- Motono Ichirō
-
Motono Ichirō
本野 一郎
Motono IchirōBorn March 23, 1862
Saga Domain, JapanDied September 17, 1918 (aged 56)
Tokyo, JapanNationality Japan Occupation Diplomat, Cabinet Minister In this Japanese name, the family name is "Motono".Motono Ichirō (本野 一郎 , March 23, 1862 – September 17, 1918) was a statesman an diplomat, active in Meiji period Japan.
Biography
Motoo was born in Saga, Hizen Province, (modern-day Saga Prefecture). His father, an entrepreneur, was one of the founders of the modern Yomiuri Shimbun. Motono studied law in France, and in 1896 translated the civil code of the Japanese Empire into French [1]. He served as Minister Plenipotentiary to the Kingdom of Belgium in 1898-1901, and in that capacity represented the Empire of Japan at the 1899 Hague Peace Conference. In 1905 served as a judge at the Permanent Court of Arbitration, and formed a dissential opinion in the case of the Japanese Tax House [2]. He served as the Japanese Ambassador to the Empire of Russia from 1906 to 1916.
On June 14, 1907, he was granted the title of baron (danshaku) under the kazoku peerage system for his services, and was also awarded the Order of the Rising Sun, 1st class. HIs title was elevated to that of viscount (shishaku) on July 14, 1916. Under the cabinet of Terauchi Masatake, he served foreign minister of Japan between October 9, 1916 and his death in 1918. He was noted for his harsh stance against the Russian Revolution and his support of the Siberian Intervention. On his death he was awarded the Order of the Chrysanthemum.
Reference
- Klaus Schlichtmann, "Japan and the Two Hague Peace Conferences, 1899 and 1907" paper presented at the 41st INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF EASTERN STUDIES, Tokyo, on May 10, 1996 [3]
- Klaus Schlichtmann, "Japan, Germany and the Idea of the Hague Peace Conferences" Journal of Peace Research, vol. 40, no. 4, 2003, pp. 385–402 [4]
- Article in the New York Times on a speech by Motono to Parliament [5].
- Article in the New York Times regarding Motono's death [6].
Political offices Preceded by
Terauchi MasatakeMinister for Foreign Affairs
1916-1918Succeeded by
Gotō ShinpeiForeign Ministers of Japan Inoue · Itō · Ōkuma (1st) · Aoki (1st) · Enomoto · Mutsu · Saionji (1st) · Ōkuma (2nd) · Nishi · Ōkuma (3rd) · Aoki (2nd) · Katō (1st) · Sone · Komura (1st) · Katō (2nd) · Saionji (2nd) · T. Hayashi · Terauchi (1st) · Komura (2nd) · Uchida (1st) · Katsura · Katō (3rd) · Makino · Katō (4th) · Ōkuma (4th) · Ishii · Terauchi (2nd) · Motono · Gotō · Uchida (2nd) · Yamamoto · Ijuin · Matsui · Shidehara (1st) · G. Tanaka · Shidehara (2nd) · Inukai · Yoshizawa · Uchida (4th) · Saitō · Hiroda · Arita · S. Hayashi · N. Satō · Hirota · Ugaki · Arita · N. Abe · K. Nomura · Arita · Matsuoka · Toyoda · S. Tōgō (1st) · Tōjō · Tani · Shigemitsu (1st) · S. Tōgō (2nd) · Shigemitsu (2nd) · K. Suzuki · Yoshida (1st) · Ashida · Yoshida (2nd) · Shigemitsu (3rd) · Kishi · Fujiyama · Kosaka · Ōhira · Shiina · Miki · Aichi · Fukuda · Ōhira · Kimura · Miyazawa · Kosaka · Hatoyama · Sonoda · Okita · M. Ito · Sonoda · Sakurauchi · S. Abe · Kuranari · Uno · Mitsuzuka · Nakayama · Watanabe · Mutō · Hata · Kakizawa · Kono (1st) · Ikeda · Obuchi · Kōmura (1st) · Kono (2nd) · M. Tanaka · Koizumi · Kawaguchi · Machimura (1st) · Aso · Machimura (2nd) · Kōmura (2nd) · Nakasone · Okada · Maehara · Matsumoto · Genba
Categories:- Japanese diplomats
- 1862 births
- 1918 deaths
- People from Saga (city)
- Kazoku
- People in Meiji period Japan
- Recipients of the Order of the Rising Sun
- Foreign ministers of Japan
- Japanese politician stubs
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