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Iwakura Tomomi (岩倉 具視 October 26, 1825- July 20, 1883) was a statesman who played an important role in the Meiji restoration, influencing opinions of the Imperial Court.
He was born in Kyoto as the second son of a courtier and nobleman ( kuge) Horikawa (堀川康親). In 1836 he was adopted by another nobleman, Iwakura Tomoyasu (岩倉具康). He was trained by the kampaku in those day Takatsukasa (鷹司政通) and wrote the opinion for the imperial Court reformation. In 1954 he was appointed to a chamberlain of the Emperor Komei.
Like other courtiers in Kyoto, Iwakura opposed the Shogunate's plans to open Japan to foreign countries. When Hotta Masamune, a RojuRoju is the highest ranking government official in charge of political affairs of the Tokugawa shogunate. of the Shogunate came to Kyoto to get the imperial permission to sign the treaty between Japan and the U.S.A. in 1858Events January 14 Felice Orsini and his accomplices fail to assassinate Napoleon III in Paris but their bombs kill 156 bystanders. Because of the involvement of French emigres living in Britain, there is a brief anti-British feeling in France but the empe, Iwakura gathered courtiers who opposed the treaty and attempted to hinder this negotiation between the Shogunate and the Court. But in those days his political thought put importance on the alliance of those two political powers. After TairoTairo (, lit. great elder") was an official in the bakuhan taisei government of Japan, who would preside over the governing roju in the event of an emergency. The tairo was nominated from among a group of samurai families who had supported Tokugawa Ieyasu Ii NaosukeIi Naosuke (, 1815 March 3, 1860) was Tairo of Japan from April 23, 1858 until his death. He is most famous for signing the Harris Treaty with the United States, granting ports and extraterritoriality to American merchants and seamen. He was born as the f was assasinated in 1860Events March 6 Abraham Lincoln speaks against slavery in New Haven, Connecticut April 3 The Pony Express makes its first run. May 9 The Constitutional Union Party holds its convention and nominates John Bell for President of the United States. May 13 Batt, Iwakura took initiatives Kobugattai, alliance of the Court and the Shogunate. The central policy of this alliance was the marriage of the Shogun Tokugawa IemochiTokugawa Iemochi ( ; 1846 1866) was the 14th shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan, who held office 1858 to 1866. Iesada Iesada Iesada. and Princess Kazunomiya (Princess Sadako), the sister of the Emperor Komei. Samurai who were against the Shogunate and its opening diplomatic policy saw Iwakura as a supporter of the Shogunate and put pressure on the Court to expel him. As a result Iwakura left the Court and moved to Iwakura, north of Kyoto.
In Iwakura he wrote many opinions and sent them to the Court or his political companions in Satsuma hanThe Han were the fiefs of feudal clans of Japan that existed during all the Edo period and for a few years after the Meiji Restoration. The number of han varied; typically, there were around 300 han in the Edo period. Most han were led by a daimyo with an. In 1866 when the Shogun Iemochi died, Iwakura attempted to have the Court seize political initiative. He tried to gather daimyos under the name of the Court but failed. When the Emperor Komei died the next year, there was a rumor Iwakura had plotted to murder emperor with poison, but he escaped arrest.
In 1867 he worked mainly for the proclamation of the Emperor Meiji to renew the politics of Japan. It was the start of the Meiji restoration. He made Tokugawa Yoshinobu resign the honorific title and offices at the Court and made him give back all his domain to the Court. It became a reason for the Boshin War, because many of those who served the Shogunate disappoved the decision of Yoshinobu who accpted all those demands from the Court.
During the Meiji restoration he stepped up the carriers of the new government. In 1871, he became minister of state of Japan, and in the same year set out on a two-year journey known as the Iwakura mission, visiting the United States and several countries in Europe with the purpose of renegotiating treaties and gathering information to help effect the modernization of Japan.
After returning from the mission in 1873, he was involved in forestalling war with Korea.
The 500 Yen Japanese currency carried his portrait.
Japanese history 1825 births 1883 deaths