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Internal Problems
By early 19th century, Japanese society was in turmoil– Declining agricultural productivity– Periodic crop failures, famine, and starvation– West arrives demanding trade with Japan
Challenge of the West
Arrival of Matthew Perry (1853)– Perry’s “Black Ships”
steam into Tokyo Bay– Force the Japanese to
establish trade and diplomatic relations with the U.S.
– Unequal TreatiesSimilar to the treaties signed by the Qing dynasty
Japanese depiction of Admiral Matthew Perry
Internal ConflictShogunate’s dealings with West viewed as dishonorable– Popular slogan: “Revere the emperor, expel
the barbarians”
Two minor wars between supporters of emperor and supporters of the shogun– January 3, 1868, the last shogun abdicated
and the Tokugowa shogunate was destroyed
Modernization: Meiji Restoration
Abolish feudal order– Administrative districts replace feudal domains– Daimyo removed from power– Samurai class is abolished
Constitutional government– Constitution of 1889 based on German model
Establishes constitutional monarchy with legislature
– Emperor commanded the armed forces
Modernization: Meiji Restoration
Japanese industrialization– Modernize transportation (RR),
communication, and education– Sold government businesses to private
investors
Modernization: Meiji Restoration
Japanese industrialization (cont’d)– Creation of zaibatsu
Combination of state initiative and private investmentConsolidates economic power into the hands of a few powerful families
Social Developments
No reforms to ease burdens on rural population
Massive population growth– Strained resources and kept labor costs low
Role of women– Maintain inferiority of women in the home– Silk industry relied upon women working in
factories