- Makino Nobuaki
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Makino Nobuaki
牧野 伸顕
Makino NobuakiBorn November 24, 1861
Kagoshima Prefecture, JapanDied January 25, 1949 (aged 87)
Tokyo, JapanNationality Japan Occupation Politician, Cabinet Minister, Diplomat In this Japanese name, the family name is "Makino".Count Makino Nobuaki (牧野 伸顕 , November 24, 1861 – January 25, 1949) was a Japanese statesman, active from the Meiji period through the Pacific War.
Biography
Born to a samurai family in Kagoshima, Satsuma domain (present day Kagoshima Prefecture), Makino was the second son of Ōkubo Toshimichi, but adopted into the Makino family at a very early age.
In 1871, at the age of 11, he accompanied Ōkubo on the Iwakura Mission to the United States as a student, and briefly attended school in Philadelphia. After he returned to Japan, he attended Tokyo Imperial University, but left without graduating to enter the Foreign Ministry. Assigned to the Japanese London Embassy, he made the acquaintance of Itō Hirobumi.
After serving as governors of Fukui Prefecture (1891-1892), Ibaraki Prefecture (1892-1893), Ambassador to the Austria-Hungary Empire and Ambassador to Italy, he served as Minister of Education under the 1st Saionji Cabinet, and as Minister of Agriculture and Commerce under the 2nd Saionji Cabinet. He was also appointed to serve on the Privy Council. Under the 1st Yamagata Cabinet, he was appointed Foreign Minister. Makino aligned his policies closely with Itō Hirobumi and later, with Saionji Kinmochi, and was considered one of the early leaders of the Liberalism movement in Japan. He was appointed to be Japan's ambassador plenipotentiary to the Paris Peace Conference of 1919, ending World War I. Makino and his delegation put forth a racial equality proposal at the conference which did not pass.
In 1907, Makino elevated in rank to danshaku (baron) under the kazoku peerage system.[1] In 1913, Makino became Minister of Foreign Affairs.[1] On September 20, 1920 he was awarded the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun with Paulownia Flowers. In February 1921, he became Imperial Household Minister and elevated in rank to shishaku (viscount). Behind the scenes, he strove to improve Anglo-Japanese and Japanese-American relations, and he shared Saionji Kinmochi's efforts to shield the Emperor from direct involvement in political affairs. In 1925, he was appointed Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal of Japan. He relinquished the post in 1935, and was elevated in title to hakushaku (count). Although he relinquished his positions, his relations with Emperor Shōwa remained good, and he still had much power and influence behind the scenes. This made him a target for the militarists, and he narrowly escaped assassination at his villa in Yugawara during the February 26 Incident in 1936. He continued to be an advisor and exert a moderating influence on the Emperor until the start of World War II.
Makino was also first president of the Nihon Ki-in Go Society, and a fervent player of the game of go.
After the war, his reputation as an "old liberalist" gave him high credibility, and the politician Hatoyama Ichirō attempted to recruit him to the Liberal Party as its chairman. However, Makino declined for reasons of health and age. He died in 1949, and his grave is at the Aoyama Cemetery in Tokyo.
Noted post-war Prime Minister Yoshida Shigeru was Makino's son-in-law, and the former Prime Minister, Asō Tarō, is Makino's great-grandson.
Notes
- ^ a b 牧野伸顕関係文書(書翰の部) National Diet Library
Resources
- Agawa, Hiroyuki. The Reluctant Admiral: Yamamoto and the Imperial Navy. Kodansha International (2000). ISBN 4-7700-2539-4
- Beasley, W.G. Japanese Imperialism 1894-1945. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-822168-1
- Makino, Nobuaki. Makino Nobuaki nikki. Chuo Koronsha (1990). ISBN 4-12-001977-2 (Japanese)
Political offices Preceded by
Saionji KinmochiMinister of Education
Mar 1906 - Jul 1908Succeeded by
Komatsubara EitarōPreceded by
Ōura KanetakeMinister of Agriculture & Commerce
Aug 1911 - Dec 1912Succeeded by
Nakashōji RenPreceded by
Haseba SumitakaMinister of Education (interim)
Nov 1912 - Dec 1912Succeeded by
Shibata KamonPreceded by
Katō TakaakiMinister of Foreign Affairs
Feb 1913 - Apr 1914Succeeded by
Katō TakaakiPreceded by
Nakamura YujiroImperial Household Minister
Feb 1921 - Mar 1925Succeeded by
Ichiki KitokuroPreceded by
Hamao ArataLord Keeper of the Privy Seal
Mar 1925 - Feb 1935Succeeded by
Saitō MakotoForeign 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:- 1861 births
- 1949 deaths
- People from Satsuma Domain
- People from Kagoshima Prefecture
- Kazoku
- Japanese diplomats
- People in Meiji period Japan
- University of Tokyo alumni
- Education ministers of Japan
- Foreign ministers of Japan
- Government ministers of Japan
- Attempted assassination survivors
- Recipients of the Order of the Rising Sun
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