British Diplomats, Bakufu and Japanese Civil War: friends or foes

Being the most dominant foreign power in nineteenth century Japan, Britain is often believed to have been behind the rise and eventual success of anti-Bakufu movement in a war against Tokugawa Shogunate. Britain, as argued by some, had indirectly supported the anti-Bakufu forces leading to the colla...

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Main Author: Fathil, Fauziah
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/50051/17/50051new.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/50051/
http://gcbss.org/past_gcbss/gcbss-proceeding.html
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spelling my.iium.irep.500512018-05-23T04:01:06Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/50051/ British Diplomats, Bakufu and Japanese Civil War: friends or foes Fathil, Fauziah H Social Sciences (General) JZ International relations Being the most dominant foreign power in nineteenth century Japan, Britain is often believed to have been behind the rise and eventual success of anti-Bakufu movement in a war against Tokugawa Shogunate. Britain, as argued by some, had indirectly supported the anti-Bakufu forces leading to the collapse of the Shogunate and establishment of new Imperial government in 1868. While there had been some events or developments cited to support this view, the general British diplomats’ stance towards either the Bakufu or its opponents, as this paper attempts to show, was that of neutrality. Their attitude and views towards both parties with regard to different matters varied, ranging from condemnatory to complimentary. This paper aims to highlight the general neutral attitude of the British diplomats, and at the same time exceptional views as expressed by a few, such as diplomat Ernest Satow in favour of the anti-Bakufu forces. Using mainly archival materials and diplomatic correspondence, this paper will demonstrate not only the views of British diplomats towards the Bakufu and anti-Bakufu forces as Japanese politics underwent changes, but also related issues or concerns which might have influenced their attitude and stance towards both. 2014-12-15 Conference or Workshop Item REM application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/50051/17/50051new.pdf Fathil, Fauziah (2014) British Diplomats, Bakufu and Japanese Civil War: friends or foes. In: Global Conference on Business and Social Science (GBSS 2014), 15th-16th December 2014, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. http://gcbss.org/past_gcbss/gcbss-proceeding.html
institution Universiti Islam Antarabangsa Malaysia
building IIUM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider International Islamic University Malaysia
content_source IIUM Repository (IREP)
url_provider http://irep.iium.edu.my/
language English
topic H Social Sciences (General)
JZ International relations
spellingShingle H Social Sciences (General)
JZ International relations
Fathil, Fauziah
British Diplomats, Bakufu and Japanese Civil War: friends or foes
description Being the most dominant foreign power in nineteenth century Japan, Britain is often believed to have been behind the rise and eventual success of anti-Bakufu movement in a war against Tokugawa Shogunate. Britain, as argued by some, had indirectly supported the anti-Bakufu forces leading to the collapse of the Shogunate and establishment of new Imperial government in 1868. While there had been some events or developments cited to support this view, the general British diplomats’ stance towards either the Bakufu or its opponents, as this paper attempts to show, was that of neutrality. Their attitude and views towards both parties with regard to different matters varied, ranging from condemnatory to complimentary. This paper aims to highlight the general neutral attitude of the British diplomats, and at the same time exceptional views as expressed by a few, such as diplomat Ernest Satow in favour of the anti-Bakufu forces. Using mainly archival materials and diplomatic correspondence, this paper will demonstrate not only the views of British diplomats towards the Bakufu and anti-Bakufu forces as Japanese politics underwent changes, but also related issues or concerns which might have influenced their attitude and stance towards both.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Fathil, Fauziah
author_facet Fathil, Fauziah
author_sort Fathil, Fauziah
title British Diplomats, Bakufu and Japanese Civil War: friends or foes
title_short British Diplomats, Bakufu and Japanese Civil War: friends or foes
title_full British Diplomats, Bakufu and Japanese Civil War: friends or foes
title_fullStr British Diplomats, Bakufu and Japanese Civil War: friends or foes
title_full_unstemmed British Diplomats, Bakufu and Japanese Civil War: friends or foes
title_sort british diplomats, bakufu and japanese civil war: friends or foes
publishDate 2014
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/50051/17/50051new.pdf
http://irep.iium.edu.my/50051/
http://gcbss.org/past_gcbss/gcbss-proceeding.html
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score 13.160551