Difference between revisions of "1881"

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*The home of artist [[Kobayashi Kiyochika]], along with his possessions, is destroyed by fire.
 
*The home of artist [[Kobayashi Kiyochika]], along with his possessions, is destroyed by fire.
 
*[[Omura Shigenobu|Ômura Shigenobu]] founds the [[Progressive Party]] (''Kaishintô'').
 
*[[Omura Shigenobu|Ômura Shigenobu]] founds the [[Progressive Party]] (''Kaishintô'').
 +
*[[Prince Albert]] and his younger brother [[George V|Prince George]] visit Japan.
 
*The first Western-style songbook is published in Japan; it contains the original adaptation of "Auld Lang Syne" into ''[[Hotaru no hikari]]''.
 
*The first Western-style songbook is published in Japan; it contains the original adaptation of "Auld Lang Syne" into ''[[Hotaru no hikari]]''.
 
*The [[Tokyo National Museum]] opens in its current location, organized around a two-story brick building designed by [[Josiah Conder]].
 
*The [[Tokyo National Museum]] opens in its current location, organized around a two-story brick building designed by [[Josiah Conder]].

Revision as of 21:27, 12 June 2014

Meiji 14 (明治十四年)

Timeline of 1881

  • 1881/1/5 Japanese ambassador to China Shishido Tamaki informs the Chinese government that he considers the dispute over sovereignty over the Ryûkyû Islands to be settled.
  • 1881/1/20 Shishido departs Peking.
  • 1881/3/4 King David Kalākaua of Hawaiʻi arrives in Yokohama. He becomes the first reigning monarch of a foreign country to visit Japan freely (i.e. not as a prisoner). During his 19-day stay in Japan, he meets with Emperor Meiji, proposes Japanese immigration to Hawaii, and suggests a marriage between Princess Kaiulani and Prince Yamashina Sadamaro (ultimately, the Japanese reject this latter proposition). Nagasaki Seigo serves as Kalakaua's interpreter and is later awarded the Royal Order of Kalākaua.
  • 1881/3/22 Kalākaua departs Nagasaki for Shanghai.

Other Events of 1881

Births and Deaths


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