Kinmochi Saionji: Difference between revisions
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Prince ''Kinmochi Saionji''' (1849-1940) was a Japanese publisher, politician, and eventually [[Prime Minister of Japan]]. | |||
He was a volunteer soldier during the [[[Meiji Restoration]], afte which he studied in Paris, returning at the age of 32. | |||
Starting a daily paper at Tokyo, "and proclaimed himself a Liberal of the European type. Subsequently, the he became minister to Austria-Hungary, and then to Germany. On his return to Japan, he joined the first [[Hirabumi Ito|Ito]] cabinet as Minister of Education, a post which he again occupied in the second Ito cabinet, having been [[Foreign Minister of Japan]] in the interval. " | |||
Saionji helped Marquis Hirabumi Ito| form the Constitutional Association (1900), and became its leader in 1903. | |||
"At three difficult crises, the Emperor called Saionji to be prime minister pro tem. Resigned premiership of Japan in December of 1912."<ref>{{citation | |||
| url = http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=6136242 | |||
| publisher = Find-A-Grave | |||
| author = Warrick L. Barrett | |||
| title = Kinmochi Saionji}}</ref> | |||
==References== | |||
{{reflist}} |
Revision as of 19:04, 31 August 2010
Prince Kinmochi Saionji' (1849-1940) was a Japanese publisher, politician, and eventually Prime Minister of Japan.
He was a volunteer soldier during the [[[Meiji Restoration]], afte which he studied in Paris, returning at the age of 32.
Starting a daily paper at Tokyo, "and proclaimed himself a Liberal of the European type. Subsequently, the he became minister to Austria-Hungary, and then to Germany. On his return to Japan, he joined the first Ito cabinet as Minister of Education, a post which he again occupied in the second Ito cabinet, having been Foreign Minister of Japan in the interval. "
Saionji helped Marquis Hirabumi Ito| form the Constitutional Association (1900), and became its leader in 1903.
"At three difficult crises, the Emperor called Saionji to be prime minister pro tem. Resigned premiership of Japan in December of 1912."[1]
References
- ↑ Warrick L. Barrett, Kinmochi Saionji, Find-A-Grave