The Meiji Restoration: How Japan Modernized Overnight — Fexingo History
Before Japan's railroads and factories could hum, the country needed a nervous system. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace the astonishingly rapid construction of Japan's first telegraph lines in the early 1870s. They explore how the Meiji government, determined to avoid colonization, turned to the telegraph as a tool of control and unification. The story follows Scottish engineer George Gilbert's struggle to string wires over volcanic mountains and through hostile territory, the role of the o-yatoi gaikokugai (foreign employees) in transferring technology, and the political urgency that drove the project. They also unpack the social friction: peasants who mistook the humming wires for demonic forces, and the samurai who saw the telegraph as a threat to their martial order. The episode reveals how the telegraph enabled the government to suppress the Satsuma Rebellion in 1877, coordinating troop movements across hundreds of miles in hours rather than days. And it ends with a reflection on how this invisible grid of copper and poles laid the foundation for Japan's later information society. A story of wires, wars, and the price of speed. #MeijiTelegraph #GeorgeGilbert #oyatoigaikokujin #SatsumaRebellion #FukokuKyōhei #BunmeiKaika #MeijiRestoration #HistoryOfTechnology #JapanModernization #TelegraphHistory #JapaneseHistory #EastAsia #19thCenturyHistory #InfrastructureHistory #MeijiJapan #GlobalHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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