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Coordinates | 53°5′″N15°29′″N |
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Name | Saigō Takamori |
Caption | Saigō Takamori, by Edoardo Chiossone. |
Birth date | January 23, 1828 |
Birth place | Kagoshima, Satsuma domain |
Death date | September 24, 1877 |
Death place | Kagoshima |
Occupation | Samurai, politician |
However, Saigō’s activity in Edo came to an abrupt end with the Ansei Purge by Tairo Ii Naosuke against anti-Shogunal activities, and the sudden death of Shimazu Nariakira. Saigō fled back to Kagoshima, only to be arrested and banished to Amami Ōshima island. He was recalled briefly in 1861, only to be banished again by the new Satsuma Daimyo Shimazu Hisamitsu. Hisamitsu finally pardoned Saigō in 1864, and sent him to Kyoto to handle the domain's interests towards the imperial court.
In November 1867, Shogun Tokugawa Yoshinobu resigned, returning power to the Emperor in what came to be known as the Meiji Restoration. However, Saigō was one of the most vocal and vehement opponents to the negotiated solution, demanding that the Tokugawa be stripped of their lands and special status. His intransigence was one of the major causes of the subsequent Boshin War.
During the Boshin War, Saigō led the imperial forces at the Battle of Toba-Fushimi, and then led the imperial army toward Edo, where he accepted the surrender of Edo Castle from Katsu Kaishu.
Saigō initially disagreed with the modernization of Japan and the opening of commerce with the West. He famously opposed the construction of a railway network, insisting that money should rather be spent on military modernization.
Saigō did insist, however, that Japan should go to war with Korea in the Seikanron debate of 1873 due to Korea's refusal to recognize the legitimacy of the Emperor Meiji as head of state of the Empire of Japan, and insulting treatment meted out to Japanese envoys attempting to establish trade and diplomatic relations. At one point, he offered to visit Korea in person and to provoke a casus belli by behaving in such an insulting manner that the Koreans would be forced to kill him. However, the other Japanese leaders strongly opposed these plans, partly from budgetary considerations, and partly from realization of the weakness of Japan compared with the western countries from what they had witnessed during the Iwakura Mission. Saigō resigned from all of his government positions in protest and returned to his hometown of Kagoshima.
, 1877.]] .]] The rebellion was suppressed in a few months by the central government's army, a huge mixed force of 300,000 samurai officers and conscript soldiers under Kawamura Sumiyoshi. The Imperial troops were modern in all aspects of warfare, using howitzers and observation balloons. The Satsuma rebels numbered around 40,000, dwindling to about 400 at the final stand at the Battle of Shiroyama. Although they fought for the preservation of the role of the samurai, they used Western military methods, guns and cannons; all contemporary depictions of Saigō Takamori depict him garbed in Western-style uniform. At the end of the conflict, running out of material and ammunition, they had to fall back to close-quarter tactics and the use of swords, bows and arrows.
During the battle, Saigo was badly injured in the hip. However, the exact manner of his death is unknown. The accounts of his subordinates claim either that he uprighted himself and committed seppuku after his injury, or that he requested that the comrade Beppu Shinsuke assist his suicide. In debate, some scholars have suggested that neither is the case, and that Saigō may have gone into shock following his wound, losing his ability to speak. Several comrades upon seeing him in this state, would have severed his head, assisting him in the warrior's suicide they knew he would have wished. Later, they would have said that he committed seppuku in order to preserve his status as a true samurai. It is not clear what was done with Saigo's head immediately after his death. Some legends say Saigo's manservant hid the head, and it was later found by a government soldier. In any case, the head was somehow retrieved by the government forces and was reunited with Saigo's body, which was laid next to that of his deputies Kirino and Murata. This was witnessed by the American sea captain John Capen Hubbard. A myth persists that the head was never found. In any event, Saigo's death brought the Satsuma Rebellion to an end.
A reproduction of the same statue stands on Okinoerabujima, where Saigō had been exiled.
An animated version of Saigō appears during the final scene of the 1985 anime film Kamui no Ken.
Saigō is a supporting character in the 2008 NHK Taiga drama Atsuhime, played by Ozawa Yukiyoshi.
Saigō is referred to repeatedly in the war sections of the manga Rurouni Kenshin by Nobuhiro Watsuki, though he never actually appears. Katsura Kogoro's (Kido Takayoshi) final words are supposed to have been 'Isn't this enough, Saigo?' during the Satsuma rebellion.
Category:1828 births Category:1877 deaths Category:People from Kagoshima (city) Category:Samurai Category:Japanese military leaders Category:Japanese rebels Category:Meiji Restoration Category:Nobles of the Meiji Restoration Category:People from Satsuma Domain Category:Seppuku from Meiji period to present Category:Japanese politicians Category:People in Meiji period Japan Category:Shimazu retainers Category:Japanese folklore
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