1 / 24

Commodore Matthew C. Perry

Commodore Matthew C. Perry. Goal. What were the impacts of Commodore Perry’s visit to Japan?. What Did the U. S. Want ?. Coaling stations. More trading partners. A haven for ship-wrecked sailors. The Treaty of Kanagawa - 1854. March 31, 1854.

Download Presentation

Commodore Matthew C. Perry

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. Commodore Matthew C. Perry

  2. Goal • What were the impacts of Commodore Perry’s visit to Japan?

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

  4. The Treaty of Kanagawa - 1854

  5. March 31, 1854 1. Peace and friendship between the United States and Japan. 2. Opening of two ports to American ships 3. Help for any American ships wrecked on the Japanese coast and protection for shipwrecked persons 4. Permission for American ships to buy supplies, coal, water, and other necessary provisions in Japanese ports.

  6. An Unequal Treaty? • Convention of Kanagawa 1854 – diplomatic relations • Five years later – treaties with most European nations • Some Samurai deeply resented (hated) these “unequal” (unfair) treaties forced on Japan

  7. 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.

  8. 1867 - Mutsuhito establishes a new Gov’t

  9. Chronology 1573-1600, “Warring States” - Transitional Era 1635, Shogunate forbids Japanese to travel overseas 1639, Portugese ships forbidden; Japan closed to outside world 1641, Dutch Trading Mission is moved to Nagasaki 1600-1868, Tokugawa Period - Centralized Feudalism era 1853-54, Perry Mission to “open” Japan 1854, Japan concludes friendship treaties with U.S., Britain, France & Netherlands; three ports open to foreign trade 1868, Meiji Restoration 1877, Satsuma Rebellion 1881, Sale of government industries to new zaibatsau 1889, Meiji Constitution 1894-5,Sino-Japanese War, Japan becomes imperialist power 1904-5, Russo-Japanese War 1910, colonization of Korea 1912, emperor Meji dies Meiji Restoration1868 -1912

  10. What was the Meiji Restoration? • See Meiji Charter Oath

  11. Iwakura Mission • 1st Meiji investigation of European and American institutions • Included Meiji government ministers • Sought info on technology, education, the army • Were very impressed with Germany and USA – increased pressure for modernisation 1871-1873

  12. Feudalism Abolished • Mass education based on American system • Samurai privileges abolished • Samurai cannot wear swords in public • Jobs open to all

  13. The armed forces • military conscription was introduced • Western experts were imported to create new railways, armies, fleets, and industries • Navy based on Britain’s • Army based on Germany’s

  14. Politics: the constitution • An authoritarian constitution based on German model 1889, establishing the Diet (parliament) • Only 1% could vote • By 1871 the daimyo domains had been surrendered to the throne and turned into prefectures with governors The first diet convenes 1890

  15. Oligarchy: the Genro • Real power exercised by an informal Choshu and Satsuma oligarchy called the Genro • They controlled politics and big business • The Sat-Cho elite = oligarchs • The Emperor “reigned but did not rule” despite the constitution

  16. Sino-Japanese War1894-1895Russo-Japanese War1904-1905

  17. Shinto How does Shintoism reinforce nationalism?

  18. Religion • Shinto replaces Buddhism as the state religion • Why?

  19. Mitsubishi Kawasaki Economy:The Zaibatsu • Zaibatsu: family businesses with close links with the government and military • Diversified conglomerates • Eventually the big 4 dominated over 50% of stock exchange • Japan did not rely on foreign investment Mitsui Nissan

  20. MEIJI RESTORATION: CAUSES> MEIJI RESTORATION> EFFECTS:

  21. Write a thesis statement in response to this question: “The Meiji restoration in Japan was not a true revolution because ordinary people played little part in the process of change” You have 10 minutes to reread your notes and write your thesis!

More Related