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Its establishment was funded by ''shôtenroku'', bonus stipends awarded by the [[Meiji government]] to Saigô, [[Kirino Toshiaki]], [[Oyama Tsunayoshi|Ôyama Tsunayoshi]], and others as rewards for their service in effecting the [[Meiji Restoration]]. As a result, the school was also known as the Shôten School or ''Shôten gakkô''.
 
Its establishment was funded by ''shôtenroku'', bonus stipends awarded by the [[Meiji government]] to Saigô, [[Kirino Toshiaki]], [[Oyama Tsunayoshi|Ôyama Tsunayoshi]], and others as rewards for their service in effecting the [[Meiji Restoration]]. As a result, the school was also known as the Shôten School or ''Shôten gakkô''.
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The school was directed by [[Shinohara Kunimoto]], who oversaw a faculty consisting of [[Kikita Taiso|Kukita Taisô]] teaching Chinese studies, [[Fukami Aritsune]] teaching Western studies, the Dutchman Schkabel, and the Englishman Copps, among other lecturers. A system was quickly established to send students to study abroad; [[Kio Mitsuji]], [[Kunigo Tetsushi]], and [[Hidaka Masao]] went overseas in [[1875]], and [[Kashiwabara Shoichiro|Kashiwabara Shôichirô]] and [[Nozu Dennojo|Nozu Dennojô]] followed them the following year. Students of the school also included [[Ban Kaneyuki]] and [[Sakakibara Masaharu]].
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The school was directed by [[Shinohara Kunimoto]], who oversaw a faculty consisting of [[Kikita Taiso|Kukita Taisô]] teaching Chinese studies, [[Fukami Aritsune]] teaching Western studies, the Dutchman Schkabel, and the Englishman Copps, among other lecturers. A system was quickly established to send students to study abroad; [[Kio Mitsuji]], [[Kunigo Tetsushi]], and [[Hidaka Masao]] went overseas in [[1875]], and [[Kashiwabara Shoichiro|Kashiwabara Shôichirô]] and [[Nozu Dennojo|Nozu Dennojô]] followed them the following year. Students of the school also included [[Tomo Kaneyuki]] and [[Sakakibara Masaharu]].
    
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