The Meiji Restoration: How Japan Modernized Overnight — Fexingo History

Meiji Japan's Banking Revolution: The Birth of the Yen

5 min · 25 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Meiji Japan's Banking Revolution: The Birth of the Yen

Descripción

In the early Meiji years, Japan had no unified currency — just a chaotic mess of clan notes, gold ryō, and Chinese coins. This episode follows the creation of a national banking system, from the 1871 New Currency Act that established the yen to the founding of the Bank of Japan in 1882. We meet Finance Minister Ōkuma Shigenobu, who pushed for modern banks modeled on the US National Banking System, and Matsukata Masayoshi, the fiscal conservative who crushed inflation by selling government bonds and raising taxes. The story takes us from the Osaka Mint — where imported British machinery stamped Japan's first silver yen — to the Matsukata Deflation that savaged farmers but stabilized the economy. We also explore how national banks issued their own notes, why the public distrusted paper money, and how the Bank of Japan finally centralized control. This is the financial bedrock that funded Japan's industrial revolution. #MeijiRestoration #BankOfJapan #ŌkumaShigenobu #MatsukataMasayoshi #OsakaMint #Yen #NewCurrencyAct #MatsukataDeflation #NationalBanks #FukokuKyōhei #BunmeiKaika #JapaneseHistory #EastAsianHistory #EconomicHistory #SilverYen #Inflation #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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126 episodios

Portada del episodio Meiji Japan's Transport Revolution: Rickshaws, Steamships, and the Birth of Modern Mobility

Meiji Japan's Transport Revolution: Rickshaws, Steamships, and the Birth of Modern Mobility

When Japan opened to the world after centuries of isolation, its transportation system was still medieval: foot travel, palanquins, and coastal junks. Within decades, the country leapfrogged into the age of steam, steel, and mass transit. This episode traces the transformation of how people and goods moved across Meiji Japan — from the humble jinrikisha, a two-wheeled carriage that became a global icon, to the British-built steamship lines that turned Yokohama into a world port. We follow the engineers who surveyed impossible mountain routes for the Tokaido Railway, the entrepreneurs who launched Japan's first streetcars, and the passengers who rode them — from silk merchants to factory girls. Along the way, we uncover the bitter debates: should Japan build its own ships or buy foreign ones? Were rickshaws a step forward or just a prettier form of servitude? And how did a single bridge in Tokyo spark a riot? This is the story of how Meiji Japan learned to move — and in doing so, redrew the map of its own future. #MeijiRestoration #Jinrikisha #Steamship #TokaidoRailway #YokohamaPort #NipponYusenKaisha #BunmeiKaika #FukokuKyōhei #IwakuraMission #RailwayHistory #Streetcar #EastAsia #Modernization #TransportationHistory #JapanHistory #IndustrialRevolution #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer11 min
Portada del episodio The Meiji Restoration Police and Prisons: Law and Order in a Modernizing Japan

The Meiji Restoration Police and Prisons: Law and Order in a Modernizing Japan

In the whirlwind of Japan's Meiji Restoration, the samurai class—once the enforcers of feudal order—were displaced by a new national police force. This episode explores the transformation from decentralized domain law enforcement to a centralized, modern police system modeled on European gendarmerie. We discuss the pivotal role of Kawaji Toshiyoshi, who studied French and German policing to design the Metropolitan Police Department. The episode also examines the harsh realities of Meiji prisons, including the infamous Miyagi Prison and the use of convict labor in Hokkaido development. We touch on key legislation like the Police Law of 1880 and the impact of the Hōan Jōrei (Peace Preservation Law) of 1887, which gave police broad powers to suppress dissent. The conversation reveals how the police became a tool for both modernization and social control, from cracking down on the Freedom and People's Rights Movement to enforcing public hygiene standards. Listeners will gain insight into how Japan's rapid state-building included a new apparatus for surveillance and punishment, reflecting the tensions between liberty and order in the Meiji era. #MeijiRestoration #JapanesePolice #KawajiToshiyoshi #MetropolitanPoliceDepartment #HōanJōrei #MiyagiPrison #FukokuKyōhei #BunmeiKaika #samurai #convictlabor #Hokkaido #FreedomandPeoplesRightsMovement #modernization #socialcontrol #Japan #history #FexingoHistory #EdoTokyo Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer9 min
Portada del episodio Meiji Japan's Railway Revolution: The Tracks That Unified a Nation

Meiji Japan's Railway Revolution: The Tracks That Unified a Nation

In 1872, Japan's first railway opened between Shimbashi in Tokyo and Yokohama, a 29-kilometer line that revolutionized travel and trade. But the story of Meiji rail is far more than just steam engines and tracks. This episode explores how the railway became a tool of national unification, the fierce debates over private versus state control, the engineering challenges of Japan's mountainous terrain, and the human cost — including the thousands of laborers who built the lines. We delve into the figures of Inoue Masaru, the 'father of Japanese railways', and Edmund Morel, the British engineer who advised the Meiji government. From the initial Tokyo-Yokohama line to the ambitious Tokyo-Aomori route and the role of railways in the Russo-Japanese War, we trace how iron rails literally connected a modernizing empire. We also touch on the cultural impact — how the railway changed time perception, sparked tourism, and even influenced fashion. This is the untold story of how Japan's railway revolution laid the tracks for its rapid industrialization. #MeijiRailway #InoueMasaru #EdmundMorel #ShimbashiStation #TokyoYokohamaLine #BunmeiKaika #FukokuKyōhei #RussoJapaneseWar #JapanIndustrialization #RailwayHistory #MeijiJapan #JapaneseHistory #oYatoiGaikokujin #TokyoAomoriLine #SteamLocomotive #History #FexingoHistory #EastAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

26 de jun de 20269 min
Portada del episodio Meiji Japan's Antarctic Expedition: The Shirase Party

Meiji Japan's Antarctic Expedition: The Shirase Party

In 1910, while Japan was still consolidating its rapid modernization, a middle-aged army reservist named Nobu Shirase set sail for the Antarctic with a small crew and minimal funding. This episode tells the story of the Japanese Antarctic Expedition—a remarkable feat of exploration that nearly ended in disaster. Shirase's ship, the Kainan Maru, battled pack ice and storms to reach the Ross Sea. After a failed first attempt, the expedition returned a year later, and Shirase, along with two Ainu dog drivers, became the fourth party in history to set foot on Antarctica's continental shelf. They named their landing site Crown Prince Harald Land, but the world barely noticed. Back in Japan, the expedition was met with public indifference and mounting debt. We explore why Shirase went, how his team survived, and what his journey tells us about Meiji-era ambition, national pride, and the limits of imperial reach. Drawing on expedition diaries and recent scholarship, this episode reveals a forgotten chapter of polar history and its quiet legacy in Japan's modern identity. Keywords: Shirase, Kainan Maru, Antarctic, Meiji, exploration. #ShiraseNobu #JapaneseAntarcticExpedition #KainanMaru #PolarExploration #MeijiJapan #Antarctica #CrownPrinceHaraldLand #AinuDogDrivers #ImperialJapan #HeroicAge #AntarcticHistory #Exploration #MeijiEra #JapanHistory #FexingoHistory #History #ScienceHistory #AdventureHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

26 de jun de 20265 min
Portada del episodio Meiji Japan's Christian Samurai: The Hidden Believers

Meiji Japan's Christian Samurai: The Hidden Believers

In 1873, Japan's centuries-old ban on Christianity was quietly lifted, but the story of how Christianity survived—and even thrived—in Meiji Japan begins long before. This episode dives into the clandestine world of the Kakure Kirishitan, or 'hidden Christians,' who preserved their faith in secret for over 250 years after the Shimabara Rebellion (1637–1638). We follow their discovery by French missionaries in the 1860s, the brutal Urakami Yondan Kuzuke (the 'Fourth Persecution of Urakami') where thousands were tortured and exiled, and the unlikely alliance between samurai-turned-statesmen like Ōkubo Toshimichi and Christian leaders who helped shape Japan's modern religious landscape. We also explore how figures like Niijima Jō (Joseph Hardy Neesima), a samurai who secretly sailed to America, founded Dōshisha University and became a bridge between East and West. This is a story of faith, persecution, and the unexpected role Christianity played in Japan's rush to modernization. #KakureKirishitan #HiddenChristians #MeijiRestoration #ShimabaraRebellion #Urakami #NiijimaJo #DoshishaUniversity #ChristianityInJapan #OyamaIwao #ŌkuboToshimichi #FrenchMissionaries #YondanKuzuke #Nagasaki #Persecution #FukokuKyōhei #BunmeiKaika #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

25 de jun de 20268 min