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Hotta Masayoshi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In thisJapanese name, thesurname is Hotta.
Hotta Masayoshi
Hotta Masayoshi
5th(Hotta) Lord of Sakura
In office
1825–1859
Preceded byHotta Masachika
Succeeded byHotta Masamichi
Personal details
Born(1810-08-30)August 30, 1810
Edo, Japan
DiedApril 26, 1864(1864-04-26) (aged 53)
Sakura, Chiba, Japan

Hotta Masayoshi (堀田 正睦, August 30, 1810 – April 26, 1864) was the 5th Hottadaimyō of theSakura Domain in the JapaneseEdo period, who served as chiefrōjū in theBakumatsu periodTokugawa shogunate, where he played an important role in the negotiations of theAnsei Treaties with various foreign powers.[1]

Early life

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Hotta Masayoshi was the younger son of the 3rddaimyō of Sakura, Hotta Masatoki, and was born at the domain's Edo residence. On the death of his father in 1811, he was adopted by his elder brother, the 4th daimyo of Sakura, Hotta Masachika, to secure the family succession. Masachika was of sickly physique and by 1824 there was a movement by the senior line of theHotta clan to have him removed from office, and replaced by the son of Hotta Masatsu, the daimyo ofKatada Domain and awakadoshiyori in the government. This was strongly opposed by most of the leadership of the Sakura domain, and Hotta Masayoshi was appointed daimyo. Almost immediately, the domain was saddled with the fiscally taxing burden of improving coastal defenses inEdo Bay against incursions of theBlack Ships. However, Masayoshi proved an able administrator, reforming the domain's finances, sponsoring studies ofrangaku, especially western military science, and establishing the predecessor ofJuntendo University.

Official career

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In April 1829, he was appointed aSōshaban and in August 1834 becameJisha-bugyō. In May 1837 he was appointedOsaka-jō dai, however only two months later he was recalled to Edo to join the ranks of therōjū. From 1841, he was regarded as the right arm ofMizuno Tadakuni, the architect of theTenpō Reforms. However, after Mizuno fell out of favor in 1843 due to failure of the Tenpō Reforms, Hotta also lost his position as rōjū.

Returning to Sakura, Hotta remained one of the leaders of the party supporting ending thesakoku isolation policy and opening the country to foreign trade. In August 1855, theAnsei great earthquakes struck Japan, and the Hotta clan residence in Edo was destroyed. A week later, senior rōjūAbe Masahiro requested that Hotta return to the ranks of therōjū.

Abe came under criticism from thetozama daimyōs, the Imperial Court and various factions within the government for perceived appeasement to the foreign powers in authorizing the signing treaties with the various western powers, starting with theConvention of Kanagawa which effectively ended the 220-year policy ofnational isolation, and in September 1855 was forced to resign his post, and was replaced by Hotta the following month, although Abe remained one of therōjū and a powerful influence until his death in 1857.[2]

Gaikoku-bōeki-toshirabe-gakari

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On October 17, 1856, Hotta formed and headed anad hoc committee of officials with special knowledge of foreign affairs.[1] In November 1856, he charged the members to come up with recommendations about the terms for opening Japanese ports. The results of their deliberations would become the basis for negotiations which ultimately resulted in theTreaty of Amity and Commerce of 1858 (also known as the Harris Treaty), which open up six ports to American trade, and establishedextraterritoriality.[3] Based on his knowledge of the events of theArrow War, Hotta believed that a violent response from the United States would arise if the demands of American consulTownsend Harris were refused. However, it was necessary to convince theEmperor Kōmei to accept the treaty. Traveling to Kyoto, Hotta found theEmperor securely in the midst of thejōi faction within the Imperial Court, who favored expelling the foreigners from Japan, by force if necessary, and was forced to return to Edo empty-handed. On top of this,shōgunTokugawa Iesada was very ill and factional strife erupted within the Shogunal court over who would be his successor. With these issues still largely unresolved, Hotta was replaced byIi Naosuke on June 21, 1858, who was given the title oftairō.

On September 6, 1859, Hotta resigned his posts in favor of his son, and went into official retirement. He continued to lend his political support to theHitotsubashi faction which was opposed to Ii Naosuke, and during theAnsei purge of Hitotsubashi partisans, he was placed under house arrest within Sakura Castle, where he died on March 31, 1864, at the age of 53.

Ancestry

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[4]

Ancestors of Hotta Masayoshi
16.Hotta Masatoshi (1634–1684)
8.Hotta Masatake (1685–1715)
17. Sakai
4.Hotta Masasuke, 1st Lord ofSakura (1712–1761)
9. Kobayashi
2.Hotta Masatoki, 3rd Lord ofSakura (1761–1811)
5. Machida
1.Hotta Masayoshi
6. Genta Mitsutoshi
3. Genta Yoshio

Notes

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  1. ^abNussbaum, Louis Frédéricet al. (2005). "Hotta Masayoshi" inJapan encyclopedia, p. 360., p. 360, atGoogle Books; n.b., Louis-Frédéric is pseudonym of Louis-Frédéric Nussbaum,seeDeutsche Nationalbibliothek Authority File.
  2. ^Harold Bolitho,Treasures among Men, p. 233.
  3. ^Beasley, William G. (1955).Select Documents on Japanese Foreign Policy, 1853–1868, p. 322.
  4. ^"Genealogy".Reichsarchiv (in Japanese). Retrieved9 November 2017.

References

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External links

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Preceded by
Hotta Masachika
5th(Hotta)Daimyō of Sakura
1825–1859
Succeeded by
Hotta Masamichi
International
National
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