Read Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan Online
Authors: Herbert P. Bix
Tags: #General, #History, #Biography & Autobiography, #Military, #World War II
39.
Quoted in Sasaki Ryji,
Gendai tennsei no kigen to kin
(Sh
wa Shuppan, 1990), p. 88.
40.
Hara Kei nikki, dai kykan
, p. 149, entry of Dec. 8, 1920; Suzuki, “Taishdemokurashii to kokutai mondai,” p. 59.
41.
On Dec. 11, 1920, while pleading with Yamagata not to resign his presidency of the privy council, Hara observed that the regency was of vital importance because “[t]he third generation is crucial for both the imperial family and the families of subjects. The Tokugawa family established itself through Iemitsu, the third shogun. Although Germany failed, the third emperor brought it to the height of its prosperity.” The notion that dynastic lineages ossify quickly after a certain length of time is of ancient origin and can be found in many civilizations.
42.
Suzuki, “Taishdemokurashii to kokutai mondai,” pp. 59â60.
43.
Hara nikki, dai kykan
, p. 118; cited in ibid., p. 59.
44.
Telegram from Shidehara to Foreign Minister Uchida, as cited in Hatano Masaru, “Taishj
nen k
taishi h
-
: sono kettei e nopurosesu to seika,” in
KeiGijuku Daigaku H
gaku kenky
(July 1993), p. 47; see also Kisaka Junichir
, “Minsh
ishiki no henka to shihai taisei no d
y
,” in Fujiwara Akira, ed.,
Minshno rekishi 8, Dan'atsu no arashi no naka de
(Sanseid, 1975), p. 76.