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The Making of Modern Japan / An Account of the Progress of Japan from Pre-feudal Days to Constitutional Government & the Position of a Great Power, With Chapters on Religion, the Complex Family System, Education, &c. cover

The Making of Modern Japan / An Account of the Progress of Japan from Pre-feudal Days to Constitutional Government & the Position of a Great Power, With Chapters on Religion, the Complex Family System, Education, &c.

Chapter 2: PREFACE
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About This Book

This work traces the transformation of Japan from pre‑feudal origins through the rise and consolidation of feudal rule, national closure and subsequent reopening, and the restoration that dismantled the old order. It surveys institutional reforms in land tenure, taxation, administration, education, and religion; the dispatch of missions abroad and difficult treaty negotiations; the framing and promulgation of a constitution and the emergence of parliamentary parties; recurring local uprisings and military conflicts with neighboring states; and the social and legal adjustments that accompanied rapid modernization and the growing assertion of central authority.

PREFACE

The Author’s thanks are due to His Excellency Baron G. Hayashi, H.I.J.M.’s Ambassador in London, for most kindly referring to a competent authority in Japan, for confirmation, a doubtful point in feudal land tenure; to Prince Iwakura, Marquis Ōkubo, and Marquis Kido for photographs of three of the eminent statesmen whose portraits appear; to the Right Honorable Sir Ernest Satow for the trouble he took in reading the MS. of the book; to Sir E. F. Crowe, C.M.G., Commercial Counsellor of the British Embassy in Tōkiō, for very useful help given in various ways; and to Miss Maud Oxenden for valuable assistance in proof-correcting.