The was a
civil war in Japan
, fought from
1868 to 1869 between forces of the ruling Tokugawa shogunate and those seeking to
return political power to the imperial
court.
The war found its origins in dissatisfaction among many nobles and
young
samurai with the shogunate's handling
of foreigners following the
opening of
Japan during the prior decade. An alliance of southern samurai,
particularly the domains of Chōshū and Satsuma, and court officials
secured control of the imperial court and influenced the young
Emperor Meiji.
Tokugawa Yoshinobu, the sitting shogun,
realizing the futility of his situation, abdicated political power
to the emperor. Yoshinobu had hoped that by doing this, the
Tokugawa house could be preserved and to participate in the future
government. However, military movements by imperial forces,
partisan violence in
Edo, and an imperial decree
promoted by Satsuma and Choshu abolishing the house of Tokugawa led
Yoshinobu to launch a military campaign to seize the emperor's
court at Kyoto. The military tide rapidly turned in favor of the
smaller but relatively modernized imperial faction, and after a
series of battles culminating in the surrender of Edo, Yoshinobu
personally surrendered.
Those loyal to the Tokugawa retreated to
northern Honshū
and later to
Hokkaidō
, where they
founded the Ezo republic.
Defeat at the
Battle of Hakodate
broke this last holdout and left the imperial rule supreme
throughout the whole of Japan, completing the military phase of the
Meiji Restoration.
Around 120,000 men were mobilized during the conflict, and of these
about 3,500 were killed. In the end, the victorious imperial
faction abandoned its objective to expel foreigners from Japan and
instead adopted a policy of continued modernization with an eye to
eventual renegotiation of the
Unequal
Treaties with the Western powers. Due to the persistence of
Saigō Takamori, a prominent
leader of the imperial faction, the Tokugawa loyalists were shown
clemency, and many former shogunate leaders
were later given positions of responsibility under the new
government.
The Boshin
War testifies to the advanced state of modernization already
achieved by Japan barely fourteen years after its opening to the
West, the already high involvement of Western nations (especially
the United Kingdom
and France
) in the
country's politics, and the rather turbulent installation of
Imperial power. Over time, the war has been romanticized by
Japanese and others who view the Meiji Restoration as a "bloodless
revolution," despite the number of casualties. Various
dramatizations of the war have been made in Japan, and elements of
the conflict were incorporated into the 2003 American film
The Last Samurai.
Political background
Early discontent against the Shogunate
For the
two centuries prior to 1854, Japan had severely limited exchange with foreign nations, with the
notable exceptions of Korea
via Tsushima
, Qing
China
via the Ryūkyūs
, and the Dutch through
the trading post of Dejima
. In
1854,
Commodore Perry
opened Japan to global commerce with the implied threat of force,
thus initiating a period of rapid development in foreign trade and
Westernization. In large part due to the humiliating terms of the
Unequal Treaties, as agreements
like those conveyed by Perry are called, the
Shogunate soon faced internal hostility, which
materialized into a radical,
xenophobic
movement, the
sonnō jōi
(literally "Revere the Emperor, expel the barbarians").
The
Emperor Kōmei agreed with
such sentiments, and—breaking with centuries of imperial
tradition—began to take an active role in matters of state: as
opportunities arose, he fulminated against the treaties and
attempted to interfere in the shogunal succession. His efforts
culminated in March 1863 with his "
Order to expel barbarians".
Although the Shogunate had no intention of enforcing the order, it
nevertheless inspired attacks against the Shogunate itself and
against foreigners in Japan: the most famous incident was that of
the English trader
Charles
Lennox Richardson, for whose death the Tokugawa government had
to pay an indemnity of one hundred thousand
British pound. Other attacks included the
shelling of foreign shipping in
Shimonoseki.
During 1864, these actions were successfully countered by armed
retaliations by foreign powers, such as the British
Bombardment of Kagoshima and the
multinational
Bombardment of
Shimonoseki. At the same time, the forces of
Chōshū, together with xenophobic
ronin, raised the
Hamaguri rebellion trying to seize the
city of Kyoto, where the Emperor's court was held, but were
repelled by Shogunate forces under the future Shogun
Tokugawa Yoshinobu. The Shogunate further
ordered a punitive expedition against Chōshū, the
First Chōshū expedition,
and obtained Chōshū's submission without actual fighting. At this
point initial resistance among the leadership in Chōshū and the
imperial court subsided, but over the next year the Tokugawa proved
unable to reassert full control over the country as most
daimyo began to ignore orders and questions from
Edo.
Foreign military assistance
Despite the bombardment of Kagoshima, the Satsuma domain had become
closer to the British and was pursuing the modernization of its
army and navy with their support. The Scottish dealer
Thomas Blake Glover sold quantities of
warships and guns to the southern domains. American and British
military experts, usually former officers, may have been directly
involved in this military effort. The British ambassador
Harry Smith Parkes supported the
anti-Shogunate forces in a drive to establish a legitimate, unified
Imperial rule in Japan, and to counter French influence with the
Shogunate. During that period, southern Japanese leaders such as
Saigō Takamori of Satsuma, or
Itō Hirobumi and
Inoue Kaoru of Chōshū cultivated personal
connections with British diplomats, notably
Ernest Mason Satow.

Shogunate soldiers in Western
uniform.
The Shogunate also was preparing for further conflict by
modernizing its forces. In line with Parkes' designs, the British,
theretofore the Shogunate's primary partner, proved reluctant to
provide assistance. The Tokugawa thus came to rely mainly on French
expertise, comforted by the military prestige of
Napoleon III at that time, acquired through his
successes in the
Crimean War and the
War of Italy. The
Shogunate took major steps towards the construction of a modern and
powerful military: a navy with a core of eight steam warships had
been built over several years and was already the strongest in
Asia. In 1865, Japan's first modern naval
arsenal was built in
Yokosuka by the French engineer
Léonce Verny.
In January 1867, a
French military
mission arrived to reorganize the shogunal army and create the
Denshūtai elite force, and
an order was placed with the United States
to buy the French-built ironclad warship CSS Stonewall, a relic
of the American Civil War.
Due to the Western powers' declared neutrality, the Americans
refused to release the ship, but once neutrality was lifted, the
imperial faction obtained the vessel and employed it in engagements
in Hakodate under the name
Kōtetsu (literally
"Ironclad").
Coups d'état (1866–1868)
Following a coup within Chōshū which returned to power the
extremist factions opposed to the Shogunate, the Shogunate
announced its intention to lead a
Second Chōshū expedition
to punish the renegade domain. This in turn prompted Chōshū to form
a secret alliance with
Satsuma. In
the summer of 1866, the Shogunate was defeated by Chōshū, leading
to a considerable loss of authority. In late 1866, however, first
Shogun
Iemochi and then
Emperor Kōmei died, respectively
succeeded by
Yoshinobu and
Emperor Meiji. These events "made a
truce inevitable."
On November 9, 1867, a secret order was created by Satsuma and
Chōshū in the name of Emperor Meiji commanding the "slaughtering of
the traitorous subject Yoshinobu." Just prior to this however, and
following a proposal from the daimyo of Tosa, Yoshinobu resigned
his post and authorities to the emperor, agreeing to "be the
instrument for carrying out" imperial orders. The Tokugawa
Shogunate had ended.
While Yoshinobu's resignation had created a nominal void at the
highest level of government, his apparatus of state continued to
exist. Moreover, the shogunal government, the Tokugawa family in
particular, would remain a prominent force in the evolving
political order and would retain many executive powers, a prospect
hard-liners from Satsuma and Chōshū found intolerable. Events came
to a head on January 3, 1868 when these elements seized the
imperial palace in Kyoto, and the following day had the
fifteen-year-old Emperor Meiji declare his own restoration to full
power. Although the majority of the imperial consultative assembly
was happy with the formal declaration of direct rule by the court
and tended to support a continued collaboration with the Tokugawa
(under the concept of ,
Saigō
Takamori threatened the assembly into abolishing the title
"shogun" and order the confiscation of Yoshinobu's lands.
Although he initially agreed to these demands, on January 17, 1868
Yoshinobu declared "that he would not be bound by the proclamation
of the Restoration and called on the court to rescind it." On
January 24, Yoshinobu decided to prepare an attack on
Kyoto, occupied by Satsuma and Chōshū forces.
This
decision was prompted by his learning of a series of arsons in Edo,
starting with the burning of the outerworks of Edo Castle
, the main Tokugawa residence. This was
blamed on Satsuma ronin, who on that day attacked a government
office. The next day shogunate forces responded by attacking the
Edo residence of the daimyo of Satsuma, where many opponents of the
shogunate, under Takamori's direction, had been hiding and creating
trouble. The palace was burned down, and many opponents killed or
later executed.
Opening conflicts

A Satsuma battery in action at
Toba-Fushimi
On 27
January 1868, Shogunate forces attacked the forces of Chōshū and
Satsuma, clashing near Toba and Fushimi
, at the
southern entrance of Kyoto. Some parts of the 15,000-strong Shogunate
forces had been trained by French
military
advisers, but the majority remained medieval samurai forces. Meanwhile, the forces of
Chōshū and Satsuma were outnumbered 3:1 but fully modernized with
Armstrong howitzers,
Minié
rifles and a few
Gatling guns.
After an inconclusive start, on the second day, an Imperial pennant
was remitted to the defending troops, and a relative of the
Emperor,
Ninnajinomiya
Yoshiaki, was named nominal
commander in chief, making the forces
officially an . Moreover, convinced by courtiers, several local
daimyo, thitherto faithful to the Shogun, started to
defect to the side of the imperial court. These included
daimyo of
Yodo on February 5,
and the daimyo of
Tsu on February 6,
tilting the military balance in favour of the Imperial side.
On February 7, Tokugawa Yoshinobu, apparently distressed by the
imperial approval given to the actions of Satsuma and Chōshū, fled
Osaka aboard the
Kaiyō Maru,
withdrawing to
Edo. Demoralized by his flight
and by the betrayal by Yodo and Tsu, Shogunate forces retreated,
making the Toba-Fushimi encounter an Imperial victory, although it
is often considered the Shogunate forces should have won the
encounter. Osaka Castle was soon invested on February 8 (on March
1, Western calendar), putting an end to the battle of
Toba-Fushimi.
At the same time, on 28 January 1868, the naval
Battle of Awa between the Shogunate and
elements of the Satsuma Navy took place. This was Japan's first
engagement between two modern navies. The battle, although small in
scale, ended in favour of the Shogunate.
On the diplomatic front, the ministers of foreign nations, gathered
in the open harbor of Hyōgo (present day
Kobe)
in early February, issued a declaration according to which the
Shogunate was still considered the only rightful government in
Japan, giving hope to Tokugawa Yoshinobu that foreign nations
(especially France) might consider an intervention in his favour. A
few days later however an Imperial delegation visited the ministers
declaring that the Shogunate was abolished, that harbours would be
open in accordance with International treaties, and that foreigners
would be protected. The ministers finally decided to recognize the
new government.
The rise of anti-foreign sentiment nonetheless led to several
attacks on foreigners in the following months. Eleven French
sailors from the
corvette Dupleix were killed by
samurai of
Tosa in the
Sakai incident on March 8, 1868.
Fifteen days later, Sir
Harry
Parkes, the British ambassador, was attacked by a group of
samurai in a street of Kyoto.
Surrender of Edo
Beginning in February, with the help of the French ambassador
Léon Roches, a plan was formulated
to stop the imperial court's advance at
Odawara, the last strategic entry point to Edo, but
Yoshinobu decided against the plan. Shocked, Léon Roches resigned
from his position. In early March, under the influence of the
British minister
Harry Parkes,
foreign nations signed a strict neutrality agreement, according to
which they could not intervene or provide military supplies to
either side until the resolution of the conflict.
Saigō Takamori led the
victorious imperial forces north and east through Japan, winning
the
Battle of
Kōshū-Katsunuma. He eventually surrounded
Edo in May 1868, leading to its unconditional defeat
after
Katsu Kaishu, the Shogun's Army
Minister, negotiated the surrender. Some groups continued to resist
after this surrender but were defeated in the
Battle of Ueno on 4 July 1868.
Meanwhile, the leader of the Shogun's navy,
Enomoto Takeaki, refused to surrender all
his ships. He remitted just four ships, among them the
Fujisan, but he then
escaped north with the remnants of the Shogun's Navy (eight steam
warships:
Kaiten,
Banryū,
Chiyodagata,
Chōgei,
Kaiyō Maru,
Kanrin Maru,
Mikaho and
Shinsoku), and 2,000
members of the navy, in the hope of staging a counter-attack
together with the northern daimyo. He was accompanied by a handful
of French military advisers, notably
Jules
Brunet, who had formally resigned from the French Army in order
to accompany the rebels.
Resistance of the Northern Coalition
After Yoshinobu's surrender, most of Japan accepted the emperor's
rule, but a core of domains in the North, supporting the
Aizu clan, continued the resistance.
In May several
northern daimyo formed an Alliance to fight
Imperial troops, the coalition of
northern domains composed primarily of forces from the domains
of Sendai, Yonezawa,
Aizu, Shonai
and Nagaoka, with a total of 50,000
troops. An Imperial Prince,
Kitashirakawa Yoshihisa had fled
north with partisans of the Tokugawa shogunate and was made the
nominal head of the Northern Coalition, with the intention of
naming him "Emperor Tobu".
Enomoto's fleet joined
Sendai harbour on
August 26. Although the Northern Coalition was numerous, it was
poorly equipped, and relied on traditional fighting methods. Modern
armament was scarce, and last-minute efforts were made to build
cannons made of wood and reinforced with
roping, firing stone projectiles. Such cannons, installed on
defensive structures, could only fire four or five projectiles
before bursting. On the other hand, the daimyo of Nagaoka managed
to procure two of the three
Gatling
guns in Japan and 2,000 modern French rifles from the German
weapons dealer
Henry Schnell.
In May 1868, the daimyo of Nagaoka inflicted high losses on the
Imperial troops in the
Battle of
Hokuetsu, but his castle ultimately fell on May 19.
Imperial
troops continued to progress north, defeating the Shinsengumi at the Battle of Bonari Pass, which opened
the way for their attack on the castle of Aizu-Wakamatsu in the Battle of
Aizu
in October 1868, thus making the position in Sendai
untenable.

Troops of the former Bakufu, being
transported to Hokkaidō.
The
coalition crumbled, and on October 12, 1868 the fleet left Sendai
for Hokkaidō
, after having acquired two more ships (Oe
and Hōō, previously
borrowed by Sendai from the Shogunate), and about 1,000 more
troops: remaining Shogunate troops under Otori Keisuke, Shinsengumi troops under Hijikata Toshizo, the guerilla corps
(yugekitai) under Hitomi
Katsutarō, as well as several more French advisers (Fortant,
Garde, Marlin, Bouffier).
On
October 26, Edo was renamed Tokyo
, and the
Meiji period officially started.
Aizu was besieged starting that month, leading to the mass suicide
of the
Byakkotai (White Tiger
Corps) young warriors. After a protracted month-long battle,
Aizu finally admitted defeat on November
6.
Hokkaidō campaign
Creation of the Ezo Republic
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desc none
Following
defeat on Honshū, Enomoto Takeaki
fled to Hokkaidō
with the remnants of the navy and his handful of
French advisers. Together they organized a government, with
the objective of establishing an independent island nation
dedicated to the development of Hokkaidō. They formally established
the
Republic of Ezo on the American
model on December 25, Japan's only republic ever, and Enomoto was
elected as President, with a large majority.
The republic tried to
reach out to foreign legations present in Hakodate, such as the
Americans, French, and Russians
, but was not able to garner any international
recognition or support. Enomoto offered to confer the
territory to the Tokugawa Shogun under Imperial rule, but his
proposal was declined by the Imperial Governing Council.
During
the winter, they fortified their defenses around the southern
peninsula of Hakodate, with the new
fortress of Goryokaku
at the center. The troops were organized
under a Franco-Japanese command, the commander-in-chief
Otori Keisuke being seconded by the French
captain
Jules Brunet, and divided
between four
brigades. Each of these was
commanded by a French non-commissioned officer (
Fortant,
Marlin,
Cazeneuve,
Bouffier), and were themselves
divided into eight half-brigades, each under Japanese
command.
Final losses and surrender
The Imperial navy reached the harbour of
Miyako on March 20, but anticipating the
arrival of the imperial ships, the Ezo rebels organized a daring
plan to seize the
Kotetsu. Led by
Shinsengumi commander Hijikata Toshizo, three warships were
dispatched for a surprise attack, in what is known as the
Naval Battle of Miyako. The battle
ended in failure for the Tokugawa side, owing to bad weather,
engine trouble and the decisive use of a
Gatling gun by Imperial troops against samurai
boarding parties.
Imperial forces soon consolidated their hold on mainland Japan,
and, in April 1869, dispatched a fleet and an infantry force of
7,000 to Ezo, starting the
Battle of
Hakodate.
The Imperial forces progressed swiftly and
won the naval engagement at
Hakodate Bay, Japan's first large-scale naval battle between
modern navies, as the fortress of Goryokaku
was surrounded with 800 remaining men.
Seeing the situation had become desperate, the French advisers
escaped to a French ship stationed in Hakodate Bay -
Coëtlogon, under the command of
Dupetit-Thouars - from where they were
shipped back to
Yokohama and then France.
The Japanese requested that the French advisers be given judgement
in France; however, due to popular support in France for their
actions, the former French advisers in Japan were not punished for
their actions.
Enomoto had resolved to fight to the end, and had sent his
valuables to his adversary for safekeeping. but Otori convinced him
to surrender, telling him that deciding to live through defeat is
the truly courageous way: "If it's dying you want you can do it
anytime." Enomoto surrendered on May 18, 1869, and accepted the
Meiji Emperor's rule. The Ezo Republic
ceased to exist on June 27, 1869.
Aftermath
Following victory, the new government proceeded with unifying the
country under a single, legitimate and powerful rule by the
imperial court.
The emperor's residence was effectively
transferred from Kyoto to Tokyo
at the end
of 1868. The military and political power of the
domains was progressively
eliminated, and the domains themselves were soon transformed
into
prefecture, whose
governors were appointed by the emperor. A major reform was the
effective expropriation and abolition of the
samurai class, allowing many samurai to change into
administrative or entrepreneurial positions, but forcing many
others into poverty. The southern domains of Satsuma, Chōshū and
Tosa, having played a decisive role in the victory, occupied most
of the key posts in government for several decades following the
conflict, a situation sometimes called the "
Meiji oligarchy" and formalized with the
institution of the
genrō.
In 1869, the Yasukuni
Shrine
in Tokyo was built in honour of the victims of the
Boshin War.
Some leading partisans of the former Shogun were imprisoned, but
narrowly escaped execution. This clemency derives from the
insistence of Saigō Takamori and
Iwakura
Tomomi, although much weight was placed on the advice of
Parkes, the British envoy. He had
urged Saigō, in the words of Ernest Satow, "that severity towards
Keiki [Yoshinobu] or his supporters, especially in the way of
personal punishment, would injure the reputation of the new
government in the opinion of European Powers." After two or three
years of imprisonment, most of them were called to serve the new
government, and several pursued brilliant careers.
Enomoto Takeaki, for instance, would later
serve as an envoy to Russia and China and as the education
minister.
The Imperial side did not pursue its objective to expel foreign
interests from Japan, but instead shifted to a more progressive
policy aiming at the continued modernization of the country and the
renegotiation of
unequal treaties
with foreign powers, later under the motto. The shift in stance
towards the foreigners came during the early days of the civil war:
on April 8, 1868, new signboards were erected in Kyoto (and later
throughout the country) that specifically repudiated violence
against foreigners. During the course of the conflict, Emperor
Meiji personally received European envoys, first in Kyoto, then
later in Osaka and Tokyo. Also unprecedented was Emperor Meiji's
reception of
Alfred, Duke of
Edinburgh, in Tokyo, "'as his
equal in point of
blood.'"
Although the early Meiji era witnessed a warming between the
imperial court and foreign powers,
relations with France temporarily
soured due to the initial support by France for the Shogun. Soon
however a
second military
mission was invited to Japan in 1874, and
a third one in 1884.
A high level of interaction resumed around 1886, when France helped
build the
Imperial Japanese
Navy's first large-scale modern fleet, under the direction of
naval engineer
Louis-Émile
Bertin. The modernization of the country had in fact already
started extensively during the
last years of the Shogunate, and the
Meiji government ultimately adopted the same orientation, although
it was better able to mobilize the whole country towards
modernization in a more efficient way.
Upon his coronation, Meiji issued his
Charter Oath, calling for deliberative
assemblies, promising increased opportunities for the common
people, abolishing the "evil customs of the past," and seeking
knowledge throughout the world "to strengthen the foundations of
imperial rule." Prominent reforms of the Meiji government included
the 1871
abolition of the
domain system, by which the feudal domains and their hereditary
rulers were replaced by
prefectures with governors appointed by
the emperor. Others included the introduction of compulsory
schooling and the abolition of Confucian class distinctions. The
reforms culminated in the 1889 issuance of the
Meiji Constitution. However, despite the
support given to the imperial court by samurai, many of the early
Meiji reforms were seen as detrimental to their interests: the
creation of a conscript army made of commoners, as well as the loss
of hereditary prestige and stipends antagonized many former
samurai. Tensions ran particularly high in the south, leading to
the 1874
Saga Rebellion, and a
rebellion in Chōshū in 1876. Former samurai in Satsuma, led by
Saigō Takamori, who had left government over foreign policy
differences, started the
Satsuma
Rebellion in 1877. Fighting for the maintenance of the
samurai class and a more virtuous government, their
slogan was . It ended with a heroic but total defeat at the
Battle of Shiroyama.
Later depictions
In modern summaries, the
Meiji
restoration is often described as a "bloodless revolution"
leading to the sudden modernization of Japan. The actual facts of
the Boshin War clearly show that the conflict was quite violent:
about 120,000 troops were mobilized altogether with roughly 3,500
known casualties. Later Japanese depictions of the war tended to be
highly romanticized, showing the Shogunal side fighting with
traditional methods, against an already modernized Imperial side.
Although traditional weapons and techniques were used, both sides
employed some of the most modern armaments and fighting techniques
of the period: including the
ironclad
warship,
Gatling guns, and fighting
techniques learned from Western military advisers.
Such Japanese depictions include numerous dramatizations, spanning
many genres. Notably,
Jirō Asada
wrote a four-volume novel of the account,
Mibu Gishi-den.
A film adaptation of Asada's work, directed by
Yojiro Takita, is known as
When the Last Sword Is
Drawn. A ten-hour television
jidaigeki based on the same novel starred
Ken Watanabe. The 2001
Goryokaku film is another
jidaigeki highlighting
the resistance in Hokkaidō. Among Japanese
anime,
Bakumatsu Kikansetsu
Irohanihoheto in part dramatizes the Boshin War, while
Rurouni Kenshin is set 10
years after.
Elsewhere, the 2003 Hollywood movie
The Last Samurai combines into a
single narrative historical situations belonging both to the Boshin
War, the 1877
Satsuma Rebellion,
and other similar uprisings of ex-samurai during the early Meiji
period. The elements of the movie pertaining to the early
modernization of Japan's military forces as well as the direct
involvement of foreign (mostly French) forces relate to the Boshin
War and the few years leading to it. However, the suicidal stand of
traditionalist samurai forces led by
Saigō Takamori against the modernized
Imperial army relate to the much later Satsuma Rebellion.
Weaponry
The forces of Chōshū and Satsuma were fully modernized with
Armstrong howitzers,
Minié
rifles and one
Gatling gun. The
Shogunate forces had been slightly lagging in term of equipment,
although a core elite force had been recently trained by the
French
military mission to Japan . The Shogun also relied on troops
supplied by allied domains which were not necessarily as advanced
in terms of military equipment and methods, composing an army that
had both modern and outdated elements.
Individual guns
Numerous
types of more or less modern smoothbores
guns and rifles were imported, from countries
as varied as France
, Germany
, The
Netherlands
, England
or the United States
, and coexisted with traditional types such as the
Tanegashima
matchlock gun.
Most Shogunate troops used
Gewehr smoothbore
guns, which had been imported in Japan since around 1840, initially
from the Netherlands by Takashima Akiho (高島秋帆). These guns were
rather ancient and had limited capabilities, with an effective
lethal range of about 50 meters, and a firing rate of about 2
rounds per minute. The Daimyo of
Nagaoka however, an ally of the Shogun,
possessed two
Gatling guns and several
thousands modern rifles. The Shogunate is known to have placed an
order for 30,000 modern
Dreyse needle
guns in 1866.
Napoleon III provided
Tokugawa Yoshinobu with 2,000 state-of-the-art
Chassepot rifles, which he used to equip his
personal guard.
Antiquated Tanegashima
matchlock guns are also known to have been used by
the Bakufu however.
Imperial troops mainly used
Minié
rifles, which were much more accurate, lethal, and had a much
longer range than the smoothbore Gewehr guns, although, being also
muzzle-loading, they were similarly limited to two shots per
minutes. Improved breech-loading mechanisms, such as the
Snider, developing a rate of about ten shots a
minute, are known to have been used by troops of the
Tosa Domain against the Shogunate's
Shōgitai, at the
Battle of Ueno in July 1868. In the second
half of the conflict, in the northeast theater,
Tosa Province troops are known to have used
American-made
Spencer repeating
rifles. American-made handguns were also popular, such as the
1863
Smith & Wesson Army No
2, which was imported to Japan by the Scottish trader
Thomas Blake Glover and used by the
Satsuma forces.
Artillery
For artillery,
wooden cannons, only
able to fire 3 or 4 shots before bursting, coexisted with
state-of-the-art
Armstrong guns using
explosive
shells. Armstrong guns were
efficiently used by the troops of
Satsuma and
Saga
throughout the war.
Warships
In the area of warships also, some of the most recent ironclads
such as the
Kotetsu coexisted with
older types of steamboats and even traditional sailboats. The
Shogunate initially had a rather strong edge in warships, and it
had the vision to order the state-of-the-art French-made
Kotetsu, although the ships was blocked from delivery by
foreign powers on ground of neutrality once the conflict had
started, and was ultimately remitted to the Imperial faction
shortly after the
Battle of
Toba-Fushimi.
Uniforms

Haguma and Shaguma headress.
Uniforms were Western-style for modernized troops (usually dark,
with variations in the shape of the helmet: tall conical for
Satsuma, flat conical for Chōshū, rounded for the Shogunate).
Officers of the Shogunate often wore French uniforms. Traditional
troops however retained their
samurai
clothes.
Some of the headgear for some of the Imperial troops was quite
peculiar, involving the used of long, colored, "bear" hair. The
"Red bear" (赤熊,
Shaguma) wigs indicate soldiers from
Tosa, the "White bear" (白熊,
Haguma) wigs soldiers from
Chōshū, and the "Black bear" (黒熊,
Koguma) wigs soldiers from
Satsuma.
Notes
- is the designation for the fifth year of a sexagenary cycle in
traditional East Asian calendars. can also be read as
"tsuchinoe-tatsu" in Japanese, literally "Elder Brother of
Earth-Dragon". In Chinese terminology, it translates
"Yang Earth
Dragon", which is associated with that particular year in the
sexagenary cycle. Etymologically, and have nothing to do with
"dragon" or "elder brother of earth", so the reading
"tsuchinoe-tatsu" has to be regarded as a kind of associative . In
term of eras, the conflict started in the 4th year of Keiō, which also became the first year
of Meiji in October of that year, and ended in the second year of
Meiji.
- Thanks to the interaction with the Dutch, the study of Western
science continued during this period under the name of
Rangaku, allowing Japan
to study and follow most of the steps of the scientific and industrial
revolution. See Jansen (pp. 210–15) discusses the vibrancy of
Edo period rangaku, and later (p. 346) notes the
competition in the early Meiji period for foreign experts and
rangaku scholars. See also: "The technology of Edo" ( ),
2006, ISBN 4-410-13886-3 (Japanese) and "The intellectual world of
Edo" ( ) Timon Screech, 1998, ISBN 4-7917-5690-8 (Japanese).
- Hagiwara, p. 34.
- Jansen, pp. 314–5.
- Hagiwara, p. 35.
- Jansen, pp. 303–5.
- Hagiwara, pp. 34–5
- As early as 1865, Thomas Blake Glover sold 7500 Minié rifles to the
Chōshū clan, allowing it to become totally modernized. Nakaoka
Shintaro a few months later remarked that "in every way the forces
of the han have been renewed; only companies of rifle and cannon
exist, and the rifles are Minies, the cannon breech loaders using
shells" (Brown)
- This is a claim made by Jules Brunet in a letter to Napoleon III: "I must
signal to the Emperor the presence of numerous American and British
officers, retired or on leave, in this party [of the southern
daimyo] which is hostile to French interests. The presence of
Western leaders among our enemies may jeopardize my success from a
political standpoint, but nobody can stop me from reporting from
this campaign information Your Majesty will without a doubt find
interesting." Original quotation (French): "Je dois signaler à
l'Empereur la présence de nombreux officers américains et anglais,
hors cadre et en congé, dans ce parti hostile aux intérêts
français. La présence de ces chefs occidentaux chez nos adversaires
peut m'empêcher peut-être de réussir au point de vue politique,
mais nul ne pourra m'empêcher de rapporter de cette campagne des
renseignements que Votre Majesté trouvera sans doute intéressants."
Polak, p. 81. As an example, the English Lieutenant Horse is known
to have been a gunnery instructor for the Saga domain during
the Bakumatsu period
("Togo Heiachiro", 17)
- These encounters are described in Satow's 1869 A Diplomat
in Japan, where he famously describes Saigō as a man with "an
eye that sparkled like a big black diamond."
- For example, An 1864 request to Sir Rutherford Alcock
to supply British military experts from the 1,500 men stationed at
Yokohama went
unanswered, and when Takenaka Shibata visited United Kingdom and
France, in September 1865, requesting assistance, only the latter
was forthcoming.
- Following the deal with France, the French ambassador in Japan
Leon Roches,
trying not to alienate United Kingdom, arranged for the Shogun to
ask for a British navy mission which arrived sometime after the
French military mission of 1867. Polak, p. 53–5
- A detailed presentation of the Shogunate Navy is available at
this site (Japanese)
- Naval Historical Center
- Keene, p. 165–6.
- Jansen, p. 307.
- There is debate as to the authenticity of the order, due to its
violent language and the fact that, despite using the , it did not
bear Meiji's signature. Keene, pp. 115–6.
- Satow, p. 282.
- Keene, p. 116. See also Jansen, pp. 310–1.
- Keene, pp. 120–1, and Satow, p. 283. Moreover, Satow (p. 285)
speculates that Yoshinobu had agreed to an assembly of daimyos on
the hope that such a body would restore him,
- Satow, p. 286.
- During a recess, Saigō, who had his troops outside, "remarked
that it would take only one short sword to settle the discussion"
(Keene, p. 122). Original quotation : " " in Hagiwara, p. 42. The
specific word used for "dagger" was "tantō".
- Keene, p. 124.
- Keene, p. 125.
- Saigō, while excited at the beginning of combat, had planned
for the evacuation of the emperor from Kyoto if the situation
demanded it. Keene, pp. 125–6.
- The red and white pennant had been conceived and designed by
Okubo
Toshimichi and Iwakura Tomomi, among others. It was in effect a
forgery, as was the imperial order to deploy it among the defending
troops. Prince Yoshiaki, was also given a special sword and
appointed "great general, conqueror of the east," and the Shogunal
forces opposing Yoshiaki were branded "enemies of the court."
Keene, pp. 126–7.
- A detailed description of the battle is available in Hagiwara,
p. 42.
- "Militarily, the Tokugawa were vastly superior. They had
between 3 to 5 times more soldiers and held Osaka Castle as a base,
they could count on the forces from Edo modernized by the French,
and they had the most powerful fleet of East Asia at hand in Osaka
Bay. In a regular fight, the Imperial side had to lose. Saigō
Takamori too, anticipating defeat had planned to move the Emperor
to the Chūgoku mountains and was preparing for guerilla warfare."
Hagiwara, p. 43. Translation from the Japanese original.
- Hagiwara, p. 43–5.
- "Togo Heihachiro in images, illustrated Meiji Navy"
- Polak, p. 75.
- Le Monde Illustré, No. 583, June
13 1868.
- Polak, p. 77.
- Hagiwara, p. 46
- Polak, p. 81.
- Tokugawa Yoshinobu was placed under house arrest, and stripped of all titles,
land and power. He was later on released, when he demonstrated no
further interest and ambition in national affairs. He retired to
Shizuoka, the place to which his
ancestor Tokugawa Ieyasu, had also retired.
- Bolitho, p. 246; Black, p. 214.
- Polak, pp. 79–91. Apart from those core domains, most of the
northern domains were part of the alliance.
- A detailed presentation of artifacts from that phase of the war
is visible at the Sendai City Museum, in Sendai, Japan.
- An account of the resistance of the Byakkotai can be accessed
here (English)
- In a letter of Enomoto to the Imperial Governing Council: "We
pray that this portion of the Empire may be conferred upon our late
lord, Tokugawa Kamenosuke; and in that case, we shall repay your
beneficence by our faithful guardianship of the northern gate."
Black, pp. 240–241
- Polak, pp. 85–9.
- Collache was onboard one of the ships that participated to the
attack. He had to wreck his ship and flee overland, until he
surrendered with his colleagues and was transferred to a prison in
Tokyo. He ultimately returned to France safely to tell his story.
The encounter is detailed in Collache, "Une aventure au
Japon".
- These included the Naval Codes he had brought back from
Holland, which he entrusted to the general of the Imperial troops,
Kuroda
Kiyotaka,
- Polak et al.
- Most legal distinctions between samurai and ordinary subjects
were soon abolished, and the traditional rice stipends paid to
samurai were first converted into cash stipends, and these were
later converted at a steep discount to government bonds (Gordon pp.
64–65).
- For example Saigō Takamori, Okubo Toshimichi,
and Tōgō Heihachirō all came from
Satsuma. Discussed in Togo Heihachiro in images: Illustrated
Meiji Navy
- BBC News article, Tuesday, 15 August 2006
- Quoted in Keene, 143.
- Discussed in Polak et al. See also, Keene.
- Keene, p. 142.
- Keene, pp. 143–4, 165.
- Parkes, quoted in Keene, p. 183-7. Emphasis in the
original.
- Discussed in Evans and Peattie.
- Jansen, p. 338. See Jansen, pp. 337-43 for political
developments during and relating to the course of the war. See
Keene, 138–42, for discussion of the Charter Oath and signboard
decrees.
- Many daimyo were appointed as the first governors, and
subsequently given peerage
and large pensions. Over the following years, the three hundred
domains were reduced to fifty prefectures. Jansen, pp. 348–9.
- Jansen, 367–8.
- Hagiwara, pp. 94–120. Saigō himself professed continued loyalty
to Meiji and wore his Imperial Army uniform throughout the
conflict. He committed suicide before the final charge of the
rebellion, and was posthumously pardoned by the emperor in
subsequent years. Jansen, 9p. 369–70.
- The Shogunate leaders are labeled from left to right,
Enomoto
Takeaki, Otori Keisuke, Matsudaira Taro. The samurai in yellow
garment is Hijikata Toshizo.
- The wigs indicate soldiers from Tosa, the wigs for Chōshū, and the wigs
for Satsuma.
- Hagiwara, p. 50.
- Ryozen Museum of History exhibit
See also
References
- Collache, Eugène. "Une
aventure au Japon" Le Tour du Monde, No. 77, 1874
- Hagiwara, Kōichi (2004). (Illustrated life of Saigō Takamori and Okubo Toshimichi) ISBN 4-309-76041-4,
2004 (in Japanese)
- Le Monde
Illustré, No. 583, June 13, 1868
- Polak, Christian. (2001).
Soie et lumières: L'âge d'or des échanges franco-japonais (des
origines aux années 1950). Tokyo: Chambre de Commerce et
d'Industrie Française du Japon, Hachette Fujin Gahōsha (アシェット婦人画報社).
- __________. (2002). 絹と光: 知られざる日仏交流100年の歴史 (江戶時代-1950年代)
Kinu to hikariō: shirarezaru Nichi-Futsu kōryū 100-nen no
rekishi (Edo jidai-1950-nendai). Tokyo: Ashetto Fujin Gahōsha,
2002. 10-ISBN 4-573-06210-6/13-ISBN 978-4-573-06210-8; OCLC
50875162
- Polak, Christian, et al. (1988). "End of the Bakufu and
Restoration in Hakodate." ISBN 4-12-001699-4 (in Japanese).
- Tōgō Shrine and Tōgō Association ( ), Togo Heihachiro in
Images: Illustrated Meiji Navy ( ), (Japanese)
Further reading
External links