- Ijichi Kōsuke
Infobox Military Person
name= Ijichi Kōsuke
lived= December 25 1854 - January 23, 1917
placeofbirth=Satsuma Domain ,Japan
placeofdeath=
caption= General Ijichi Kōsuke
nickname=
allegiance=Empire of Japan
branch=
serviceyears=1880 -1913
rank=Lieutenant General
commands=
unit=
battles=Russo-Japanese War
awards=
family=
laterwork=nihongo|Ijichi Kōsuke |伊地知 幸介|extra= December 25 1854 - January 23, 1917 was a general in theImperial Japanese Army in theFirst Sino-Japanese War and Chief of Staff of theJapanese Third Army during theSiege of Port Arthur in theRusso-Japanese War . His wife was the niece of MarshalOyama Iwao .Biography
Ijichi was born to a
samurai family inKagoshima ,Satsuma Domain (present-dayKagoshima prefecture ). He was a graduate of the 2nd class of the Imperial Japanese Army Academy. After serving in the Imperial Guard, he was sent in 1880 toFrance for four years of training at theÉcole spéciale militaire de Saint-Cyr , and from there toGermany . He was recalled before the start of theFirst Sino-Japanese War to serve on the planning department of theImperial General Headquarters . After the war, he was sent as amilitary attaché toGreat Britain from 1898-1900.Promoted to
major general in 1900, he held numerous staff positions within theImperial Japanese Army General Staff pertaining tofield artillery . He was also briefly assigned to the staff of the Japanese embassy inSeoul ,Korea in 1903. With the start of theRusso-Japanese War , he was assigned as Chief of staff to GeneralNogi Maresuke ’s Third Army, in charge of the operation against the Imperial Russian stronghold of Port Arthur. There were several reasons for his choice: Ijichi had wide experience with foreign tactics from his years overseas, spoke several languages fluently and could interface with foreign military observers. He was also a specialist in artillery. And furthermore, his Satsuma background provided for a balance to Nogi’s Chōshū origins, which was thought necessary in an army still divided by regional loyalties. However, Ijichi clashed with Nogi on several occasions during the Port Arthur campaign over the extremely high rate of casualties the Japanese forces were taking, and the long months without appreciable progress against the heavily fortified Russian positions. The Japanese command blamed Ijichi, rather than Nogi, for incompetence, and for continuing to order ineffectivehuman wave attack s against Russian positions. MarshallYamagata Aritomo , on the General Staff of the Manchurian Army pushed strongly to have Ijichi replaced by GeneralKodama Gentarō . [Jukes, The Russo-Japanese War. pp.59] Due to these issues, Nogi replaced him as chief of staff after the fall of Port Arthur, and refused him a position in the 3rd Army at theBattle of Mukden , reassigning him back to theJapanese home islands to assume command of the coastal artillery atTokyo Bay .After the war, Ijichi was promoted to
lieutenant general and given the rank of "danshaku" (baron ) in the "kazoku " peerage in 1907. He attempted to resign, citing health reasons; however, he was persuaded to stay on as commander of theIJA 11th Division until 1908. He retired in 1913.References
*cite book
last = Connaughton
first = Richard
year = 1988
title = The War of the Rising Sun and the Tumbling Bear - A Military History of the Russo-Japanese War 1904-5
publisher = Cassell
location = London
id = ISBN 0-415-00906-5
*cite book
last = Dupuy
first = Trevor N.
year = 1992
title = Encyclopedia of Military Biography
publisher = I B Tauris & Co Ltd
location =
id = ISBN 1-85043-569-3
*cite book
last = Jukes
first = Geoffrey
year = 2002
title = The Russo-Japanese War 1904-1905
publisher = Osprey Publishing
location =
id = ISBN 1841764469Notes
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