The Meiji Restoration: How Japan Modernized Overnight — Fexingo History

The Meiji Constitution: How Japan Crafted a Modern Monarchy

9 min · I går
episode The Meiji Constitution: How Japan Crafted a Modern Monarchy cover

Description

In 1889, Japan unveiled the Meiji Constitution — a document that balanced imperial authority with a fledgling parliament and defined the nation's political path for half a century. This episode explores the drafting process led by Itō Hirobumi and his team, the influence of European models (especially Prussian), the tense negotiations between oligarchs and reformers, and the constitution's key clauses on the emperor, the Diet, and citizen rights. We also discuss the role of the genrō — the oligarchs who shaped modern Japan — and how the constitution reflected Meiji ideals of fukoku kyōhei and bunmei kaika while retaining traditional kokutai (national essence). The episode unpacks the document's dual nature: a tool for legitimacy and a framework for incremental democracy. #MeijiConstitution #ItōHirobumi #MeijiRestoration #FukokuKyōhei #BunmeiKaika #Kokutai #Genrō #ImperialDiet #PrussianInfluence #1889 #EmperorMeiji #CharterOath #PrivyCouncil #UenoRōen #JapanHistory #EastAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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144 episodes

episode The Meiji Silk Mills: How Raw Silk Powered Japan's Overnight Modernization artwork

The Meiji Silk Mills: How Raw Silk Powered Japan's Overnight Modernization

This episode explores the critical role of raw silk exports in funding Japan's rapid industrial transformation during the Meiji era. Lucas and Luna walk through the story of the Tomioka Silk Mill, a state-of-the-art French-designed factory that opened in 1872. They discuss how the Meiji government sent young women to learn Western reeling techniques, the lives of the female factory workers known as 'jokō,' and how silk earnings helped Japan import warships, railways, and machinery. The conversation touches on the contradictions of modernization: technological progress built on the labor of poor rural women, and the tension between tradition and industry. Along the way, they mention key figures like Eiichi Shibusawa, the mill's founder, and the French engineer Paul Brunat. This episode offers a ground-level view of Japan's industrial revolution through the lens of a single transformative industry. #MeijiJapan #TomiokaSilkMill #SilkIndustry #JapaneseIndustrialization #EiichiShibusawa #PaulBrunat #Jokō #RawSilk #FukokuKyōhei #BunmeiKaika #MeijiRestoration #JapaneseHistory #WomenInHistory #TextileIndustry #IndustrialRevolution #EastAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday7 min
episode The Meiji Constitution: How Japan Crafted a Modern Monarchy artwork

The Meiji Constitution: How Japan Crafted a Modern Monarchy

In 1889, Japan unveiled the Meiji Constitution — a document that balanced imperial authority with a fledgling parliament and defined the nation's political path for half a century. This episode explores the drafting process led by Itō Hirobumi and his team, the influence of European models (especially Prussian), the tense negotiations between oligarchs and reformers, and the constitution's key clauses on the emperor, the Diet, and citizen rights. We also discuss the role of the genrō — the oligarchs who shaped modern Japan — and how the constitution reflected Meiji ideals of fukoku kyōhei and bunmei kaika while retaining traditional kokutai (national essence). The episode unpacks the document's dual nature: a tool for legitimacy and a framework for incremental democracy. #MeijiConstitution #ItōHirobumi #MeijiRestoration #FukokuKyōhei #BunmeiKaika #Kokutai #Genrō #ImperialDiet #PrussianInfluence #1889 #EmperorMeiji #CharterOath #PrivyCouncil #UenoRōen #JapanHistory #EastAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday9 min
episode The Meiji Sewing Machine: How a Simple Invention Modernized Japan artwork

The Meiji Sewing Machine: How a Simple Invention Modernized Japan

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the unlikely role of the sewing machine in Japan's Meiji Restoration. While railways, warships, and education reforms grab headlines, the humble sewing machine—introduced by American missionaries and adapted by Japanese innovators—transformed daily life and powered Japan's textile-driven industrialization. Learn how the first sewing machine arrived in Yokohama in 1860, how inventors like Yosaku Hanyū reverse-engineered and mass-produced Japanese versions, and how the Singer company's marketing campaigns taught millions of women to sew Western-style clothing. The episode also covers the rise of Japan's garment industry, the shift from kimono to Western dress, and how sewing machines became symbols of modernity in rural homes. Finally, a brief look at the Matsukata Deflation's impact on textile workers and the global export boom that followed. Specific terms include: ミシン (mishin), Yosaku Hanyū, Singer Sewing Machine, Yokohama, Ōmi, Matsukata Deflation, Fukoku Kyōhei, Bunmei Kaika, kimono, rickshaw. #MeijiSewingMachine #Mishin #YosakuHanyu #SingerSewingMachine #MeijiTextiles #FukokuKyōhei #BunmeiKaika #MatsukataDeflation #Yokohama #Omi #GarmentIndustry #Industrialization #JapaneseHistory #MeijiRestoration #EastAsia #History #FexingoHistory #SewingMachineHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

5. juli 20265 min
episode Meiji Japan's Newspaper War: Freedom of the Press vs Censorship artwork

Meiji Japan's Newspaper War: Freedom of the Press vs Censorship

In this episode of The Meiji Restoration series, we dive into the turbulent birth of Japan's modern press. After centuries of Tokugawa-era information control, the Meiji government initially encouraged newspapers as tools of enlightenment—only to clamp down hard when editors began criticizing the regime. We trace the story of the first daily newspaper, the Yokohama Mainichi Shimbun, founded in 1870, and the rapid proliferation of titles that followed. Central to the conflict was the 1875 Press Ordinance and Libel Law, which gave authorities sweeping powers to fine, imprison, or ban papers and journalists. We explore the dramatic 1875 arrest of Narushima Ryūhoku, a former shogunate official turned biting satirist, whose trial became a cause célèbre for free speech. We also look at the government's own propaganda organ, the Dajōkan Nisshi, and how censorship shaped the Meiji public sphere. The episode touches on the role of journalists like Fukuzawa Yukichi, who used his paper Jiji Shinpō to advocate for gradual reform, and the tension between Bunmei Kaika (civilization and enlightenment) and the state's desire for control. We close with the 1880s, when a fragile press freedom emerged under the Meiji Constitution's promise of liberty within the law—a promise that remained contested until the end of the era. #MeijiJapan #PressFreedom #Censorship #NarushimaRyuhoku #FukuzawaYukichi #YokohamaMainichiShimbun #PressOrdinance1875 #BunmeiKaika #FukokuKyōhei #DajōkanNisshi #JijiShinpo #MeijiRestoration #JapaneseHistory #HistoryOfJournalism #FreedomOfSpeech #EastAsia #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

5. juli 20268 min
episode Meiji Japan's Postal Revolution: From Runners to Rails artwork

Meiji Japan's Postal Revolution: From Runners to Rails

In the 1870s, Japan's postal system transformed from a patchwork of private couriers and feudal messengers into a unified national network that tied the islands together. This episode follows the unlikely rise of Maejima Hisoka, a samurai bureaucrat who studied Western postal systems and fought to build Japan's modern mail service from scratch. We trace the first regular mail routes connecting Tokyo, Yokohama, and Osaka; the introduction of postage stamps featuring the dragon emblem; the role of the railway in speeding delivery; and the quiet diplomatic victory of joining the Universal Postal Union in 1877. Along the way, we touch on the social impact: how the mail opened communication for ordinary people, spread newspapers and ideas, and became a symbol of Bunmei Kaika — civilization and enlightenment. Lucas and Luna discuss the practical challenges — from illiterate customers to unreliable ships — and reflect on what the postal system reveals about Japan's broader modernization. A story of stamps, steam, and state-building. #MeijiRestoration #BunmeiKaika #FukokuKyōhei #Japan #PostalHistory #MaejimaHisoka #Tokyo #Yokohama #Osaka #UniversalPostalUnion #PostageStamps #Railway #Modernization #19thCentury #History #FexingoHistory #EastAsia #Telegraph Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

4. juli 20267 min