Itagaki Taisuke

For information on the warrior woman, see Itagaki
In this Japanese name, the family name is Itagaki.
Itagaki Taisuke
Born (1837-05-21)May 21, 1837
Tosa Domain, Japan
Died July 16, 1919(1919-07-16) (aged 82)
Nationality Japanese
Occupation Politician, Cabinet Minister

Count Itagaki Taisuke (板垣 退助, 21 May 1837 – 16 July 1919) was a Japanese politician and leader of the Freedom and People's Rights Movement (自由民権運動 Jiyū Minken Undō), which evolved into Japan's first political party. His image is on Japan's 1953 100-yen banknote.

Biography

Early life

Jinshotai (From the left in the bottom row: Ban Gondayu, Itagaki Taisuke, Tani Otoi (young boy), Yamaji Motoharu. From the left in the middle row: Tani Shigeki (Sinbei), Tani Tateki (Moribe), Yamada Kiyokado (Heizaemon), Yoshimoto Sukekatsu (Heinosuke). From the left in the top row: Kataoka Masumitsu (Kenkichi), Manabe Masayoshi (Kaisaku), Nishiyama Sakae, Kitamura Shigeyori (Chobei), Beppu Hikokuro.)

Itagaki Taisuke was born into a middle-ranking samurai family in Tosa Domain, (present day Kōchi Prefecture), After studies in Kōchi and in Edo, he was appointed as sobayonin (councillor) to Tosa daimyo Yamauchi Toyoshige, and was in charge of accounts and military matters at the domain's Edo residence in 1861. He disagreed with the domain’s official policy of kōbu gattai (reconciliation between the Imperial Court and the Tokugawa shogunate), and in 1867-1868, he met with Saigō Takamori of the Satsuma Domain, and agreed to pledge Tosa's forces in the effort to overthrow the Shogun in the upcoming Meiji Restoration. During the Boshin War, he emerged as the leading political figure from Tosa domain, and claimed a place in the new Meiji government after the Tokugawa defeat.

Meiji statesman to liberal agitator

"Advocacy of a punitive expedition to Korea"(1877 painting by Suzuki Toshimoto)
When Itagaki Taisuke was attacked by a thug in Gifu, he said "Itagaki may die, but liberty never!"

Itagaki was appointed a Councilor of State in 1869, and was involved in several key reforms, such as the abolition of the han system in 1871. As a sangi (councillor), he ran the government temporarily during the absence of the Iwakura Mission.

However, Itagaki resigned from the Meiji government in 1873 over disagreement with the government's policy of restraint toward Korea (Seikanron) and, more generally, in opposition to the Chōshū-Satsuma domination of the new government.

In 1874, together with Gotō Shōjirō of Tosa and Etō Shimpei and Soejima Taneomi of Hizen, he formed the Aikoku Kōtō (Public Party of Patriots), declaring, "We, the thirty millions of people in Japan are all equally endowed with certain definite rights, among which are those of enjoying and defending life and liberty, acquiring and possessing property, and obtaining a livelihood and pursuing happiness. These rights are by Nature bestowed upon all men, and, therefore, cannot be taken away by the power of any man." This anti-government stance appealed to the discontented remnants of the samurai class and the rural aristocracy (who resented centralized taxation) and peasants (who were discontented with high prices and low wages). Itagaki's involvement in liberalism lent it political legitimacy in Japan, and he became a leader of the push for democratic reform.

Itagaki and his associations created a variety of organizations to fuse samurai ethos with western liberalism and to agitate for a national assembly, written constitution and limits to arbitrary exercise of power by the government. These included the Risshisha (Self-Help Movement) and the Aikokusha (Society of Patriots) in 1875. After funding issues led to initial stagnation, the Aikokusha was revived in 1878 and agitated with increasing success as part of the Freedom and People's Rights Movement. The Movement drew the ire of the government and its supporters. In 1882, Itagaki was almost assassinated by a right-wing militant, to whom he allegedly said, "Itagaki may die, but liberty never!"[1]

Leadership of the Liberal Party

Government leaders met at the Osaka Conference of 1875, enticing Itagaki to return as a sangi (councilor): however, he resigned after a couple of months to oppose what he viewed as excessive concentration of power in the Genrōin.

Itagaki created the Liberal Party (Jiyuto) together with Numa Morikazu in 1881, which, along with the Rikken Kaishintō, led the nationwide popular discontent of 1880-1884. During this period, a rift developed in the movement between the lower class members and the aristocratic leadership of the party. Itagaki became embroiled in controversy when he took a trip to Europe believed by many to have been funded by the government. The trip turned out to have been provided by the Mitsui Company, but suspicions that Itagaki was being won over to the government side persisted. Consequently, radical splinter groups proliferated, undermining the unity of the party and the Movement. Itagaki was offered the title of Count (Hakushaku) in 1884, as the new peerage system known as kazoku was formed, but he accepted only on the condition that the title not be passed on to his heirs.

The Liberal Party dissolved itself on 20 October 1884. It was reestablished shortly before the opening of the Imperial Diet in 1890 as the Rikken Jiyūtō.

In April 1896, Itagaki joined the second Itō administration as Home Minister. In 1898, Itagaki joined with Ōkuma Shigenobu of the Shimpotō to form the Kenseitō, and Japan's first party government. Ōkuma became Prime Minister, and Itagaki continued serving as Home Minister. The Cabinet collapsed after four months of squabbling between the factions, demonstrating the immaturity of parliamentary democracy at the time in Japan. Itagaki retired from public life in 1900 and spent the rest of his days writing. He died of natural causes in 1919.

1868
(31 years old)
1880
(44 years old)
about 1886
(about 50 years old)
about 1896
(about 60 years old)
about 1906
(about 70 years old)

Legacy

On the old 50-sen note
On the old 100-yen note

Itagaki is credited as being the first Japanese party leader and an important force for liberalism in Meiji Japan. He was elevated to the peerage posthumously, and given the rank of hakushaku (count).

His portrait has appeared on the 50-sen and 100-yen banknotes issued by the Bank of Japan.

Family crest of Itagaki clan

Jigurobishi
Kayanouchi Jumonji
Tosa kiri

Genealogy

In this house, Edo period was a samurai in the Tosa clan from generation to generation. Knight(senior samurai).[2] Original Itagaki used "Jiguro-bishi (Kage-hanabishi)" for the family crest with Takeda of the effect for the same family.[3] However, Inui used "Kayanouchi Jumonji"(Aduchi Period - Meiji Period), "Tosa Kiri"(Meiji Period - now).[4]

 ∴Itagaki Suruganokami
Nobukata
 ┃
 ┣━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┳━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┓
 ┃Itagaki Yajiro       ┃Sakayori Seizaburo       ┃Ozo(Itagaki) Nobuyasu's wife
Nobunori                     Masamitsu                 woman
 ┃
 ┃
 ┃Inui Kahei
Masanobu
 ┃
 ┃
 ┃Inui Kinemon
Masayuki
 ┃
 ┣━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┳━━━━━━━━┓
 ┃Inui Yosobei                         ┃Inui Ichirobei┃Inui Gengoro
Masasuke                            Masanao       Tomomasa
 ┃                                ┃
 ┣━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━┓              ┃
 ┃Inui Shoemonnojyo        ┃Inui Jyujiro       ┃Inui Shichirozaemon
Masakata              unknown           Masafusa
 ┃                 ┃              ┃
 ┣━━━━━━┓          ┃              ┃
 ┃Inui Kasuke┃Inui Yosozaemon  ┃Inui Tosuke        ┃Inui Yagobei
unknown    Masakiyo      unknown           Yoshikatsu
        ┃                         ┃
 ┏━━━━━━╋━━━━━━━┳━━━━━━━━┓        ┣━━━━━━━━┓
 ┃Inui Kasuke┃Inui Dainojyo┃Nakayama Uhyoe┃Inui Shirodayu┃Inui Ichirobei┃Inui Seijiro
Naotake     Naotsuru    Hidenobu     Tsurumasa   Masahide      Masanaru
 ┃                                ┃
 ┃                                ┃
 ┃Inui Jyoemon                         ┃Inui Takubei
Masaakira                         	Masatoshi
 ┃                                ┃
 ┣━━━━━━━━━┓                      ┣━━━━━━━━┓
 ┃Inui Shoemon  ┃Nomoto Kume                ┃Inui Sahachi   ┃Motoyama Hikoya
Nobutake      Nobuteru                  Masaharu      Shigeyoshi
 ┃                                ┃
 ┣━━━━━━━━━┓                      ┣━━━━━━━┓
 ┃Inui Eiroku   ┃                      ┃Inui Yotaro  ┃Inui Ichirobei
Masashige      woman                   Masakatsu    Masahiro
 ┃                                        ┃
 ┣━━━━━━━━━┳━━━━━━┳━━┳━━┓                 ┃
 ┃Itagaki Taisuke ┃Inui Kume ┃  ┃  ┃                 ┃Inui
Masakata      unknown    woman woman woman              Seishi
 ┃                                        ┃
 ┣━━━━┳━━━━┳━━━━━┳━━━━┳━━━┳━━┳━┳━┳━━━━┓   ┣━━━┳━━┓
 ┃Itagaki┃Inui   ┃Araki   ┃Itagaki ┃Inui ┃    ┃  ┃  ┃      ┃     ┃Inui ┃    ┃
Hokotaro  Seishi  Magozaburo Masami Muichi Hyo Gun Yen Chiyoko Ryoko Ichiro Miyoshi Cho
 ┃                                        ┃
 ┣━━━━┳━━━━━┳━━━━━┓                       ┃
 ┃Itagaki┃Yamanouchi┃Itagaki ┃Ozaki                     ┃Takaoka
Takeo   Morimasa  Syokan   Tadashi                    Mariko
      ┃     ┃
      ┃     ┣━━━━┳━━━━┓
      ┃     ┃Akiyama┃Itagaki┃Itagaki
     woman    Noriko  Taitaro Naomaro
                      ┃
                 ┏━━━━┫
                 ┃    ┃
                woman   man
Source
"Kai Kokushi". Matsudaira Sadayoshi. 1814. Japan.(Aduchi-Momoyama period part)
"Kwansei-choshu Shokafu". Hotta Masaatsu, Hayashi jyussai. 1799. Japan.(Aduchi-Momoyama period part)
"Osamuraichu Senzogaki-keizucho"(Edo period part)

Family

Notes

  1. Jansen, Marius (2000). The Making of Modern Japan, p. 381.
  2. Tosa-han(official document) Japan(1826). Osamuraichu Senzogaki-keizucho. Kochi prefectural library, Japan.
  3. Takakuwa Komakichi, Yoda Kiichiro, Narikawa Eijiro. Koutei-zoho Azumakagami. Dainippontosho, Japan(1896).
  4. Taisuke Itagaki's grave. Sinagawa, Tokyo, Japan.

References

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Political offices
Preceded by
Yoshikawa Akimasa
Home Minister
14 April 1896 – 20 September 1896
Succeeded by
Kabayama Sukenori
Preceded by
Yoshikawa Akimasa
Home Minister
30 June 1898 – 8 November 1898
Succeeded by
Saigō Tsugumichi
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