Difference between revisions of "Tsuboi Shogoro"

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Tsuboi Shôgorô is considered one of the founders or fathers of anthropology and archaeology in Japan.
 
Tsuboi Shôgorô is considered one of the founders or fathers of anthropology and archaeology in Japan.
  
Born in [[Edo]] in [[1863]] the son of [[Tsuboi Shinryo|Tsuboi Shinryô]]<!--坪井信良-->, Shôgorô went on to graduate from [[Tokyo Imperial University]] in [[1886]], founding the Tokyo Anthropological Society that same year. After studying abroad for a time in England and France, he become a professor at his alma mater in [[1892]].
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Born in [[Edo]] in [[1863]] the son of [[Tsuboi Shinryo|Tsuboi Shinryô]]<!--坪井信良-->, Shôgorô went on to attend [[Tokyo Imperial University]]; he was one of three men from the university who made the very first discovery of [[Yayoi period]] materials in [[1884]], just outside the campus.<ref>Plaques on-site at University of Tokyo.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/15800690658/sizes/k/]</ref> Tsuboi graduated from the Imperial University in [[1886]], and founded the Tokyo Anthropological Society that same year. After studying abroad for a time in England and France, he become a professor at his alma mater in [[1892]].
  
 
Among his many works of scholarship, Tsuboi proposed and advocated for the theory that the first indigenous people to occupy the Japanese islands were a people who appear in Ainu legends as the ''[[korpokkur]]''. His so-called "korpokkur theory" was hotly debated by others of the time.
 
Among his many works of scholarship, Tsuboi proposed and advocated for the theory that the first indigenous people to occupy the Japanese islands were a people who appear in Ainu legends as the ''[[korpokkur]]''. His so-called "korpokkur theory" was hotly debated by others of the time.
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*"[http://kotobank.jp/word/%E5%9D%AA%E4%BA%95%E6%AD%A3%E4%BA%94%E9%83%8E?dic=daijisen&oid=12452200 Tsuboi Shôgorô]," Digital Daijisen, Shogakukan, Inc.
 
*"[http://kotobank.jp/word/%E5%9D%AA%E4%BA%95%E6%AD%A3%E4%BA%94%E9%83%8E?dic=daijisen&oid=12452200 Tsuboi Shôgorô]," Digital Daijisen, Shogakukan, Inc.
 
*"[http://kotobank.jp/word/%E5%9D%AA%E4%BA%95%E6%AD%A3%E4%BA%94%E9%83%8E?dic=daijisen&oid=12452200 Tsuboi Shôgorô]," Asahi Nihon rekishi jinbutsu jiten, Asahi Shimbunsha.
 
*"[http://kotobank.jp/word/%E5%9D%AA%E4%BA%95%E6%AD%A3%E4%BA%94%E9%83%8E?dic=daijisen&oid=12452200 Tsuboi Shôgorô]," Asahi Nihon rekishi jinbutsu jiten, Asahi Shimbunsha.
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<references/>
  
 
[[Category:Meiji Period]]
 
[[Category:Meiji Period]]
 
[[Category:Scholars and Philosophers]]
 
[[Category:Scholars and Philosophers]]

Revision as of 09:41, 1 May 2015

The graves of Tsuboi Shôgorô, his wife Naoko, and his father Tsuboi Shinryô, at Somei Cemetery in Tokyo
  • Born: 1863
  • Died: 1913
  • Japanese: 坪井正五郎 (Tsuboi Shougorou)

Tsuboi Shôgorô is considered one of the founders or fathers of anthropology and archaeology in Japan.

Born in Edo in 1863 the son of Tsuboi Shinryô, Shôgorô went on to attend Tokyo Imperial University; he was one of three men from the university who made the very first discovery of Yayoi period materials in 1884, just outside the campus.[1] Tsuboi graduated from the Imperial University in 1886, and founded the Tokyo Anthropological Society that same year. After studying abroad for a time in England and France, he become a professor at his alma mater in 1892.

Among his many works of scholarship, Tsuboi proposed and advocated for the theory that the first indigenous people to occupy the Japanese islands were a people who appear in Ainu legends as the korpokkur. His so-called "korpokkur theory" was hotly debated by others of the time.

In 1903, he played a key role in organizing the "Pavilion of Mankind" (Jinruikan) at the Fifth Domestic Exposition in Osaka. This pavilion is infamous today as a classic example of the "human zoo," commonly practiced by many colonial powers at that time, and seen also at the 1904 St. Louis World's Fair; at Tsuboi's pavilion at Osaka, Ainu and Taiwanese aborigines were put on display, in mock recreations of their traditional clothing and homes, to be seen by visitors to the expo. Okinawans famously refused to be put on display, and somehow were permitted to exempt themselves.

Tsuboi died in 1913 in St. Petersburg.

References

  1. Plaques on-site at University of Tokyo.[1]