The Six Great Imperial Tours were the six largest and longest-term imperial progresses made by the Meiji Emperor in the 1870s-1880s. These served as a key element of the early Meiji government's construction of a new Emperor-centered nationalism, by making the Emperor visible and accessible to the people, and to have him seen traveling and surveying the realm, reinforcing the idea of his connection to and concern for the entire realm. His travels included visits to sites of Imperial importance, including Ise and Atsuta Shrines, imperial mausolea, and the like, as well as visits with honor students, disaster victims, and the elderly, as well as individuals honored for certain forms of service to the nation (such as contributions to local industry and education), showing his concern for the people.
They included:
- 1872/5/23 to 7/12: A tour of the Chûgoku and Saikoku regions.
- 1876 June 2 to July 21: A tour of the Tôhoku region.
- 1878 August 30 to November 9: A seventy-two day tour of the Hokuriku and Tôkaidô regions, with a retinue of around 700 people, including a visit to Atsuta Shrine.
- 1880 June 16 to July 23: A tour of Yamanashi, Mie and Kyoto prefectures, including visits to Ise Shrine.
- 1881 July 30 to October 11: A seventy-four day tour of Yamagata, Akita, and Hokkaidô, on which the emperor was accompanied by a retinue of some 350 people.
- 1885 July 26 to August 12: A tour of Yamaguchi, Hiroshima, and Okayama prefectures.
References
- Takashi Fujitani, Splendid Monarchy, UC Press (1998), 47.