Mori Arinori

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Mori Arinori
Mori Arinori
In this Japanese name, the family name is Mori.

Baron Mori Arinori (森有礼 Mori Arinori?), (23 August 184712 February 1889) was a Meiji period Japanese statesman, diplomat and founder of Japan's modern educational system.

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[edit] Early life

Mori was in the Satsuma domain (modern Kagoshima prefecture from a samurai family, and educated in the Kaisenjo School for Western Learning run by the Satsuma domain. In 1865, he was sent as a student to Great Britain, where he studied western techniques in mathematics, physics and naval surveying. He returned to Japan just after the start of the Meiji Restoration and took on a number of governmental positions within the new Meiji government.

[edit] Meiji statesman

He was the first Japanese ambassador to the United States, from 1871-1873. During his stay in the United States, he became very interested in western methods of education and western social institutions. On his return to Japan, he organized the Meirokusha, Japan’s first modern intellectual society.

Mori was a member of the Meiji Enlightenment movement, and advocated freedom of religion, secular education, equal rights for women (except for voting), international law, and (most drastically), the abandonment of the Japanese language in favor of English.

In 1875, he established the Shoho Koshujo (Japan's first commercial college), the predecessor of Hitotsubashi University. Thereafter, he successively served as ambassador to Qing Dynasty China, Senior Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs, ambassador to Great Britain, member of Sanjiin (legislative advisory council) and Education Ministry official.

He was recruited by Ito Hirobumi to join the first cabinet as Minister of Education and continued in the same post under the Kuroda administration from 1886 to 1889. During this period, he enacted the "Mori Reforms" of Japan's education system, which included six years of compulsory, co-educational schooling, and the creation of high schools for training of a select elite. Under his leadership, the central ministry took greater control over school curriculum and emphasized Neo-Confucian morality and national loyalty in the lower schools while allowing some intellectual freedom in higher education.

He has been denounced by post-World War II liberals as a reactionary who was responsible for Japanese elitist and statist educational system, while he equally condemned by his contemporaries as a radical who imposed unwanted westernization on Japanese society at the expense of Japanese culture and tradition. He was also a known Christian.[1]

Mori was stabbed by an ultranationalist on the very day of promulgation of the Meiji Constitution in 1889, and died the next day. The assassin was outraged by Mori's failure to follow religious protocol during his visit to Ise Shrine two years earlier; for example, Mori did not remove his shoes before entering and pushed aside a sacred veil with a walking stick.[2]

Selected portions of his writings may be found in W.R. Braisted's book Meiroku Zasshi: Journal of the Japanese Enlightenment.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Smith 1997, p. 88
  2. ^ Smith 1997, pp. 87–88

[edit] Further reading

  • Cobbing, Andrew. The Japanese Discovery of Victorian Britain. RoutledgeCurzon, London, 1998. ISBN 1-873410-81-6
  • Hall, Ivan Parker. Mori Arinori. Massachusetts: Harvard University Press, 1973. ISBN 0-674-58730-8.
  • "Mori Arinori, 1847–89: From Diplomat to Statesman", Chapter One, Britain & Japan: Biographical Portraits Volume 4, by Andrew Cobbing, Japan Library 2002. ISBN 1-903350-14-X
  • Smith, Patrick. Japan: A Reinterpretation. New York: Pantheon, 1997. ISBN 0-679-42231-5. pp. 75–106.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Smith 1997, p. 88
  2. ^ Smith 1997, pp. 87–88