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Preview image of work. oban tate-e triptych woodblock print on paper,  Japanese War in Kagoshima (Kagoshima boto syutuzinzu) 34128
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2017.28.a.-.c

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Japanese War in Kagoshima (Kagoshima boto syutuzinzu)

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Artist

Tsukioka Yoshitoshi (Tokyo, Japan, 1839 - 1892, Tokyo,Japan)

Title

Japanese War in Kagoshima (Kagoshima boto syutuzinzu)

Creation Date

1879

Century

late 19th century

Dimensions

14 3/4 x 30 1/8 in. (37.47 x 76.52 cm)

Object Type

prints

Creation Place

Asia, Japan

Medium and Support

oban tate-e triptych woodblock print on paper

Credit Line

Museum Purchase, Art Collections Purchase Fund

Copyright

Public Domain

Accession Number

2017.28.a.-.c

Object Description

Per Scholten Japanese Art:
Saigo Takamori (1828-1877), popularly known as the 'Last Samurai,' led rebel forces against the Imperial regime during the Satsuma Rebellion of 1877. Leading up to and through the early periods of the Meiji Restoration, Takamori remained loyal to the pro-modernization forces. He was a commander in the Second Choshu Expedition in 1866, attempting to subdue a rebellious group of samurai who were resisting efforts at opening trade and modernize the military, and then again fought in the Boshin War of 1868-1869, leading imperialist forces of the new Meiji Regime against a group opposed to the Restoration.

After acting a Meiji bureaucrat for a short time, he retired to his home in Kagoshima, where a group of disenfranchised samurai would soon initiate the rebellion and convince Takamori to be their leader. The rebellion would be crushed between late January and September of 1877. The rebels stood little chance against the far larger and already westernizing military of the Imperial regime. Takamori himself would die at Shiroyama during the final battle of the war. Injured, he is said to have committed seppuku or to have succumbed to his wounds. Notably, his exact cause of death is uncertain, and was at the time the subject of much speculation. While the seppuku theory of death was popular especially with the rise of state-sponsored bushido culture, others speculated that he was decapitated or died of a gunshot wound. More fancifully, some imagined that he ascended to the planet Mars, attained nirvana, or overthrew Emma-O, the King of Hell.

The rebels are caught in deep snow, encumbered in their attempt to take up positions against the Imperial army. Proud of his imperial service, Takamori still wears his official uniform. When news of the heavy snowfall reached the capital, supporters of the Restoration took it as a providential sign that their cause was the righteous one.

In addition to Takamori several the other Satsuma rebels are identified. They are, identified from right to left, as follows: (right sheet) Henmi Jurota (1849-1877); Ikenabe Kichijuro; Kodama Hachinoshin (1843-1877); Kirino Toshiaki (1838-1877); Saigo Kohei (1847-1877); (center sheet) Saigo Yoshinosuke Takamori (1828-1877); Fuchibei Takateru (1840-1877); Shinohara Kunimoto (1837-1877); (left sheet) Murata Sansuke (1845-1877); Murata Shinpachi (1836-1877); Ikenoue Shiro (1842-1877); and Beppu Shinsuke (1847-1877).