decision, it was to reverse his earlier one: the conquest of Korea was ordered abandoned.”
40 Ariga, Nagao, op. cit., p. 167Google Scholar, Dennett, Tyler, op. cit., p. 442Google Scholar, also Akagi, R. N., Japon's foreign relations, 1542–1936 (Tokyo, 1936), p. 116.Google Scholar
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