1 / 40

Japan becomes an imperialist power

Japan becomes an imperialist power. Ms. Susan M. Pojer & Mrs. Lisbeth Rath Horace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY. Japan Changes Direction During the Meiji Era: 1868 - 1912. Commodore Matthew Perry. 1853 – Commodore Matthew Perry “Opens Up” Japan to Western Trade!. What Did the U. S. Want??.

jodie
Download Presentation

Japan becomes an imperialist power

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Japan becomes an imperialist power Ms. Susan M. Pojer & Mrs. Lisbeth RathHorace Greeley HS Chappaqua, NY

  2. Japan Changes Direction During the Meiji Era: 1868 - 1912 Commodore Matthew Perry

  3. 1853 – Commodore Matthew Perry“Opens Up” Japan to Western Trade!

  4. What Did the U. S. Want?? • Coaling stations. • More trading partners. • A haven for ship-wrecked sailors.

  5. Perry’s “Black Ships”

  6. After Perry's arrival in 1853 & 1854, conclusion of Treaty of Kanagawa or the Unequal Treaties, called "Treaty of Amity and Commerce" by the US. Consequences: no tariff autonomy to protect domestic industries (cotton industry collapses) Westerners have extraterritoriality most favored nation clause: any privilege to anyone must also be granted to US one major difference to China: prohibition on trade in opium The Treaty of Kanagawa - 1854

  7. The Treaty of Kanagawa - 1854

  8. 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 Chinesehave 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.

  9. China’s “Unequal Treaties” • After the Opium War of 1839-1842, Japan was convinced that it had to Open Up to the West.

  10. The Shi-shi (“Men of High Purpose”) • 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 without the Emperor’s consent. • Their slogan Revere the Emperor, Expel the Barbarians!

  11. Tokugawa Shogun resists changes Renegade samurai establish a new “modern” government Old samurai forbidden to wear top knot, carry samurai sword Many commit seppuku Cannot adjust to the new changes Series of Civil Wars1864, 1865-68

  12. The Meiji Revolt - 1868 • A powerful group of samurai overthrow the Shogun. • Sakamoto Ryoma, the hero. • He helped Japan emerge from feudalism into a unified modern state.

  13. The Shogunate Is Overthrown! • The last Shogun. • Tokugawa Yoshinobu.

  14. The Emperor Is “Restored” to Power MEIJI “Enlightened Rule”

  15. Newspaper Cartoon, 1870s? Enlightened Half-Enlightened Un-Enlightened

  16. Modernization by “Selective Borrowing” • Popular board game. • Start by leaving Japan & studying in various Western capitals. • End by returning to Japan and becoming a prominent government official.

  17. EuropeanGoods • Europe began to “loom large” in the thinking of many Japanese. • New slogan:Japanese Spirit; Western Technology!

  18. Japanese Textile Factory

  19. The Japanese Became Obsessedwith Western Styles Civilization and Enlightenment!

  20. Everything Western Was Fashionable!

  21. Everything Western Was Fashionable! Japanese soldiers with their wives.

  22. The Rulers Set the Tone with Western Dress Emperor Meiji Empress Haruko (1868- 1912)

  23. Changing Women’sFashions The First“Miss Japan”(1908) 1900 Styles

  24. LandRedistribution Westernizethe SchoolSystem(Fr. & Ger.) Abolitionof the feudal system ModernBankingSystem Modernize the Army(Prussian) MeijiReforms WrittenConstitution(Germans) Build aModern Navy(British) Human Rights & ReligiousFreedom EmperorWorshipIntensified

  25. A Constitutional GovernmentCopied from the Germans Satsuma & Choshu Families The Emperorof Japan The Diet(Legislative Body) 1889 Constitutionof Japan House ofRepresentatives House of Peers

  26. Expansionism& the Rise of Military Power New players on the block?

  27. 1895-1914 Japan can prove that it is "civilized" by colonizing others, namely Okinawa and Hokkaido and the Kuril Islands Japan joins the “Imperialist Gang”

  28. Sino-Japanese War: 1894-1895 The Meiji Emperor was in Hiroshima during the Sino-Japanese War

  29. Won handily by Japanese Japan concludes treaty directly with the Qing, gets island of Taiwan and Kwantung peninsula on mainland Triple Intervention by Russia, Germany and France: Japan can't have part of mainland. BUT: Russia immediately leases the Kwantung territory itself! Taiwan becomes Japan's model colony Sino-Japanese War: 1894-1895

  30. Soldiers on the BattlefieldDuring the Sino-Japanese War The Treaty of Shimonoseki ended the war.

  31. Today—Tensions Between China & Japan • Offshore gas field in the East China Sea reveals recently strained relations between China & Japan. • Tension over disputed gas field on the rise, exacerbating mutual mistrust dating back to the Sino-Japanese War. EEZ-Exclusive Economic Zone.

  32. The Russo-Japanese War:1904-1905 The Battle of Tsushima:The results startled the world!

  33. Russia and Japan both had designs on Manchuria and Korea Japanese concerned about Russian Trans-Siberian Railway across Manchuria Japan destroyed Russian fleet off coast of Korea and won major battles on land although Russians turned the tide on land Westerners horrified that Japan had defeated a major Western power. The Russo-Japanese War:1904-1905

  34. President Teddy Roosevelt Mediates the Peace The Treaty of Portsmouth, NH ended the Russo-Japanese War.

  35. Mediated by U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt ended war with Japan winning major concessions (preferred position in Manchuria, protectorate in Korea, half of Sakhalin Island – Japan also went on to annex Korea Long-term impact of war: Russia turned to the Balkans, and Russia’s political situation deteriorated further, leading to the Russian Revolution Japan’s victory stimulated Asian nationalism – various Asian peoples hoped to emulate Japanese power and win their independence Treaty of Portsmouth, 1905

  36. Japan Annexes Korea

  37. Japan Is a Player in China

  38. Competition from Another “Pacific” Power Is on the Horizon

  39. The U. S. “Great White Fleet”

  40. But, Japanese Power Would Grow . . .

More Related