Welcome
The Floating World
A group to explore Edo and the Tokugawa Period, its culture and history

The Tokugawa Shogunate (- threads, 22 posts)
    General History (16 posts)
    Historical Thread

    The 15 shoguns of the Tokugawa shogunate or bakufu ...
    9 Posts by * Kiyoko Murasaka
    Google
    AncientWorlds.net Web
    Next: Battle of Sekigahara
    Prev: Tokugawa Yoshimune
    The Boshin War
    kiyoko.jpg
    Author: * Kiyoko Murasaka - 9 Posts on this thread out of 124 Posts sitewide.
    Date: Apr 21, 2004 - 21:25

    The Boshin War (戊辰戦争, 1868-1869, literally War of the Year of the Dragon) was fought between the Tokugawa Shogunate and the pro-Japanese Emperor|Imperial forces in Japan. The defeat of the shogunate lead directly to the Meiji Restoration.

    Discontent between the shogunate and the reformist 'sonno joi' movement had been brewing for years. In November 1866, Emperor Meiji had given the rebellious provinces of Satsuma and Choshu the right to overthrow the shogunate; however, reigning Shogun Tokugawa Yoshinobu deftly sidestepped this by resigning his post (but not his power) the next day.

    Events came to a head on January 3, 1868 when the emperor declared his own restoration to full power, and the war started seven days later when Shogun Tokugawa Yoshinobu declared the declaration "illegal" and attacked Kyoto, the seat of the emperor. Despite a 3:1 numerical advantage and training by France|French military advisors, the first significant battle near Toba, Mie|Toba and Fushimi, Kyoto|Fushimi led to a rout of the 15,000-strong shogunate forces, and Yoshinobu was forced to flee to Edo. Saigo Takamori led the victorious imperial forces north and east through Japan, eventually leading to the unconditional surrender of Edo in May 1868.

    After Yoshinobu's surrender, most of Japan accepted the emperor's rule, but a core of shogunate supporters led by the Aizu clan continued the resistance. After a protracted month-long battle, Aizu finally admitted defeat on September 23, leading to the mass suicide of the 'Byakkotai' (White Tiger Corps) young warriors. A month later, Edo was renamed Tokyo, and the Meiji Era started.

    In a final chapter to the war, navy official Enomoto Takeaki had fled to Hokkaido with the remnants of the shogun's navy and a handful of faithful French military advisors (especially Jules Brunet) and attempted to establish the Republic of Ezo there, but this too was crushed by Meiji forces in May 1869, bringing the war to an end.

    Wikipedia ~ the free encyclopedia - The Boshin War

    rabbit.gif


    NEXT: Battle of Sekigahara
    PREV: Tokugawa Yoshimune
Rome - Rome, Season 1 - The Stolen Eagle


Copyright 2002-2011 AncientWorlds LLC | Code of Conduct and Terms of Service | Contact Us! | The AncientWorlds Staff