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Intro | Japanese politician | |
A.K.A. | Jushiro Kiuchi | |
A.K.A. | Jushiro Kiuchi | |
Places | Japan | |
was | Politician | |
Work field | Politics | |
Gender |
| |
Birth | 26 January 1886, Sanbu District, Chiba Prefecture, Japan | |
Death | 9 January 1925Mama (aged 38 years) | |
Politics: | Kenseikai |
Biography
Kiuchi Jūshirō (木内 重四郎, 26 January 1866 – 9 January 1925) was a Japanese politician. He was educated at Chiba Middle School and Chiba First High School, and later graduated from Imperial Tokyo University's Department of Political Science. In 1906, while serving as a Japanese representative in Korea, Kiuchi made a bet with Durham Stevens, an American advisor to the Korean government, about the length of time before Japan would annex Korea. Kiuchi expected it would only take three years; Stevens' guess of five years would prove to be more nearly correct, as the Japan–Korea Annexation Treaty was signed in mid-1910. In January 1909, Kiuchi was one of a number of politicians who brought pressure to bear against Itō Hirobumi and his allegedly soft policies towards Korea, urging that Japan should exercise direct rule there; it was suggested that Kiuchi took this position due to his dissatisfaction with being shifted from Vice-Minister of Home Affairs to Vice-Minister of Agriculture. He later served as a member of the House of Peers and then from 1916–1918 as governor of Kyoto Prefecture.
Kiuchi's former residence, located in Ichikawa, Chiba, was maintained as a historical building and tourist attraction for some years, but was being considered for dismantling as of 2001.