Empire of Japan

The Empire of Japan was an expansionary empire that emerged from Imperial Japan.


History

Japanese expansion began with the First Sino-Japanese War. The Treaty of Shimonoseki was signed on April 17th, 1895 and involved the cession of the Liaodong Peninsula, Taiwan, and the Penghu Islands to Japan. Korea was also made independent. A week later, Russia, Germany, and France intervened diplomatically in what is known as the Tripartite Intervention (三国干渉, Sangoku Kanshou). The claim to Liaodong Peninsula was dropped; Russia instead began to occupy the peninsula, and other European powers immediately began to occupy other port cities as well.

The Russo-Japanese War pushed Russian influence out of Manchuria and Korea. The Japan-Korea Treaty of 1905 made Korea a dependent protectorate of Japan, and in 1910 Japan annexed Korea entirely.

Following World War 1, German territories in the Pacific were partitioned in the South Seas Mandate; Japan took command over the portions of German New Guinea norht of the equator.

Manchukuo

Japan invaded Manchuria in 1931 and established the Manchukuo puppet state.

Thailand

Phibun allied with Japan and purged anti-Japanese nationalists from government.


Composition

The Empire of Japan technically included just:

All other occupied and conquered territories were instead organized as puppet states.


Structure

Power in the Empire of Japan was split in a complex relationship between the military, the emperor, and ministries.

Emperors

Reign

Mutsuhito

1867 - 1912

Yoshihito

1912 - 1926

Hirohito

1926 - 1989

Prime Ministers

Terms

Hirobumi Ito

1885 - 1888

...

Horobumi Ito

1892 - 1896

...

Gonbee Yamamoto (山本 権兵衛)

1913 - 1914

...

Korekiyo Takahashi

1921 - 1922

Tomosaburou Katou (加藤 友三郎)

1922 - 1923

Gonbee Yamamoto

1923 - 1924

Keigo Kiyoura (清浦 奎吾)

1924

Takaaki Katou (加藤 高明)

1924 - 1926

Reijirou Wakatsuki (若槻 禮次郎)

1926 - 1927

Giichi Tanaka (田中 義一)

1927 - 1929

Osachi Hamaguchi (浜口 雄幸)

1929 - 1931

Reijirou Wakatsuki

1931

Tsuyoshi Inukai (犬養 毅)

1931 - 1932

Makoto Saitou (斎藤 実)

1932 - 1934

Keisuke Okada (岡田 啓介)

1934 - 1936

Kouki Hirota

1936 - 1937

...

Most of the prime ministers were military officers rather than civilians. The imperial family all served in the military officer corps. There were several attempted coups.


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