Difference between revisions of "Sakamoto Ryoma"

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(added imina and other name)
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* ''Born:[[1835]]/11/15''
 
* ''Born:[[1835]]/11/15''
 
* ''Died:[[1867]]/12/10''
 
* ''Died:[[1867]]/12/10''
* Japanese: 坂本竜馬 ''(Sakamoto Ryôma)''
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* ''Other name: Saitani Umetarô''
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* ''Japanese'': 坂本龍馬直柔 ''(Sakamoto Ryôma Naonari)''
  
  

Revision as of 04:21, 12 March 2007

  • Born:1835/11/15
  • Died:1867/12/10
  • Other name: Saitani Umetarô
  • Japanese: 坂本龍馬直柔 (Sakamoto Ryôma Naonari)


Sakamoto Ryôma Timeline

  • 1835 Born on November 15 in Tosa as the second son into the Gôshi (low ranking samurai) household of Sakamoto Hachihei Naotari
  • 1848 Started studying swordsmanship at the local dôjô and quickly became one of the dôjô’s most gifted students.
  • 1853 Completed his training in swordsmanship and received his certificate
    • Began advanced training in swordsmanship at the famed Chiba dôjô in Edo.
    • Saw the U.S. Navy “black ships” under the command of Commodore Matthew Perry, rousing feelings of both curiosity and a strong anti-foreign zeal
  • 1854 Completed his training at the Chiba dôjô and returned to Tosa where he learned more about the West from scholar Kawada Shoryo
  • 1858 Returned to Edo to receive his license in swordsmanship from the Chiba dojo
  • 1861 Joined the Tosa Loyalist Party, led by longtime friend, Takechi Zuizan (Hanpeita), with the aim of expelling the foreigners and restoring power to the emperor
  • 1862 Fled Tosa without han permission to become a ronin in Edo to work with other loyalists to push their Sonnô Jôi agenda
    • Sets out to assassinate Katsu Kaishu, commissioner of the Tokugawa navy, due to his calls for opening up the country to foreign trade. Instead of killing him, Ryoma becomes one of Katsu’s disciples
  • 1863 Katsu secures a pardon for Ryoma for leaving Tosa, but he refuses han orders to return, remaining an “outlaw” Rônin
    • Put in charge of the Kaientai, in Kobe, an auxiliary naval training unit established by Katsu Kaishu
    • Introduced to Yokoi Shonan, an influential loyalist from Fukui, who advocated opening the country
  • 1864 Met Saigô Takamori, a Satsuma loyalist leader, one of the future masterminds behind the future overthrow of the Tokugawa bakufu
  • 1865 Established Japan’s first foreign trading company, the Kameyama-shachu in Nagasaki, with the help of Saigo, to run supplies to loyalists in Choshu.
    • Met Chôshu loyalist leader Katsura Kogorô and begins to push longtime enemies, Satsuma and Choshu to form an anti-Tokugawa alliance
  • 1866 Successfully brokered the secret military alliance between Satsuma and Choshu that will seal the fate of the Tokugawa Bakufu.
    • One night after the conclusion of the Satsuma-Choshu alliance, Ryoma fights his way out of the Teradaya using a Smith & Wesson revolver during a raid by pro-bakufu police forces.
  • 1867 Received a second pardon from Tosa
    • Reorganized the Kameyama-shachu into the Tosa-Kaientai, and is appointed its head.
    • While running guns, the Kaintai vessel lroha is struck by a vessel belonging to Kii. Ryoma files a law suit under the premise that the Kii ship violated the laws of the sea as stipulated under international law. Receives an out-of-court settlement.
    • Formulated his Eight-Point Program, calling for a new government structure to replace the Tokugawa baku-han system.
    • Goto Shojiro, head of the Tosa bureaucracy, passes a written memorial calling for the immediate restoration of imperial rule and a new government based on Ryoma’s Eight-Point Program to the leader of Tosa, Yamauchi Yôdô, who passes the document to the bakufu.
    • Tokugawa Yoshinobu, accepts the memorial from Tosa and resigns as Shogun, returning political power to the imperial court.
    • Assassinated with fellow Tosa loyalist, Nakaoka Shintarô by pro-bakufu forces on December 10

References

  • Hillsborough, Romulus. RYOMA- Life of a Renaissance Samurai. Ridgeback Press, 1999
  • Jansen, Marius B. Sakamoto Ryoma and the Meiji Restoration. Columbia University Press, 1994.
  • The Sakamoto Ryoma Memorial Museum’s Webpage: http://www.kochi-bunkazaidan.or.jp/~ryoma/english1.htm
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