The was an
act, in 1871, of the new Meiji
government of the Empire of Japan
to replace the traditional feudal domain
(han) system
and to introduce centralized government authority (Prefectures of Japan). This
process marked the culmination of the
Meiji Restoration in that all
daimyo (feudal lords) were required to return their
authority to the
Emperor.
The process was accomplished in several stages.
Boshin War
After the defeat of forces loyal to the
Tokugawa shogunate during the
Boshin War in 1868, the new
Meiji government confiscated all lands
formerly under direct control of the Shogunate (
tenryō)
and lands controlled by daimyo who remained loyal to the Tokugawa
cause. These lands accounted for approximately a quarter of the
land area of Japan and were reorganized into prefectures with
governors appointed directly by the central government.
Return of the domains
The second phase in the abolition of the
han came in 1869.
The movement was spearheaded by
Kido
Takayoshi of the
Chōshū
Domain, with the backing of court nobles
Iwakura Tomomi and
Sanjō Sanetomi. Kido persuaded the lords
of Chōshū and of
Satsuma, the two
leading domains in the overthrow of the Tokugawa, to voluntarily
surrender their domains to the Emperor. Between July 25, 1869 and
August 2, 1869, fearing that their loyalty would be questioned, the
daimyo of 260 other domains followed suit. Only 14 domains failed
to initially comply voluntarily with the , and were then ordered to
do so by the Court, on threat of military action.
In return for surrendering their hereditary authority to the
central government, the daimyo were re-appointed as non-hereditary
governors of their former domains (which were renamed as
prefectures), and were allowed to keep ten percent of the tax
revenues, based on actual rice production (which was greater than
the nominal rice production upon which their feudal obligations
under the Shogunate were formerly based).
As governors, the former daimyo could name subordinates, but only
if the subordinates met qualification levels established by the
central government. Furthermore, hereditary stipends to their
samurai retainers were paid out of the prefectural office by the
central government, and not directly by the governor, a move
calculated to further weaken the traditional feudal ties.
The term "daimyo" was abolished in July 1869 as well, with the
formation of the
kazoku peerage system.
Consolidation
Although the former daimyo had become government employees, they
still retained a measure of military and fiscal independence, and
enjoyed the customary veneration of their former subjects. This was
considered an increasing threat to central authority by
Okubo Toshimichi and other members of the
new
Meiji oligarchy, especially with
the large number of ex-samurai revolts occurring around the
country. In August 1871, Okubo, assisted by
Saigo Takamori,
Kido Takayoshi,
Iwakura Totomi and
Yamagata Aritomo forced through an Imperial
Edict which reorganized the 261 surviving ex-feudal domains into
three urban prefectures (
fu) and 302 prefectures
(
ken). The number was then reduced through consolidation
the following year to three urban prefectures and 72 prefectures,
and to the present three urban prefectures and 47 prefectures by
1888.
The central government accomplished this reorganization by
promising the former daimyo a generous stipend, absorbing the
domain's debts, and promising to convert the domain currency
(
hansatsu) to the
new national currency at face value. The central treasury proved
unable to support such generosity, so in 1874, the ex-daimyo
stipend was transformed into
government
bonds with a face value equivalent to five year’s worth of
stipends, and paying five percent interest per year.
Makino Nobuaki, a student member of
the
Iwakura Mission was to remark in
his memoirs:
Together with the abolition of the han system,
dispatching the Iwakura Mission to America and Europe must be cited
as the most important events that built the foundation of our state
after the Restoration.
Notes
References
See also