Japanese politician and diplomat (1832-1893)
Terashima Munenori
In office 21 October 1881 – 13 July 1882Monarch Emperor Meiji In office 18 October 1873 – 10 September 1879
Born (1832-06-21 ) June 21, 1832Akune, Kagoshima , Japan Died June 21, 1893(1893-06-21) (aged 61) Occupation Politician, Diplomat
Count Terashima Munenori (寺島 宗則 , June 21, 1832 – June 6, 1893) was a Japanese politician and diplomat during the Meiji period . He served as the 3rd Chairman of the Chamber of Elders and Japan's 4th Foreign Minister .
Early life
Terashima was born to a samurai family in Satsuma Domain (in what is now part of Akune , Kagoshima Prefecture ). He studied rangaku and was appointed as a physician to Satsuma daimyō Shimazu Nariakira . In 1862, he was chosen as a member of the group of students selected by the Tokugawa bakufu to study at the University College London in Great Britain . He also visited France , the Netherlands , Belgium , Russia and Portugal . He returned to Japan in 1863, and participated in the defense of Satsuma during the Anglo-Satsuma War .
Meiji bureaucrat
Count Terashima Munenori
After the Meiji Restoration , Terashima was appointed a san'yo (junior councilor) in the new Meiji government . In 1873, he was appointed foreign minister, and negotiated the Treaty of Saint Petersburg (1875) , which fixed the national boundaries between Japan and the Russian Empire . His efforts to re-negotiate the unequal treaties with the United States failed at the last minute due to British opposition. Terashima was also responsible for the negotiations during the Maria Luz Incident involving a Peruvian ship carrying indentured labor Chinese laborers stopping in Japan.
As Governor of Kanagawa Prefecture , he was responsible for connecting Tokyo and Yokohama by telegraph in 1868.
He later served in the Genrōin (Chamber of Elders), and as the chairman of Genrōin between 1881 and 1882. In 1891, he became vice president of the Privy Council .
References
See also
International National Academics Other