1 / 31

The Rise of Germany and Japan

The Rise of Germany and Japan. A Comparison. Tokugawa Shogunate Japan. For almost 300 years the shogunate r uled Japan Its later years were marked by bad harvests and increasing corruption Samurai lashed out at the incompetence of the central government

edric
Download Presentation

The Rise of Germany and Japan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Rise of Germany and Japan A Comparison

  2. Tokugawa Shogunate Japan • For almost 300 years the shogunateruled Japan • Its later years were marked by bad harvests and increasing corruption • Samurai lashed out at the incompetence of the central government • Japan was very isolationist and only rarely traded with Korea…but this changes in 1853

  3. Commodore Matthew Perry • Westerns nations began approaching Japan and trying to open it up to trade • In the summer of 1853, Perry sailed into Tokyo Bay with 4 heavily armed guns ships. • He asked for the opening of trade • Japanese leaders argued over what to do • Finally, weary of US military power the Tokugawa Shogunate agreed to open Japan up

  4. Japanese upset • Many Japanese living far from Tokyo were upset that Japan gave in • Felt it showed weakness and demanded the resignation of the shogunate and restoration of the emperor to his rightful place • In 1868, the emperor is restored

  5. Meiji Restoration • The emperor took the name Meiji which means enlightened rule • Embarks on a transformation of Japanese society • Begins to modernize Japan

  6. Political • Created a legislative body to help rule Japan, modeled on the West • Power still rested in the hands of the ruling oligarchy

  7. Economic • Land taken away from Daimyos and given to peasants who had to pay a 3% tax • When peasants could not pay they sold their land, by end of the century 40% of farmers were tenants • Needed industry - universal education with emphasis on applied science -provided subsidies to industry -Key industry is weaponry and shipbuilding Funds provided locally and not by Westerners thus keeping out western money

  8. Social Structure • 1871, abolition of hereditary rights • Increased military and did away with samuari soldiers. Also had conscription • Education based on Western models, especially the US • Western clothing became popular, along with ball room dancing. Baseball became popular

  9. Militarism • Where does it get the money? • Through exports of textiles the government gained revenue to spend on military equipment and heavy industry • Textile industry was dominated by a women workforce • Irony, women had few rights yet it was their labor force that allowed Japan to become a military world power.

  10. Japanese Imperialism • In 1895 they take over Taiwan and forced Korea to open 3 ports to Japanese goods • 1895, Japan and China joined in a peasant revolt in Korea, on opposite sides. Japan will annex Korea in 1908 • Japan gains Liaodong Peninsula and Port Arthur. Due to European pressure the Japanese gave it back • The Russians took Port Arthur in 1898 from China. In 1904, Japan makes a surprise attack on Port Arthur

  11. Russo-Japanese War • Japanese destroy the navy of Russia • An Asian country defeated a European power • Japan regains Liaodong peninsula and the southern Sakhalin and the Kurile Islands

  12. Siege of Port Arthur and its bombardment

  13. Retreat of Russian soldiers

  14. Culture in Transition • European and US teachers flood Japan to teach modern skills • Western architecture is on the rise in Japan • Japanese art and gardens also influenced Western artists • Many Japanese still revered the traditional Japanese ways and values. There was tug-of-war between modernity and tradition

  15. Japan and Germany • Asian Fascism: feudal and warrior ethic combined with modern capitalism • Both engaged in repression at home and expansion abroad to achieve national objectives • Took defeat in war to disconnect the feudal ethic and bring about the transformation to a pluralistic society dedicated to living in peace and cooperation

  16. Germany and Otto Von Bismarck • Prussia refused to levy taxes for military • Bismarck: “Germany does not look to Prussia’s liberalism but to her power…Not by speeches and majorities will the great questions of the day be decided-that was the mistake of 1848-1849- but by blood and iron.” • He governed Prussia by ignoring Parliament • Advocated Realpolitik – “politics of reality”

  17. Otto Von Bismarck

  18. Imperial Germany • Bicameral legislature • Lower house was known as the Reichstag, which gave universal male suffrage • Chancellor was responsible to the emperor not the Parliament • Chance for democracy to grow but it failed because of army’s independence and Bismarck political tactics

  19. Imperial Germany • Germany was an authoritarian, conservative, military-bureaucratic state • Had the strongest military, Britain had the strongest navy

  20. Industrial Powerhouse in Europe • Strong industry – see notes • Over 50 percent of German workers were in industry • Over 30 percent of workforce was still in agriculture • Society was torn between traditionalism and modernization • There were demands for more democracy with Germany

More Related