- Hideo Kodama
Count nihongo|Hideo Kodama|兒玉 秀雄|Kodama Hideo|extra= July 19, 1876 – April 7, 1947, was a politician and wartime cabinet minister in the
Empire of Japan . He was the eldest son of famedRusso-Japanese War generalKodama Gentarō , and his wife was the daughter of Prime MinisterTerauchi Masatake .Biography
Kodama was born in
Yamaguchi prefecture . After graduating from the Law School ofTokyo Imperial University in 1900, he obtained a position at the Ministry of Finance), passing his career civil service examinations the same year. He served in a number of bureaucratic posts. During the Russo-Japanese War, he was assigned to theImperial General Headquarters and sent to theLiaodong Peninsula (under Japanese occupation), where he served as liaison between the civilian government in Tokyo and the Japanese general armies inManchuria . Following the war, he returned to the Finance Ministry as head of the government's Tobacco Monopoly. He was later assigned to serve in the Japanese Government-General of Korea, as a secretary to the Privy Council, and as a member of theHouse of Peers (having inherited the title ofcount ("hakushaku") from his father. From 1916-1918, he served asChief Cabinet Secretary . From 26 Sep 1923 - 17 Dec 1927 he was governor of theKwantung Leased Territory . In the late 1920s, he was the civilian administrator of Korea. In October 1934, he was picked to be Minister of Colonization under the Okada administration. In February 1937, he became Minister of Communications under the Hayashi administration. From January to July 1940, he served as Home Minister under the Yonai administration. He visitedJava in Japanese-occupiedNetherlands East Indies as a special advisor in 1942 at the request of theImperial Japanese Army . In 1944, he served as aMinister without portfolio under the Koiso administration, and from February to April 1945, served as Education Minister in the same administration. After thesurrender of Japan , he was purged from public service by theSupreme Commander of the Allied Powers . He died in 1947, and his grave is at the Tama Reien, inFuchū, Tokyo .References
*McNamara, Dennis L. "The Colonial origins of Korean Enterprise, 1910-1945". Cambridge University Press, 1990. ISBN 0521385652
* [http://www.worldstatesmen.org/China_Foreign_colonies.html Rulers of China]
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