Online Encyclopedia

COUNT TADASU HAYASHI (1850– )

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Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 109 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COUNT TADASU HAYASHI (1850– )  ,
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Japanese states-man, was born in Tokyo (then Yedo), and was one of the first batch of students sent by the
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Tokugawa government to study in England . He returned on the
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eve of the abolition of the Shogunate, and followed Enomoto (q.v.) when the latter, sailing with the Tokugawa
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fleet to
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Yezo, attempted to establish a republic there in
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defiance of the newly organized government of the emperor . Thrown into prison on account of this affair, Hayashi did not obtain office until 1871 . Thereafter he rose rapidly, until, after a long period of service as
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vice-minister of
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foreign affairs, he was appointed to represent his country first in Peking, then in St
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Petersburg and finally in
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London, where he acted an important
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part in negotiating the first Anglo-Japanese
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Alliance, for which service he received the title of viscount . He remained in London throughout the Russo-Japanese War, and was the first Japanese ambassador at the court of St James after the war . Returning to Tokyo in 1906 to take the portfolio of foreign affairs, he remained in office until the resignation of the Saionji
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cabinet in 1908 . He was raised to the rank of count for eminent services performed during the war between his country and Russia, and in connexion with the second Anglo-Japanese Alliance of 1905 .

End of Article: COUNT TADASU HAYASHI (1850– )
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