132 17 79MB
English Pages [612] Year 1973
MITSUI
MITSU
————
THREE CENTURIES OF JAPANESE BUSINESS byJOHN G.R OBERTS
foreword byCHITOSHI YANAGA
©
NewYork-WEATHERHILL : Tokyo
Thedesign usedonthebinding andchapter-opening pagesisa modern version of theemblem usedbyEchigoya. Thiscrest,consisting oftheideograph for“three’’ (mitsu)enclosed ina stylizedformoftheideographfor “well”(i),is read “Mitsui.”Theproprietors ofthiscrest,MitsuiC
Co.,Lid., havegenerously
extended permission for itsuseinthisbook.Reproduced ontheendpapers isa woodblock printfromtheseriesTotoMeisho(FamousPlacesinEdo)by AndoHiroshige(1797-1858).Thisprintis titled“‘Surugacho’”’ andshows
Mitsui’s Echigoya, withMount Fujiinthebackground.
First edition,1973
Published byJohnWeatherbill, Inc.,149MadisonAvenue,NewYork,New York 10016,witheditorialofficesat 7-6-13Roppongi,Minato-ku,Tokyo
Copyright undertermsoftheInternational bycopyright 106,Japan.Protected inJapan. andfirstpublished Printed allrightsreserved. Union; LibraryofCongressCataloging in Publication Data:Roberts,JohnG.| Mitsui:threecenturiesof Japanesebusiness./ Bibliography:p. | 1. Mitsuizaibatsu.2. Businessand politics—Japan.I. Title./ HD2907.R62| 332.1/0952/73-9856/ 1sBN0-8348-0080-2
Contents
Foreword,byChitoshi Yanaga Authotr’s Preface NH WH
BB
Om
NA
FromSwordto Soroban EchigoyatheShunned
TheSourceofHappinessIsPrudence “RememberWeAreMerchants’”’
LegacyoftheBarbarians TradeofBloodandGuile TheManfromNowhere
onTD PickingtheWinner
ByAppointmentto theEmperor
Foundations inBankingandCommerce
Capitalism,JapaneseStyle TheZaibatsuBuilders DiplomacybyOtherMeans TheBestLaidPlans... AFootholdontheMainland TheTwoFacesofMitsui
WhichWaytoUtopia? TheClaninAllItsGlory
WhomtheGodsWouldDestroy ChallengingtheWorld TheHonorableMeninPower
TheWaveoftheFuture
CracksintheFoundation
NotNecessarily toJapan’sAdvantage Ashes,Ashes,AllFallDown
AlltheKing’sMen
NewWineinOldBottles
vil x1
13 23 36 43 50 64 /3 8) 105 116 129 144 160 175 185 200 to 240 259 281 301 a2F 341 365 388 408
V.
LIBRARY UNIVERSITY fia CONCORDIA OR97211 PORTLAND.
vi.
CONTENTS
28 TheRebirthofMitsuiBussan 29 BehindtheCurtain 30 Japan,Unlimited
429 439 469
Appendixes A. MitsuiConstitution of1722 B. MitsuiConstitution of1900
492 504
Epilogue:TheTurningWheels
493
C. TheMitsuiMainFamilyc. 1900-1945
D. SomeFamily TiesintheMitsuiConcern E. TheMitsuiGroupin1973
Notes Bibliography Index
Photographs
1-24 FromSwordto
Soroban
25-67 ‘TheManyFacesofMitsui
510
312 514
521 d31 539
following page114 Jollowing page290
Foreword
AvTHEENDOFWorLDWar IILin1945Japanwasa shambles.Herindustrialproductionhaddropped to a mereforty percentof whatit had beenat itspeak.Thewhole nation seemedto bein a state of stupor inducedbythedefeat,aswellasby thelossofoldbeliefs,lovedones, homes,and livelihoods.Peoplewere dyingof starvationon the streets.It wasgenerallythoughtthat Japanhadbeenreducedto a fourth-ratepower.Eventhe Japanesethemselvesbelievedthat the chancesofregainingtheir former statusas a majorw orldpowerwere they nil.Yetoncetheyaccepteddefeatand its inevitableconsequences,
theirwar- . tothetaskofrebuilding singlemindedly appliedthemselves devastated land. Notimewasloston self-pity,regretoverthemistakeofwaginga
hopelesswar,or hatredoftheconquerors.Withresilience,determination, and accommodation,the nation quickly lifteditself fromthe ashesofdefeat.Inthespaceofa meredozenyears,it achievedthepositionofleading shipbuilderin the world. In a spanof lessthana generation, Japan’seconomicrecoverywascomplete.Shebecametheworld’s thedreamsofhermostrabid thirdgreatindustrialpower,surpassing during theheyday ofmilitarismin the1930s. ultranationalists Needlessto say, the tense and fluid internationalsituationimme-
bythestrugglebediatelyfollowingthewar,whichwashighlighted
tween the Communistand Free Worlds,playedanimportant partin
However,noeconomicmiracle Japan’srapideconomicresurgence. traditions,histhedeeply-rooted without wouldhavebeenpossible ortechnicalandorganizationalskillsoftheJapanese toricalexperiences, people. Froman economicpointofview,Japanis no longerconsidereda non-Westernnation.Technologicallyadvancedfarbeyondthe con-
groupedwith sheisinvariably andpotential, finesofAsiancapabilities advanced nations.Despiteherindustrially Western,ratherthanAsian, status,sheisdecidedlymoretraditionalandAsianinthenonmaterial aspectsof life, such as thought, behavior,and values,all of which
athomeand activities andindustrial hereconomic influence profoundly abroad. is an impressivestudyof ofJapaneseBusiness Mitsui:ThreeCenturies vit
Vill ~ FOREWORD
howtheHouseof Mitsuibegananddevelopedintoa hugeeconomic
empire.Morethananyothercorporateentity,Mitsuisymbolizes continuityandchangeandrepresents theeconomic growthanddevelopmentof Japanduringthepastthreehundredyears.Furthermore, it is
orzaibatsu,whichemerged theprototypeof thepowerfulcombines,
in thelatenineteenthcenturyandservedas instrumentsof national policyinthebuildingofa modernindustrialJapan.Assuchtheywere thehandmaidensin thegovernment’sprogramof modernizationand industrializationalongthelinesofWesterncapitalism.
Thefounderof the Houseof Mitsuishowedrareforesightin thefamily’ssamuraistatustobecomea mervoluntarily abandoning Startingoutasa smallbrewery formakingsakéand chant,orchonin.
soy,thenexpandingintoamodestdraper’sshopandmoneyexchange, Mitsuieventuallybecamea hugeconglomerate encompassingpracticallyeverytype of businessand industrialenterprise:banking,
construction, insurance, shipping,foreigntrade,retailmerchandising, paper,glass,elecengineering, mining,brewing,textiles,chemicals, tronics,optics,andrealestate. In additionto itsvariousenterprises,Mitsuibecamethefiscalagent inOsakaoftheTokugawa governmentneartheendoftheseventeenth century,continuinginthiscapacity formorethana centuryandahalf. Buttowardthe end of the feudalregime,it founditselfin serious
Torectifythesituation, it difficulties broughtonbymismanagement.
recruitedMinomuraRizaemon,a managerofuncommon ability,who not only injectednew vigor into its operationsbut turnedthem around, and laid solidfoundationsfor a greateconomicempire. Through an efficientinformationnetwork,Minomuralearnedof the
battle sharplydeclining fortunesofthebakufu,wellbeforethecrucial hebegancultivatingintimate ofToba-Fushimi in 1868.Whereupon
relationswiththefutureleadersoftheanti-bakufu forces,notablyIto, Inoue,andYamagataof Choshu.AftertheMeijiRestoration, Mitsui
forcesandhelped toraisewar severeditsrelationswiththeTokugawa toputdowntheresistanceof fundsneededbytheMeijigovernment thedie-hardbakufusupporters. Followingthedemiseofthefeudalregimein 1868,theHouseof
Mitsuiprovidedvaluableexpertiseandresourcestowardthebuilding ofthenewJapan.It respondedto theurgentcallofthe Meijigovernmentandfurnisheddesperatelyneededfundsforitsoperations. Asthe govetnment’sfiscalagent, it receiveddeposits,disbursedfunds, handledtrade,andevenissueditsownpapercurrency,sinceitscredit wasbetter than the government’s.It wasno accident,therefore,that
Mitsuiwasregardedasthe defactoMinistryofFinanceoftheMeiji
oftheBankofJapanin1882.By government untiltheestablishment
FOREWORD-
ix
helpingto putthenation’sfinances ona soundbasis,Mitsuinotonly
wonrecognition, butactuallyworkeditselfintothefinancial structure ofthegovernment.Theintimaterelationship whichwasassiduously developedbetweenMitsuiandthegovernment provideda modelfor otherenterprises. Mitsui’ssuccesswasbasednotonlyonitspolicyofrecruitingtalent, whichincludedtheadoptionofpromisingyoungmenintothefamily,
butalsoonitsabilitytoobtainvaluable advanceintelligence regarding
the government’smoves,as wellas to maintainclosetieswiththe government.Amongtheinnovationswhichhavebeenattributedto Mitsuiaresalesonastrictlycashbasis,emphasisonsmallprofitperunit andlargesalesvolume,whichstillischaracteristicofJapanesebusiness
operations, auniqueconceptofthetradingcompany, andthefounding
of thefirstJapanesechamberof commerce. Mitsui’svariousrolesinwarandpeacearewell-known tohistorians ofJapanesebusiness.It hasparticipatedin thedevelopmentofManchuria,Korea,andChinaandintheexpansion ofJapan’stradeandin-
fluence,botheconomic andpolitical,invariouspartsoftheworld.Its far-flungactivitieshaveenabledit to gatherallkindsofvaluableinformation,not onlyforits ownbusinessoperations,butalsoforthe governmentin itsformulation ofpoliciesandconductofdiplomacy. In the phenomenaleconomicrecoveryfollowingthe war,Mitsui workedcloselywithothercombinesto amelioratethe harsh,if not
vindictive,occupation policywhichcouldhaveresulted inthecompletedissolution ofthezaibatsu.Thus,representatives ofthezaibatsu effectivelyfunctionedasa moderatinginfluenceto restrainoverzealous occupationofficialsfromtotallydismantling Japan’seconomicstructure.Thesesamerepresentatives convincedJohnFosterDulles,the personalenvoyofthepresident,thata generouspeacetreatywouldinsureJapan’sroleasareliableallyoftheUnitedStatesintheFarEast.It wasno surprise,therefore,thatDullesmetwiththeJapaneserepresentativesaswellasthe SupremeCommanderfortheAlliedPowers, GeneralDouglasMacArthur,in the MitsuiBuildingin downtown Tokyo,thecitadelof zaibatsuprestigeandpower. InexplainingthepostwarresurgenceofJapanasa first-rateeconomic
power,theauthorreveals theclosecollaboration betweenthegovernmentandthebig-businessestablishment.Healsoshowshowdecisions werereachedandpoliciesformulatedin informalsocialgatheringsof small,intimatecliquesatteahousesaswellasintheexecutive suitesof
bigbusinessandhighgovernment officials. Adetailedaccountofthe Miikecoalminers’ strikeprovides insightintothemodusoperandiof big businessin dealingwithlabortroubles.The authoralsofollows closelytheeventswhichgeneratedthestronganti-Kishisentimentsin
x
= FOREWORD
thenation,resultinginthecancellationofPresidentEisenhower’s projectedvisitin 1960.
Thisoutstanding workon thehistoryoftheHouseofMitsuiis valuablereadingforthoseinterestedinthe developmentof Japanese businessaswellasthe postwarriseofJapanastheworld’sthird in-
dustrialpowerof thetwentiethcentury.
CHITOSHI YANAGA Professor Emeritus of Political Science
YaleUniversity
Author’sPreface
WHENI WAS ALITTLE BOY, I wasbundledoffto Sundayschoolregular-
ly,clutching asmallpinkenvelope containing afewnickelsanddimes. Sincetherewasacandystorelurking betweenhomeandthePresbyterianchurchof myparents’choice,theenvelopedidnotalwaysarrive unopened.Butsincethecontribution wasintendedforthesuccorof pitiableJapaneseheathens,conscienceovercamecravingas oftenas not,andI assumethatsomeof themoneywaseventuallyusedforthis purposeby “our man in Tokyo,” the ReverendAugustReischauer. Afterthatinitialexposure,myattitudetowardJapanpassedthrough thestagesof indifference,disapproval,hatred,andagainto pityand indifferenceuntil, in 1959—severaldecadesand
two wars later—I
landedin Japanasa tourist.Observingthefeverishreconstructionof
thecitiesandthesignsofeconomicexpansion onallsides,I found myselfintellectuallyandemotionallyunpreparedto assesstheresults ofmyboyhood’s smallinvestment.Whatwasoneto thinkof allthis vigorous,determinedactivity,in
whichgreatmassesof peopleseemed
to actas one?Pitywouldhavebeenimpertinent, indifferenceincon-
andwonderwoulddo. Onlyastonishment andhatredabsurd. ceivable, I realizedforthefirsttimethata uniquekindoffermentbeyondmy comprehensionwasin progress,andthatI hadbettersetaboutre-
pairingmyignorance.
Theleastanswerable of myquestionsrelatedto thenatureof the
What bywhichtheywerebeingdirected. forcesatworkandthemeans it?Atthetime,agreat kindofashowwasthis,andwhowasrunning
confrontationbetweentherightandtheleftinJapanwasshapingup, Butit andit waseasyto becomeconfusedbypoliticalsuperficialities. essentially camefroman wassoonapparenttomethatthepropulsion
unitedpeople, andthatdespitetalkofsocialupheaval, guidance ofthe in firmlyinthehandsofa smallelitecalledzaskai nationremained Asa steptowardunderstanding elsewhere. Japanand“bigbusiness” theprocessesinvolved,I beganto studyandwriteabouttheeconomy,© finance,andindustryforpublicationsin Japanandabroad. In thelate1960sMitsuiBussanKaishainvitedmeto writea history
ofthevenerableMitsuiconcern. Rashly,I acceptedbecauseI thought itwouldbeagoodchancetolearnsomething aboutJapaneseeconomic xt
Xll + PREFACE history. The result, born from sore travail, was a seriesof fifteen
articlescalled““TheMitsuiStory’’thatappearedin MitsuiTradeNews
between1969and1972.Onthebasisofresearchconducted forthat project(inwhichMitsui Bussancooperated fully)Ibegananindepend-
entwork,theoutcomeofwhichis Mitsui. I shouldliketo emphasizethatthisis notan ‘authorizedhistory.” AlthoughofficialsofseveralMitsuicompanieshavebeenmosthelpful inprovidinginformation andreferences,theselectionofmaterialand theopinionspresentedherearemyown.No memberof anyMitsui companyhasseenanypartofthemanuscript, andthereforenoonebut myselfcanbe heldresponsible for anyerrors,omissions,or other faultsthatmaybefoundin thesepages.AndalthoughMitsuiBussan haskindlypermitteditsfamiliaremblemto beusedasa decorationin thebook,it mustnot be construedasbeingan endorsementof this historyor ofanythinginit.
InJapan,thefamily nameprecedes thegivenname,andthatcustom hasbeenobserved inthisbook.Thespelling ofnamesisalwaysaprob-
lembecausetheymustbe transliteratedfromideographsthat may havemanyreadings.Furthermore,Japaneseareaccustomedto changingtheirnamesforvariousreasons.InrenderingnamesI havetriedto usethe readingandspellingpreferredby the personconcernedand havealsousedthenameunderwhichthatpersonisorwasbestknown. Honorifics,usedinvariablyin
Japan,havebeenomittedhere.
Inassemblingandevaluatinghistoricalmaterial,I hadtocopeasbest I couldwithanoverabundanceofopinionsanda dearthofhardfacts.
Eveninascertaining thenumberofdeathsresultingfromtheGreat
KantoEarthquakeof 1923,onefindsseveral“authoritative” figures, alldifferent.Until1945Japanwasa closedsociety,inwhichfreedomof inquiryandexpressionwereseverelylimited,andcredencewasbased uponauthorityratherthanveracity.Yetto hedgeeachfactwithdisclaimerswouldbe undulycumbersomein a bookof thiskind,so in mostcasesI havegiventhedataorversionsofeventsthatI considered tobethemostvalid,withoutqualification. I entreatthereaderto view cautiouslytheportionsdealingwithprewarhistory.Somesmallparts ofthebookhaveappeared,indifferentforms,intheFarEasternEconomacReview, Burroughs ClearingHouse,Corporate Financing, andtheMeanjin
Quarterly,
In preparingtowritethisbookI havetalkedwithscoresofpersons connectedin somewaywiththe elevenMitsuifamiliesor withthe Mitsuigroupofenterprisesbearingtheirname.Ishallciteonlya few
individuals whoarerepresentative of theirparticularorganizations,
whileextendingheartfeltthanksto otherswhohavebeennolesshelpful.
PREFACE -: Xi¢ilt
Particular thanksareduetoMitsuiHachiroemon Takakimi, present
the Mitsui headof the mainfamily;MitsuiTakasumi,chairmanof Foundation,andMrs.Mitsui;MitsuiReiko,whois compilinga history of the House; Mitsui Takamitsu,heir of Hachiroemon; Mitsui Takanaru,headof a branchfamily,and Mrs.Mitsui.
OfthoseconnectedwiththeMitsuifamilies,I wishto thankShirane
handlingtheImperialHousehold’s aformervice-minister Matsusuke, a finances;MinomuraSeiichiro, descendantof a famousmanager
of the Mitsuiconcern;andMinomuraTomoyuki,alsoa descendant. Of specialhelphasbeen thehistorian YamaguchiEizo,custodian of the Mitsui familyarchives.For generalinformationabout Japanand its historyI am beholdento NishiHaruhiko,formerVice-minister
his sonTeruhiko,HonoraryConsulofIreland of ForeignAffairs;
in Japan; ShiraiKuni,proprietorof the Yamaguchiteahouse,at whichtheleadersof modernJapanhavecongregatedsincethe Meiji era; andSakamotoMoriaki,anexpertonthehistoryof the Satsuma clan.
of Mitsuienterprises (nowelderstatesmen) Formerhighofficials of withinterestandbenefitareSatoKiichiro whomIhaveinterviewed MitsuiBank;formerfinanceministerMukaiTadaharu;TashiroShigeki of Toray Industries;and NiizekiYasutaro,MizukamiTatsuzo, and
TanabeShunsukeofMitsuiBussan.AtMitsuiRealEstateDevelopEdoHideo;andatMitsukoshi, mentI learnedmuchfrompresident andchairman OmotoShimpei President OkadaShigeru. frompresident KurataOkito,of MitsuiMiningandof MitsuiMining& Smelting, respectively,wereespeciallygenerouswiththeirtime.At MitsuiBussan I had veryenlightening conversationswithpresidentWakasugi Sueyuki;SakurauchiTakeshi,thenadvisertothe board;and Ogino Inaddition,I talked Sachu,generalmanagerofthefinancedepartment. superintendentsof Mitsui withnumerousdirectors,managers,and
Mining,Mining&Smelting,Aluminum,Petrochemical,Shipbuilding & Engineering,Bussan,Bank, and other companies of the group,
aredeeplyappreciated. andhelpfulness whosecourtesy
Among thoseunconnected with Mitsuibut deservingof special
thanks are Takahata Seiichi,former chairmanof the Nisshotrading
company,and EleanorHadley,a notedauthorityon Japaneseollithe arcanaof JapanesepoliticsIwish gopolies.Forearlyguidancein to thanksociologistShibataTokue,DirectoroftheGeneralPlanning Government;theorist andCoordinationBureau,TokyoMetropolitan For IchiyoMuto;historianDavidCondé;andeditorUyenoKazuma. M itsuKurotaki I patientassistancein research, expressmythanksto theForeignCorrespondents ou,FuruyamaEiji,andthelibrarystaffsof editorialhelp Japan.Constructive Houseof ClubandInternational
xiV + PREFACE
hasbeengivenbyMartin DavidsonandRebeccaDavis.Andfinally, I offermydeepestgratitudetoMidoriYamakawa forherableand
energeticresearch,translation,and
bookcouldneverbeencompleted.
generalhelp, without whichthis
MITSUI
| - FromSword to Soroban
MITSUI ISTHEWORLD’s OLDEST large-scalebusinessenterprise.The MitsuifamilyopeneditsfirstshopfiveyearsbeforethePilgrimslanded
inNewEngland,andestablished a bank—still operatinginthesame location—in 1683,adecadebeforetheBankofEngland wasfounded. Late in the 1860s,soon after the CivilWar in the United States,the
Houseof Mitsuigaveindispensablehelpto the revolutionarieswho
toppledtheancientmilitaryregimeinJapanandloosened theshackles offeudalism. FromthenonMitsuiwasintheforefrontofJapan’seco-
nomicmodernization, andbytheearlytwentiethcenturyitwasa dominantpoliticalforcein thefast-risingnation. Thepowerandreputationoftheconcernreachedfullmaturityafter
theFirstWorldWar,andin
the nineteentwentiesandthirtiesthename
Mitsuiinspiredrespectandawe,or hatredandfear,throughoutthe
Japaneseempire.TheskiesaboveJapan’scitiesdarkenedwiththe
smokefromMitsui’smillsandfactories.Theriversgrewturbidwith theoutpouringsfromtheirmines,metalrefineries,andpulpmills.The
earthshookfromthevibrations oftheirhydraulic presses,piledrivers, andblastings. Mightyshipsglided downtherampsofMitsui dockyards to jointhefleetofMitsui vesselsplowingthroughremoteseas,bringing tawmaterialsforMitsuiindustries,or carryingawaythegoodsthey producedin quantitiesthatat firstastonishedandthenappalledthe world. Fromthenorthernfrontiersin Hokkaidoto Kyushuin the south Japanesemen,women,andchildrentoiledinMitsui’sforests,fisheries, andplantations.Theylaboredceaselesslyin thestiflinglabyrinthsof Mitsuiminesand in smallworkshops,wholesalehouses,docks,ware-
houses,lumberyards,and quarriesownedor controlledby Mitsui. Universitygraduatescompetedfiercelyforemploymentintheofficesof Mitsuibanksandinsuranceandcommercialhouses,themostpuissant
andprestigious inthenation.
Althoughthepeoplemayhavebeenunaware ofit,alargeshareofthe necessitiesandluxuriestheypurchasedwereproducedordistributedby Mitsui,andperhapsoneoutofeverytenJapanesewasdependentupon
3
4.
MITSUI
aMitsuienterpriseorsubsidiaryforthewageswithwhichtobuythem. In Japan’scolonies—Formosa, Korea,andSouthSakhalin—aswellas inManchuriaandpartsofChinaproperMitsuioperatedthemostproductiveconcessions, andimportedtheirproductstoJapanorexported themto othercountries.Mitsuiwasthemainbackerandbeneficiary
oftheSouthManchurian Railway, thelargestsingleprivate enterprise intheJapaneseempire,andsponsoredarmiesofmercenaries forthe
penetrationandpacificationofChina.Mitsuisuppliedarmsandmoney firstin 1912for SunYat-sen’srevolutionto overthrowtheManchu dynastyandthenin 1932to restorethesamedynastyin Manchuria— whichMitsuihadoncenearlysucceededin buyingoutrightfromcor-
ruptChinesepoliticians.
MitsuiBussanKaisha,knownabroadas
Mitsuiand Company,
spannedthe globe with its trading and shippingnetwork, through whichit handledabout forty percentof Japan’sexportsand imports.
MoteextensiveandbetterorganizedthantheJapaneseforeignoffice,
it conducteddiplomacyforthegovernmentandgatherednotonly thatwas butpoliticalandmilitaryintelligence information commercial
oftenof decisiveimportanceto thenation. In 1905,duringthe Russo-JapaneseWar,managersof Bussan’s branchofficeinShanghaifollowedthemovementsof theczar’sBaltic
and totheJapanesehighcommand, accurateinformation Fleet,flashed enabledtheimperialnavyto winoneof thegreatestseabattlesof moderntimes.Duringthe FirstWorld WarMitsuiBussan obtained advancedmilitaryaviationtechnology by purchasinga largeAmerican aircraftmanufacturing plantandvirtuallymonopolizedsalesofaircraft inJapanfora longtimethereafter.Two decadeslatercodedmessages
plantedinBussan’stradereportsfromHonolulu helpedJapanese intelligenceto keepabreastofthedispositionandmovementsofthe PearlHarborup to themorningof UnitedStatesNavy’swarshipsat December7, 1941.Throughoutthe
SecondWorld War Mitsuimen,
as intelligenceofficers(andotherofficersdissecretlycommissioned guisedasMitsuiemployees),workedforthefatherland whereverthe
branchesservedasvirtual tooperate.Bussan’s waspermitted company
appendagesof the militarygovernmentin the vastbut short-lived “GreaterEastAsiaCo-ProsperitySphere.” MitsuiwasJapan’slargestprivatecontributorto charitableinstitutions,hospitals,schools,andpatrioticorganizations.Its paternalistic manufacturingandminingenterprisesadoptedsomeof themostadvancedlaborpracticesof theWest,andtheiremployees enjoyedthe bestwagesandworkingconditionsin the country.Yetthe Mitsuis werehatedas exploitersandprofiteers.In the 1930stheirhighest
executives wereadvised towearbulletproof vests,andtwowhoignored
FROMSWORDTO SOROBAN= 5
this counselwereassassinated—bymembersof secretsocietiesthat weresubsidizedbyotherMitsuiexecutives.It wasMitsuithatprovided bothpreciousradiumforcancerresearchin Japanandopiumforthe pacificationof occupiedregionsin Asia.Mitsuifactoriesmadethe
dyestuffs forthecolorfulJapanese fabricsthatgainedworldwide favor; but,whennationalpolicydictated, thesameplantswereconverted to theproductionof militaryexplosivesandchemicalweaponsforwars
ofaggression.Mitsui’sleaderswerethemosteffectiveopponentsof
communismin Japan,anda Mitsuisubsidiarysupplieda majorshare
oftheweaponsusedbytheczaristregimeinitsfutileefforttocrush
the Russianrevolution.The sameweapons,ironically,wereinstrumentalin assuringthevictoryof Lenin’sBolsheviksandestablishing theSovietUnion. | Controllingas it did oneof the majorprewarpoliticalpartiesin
Japan,Mitsuicouldinfluence legislation, arrangetheappointment of friendlycabinets,andmakeitsimprintuponforeignpolicy.Independentlyorincollaboration withotherzasbatsu, orfamily-controlled financialcliques, it couldoftenthwartpower-hungry bureaucrats andmilitarists,promotenecessary administrativereforms,andoustincompetent governments.Itsofficials,usingeconomicleverage,alsohadthepower to suppressreformmovements,smashunions,imprisonor liquidate agitators,andsecureimmunityformiscreantswithintheirownranks. Theirhatchetmenincludedcabinetministers,militaryofficers,police chiefs,newspapereditors,andbossesofterroristsocieties,whowould stopat nothingin supportingtheinterestsoftheirprotectors.
Mitsui’s tradeandoverseas investment programs boostedthenation’s
powerandprestige,smoothingthewayforits expansionin foreign marketsandgivingit accessto vitallyneededrawmaterials.Among the zaibatsuMitsuistoodout as an advocateof peacefultradeand
international goodwill,yetitsdecisionssometimes fueledtheflames
ofwaranddetermined the riseor fallofforeigngovernments. Thefourlargestzaibatsuownedabouttwenty-fivepercentofJapan’s corporateassets,and just two of themwereresponsible for threefourthsofJapan’soverseasinvestmentsduringtheheightofJapanese
imperialism. Standingheadandshoulders abovetheotherswasMitsui, whosesprawlingempireembracedeverysignificantsectorofindustry, finance,andcommerce,andemployedasmanyasthreemillionpeople domesticallyandoverseas. AttheheadofthisempirewastheMitsuiholdingcompany, which undera successionof namesruledits vassalbusinessesin muchthe
samewayastheTokugawa shogunshadexactedobedience fromthe
feudallordsof Japan.And,likethoseshoguns,whogovernedinthe nameoftheimperialcourt,themaincompany wassubjectto a higher
6 « MITSUI
authority.Inthiscasethe“emperor” headingthemainfamily wasBaron MitsuiHachiroemon,a
direct descendantof the Mitsuiwho had
foundedtheHousethreehundredyearsbefore.TheprincesinthissovereignHousewerethe headsof the ten branchfamilies,whowere boundtogetherby a formalconstitutiondatingfromthe establishment’ssecondgeneration.Thisunusualdocumentprescribedexplicit responsibilities,duties,policies,andbehaviorexpectedofeachindivid-
ual,aswellastheunalterable hierarchyofthefamilies,theirsharesin theproceedsofthebusiness,andthenatureofofficial andpersonalre-
lationshipsto be maintainedamongthem. Theperpetuationofafamily’sfortuneandpositionbyawrittencode isnotunusualin theworld,orevenin Japan.Whatdistinguishedthe Houseof Mitsuifromotherwealthyandinfluential familieswasits tapiddevelopmentintoa nationalinstitutionanditstenureof quasiofficialstatusthroughthetumultuouseventsof modernhistoryuntil itsenforcedcollapsein 1945.Inthisrespectthereisa strongsimilarity betweenMitsuiandtheEuropeanhousesof RothschildandKrupp, whoseactivitiesalsowerecloselyboundupwiththefortunesofempire.
ButtheMitsuiinfluence emergedmuchearlier, andseemstohavebeen
motepervasivethanwasthatofanyEuropeanor Americanfinancial
house.WithoutthesupportofMitsuithemomentous Meijirevolution
of 1868couldscarcelyhavesucceeded,andin thesubsequentdecades ofthenation’smetamorphosisMitsuiwasthefoundationuponwhich the modernJapaneseeconomywasbuilt.The rolethat individual
Mitsuisplayedinthosedevelopments isuncertain,buttheirparticipa-
tionwasconsideredtobesoessential thatcollectivelytheybecamevirtualhostagesof thestate. TheparallelbetweentheHouseofMitsuiandtheimperialfamilyof Japanisstriking.Itsoriginswereshroudedinthesamekindofofficial mythology,andits structureandregulations wereelaboratedbythe
samelegalauthorities whorationalized thejuridicalbasisofimperial
rule.In timesofperilitscontinuation wasassuredbygovernmentintervention;itsmatrimonialalliances(eventuallywithsomeoftheem-
peror’srelatives)werearrangedwithequallyfinediscrimination; and thepersonalactivitiesofitsmembersusuallywereimmune fromscru-
tinyandcriticism.Attheheightofitspoweritsleaders—whose positionswerehereditary—weresupervisedby the sameelderstatesmen whosurroundedtheemperor,andthedecisions ofits administrators weresubjectto theirveto.Likepersonagesoftheimperialhouse,the Mitsuis’chiefswereseldomseenbyanyoneexceptpeersoftherealm, highexecutives,or membersof theirhouseholds. Theirfaceswere knowntothepubliconlythroughofficialportraits,andtheiractivities onlyfromcarefullycensorednewsreports.Butthe featuresof two
FROMSWORDTO SOROBAN« 7
Mitsuis,likethoseofEmperorMeiji,wereknowntoeveryliterate oftheHouseasa major Japaneseandreveredbymany:thefounder intheprimarywasportrayed Takatoshi, MitsuiHachirobei enterprise, schoolreadersissuedtoeveryboyin thecountry;andthelikenessof hisremarkablemother,Shuho,appearedinsimilarbooksforgirls.Accompanyingthepictureswerehomiliesextollingthethrift,enterprise, asexamplesto be diligence,andforesightofthoseworthies,presented followedby everyuprightyouth.
ThefirstMitsuishopwasestablished notbyHachirobei butbyhisfather,SokubeiTakatoshi,whoseclaimto famelayin hisforesightand coutagein renouncinghisrankasa samurai,or warriot-aristocrat,to
becomea lowlytradesman. Sokubei’s forebearshadbeenprovincial lordsofminorimportancebutofsubstantialestate.Itis difficultto tracetheirpedigreeformorethana fewcenturies,becauseclass-consciousJapanesehavealwaystendedtocherishflatteringlegendsabout theirorigins.TheMitsuisarenoexception: inprewardays,whenhistorywastheirhandmaiden,theirobliginggenealogiststriedseriouslyto tracetheclan’sancestrybacktotheFujiwaras, who,liketheemperors, wetelegendarydescendants of AmaterasuOmikami,the SunGoddess. Accordingto onelegend,a memberoftheFujiwarafamilywhowas
namedUmanosuke NobunarileftKyotoabouta.p.1100(duringthe periodofthefirstcrusades inEurope)to takeuphisabodeinnearby OmiProvince.Thenewsettler,whilelookingoverhisproperty,extendingalongthe shoreof LakeBiwa,discovered that it hadthree wells.In oneofthemhefound a treasurein goldcoins.To commemoratethisgoodfortunehechangedhisnameto Mitsui,whichmeans “threewells.” TheMitsuis’history,asdistinguished fromtheirmythology, seems to beginlateintheMuromachi period,ataboutthetimewhen,onthe othersideoftheworld,Christopher Columbuswasaskingtherulersof
PortugalandSpaintofinancehisvisionaryprojects.Atthattimethe
Mitsuiswereretainers,withsamurairank,of theRokkakubranchof the Sasakiclanin Omiprovince.ThoseSasakis,famousas warriors, belongedtotheOmiGenji,descendantsofMinamotoYoritomo(1148-
99).Thatmilitary genius,havingdefeated thedominant Tairaclanwith thehelpof Sasaki’ssamurai,hadbeenappointedby the emperorin 1192as thefirstsedi-tai-shogun, or “barbarian-quellinggeneralissimo,” andhadintroduced thebakufu,thesystemofgovernment byshoguns, whichthereafterwouldcontrolJapan.Threehundredyearslaterthe Sasakiswerestillfirmlyensconcedin theirOmistronghold. Amidthe anarchythatprevailedduringmostyearsfrom1300to
8 « MITSUI
1600,everysamurai homehadtobeanarmedcamp,andthefamily unittookontacticalaswellassocialimportance. Kannonjicastle,for-
tressof the Sasakilords,wasbesiegedrepeatedly,andneighborsless stoutlydefendedwerein constantjeopardy.TheMitsuis,smallin statuteanddelicateinbuild,owedtheirsurvivaltothepoweroftheSasaki daimyo,whomtheyapparentlyservedas administratorsratherthan fighters.Evenso,theMitsuismusthavebeenofratherhighrank,for lateinthefifteenthcenturytheywereabletomarryoneoftheirdaughtersto Takahisa,a youngersonofLordSasaki. Becauseoftheneedforcontinuity andsolidarityinthefamily,it had becomecustomaryforafathertobequeathhisentireestatetohisoldest ormostcapableson,or,ifhelackedanaturalheir,toadoptasa sonthe
husbandofoneofhisdaughters.Suchanadoptedheir,oryoshi,was SasakiTakahisa,whobecameheadandprotectoroftheMitsuihouse.
Takahisabuilt a castleat Namazue,east of Lake Biwa,where the
Mitsuislivedasa pettydaimyoclanundertheaegisoftheSasakiwar-
lords.Littleisknown ofTakahisa’s descendants duringtheiroccupancy ofNamazuecastle,butassamuraitheymusthavefollowed thecodeof
knighthoodknowntodayasbushido.‘Thisinflexible andungentlebrand ofchivalry,introducedbyTakahisa’sancestors,theMinamotoshoguns, emphasizedcourageinbattleandloyaltyto one’sliegelordevenatthe sacrificeof one’sfortuneandfamily,withdeathbyseppuku, or ritual disembowelment,asthecompulsory alternativeto dishonor.Thetrue
watriorhadtoshowindifference inthefaceofdanger,hardship,love, anddeath.UnlikeEuropean knights,a samuraiwasforbiddentodis-
playsentiment,andin hisausterityhe wascontemptuousof material gain.Hisrewardsforenduringa spartananddangerouslifewerethe prestigeofbeingnearthetoplevelinarigidlystratified society,andthe
privilegeofwearingtwoswords,thetemperofwhichhewasfreeto testupontheunresistingfleshofpeasants,craftsmen,merchants,or outcastswheneverhesawfit. Provinciallifeinthosedarkageswasneithercomfortable norsecure,
for one neverknewwhena
band of samurai,bellowingdefiance,with
swordsflashingandtorchesalight,mightswaggerintoa villageor manor,to leaveit a blazingshambles.Forthosethick-skinned gentry
bloodshed wasthebadgeofmanliness, andindividualmayhemorin-
discriminatemassacretheverymeatandmarrowoflife. The mostbloodthirstywarlordof the sixteenthcenturywasOda Nobunaga,a minordaimyowhonursedthehighambitionofbringing
allofJapanunderhissway.Inhisrampage throughcentralJapanhe
trampledoveranyoneoranythingthatlayinhispath.Tocurbtheinfluenceof the Buddhistwarrior-priests,whothenheldgreatsecular
FROMSWORDTO SOROBAN+ 9
everyoneof oftemplesablazeandslaughtered power,hesetthousands theirdefenders. advancethroughOmion AmongthosewhoimpededNobunaga’s his marchtowardKyotowerethe Sasakisand theirvassals,whose
martialskills,valor,andfortifiedcastlesavailedthemnothingagainst the savageryof the invaders.DuringNobunaga’sonslaughtsixteen castles,includingthoseofthe Sasakisand the Mitsuis,wererazedor
and captured.ThefewsurvivorsoftheSasakiclanweresubjugated, Sasakivanishedfromtheannalsof RokkakuHouseof thereafterthe Japan’shistory. theprudenceforwhich TheMitsuis,meanwhile,weredemonstrating House,Takayasu, headofthe The latertheyweretobecomerenowned.
to danger,toldhisservants LordofEchigo,sensingtheapproaching wereportable,andfledwiththem,hisfamily, packwhatevervaluables ofthe anda fewretainers.Withphenomenalluck(anothercharacteristic acrosscentral Honshuto Ise Bay,and Mitsuis),theymadetheirway whereas atlengthfoundrefugenearthepeacefultownofMatsusaka, anunemployedsamuraiTakayasuhad plentyoftimetothink upon this
lessoninthedisadvantages ofbushido. in1568OdaNobunaga WithinadecadeafterthedefeatoftheSasakis
hadsubdued mostofJapan, andafter his death thetaskofunification by hisablestgenerals,ToyotomiHideyoshi waspursuedsuccessively followersand andTokugawaIeyasu.ButrivalrybetweenHideyoshi’s
camps.The thecountryintotwowarring Ieyasuonceagaindivided men 160,000 camein 1600,whentwomightyarmies—about showdown
inall—joinedinbattleatSekigahara, nearNagoya.Ieyasuwontheday, ruler tookfortythousandheadsastrophies,andemergedasundisputed ofJapan.Byredistributingthe fiefsin sucha waythathismostloyal wasquestionable, vassalscouldkeepwatchoverthosewhosereliability with consultation hepreventedanyeffectivechallengetohis rule.In Japan’swisestscholarsheestablishedthe Tokugawashogunate,the governmentthatenduredfrom1603until1868. Adetachedbut interestedobserverofIeyasu’svictoriesandreforms of the Takayasuwhohad wasMitsuiSokubeiTakatoshi,eldestson a gentlemanofleisureif not ofafflubeenLordofEchigo.Apparently Matsusaka,a market center for the in ence, Sokubeihad taken root partofMiePrefertileandrelativelyprosperousIseProvince,nowa wasneara busy forMatsusaka arustic, fecture.Buthehadnotbecome stoppingpointforpilgrimsjourportfor coastaltradeandwasalsoa neyingto the GrandShrinesofIse,thenasnowthemostsacredplace ofworshipforbelieversinShinto.Sailors,pilgrims,andtravelingmerandfromthemSokubeiwas chantsbroughtnewsquicklytoMatsusaka,
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11
abletojudgethetrendofthetimes.Healsotookoccasional tripsto Edo(nowcalled Tokyo),whereIeyasu hadbuiltanenormous castleas
headquartersforhistightlyorganized bakufugovernment.WhatastonishedSokubeimostwastherapidgrowthofthetownlyingoutside thewallsofleyasu’sfortress,whichwassometwomilesin diameter, andtheevermoreimportantrolethattradewasplayinginthelifeofthe
bakufu’spopulouscapital.
Officially,commercewasconsidereda parasiticoccupation,and the
chonin, themerchantsortownsmen,occupieda socialrankjustonestep abovethee/a,theoutcasts,whowerenotclassified ashumanbeings. Sumptuarylawsprohibitedthe choninfromwearingfineclothing,
usingcertain formsofspeech, orlivingindistrictsofthecitythatwere inhabitedbysamurai. Butduringthesixteenth century,despitealmostconstantwarfareand politicalchaosnationally,workersin agriculture,industry,andtrade hadshownconsiderableimprovementin theamountsandqualityof
theirgoods.Aslocalwarlords broughtweakerneighborsundertheir sway,feudalunitywasstrengthened andinternalcommerce wasfos-
tered.Concurrently, thetraditionalsystemofbarteringriceforhandicraftsandothercommoditieswasbeinggraduallysupplantedbytheuse ofmoney.Burdenedbythecostsofwarfare,daimyoborrowedtomeet expenses,andprosperouscommoners,not onlymerchantsbut land-
holdersandpriestsaswell,becamemoneylenders.
AAs themoneyeconomydeveloped,themerchantclassgrewinnumbersand,despiteformalkindsofdiscrimination, wastoleratedandeven on occasiongivenofficialstatus.Thebestappointmentsfellto those whohadhelpedTokugawa IeyasubeforetheBattleof Sekigaharaby
providinghistroopswithsupplies oncredit.InEdoaswellasinOsaka
—thecommercialcenterofwesternJapan—theyeventookpartincity administration.Thoselong-sleevedquartermastersto thebakufuenjoyedastatusfaraboveothermembersoftheirclass,andtheirpositions hadtheadvantage of beinghereditary. Fromsuchobservations,andtheunfortunateexperiencesofhisown family,Sokubeiformulated anoriginalvisionofJapan’sfutureandthe Mitsuis’placeinit.Hecouldseethat,ina countrythoroughlypacified bya centralgovernment,theroleofthewarriorclassinevitablywould wane.The likelihoodof warswith other countrieswasremote,since
Ieyasu,alarmedbothbythesusceptibilityofhiscountrymento the Christianreligionandby the powerof Europeanships,hadbegun
tighteningtheexclusion lawsdirected againstforeigntradersandmissionaries.Sokubeicouldalsoseethat underthe orderlytuleof the
bakufuagriculture, industry,anddomestictradewouldthriveand
thatdespiteanyrulesto thecontrarythosepeoplewhowerequalified
12 « MITSUI
toengageinbusinesswouldriseinpowerandaffluence.Reputedtobe theshrewdestandmostubiquitousmerchantsinJapanwerethemenof Omi,hisancestralhome,andof
Ise,hisadoptedone.It
wasnot unrea-
sonabletobelievethat,insuchasettingandwithamodestamountof
capital,a Mitsuicouldalsosucceedin business.Atsomepointin his cogitationsuponthesemattershemadethesecretresolution, breath-
takingbutperfectlylogical,toexchangehissamurai’s swordsforthe
soroban—the abacusof a Japanesetradesmen. Hischoiceofatimeforreachingthatdecisionwasmostappropriate, if notprophetic.In 1616,thefinalyearof hislife,Tokugawa leyasu eliminatedthe lastcontenderfor supremacyandlefthisworthyson Hidetada,whohadsucceededhimasnominalshogunelevenyearsearlier,securelyin commandoftheunifiedempire.In thesameyearall portsexceptNagasakiandHiradowereclosedto Europeanships,asa measurefor regulatingforeigntradeandpreventingtheconquestof
Japanbythoseaggressive Europeans. Atthissignificant timeinhistory SokubeimadeatriptoEdo.Uponhisreturn,perhaps withhisimaginationinflamedby theprosperityhe hadseenthere,he assembledhis household—hiswifeShuho,severalchildren,retainers,and
servants—
toinformthemoftheirimpending descenttoplebeianstatus.Histask wasnotmadeeasierbythemutelyaccusingpresenceofanexceptionally largesuitof armor,oncewornbyhismorecourageous ancestorsand broughtfromOmiduringNobunaga’sonslaught.Butnowtherewas nodaimyotowhomtheMitsuisowedfealty,andasheadoftheHouse, Sokubei’sfirstdutyto hisancestorswasto repairitsfortunes.Bowing tothefamilyshrineandclappinghishandssmartly,heexplainedhisintentionto sacrificetheMitsuis’hallowedbutemptyprivilegesforthe
sakeoftheirmaterialwelfare:““Agreatpeaceisathand,”hedeclared solemnly. “TheshogunrulesfirmlyandwithjusticeatEdo.Nomore
shallwehaveto livebythesword.I haveseenthatgreatprofitcanbe madehonorably.I shallbrewsakéandsoysauce,andweshallprospet."
Thissimplespeech,madein1616,andrecordedinthefamilychroniclesmorethanthreehundred yearsago,marked thebeginningofthe Mitsuis’financialempire.
2 - Echigoya the Shunned
INFEUDAL JAPANpoliticaland militaryactivitycentereduponthe
strongholds oftheshogunandhisvassals, wholivedassumptuously as
thericeyieldsoftheirfiefspermitted.Attheircastle-courts,surrounded bymazesofwallsandmoats,theyassembledretainers,soldiers,craftsmen,concubines,andservants,whoseneedsandfanciesengendered trade.Marketsgrewupoutsidethecastlewallsanddevelopedintopopuloussettlements.In justthatwaytheancientChineseideographfor
“market”hadcometorepresent “town”or“city,”aswell.Thecastle townofMatsusaka wasfortunate inbeingundertheprotection ofadaimyowhoheadedtheKiibranchoftheTokugawa familyandenjoyed thebakufu’sfavor.LordKii’scourtiersandretainersreceivedample stipends,andlocalbusinesswasfurtherenhancedbythesteadystream
ofpilgrimstravelingtoandfromIse’sshrines.MitsuiSokubei could
nothavechosena betterstartingpointforhiscareerasa chonin. Thebrewingofsakéandofsoysaucearerelatively simpleprocesses, requiringonlya smallamountofcapitalanda fewworkerswhoknow thetraditionalskills.Sokubei’sbrewerywasdifferentfromothersonly
it Echigo-donoPeoplebegancalling inbeingrunbyaformersamurai. no-sakaya, LotdEchigo’ssakéshop,because hisfatherhadbornethat title.The appellationsuggeststhat Sokubeiwasrespected,but that commonersweresomewhatin aweofthisaristocratic brewer.Atany tatetheywereslowto patronizehisshop,andbusinesswaspoorat first.Whatlittleofit therewasEchigo-donomanagedbadly.Although
withfigures hewasclumsy hewasadeptatlightverseandcalligraphy, andevenwotseat drummingup trade.
It washis wife Shuho,the daughterof a successfulmerchant,who
stoodbetweenSokubeiandfailure.Althoughshehad marriedhim whenshewasonlythirteenyearsold,andbeganto bearchildrensoon afterward,shefoundtimeto participateinbusinessaffairsandshowed remarkableaptitudeasshematured.Unencumberedwithsocialpretensions,shecouldtalktocustomersintheirowndialectandgainedfavor withtheirservantsbyofferingthemteaortobaccowhentheycameon errands.Onmarketdaysfarmersfromthecountrysidewereina festive
13
14 - MITSUI
mood,andpilgrims andotherwayfarers werealways thirstywhenthey arrivedinMatsusaka. UnderShuho’s cajoling,customersattheshop
oftenspentmorethantheyshouldhaveandhadto borrowmoneyfor thejourneyhome,leavingtheirvaluablesassecurity.Fromthispractice it wasonlya shortsteptopawnbroking, a businesssheestablishedasa sideline.Interestonloansandincomefromsellingunredeemedpledges turnedouttobemoreprofitablethanbrewing,andEchigo-dono’sshop
begantoprosper.
Takingwarningfromtheprodigalityofothers,Shuhocultivatedthe
traitforwhichsheisbestremembered—thrift. Asayoungmotherwith foursonsandfourdaughtersto providefor,sheservedveryfrugal meals,andnoonewasallowed toleaveuntilhisricebowlwasempty. Even when she could affordsilk she and her childrenwore cotton,
whichwasgrown,spun,andwovenintheIseregion.Everyyoungster wastequitedto contributeto thewelfareofallbydoingusefultasks,
whichformedthemostimportantpartofhismeagereducation. WhenSokubeidiedprematurely in1633hiswidowfoundconsola-
tioninreligionandwork.Risingatdaybreak, shewouldbatheincold waterandprayto theBuddhaandto Shintodeitiesbeforestartingher day’slabors,whichextendedwellintothenight.Despiteherprofes-
sionalconviviality intheshopsheledanincreasingly austerelifeprivately,andherfrugalityearnedherareputationformiserliness. Shuhoworshiped frequently atthetemples,buttoavoidwasting time sheandhermaidswoulddoabitofscavenging onthewayhome.They
would collectdiscardedsandalsand
horseshoes,which were woven
fromstraw,to beusedasfuelor compost.Paperstrings,withwhich menandwomentiedtheirhair,werepickedup, spliced,andwound
intobigballsforuseintheshop.
In Shuho’shouseholdnothingwaswasted.The leesfromthesake andsoyvatswereconvertedintoediblebyproducts, ordurewassaved
for fertilizer,clothingwas
handeddown until it was threadbare,and
evenbrokenutensilswereputto someunexpecteduse.Thusabottom-
lessvatwasconverted intoacistern,andaleakywoodendipperbecame aflowerpotstand.Insuchaneccentric matriarchy, Sokubei’s children, thefirstgeneration ofMitsuicommoners, acquiredthevaluesthatwere tobringfortunetohisdescendants. ThemostflourishingmarketinJapanwasEdo,whoseinhabitants—
calledEdokko—were renownedasspendthrifts.Manymerchants of
OmiandIsejoinedtherushtotheshogun’s capitalonthesoundtheory thata foolandhismoneyaresoonparted.WhenShuho’seldestson, SaburozaemonToshitsugu,wasthoroughlytrainedat Matsusakashe senthimtoEdowithcapitalto opena draper’sshopcalledEchigoya. Assistedby the third son, SaburobeiShigetoshi,he wasnot long
ECHIGOYATHE SHUNNED « 15
inestablishing hisownbusiness house,whichintimewasknown asthe “nail-puller,” orAuginuki, Mitsuifromtheshapeofhisemblem. The secondson,SeibeiHiroshige,wasadoptedinto
anotherfamily,leaving
theyoungest,HachirobeiTakatoshi,at hometo assistShuho. Hachirobei,bornin 1622,showedconspicuoustalentfromchildhood,andit wouldhavebeennaturalforhimeventuallytoinheritthe
business ofEchigo-dono inMatsusaka. ButShuho, sensing thathecould becomeagreatmerchant,senthimtoSaburozaemon inEdoasanapprenticewhenhewasonlyfourteen yearsold.Hachirobei provedtobe soablethatthebrothers soonopeneda secondshop,alsocalledEchigoya.The lesstalentedShigetoshireturnedto Matsusakato help Shuho,and Saburozaemonwentto Kyototo organizea cloth-put-
chasingsystem.ThisleftyoungHachirobei inchargeoftheEdoshops,
whichhemanagedwithgratifyingsuccess. Onthenationalscenethenewbakufuregimewaseffectingdramatic changes,manyofthemunintentionallyfavorabletothemerchantclass. ThethirdTokugawashogun,Iemitsu(whoruledfrom1623to 1651), tookextrememeasuresto curtailallforeigninfluences.Havingclosed thecountrytoforeigntrade,heforbadeJapanesetoleavethecountry,
uponpainofdeath.Toensureisolationhemadeit a crimetobuild
shipslargeenoughforoverseasvoyages,andheestablishedmonopolies to handlethetightlycontrolledforeigncommerceconductedthrough thelastopenport,Nagasaki.Foreignmissionaries landinginJapanwere
puttothesword,andatleasttwenty thousandJapanese Christians who stageda revoltinKyushuweremassacred. Whenanembassy ofPortu-
guesecameto askfora restorationoftradeprivilegestheirshipwas burnedandfifty-sevenoftheintrudersweredecapitated.Suchfanatical isolationism,althoughcostlytotheeconomy,protecteddomesticproducersandtradersagainstcompetitionfromforeignersandthenation fromconquest. Iemitsuwassuspiciousevenof hisownvassalsand,beginningin 1634,enforcedthesystemof sankinkotai,underwhichtheywetetequiredto spendseveralmonthsofeachyearin Edo.Whena daimyo returnedto hisowndomainhehadto leavehiswifeandchildrenbehindas hostages.Thissystemmadeit necessaryforeachdaimyoto buildaresidenceinEdoandmaintaina full-timestaffthereaswellason hisfief.Onhistravelstoandfromtheshogun’s courthehadtobeaccompaniedbya retinueofa sizeanddegreeof elegancebefittinghis rank.Allthiswasruinouslyexpensive,asIemitsuintendedittobe,and thedaimyohadnorecoursebuttoborrowmoneyfromthemerchants. Suchbusinessusuallywasprofitable, butrisky,becauseachoninhadno
legalwaytocompel adaimyotopayhisdebts. Astheyearspassed, Hachirobei observed thebusiness worldcannily
16 + MITSUI
anddeveloped hisownideas.Hesaw,forexample, thatthepeoplewho
flockedin fromalloverJapanto becometownsmenwerecoalescing intoa newandprosperousclass.Yettradition-mindedmerchantslike Saburozaemonconcentratedtheirsaleseffortsuponthearistocrats,to whomtheywereforcedto extendliberalcredit.Hachirobeilongedto beindependentandto trynewideas,butevryo—trestraint orreserve— kepthimfromcompeting withhiselderbrother.‘Then, whenhewas twenty-eight,hishopesweredashedbythedeathofShigetoshi,which obligedhimto returnto MatsusakaandhelptheagingShuhorunthe familybusiness. Echigo-dono’sbreweryandpawnshopweretoohumdrumto hold theinterestofanEdochonin,soHachirobei setupa sidebusinessasa moneylender.Thishewaswellabletodo,forduringhisfourteenyears in Edohe hadsavedaboutfifteenhundredryo,equivalent to nearly sevenhundredandfiftypoundssterlingin silver.(Atcertaintimes
duringtheTokugawa periodaryowasequivalent toaboutonepound sterling,but thediscrepancymustbenotedbecause,byinternational standards,silverwasgrosslyovervalued in Japan.)For the modest sumof sixtyryohe boughttheestateof anothermerchant.Thenhe tookawife,Jusan,whohadbeenpickedforhimbyShuho.Hisfifteen-
year-oldbride,a merchant’sdaughterlikeher
mother-in-law,wasen-
ergeticandlevelheaded. Havingestablished hisownhouse,intowhich sonsanddaughters wereborninquicksuccession, Hachirobei waswell launchedasa provincialbankerwitha reasonably promising,if not exciting,future.
ShrewdoperatorssuchasHachirobeilearnedto spreadtheirrisksin variousways,formingsyndicateswiththeirrelativesandfellowmer-
chants,orborrowingshort-termcapitalfromtemplesandshrinesand relendingit todaimyo.Hachirobei alsolearnedthetricksofricetrad-
ing.Thedaimyousuallyrepaidtheirloansinrice,butlaterwouldfind it necessaryto borrowricewithwhichto paythe stipendsof their samurai.Byvariousmanipulations familiartoexperiencedcommodities speculators,themerchantscausedthemarketto fluctuatewidelyand,
withforeknowledge ofpricechanges,managedto turnneatprofits bothways,inadditiontothehighratesofinteresttheycharged.AnotherphaseofHachirobei’s businesswaslendingmoneytofarming
villages,withmortgagesascollateral,fordevelopingvirginland,handicraftworkshops,or newagriculturalproducts.In thissensehewasa pioneerindustrialcapitalist.
Asthe“greatpeace” foreseen bySokubeisettledoverthelandinthe
mid-seventeenthcentury,the MatsusakaMitsuis’fortunegrewsubstantially.Jusanraisedsixsons,allofwhomlisteneddutifullytoHachirobei’slecturingandheededhiscounsel.Oneofthemwrotein later
ECHIGOYATHE SHUNNED~- 17
years:“Soju[Hachirobei’s posthumous name]saidthatifoneloaned ten[units]ofsilverat1.2percentamonth,itwouldbedoubled infive
years,andinfiftyyearswouldbecometenthousand[units].Therefore, oneshouldmakethe mostof evensmallamounts,for evena petty clerkcouldbecomea millionairein time.” Hachirobeididnotalwaysfollowhisownadvice,however.Hehad
oftenwarnedhiselderbrotherSaburozaemon againstlendingtodaimyo,andthelatterhadcometothebrinkofbankruptcy byignoring theadmonition. YetHachirobeicontinuedto lendmoneyto thelord Kii—perhapsbecausea refusalwouldhavebeenmore hazardous thantheloanitself.Thatpreeminent daimyo,as headof oneof the
threeTokugawa families fromwhichashoguncouldbeselected, wasa telativelygoodrisk,of course,butHachirobeiwasstillworried.Al-
thoughtheTokugawa domainsproducedalmostone-thirdofthenation’srice,the extravaganceof the shogun’scourtandthe follyor knaveryof hisministerswereleadingthe nationto ruin.Merchants knewthat someofficialswere embezzlingvast sums; in fact, one of
them,afteralifeofflagrantprofligacy, hadprovidedhimselfwitha coffinofsolidgold.Iemitsusetdownsevereregulations tocurbthe
extravagancesof others,butwhenhediedhisownlavishwayof life wasrevealed.AtEdoCastlethereweresomanyretainersthatlemitsu’s successorfounditnecessarytodismissthreethousandofthem—mostly females. In 1673,whenHachirobeiwasfifty-oneyearsof age,he reacheda decisionnolessboldandpropheticthanthatofhisfather:fromnowon hewouldnotriskhismodestfortuneuponthewhimof anydaimyo. LikeSokubei,hewoulddareto
followthetrendof thetimesanddevote
himselftobusinesswithcommoners. Havinghismother’sblessing, he movedtoKyotowithhisfamily andopenedabusinessdevotedinitially to theprocurementof fabrics.Leavinghiseldestson,Takahira,in charge,hetookhissecondsonto Edointhesameyearandopeneda smallshopina goodlocationadjacenttothemismanaged“nailpuller” establishmentof hislatebrother.Herehebeganto sellthefashionable
Nishijinbrocadesandothersilkspurchasedin Kyotoor elsewhere.
Whentheshopswererunningsmoothly,helefttheeveryday managementtohissixsonsandspentmostof histimetravelingandstudying businessconditionsin general.(Todaywewouldcallthatmarketresearch.) HisEdoshop,calledEchigoya afteritsdefunctprecursors,fronted onHoncho-dori,wherethemoststylishdrapers’shopswereclustered. Thosemerchantssoldgoodsmainlyto daimyoorupper-classsamurai familiesbyshowingsamplesor actualboltsof clothatthecustomers’
mansions. However,Hachirobei hadneithertheopportunity northe
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ECHIGOYATHE SHUNNED - 19
incentivetocaterto sucharistocrats, whosettledtheiraccounts only twiceayearatbest.Tocompensate forthisdeficiency, Hachirobei laid
inlargestocksat Kyotoandsoldthemat wholesalepricesto smaller merchantsin the provinces.Theprofitmarginwassmall,but rapid turnoverandpromptpaymentmadesucha systemworthwhile.
ThecostlyfabricshandledbythemerchantsofHoncho-doriwere soldonlybythewholepiece,sufficient to makea kimono,andthis practicelimitedtheirsales.Hachirobei, awarethattherewasquitea lot
ofcashjinglinginthecoinpouchesofthecommonpeople,wasseeking newwaystoexpandthemarket.A preciouscluecamefromoneofhis
clerks,whopatronized thepublicbathsandenjoyedlisteningtothe chatterofthefemale bathers.Afavoritetopicofconversation, hetold
Hachirobei,wascloth:womenwereespecially eagertofindsmallpieces thatcouldbeusedformakingpouches,personalornaments,orcovers fortreasuredobjects.Sincenomerchantwasfoolishenoughtocutinto
aboltforsuch a triflingsale,women hadtobesatisfied withexchanging remnantsleftoverfromkimono-making.
WhenHachirobeihadmulledoverthisbit ofinformation,heconceiveda daringexperiment:hewouldsellclothin anylengthdesired. Forthisprivilege,hesoondiscovered,customerswerewillingtopaya muchhigherunitprice.Andsincehiswholesale businessenabledhim to maintainan exceptionallyattractivevarietyof stock,customers
flockedtohisestablishment. Encouraged bytheirenthusiastic response,
heagainfloutedtraditionbysellinghismaterials—notonlypiecesbut wholelengthsaswell—forspotcashonly. Thelatterinnovationwasresentedbyaristocrats,butit reducedhis creditriskssignificantly, andhadotheradvantagesaswell.Bypurchas-
ingoncreditandsellingforcash,Hachirobei wasabletoemployhis capitalmorebrisklythanhiscompetitors. Sinceheknewwherehe stoodatalltimes,hewasableto calculatecostsmoreprecisely,reduce hismarkup,andsellat fixedprices.Thiseliminatedhaggling,a time-
honoredbuttime-wasting custom,andgavethepurchaserassurance thathewasnotbeingcheated. Theefficacy ofHachirobei’s newmeth-
odswassoonapparent.Withina yearafterhisarrivalin Edohehad prosperedsoimmenselythatheopeneda newshopinthesamestreet, havingsixtimesthefrontageoftheoldone,andemployedsomefifteen clerks,fiveapprentices,andseveralservantsat bothstores. Predictably,Echigoya’sunorthodoxmethodsfirstirritatedandthen
infuriatedcompetitors.Theirragereachedtheboilingpointwhen Hachirobeisnatcheda big orderfor crepefromhis rival,Matsuya. Havingviolateda gentlemen’sagreementagainstunderselling,the
Mitsuiswereostracized bythemerchants’ guildandbeforelongEchigoyawasknownas“theshunned.” Someenvious rivalstriedtoincite
20 - MITSUI
theclerksto revoltagainstHachirobei, buthisstaffremainedloyal.
Thenthoseadversariesboughta housenextdoorto Echigoya,builta toiletclosetotheMitsuikitchen, andlettheirsewage overflowintoit. Hachirobeitriedto changethe location,whichhe alreadyhadoutgrown,butwheneverhefounda suitablebuildinghistormentorsmanagedto preventhisleasingit. FinallyHachirobeidiscovereda housefor salein Surugacho,near
Nihombashi, andboughtitsecretly. Whentheremodeling ofthatnew shopwasnearlycompleted,therewasa disastrousfire,oneofthefre-
quentconflagrations knownas“theflowers ofEdo.”AllofHoncho’s high-class shops,alongwithEchigoya, wereburneddown;butHachirobeiwasabletoopenhisnewestablishment inSurugachoalmostimmediatelyandenjoyedatremendousadvantagethereby.Soonafterthe fireHachirobeifirstputuphisfamoussignboard, stillpreservedinthe Mitsui museum,announcingGenkin,Kakenenashi—cashonly,
fixed
prices. ThehistorianAraiHakuseki,a contemporaryofHachirobei,wrote inhisbookShimsho, a collectionofessays:“EchigoyaofSurugachohas twostoresinEdoandanauthorized exchangehousefortheshogunate. Oneofthestoresdealsin drygoods[presumablysilks]andtheother
sellscotton.Itis saidthatthetwostoreshavecombineddailysales amounting to1,000ryo,or360,000ryoayear,onacashbasis.” Bythattimeatleastsevenmerchants hadbeguntoimitate Echigoya’s methods.Someadopteditsemblemandevenitsname,whichwasbecomingalmostagenerictermforthecash-payment,one-pricestyleof
merchandising. AfterthemovetoNihombashi, Mitsuistopped using the“nailpuller”’ crestanddesigned anewone,whichhassurvived with slightmodificationtothepresent.Anadditional motiveforthechange wasthefactthatthefounderofEdo’sfamousYoshiwara brotheldistrict,ShojiJin’emon,useda familycrestalmostidenticalwiththatof theMitsuis,whichin itsturnwasappropriated byanothernotorious
whoremaster. Thismusthavebeenhumiliating to theMitsuis,who werereputedfortheirsobrietyandrectitude.Buttherereallywasno escapefromimitators:alaterbrothelkeeperinYoshiwarausedtolure thecheapskatetradebydistributing a handbillbearingapicturequite similarto Echigoya’ssign,advertisingladiesof the nightfor “spot cash,at fixedprices.”
TheSurugachositewasconsidered themostattractivecommercial
locationin Edo.It wasso namedbecauseon cleardaystheviewof MountFujiresembledthat seenfromSurugaProvince(nowcalled ShizuokaPrefecture).Asbusinessswelled,Hachirobeiaddedlinesof merchandise,especiallycheapercottonsandpongee,appealingtofam-
iliesoflower-ranking samuraiandto commoners of slendermeans.
ECHIGOYATHE SHUNNED - 21
Asthepremisesexpanded,Echigoyabecameoneofthesightseeing
featuresof thecity,whosepopulationhadreachedhalfa millionby 1700.Theshopwasafavoritesubjectforpainters,andinspiredaseeminglyendlessseriesofcoloredwoodblockprints.Originalimpressions
ofsuchprintscanstillbefoundinTokyo’s curioshops, whichindicates thattheeditionswerequitelarge. Longbeforetheconceptofadvertising hadmadeitsimpact uponthe West,Hachirobeiandhissonsweremastersofindirectpersuasion.The weatherin Edo beingunpredictable,Echigoya’scustomersnot in-
frequentlyweresurprisedbyrainstorms.ThisgaveHachirobeithe ideaoflendinghiscustomers oiled-paper umbrellas. Onrainydaysthe streetsofcentralEdoblossomed withthem,eachoneconspicuously
emblazonedwiththe Mitsuimark.Hachirobei alsobefriendedplaywrights,authors,andpoets,whoshowedtheirgratitudebyfurtherenhancingMitsui’spublicimagein bothspeechandwriting.
Beforetheendoftheseventeenthcentury,Mitsui’sstaffofseveral hundredemployees enjoyedagoodmanyfringebenefits thenscarcely knowninJapanorelsewhere. It isrecordedthatemployees wetete-
quiredto workforonlya specifiednumberofhours,andweregiven regularrestperiodsduringthecourseofeachday.Somethoughtwas givento healthandsanitation,anddecentdormitorieswereprovided.
Echigoyagaveclerkson-the-job traininginmanners,speech,andpersonalappearance; andforthosewithsenioritya rudimentary profitshatingsystemwasestablished. Tokeeptrackofsuchalargevolumeof business,Hachirobeioriginateda formof double-entrybookkeeping similarto thatusedin Europe.
AsEchigoyaflourished Hachirobei setupbranchestablishments in KyotoandOsaka,anticipating thechainstoresystempopularized in America about1860 bytheAtlantic&PacificTeaCompany. However,
a competitor,Iseya(whichalsooriginatedinMatsusaka),seemstohave anticipatedEchigoyabysettingupa chainoftextileoutletsinallthe
wardsofEdoevenbeforetheMitsuis beganbranching inearnest. Echigoyawassituatedalmostexactly whereitsdirectdescendant, themainMitsukoshi DepartmentStore,standstoday,inTokyo’s centralNihombashi district.Antedating JohnWanamaker’s emporium in Philadelphiabyalmosttwohundredyears,Echigoyamayhavebeen theworld’sfirstdepartmentstore.In 1700itwasJapan’slargeststore,
justasMitsukoshiistoday.ButEchigoyawouldbequiteunfamiliar
tomodernshoppers,whoexpectquickservice.Thecustomers,ducking in underthezoren,theshortcurtainshungin doorways,foundthem-
selvesinagreathall.Araisedplatform coveredwithsweet-smelling tatamiwasitsonlyfixture. Greetedpolitelybyoneofthechiefclerks, customers wouldremove theirwoodenclogsortheirsandals andtake
22, « MITSUI seatson themattingor uponsilkcushions.Theclerkwouldengage
theminlightconversation asteawasserved.According tothestatus or interestsof the customer,the chatterwouldturn
to art, literature,
poetry,sometitillatingscandalinvolvinga populargeisha,or a new playattheKabuki-za.Onlyaftersuchnicetieshadbeenobservedwould the customerbe expectedto turn his attentionto boltsof material broughtfromthewarehouse byapprentices. EchigoyaattainedgreatfameduringtheGenrokuera(1688-1704),
reachedfullflower. whenthecultureofthenewurbanbourgeoisie
Thewealthof thechoninhadevokedthe so-calledfloatingworld— refinedbutevanescentpleasuresthatinspiredartists,poets, ukiyo—of
playwrights, andnovelists.ThiswasalsothehighpointofKabuki, thetheaterof chonin,in whichthegloriesandtragediesof samurai
lifewerepresented.Oneof themosttalentednovelistsof theperiod wasIharaSaikaku,sonof an Osakamerchantand authorof Néhon
book (Japan’sEternalTreasureHouse).Thistrue-to-life Eitai-gura describesleadingmerchantsofthedayandrelateswittilythewaysin whichtheymadetheirfortunes.
Of Echigoya, Saikakuwrote: “At Surugacho,a man namedMitsui
Kuroemon[Hachirobei]openeda shopof 9 kenby40 ken [roughly
system. fixed-price thecash-payment, 54feetby239feet],adopting Thereareforty-oddclerks,eachengagedin a differentcategoryof
business.Forexample,oneis handlingbrocade,twomenareselling [asmoothsilk],onein in Aabutae silksfromHinoandGunnai,oneis men] saya{atexturedsilk].Onesellshakama[askirtlikegarmentfor
one-inch andanotherwoolens.Thusdivided,theysellvelvetby makea tweezercase,of red satin squares,brocadelargeenoughto costumesarereenoughto covera spearinsignia.Whenceremonial quiredin a hurry,theshopletsthe servantswaitandhasthe regalia madeup immediatelyby severaldozensoftheirowntailors.... To fromothers,withhis lookat the shopowner,heappearsnodifferent
eyes,nose,andlimbsintheusualarrangement;butheisclever ofa reallybigmerchant.”® business.Thisisanexample
3 - TheSourceof HappinessIsPrudence SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY JAPAN,disdainfullyalooffrom the outside worldandsociallyconstrainedin theweboffeudalism, is mistakenly believedto havebeena backwardcountry.Actuallyit wasrelatively
advanced,comparingfavorablywithElizabethanEnglandeconomicallyandwiththeCelestial Empireculturally. Therewereinnumerable
lawsandregulationsto preventchange,yeta neweconomicsystem wasstirringwithinthebodyoftheold;andanewbourgeois class,with itsmatchingculture,wasassertingitselfwithbrashdisregardforsocial barriers.
AtthetimeHachirobei appeared uponthebusiness scenetheground-
workfor industryhadalreadybeenlaid.Handicrafts werewelldeveloped,andeachprovinceproducedits ownspecialtiesin amounts exceedinglocalrequirements.Thelevelof technicalcompetencewas
high,anddivision oflaborintheworkshops madeproduction reasonablyefficient. Transportation bylandandseawasslowbutadequate. Thesankin-kotaisysteminstitutedbyShogunlIemitsu in 1634had improvedthe highroadsleadingto Edofromdifferentpartsof the
country.Anda well-organized distributionsystemmadeiteasyto exchange agricultural andindustrialproductsformoney. Therehadbeenasteady advanceintheyieldsoffarms,andricewas moteplentiful thanithadeverbeen.Butthedaimyo, tomeetmounting expenses,exactedlargerand largersharesof the peasants’crops— usuallyfiftypercentor more—andreducedthericestipendsallotted totheirsamurai.Thecrushingpovertyofthecountryfolk drovemore andmoreyoungmento thecitiesto seekemployment,andthewives anddaughtersof impecunioussamurai,likethoseof peasants,eked out a livingin domesticindustries.Underthesecircumstancesmet-
chantswereabletoaccumulate capitalthatwasnotlaggardinmating withtheemergingproletariat to begetmoreenterprises.
ThusHachirobei’s world,although feudalinconceptandstructure,
showedmanyresemblances totheprecapitalisticeconomiesofEurope. Fromhisphenomenalsuccessinbusiness,onecanassumethatHachiro-
beihada basicunderstanding ofthisparadoxicaleconomyandthe 23
24 + MITSUI
richopportunities it offeredfor the future.Butbeinga realist,he recognizedthatthebigsumsofmoneyneededforincreasing tradeand industrywerestilllockedin thecoffersof thebakufu.Healsoknew thatmerchantswerestillat themercyof aristocratsandthatwithout officialpatronagehecouldlosehisfortuneovernight. Theshortestroadto securitywasto becomeanofficialpurveyorto
thegovernment.In thosedaysthebakufuprocureditsfabricsand apparelfromsixhousesofgofuku-shi (something like“kimonomasters”),whoseappointmentwashereditary.Breakingintothismonopolywasnextto impossible,butthesagacious Hachirobeifoundaway to do so.Oneof hisrelativesfromMatsusaka,agochampionnamed Doetsu,wasbeingemployedto playexhibitionmatchesandteachthe gameto bakufuofficials.Doetsu’sworkbroughthiminto contact withLordMakinoNarisadaof Bingo,an influentialadviserto the Edocourt.Hachirobei persuadedDoetsuto put in a goodwordfor
Echigoya, andthismadeitpossible forhimtobecomeacquainted with Makino.Hehewedto hispurposesodiligentlythatatlast,in 1687, “theshunned”Echigoyawasappointeda supplierof clothto the bakufu. | AtthistimeHachirobei’sresidencewasinKyoto,sohedelegatedhis eldestson,Hachiroemon Takahira,to managethe businesswiththe bakufuin Edo.Takahiramusthavedonehisworkwell,fortwoyears later,in 1689,the Mitsuisweremadepurveyorsof
apparel,ornaments,
andpersonalaccessoriesto ShogunTsunayoshi.In thispositionthey heldthehighestrankattainablebytownsmenandweregivena suitable dwellingwitha frontageof thirty-sixfeet. Thehonorwasgreat,ofcourse,andkimonomastersusuallybasked
complacently intheirprivilegedstatus.ButtheelderHachirobei ridiculedthemasnotbeingrealbusinessmen. “Don’tforgetthatweare merchants,” heusedtotellhissons.“Ourtradeisthemostimportant thing;official businessisjustanornament.”Thiswarningreflected the factthatpurveyingto theshogunwastroublesome,andsometimesunprofitable,becauseoflongdelaysinpayment.Nevertheless,Hachirobei acceptedeverypreferment,profitableor otherwise,witha showof
gratitude,andhismotivesareeasilyguessed:merchants, importuning clientstopaytheirdebts,madepowerfulenemiesandneededpowerful protectors;suchambitiousschemesasthoseofHachirobeicouldnotbe realizedwithoutinfluentialconnections;andthe timelyinformation necessaryforsurvivalinthoseuncertaindayscouldbestbepickedupin
courtcircles. Theintelligence ofmostinteresttoHachirobeiwasthatconcerning thecirculation ofmoney,themediumsoessential totrade.Evenbefore movingtoSurugacho hehadmanaged asmallexchange houseadjacent
THE
SOURCE
OF HAPPINESS
IS PRUDENCE
:-
25
toEchigoya,andin1683,aftercombating theguildfortenyears,he
waspermittedto establishhisown.Sincethemoney-changersofEdo wereconcentratedaroundSurugacho,hewascontinuallyin touchwith fluctuationsintherelativevaluesofgold,silver,copper,andironmonscripissuedbydaimyo.Within ies,aswellaswiththedubioussortsof
calledryobrokerages, similarexchange eightyearshehadestablished
Osaka,wherethebakufu’s gaeya,in Kyoto,theimperialcapital,andin ryogaeya,Hachitobeiwas treasurywaslocated.Withthisnetworkof ableto eliminatethehighcommissionshehadbeenchargedforsettling
hisaccountswithsuppliersandtocollectsuchfeesfromfellowmerchantswholackedsimilar exchangefacilities. Evenin thosedaysthe ryogaeyawereperformingthebasicoperationsof modernbanks,acceptingdeposits,grantingloansagainstcollateral,discountingnotes,andissuingtradevouchersthatalsoserved as banknotes.SuchvouchershadonlylocalcirculationuntilHachisystem. robeiexpandedthebusinessintoanationwidebill-of-exchange
in hisoperations,andto insureprobityheplaced Hewasscrupulous ofoneofhissons, underthemanagement eachofthethreeryogaeya withthestipulationthatthepositionwastobehereditary. TheMitsuis’ reputationwassounblemishedthattheir“wrappedmoney,”bearing thesealandsignatureoftherespective manager,usuallywasaccepted
atitsfacevaluewithoutbeingcounted. Mostsignificant forthefortunesoftheHousewasHachirobei’s idea system.In 1691,whenhis of reformingthebakufu’smoney-transfer Osakaexchangeshopwasopened,theHouseofMitsuibecameanofficialmoney-changerforthebakufu’streasury.Fromthenonbanking wasHachirobei’smainbusiness,and althoughthe Echigoyashops
continuedtogrowapace,hisplansweredevoted tohighfinancerather thantomerchandising. Hehadlongobservedthat,whileEdo’smerchants boughtfoodstuffsandmerchandisein Osakaandsentmoneytherein return,the
government wascollecting taxesfromthesameregionandsending the
coinstoEdo.SuchtransfersofcurrencyweremadebywayoftheTokaido,thehighroadfromEdotoKyoto,andtrainsofhorsesladenwith senryobako, theboxescontainingonethousandryoof goldor silver, couldbe seenpassingeachother—goingin oppositedirections.This cumbersomeandredundantmethodwasalsodangerous, inasmuchas highwayrobberywasnotuncommon.
Hachirobei’s reputationwassogoodthathewasabletopersuade the
treasuryofficialsto adopthissystem,alreadyperfected,ofsendingremittancesbymoneyorder insteadofbycash.Thereafter,asmoneyaccumulatedin the treasuryit wasloanedto Osaka’smoney-changets. Theyin turnloanedit to merchants,whousedthefundsto purchase
26 + MITSUI
commodities forshipmenttoEdo.Whendeliverywascompleted the
wholesalersinEdowouldpaythelocalrepresentativeoftherespective ryogaeya,whowouldthenrepaytheoriginalloantothebakufuinEdo. Atfirstthetreasuryallowed60daysforrepayment,butlaterextended theperiodto aslongas150days,withoutinterest.Thustheexchange brokerswereabletorelendthemoneyathighinterestratesandtomake a generousprofitfromthissimpleoperation.
Naturally,allthebigryogaeyawereanxioustogeta shareofthis
business,but onlytwelvewereappointedas o-kawase, or honorable money-exchangers, in 1691.Tenof themformeda partnershipcalled Junin-gumi,the ten-mancompany;and the eldestMitsuison,Hachiro-
emonTakahiraofKyoto,andhisbrotherJicoemon Takatomi,repre-
sentingtheEdoheadquarters, constitutedthe ninin-gumi, or two-man company.Laterthiswasexpandedintothesannin-gumi,or three-man company,whentheirbrotherGennosuke of Osakawasappointedto thegroup. Thosethirteenmoney-changers,actuallybankersbythen,wereelevatedto a specialstatuswiththebakufu’saccounting agency,being listedin officialgazettesandprivilegedto greettheshogun’s familyat the ceremoniesof the NewYear.Thiswasthe greatesthonorever
accorded membersofthedespisedmerchantclass;butmoreimportant to theagingHachirobeiwasthefactthathissonswerefirmlyen-
trenchednearthesourceofpoliticalpower. NotthatHachirobeisoughtanyshareofthatpowerforhisdescendants.TheproudSasakishadcrumbledbeforethemightofOdaNobunaga,justasintheirturnthefamilies ofOdaNobunagaandToyotomi HideyoshihadbeeneclipsedorexterminatedbytheTokugawas.Other choninmayhavedreamedofequalitywiththesamurai,inordertoseek politicalcareers,butnotHachirobei.Whathewantedwaswealth,and motewealth.Yethisesteemformoneywasnotevidenceofmeremegalomaniaor greedforpossessions.Luxuryandostentationwereasdis-
tastefultohimasdissipationandlechery;positionsofhonorwereas merebaubles; andeveneconomic powerwasonlyameanstoanend. Theelusivetreasurehesought,ashadTokugawaIeyasubeforehim,
waspermanence—the perpetuationofhisline,unchallengedforagesto come.In the politicalrealmthe imperialfamilyandthe Tokugawa shogunshelda monopolyuponpermanence,butwhycouldnotamerchantfounda financialdynastyno lessenduring? Asthe seventeenthcenturydrewtowarditsclose,Hachirobei was ableto viewthe resultsof hiseffortswithconsiderable satisfaction. Fromhisheadquartersat Kyotohe supervisedprosperousshopsand exchangehousesin Japan’sthreemajorcities,aswellastheoriginal
establishment inMatsusaka. Butbythenhisguidinghandwasunnec-
THE SOURCEOF HAPPINESSIS PRUDENCE=
2/7
essary,foramongtheelevensons(nottomention thefivedaughters)
producedby Jusanthereweresixwhomhe consideredqualifiedto catryon the business.Theywerecapableandwellschooledin the patriarch’smethodsandprinciples. Buttherewasno guaranteethat theywouldnot becomecompetitiveamongthemselves,andin his
twilightyearshepondered overthecomposing ofalastwillandtesta-
mentthatwouldpreservetheintegrityandsolidarityofthehouse. Beforehisdeathin1694hereadthedocumenttohissonsanddaughters,explaininghowhisestatewastobeshared.Ratherthanleavingit alltotheeldestson,aswouldhavebeencustomary, hedesignatedeach
offiveyoungersonsastheheadofanewhon-ke, ormainhouse,who wouldinheritafixedshareofthefortune.Twoothersonsandan
adoptedson-in-lawwereto beendowedalso,andheorderedthemto setupbranchorassociate families.Butnonewastobefullyindependent,forallninehousesowedfealtytotheheadoftheseniorhouse. Thisinnovationgaveriseto a systemofnomenclaturethatiscom-
plexevenforJapan,wherefamily namesareexceptionally baffling. In
feudaltimestheclanwecallMitsuiwasknownpublicly asEchigoya.As wasthe casewithmostof the world’scommoners,the choninwerenot
entitledtobearsurnamesthatmightbeconfusedwiththoseofsuperior classes.The Mitsuis,likeothermerchants,usedthe
tradenameof their
shopasakindofsurname. Butsincetheywereofsamurai lineagethey weteentitledtoretaintheiroldsurname ofMitsui.Thiswasusedprivatelybyallexceptthreeoftheassociate families,whichboreinstead
thenamesOnoda,Nagai,andIeharauntiltheMeijiera. ThegivennamesofmaleMitsuis usuallybeginwiththecharacter taka(highor tall),afterSasakiTakahisa,the mostfamousof their presumedancestors,andthiscustomhasprevailed to thepresentgeneration.ThusHachirobei’sfavoritesonswerenamed,in orderof arrival,Takahira,Takatomi,Takaharu,Takatomo,anotherTakaharu,*and
Takahisa.Takahira(alsocalledSochikuEchigoya Hachirobei)borethe nameHachiroemonbecausehewastheeldestsonofHachirobei, who
wasnumbereight(Aachi) amongShuho’s progeny.Hachiroemon be-
* OnemaywellaskwhythereweretwoTakaharus. The“haru”’oftheelder
Takaharu’snamewaswrittenwitha differentcharacterfromthatofthe
youngerone.For mostcharactersusedin writingJapanesenamesseveral vatiedreadingsarepossible,andthe “‘correct”’ onedependsuponthewhim
oftheparentsorofthebearer.Thecorrectreadingofsomenamescannot bedeterminedunlessonehasheardthempronounced orseenthemwritten in phoneticcharacters.Therefore,thereis wildconfusionin thetransliterationofhistoricalnames,complicatedbythefactthattheJapanesecommonly changedtheirgivennamesor eventheirsurnamesat crucialpointsin their lives,andalwaysreceiveda newoneafterdeath.
28 - MITSUI cametheusualhereditarytitleoftheheadoftheseniorhouse.Other
Mitsuifamilyheadsalsohadtitularnamesindicating theirbusiness
positions.SaburosukerantheKyotoexchangeshop,andJiroemonand GennosukehadthesamefunctioninEdoandOsaka,respectively.The suffix-sukeoriginally meantvice-manager,and-emon,helper.
In addition,eachfamilyhadanameindicating thelocationofits
residenceanditsrankin thehierarchy.Forexample,theseniorhouse wascalledKita-ke(Northfamily),thefirstmainfamilyIsarago-ke, and thesecondShimmachi-ke. ThusthenameMitsuiSaburosukeTakaharu of Shimmachi-kemeant “Takaharu,heir
of the Mitsuis’Shimmachi
family,headingthe exchangeshopin Kyoto.”Thepositionaltitles (Hachiroemon,Jiroemon,andsoon)werenotrigidlyhereditary,being passedfromonefamilyto anotheras occasionrequired,but such changeswerenotcommon. Fortunatelyfor Hachirobei’splans,his eldestson Hachiroemon
Takahiraprovedtobea worthyheir.Recognizing that,withoutthe
guidanceofhisfather,theninehouseswouldneedsomecontrolling
organ,heestablished theMitsuiOmotokata, orgreatmainheadquarters,
toregulatetheaffairsofthegroupofhousesthatcametobeknownas Mitsui-gumi.Thewordgumimaybetranslated as“company”or “‘association.”” BeforeJapanesecorporatelawwascodified,gumiwasthe usualdesignationfora familyenterprise. ThedescendantsofHachirobeihavebeenreferredtorathergenerally
as a family,household,house,clan,tribe,
or gumi,but for an under-
standingoftheMitsuistructureanditssignificancesomemoreprecise
definitions arenecessary. InoldJapanthefamily,nottheindividual, was the socialunit. It was also the economicunit, and theoretically,
onlyitsheadcouldownproperty, transactbusiness, ormakedecisions
affectingthefamilyanditsmembers.Thehousehold,however,included unrelatedpersons,notonlythewivesofsonsbutalsothosepeoplewho weteeconomicallydependentuponthe family,suchasclerks,servants, wotkers,and their respectivefamilies.Sucha unit wascalledan ze,or
house.Allmembersofthehouseweredependentuponthehead,who wasusuallytheeldestsonofhispredecessorortheadoptedhusbandof theeldestdaughter.Whenyoungersonsmarriedtheyestablished their ownhouses(unlesstheywereadoptedintoanotherfamily), anddaughtersbecamemembersoftheirhusbands’houses.The
house,then,wasa
gtoupofpersonsboundtogetherbyobedienceto thehead,whose authorityderivedfromthefounder. Therelationship betweenthehead andthemembers, baseduponthecodeofancestor veneration andfilial piety,wassimilartoifnotidenticalwiththatbetweentheemperorand hissubjects. Ordinarily,the officialtiesbetweenthe headof a houseandhis
THE SOURCE OF HAPPINESS
IS PRUDENCE
: 29
marriedsonsanddaughters,otherthanhisheir,wereweak.Consan-
guinitydidnotmeanmutual responsibility amongrelatedhouses;once
asonhadleftthehousehewasindependent(andusuallyself-supporting as well),exceptthat filialpietyrequiredhimto be attentiveto his patentsandto assistthemin timeof need.Otherwise,theeconomic telationshipimplicitin thehouseconceptwasno longerobligatory. Naturally,thetiesofaffectionwerenotsubjecttoanysuchprescription. TheuniquefeatureoftheHouseofMitsuiwasthefactthatHachitobeicombinedthe housesof his sonsintoa morecomprehensive economicunit,makingallofthemobedientto onehead,representing thefounder.Whathedid,ineffect,wastoformasuperhouse,composed
notofindividuals butofhouseswhoseunifyingelementwasacommon ancestry.Bydoingso,hemadepossible theformationofa corporate body,orgumi,capableofengagingincapitalistic enterprisewithina feudaleconomy.Mitsui-gumiwas,to someextent,a joint-stockcorporationof limitedliability.Thatis to say,thehousescomposing it
couldunitepartoftheirassets forlong-range endeavors ofconsiderable scaleyetstillsurvivethebankruptcyofjointbusinesses,sinceone housewasnotlegallyresponsibleforthedebtsofanother. In the feudalperiodsuchhouse-laws appliedonlyto the samurai class,forwhoseperpetuationtheywerecodified.ButbecauseHachirobei’sforebearshad beenmembersof the nobleSasakihouse,he was
familiar withitsrulesoforganization andadapted themtohismerchantclassfamilywithspectacularresults,bothforthe Mitsuisandforthe futureeconomicstructureofJapan. Mitsui-gumi,thishouseof houses,wasstructurally a partnership
builtuponmutualtrustandcooperation.Theshopsandexchange housesweremanagedindependently andweresharedaccordingto tule.Employeesofoneestablishmentwereconsideredtobeemployees ofall.Theincomeofeachfamilywasfixed,andnonewasallowedto exceedit. Insteadof accumulatingcapitalseparatelythe sixbrothers pooleditinOmotokata,whichtheyownedjointlyandfromwhichthey couldborrowoperatingfundsatseven-to ten-percentannualinterest, dependingon the amount.Andto Omotokatatheyturnedin fixed
dividends rangingfromseventeen totwentypercentoftheannualnet incomeofallthebusinessescomprising Mitsui-gumi. Because theMitsuisweremeticulous bookkeepers andkeptimportantdocuments eversincetheendoftheGenroku era,orthebeginning oftheeighteenth century,thedetailsoftheiroperations canbelearned bystudyingthehugeparchment-bound ledgersofhand-laid paperstill perfectlypreservedintheMitsuiBunko,amodernfireprooflibraryand
museummaintained bythefamilyinTokyo.Scholars, including mem-
bersofthefamily,frequentlyconsultthesetomestodiscoverorverify
30 - MITSUI
factsconcerningJapan’spoliticalandeconomicdevelopment.Mitsui’s
recotdspresumably arerepresentative ofmethodsemployed byleading merchants oftheirtimes,buttheymusthavebeenbetterkeptthanwere thoseoftheaverage merchant, because Mitsui-gumi hadbeenappointed
in 1707to handlethe government’saccounting. Fromthecompany’srecords,writtenclearlybymanydifferent hands, onediscoversthatbusinessin Tokugawadayswassystematicallyand rationallyorganized.TheMitsuis,employingtheirowndouble-entry
system,keptofficialbooksof atleasttwokinds:oneforhalf-yearly
settlementsof short-termloans,interest,dividends,andsuchitems;and
anotherforthe “grandsettlement”thatwasmadeeverythreeyears. ThelatterwastheoccasionforbalancingaccountswithOmotokata.An interestingfeatureofthissettlementwasthepaymentofabonustoemployeesamountingto onepercentof theprofitthathadbeenretained duringtheperiod.Whetheror notthiswastheoriginofJapan’spres-
ent-daybonussystem,it indicatesthatincentivepaywasalreadya partofMitsui’sbusinessstyle. Ofimmeasurable importance tothedurabilityofMitsui-gumi wasits
systemof reserves,whichkeptit afloatwhenothercompaniesfoundered.Thetermstheyusedto describetheirreservesareunfamiliartoday,butonecanimaginethecontingenciesforwhichtheyweredevised.
Atthetopwasthe“shop’sfoundation”reserveforworkingcapital.
Therewerealsoa reserveto coverpaymentsof principalandinterest uponborrowings;a “lay-aside”fund(perhapsfor defrayingunanticipatedexpenses);and finally,the “‘cellarsilver,”a hoardof coinsand
bullionto be dugup onlywheneveryotherresourcehadbeenexhausted.
Foralmosteighteen yearstheo-kawase, astheofficial money-changers werecalled—the competitors’ junin-gumi andtheMitsuis’ sannin-gumi —monopolized thegovernment’s currency-transfer business,usingits interest-freemoneyfortermsof fivemonthsbeforehavingtorepayit. Inaddition,theywereentrustedwithexchangingnewcurrencyforold
andwithreceivingproceedsfromthesaleofgovernment-owned rice fortransfertoEdo(alsowithoutpayinginterest).
Butthedisclosure ofhugepeculations bytreasuryofficialsaroused thesuspicionsofthebakufu’sauthorities.In1709theyissuedaperemptoryorderto thethirteeno-kawaseto paybackat onceallthemoney theyhadborrowed.Thosewhohadnotpreparedforsucha senseless
andmerciless movewereunable tocomply,ofcourse,andanumberof
themwereruined.Mitsui’ssannin-gumi,however,drawinguponthe resourcesof Omotokata,and perhapsevendiggingintothe “cellar silver,”camethroughthatcrisisnicely.
It isdoubtfulthattheMitsuisweretakenbysurprise.Sincetheir
THE SOURCEOF HAPPINESSIS PRUDENCE°* Al
appointmentaso-kawasetheyhadimprovedtheirstandingwithLord ministers.It wasperhapsthrough Makino,oneofShogunTsunayoshi’s the his interventionthat MitsuiJiroemonhadbeenelectedchiefof withthe 1702.Thisposition,andhisconnection fiscalagentsinEdoin shogun’scourt,musthaveprovidedJiroemonwithsomehintthatthe fortified Atanyrate,suchexperiences loanswouldbecalled. bakufu’s attacks. surprise against everyprecaution policyoftaking Mitsui-gumi’s to the demonstrated period of thepost-Genroku Thevicissitudes andpowertheywerestillat choninthatdespitetheirrisingprosperity One themercyofa corrupt,irrational,and oftenvengefulgovernment. Keian, byYodoya was thatfounded families merchant ofthewealthiest a watcontractorforHideyoshi.Inthe Genrokuerathe Yodoyaheir cuta finefigureinthe“floating Saburoemon(alsoknownasTatsugoro) freelyhisprofitsfromtradinginlumberand world”ofOsaka,spending riceand making loans to daimyo.Floutingthe sumptuarylawste-
hefrequentedthepleasurequarters quiringchonintodressmodestly, wearingwhitesilkkimonointowhichhis familycrestwasworked the loanswerecalledin, In 1709,whenthetreasury ostentatiously. entirefortuneandthehousewasbanished Yodoya’s bakufuconfiscated by probablyengineered fromOsaka,Kyoto,andEdo.Thisdownfall, other to warning asa served hisdebt, in deeply whowere daimyo choninto beeveronguardagainstvanityandcomplacency. ofthedaymaybegaugedbya Thewealthoftheleadingmerchants According fromYodoya. ofthepropertyconfiscated partialaccounting jeweled included50pairsofgoldscreens,3 to onemodernhistorian,it toy ships,373carpets,13,266poundsof“liquidgold,”273 large preciousstonesand innumerablesmallstones,2 chestsof gold, 3,000
ryoworthof ryo),120,000 oban(largegoldcoinseachworthabout9 poundsofsilver,150boats,730warehouses, othergoldcoins,7million 17 treasurehouses,160 granaries,92 houses and shops, 367 acresof
ricestipendof55tons.’ cypressforest,andanannual Duringthis periodthe bakufu’sworseningfinancialplightwas In theKantoearthquakeof aggravatedbya seriesofnaturaldisasters. 1703some150,000peoplein Edo died,and in 1707-8MountFuji
Latera hundredsofsquaremilesofrichfarmland. erupted,devastating tidalwavesweptoverthesoutherncoast largepartofKyotoburned,a of Kii Province(in present-dayWakayamaPrefecture),and floods ruinedcrops in the fertileprovincesaround Kyoto,Nara, and Osaka. Rehabilitationcostswereenormous,andto replenishthe treasury, thebakufuresortedtothe debasealreadydepletedbyembezzlement, mentofmoney.
confusionand overa longperiodhadcaused Frequentrecoinages alonethe issue Inonenew inthecurrency. publiclossofconfidence
32 + MITSUI
valueofgoldone-ryo coinswasreduced byhalf,andofsilvercoinsby three-fourths. Sincegoldwasthemaincurrency ofEdoandsilverthat of Osaka,therewasmonetaryconfusionin additionto inflation.By 1720manymerchantswerefailingundersuch difficulties,and the
Mitsuisalsosuffered seriousreversals. Fortunately,thesharingoflosses throughOmotokataenabledthemto weatherthestorm,whichlasted fouryears.
Hachirobei’s sons,whomightbecalledtheoriginators ofscientific management inJapan,triedseriously toanalyzethesuccesses andfailuresof the chonin,andto drawguidingprinciplesfromthem.Such
inquiriesledto the writingofChoninKokenroku (Merchants’Observations),theoldestsurviving literaryworkofa Mitsui.WrittenbyTakafusa,a grandsonofHachirobei,it isa collectionof anecdotesabout wealthymenwho wentbankrupt.The lugubrioustales,toldto the authorbyhisfatherTakahiraandbyseveralshopmanagers andclerks, citedexamplesofmerchantswhohadlosttheirfortunesthroughreligiousfanaticism, personalextravagance,lendingto daimyo,overweeningambition,andsimilardeparturesfromsensiblestewardship. Oneofthe storiesis aboutHachirobei’selderbrotherSaburozaemon, withwhomhehadservedhisapprenticeship. Saburozaemon,headof theshort-lived“nailpuller”Mitsui,owedhisfailuretohavingbrought uphissonsasgentlemeninsteadof asmerchants,encouragingartistic endeavorssuchastheNohdrama,andassociating withfrivolouswast-
rels. The originalKokenroku probablywascompletedin1719.It is no longerin the possessionofthe family,but thedateis knownbecause oneledgershowsthat on a certaindaya quantityof paperwaspurchasedto makehand-writtencopiesforthe clan.It wasnot published
then,butwasborrowedbyothermerchants whohadtheirowncopies made,andit becamequitefamous.Morethantwentysuchmanuscript versionsarepreservedin theMitsuiBunko.In theMeijierait finally waspublished,with numerouserrors,and widelydistributed.
Absorbingthelessonstaughtbyhardtimes,Takahira, theheirofold
Hachirobei, foundthewisdom ofhisfatherfullyvindicated. Inorderto establishthatwisdomasthe foundationofMitsui-gumiandof its
gtowingenterprises,he decidedto drafta constitutioncodifyingthe preceptsandprinciplesthathadbroughttheHousesafelythrough its firstandsecondgenerations. Takahiraworkedon the document,purportedlyaredraftof his father’swill,inhissparetimefor a decade,andpromulgated it as his ownwillin 1722,the centenaryof Hachirobei’sbirth.Accordingto familylegend,Takahira,theninhisseventiethyear,assembledtheheads of the fivemainbranchfamilies,showedthemaquiverof arrows,and
THE SOURCEOF HAPPINESSIS PRUDENCE - 33
brokeoneoftheshafts intwo.Thenheboundsixarrows togetherand invitedhisbrothersin turnto breakthesheaf.Nonecould,andthe
truthoftheancientparablewasdemonstrated onceagain,asaprelude tothefirstreadingoftheMitsui&aken, orhouseconstitution. The generalclausesrepeathomiliesthat mighthavebeenapplied beneficiallybyanyone.Forexample,clanmemberswereadmonished
topromotethemutualwelfarewithoneaccord,tobeconsideratein theirrelations withoneanother, torespectthoseinauthority andshow kindnesstosubordinates.“Thriftisthebasisofprosperity,” theywere
told,“butluxuryruinsaman.”Theywereemphatically andrepeatedly
warnedagainstreligiousexcesses.“Itisone’sdutytobelieveinthegods andBuddhaandfollowthelawsofConfucianism,” thekakenadvised,
butnottodonateexcessive sums.“Instead ofwastinggoldandsilver on
templesandshrines,youshouldmakeappropriatecontributionsto the poorandsuffering, andyouwillberewardedten-thousandfold.” Therewerealsosomesimplebut pithybusinessprecepts,stating essentially: Bediligentandwatchful,or yourbusinesswillbe takenawayby others. Farsightednessis essential:do notmissgreatopportunities bypur-
suingtrivialonescloseathand. Avoidspeculation ofallkinds,anddonottouchuponunfamiliar linesofbusiness. Callingforveryspecial emphasis weretheselection andtreatment of thechiefclerks orshopmanagers—whose designated rolewastoguard
thebusinessoftheHouse,giveappropriate advicewhennecessary,and correctblundersmadebytheirmasters.Clanmembetswereadjuredto keepaneyeonyoungerclerksandtrainworthycandidates forresponsiblepositions,beingcarefulnot to overlookanymenof talent.The numberofhiredmanagerswastobelimitedtosixorseven—threefrom Kyoto,twofromEdo,andone(orperhapstwo)fromOsaka—presumablyto preventanylocalcliquefromgainingtoomuchinfluence. The Mitsuis’concernfortheirretainerswasshownintheclauseproviding
that“aconsiderable amountofsilvershallbesetasideasareserve fund
forthebenefitofelderlyemployees ofthehouse”suffering frommisfortuneor calamities. Themainbodyoftheconstitution, however,wasdevotedtoregulationspreservingsolidarity,harmony,andrectitude,aswellasassuring
fairdealingamongfamilymembers.Themostimportantofthesecan besummarizedasfollows: DescendantsoftheHouseshallforeverobeytheseruleswithoutfail. Theheadoftheseniormainfamily,Hachiroemon, shallberegarded asheadoftheHouseandobeyedasifhewerea parent.
34 - MITSUI
Whenthereisnocompetent heirtosucceed Hachiroemon, asonmay beadoptedfromamongothermembers oftheHouse,orafemalemay succeedashead. | Boysof the familiesareto be apprenticedat theageof twelveor
thirteen,servingat Kyoto,Edo, andOsakaand learnthe rudimentsof
thebusinessuntiltheageoftwenty-five.Bytheageofthirtythey
ateexpected to becapableof managinga shop. The sharesof houseassetsshallbe allottedto memberfamiliesas specified(seeAppendixA),but 10ofthe220sharesshallbe setaside fordeserving offspringotherthantheheirs.Daughtersofthefamilies
aretobemarriedtosonsofMitsuiclanmembers wheneverpossible, butatetobegivensuitabledowriesotherwise. Secondandyoungersonsshallbe allowedto establishfamiliesat aboutthirtyyearsofage,if theyareconsideredsufficientlycapable;in suchcasestheymayusethebusinessnameEchigoya, butnotthesur-
nameMitsuiwithoutspecial permission. It willnotbenecessaryto establishanymorebranchorassociate families. Threecapable oldermembers aretobeappointed aschiefdirectors of theHouseto overseeallthebranchshops.Monthlymeetingswiththe managersofallshopsareto beheldfordiscussion ofimportantbusi-
ness.
Housemembersare not encouragedto entergovernmentservice
becauseit mightcausethemtoneglect familyaffairs.“Donotforget thatwearemerchants.Youmustregardyourdealingswiththegovetor mentasa sidelineof yourbusiness.” To preventrivalryamongthe families,Takahiraestablishedthe
hierarchyofthesixmainbranchesandthreeassociate familiesforall time.Although thenumberoffamilies waslaterexpanded fromnineto eleven,andthetitle““Hachiroemon” passedtoothermainfamilies on severaloccasions,thishierarchywasobserveduntilthemid-twentieth centuryandundoubtedlysavedtheclanmanytimesoverfromdeadly feudsor dissolution.Provisionalsowasmadeto punishmiscreantsby expellingthemfromthefamilyandsendingthemintothepriesthood, alongwithprofligatesincapableofcaringfortheirfamilies. Fortunately,Hachiroemon Takahiralivedfor fifteenyearsafter readinghis“‘will,”’andwasableto setanexampleforhisbrothersas
ofmylife.. . I “Duringtheremainder inoneoftheclauses: elucidated
shallsaveasmuchasI can. . . andsuchsavingswillbedepositedwith
thechiefaccountant. Theexactsumofsuchsavings shallbesubmitted to meformyperusalonceayear.Theamountdepositedduringthe yearshallbehanded tomeattheearliestpossibledateafterthethirdof Januaryeveryyear.”
Whileinstructing hiskinsmenintheorganizationandauditingof
THE
SOURCE
OF HAPPINESS
IS PRUDENCE
= 35
theirfinances,hewarnedthemaboutoverexpansion, dispersionof
resources,andrashlending.“Whenlendingmoney,oneneedsa solid
mortgage,”hewarned.“Iftheborrowercannotrepayinduetime,
recognizehislimitations.Onemaylosesomemoney,butthatisbetter thantoincura biggerlosslateron.”Butasforlendingto daimyo,he wasdeadsetagainstit,foreventhegreatLordKiioftheTokugawaline
eventually haddefaultedona debttoHachirobei. “Donotlendtodaimyo,” Takahirawarned.“Thelenderdevelops an
obsequiousattitude,andrecoveryofthemoneyisdifficult.Ifoneforms an unsoundrelationshipwitha daimyoandgetstoodeeplyinvolved, one’sshipwillsinkfromtheheavyload.” ManyofTakahira’spreceptswereignoredorviolatedatonetimeor another,butoneofthemwasobserved withoutanyknownexceptions: “Neverforgetthe kindnessof tenka-sama[thehonorablemenin power],forwhensocietyispeaceful,businesscanbecarriedonsafely. Thoseofthesamebloodshouldneverforget4o-on[repaymentofkindness]andgratitudetowardthestate.Tenka-sama’sdecreesshouldbe
carriedoutfaithfully, evenbythelowestemployees.” Tothislastadmonition aprofoundsagacity maybeimputed. Atthe
timeit waswritten,tenka-sama(anepithetwhichcanalsobetranslated as“thesovereign ofallthingsunderheaven”)wastherulingshogun.
ButTakahirasaidnothingabouttheshogunortheTokugawa family thatmonopolizedthesupremeposition.Perhapshe wasdisillusioned bythedefaultingofLordKii,orbythecorruption ofthebakufu,orby the aberrationsof the successiveshogunsandtheirsycophants. Or possibly,beingof the literati,he hadacquiredenoughawarenessof historytorealizethattheZeno,oremperor,inKyoto,althoughvirtually
analmsman oftheTokugawas,wasalsoapotentialtenka-sama. WhateverTakahiramayhavebeenthinkingwhenhecodifiedthe Houselaw,itstwodominantthemes—permanence andflexibility— comethroughmostclearly.Hishomelyphilosophywasfurtherrefined intheyearsremainingto him,andwhenhediedin 1737heleftto his heirahangingscrolluponwhichhehadinscribedtheessenceofhisexperience:““Thesourceofhappinessisprudence.”
4 . “Remember WeAre Merchants”
A GAME POPULAR AMONG JAPANESE CHILDREN andknowntheworld
overisjankenpon, inwhichtwoormoreplayersextendtheirhandssi-
multaneouslytosymbolizerock,scissors,orpaper.Rockcanbreakscissors,scissorscancutpaper,andpapercanwraprock,andateachturn thelosersareeliminated.Thisgamesuggeststheclasssystemoffeudal
Japan,withrockrepresenting thepeasants,scissorsthetwo-sworded men,andpaperthemerchants. Infact,samuraiusedtheterm“paper people”inreferringtothechonin,althoughtheywerelearning totheir discomfiture thatpapercouldwrapsteelblades aswellasrocks. Thethreeclasses,allvictimsofthesocialsystemin whichtheywere trappedbylaw,becamemutuallyembitteredbecausethestrugglesof
eachtosolveitsproblems separately aggravated theplightoftheothers. Ieyasu’s“greatpeace”haddeprived thesamuraiof opportunities to
performgloriousdeeds,andthemoneysystemthatwasbeingawkwatdlysuperimposeduponthe country’sagriculturaleconomyput themat the mercyof the merchants.Butbothsamuraiandchonin classeswereparasiticuponthepeasants,whowereplungedintoever
deepermiseryandoftenresortedto violenceagainstthemerchants,
to becutdowninturnbythesamurai.Thepeasants’ onlyalternative wasto jointheurbanchoninandbecomemerchantsthemselvesifthey couldsaveupalittle capital.Butwithsofewchannelsforenterprise
leftopento thembythebakufu,theincreasingly numerouschonin competedintenselywithinthenarrowmarket, andfewescapedruin. Ofthesurvivors,thosewhomigrated fromIseProvinceweremost ubiquitous—or at leastthemostnoticeable.In theearlyeighteenth centurytherewasa saying:“Thecommonestthingsin Edoare Ise merchants,Inarishrines,anddogturds.”’Thisjuxtaposition indicates
thelowesteeminwhichpeopleliketheMitsuiswereheld.
Themerchants,subjectto persecutionor the confiscationof their propertybythebakufuandoftencheatedbydaimyoorsamuraidebtors, alsosufferedpillageandarsonat thehandsof outragedpeasantsor mobsofhungrytownsmen.Toprosperinsuchaworldtheyhadtobe
cringinglyobsequious towardtheirsuperiors,ruthlesslycompetitive
36
“REMEMBERWE AREMERCHANTS
«+37
withtheirequals,andpitilesslygraspingintheirdealingswithpeople
morehelplessthanthey.In short,theaccusations heapeduponthe JewsofEuropeappliedequallyto themerchantsofJapan—andfor
thesamereasons. | TheMitsuis,beingthemostsuccessful, wereprobablyamongthe leastloved.Unlikesomanyoftheircolleagues,whosharedthefoibles
andweaknesses ofthechoniningeneral,theyseemtohavebeenpuritanicalandalmostobsessively diligent.Considering theexigencies of the age,onecouldscarcelyexpectthemto havethrivedotherwise. Whatis surprisingis theevidencethat,despitethelowliness oftheir callingandtheirrelentlesspursuitofprofit,theymadesomeveryrespectablecontributionstotheculturallifeofthenationand,indirectly, to itspoliticalmetamorphosis. TheMitsuiswereenjoinedby theirHouse’sregulationsto avoid extravagantcontributionsto templesandshrines,butthereis noreasonto suspectthat theywerelesspiousthantheircontemporaries.
WhilelivinginMatsusaka, Hachirobei hadfrequently visitedtheGrand ShrinesofIse.Aftermovingto KyotohejoinedtheIse-ko,theIse
pilgrims’association,andmadea visitto theholyplaceseveryyear.
Asprivilegedpurveyorsto thebakufuheandhissonshadaccess alsototheouterprecincts ofthehallowedimperialcourt,contributed towarditsupkeep,andservedasbearersoftheo-mikoshi,theportable
shrines,thatwereparadedthroughKyoto’sstreetsduringShinto
festivals.Aftertheirbrushwithbankruptcy in the1720stheydonated fundsfor enlargingthe compoundof MimeguriJinjain Edo and
buildinganannexin whichtheirtutelarygodsEbisuandDaikoku
wereenshrined.Theseweretwoof the traditional“SevenGodsof Luck”worshipedbytownsmen,alongwiththefox-messengerof the Inarishrines.
Sincethegoodwillofthetownspeople hadbeenthebasisofthe Mitsuis’fortune,whichfluctuated withthegeneralprosperity,their patronageoffolkshrinesandthegodsofluckmayhavebeenaform ofinsurance, orattheleasta soundbusiness policy.Fortheirpersonal worship,however,theyfavoredthemoredignified Tendaisectofpan-
theisticBuddhism, introduced fromChinaintheninthcentury.Hachirobeiandhisdescendants worshipedatShinnyo-do, a Tendaitemple upona hilltopin Kyoto,andwereentombed there.In theloftymain hall,builtin the seventeenthcentury,are severalsplendidlycarved
altarsencrusted withgold.Ina secluded cornerbehindthemainaltar aretheancestralshrinesoftheMitsuis,behindwhoseportalsstand rowuponrowofgold-lacquered woodentabletsbearingthenamesof allthedeceased heirsfromHachirobei onward.Thesearerankedstrictly accordingto theprecedenceofthebranches:theheadfamily,Kita-ke,
38 « MITSUI
in the center,is flankedby thehon-ke,or mainbranches,whilethe
collateral branchesareplacedina separatecompartment.
Asimilarhierarchyisobservedintheadjacentgraveyard,overlooked bya statelypagodaandshadedbyhugecryptomeriatrees.Theheadstonesofthefirstandsecondgenerations standona slightlyelevated terrace,withthoseofHachirobeiandJusanat thecenter.
Inthistimelessplace,towhichthedinofmodernKyoto’straffic scarcely penetrates, sometwelve generations ofMitsuissleepinordered ranks,eachinhisproperstationindeathasinlife.Among themare no statesmen,soldiers,or professionalmen.One,longago,became
a Buddhistpriestafterretirementfrombusiness,andothersearned respectfortheiraccomplishments inseveralavocations. Butallofthem, truetoHachirobei’s teachings, weremerchants first,andindulged other aspirationsonlyafterhavingdischargedtheirobligationstothefamily, the clan,andthe state.In thatwaytheyfoundthe permanencefor whichthefounderhadyearnedandstriven.
As theyprospered,the chonindonatedgenerouslyto theirfavorite templesandshrines,therebypayingmostofthecostsof a renaissance in religiousartandarchitecture.Theyalsoinvigoratedtraditionalart
forms,suchasNoh,whiledevelopingnewones—notably Kabuki, whichreached itspeakofcreativeness abouttwohundredyearsago. BeforethattimeMitsuiJiroemonTakanariemergedas a recognized
writerofjoruri,orballaddramas forthetheater.Underthepenname
KinoJotaro(takenfromhismasterKinoKaion,a composerofcomic tanka,ot versesof thirty-onesyllables),he collaboratedin writinga
historicalplaythatisstillintheKabukirepertoire. Anothercoauthor wasthefamousUteiEmba,a carpenterwhohadbecomea popular reciterofthecomicstoriescalledrakugo. In the Tokugawaperiodpeopleassociatedwiththe theaterwere ostracizedbythe“‘betterclasses.”It istruethatjoruriandrakugowere
considered morerespectable thanKabuki,butstillit wasunusualfor thescionofa prominentmerchantfamilytoconsortwithstagefolk. Theexplanation isthatTakanari tookupthetheater onlyafterabandoninghisbusiness career.Hecoulddosobecause aconflicthaddeveloped amongtheMitsuifamilies overa questionable businesstransaction. Threatened bythebakufu,theyhadhadtofindascapegoat. SoTakanati,ayoungersonandthus“expendable,” assumedresponsibility for theunpleasantsituationandresignedhispositionaschiefoftheryogaeyainEdo.Onlythen,whenhenolongerrepresented Mitsui-gumi, didhefeelfreeto indulgehisinterestin thetheater. Whilecherishingtheprestigetheyenjoyedwithintheirownclass,
theMitsuisstillheededthefounder’sreminder—‘“‘we aremerchants”
“REMEMBERWEAREMERCHANTS+ 39
—andmadenopretense ofbeinganything else.Duringthetimeswhen manychonin wereeagertomarrytheirsonsanddaughters intosamurai
families(afeatthatcouldbeaccomplishedbyfinancialmeans)Mitsuis marriedonlychonin,preferablyotherMitsuis,as recommendedby
theirconstitution,untiltheclasssystemwasabolishedofficially in 1870. Theirtastes,however,becameincreasinglyaristocratic.Severalpoets
of Mitsuibloodwonrecognitionin theirlifetimes.In theplasticarts the Mitsuiswerepatronsof manyof theleadingpainters,including
HiroshigeandUtamaro.Oneofthegreatestamongthoseartistswas Maruyama Okyo,laterapainterfortheimperial court,whointroduced newandlastingstylesderived fromChineseandEuropeanexamples. Someofhiscreationsarestillprizedpossessions oftheheadfamily. TherenownedceramistEirakuHozen,whosepotterymadeforthe teaceremonyisnowpriceless,wasanotherMitsuiprotégé. TheMitsuis’interestinscholarship beganbyaccidentratherthan throughinclination. Inthelateeighteenthcenturyit sohappenedthat MitsuiTakakage, headingoneofthetwobranchfamilies thatremained inMatsusaka, livednextdoortoa scholarnamedMotoori Norinaga. TheheirofanIsemerchant housethathadrecentlybecomebankrupt in Edo,Motooripracticedmedicinefora livelihood,butdevotedmost of histimeto study,andto writingandlecturing upon theJapanese classicsthataftercenturiesofneglectwerebeing discoveredagainby the great scholars.Oneof his specialinterestswas GenjiM onogatari,
centurybyMurasakiShikibu,a lady-innovelwrittenintheeleventh
waitingat theimperialcourt. Indifferentasa physician,Motooriprovedtobeoneof Japan’smost
When hisearlydisciples. wasamong importantthinkers,andTakakage oftheoutstanding attheurging Motoori, hewasinhismid-thirties KamonoMabuchi,undertooka prodigioustask.Thiswas classicist becamea forty-eightthewritingoftheKojikiDen,whicheventually of compilation aneighth-century upontheKojiki, commentary volume Japanese“history,”folkwisdom,andmythology.The KojikiDen, whichtookthirty-fiveyearsto complete,isregardedasoneofJapan’s outstandinghistoricalandliteraryworks,andthe Mitsuistake con-
supportofMotoori financial prideinthefactthatTakakage’s siderable Norinagahelpedtomakeitpossible.Oneof theirdearestpossessions toTakakagebyMotoori, anoldertypeofkoto,presented isa wagon, witha messageofcommendationattached. Usingthemostadvancedmethodsofphilologyandlinguisticsthen
theoriginalmeaningoftheKojtki, known,Motoorisoughttoestablish withevents whichheacceptedas theholywritofShinto.Beginning
thathappenedbeforethedawnofJapanesehistory,theKojikirecounts
40 - MITSUI
the creationandthefoundingof theimperialhouseuponordersof
theSunGoddess, Amaterasu. Suchstudies weregratifying tothepeople ofIseandKiiprovincesbecauseoftheirstronginterestintheGrand ShrinesatIse,whichwerededicatedto Amaterasuherselfandto the
spiritsofothersoftheimperial ancestors.
Motoori’sexhaustivestudy,althoughconductedmoreor less“‘scientifically,”” wasessentiallya revivalofhalf-forgottenmythsandsuperstitions.YetultimatelytheKojikiDenandotherwritingsof its kind
hadanextremely significant impactuponJapan’s politicaldevelopment andhistory. Sincethe triumphof Ieyasuin 1600his bakufugovernmenthad sedulouslyfosteredthemyththattheTokugawasruledbydivineright. Theimperialhousepresumably had delegatedfullauthorityto the Tokugawashogunsforalltime.Theemperor,althoughformallyre-
verted asthechiefdeityofShinto, actuallylivedupontheparsimonious charityoftheshogunate.Surrounded byhereditarynobles,heplayed theroleofhighpriestinhollowritualssymbolizing thecontinuityof
thedynastyandhencethelegitimacyofTokugawarule. Thebakufupaidlittleheedto Shintoitself.Theofficialideologywas
a mixtureofimportedBuddhistandneo-Confucian preceptssuperimposeduponanativeculture thatinitselfwasviewed disdainfully by conservativescholars,whofoundtheirinspirationin theChineseclassics.TheTokugawaswereinterestedonlyinthepermanenceof their tule and discouragedany objectivestudyor creativethoughtconcerninghistoricalor socialmatters.
Indifferent tothepublicweal,thebakufu didlittletorelieve suffering fromsuccessive disastersandpestilences. InMotoori’stimethegreat famineof Temmei,whichlastedfrom1783to 1787,is estimatedto
havereducedthepopulationbya million.It issaidthatinthecastle townofHirosakiinnorthernHonshueightythousand peoplestarved to death,afterhavingeatenallthedogsandcatsinthevicinity.In manyvillagestherewasnota singlesurvivorto burythedead,whose
corpseswereconsumed bybirdsandbeasts.
Suchhardships,aggravatedby officialcorruptionandspeculation,
provokednumerousandviolentrevolts.DuringtheTemmeifamine, whenthepriceofricetripled,thereweremorethanonehundredand fiftyuprisingsamongpeasantsandtownsmen. Concurrently,intellectualswerebeginningto questionnotonlythe
virtueandadministrative competence oftheTokugawas butalsotheir
interpretationsof historyandthe legitimacyof theirreign.Almost forgottenclassicsofJapanesehistory,mythology,andliterature—the NihonShoki,Japan’soldestofficialchronicles, andthe Man’yoshu an-
thologyofpoetry,aswellastheKoj#ki—wete studiedtorediscoverthe
“REMEMBERWE AREMERCHANTS
°- 41
spiritualessenceofJapaneselifeandthepreceptsforbenevolentrule thathadbeenlostundertheTokugawadespots.Thisledgradually toa revivalofancientJapaneseidealsandethics,especially thoserelatedtothesupremacyoftheimperialhouse.Independentstudiesalong theselinescoalescedintoa movementknownaskokugaku,or national
learning,ofwhichMotooriNorinagawasthebrightestexponent.Implicitinkokugaku wasthesuspicion thattheTokugawas wereusurpers andthattheirviolationofeternallawslaiddownbythegodshad causedJapan’sdecay. TheTokugawaswerenot obliviousto the situation,andsomeof themweretryingtodiscoverwhathadgonewrongwiththeirformula. In 1787,whenthe Temmeicrisiswasat its peak,TokugawaHarusada,
daimyoofKii,summonedMotooriNorinagatoaskhisopinionsand
adviceuponproblemsrackingthenation.ThisinspiredMotoorito writeTheSecretBookoftheJeweled CombBox,dedicatedto Harusada, in whichhe developedhisviewsonsocialunrest,theeconomicproblemsof the severalclasses,and the natureof commerce.Thiswas
perhapsthefirsttimethata Tokugawahaddeignedto consulta nationalistscholar,andtheeventwasdoublysignificant becauseMotooriwasa memberofa choninclassbybirthandtraining.Inhisyouth hehadbeenadoptedbyandapprenticed to a papermerchant.Finding businessdistasteful,hehadturnedtoreligiousscholarship,whileapplyingthepracticalknowledgeandempiricismofcommerceto hisintellectualtasks. Motoori’steachingsmusthaveseemedshockingly radicalto the
daimyo,aswellastothenumerouschoninandpriestswhoattended hislectures.Henotonlyattackedtheirtraditional beliefsinBuddhism andConfucianism but wasstronglycriticalof the principlesand methodsuponwhichtheirprosperity rested.Concerning privatepropertyheasserted that,althoughAmaterasu Omikamiandtheimperial householdhadentrustedthe affairsof stateto the Tokugawasand administrationoftheprovinces to thedaimyo,“‘nopeopleina fiefare privatepeople,andnolandisprivateland,”sinceeverything andevery-
onebelongedtotheemperor.
Hesawgreatinjusticesincommerce,andchidedrichmerchantsand
people”didallthework. while“lower forlivinginidleness aristocrats Particularlyreprehensiblein Motoori’sviewwasthealliancebetween
businessandgovernmentthatwasthecornerstoneofMitsuipolicy frombeginning toend.Thedonationofmoneytothegovernment for theirwealth therichfurthertoincrease “willenable advantage business that andwilldogreatharmtothepoor,”hesaid.“Evensomething if it is shouldbewhollyprohibited wouldhelptherulers’finances harmfultothelowerpeople.’”!
42 - MITSUI
Theimmediate effectofMotootri’s teachingupontheMitsuis, several ofwhomwereincluded amonghisfivehundred disciples, isnotrecorded.ThediariesofTakakage,no scholarhimself,giveonlysuch
informationas “TodayI attendedMotoori’slecture,”or recordthe
master’svisit,inhisroleasphysician, toanailingMitsui.Therecan belittledoubtthatexposure totheideasofJapan’s pioneer“economic adviser”hadsomeimpactupontheirthinking, eventhoughtheyap-
pliedhis preceptsinreverse.(Amodernparallelisfoundin mostof present-dayJapan’scapitalistleaders,who wereinfluencedin their universitycoursesbyMarxistprofessors.) Moresignificant,however,
wastheearlyawareness, inculcated intheirdisciples byMotootiand othernationalscholars,thattheTokugawaswereusurpersandthat the imperialfamilycouldofferto the oppressedpeopleof Japana morallyacceptable alternativeto the tyrannyofthe bakufu.
5 - Legacyof the Barbarians
oneof unprecedentedgrandeurandprosCENTURY, AFTERITSFIRST
itsvitalitysapped perity,theTokugawashogunatewentintodecline, eachclass structure Inthefeudal change. bya futilestruggleagainst by heldtogether monolith andeveryindividualin it waspartofa mercantile Yettheburgeoning relationships. indissoluble presumably economy,in obedienceto its owninexorablelaws,hadalreadyaltered
of incapable Thebakufu,organically thenatureofthoserelationships. metsuccessive conditions, changing to adjustingthesocialstructure and criseswith strongerdosesof the sameold medicine—tyranny isolation.
AtthebeginningoftheTokugawaperiod,whichlastedfrom1603
to 1868,Japanhad beenarelativelyadvanced, outward-lookingcoun-
try,readytoclaimarespectedplaceamongtheworld’snations.But remoteness, madeallthemorepossibleby hergeographical seclusion, intellectualgrowthat a time paralyzedJapan’ssocialcreativityand theWesternworld wastransforming revolution whentheindustrial asJapanstagThen, expansion. forglobal itscountries andpreparing Asiato trade Southeast of upmost naviesopened nated,European andcolonization.In thefirsthalfofthenineteenthcenturytheBritish establisheda solidpositionin China,whiletheRussiansbeganreaching acrosstheSiberianwildernessto developnew territoriesatthemouth of the AmurRiver,little morethanfivehundredmilesfromthe shores ofJapan.
orpoliticalreasonsalltheEuropeannavalpowers Forcommercial relationswithJapan,andexploratory amicable weretryingtoestablish frequent.TheRussianempire,intent visitsbyforeignshipsbecame a friendlyJapanon needed KoreaandManchuria, upondominating ofa Russianadvanceinto itseasternflank.TheBritish,apprehensive China,hopedtoforestallit bywooingtheJapanese.TheUnitedStates,
by inregionspreempted wasata greatdisadvantage asa newcomer, EuropeansandsawvirginalJapanasitslastchanceto stakea claim Japancould closestneighboracrossthePacific, inAsia.AsAmerica’s be a navaloutpostofgreatvalue;butundercontrolofhostilepowers 43
44.
MITSUI
it couldalsobea threat.Japan’s portswereneededassupply bases for Americanmerchantmen andwhalers;tradeprospects, though
unevaluated,were
enticing; and for zealousChristianmissionaries
therewerethosemillionsofheathensknowntobesusceptibleto conversion. Japanwasdoublyinvitingbecause ofitssuspectedvulnerability. AsE.H.Normanhaspointedout:“Inthemiddleofthe19thCentury JapanwasasweakascontemporaryBurmaorSiam,facingthemodern worldwithoutallies,withouta fleetor modernarmy,withnomonies in its treasury,its industrystillhandicraft,its tradenegligible,its povertyprofound.””! ThearmieschargedwithdefendingJapanwerevitiatedby a peace thathadlastedtwohundredandfiftyyears.WhenCommodorePerry’s menlandedin 1853theyencounteredwarriorscladin armormade of silk,leather,andthinplatesofmetal,verysimilarto thatwornby SasakiTakahisainthefifteenthcentury.Gunswerein commonuse,
butmostofthemwererelicsofpastEuropeanwars,muzzleloading
flintlocks,muskets,and such,whileothertroopswerearmedwith swords,spears,andbows.Thiswasthe sameyearin whichSamuel Coltstartedthemassproductionofsmallarmsat Hartford,Connecticut.Fromtheviewpointofthe“DutchScholars,” whichcoincidedin thisrespectwiththatoftheexponents ofnationalism,thebakufuhad betrayedsacredNipponbymakingit impotentto repeltheonslaught of thebarbarians.
Perryassumed thatthereluctance oftheshogun’srepresentatives to
accepthis reasonabletermswasdue to ignoranceor to encrusted
tradition,notrealizingthathewasforcingthemto makea choice betweentwoformsofcommittingsuicide—a daggerinthebelly,or
slowpoison.Theyknewthatrefusalof Perry’stermswouldleadto eventualattackeitherby the UnitedStatesor by Europeanpowers. Yetacceptanceofthosetermswouldbeusedbythebakufu’s enemies to inflamemalcontentsofallclasses. Thedaimyowerealmostequallydividedoverthe
courseto be taken,
sowithcharacteristicJapaneseambivalence thebakufu“harmonized” theopposingviews.Bygoingthroughthemotionsofsigninga treaty,
theywouldgaintimeforrebuilding theirdefenses alongmodern lines;
concurrently,theywouldusetheirnewcontactswiththe
Westto
learnitsmilitaryscienceandthendriveouttheinterlopersonceand forall.Bysuchreasoning theytriedtoreconcile abreachintradition, represented byatreaty,withtheirresponsibility forexpellingthebarbarians. Undertheseinauspiciouscircumstances JapanandtheUnitedStates
LEGACYOF THE BARBARIANS= 45
concluded theTreatyofKanagawa, Japan’sfirstdiplomatic recogni-
tionofaWesternpower,onMarch31,1854.Thisso-called woodand watertreatygaveAmericansshipsaccessto twominorports,Shimoda andHakodate,andtherightof refugeandsupply.It alsoauthorized theinstallationofa UnitedStatesconsul,if andwhensuchanofficial
wasneeded. Usingthisexcuse (andmuchtotheanguish ofthebakufu), TownsendHarrisarrivedinShimodatwoyearslater,demandinga residence,an audiencewiththe shogun,the conclusionof a commercialtreaty,andtheopeningofmoreports. Eventually,in December1857,hewasreceivedat Edo Castlewith fullceremony;andafterhavingto enduremorethananotheryearof
bureaucratic obstructionandinfuriatingevasions,in 1858hewona TreatyofAmityandCommerce thatprovidedforfreedomoftrade,
theopeningofKobeandYokohama (bothseaportsadjacenttoJapan’s largestcities),andthe rightof residencefor Americansin the open
ports,aswellasinEdoitself. TheJapanesehadbeenassuredthattradewouldbringthenation greatbenefitsandstrengthenthegovernment,butitsimmediateeffects
aftertheopeningofYokohama in1859wereworsethaneventhepessimistshadimagined.At firstfewerthanfiftyCaucasianslivedin the
newinternationalsettlement,builtandmaintainedat government expense. Butaswordofthesingularopportunities forprofitcirculated abroad,thenumberoffortuneseekersmultiplied.Conspicuousamong themweredrifters,sots,andbrawlingsailors,whoquicklyconfirmed
Japan’sworstsuspicions aboutthebarbarians.
HardlymoreagreeabletotheJapanese wereforeignmerchants,who
sniffed outtheweaknesses inthecountry’s economy andexploited them
withoutmercy.Theyfoundthemostseriousflawin itscurrencysystem.Thebakufu,havingbeenout of touchwithworldfinancefor centuries,had manipulatedcoinagevaluesarbitrarily(andnaively),
withtheresultthattheexchange ratebetweengoldandsilverwasone to five,or oneto six,whereasin foreignmoneymarketsit wasabout oneto fifteen.Thestandardinternational currencyin EastAsiawas
theMexican dollar,asilvercoinminted inHongKongandtheUnited States,aswellasinMexico.Undertreatyprovisions theexchangerate
inJapanwassetatthreesilverbuforoneMexican dollar.TheJapanese goldkobancoin(worthoneryo)costfourbu. Shrewdbarbariansimmediatelysawthat withan outlayof 100dollarsa mancouldbuy 300buandexchange themfor75koban.Then,whenexported,those 75kobanwouldfetchat least150dollars,andasmuchas270dollars, dependingupontheirgoldcontent.
Thisdollar-bu-koban trickbecamean obsessionamongtheforeigners;andevendiplomats, including Harrisandmembers ofhisstaff,
46 - MITSUI
playedit to amplifytheirsalaries.Thebakufutriedclumsily to read-
justthecoinageinorderto stopsuchplunder,butsucceeded onlyin stoppingtradeentirelyandantagonizing theforeignpowers,whoinsistedupontheirtreatyrights.Before thecurrencymatterwassettled suchadrainageofgoldhadoccurredthatJapan’smonetary systemwas
disrupted.Sporadicdemandforexportcommodities, andexcessive suppliesofimportedgoods,caused wildfluctuations inprices.Sudden changesin thepriceof riceaffectedthewholeeconomy,imposing severehardships uponpeasantsandpoorertownsmen.Suchfluctuationsweremanipulated by merchantsto thedisadvantageof daimyo andsamurai,whoseincomesweremeasuredinriceandseemedalways to shrinkwhenconvertedintomoney. Sincetradeintheopenportswasmonopolized bytheforeigners and conductedthroughofficialchannels,it broughtlittleprofitto native merchantsand noneto the bakufu,saddledasit waswithastronomical
expensesrelatedto theforeignincursion.Incomefromdutieswas minimal becauseHarrishadincluded inhistreatyaclauseallowingfor-
eignersto setthetariffrates,whichofcoursetheykeptextremely low. Thisprovisionmadeit impossibleto protectdomesticindustryand inviteda floodof cheapfactory-madeforeigngoodsthatruinedin-
numerable handicraftenterprises uponwhichthefamilies ofpeasants andimpoverished samuraihaddependedfortheircashincome. Theseeconomicwoeswereno lessdistressingto theMitsuis,with whombusinesshadbeen goingbadlyfora longtime.Ordinarily, the misfortunesoftheupper classesbroughtadvantagesto themerchants, but latelytherehadbeen toomuchmisfortune. In the1840sdebtsof thedaimyohadrisenso alarminglythatfullythree-fourths oftherice
cropsenttoOsakawasowedinadvance asinteresttomoneylenders, Baddebtshadmountedcommensurately, andamongtheexchange
housesit wasestimatedthattwentypercentoftheircapitalstagnatedin
theformofuncollected loans. Forthetwopreviousdecadescalamities hadbeenstrikinginrelentlesssuccession. DuringtheTempoera(1830-44)cropfailureshad
broughtrepeatedfamines,someso severethat the streetsof many townswerelitteredwithunburiedcorpses.Whenthebakufudidnothingto alleviatethepeople’ssufferings,a scholarlypoliceofficialnamed OshioHeihachirowasspurredinto action.Realizingthe futilityof
persuasion, heconceivedthedesperateschemeofstaginga revoltin
Osaka,seizingthe wealthof the merchants,andusingit to finance
a peasantmilitiastrongenoughtochallenge thebakufu.Inorderto
begintherebellionandfeedhisfollowers—amongwhomwetesamurai and ronin,or lordlesssamurai,as well as townsmen and farmers—he
soldhisbelovedbooksandmanuscripts.
LEGACYOF THE BARBARIANS-
4/7
Beingamanofconscience,Oshiofirstpetitioned thebakufuand someof todistribute suchasMitsuiandKonoike, leadingmerchants, he ignored were pleas Whenthese granaries. thericefromtheirbulging secretlydistributedswordsto hisfewhundredcohortsand,onFebruhislittlebandfor an assaultuponOsaka’s ary19,1837,assembled mercantiledistrict.“Firstwemust killalltheofficials whohavemade
“andthenwemustgoonto slaughter hecommanded, thepoorsuffer,” alltherichmen.” oftheplot,butthepolicewereso Thebakufuwasfullyinformed incompetentandcowardlyinthefaceof anarmedmobthattherioters wereableto run wildthrough the streetsfor hours.The revoltcen-
suchenorwhichyielded ofthemerchants, tereduponthewarehouses mousamountsoftreasure that the rebelswereunable to carry allofit
away.Asthelootersstruggledwithbalesofriceandboxesofsilver, theshopsandwarehousesweresetafire,andsoonflameswereraging acrossthe city.The rebels,immobilizedby theirgreed,wereeasily must, dispersedbysoldiersfromthelocalgarrisonand,asheknewhe
seemtohavebeen TheMitsuisandtheirproperty Oshiokilledhimself. in But thelossesof merchantsandhouseholders almostunscathed. whichlastedthree forintheconflagration, generalweretremendous, days,abouteighteenthousandshopsandhomesweredestroyed. bakufu Therevolt,whichspreadtootherareas,arousedthestupefied kind.Intheso-called ofa counterproductive toaction,unfortunately citieswas thatfollowed,hungerin the overpopulated Temporeforms gobackto the farms.Luxrelievedbyorderingsurplustownsmento uriouslivingwas prohibitedby strictersumptuarylaws.Andsince
the andcausedscatcities, commercestifledproduction monopolistic guilds—were orwholesalers’ corporations ¢onyaz—trading centuries-old systemwas withtheresultthatthecommodity-distribution abolished, : crippled. got worse,even Businessstagnated.Afterthebarbarianslandedit oneveryside,people forMitsui.Withfinancialdistressanduneasiness retailtradedeclined justweren’tbuyingpiecegoods,andEchigoya’s feudalcustom dangerously.Inflationhadraisedpersonnelcosts,but
executive anyone.DuringthesetrialsaMitsui-gumi forbadedischarging
wrotein the company’slogbook:“No businesspaying,onlyexpendituresswelling.”
Thebakufubecameinsatiablyhungryformoneyandleviedforced tappedfor Mitsui-gumi, loansoffearsomesizeuponthemerchants. putupa strongerprotestthanusual,explainryoearlyin1859, 200,000 Mitsui’sbusiness ing:“BeforeandsincethearrivaloftheBlackShips, hadbeendeclining,andexpensesareincreasingbecauseofearthquake
wasgreaterthantheentirecapital andfire.’Theamountdemanded
48 - MITSUI
oftheHouse’sdry-goodsshopsandamounted to morethantwenty-
fivepercentofthetotalassetsenteredin Mitsui’sbooks. Thelevycouldnotberefusedoutright becauseMitsui-gumiwasstill doinga gooddealofofficialbusinessfor thebakufu.Furthermore,the Housestoodtogainconsiderablebenefitsbycooperating.Forexample,
afterthesigning oftheTreatyofAmityandCommerce theEdoMitsuis hadappliedsecretlyforpermission toopenabranchexchange shopin
Yokohama.Whentheyprovedthemselvescompliantabouttheloan, theaccountingmagistraterespondedto theirpetitioninthesereassuringterms:“‘AsforeignpowersarecomingtoJapaninMay,1859,and
onlytheMitsuiscoulddealwithforeigncountries whoareeagerto trade,theshogungraciously allowstheopeningofa shopthere.”
Japanesemerchantsstillwereforbiddento engagein foreigntrade directly,butthebakufuwasanxiousto conductbusinessefficiently at Yokohamaasa demonstrationof theshogun’ssincerityin enforcing thetreaties.TheMitsuisseemto havebeenwillingto assistinthisen-
deavorbecause familiarity withtradeintheopenports(untilthena monopoly ofthebakufu)wouldputtheminafavorable positionifand
whenprivatetradebecamepermissible. Theprojectseemstohavebeenreasonableinconcept,butthewayin whichitwascarriedoutindicatesthatinthecenturiessinceHachirobei’s
deaththeunityoftheclanhadsuffered.IntheEdoshopstherewere twoinfluential butcompeting banto,orclerks,SaitoJunzoandSakurai Yohei.Theformerfavored thenewventure,butSakuraiopposedit
becauseitcontravenedtheprovisionintheMitsuis’constitutionagainst beinginvolvedin unfamiliarbusiness.Out of deferenceto Sakurai, Saitoagreedtoestablisha dry-goodsshopinsteadofaforeignexchange house.Butthenhe usedit as a frontfor exchangeoperations,thus
achieving hispurpose.TheEdoMitsuismusthaveknownwhatSaito
wasdoingandacquiesced in hisplan,but apparentlyheproceeded withoutconsultingOmotokatain Kyoto,a surprisingomission,and
onethatcausedserioustroublelateron. TheYokohamabranchwasindeedalegitimateretailshop,asattestedbyaledgerentrydescribing itsfirstsalestoforeigners. OnJune
2,1859,thedaytheportopened,aRussianandanAmericanstoppedin andboughtsomebrocades.Theymusthavefoundthepricesrightand passedthewordaround,foronthefollowing daytwoAmericansorderedsomuchmaterialthatithadtobebroughtupfromKyoto.Eventually,however,thebranch’smainbusinesswasthecustodyoftreasury fundsinYokohamaandKanagawa,actingasofficialmoney-changer in far-offHakodate,andhandlingreceipts,payments,andtaxesinnearby Yokosuka,whereanironworkshadbeenbuilt.Suchbusinessshould
havebeenconducted byaregularmoney-exchange shop,ofcourse. The
LEGACYOF THE BARBARIANS-
49
confusionresultingfromthehybridestablishment wasdescribedby Saito’sstepson:“WehadtogobackandforthbetweenYokohamaand Edo,andwerequitebusy.Because theportwasnewlyopened,alarge amountofmoneycameinandout,andmostofitwaskeptattheYokohamabranch.ClerksfromtheEchigoyagofukuten[draper’sshop]took careof thebusiness,andon thesidetheyalsoloanedmoneylikean
exchange house.Butwemademistakes inmoneylending andasthings wentonlikethisit wasquiteunsatisfactory becauseit lookedasifa merchantwashandlingofficialbusiness.”
Thepersistence ofsuchadangerousanomalyindicatesthatOmotokatawaseitherignorant oftherealstateofaffairsornolongerableto exercise control.Theprecisereasonforthisfailureofleadership isnot apparent,butthereisnoreasontobelievethattheMitsuiswereimmune to the generaldisarrayanddesperation that convulsedJapanas the shogunatestruggledagainstits impendingdoom.
6 - Tradeof Bloodand Guile
TOWNSEND HARRIS, HAVING OPENED Japan’sdoorsto trade,waseager to openitsmindto theinestimableadvantagesofcommerce.Heknew thattheJapanesepeople,aftertheirlongseclusion,wouldbeindelibly impressedwiththemanifestationsoftheWesternworld,andhehoped
thathisowncountrywouldbethemodelforJapan’srenaissance. Throughthegoodoffices oftheshogun’s/airo,otchiefminister, Lord Ii Naosuke,whohadbeeninstrumental in concludingthe Treatyof AmityandCommerce,Harrisarrangedthata GrandEmbassybesent to Washingtonin 1860to exchangeratifications. A missionof nearlyeightydaimyoand samuraiwastransported acrossthePacificto SanFranciscoaboardanAmericanside-wheeler, crossedtheIsthmusof Panamabyrailway,andproceeded by shipto
theUnitedStates.InWashington itsmembersmetPresidentJames
Buchananandhiscabinet,gotagoodlookatsomeoftheachievements of a Westernsociety,andincidentallymadea sensationalimpression upontheAmericanpublic.BeneaththewindowsoftheirroomsatWillard’sHotel,neartheWhiteHouse,asnewspapersreported,hundreds
ofwomenandgirls,“handsomeandprettilydressed,havebeen... throwingupbouquets,candyandallsortsofnick-nacks, callingout
‘Japonee,Japonee!givemea fan,won’tyou?’””? NewYorkwasenraptured bytheexoticvisitorsin theirelegantapparel,and theirceremonial processionattractedhugethrongs.One
spectator, WaltWhitman, wasinspired towritethepoem“ABroadway Pageant,”’ partofwhichdeclared: OvertheWesternseahitherfromNiphoncome, Courteous,theswarth-cheek’dtwo-swordedenvoys,
Leaningbackintheiropenbarouches, bare-headed, impassive, Rideto-daythrough Manhattan. Thoughtfuleffortsweremadetoarousetheenvoys’interestinAmerticanscience,technology,government,andthenavalandmilitaryarts. Thenobleguestswereunexpectedly responsive,askingmanyquestions, takingnotes,andkeepingdetaileddiaries.Oneofthemoststudiouswas
50
TRADEOF BLOODAND GUILE -: 51
OguriTadamasa,Lordof Bungo,whowasallowedto observethe
operationoftheUnitedStatesMintatPhiladelphia inpreparationfor
teorganizingJapan’santiquatedcurrencysystemand,bysodoing,unwittinglyrevivingtheebbingfortunesoftheMitsuis. Whentheembassyreturnedto Japan,however,therewasnorejoic-
ing.Theincreaseof Yokohama’s foreignpopulationhadgenerated
a groundswellof xenophobia,andanyoneassociating withthe barbarianswasregardedsuspiciously. Theoutlanderswhohadflockedto thetreatyportwerenota prepossessingbreedonthewhole,andeven at besttheygrateduponJapanesesensibilities.AsSirErnestSatow,
thenayounginterpreter fortheBritishdiplomatic mission,observed: “Theyaffronted thefeelingsofsamuraibytheirindependent demeanour,sodifferentfromthecringingsubservience towhichtherulesof
JapaneseetiquettecondemnedtheJapanesemerchant.’”? Theirlustfor goldandgrog,andtheirintolerable assumptionof superiority(seeminglyconfirmedby the resultsof businessdealings
withJapanese, inwhichforeigners usually won),goaded patrioticsamuraiintofury.Thosewhowerenotstirredbyfeelingsofnationalism werestillforcedtorecognizetheeconomicdisadvantages offoreign trade,as domesticindustriessuccumbedto the assaultof cheaper products.It wasalsowidelybelievedthatforcibleconquestof Japan by oneor anotherof the barbariannationswas only a matterof
time. Forevilsrealoranticipated, patriotsblamedtheshogun,whohad admittedtheforeignersagainstthewishesoftheemperor.Soonafter thedepartureoftheembassytoWashington,thetairo,LordIi,wasassassinatedbynationalists,whoseslogan“‘Sonno! Joi!’”,—Revere theEm-
peror!ExpeltheBarbarians!—was onthelipsofdiscontented samurai
androninthroughoutJapan.
In 1859,the yearthat Yokohamawasopenedto
foreigntrade,three
foreignersanda Japaneseinterpreterweremurderedincoldblood.A
conflagration destroyedalargepartofthesettlement,andsoonafter-
wardtheFrenchLegationinEdowasburned.InJanuary1861,Town-
sendHarris’secretary, theamiableHenryHeusken, wasambushed by roninandslashed todeathinEdo,andinJulytheBritishLegationrepulsedanattackbyabandofronininwhichtwoEnglishmenwere killedandtwowounded.
Rumorandpanicignitedthetinderofpublicdiscontent. Inflation
andcropfailureprovokedmorepeasantuprisingsin thecountryand ticeriotsin the cities.Smugglingandhighwayrobberywerewidespreadand,aspolicepowerdisintegrated,propertiedpeopleentrusted theirsafetyto bosseswhocontrolledgangsofarmedoutlaws.Theoccasionalviolenceagainstforeignerswasasnothingcomparedwiththe
52 - MITSUI
subversive plotting,assassinations, andinternecine fightingthatpara-
lyzedthebakufu. | MuchofthedisorderthatshatteredthelongpeaceoftheTokugawa
periodwascontrived andexecuted byradicalintellectuals ofthesonnojoipersuasion. Someofthemweremotivated bya sincereloathingof foreigners, butthemoresensibleamongthem,entertaining a wholesomerespect fortheWestanditsachievements, usedantiforeignism as a clubwithwhichto batterthebakufu,theprincipaltargetof their hatred.
Themostformidable opponentsoftheshogunateweretheSatsuma andChoshu4a, orclans,insouthernandwesternJapan.Because the Ieyasu daimyoofthosefiefshadnotralliedtothebannerofTokugawa
beforetheBattleofSekigaharain 1600,theirdescendantshadbeenregardedas unreliableelementseversince.Withoutrepudiatingtheir or “outsidehan,” vowsof fealtyto theshogun,thoseresentfulsozama,
withinsolentdisregardforhisauconductedtheiraffairs nevertheless thority.
Satsuma,withits capitalin Kagoshimaat the southeasterntip of Kyushu,held suzeraintyover theRyukyu Islands,whichservedas a of bridgefortradewithChina.RemotefromEdoandtheinterference thebakufu,Satsumahadevadedthe
fulleffectofthe seclusionlaws,and
hadadoptedrelativelyadvancedindustrial throughforeigncontacts methods, improved itsnavalandmilitary arms,andamassed somecomlocatedalongtheStraitsofShimomercialcapital.Choshu,strategically
forshippingbetweentheInlandSeaandNagasaki, noseki,thegateway
hadalsoprosperedfromtradebaseduponawell-organizedagricultural
andhandicraft economy andhaddeveloped itsmartialcapacities beyond thosecountenanced bythebakufu. Tosa region—notably Thesetwohan,andafewothersinthewestern muchin comon theislandofShikokuandHizennearNagasaki—had
mon.The daimyothemselvesandtheirhereditary ministersin most caseshadsuccumbedto theinanitionof languorousTokugawacourt youngersamuraiof life,andtheirpracticalaffairswerehandledby vigorand ability.Manyof thelatterwereadherentsofthe national andsupported learningtaughtbyMotooriNorinagaandhissuccessors, the principlesofsonnojoi.Wantingto reformandmodernizetheir provinces,theychafedundertherestrictionsandinterferencesof the
andfinancialdealingstheykeptinclose bakufu.In theircommercial andthoseofthebigcitiesaswell. merchants contactwiththeprovincial ofthenationa mundanelot,probablywereskeptical Themerchants, alistideologies,buthavingsufferedgrievouslossesfromtheforeignincursion,anddespairingofanybenefitsfromforeigntradeunderthe
TRADEOF BLOODANDGUILE
«+53
bakufu,theylistenedsympathetically to thesamuraiwhoadvocated
sonnojoi. Thetozamasamurai,manyofwhomwerestationedinKyototoshare thedefenseoftheimperialcourtwithmenfromtheotherhan,found kindredspiritsamongthe&uge, thenoblesat thecourt.Embitteredby
theshabbytreatmenttheyhadreceived fromtheTokugawa usurpers, thekugealsoresponded tothenationalistteachings. Thus,therewas formingavaguecoalition ofthemostmilitantsamuraiofthewestern
han,merchants,andcourtnobles—allcallingforexpulsionoftheforeigners,curbingof the bakufu,anda correspondingincreasein the poweroftheimperialcourt.
Amongandwithinthetozamahantherewereschisms reflecting thoseofnational scope.Theradicals weremoving towardapositionof tobaku,ovetthrowof thebakufu,whileconservativesfavoreda more
moderatecourseofkobu gattai,otunionoftheshogunate andtheimperialcourt.Satsuma andChoshu,longrivalsforthefavorofKyoto, weredividedoverthisissue.InChoshu thetobakucontingent wasascendant,whilethe kobu-gattaiadherentsdominatedSatsuma.Varia-
tionsofthisideological splitcaused factionalstruggleswithinthehan andarmedclashes betweenthemastheyviedforphysical controlover
thecourtandthepersonoftheemperor,whoseimportance asatalismanofpowerwasrising.
Mostinjuriousto theshogunatewerethedepredations ofradical
samuraiandroninagainsttheforeigners, whoseenvoyswerelosing patiencewiththebakufu’svacillationaswellasitsweaknesses.In1862,
whenAnglo-Japanese relationswerethusstrained,a freshoutrage broughtmatterstoahead. OnafineSeptemberafternoonanEnglishmerchantnamedRichard-
sonwentridingoutofYokohamawithtwocolleaguesanda lady
friend.HeadingtowardEdoonthebroadTokaido,theyencountered
thevanguardofa daimyo’s procession movingintheoppositedirec-
tion. Richardson,a newcomer,wasunfamiliarwith
road etiquetteand
failedtodismount orleavethehighway aswasobligatory whenapet-
sonageofhigherrankwaspassing.Thepersonageinquestionhappened to be ShimazuHisamitsu,the actualleaderof Satsuma,whosesamurai
wetenotoriousfortheirbelligerence.WhenRichardson,ignoringall
warnings, persistedinridingagainsttheoncomingprocession, heand hispartywereattackedby Satsuma’s swordsmen. Richardsonwas slashedmortallyandthetwo menwithhimwereseverely wounded. TheangryforeignsettlersandtheirtroopsinYokohama clamored forimmediateretaliation,andSatsuma’swarriorsweteequallyready
forbattlewiththebarbarians. Theoutbreakofwarthenandtherewas
54 «©MITSUI
pteventedbytheleadersof bothsides,whomanagedto restrainthe hotheads.TheBritishchargéd’affaires decidedprudentlythattheissue wasa diplomaticoneto behandledbyGreatBritain’sForeignOffice, andconfinedhimselftolodginga sternprotestwiththeJapanesegov-
ernment. Butwhiletheforeign envoysstillfumed, thebakufu’s impotence was demonstratedagainwhenunidentifiedarsonistsdestroyedtheBritish Legation,newlybuiltandjustreadyforoccupancy. In thefollowing
MarchLondon’s termsforsettling theRichardson affairreachedYoko-
hama.TotheconsternationofthebakufuinEdotheBritishdemanded,
inadditiontoaformalapology,thepayment of100,000 poundssterling
asapenalty.Satsumawastoexecutethosesamuraiwhohadcommitted theoffenseandtopayanadditional 25,000poundscompensation. The ForeignOfficemadeitclearthattheonlyalternative waswar. Thebakufuprocrastinatedinreplyingtothesedemandsandusedthe
timegainedtoprepareforhostilities.Concurrently, thesonno-joiextremistsmaneuvered theimperialcourtintoissuinga futileorderfor theexpulsionofforeigners.Thebakufu,unabletorefuseanimperial command,reluctantlysettheexpulsion dateforJune25of thesame yearand,whilestillnegotiatingwithBritain’senvoys,madesecretpreparationsto enforceit.ThesemovesbecameknowntotheBritish,who
respondedbystrengthening theirfleetandissuinganultimatumthat theshogunatepay,withintwentydays,the100,000-pound indemnity togetherwith10,000poundsalreadydueforcompensatingthefamilies of victimsof earlierattacks.Astensionsmountedseventeenforeign
warshipsandsixmerchantmenwereassembledforthedefense of residentsinthetreatyports.
Thisdisplayofpowerhadthedesiredeffect.Atthelastminutethe bakufucapitulated anddelivered totheBritishchargéd’affaires thesum of440,000 Mexican dollars—most ofitpractically confiscated fromthe merchantsofOsaka. Theforeignenvoyswereassured,unofficially,thatthebakufuhad
abandoned itsplanstocarryouttheorderforexpulsion, andtheindem-
nitywasregardedasa tokenoftheirsincerity. Butofficiallytheorder wasstillineffect,andontheappointed daytheincorrigiblesamuraiof Choshutookindependent actionto enforceit. TwoChoshuvessels firedupontheAmerican merchantmanPembroke passingthroughthe Straitsof Shimonoseki,andin succeedingweeksotherforeignships
wereattacked there. TheWesterndiplomats, realizing atlastthatthebakufuwasunable to controltheoutsidehan,nowadopteda policyof conciliatingthe shogunatewhilechastisingitsinternalenemies.In JulyAmericanand
Frenchmerchantmen destroyed twoChoshugunboatsandsomeforts
TRADEOF BLOODANDGUILE
- 55
atShimonoseki,butthestraitsremained closed.Then,earlyinAugust, theBritishsenta navalsquadronto Satsumato exactpaymentofthe additionalindemnityandthepunishment of Richardson’smurderers. Thedemandwasrejectedratherinsolently,sotheBritonsrighteously
bombarded Kagoshima, Satsuma’s castletown,setting a considerable partofitablaze,andthenburnedseveralshipsforgoodmeasure. Itwas nota clear-cutvictory,sincetheBritishsuffered manycasualties and, batteredbyawildtyphoon,decidedtowithdraw.ButthedemonstrationforcedSatsumato recognizethesuperiorityof Westernnaval powerandto meetBritain’sterms.
ShimazuHisamitsuof Satsuma,alreadyneck-deepin debtto the
Osakachonin,hadno suchsumas25,000pounds.Buthedidhavea resourcefulhelperinthepersonofOkuboToshimichi,anopportunistic youngsamuraiwho alternatedbetweenradicalismand moderation. Havingswungbacktoamoderatepositionatthetime,hewasonspeakingtermswiththebakufu’s officials.Hewenttovisitoneofthehigher
councilors, ItakuraKatsukiyo, LordofIga,andargued thatthebakufu, beingresponsiblefor havingadmittedthe foreigners,shouldpay Satsuma’sindemnity.
Itakura,awareoftheimpoverished bakufu’sfinances (atonetimeit
hadlittlemorethan20,000ryoinitstreasury), wasstubborninhisre-
fusal,butOkubowasadamant. Takinghiscuefromthebakufu’s extortionisttactics,he senttwoswordsmento Itakura’sresidencewiththe
informationthat,unlessthe“loan”’wasforthcoming,theBritishchargé d’affaireswouldbeassassinatedimmediately.Itakurawavered.Sucha deedwouldnot merelyhumiliatethe bakufubut couldmeanwar againsttheforeignpowers.Yetto arrestOkuboand hisbullieswould
antagonizeSatsumaandinflamethehan’sradicals.Hegavein,and
promisedOkubothathewould“‘borrow”themoneyfromtheMitsuis
—whohadprovided a sizableshareofthe110,000-pound indemnity thebakufualready hadpaidtotheBritish. Caughtinthesqueezebetweeninvasionandinsurrection, thebakufu
yieldedto itscriticsandinstituteda numberof reforms.Forone,the sankinkotaiwasreducedtoa tokenhundred-daysojourninEdoevery threeyears,andthefamiliesofdaimyowerenolongerheldin Edoas hostages.Thisrelievedthedaimyoofa heavyfinancialburden,butit alsogavethedissidentsamongthemmoretimeandresources fortheir machinationsagainsttheshogun. In 1861,to furtherthekobu-gattai policyofunitingJapan’sembat-
tledfactionsthroughareconciliation betweentheimperialcourtand theshogunate,thefifteen-year-old ShogunIemochihadbeenwedded totheemperor’ssister.Butperversely, theKyotoloyalists sawthisas anattemptbythebakufutosecureimperialsanctionofthetreaties,so
56 - MITSUI
farstubbornlywithheld.Thekobu-gattai strategyfailedandtheshogunate,bereftofapolicy,driftedhelplessly. Throughtheinterventionoftheradicalstheyouthfulshogunwas
forcedtoaccepta “guardian”(ineffect,aregent)amenabletotheguidanceoftheimperialfactions.ThiswasTokugawaHitotsubashi Keiki (alsoknownasYoshinobu), sonof theultranationalistLordofMito. Anableandreasonably enlightenedyoungman,Keikiwasresponsive
toadvisersworkingtowarddomestic harmonyandconciliation ofthe Westernpowers.Butparadoxically, theshogunhimself,undercoer-
cionfromimperialistsin Kyoto,justthenwassettinga newdatefor the finalexpulsionof Westerners.Theextremists, pressingtheirad-
vantage,obtainedanimperialorderthatShogunIemochishouldvisit Kyoto,presumablyto reachanunderstandingwiththeemperorconcerningthetreaties.Thiswasthecrowning humiliation,fornoshogun
haddeignedto visitthesovereignduringthepasttwohundredand thirtyyears. In March1863,the “barbarian-quellinggeneralissimo”’ startedhis journeydowntheTokaido,escortedbythreethousandbrilliantly caparisonedretainersandtroops.TheEdomerchants weretappedfor contributionsas a matterof course,and the Mitsuisrecordedin their
ledgeranitemoftenthousand ryo“forsending offtheshogun.” There wassomeconsolation, however.Echigoya wasstilltheleading purveyotofclothtothebakufu,andthemakingofuniformsandceremonial attireforthejourneykepttheshopprofitably occupiedforweeks.But soonafterthisrespitefrombusinessdoldrumsa deeperdepressionset in.TheshogunhadintendedtostayinKyotoforonlytendays,buthis
opponents founditusefultokeephimthereundertheircontrol andhis advisers inastateofconfusion. SothereIemochi remained, languishing
amidthe refurbishedsplendorsof NijoCastle,monthaftermonth. Kyotohadbecomethearenaofaction,leavingEdoapoliticalvacuum. Theforeignenvoys,whowerenotpermittedtovisitKyoto,hadtodeal
withpowerlessunderlingsleftbehindin Edoandcouldlearnlittle aboutthefateful decisions beingmadeintheremote imperialcity.Antiforeignsamuraiandroninnowswarmed intothecapital,shattering itstranquillity by theirmurderousassaultsuponmoderates andeven fellowradicalswhohadadmittedtheinevitability ofintercoursewith
foreigners. Tocurbthezealotsthebakufuorganized mercenary units ofsoshi,politicalbullies,recruitedfromamongtheflotsamofronin, gamblers, thugs,anddesperadoes whoroamedthetroubledland.Their influxbroughta certainprosperityto thecity,butasthepolicecowered beforethe swashbucklers,robbery,looting,andarsonbecamethe
orderoftheday.
TRADEOF BLOODANDGUILE
: 57
Themoteimportantchonin,beingintouchwithstewardsofthe tozamadaimyoandalsounderthebakufu’s protectionassuppliersand fiscalagents,weresparedthesedepredations. ButtheMitsuis,from theirvantageinKyoto—oneoftheirmansionswasadjacentto Nijo Castle—sensed thecalamitouseventsthatwereaboutto happenand
triedtofindthepoliticalconnections thatwouldbringthemthrough
safely. Intheearlypartof1863theloyalistsfromChoshuwerestillsecurely entrenchedatcourt.Workingthroughcertainkugesecretlyalliedwith
theircause,theycouldgainimperial backingfortheirundertakings, howeverrash.Itwastheywhohadcoerced thecourtintoordering the bakufutoexpelthebarbarians. Evenmorequixotic wastheirprogram formobilizinganimperialexpedition, withtheemperorridingatits head,to sweeptheinterlopersoutofJapan.Sucha movewastantamountto havingtheemperortakeoverthe officialfunctionsofthe shogun,whileleavingChoshusupreme.
Theemperor,wellindoctrinated bysonno-joi nobles,gavehisbless-
ingevento thisdeviousscheme.ButafterChoshu’svirtualdeclarationofwarat Shimonoseki,andthedebacleofSatsumaatKagoshima, hismajestygrewmorecautious.Realizingthatthecountryhadbeen
saddledwithanuntenable foreignpolicy,hecooledtowardthenobles beingmanipulated byChoshu’s hotheadsandshowedincreasing favor to thoseof moderateinclination.Satsuma,chastenedby theBritish, hadtakenleadershipof thekobu-gattaimoderatesandbeganto gain
theimperialfavorthatChoshuwaslosing. Choshu’scontinuedplotsandprovocations outragedSatsumaand its temporaryally Aizu, a pro-Tokugawahan in northern Honshu,
whosedaimyowasthenmilitarygovernorof Kyoto.Suspecting(or inventing)a Choshuconspiracyto recoverits positionby treachery, SatsumaandAizuleadersinformedthe
emperor—indirectly,of course,
fornotevendaimyocouldapproachthatgodlybeingin person—and
wonhispermission totakeforciblecountermeasures. Accordingly, on September30,1863,theystageda coupd’étatandsequestered the palace.Civilwarwasavoided whenSatsuma producedanimperial edict forbidding violence, andChoshu,whoseprotestations ofreverencefor theemperorwereunsurpassed, waspersuaded towithdrawitssoldiers. ButtheSatsuma-Aizu coup,thoughbloodless, endedthelongTokugawapeace. Fortwoandahalfcenturies politicalchangeinJapanhad beeneffectedgraduallyby meansof sycophancy,intrigue,andsubtle treachery.Butafterthisconfrontationthekeyto supremacywasto be nakedmilitarypower.Ominously,Choshu’smentookwiththem,in to sonnojoi,withthe defianceof thecourt,sevennoblessympathetic
58 - MITSUI
clearindicationthattheywouldreturnto reinstatethemat courtby forceofarms.
Thewellspring ofsonno-joinationalism inChoshuwasaschoolestablishedbyayoungmilitary instructornamedYoshida Shoin.Anintellectualprodigy,hehadquicklyabsorbedtheChineseclassics thatwere stillthestockin tradeof orthodoxscholarship;but he wasmoteat-
tractedtothenationallearning,notablytheworksoftheMituis’erst-
whileteacherMotooriNorinaga,whichconvincedhimthatJapan wastrulythelandof thegodsandthattheemperorwasits rightful sovereign.YoshidabelievedthattheTokugawas,havingbetrayedhis majesty’strust,hadneglectedthecountry’sdefensesandexposedit to the depredationsof inferiorbreedsof men.Moreover,the bakufu, ctavenlyshirkingitsduty,hadstoopedto parleywiththealiens,and soonthoseintruderswouldtryto subjugatetheJapaneserace.It was
thedutyofeveryloyalJapanese, heinsisted,toreimplanttheancient virtues,purgethecountryofforeignersandtheirinfluences, andrestoretheemperor tothesupremacy ordainedbythegodsforageseter-
nal.OnlythencouldsacredNipponattainits destinyandassertits leadershipin theworld.(Prophetically,YoshidaalsoadvocatedsubduingKoreaandannexingManchuria,Formosa,andthePhilippines.) Suchweretheteachingsofthisprovincialmessiah,whohadaprofound impactuponhiscontemporaries,inspiredthetwentieth-centurymilitarists,andisa hallowedfigurestillinJapan’snationalistpantheon. Yoshidawasfanaticallyantiforeign,but notignorantlyso.Having
delvedintoforeignbooks,hehadlearned muchaboutthenewmilitary technologyandthewayit wasused.Beinginformedaboutforeign
affairs,heknewhowtheBritishhadfirstgoneto Chinato trade,then
introduced opiumasameansofsavingtheirgoldandsilver, andfinally subjugated thegovernment thathadtriedtoabolishthebanefultraffic. HopingtosavehiscountryfromthefateofChina,Yoshidaroamed Japanasaronin,spreading thesonno-joigospelandhatchingplotsto
realizeitsaims. HeknewthatwithoutscienceandtechnologyJapanwouldbehelplessbeforetheWesternoffensive, sohedecidedtogoabroadandstudy them.In 1854,withelaboratebut transparentsecrecyreminiscentof
TomSawyer’s,heboardedoneofCommodorePerry’sshipsinthe deadofnightandpleaded tobetakentoAmerica. Rebuffed, hewasset ashoreandarrestedbythebakufuforthecrimeofhavingattemptedto leavethecountry.Afterbeingreleasedfromprisonthroughthelenien-
cyofhisdaimyo,hewasallowedtostarta school,atwhichhetaught thesonno-joiphilosophy alongwithhisownbrandofthemartial arts admixed withConfucianism. Themostspirited oftheyoungersamurai
TRADEOF BLOODAND GUILE : 59
attendedhisclasses,andwereconqueredbyhisferventpatriotism, devotiontotheemperor,andbeliefinJapan’s futuregreatness. From hisschoolinHagi,a castletownnorthofShimonosekiinChoshu,came a groupofmenwitha newunderstandingofJapanesehistory,social conditions,andpoliticalprocesses.Despitetheirunrealisticprogramof excludingallforeigners,theyhadagenerallyaccurateviewoftheworld —andespeciallyof Japan’salarminginsecurityasa targetof imperi-
alism.Aboveall,theyespoused a coherentnationalpolityandwere sustained byanunshakeable conviction thatitwouldeventually prevail. Yoshida,oneofthefirstmajorexponents oftobaku,theoverthrow oftheshogunate, wasexecutedin 1859forhispartinanassassination plotagainsta bakufuofficial.Buthisformerstudentsintensifiedtheir
efforts,inconcertwithloyalist samuraiandroninofotherhan,totopple theTokugawadynasty.Theywereringleaders in theassaultsupon foreigners andthedestruction oftheirlegations, ingoadingtheirhans’ antiforeignfeeling governmentsintodefyingtheshogun,andinflaming withintheimperial court.Itwasthoseprophets ofmodernmilitarism whoestablishedinJapantheprinciple,notyetdisproved, thatpolitical
powergrowsfromthebarrelofagun.
AmongthebrightestalumniofYoshida’sschoolwereItoHirobumi andInoueKaoru—tousethenamesbywhichtheywereknowninlater Shimonoseki years.In May1863,thirteenmonthsbeforetheeventsat andKagoshima,theyandthreeotheryoungsamuraiof Choshure-
in orderto to leaveJapansecretly permission ceivedtheirdaimyo’s
studyinEngland.Theirpurposeingoingwastoacquiretheknowledge necessaryforcarryingouttheirsubversiveplansandforstrengthening themilitaryandeconomicpotentialofJapan. ArrangementsfortheirpassagefromYokohama weremadebyan
Englishmerchant,ThomasGlover,andclearedwithhisconsulate
there.Thefiveadventurers,allintheirearlytwenties,embarkedunder coverofdarknessaboardashipownedbyJardine,MathesonandCompany,themostpowerfultradingfirmintheOrient.At Shanghaithey whosedescenweremetby Jardine’sagentWilliamKeswick(oneof dantsis todaychairmanof the samecompany)andput aboardtwo London-boundsailingships.Theirintentionwasto learnsomething aboutnavigationwhileenjoyingthecomfortsofbeingpassengers,but becausetheycouldnotexpressthemselvesinEnglishthefivelandlub-
berswereputto workasapprenticeseamenaboardtheirrespective ships. ItoandInoueweremortified bytheirdemotion to cooliestatusand
foundtheincessant toilandcoarsefoodanalmostunbearable hardship. Yetevenintheunremittingadversitythatcamewithsailingbeforethe masttheyneverstoppedthinkingabouttheplightofJapanand,inpas-
60 - MITSUI
sionatediscussions, refiningtheirplansforitssalvation. Mutualsupport pulledthemthroughthe four-monthvoyageand strengthenedthe
bondsoffriendshipthatenabledthemtoweatherpoliticalstormsin
lateryears,whenIto wasJapan’smostillustriousandlongest-serving primeminister,andInoue,statesmanextraordinary,managedthena-
tion’sfinances andforeignaffairswhilealsoguiding thedestinies ofthe HouseofMitsui.
AAsojournof severalmonthsin London,withvisitsto shipyards, arsenals,andfactories,convincedthefivesamuraistudentsthatJapan faceda longperiodof developmentbeforeit couldcompetewith Westernpowersin eitherwarorpeace.Theywereaghastwhennews
ofChoshu’sattacksuponforeignvessels,andofKagoshima’s ordeal,
reachedLondon.Earlyin1864,asthesituationinJapanworsened,they learnedthatanalliedfleetwasbeingassembledto attackShimonoseki, andthatChoshu’s leaderswereeagerto acceptthechallenge.Ito and Inoue,hopingthattheymightbeableto divertChoshufromsucha
foolhardycourse,sailedforJapanwithoutdelay. Whentheyarrived atYokohama theyfoundanimposing armadaof seventeen foreignwarships andsomeseventhousand troops.Received bytheBritishMinister,SirRutherfordAlcock,theyurgedhimto
ponetheattacklongenoughforthemto
post-
attempta peacemissionto
Choshu.Hadheknownthatthoseeloquentyouthsweremembers of thebandthathadburned hiscountry’s newlegation lessthantwoyears
previously,hewouldhaveturnedthemout,buttheirgentlemanly behaviorarousednosuspicion.Becausehewasanxioustoavoidunnecessarycarnage(whichwouldhaveprovokedcriticism fromtheliberalsat homeinBritain),Alcockdecidedtogivethemtimetotrytheirluck.
WithBritishhelpItoandInouelandedontheshoreoftheirnative provinceandproceeded overlandindisguise.ReachingtheheadquartersofLordMoriMotonari, theninYamaguchi, northeastofShimonoseki,theyweregivenanaudience andspentmanyhours,talkingover
a mapoftheworld,explaining Japan’svulnerability andthefollyof Choshu’s makingarmedresistance tooverwhelmingly superiorforces. Thedaimyowasimpressed withtheirlearningandsympathized with theappeal,butotherleadersofthehanremainedobdurate,andeven
suggestedthatthewould-bepeacemakershadsoldoutto theenemy. Attheriskofbeingassassinated theypersistedin theirargumentsfor severaldays,but to no avail.Afterreportingtheirfailureto British
representatives waitingaboardawarshipneartheStraitsofShimonoseki,theyreturnedto Yamaguchi,heavy-heartedbutfullypreparedto
dieforChoshu. It seemedtothemthattheirfellowdisciples ofYoshida,whowere theninchargeofthehan’smilitaryforcesandinfluencedthepoliciesof
TRADEOF BLOODAND GUILE - 61
itsgovernment, werecaught inthegripofasuicidal mania.Notcontent withhavingtwistedthelion’stail,thereby provokingcertainretaliation bysea,theyhaddecided—even astheenemywaspreparing itsattack— to seizetheImperialPalacebyforceand“liberatetheemperorfromhis evilcounselors”sothathecouldleadagrandoffensive againstthebarbarians. .
Buoyinguptheconfidence ofthezealotswastheirarmy,whichthey hadrevolutionized. Insteadofleavingallthefightingto aristocratic swotdsmenandsubordinatetroopsarmedwithbowsandspears, Yoshida’spupils—severalof whomwereto be futureleadersof the nation—hadrecruitedcommoners,trainedthemto userifles,andor-
ganizedthemintomilitiaunits,insomeofwhichpeasantsmarched
besidesamurai.Thenewunits,calledshotaz, wereledbythemostradical
samuraiandindoctrinated withthesonno-joi philosophy ofYoshida,as wellaswithYamato damashii, thefightingspiritofoldNippon.Shoutingdowntheobjectionsofwisermen,theultraradicalswonpermission tosendtheirtroopstoKyoto.InAugust1864severalcrackunitssailed uptheInlandSeato Osaka,andfromtheremarchedin fullbattlere-
galiatotheoutskirts ofKyoto.Theytookpositions soclosetothecity thattheflickeringoftheircampfirescouldbeseenfromthewatchtowersofNijoCastle.Thisadvance initselfindicated theimpotence of thebakufuandtheirresolution ofthecourt. Choshu’sfinalappealfortheemperor’spardonforitsearlieroffenseswasrejected, anditstroopswereordered towithdraw.Although theywerehopelesslyoutnumbered,the“loyalist”shotairemaineddefiant,rememberingYoshida’sprecept,“Itisunworthyofasamuraitobe overlyconcernedwiththeconsequenceswhentheactionitselfisvirtuous.”
Theyattacked fearlessly, foughtwithsuperhuman ferocity,andmanagedtoreachtheHamaguri-mon, the“Forbidden Gate”ofthepalace, whichonlytheemperorwasallowedtouse.Therethebattleragedfor hoursastheinhabitantsofneighboringquartersfledwiththeirportable treasuresto thesurroundinghills.MostoftheMitsuis’ homeswerein
thecentralpartofthecity,justsouthoftheImperial Palace.Warnedin advance, theirhouseholds hadbeenevacuated tosaferprecincts, leaving servantsandguardstowatchoverthetightlyshuttered dwellings, of-
fices,andshops. TheMitsuielders,informedof developmentsby courier,assumed thataftertheshootingwasoverthesituationwouldsettledowntowhat passedasnormalinthosechaoticdays.ButinthebattleChoshu’s guns setfireto a buildingwithinthepalacecompound.Theimperialfire
brigadewasunabletofunctioninthebattlezone,anda briskwind spreadtheflames,whichsweptsouthwardthroughtheheartofKyoto.
62 - MITSUI
Intheconflagration some38,000 dwellings weredestroyed. Fiveofthe sixmansionsofthemainMitsuifamilies wereburnedtotheground,
togetherwiththeirbusinessbuildings.Othermerchantfamilieswere
similarly stricken.Thedisasterwasnottotalonlybecause personsof
propertykepttheirvaluables,artobjects,anddocuments—astheystill
dotoday—infireproofAura,storehouses withthickearthenorstone
wallsfittedwithirondoorsandshutters.ThustheMitsuissavedtheir accountbooksdatingbackto theseventeenthcentury,Motoori’sgifts to Takakage,andpricelesspaintingsandscrollsthatarestillin their
possession. Therewasalsothecellarsilver, burieddeepunderground. Buttherewasnoinsurance onthebuildings, andthefinancial blowwas stunning. Choshu’szealotsweredefeated,of course,and,afterburyingmanyof
theircomrades,thesurvivorsstraggledhomein utterdisgrace.Before
theyhadtimetorecover,newscamethatthealliedfleethadsailedf Yokohama,amidgreatrejoicing of its foreigninhabitants, to give
Choshua thrashing. TheblunderatKyotohadbroughttheChoshuleadersto theirsenses,
andtheysentIto Hirobumiposthastetothealliedfleet’sanchorage neartheentrancetotheStraitsofShimonoseki to makea truce.Buthe
atrived too late, and by middaythe fleet of fifteenBritish,French,
Dutch,andAmerican vesselswasunderway.AtShimonoseki,Inoue
Kaorusawtheapproaching enemywarships withdismay.Choshu’s attillerymen hadnotbeeninformed thatatrucewasbeingsought, and theyintended tostartshooting assoonasthevessels camewithin range. It tookInouetwohoursto persuadetheartillerycommanders to hold
theirfire.Thenhe set out in a smallboat,but whenhe reachedtheallied
flagship andannounced thathisgovernment wasreadytonegotiate, he wastoldthattheshipswerealready movingintobattlepositions and
thattheissuewouldbesettlednowwithguns,notwords. At tenminutespastfourin theafternoonof September5, 1864,an exchangeofcannonfirebegantheBattleof Shimonoseki.It provedto bedevastatingto theChoshuforts,butscarcely touchedtheattacking
vessels.Althoughthestraitswereonlyamilewideatmost,thefleet wasabletokeepoutofrangeandmostofthedefenders’ shotsfellshort oftheirmarks. Onthethirddayofthebattle, whichwipedoutChoshu’s coastaldefensesbutcosttheattackersonlyeightmendeadandthirty
wounded,ItoandInouecamealongsidetheflagshiptomakearrange-
mentsforthedaimyo’s formalsurrender.A weeklatertheseinsepar-
ables,whosestockhadrisengreatly sincetheirabortive peacemission,
assistedtheirsuperiorsin negotiatingtheConventionofShimonoseki, underwhichChoshuagreedtomeetverystiffterms,includingthepaymentofanunspecified sumasindemnity.
TRADEOF BLOODAND GUILE - 63
TheBattleofShimonoseki, whichwashighly instructive forJapanese patriots,hadotherimportant consequences. Choshu,bysigningapact
withforeigners,hadlostitsclaimtomoralsuperiorityovertheshogunate, and its favoritecry, “expelthe barbarians,”’becamemeaningless.
Havingenteredintodirectrelationswithforeigners,SatsumaandChoshuhastenedto usetheirnewconnections asa meansofintensifying
pressureupontheshogun.Theallieshelpedmatters bydemandinga
preposterousindemnityof threemilliondollars,whichChoshu,with itssmallrevenues,wasunableto pay.Theshogunate,alreadysinking underthe expensesof militarypreparations,diplomaticmissions
abroad,maintenance andsupervision oftreatyports,andindemnities forrepeatedattacksonforeigners, hadto assumeresponsibility for Choshu’sdebt,too. Thisseriesof shocks,precipitatedby thewell-meaningAmericans andaggravatedbyEuropeandiplomatsandtraders,broughtdespairto thechonin,whoseenforcedloansto thebakufuhadincreasedbeyond allreason.HowtheMitsuisreadthoseominoussignscanonlybecon-
jectured.It isimprobable thattheyrecognized thelong-range benefits
eventuallytobegainedfromallthistumult.Thefactthattheirprincipal roleinthemomentouseventsoftheearly1860swastokeeponpouring preciousgoldintoa bottomlessbagmaybe sufficientto explaintheir ebbingloyaltyto thebakufuandtheireventualalliancewithitsmost
implacable enemies,thenationalists ofChoshu.
7 -«TheMan fromNowhere
THETWILIGHT OFTHESHOGUNATE, knownin Japanas the bakumatsu,
fascinateshistoriansbecauseit releasedtheforcesthatweretomodernizeJapan.ButfortheMitsuisitwasthemostharrowingtimetheywere evertoexperience.HeadingtheHousethenandformanyyearsthereafterwasMitsuiHachiroemonTakayoshi,*eighthconsecutiveheirof
founderHachirobei. Duringhislifetime Takayoshi wascalledKofuku, whichmeans“fortunate,”andhewasindeedtheluckiestMitsuiofall, threadinghiswayamongthepitfallsandambushesofthebakumatsuas thoughpersonallyguidedbythefoxdeityoftheInarishrines. Anurbaneandsensitiveman,he wasa devoteeof chanoyu, thetea ceremony,a perceptivecollectorof art, anda creatorof tapestrylike
sensat,collagesmadefromswatchesof silk(anaccomplishment for whichlaterhewonnationalrecognition). Hiscultivationandsociabilitymadehima welcomeguestat thecourtsoflocaldaimyoanda popularfigureinchoninsociety,butthepersonalqualitiesthatenabled himto emergeunscathedfromtherough-and-tumbleepisodesofthe
bakumatsu upheavalaremoredifficult to detect.
Hisdescendant,MitsuiReiko,whohasdoneintensiveresearchinthe family’shistory,providesoneclueto his success.“Ourgrandfather Kofuku,”shetold the author,“wasa broad-mindedman:he hadgood
foresightandaneyeforselecting people.”
ItisafactthatKofukuwonareputation formakingboldandcorrect decisionsthatinfluenced thedestinyofJapan,aswellasthatofthe
HouseofMitsui.Howmuchofthepraisehemaydeserveisamatterof opinion,butthereisnodoubtthathis“eyeforselecting people”saved theclanina timeofconfusionandpanic.Forwithouttheservicesof MinomuraRizaemon,hispersonally-appointed obanto(literally,“great
clerk,”butactuallychiefmanager), theMitsuinamewouldhavepassed intoobliviona centuryago. * ThenameHachiroemon wasalwaysgivenbyOmotokatato theMitsuiin eachgenerationwhowasselectedtoleadtheentirehouse.UsuallyHachiroemonwasthe eldestsonof the Kita-ke(northfamily),whichwassupreme
amongthehon-ke,ormainfamilies.
64
THE MANFROMNOWHERE
~ 65
Theastonishing changesin Minomura’sfortunesandstationillus-
tratetheplayofsocial forcesthatloosened feudalclasstiesanddoomed
theshogunate. If wecanbelievehisowncolorfulaccount,Minomura wasbornofsamuraistockyetservedasacommonlaborer,fish-dealer’s
apprentice, lackey,peddler,andmoney-changer, beforeemerging inhis thirtiesasabankerand,eventually, themosteminentbusinessexecu-
tiveofhisday. Inhismemoirs,dictatedduringhislateryears(itisbelievedthathe wasilliterate,or nearlyso),he saidthathisfatherwasa samuraifrom northernHonshuwho,havingincurredthewrathof hisfellowwartiors,becamea ronin.Hisonlyson,thefutureMinomura, wasleftan orphanat theageof seven. Aftera poverty-strickenboyhoodinKyushuandKyoto,theyoung man,whoseoriginalgivennameis unknown,but whoat thattime calledhimselfKimura,becameanitinerantlaborerinearlyadolescence. Inhisnineteenth yeartheroad-wearyKimuraturnedupinEdo,where
hefoundasteadyjobaslive-inapprentice toadealerindriedsardines.
Or sohe said,laterin life,althougha morewidelyacceptedversion statedthathisemployer wasa money-changer.Possiblyneitheristrue, for “themanfromnowhere,”as he hasbeencalled,inventedmany detailsofhispast,perhapstoconcealalowlyoriginorothermattershe preferredto haveforgotten. Whateverhis adventuresmayhavebeen,he wasa conscientious worker.Uponcompletinghisapprenticeshiphewasrecommendedby hismasterforthepositionoffootmanat themansionofOguriTadataka,a lordlyretaineroftheshogun.In thishumblepositionKimura wasfrequentlyinthecompany ofOguri’sheir,Tadamasa,*andthetwo
formedanaffectionate andenduringrelationship. A confectioner namedMinogawa Rihachi,ownerofa shopcalled Kinokuniya,wasimpressedby the personalityandcleverness of the
youngfootman andofferedhimhisdaughterinmarriage.Kimuraacceptedandthusbecame theyoshi,oradoptedson-in-law andheir,of Minogawa. Itwasastepdownward socially fromtheOgurimansion to
theconfectioner’sshop,butthemoveearnedhimtherespectable name Minogawano Rihachi,thefirstof severalappellationshewasto take duringhisclimbfromobscurity.JustastheMitsuiswerecalledEchigoya,a cognomenderivedfromthenameoftheirshopinEdo,sowere RihachiandhisadoptivefamilycommonlycalledKinokuniya.Hisjob wasto peddletheconfectionsmadebythefamilyand,ashecalledon customers,carryinghisbasketsofsweetsandthesteelyard forweigh-
* AsLordofBungo,Tadamasa visitedtheUnitedStatesin 1860,a member
ofJapan’sfirstdiplomatic missiontotheWest.HealsoheldthetitleofLord ofKozukeandwascommonlyknownasKozukenosuke inhislateryears.
66 - MITSUI
ingthemout,helearnedtherudiments ofbusinessandcultivated friendshipswith tradesmen.Withinten yearshe had accumulated enoughcapitalandexperienceto gointobusinessforhimself. Intheearly1850s,atthetimewhenPerrywasorganizing hisfirstexpeditionto Japan,Rihachi,thenthirty-twoyearsold,boughtan interestina tinymoney-exchangeshop.Laterin thedecadeheattracted
theattentionofMitsui’s managers byhisshrewdness duringthetimeof confusion andanxietyinthemoneymarket,asthebakufumanipulated
thecoinageto copewiththegolddraintheforeigners werecausingat Yokohama. Rihachisuddenlyshowedanunaccountableinterestinbuyinga cer-
taintypeofkoban(anelongated goldcoin)minted intheTempoera,a
dozenyearspreviously.Whenheranoutofcashhepawnedhishoard toborrowfundswithwhichheboughtmoreTempokoban,repeating theprocessasoftenashiscapitalpermitted.Withina shorttimethe bakufu,havingsecretlydebasedthecurrency,announceda changein ratesthatnearlytripledthevalueofRihachi’s coins. Rihachithen got an introductionto the Mitsuiryogaeya,which, despitehavingthebestprivateintelligence systeminJapan,remained ignorantoftheimpending valuechangeuntilthedayit wasdeclared. WhenRihachicameinwithhisheavybagsofgold,a rippleofastonishmentspreadamongthemembersoftheryogaeya. In a veryshorttime hiscoupbecameknownto obantoSaitoJunzo,themostinfluential
employee oftheMitsuis’Edoshop.
FromthenonRihachiwasa familiarfigurearoundtheMitsuiryo-
gaeyaandwasgiventhenicknameKinori(madefromtheinitial soundsof Kinokuniyano Rihachi).It didn’ttakeSaitoverylongto
learnthat Kinori wasacquaintedwith Oguri Tadamasa,who, having
succeededhisfatherasLordofBungo,wasnowanimportantofficial inthebakufu’saccounting department.It wasprobablyduringoneof
Kinori’sfrequentvisitstoOguri’shomeintheKandadistrict ofEdo, neatKinokuniya, thathehadpickedupthetipabouttheimminent revaluation ofthekoban. Rihachi-Kinori’s relationship withtheMitsuisduringthenextfew yearsisobscure.Theyhadnoreasontotrusthim,because undoubtedly hewasaninformantforOguri.However,theiroperations werepredicateduponexploitingtalent,gleaningadvanceinformation,andcurryingfavorinhighplaces.SotheypatronizedKinori,perhapsinthehope thathemightrenderthema significantservicesomeday.In thisthey werenotmistaken, althoughtheyhadto waitseveralyearsbeforethe opportunityarrived.
WhileupstartRihachi prospered inmysterious ways,thefortunes of long-established chonincontinued tosagundertheincreasingweight
THE MANFROMNOWHERE~-
67
At fellupontheMitsuis. ofthoseburdens offorcedloans.Theheaviest
thesametime,thefoundationsofthehousewerebeingeatenawayby Theweakestpointin thestructurewas thetermitesof mismanagement. the Yokohamagofukuten,whose anomalousfiscaloperations,insti-
Notonlyweretheshop’s havebeendescribed. tutedbySaitoin1859, dry-goodsclerksplayingfastandloosewithpublicfunds,buttheextheirloans in silverandhadoverextended ecutivestoowerespeculating to silkmerchants.
asthedemandforbothraw Silkwasthemainexportcommodity, silkwormblightthat swept fiberandsilkwormeggsboomedaftera were throughEuropeinthe early1860s.TheJapanesesilkmerchants goodrisksbecausetheirguildhadbeengranteda monopolybythe bakufu.But takingadvantageof the generalconfusion,somesilkanarrangeproducinghanbegansellingdirectlytoforeignmerchants, mentthat wasadvantageousto bothparties.The bakufu,seeingits
exportof revenuethreatened,imposedstrictercontrols,bannedthe trafficsoheavilythatproducers eggs,andtaxedtheraw-silk silkworm
were couldnolongermakea profit.Asaresultthenativesilkmerchants unabletorepaytheirdebtstoEchigoya. camefrom byEchigoyaatYokohama Sincethemoneybeingloaned customsrevenues,it hadto beremittedto the shogunate’streasuryat ofmisfeasanceandbadlucktheshopfound regularintervals.Because ofthebakufutreasury,awareofthe itsshortagesmounting.Officials unsavorysituation,seemtohavebeenusingit asgroundsfor blackreductionin theforcedloansbeing mail.WhenEchigoyapleadedfora unlessMitsui levieduponthe chonin,treasuryofficialshintedthat ofall repayment compliedthe governmentwoulddemandimmediate House’sassets. publicfunds or, if necessary,wouldconfiscatethe
longneglectofthisdangerousconditiondefiesunderOmotokata’s Kofukuwastooprestanding,unlessitisassumedthatHachiroemon inEdo theoperations inKyototosupervise withtheturmoil occupied andYokohama.OrhadheandtheotherMitsuifamilyheadscomposing Omotokatabecometoo effeteto copewithit? Whateverthereason, accumulatedduringthecentheyhadallowedtheirreserves,carefully turies,to dwindleto perilouslylowlevels. Aprincipalcauseofthebakufu’splight,andhencethatofthechonin, wastheintransigenceoftheChoshuhan,whichhadcausedtheMitsuis Nowatlast,exhausted suchgrievouslossesintheKyotoconflagration.
subduedbythebakufu’s defeats,Choshuwaseasily bythreesuccessive Satsuma,was forces.Yetthe victoriouscommander,SaigoTakamoriof
Inhissympathy withtheloyalistcausehe himselfanardentnationalist. strength recovered termsthatChoshu laiddownsuchmildsurrender bywhichYoshidaShoin’s rapidly.Aftersomeelaboratemaneuverings
68 - MITSUI
disciples gainedleadership inthecivilaffairs ofthehan,theformidable shotaiunitswereagainbeingtrained fora comeback. Oneofthemostpowerfulmenin thebakufu’sgovernment was
OguriTadamasa,who,havingusedthe
knowledgegainedin Philadel-
phiatoimproveJapan’scoinagesystem,waspromotedtotheposition offoreignaffairscommissioner. Profoundlyloyaltotheshogun,hehad
beendissatisfied whenChoshuwaschastisedsolightlyafterhaving occasioned somuchdistress,andhehadbeenoutragedwhenthehan refusedtoaccepteventhemildpunishment imposeduponitbySaigo.
Moreover,it wasnolongera secretthatthenewBritishMinister,Sir
HarryParkes,hadbeencultivatingthefriendshipof Satsumaand Choshu,whowerereceivingcontrabandmilitaryequipmentofadvanceddesignfromEnglishmerchants.If neglected,thissmuggling couldmakethetwohaninvincible. Oguri,whowasalsocommissioner of thearmyandnavy,decided
thatnotimeshouldbelostindealingChoshua blowfromwhichit
wouldneverrecover.The FrenchMinisterconcurred.Havingim-
ptovedrelationswiththeshogunate,Francehadpromised financial
assistanceandevenmilitarysupportagainsttherebellioushanif they werewanted.WithFrenchhelpthe armywasbeingmodernized, a
strongfleetwasbeingbuilt,andanavaldockyard andfoundry hadbeen established atYokosuka.Tobringotherrecalcitrant daimyobackinto line, the shogunateattemptedto
reimposethe sankin-kotaisystem;
andasanassertion ofthebakufu’sauthority,theshogunhimselfwent toOsakaattheheadofalargearmyandestablished hisheadquarters
there. | In anticipationof his departuretherewasa flurryof businessat
Mitsui’sEchigoya,followedbya deadcalmasthebakufu’sactivity
shiftedto theOsakaregion.Westerndiplomatswerepressingrelentlesslyforboththeopeningof theportat Hyogo(nowcalledKobe) andtherightofresidence innearbyOsaka.Infact,theyhadofferedto canceltheindemnitydemandedfromChoshuifthoseconcessionswere
made.Butthebakufu, fearingreprisals fromhanopposed totheopen-
ing,strainedeveryresourceandpaidthefirstinstallment of 500,000 dollarsata timewhenpreparationsforthepunitiveexpeditionagainst Choshuweredepletingthegovernment’srevenue.
Earlyin1864theMitsuis hadbeensqueezed formorethanamillion
ryo.Laterthatspringtheyhadtohandovermorethan40,000pounds of silver,worth150,000ryo.Fromtheendof 1863to themiddleof 1866theHousewasforcedto “lend”thebakufuat least3.5million ryo.Reelingfromthesesuccessive raids,Omotokatacalledforanemergencyaccounting,whichrevealedanappallingsituation.AtYokohama
THE MANFROMNOWHERE
~ 69
Echigoya’s public-funds accountshowedshortagesof110,000ryoand of10,000dollarsinforeignsilver.Butforcedloanstothebakufu hadso depletedthecentralreservesthateventhisrelatively modestsumcould
notbeadvanced byOmotokata,andtheothershopscouldofferlittle assistance. As a last recourse,HachiroemonKofukuinstructedthe Osaka
gofukutentoborrowasmuchaspossible fromformerclerkswhohad established businesses oftheirown.Itwasthecommonpracticethen, asit stillis,to rewardanemployeeforlongandfaithfulservicewith theprivilegeandeventhemeansof settinghimselfupindependently inbusiness.Naturallysuchassistanceincurreda lastingobligationof
gratitudetotheoriginalhouse.Byanappealtoconscience, Omotokata gleaned50,000ryo,tobeheldasanemergencyfundto staveoffthe
bakufumomentarilyincaseit shoulddemandimmediatesettlementof accounts.Buttheonce-mightyHouseofMitsuiwascloseto ruin,for thecollapseoftheEdoEchigoyawouldundoubtedlybringdownallof
theaffiliated shopsandOmotokata aswell. SuchwasMitsui’s situationwheninmid-August theshogun’s long-
awaitedpunitiveexpedition reachedChoshuandlauncheditsoffensive. Theenormousexpenseofthecampaignwaslaiduponthebacksofthe merchants,of course,and the commissionerof finance—theversatile
Oguriwearingyetanotherof his officialhats—informed the Osaka exchangeshopthatthe Mitsuiswereexpectedto providea loanof 500,000ryo.Thiswastentimestheamountheldin theiremergency reserve,andwouldmeantheirliquidation unlesssomewaycouldbe
foundtoevadeit.Onepossibility wastomakea directappealtothe bakufuforaremissionofthelevy.Butthiswouldhaverequired Echigoyato discloseitsirregularitiesat Yokohama, a coursethatmight havebeenworsethanbankruptcy.
Omotokatahada numberof verysoundexcusesfor a delayand usedthemsuccessfully.Whilethematterwasstillunderdeliberation, Ogurihitupona planformitigatingthefinancialpanicbroughtonby theChoshucampaign.Hissolutionwasto lendEdo’smerchantsthe revenuesfromthe customsofficeat Yokohama,acceptingtheirinventoriesas collateral.TheMitsuis(whohadmadesucha messof governmentbusinessintheforeignsettlement)wereorderedtohandle thedisbursements.ThisassignmentterrifiedOmotokata.Alreadyclose
toinsolvency fromtoomuchgovernment business, theHousewanted nofurtherentanglement withtheunpredictable bakufu. Itistruethattheyhadprosperedfromtheirgovernmentcommissions ingoodtimes,butnow,in badtimes,thehazardsweretoogreat.Of
thejunin-gumi, thetenfiscalagentsappointed inthe1690s,allbuta
7
*®MITstt
of Bankerswhosurvivedthebadtimes—and fewhadgonebankrupt. those Mitsui,Ono, Shimada,and Konoikewerethe
most conspicu-
ous—hadbecomesocautiousaboutloansandcreditsthatlessermer of chantswerestarvedforoperatingfunds.Thereforethefulfillment was imperativeit Oguri’splanto advanceloansagainstmerchandise
Furthermore, wastobeprevented. ofEdo’seconomy thetotalcollapse
theMitsuis’peculiarsituationmadeitsuicidalforthemto antagonize Oguriby refusingto cooperate. the Onlya miraclecouldextricatethemfromthetighteningjawsof
wasobantoSaitoJunzoof trapin whichtheywerecaught,andit Echigoyawhoachievedit whenheenlistedtheservicesof“Kinorisan.”Doingso tookno greatimagination,sinceKinokuniyaRihachi wasaregularclientoftheEdoexchangeshopandpersonallyacquainted
with its director,MitsuiJircoemonTakaakira,whomhe
sometimesac-
companiedonjauntsto thecountrysideorto housepartiesattheestates
ofminordaimyo. It wasnotinkeepingwithMitsui’sdignitytoaskfavorsofanupstartlikeRihachi.Buthisinfluence withthecommissioner offinance
meantmuchmorethandignity,soSaitoswallowedhisprideandpaida
visit to Rihachi.The detailsof their conversationare unrecorded,but
advice,aswellashisinterthereis littledoubtthathesoughtRihachi’s
to onestory,Rihachiwasdeeply ventionwithOguri.According andbySaito’strustinhim.Itis bytheplightofhiscolleagues touched
probable,however,thattheambitiousbankersetaveryhighpriceupon his services,for what he gotfrom themwas far beyondanyofferthe Mitsuishadeverdreamedof making.
soitwas tomostofthefamily, hadbeenastranger UntilthenRihachi decidedinEdothathebetakentoKyotobytwohigh-ranking bantoto Inthe presenthisplan,oratleastthepartofitthatcouldbediscussed. heads,Rihachi Kofukuandfiveotherfamily presenceofHachiroemon scheme.In orderto premodestlyexplainedhis precedent-shattering
theexchangebusiness, venta repetitionofpasterrors,hemaintained, andprivatelendingaswell,shouldbeseparatedfromtheEchigoya gofukuten.Furthermore,all governmentcommissions shouldbe
ot officialbusinessestablishment, handledby a separategoyodokoro, placeddirectlyunderthesupervision of Omotokata.In otherwords, the monolithichousewasto
be divided,so that if a failureoccurredin
onelineofbusiness,asseemedmorethanpossible,theotherbranches
neednotbedraggeddownwithit. Rihachimadeafavorable impression, andthemeritofhisideawas proposedbySaitothroughhis Butthecondition recognized. generally envoys—that Rihachibeappointedmanagerof thegoyodokoro— seemedimpossible to accept.AJapanesebusinesshouserarelyem-
THE MANFROMNOWHERE-
71
ployed“outsiders” forsuchimportant jobs,whichwereentrusted only tomenwhohadentered thefirminyouthandworked theirwayupthe ladderunderthescrutinyoftheirelders.Thistraditionis sodeeply
ingrainedthatit persiststoday. Yetnoneof the Mitsuiswantedto handlethe riskygovernment businessat sucha time,andwhobut Rihachiwouldbe bothable enoughandacceptableto the commissioneroffinance?Then,too,they
musthavethought,thisnewmanmightsomehow workuponOguti’s sympathiesto reducetheamountsoftheloanshehadlevied. ThedecisionrestedwithHachiroemon, whohadbeenmeditating upontheHouse’svicissitudesandprobablyhadrefreshedhismemory concerningitsconstitution.Accordingto onearticleofthatrespected
document,theessentialroleofamanagerwastoguardthebusiness of
the House,giveappropriate adviceif the mastererred,andcorrect blundersalreadymade.Buthisobantohadbecomecareless,givenunsoundadvice,andcompoundedtheirmasters’errors.Perhapsthisbold
Rihachi,whohadimproved hisfortunewhileallabouthimotherswere losingtheirs,wouldbeabletosetmatters aright.
Hachiroemonrealized,too,thathehadbeenremissinobserving the articlewhichinstructedthemasterstokeepaneyeupontalentedyounget men,“withoutanyoversights,”andto trainthemostpromising of themasmanagers.BecauseofhiscarelessnesstheHousehadnoobanto ofsufficientmettletosaveitnowintimeoftrial.CouldRihachiprevent theultimatedisaster?It wastheobviousintentionofthefounderthat youngermenoftalentbedrawnfromtheregularstaff,buttheemploymentof an outsider,evenonein middleage,wasnotdefinitelypro-
hibited.Afterconsidering theunknownperilsthatstilllayahead,
HachiroemondecidedthatRihachiwasindispensableand appointed
him,attheageofforty-five,asmanageroftheproposedgoyodokoro. TheminutesoftheOmotokata meetingat whichthisdecisionwas madeareprosaicenough.DatedNovember2, 1866,theentrystates
thattwobantooftheEdoexchange house“accompanied amannamed Minogawa Rihachi,whowasappointed inchargeofthismatter,”after
havingbeendulyevaluated.Buta letterdispatchedto Edobyspecial messengerindicatesthattheconferencetoucheduponsomepointstoo delicatetobeputintowriting.Announcing thedepartureofRihachi andhis companionsfromKyoto,the writerconfided:“It willtake twelvedaysontheTokaido.If theyarrive[inEdo]safely,theywilltell youthe secretdetailsof thematterswehavediscussed, sopleasebe alert.” Throughthischainofcircumstances KinokuniyaMinogawaRihachi, bornKimura,andalsoknownasMinogawa Kinori,wonhisunprece-
dentedappointment, aswellasapermanent name.Forhisexalted posi-
72 * MITSUI tionamongmerchantsandhisassociationwiththemenin power,the “manfromnowhere”neededa newnamethat wouldconcealhis plebeianpast.Perhapsasanencouragement toloyalty,hewaspermitted to takewi,thefirstcharacterofMitsui.To
thatheaddedwofromMino-
gawa(thenameof hisadoptivefather),andmurafromKimura(the
nameofhisrealfather). AndhechangedhisgivennametoRizaemon, whichhefeltwasmoredignified thanRihachi.Soequipped,andwith the prayerfulbackingof his newemployers, MinomuraRizaemon proceededto shoreupthedecrepitHouseofMitsuiagainsttherising
typhoonofthebakumatsu.
8 - Picking the Winner
OFTEN, AFTER Awar,thosewhofailedto supportthewinningside openlyclaimtohavedonesosecretly andsparenopainstoprovethat theyhadpreferred thevictorsevenbeforethewarbegan.Inthewakeof theMeijirevolution Japan’sleadingmerchants andtheirclaques made a casethat,althoughtheirhouseshadbeenformallyalliedwiththe shogunate andfavoredbyit,theirtruesympathies ofcoursehadalways beenwiththeimperialcourt. TheMitsuis’protestationsofpriorloyaltyto theemperorwereperhapsthemostconvincing.SincethedaysofHachirobeitheyhadbeen
Kyotopeopleat heart,registeringthebirthsof theirchildrenand
buryingtheirdeadthere.Theycontributedregularlyandin
seemly
amountsto thefestivalsforwhichthecapitalwasfamous.Theyfinancedtheimperialcourt’smodestprojects forconstructionandimprovementwheneverthebakufu’sdolewasinadequate; andwhenthe greatImperialPalaceburnedin1855theysupplied alargepartofthe fundsforrebuilding it.Theyalsomademuchofthefactthattheyhad beenpatronsofMotooriNorinaga,greatestofthenationalscholars. “Motooriandhisfollowersbreathedintolargenumbersof their countrymenthe spiritof devotionto the ImperialFamilyandthe exaltationoftheJapanesegenius,’!asE.H. Normanwrote,andare givenmuchofthecreditfortheeventualoverthrowoftheshogunate andtheabolitionoffeudalism. | Of moreimmediatesignificancewerethe cashcontributionsthe Mitsuisandotherchoninmadetotheemperor’scause.Mosthistorians agreethatthosewerevoluntary,butanotedJapaneseeconomicscholar,
HonjoEijiro,whileadmitting thatthewarsoftherestoration were thechonin,insistedthatthey foughtandwonwithfundssuppliedby wereobtained bycoercion.? Thereisevidence tosupportbothopinions, butcommonsenseleadsto theconclusionthatthechonin(liketheir
counterpartsin Europe, the Fuggers and Rothschilds,and like the
RockefellersandMorgansin the UnitedStates)madea practiceof establishingthemselvesin thefavorof morethanone contenderfor theirsentiPower.TherecordshowsclearlythattheMitsuis,whatever
Fi
74 « MITSUI
mentsmayhavebeen,kepttheirmainstakeuponthebakufu’s number untiltheveryendof the Tokugawaregime,althoughtheywere hedgingwithsubstantial sidebetslaidupontheopposition.
UnfortunatelyforthefactsofJapanese history,theprudenceofthe peopleinvolvedandthe highincidenceof naturaldisastersin Japan haveremovedallbuta fewtracesoftheMitsuis’collaborationin the
intriguesattendingthecollapseofthebakufu.Recordswerekept;and someofthemmusthavebeendangerously revealing, becauseanumber
ofthoserelatingtothegestationandbirthofJapan’scapitalisteconomy weresecretlyentrustedbytheMitsuisto MinomuraRizaemon.They remainedunderseal,presumablyunread,in the Minomurafamily’s storehousein Tokyountil1923,whenit wasdestroyedbytheKanto earthquake. It isprobablethatnomanoutsidethegovernmentknewmoreabout the clandestinetransactionsduringthebakumatsu andtheMeijiup-
heavalthandidMinomura. Asthebrainbehind Japan’smostinfluential
privateenterpriseandthecommanderofitsresources,heextendedhis investigationsintothehighestcirclesofboththecourtandtheshogunate and was also privy to the machinationsof those who, in truth,
managedtousurpthepowerofboth.Undoubtedly thedocumentsin
hispossessionwouldhavehelpedto interpretthereasonsforsomeof thealmostincredibleeventsthattookplaceinthosecrucialyears.But becausetheexposureofcertainstateorprivatesecretswouldhaveunraveledthefabricofthecarefullywovenMeijimythologyandincurred thewrathofthepersonages whosepowerandwealthweresupported byit, theevidencehadto besuppressed. In partialcompensationforthatloss,theMitsuis’passionforcompilingbusinessinformation, and theirorderlinessandexactitudein recordingit, havelefta voluminouscollectionof ledgers,letters,instructions,agreements,andchroniclesthatmiraculouslyhaveescaped
bothnaturalandman-made disasters.Fromthesesources it isknown
thattheMitsuishadestablishedbusinessrelationsoflongstandingwith theantishogunateSatsumaandChoshuhanandwereacquaintedwitha numberoftheiragentsor stewards.In 1866,forexample,twoprominent Satsumaloyalists—Saigo Takamoriand KomatsuTakewaki— calledattheMitsui’smainshopinKyoto.Asa pretexttheyaskedtoexamineararepieceofChinesecalligraphyknowntobeinHachiroemon’s possession.Saburosuke’schiefclerk,recallingthe
incident,wrotethat
the twosamuraiwereextremelypoliteto Hachiroemon,asif talking withtheirmaster.ThereafterrelationsbetweenMitsuiandtheSatsuma loyalistsdeepened.Othernamesappearingin the Mitsui’svisitors’ booksofthoseyears,withoutcommentasto thenatureoftheirbusiness,werethoseofGotoShojiro,aretaineroftheKochihanandlatera
PICKING THE WINNER-:
75
cabinetminister;MutsuMunemitsu, a samuraioftheKiihanwhowas
thatredoubtablepair, as foreignminister; to servewithdistinction Inoue Kaoru and Ito Hirobumiof Choshu;and court noble Prince
IwakuraTomomi.Allthesemenperformed indispensableservicesin overthrowingthebakufu,andtheirvisitstotheMitsuisbecamemore
frequentasthecrisisapproached. ofloyalistplottheringleader wasIwakura, Ofgreatestimportance tersin Kyoto.Havingservedtheemperorasapage,hehadrisentoinarrangingthemarriageof fluenceincourtcircles.Then,forhisrolein theemperotr’ssisterto theshogun,hehadincurredthewrathofthe radicalsat court. Accusedof beinga bakufusycophant,he hadbeen
forfiveyears.Likemostofthekuge,hehada orderedintoseclusion intoa it, heturnedhisresidence Tosupplement verysmallincome. notsubwere thekuge that ofthefact den,takingadvantage gambling broughthimintocontactwith jecttosearchbythebakufu.Thissideline ronin,whomayhave wereloyalist manyofwhom gamblers, wandering aneagerconhebecame anyevent, At convertedhimtoradicalism. and espionage toconduct hewasable clientele a spirator,andwithsuch possiblyguerrilla-typeoperationsalloverJapan.
extendinginto Thebanishedprincestillhadlinesofcommunication the imperialcourt—indeed, into the emperor’s bedchamber—for workingcloselywithhimwasthekugeNakayamaTadayasu,whose his majesty’sfavoriteconcubineand the mother daughterYoshikowas ofhissonMutsuhito.Iwakurawaslinkedmoststronglywiththehanof Choshu,but he also maintainedclose contactwith Satsumathrough Okubo Toshimichi,who, with his boyhoodfriend SaigoTakamori,
han’saffairs.Itwasrecognized wasrapidlygainingcontroloverthat
only thatthosetwohanhadenoughpowertooverthrowthebakufuif
Choshu’sradicalshatedtheir theywouldworktogether.Unfortunately, Iwakura,helpedby irreconcilable. rivals,andthefeudseemed Satsuma bytheBritishdiplomats roninfriendlytobothsides(andindependently
andmerchants),workedtirelesslytoeffecta reconciliation.In 1866the two contendinghan reached an agreement—theso-calledSat-Cho alliance—thatmeantdoomfortheTokugawas. This alliancewas concludedby Okubo, Saigo,Komatsu,and Kido Koin. These men, with their Satsuma-Choshucomradesand a few
othersfromthe han of Aki, Tosa,and Hizen,werethe oneswho
theshogunate,and organizedandexecutedthecoupthatoverthrew
whomonopolizedthetoppositions inthenewgovernmentfor several
ofthefactmaybe,nearly thesignificance Whatever decadesafterward. allofthemareknowntohavebeeninconsultationwiththeMitsuisor theMeijirevolution,which theirbantoduringthethreeyearspreceding is misleadinglycalleda “restoration.”
76 + MITSUI
It wasthepolicyoftheMitsuis nottoskimpwhenthestakeswere
high.Havingappraisedthesepatriotsandtheirchancesofsuccess,the
Housetreatedthemgenerously. Onechronicler, writinginthe1930s, stated:“When welookatswordplay onthestageandscreen, weoften forgetwherethemoneycamefrom.Butevenloyalists oftheMeiji Restoration couldnotlivewithouteating,soexpenses fortheirlivelihoodsalonemusthavebeengreat.Besides, expenses fortheirpunishing thebakufuandpayinggeisha. . . wereenormous.OfcourseSatsuma
andChoshuhadfunds,butwealthymerchants, includingtheMitsuis werebehindthem.” Minomura’s relationships withthosedissidentsamuraiandnobles beforehejoinedMitsuiarenotclear,butitissignificant thattheirconnectionwiththe housebecameconspicuousin the yearhe wasap-
pointedobanto.One
of his descendantssaidthat Minomurawasquite
closeto thosestatesmen-to-beandthatwhentheyvisitedMitsuihe
wastheonewithwhomtheyusually conferred. Topreservesecrecy, Minomura wouldtakehisvisitors forawalkinthegarden,wherethey couldconverse withoutfearofeavesdroppers, forspieslurkedeverywhereandmostof themattersbeingdiscussed wouldhavebeenextremelycompromising.
Minomura’s connections withtheloyalistsamuraiandnobleskept theMitsuiswellinformed abouttheiractivities andplans.Atthesame timeMinomura himselfwasavaluable soutceofinformation aboutthe
bakufu,inasmuchas hispositionas chiefof Mitsui’snewofficefor handlingofficialfundsbroughthimintofrequentcontactwithLord Oguriin Edo.
Anothersourceofusefulintelligence wasMutsuMunemitsu, a tetainerofLordKii,whowasamember oftheTokugawafamily.While
completinghisstudiesinKyoto,Mutsuhadbeenlivingasa shosei—a
combinationhouseboyandprotégé—inthe householdof Mitsui SaburosukeTakaaki,heir of HachiroemonKofuku.Mutsualsohadan
entreeatnearbyNijoCastle,theshogun’sheadquarters inKyoto. Commanding ashedidtheseandotherimportant sourcesofintelli-
gence,Minomuramayhavebeenaswellinformedaboutthedeveloping situationasweretheconspiratorsthemselves;andhesurelyknewmore thanthebakufudid,despiteitselaborate espionagenetwork.Thereis nothinginallthistoprovethatMitsui-gumi wasanactivepartytothe loyalistconspiracy,but thisis preciselythekindof informationthat
wouldhavebeenmostcarefully concealed bytheMitsuisandtheir
friends,for obviousreasons.Furthermore,the rewardsthat Mitsui ultimatelyreceivedfromthesuccessfulplotterswerefaroutofpropor-
tiontotheirrecordedcontributions. Thesefactsandprobabilities lead
PICKING THE WINNER + 77
tospeculation thattheMitsuismayhavebeenmoredeeply involvedin therevolutionthaniscommonlysupposed.
TheMitsuis’motivescanbeguessedfromanappraisalofthesituationin whichtheywerecaught.It willbe recalledthatMinomura’s friendOguri,ministerofthearmedforces,hadriskedeverythingupon sendingasecondpunitiveexpedition againstChoshu.Butthecampaign
wentbadlyfromthestartbecause themenofChoshuhadbeenarmed withmodernweaponsandshipsbytheBritishandbecause Satsuma
(presumablythe mainstayof the bakufu)wasin secretalliancewith Choshu.In 1866the bakufu’sforces,whichhad
beensent to chastise
Choshu,werebeingdefeatedignominiouslyonallfronts.Thedeathof
ShogunTokugawa IemochiinSeptember gavethebakufu apretextfor suspending hostilitieswithoutadmitting defeat.Buttheshogunate’s government wasleftinperilouscondition,havingtoloadthecostsof demobilizingthepunitiveexpeditionuponanalreadyprostrateeconomy.(It wassoonafterIemochi’sdeaththat LordOguriimposed
uponMitsuitheforcedloanof500,000 ryo,anddesignated theHouse to administerthereliefloansin Edo.)
Meanwhile, a shortageoffoodandconsequentpriceincreases attributedtospeculation provokedriotsinEdo.Ledbypriests,angry
mobsattackedmoney-changersandmerchantsof riceand saké.In November,immediatelyafterMinomuraRizaemonreturnedto Edo
fromKyotowithhisnewnameandposition, a terribleconflagration razedthegreater partofYokohama, including thecustomshousefrom whichhewasto drawfundsforthosereliefloansto distressedmerchants.LessthanthreeweekslateranotherfireguttedtheNihombashi districtin Edo,destroyingsomanystructuresthat,
someonecalculated,
iftheyhadbeenplacedsidebysidetheywouldhaveextended more
thanthirtymiles. The lossesto Mitsuimusthavebeensevere.But the confusion resultingfromthoseevents,compoundedbya reorganizationin the
bakufuaccompanying theaccession ofanewshogun,gavetheMitsuis agoodexcuse forfurtherdelay inpayingthemoneydemanded byLord Oguri.Then,earlyin1867, whilethepopulace wasobserving theNew Yearholidays, thedeathofEmperorKomeiagainplunged thenation intoofficial mourning,duringwhichtimebusiness wassuspended. ThecauseofKomei’sdeathisstillamootpointamonghistorians.A
mostknowledgeableBritishdiplomat,SirErnestSatow,recalledin
his
memoirs, published in1921:“Rumoutattributedthedeceasetosmall-
pox,butseveralyearslaterI wasassuredbyaJapanesewellacquainted withwhatwentonbehindthescenesthathehadbeenpoisoned.He wasby convictionutterlyopposedto anyconcessionsto foreigners,
78 «©MITSUI
andhadtherefore beenremoved outofthewaybythosewhoforesaw thatthecomingdownfalloftheBaku-fuwouldforcethecourtinto
directrelationswithforeignpowers.”4 Anotherpossiblemotivefor assassinationlayin thefactthatEmperorKomeiwasfavorablydisposedtowardthe newshogun,TokugawaHitotsubashi Keiki,and thereforewouldnot approvethe extremeantibakufupolicyof the loyalists. Japanesehistorianstodaygenerallybelievethat the “smallpox” responsiblefortheemperor’suntimelydeathattheageofthirty-seven wasactuallya poisonadministeredat thebehestof PrinceIwakura.*
Theevidence tosupportthisbeliefisscanty,butthemotivesthatmake it probablearecompelling: forexample, thereplacement ofKomeiby
the pliablefourteen-year-oldPrinceMutsuhito,whocouldbe dominatedbyradicalsopposedto thebakufu,enabledtheSat-Choalliesto obtainthe “imperialedicts”theyneededfor legitimizingtheirsub-
sequentcoupd’état. Inanyevent,although noonewouldaccuse theMitsuisofhaving takenapartintheregicide, thedeathofEmperorKomeimarked the
turningpointin theirdecliningfortunes. It mightappearfromallthisthattheMitsuiswerecommitted tothe
imperialcause.Yetthefactremainsthatevenwhiletheywereintensifyingtheircollusion withtheloyalists theywerealsokeeping in the goodgracesofthebakufu.Whenthefifty-day periodofmourning for thedeademperorwasover,Minomura paida visittohisbenefactor Oguriandpresenteda letterof proxyfromHachiroemon Kofuku. Thereis no recordof hisarguments forthebakufu’sleniencytoward hisemployersin thematterofthatenforcedloanof500,000ryo,butas
oneofMitsui’s clerksnotedcryptically, “nota smallamount ofmoney
wasspentontheproject.”Regardlessofpecuniaryinducements,however,Oguristoodto gainmorefroma viableandgratefulHouseof Mitsuithan froman embitteredbankruptone,especially sincehe neededitshelpina newfinancialmaneuver.Sohegraciouslyreduced theamountofthelevyfromhalfa millionryoto a mere180,000ryo, payableineasyinstallments.HealsoledMinomurato understandthat
nofurtherloanswouldbedemanded forthetimebeing.Noissuewas
made,apparently,ofthemissingcustoms-houserevenuesattheYokohamaofficeofEchigoya,andthenameofMitsuiremainedimmaculate.
Correspondence pursuantto thistransactionindicatesthatit was
*TheJapanBiographical Encyclopedia, 1964-65 (pp.2011-12) statesthatPrince
Iwakura“‘issaidto haveengineeredthe murderby poisoningof Emperor Komei,whoseantiforeignstandwasthe onlygreatobstacleto theultimate openingofthecountryto foreignintercourse.”
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unorthodox,to saytheleast.A letter,addressed to “theHonorable Commissioner” (presumably intendedfor Oguri’sunderlings)and
endorsedbyMinomuraRizaemon,warned:“Weherebyacknowledge thesubmissionofthewrittenauthorization,whichwasdulyforwarded to [o]motokata-sama.
“However,weweresecretlyorderedthatif theabovementioned matterofapardon shouldleakouttothegeneral public,thoseinvolved
withtheuseof thesealwillbeaffected,sothateachoneof youshould keepit in mindneverto let it be knownoutside;it shouldonlybe knownamongus.”5
AfterthistriumphMinomuta enjoyedthefullconfidenceofthe Mitsuis,andbecausehewasusuallyathandwhenimportant matters werediscussed peoplecalledhim“Hachiroemon’s shadow.”Byhis
masterfulorganizationandmanagement,thegoyodokoro—whichhe eventuallydevelopedintoMitsuiBank—soon showedenoughprofitto salvageotherbranchesofthebusiness.Theworstofthestormhadbeen
weathered, butthetrickiestsailinglayahead. Thenewshogun’s progressive reforms,especially hismodernization ofthebakufu’smilitaryforces,dismayed therebels.PrinceIwakura
wrote:“TheactionsofthepresentShogunKeikiareresolute,courageousandofgreataspiration; heisa strongenemynottobedespised.”
AndKidoKoinwarned: “Iftheopportunitytorestorecourtgovernmentisnowlost,andtheleadistakenbythebakufu, thenitwilltruly
beasif onewereseeingtherebirthofIeyasu.”’TheBritish,whohad donesomuchto strengthenKeiki’senemies,nowreconsidered their strategy.Iftheshogunprovedableto meettheirrequests,therewould
benopointinfomenting rebellion againsthim.Alsotheyfeared losing groundtotheFrench, whowereendeavoring tomakeKeiki’s regimea SUCCESS. MinomuraRizaemon,too,wasfullyawareofthesepossibilities. And liketheBritishminister,hehadnotbecomeso deeplyinvolvedwith
theloyaliststhatretreatwasimpossible. Furthermore,theMitsuiswere moreheavilyobligatedthaneverto thebakufuandcarefully avoided anyshowofingratitude.Rizaemon,objectivelystudyinghisintelligence reports,sawthattheshogunatewasbynomeansto
becountedout,and
hewaspreparedto greeta victorybyeitherside.
LordOgurididnothesitateto takeadvantageoftheMitsuis’indebtedness tohim.Ingreatneedoffunds,heendedthecenturies-old
banonpapermoneyandorderedtheissueofnotesconvertibletogold, forlocalcirculation.Butwithpublicconfidenceinthebakufuata low ebb,heneededthegoodnameof Mitsuito ensureacceptanceof the goldnotes.Thusredemption of the bakufu’sfirstpapermoneywas
guaranteed byMitsui-gumi, whichineffectservedasanationalbank
80 - MITSUI fortheTokugawaregimewhileat the sametimefinancingarrangementsforits overthrow.It wasthroughsuchopportunism thatthe Houseearnedthenickname“double-dealingMitsui,”appliedfordec-
adesafterward whenevera Mitsui-controlled companywascaughtin equivocal businessdealings.
Despitethefavorableimpressionhehadmadeontheforeigners, the newshogunwasunableto establishhisinfluenceoverthe daimyo, withoutwhosetroopshecouldnothopetoremaininpower.Andafter
theaccession ofPrinceMutsuhito totheimperialthrone,withthestyle andtitleofEmperorMeiji,thecourtradicals, undertheguidanceof Iwakura,acceleratedtheirmachinationsto seizecontrolofthenation. OnlythendidtheMitsuisshowanyovertsignofdissidence.Inpreparingfor the openingof Hyogoport, LordOguriorganizedthe HyogoShosha,Japan’sfirstjoint-stockcompanyaftertheEuropean pattern.Its functionwasto conductforeigntradeandto issuemore
papermoneytofinancetheport’soperations. Leadingmerchants were invitedtoparticipate, andthemostprominent,MitsuiHachiroemon, wasappointedpresidentof thecompany.Mitsuigoyodokorohadno alternativebut to handlethe currencyissue,but uponMinomura’s adviceHachiroemondeclinedthehonorofheadingthetradingfirmor
ofinvestinginit.Asaresult,subscriptions byothermerchants wereso paltrythatthecompany wasstillborn.Mitsui’srefusaltotakethelead wasinperfectaccordwiththepositionofPrinceIwakuraandhisSatChocohorts,whoprivatelyfavoredopeningOsakaand Hyogoto foreigntradebutfoughttopreventthatfromhappening aslongasthe bakufuremainedin power.
SincethefoundingoftheirHouseithadbeenthestanding policyof theMitsuistoshowspecial respecttothelordsofKii,whosepatronage atonetimehadbeenofgreatvalue.Forcenturiestheyhadobserved the customof greetingceremoniouslythe incumbentdaimyoof Kii wheneverhevisitedKyoto.ButLordKiiwasa Tokugawa,andasthe
Mitsuisveeredtowardanopenly neutralposition theyabandoned the ancientformality. WhenHachiroemon Kofukuwasaccusedof disrespectfordoingso,hepleadedill-health andbeggedLordKii’sforgiveness,butwiththatunmistakable neglectofdutythealienation of theHouseofMitsuifromtheTokugawas wasdeclared,mostsubtly.
Intheautumnof1867therichlyvariegated foliageinthegardensof NijoCastlebroughtnojoytotheyoungshogun.Heknewthatdespite hisearnesteffortshehadfailed,anditcameasnosurprisetohimwhen, lateinOctober,hewaspresentedwithathoughtfullywordedmemorial.
Composed bysomeofthemoremoderate imperialists oftheTosahan, itrecommended thatheresignhispositionforthesakeofpeace. “There
PICKING THE WINNER - 81
isendlessmeritinaman’sknowingwhentohavedone,”Carlyle had written,andKeikishowed thismerittoacreditable degree.InNovemberheannounced hisdecisionto yieldthereinsofgovernment to his sovereign.Assumingresponsibilityfor the unhappysituationwhich haddevelopedsincetheforeigners hadenteredthecountry,he said,
“,. . ifauthorityisrestoredtotheEmperor,andmattersofhighpolicy aredecided byHisMajesty afternational deliberations, thenbyunityof thoughtandeffortthecountry canholditsownwithallthenations of
theworld.”’8 | Thechangewasnottobemadeinsuchagentlemanly way,however.
Themenaboutto takecharge,althoughmostofthemwerestillin theiryouth,wereseasonedsoldiersbearingthescarsofbattlesand skirmishesinwhichtheyhadlostmanyoftheircomrades. Theywere notcontentwitha resignationthatleftthebakufuinchargeofthenation’sadministration,eventemporarily,andtheTokugawa familyin possessionofvastdomainsfromthewealthofwhichtheycouldrebuild
theirpower.TheSat-Cho loyalists weredetermined tosmashtheTokugawa’sbakufusystemfromtopto bottom,andhadmadeelaborate planstodojustthat.Theircampaign toseizecontrol wasalready under way,andgainingirresistiblemomentum. In Julyof 1867the Sat-Choleadershadmetat PrinceIwakura’s
residence, signeda pacttocarryoutacoupd’état,andbeguntotrain theirarmedforcesintensively forthispurpose.Earlyin November, whentheylearned ofKeiki’simpending resignation, theysentOkubo posthastetoIwakurawithapetitionaskingtheemperorforauthorizationto overthrowthe bakufu.ThroughPrinceNakayama, the em-
peror’sgrandfather andtutor,Iwakurareceivedwrittenorderstothis effectandpassedthemsecretlytotheSatsumaandChoshuleaders.By thetimeKeikiannounced hisresignationasshogun,cracktroopsof
bothclanswereontheirwaytoKyoto,whereunitsof severalsympatheticdaimyowerestationedto “protect”thecourt. Thusalready therewasinexistence an“imperialarmy,”andserving it discreetly as quartermaster wastheHouseofMitsui—which wasstillofficial purveyot andbankertothedyingbakufu.
Sincethebakufustillheldthenation’spursestrings,aswellasits administrativeoffices,thecourtcoulddonothingwithitshypothetical power.As the firstanniversary of the lateEmperorKomei’sdeath
approached, PrinceIwakura requested fundsfromShogun Keiki,who
wasstillinresidenceatNijoCastleinKyoto,ostensiblyforthepurpose ofconductingappropriatememorialservices.Butallhecouldgetfrom theshogun’streasurer,LordOguri,wasapittanceofonethousandryo,
sohehituponanotherstratagem.OnDecember23,astheChoshu forceswereapproaching Kyoto,heorganizeda “donation-accepting
82 - MITSUI
office,”orkinkoku suitosho. Itsrealpurposebecameapparentthreedays
later,whenanimperialmessengercametotheimposingnewresidence of MitsuiSaburosuke,head
of the exchangehousein
Kyoto, with a
noticethatread:“‘Astheshogunate returnedthereinsofgovernmentto theemperor... theimperialcourtistakingovernationaladministration.Sincetheshogunatehasyettohandoverthestatetreasury,however,theimperialcourtiswithoutsavings,soa procurementofficeis beingsetup.... Thereiseveryindicationthatfightingmaybreakout atanytimebetweentheimperialandshogunateforces,anda shortage
ofmoneyforgeneralexpensesandmilitaryfundsisfeared.Yourorganization haslongbeenprovidingexchangeservicefortheimperial court.Youarerequested totakechargeoftheprocurement office.You mustmakeeveryeffortin theimperialcause.’” Thisbluntdemand,unsignedbutpresumablysentbyIwakura’sorder,madeit necessaryatlastfortheHouseofMitsuitodeclarefulland
openallegiance toonesideortheother,andafamily conference was convenedimmediately. SinceMinomura alreadyhadacquaintedhis
employerswiththesituationanddeclaredhisintentionto partfrom LordOgurionceandforall,therewaslittleneedfordiscussion. The timefordissimulationwasover,andit wasagreedthatMitsuiwould
backtheimperialsideexclusively. Saburosuke wasreadywhenarepresentative ofthe“imperialtreasuty”(whichdidnotexist)called athismansionlatethatevening witha
summonsto appearat thepalace.Hewaswearinghisformalkimono embellishedwiththe“foureyes”oftheSasakicrest,andashestepped intothepalanquinprovidedforhimhecarriedaheavyparcelwrapped,
asisthecustom,ina heavysilkcloth.Escorted bylanternbearersand
swordsmencladinarmor,hewasbornetotheappointed placeandwas receivedalmostobsequiouslybycourtofficials.Theyofferedhim,as headoftheKyotoMitsui-gumi,thepositionofexchangeagentforthe imperialgovernment.Theyalsorequestedhimto takechargeofthe
organization forsoliciting donations forthecourt.Showing thehumilitypropertohisstatusasachonin,Saburosuke acceptedtheappointmentsgracefully.Thenhe unwrappedthe lacqueredboxhe had brought.It containedonethousandgoldryo—quiteprobablythefirst privategiftofferedto thenewimperialgovernment. Saburosuke’sassignedtaskwasto solicitfundsfromOno-gumiand
Shimada-gumi, whowerestillreluctant toprovokethebakufubyaidingitsenemies.Meanwhile the“donation-accepting office”hadbeen setupatonegateoftheImperialPalace,andotherwealthypeoplewere contributingto it. KumagayaKyuemon,a merchantfriendofPrince Iwakura,gaveonethousandryoandonehundredandfiftypairsof
PICKING THE WINNER = 83
futon,otpaddedsleepingquilts,forthesoldiers thenswarming intothe
city.AtempleinNarasentonethousandbalesofrice,andthepowerful BuddhisttempleNishiHongan-jiinKyotodonatedthreethousandryo. Thegeneralpublicalsohelped,supplyingtenthousandpairsofstraw sandals,severalthousandricebowls,and
quantitiesof foodstuffs,raw
cotton,andcharcoal. Thesevoluntary giftsamounted tonearlyforty thousandryoincash,inadditiontocontributions inkind;incontrast, OnoandShimada, merchants whoseprestige wasovershadowed only byMitsui’s,madea“poormouth”andproducedonlyonethousandryo betweenthem.Theirparsimonythenwastobecomea causeforintense regretlater.
Since1864theChoshu armyhadbeenbanished fromKyoto,and
obediently,it remainedencampedoutsidethecity.Butonthesecond dayof1868,bytheoldcalendar,thegovernmentoftheChoshuhanwas pardonedbyimperialdecree,andKidoKoinleditstroopstriumphant-
lyintoKyotoonthefollowingday.Meanwhile Iwakurasummoned severalfence-straddling daimyotoaconference atwhichherevealed the existenceoftheemperor’sordersto overthrowthebakufu,thereby gainingtheirsupport.According toprearranged plan,theloyalist units surroundedthepalaceasSaigoandKidodisplayedtheirauthorization torelievetheshogun’sforcesthenonguard.InsidethepalaceIwakura,
inthepresenceofthebewilderedboy-emperor, proclaimed the“ImperialRestoration,”togetherwiththe
decisionthat HitotsubashiKeiki,
thefifteenthandthelastoftheTokugawa shoguns,wasto relinquish
allhispositionsandtitlesandthattheTokugawafamily,exceptfor wasto surthosefewofitsmemberswhohadsidedwiththeloyalists, renderitsvastdomains totheimperialcoutt. Incredibly,thisdecreewasacceptedbytheshogun,whowithdrew
fromNijoCastlewithhisdisgruntledfollowersafewdayslaterand bytroopsof the headedforOsaka.NijoCastlewaspromptlyoccupied imperialgovernment,nowunderthecontrolofprincesIwakuraand
a fewhereditaryretainersoftherebelclans,anda SanjoSanetomi, dozen“countrysamurai”from Satsuma,Choshu,andneighboring
provinces. Thiswasveryconvenientforthenewlyappointedcourtbankers,the Mitsuis,whoestablishedtheirheadquartersat Saburosuke’smansion justacrossthe moatfromNijoCastle.The factthat theMitsuisand theirhiredmanager-general,Minomura,werepersonallyacquainted withmostifnotallofthe “honorablemeninpower”wasevenmore gratifying. in theirposition,however:witha Therewasoneseriousweakness
looming,thehonorablemenin power watof unknowndimensions
84 - MITSUI
neededenormoussumsofmoney,immediately. AndtheMitsuis,who hadbeentryingsohardforsolongtoberelieved ofallofficial business, nowfoundthemselves saddledwiththeobligationto refillthenew government’snearlyemptytreasury.
9 - ByAppointment to the Emperor ONTHEFIRST DAYOFYEAR ONEoftheMeijiera,*theMitsuihouseholds,havingsuspendedallbusinessactivitiesforthelongNewYear
holidays,gatheredattheirrespectivemansionsforquietcelebration, rest,andcommunion withthespiritsoftheirancestors. Butthecus-
tomarysilenceofKyotowasbrokenbythetreadofmarching feet,the poundingofhooves,andtherumblingofwheelsovercobblestones,as theemperor’ssoldiersrushedtodefendKyotofromapproachingene-
mies.Theshogun,yielding to theprotestationsofhisretainersand loyaldaimyo whoweredetermined tofightforthewealth andpowerto
whichtheywereaccustomed, hadmobilizedan armyat Osaka.His forces,whichoutnumberedtheemperor’stroopsbyfiveto one,were marchingonKyoto,anda longsiegewasexpected.
Theimperial armylacked almosteverything exceptzeal,butsuchwas thestrengthofcustomthatYuriKimimasa, Iwakura’s financial assistant
inchargeof“acceptingdonations,”hadlockedhisofficeandtakenhis customaryfive-dayNewYear’sfurlough.Inconsequence,thefeasting at MitsuiSaburosuke’shomewasinterruptedbythearrivalofa mes-
sengerfromthecourt,whopresented anurgentrequestformoney. TheMitsuimenwithdrewreluctantly to thecountinghouse,where,
lateintothenight, thejingleofcoinsandtheclickingofsorobancould be heard—perhapspunctuatedby an occasionalsighas Saburosuke watchedthefirm’s“cellarsilver”depletedonceagaintoprotectarisky investment.Beforedawnof the seconddaya squadof soldierscom-
mandedbyayoungartillery captainarrivedwithahandcartandhauled
thetreasure—abouttwothousandryo—toimperialarmyheadquarters. This,andpresumably similarcontributionsfromothermerchants,
enabledthe imperialtroops—aided by superiororganization and tactics—to routthebakufu’s armyinthebriefbutdecisive battlefought atTobaandFushimi, justsouthofKyoto.Victorygavethem a breathingspelltoconsolidate theirforcesandenough prestigetocommand * Accordingtothelunarcalendar,butlateinJanuaryof1868bytheWestern
styleofreckoning.
|
8D
86 - MITSUI
supportinwesternJapanwhilegatheringstrengthforconqueringEdo andthenorth.Butthewarwasjustbeginning, andtheneedformoney wascrucial.Torelyuponpublicgenerosityatthatjuncturewouldhave beenfatuous,andthe “donation-acceptingoffice”regressedto the
bakufu’sfavoriteexpedientofextractingforcedloans.Announcing thisdetestedpolicyastactfullyaspossibly,YuriKimimasaorderedthe
followingproclamation tobeposted:
“ConcerningtheRestoration,variouspreparationshavebeenmade butfinancialdifficultiesremain.In caseof necessity,thegovernment willconductaninvestigation,soeveryoneisrequestedto keepmoney
onhand.Therefore, youateadvisedtorefrainfromtransferring large
sumsofcash. January,1868,TheImperialDonation-Accepting Office”? Thiswasactuallythedeclarationofa moratoriumonfinancialtransactions,intendedtofreezethefundsofmerchants sotheycouldbecom-
mandeered bytheemperor’s government. It wasaimeddirectly atthe Mitsuis,whoweremostactiveinthemoney-orderbusiness.Forif
Mitsui-gumiwereto cashallnotespresentedforpaymentit wouldbe shortoffundsneededforthefinancialoperationsoftheimperialcoutt. TheMitsuishadtheunhappytaskoftryingto convinceothercynical merchantsthatthenewforcedloans,unlikethoseofthebakufu,would
bepaidbacksometime,somehow.Whetheror notanyonebelieved
them,theymanagedto collectmorethanfourhundredthousandryo, enoughto meetemergencyneeds.In appreciation,the accounting magistratetreatedMitsuiSaburosuketo a repastat whichmutualloyaltywaspledgedin saké.Gratefulat havingsurvivedyetanotherfi-
nancialordealandhavingsavedfaceonceagain,theMitsuis, together
withtheShimadasandtheOnos,donatedanadditional tenthousand
ryoonthefollowingday.
Butthemoratorium wasonlya stopgapmeasure.Immediatelyafter
the Battle of Toba and Fushimi,Prince Iwakura calleda business
meetingattendedby Okubo,YuriKimimasa,andotherministersto
establish arealtreasury. Mostofthem,unaccustomed tohandlingmon-
ey,wetethinkingin verysmallterms.ButYuri,whohadbeenentrustedwithmanagingthe newgovernment’sfinances,entertained gtanderideas.HereasonedthatsincetherewerethreemillionhouseholdsinJapanthenationshouldbeabletoraisethreemillionryowith-
outdifficulty. Thishypothesis beingagreedupon,theyworked outa planto extractthatsum—not fromthepeopleasa wholebutfrom wealthymerchants.Afterthinkingaboutthe criteriaof wealth,they decided:“Inforeigncountries,thosewhopossesstwosteamshipsand
fiftyboatsareconsidered merchants ofordinaryscale.’”
BYAPPOINTMENTTO THE EMPEROR-
8/7
Toreassurethechonin,theypromised:“IntheMeijiRestoration, thosehouseswhoremainloyalwillsurelyprosper.” Butsincedisloyaltywouldbeanationaldisgrace,thenamesoftheleadingmercantile houseswereto beplacedupontherollsofpossibledonors,justasa precaution.Threebookslistingtherichchoninof Kyoto,Omi,and OsakawerepreparedbyMitsui,servingasthegovernment’s informant.
OnthisbasisYurisummoned onehundredmerchants whowereconsideredbestabletocontribute andapprisedthemoftheirduty.
Mitsui-gumiwasofferedtheprivilegeofcollectingthemoneyfrom the otherhousesbut wasnot veryconfidentof success.Aftersome pteliminaryinquiriesSaburosukesubmittedthefollowinglettertothe imperialcourt: “Beit known,withduereverence:
“Weherebyacceptyourhonorable order.Weshalldoourbest, althoughthreemillionryoisagreatsum.Asordered,weshalltryto collectfromboththeupperandlowercategories. Butamongthefa-
mousOsaka merchants therearemanywhoseshopsareclosed, ortheir
businessessuspended.Sopleaseconsiderthisto avoidunpopularity.
Sinceweareofficially appointedmoney-changers, wehaveoftenlent
money[tothecourt].Weshalltryto persuadethosewhoarenotwill-
ing.”8
Thereseemsto benoauthenticrecordoftheresultsofthissqueeze,
butaccording tooneaccountitwasoversubscribed inlessthanayear. Thecreationofsuchalargenational“loan”inthefaceofwidespread distrustofthenewgovernmentwasanimpressive demonstration of Mitsui’s influence. Althoughtheclaimhasneverbeenmade,thename ofMitsuiseems tohavebeenaspotentasymbol inthefinancialworld aswasthatoftheimperial houseinthepolitical realm.Thismayexplain why,timeaftertime,totteringMitsuienterprises wererescuedfrom collapsebythebakufu,aswellasbyitssuccessor regime. Thesehigh-handedmaneuversof theimperialgovernmentcaused muchanguishandnotinfrequent ruinamongthemerchantclass,but
forsomechoninthebenefits faroutweighed thelosses.Forexample, earlyin 1868the leadinghousesof
Mitsui,Ono, and Shimadawere
appointedtomanagethecollectionanddisbursementoftaxrevenues,a privilegethatenabledthemto extendtheirbusinessactivitiesand,no
lessimportant, tousetaxfundsonhandforsupporting currentoperations.Thusevenwhentheirownliquidcapitaldeclined to thevanishingpoint,theywereableto recoupswiftlybydeftmanipulationof publicmoney.
TothepeopleoutsideKyototheexistence ofanimperialgovernment
88 - MITSUI
wasnomorethan a rumorbecauseit hadnotyetshownitsfaceinthe provincesandthe countryside.Hopingto projectanimageofpower, Iwakuraorganizedachimbu,orpacificationexpedition,nottouseforce againstthepeoplebutjustto letthemknowthatthegovernment had
themeansofdoingsowhenever itmightbenecessary. Fivethousand troopsmarched offinsplendidarrayfromKyoto,butranoutoffunds
almostimmediately.Iwakuracouldnotrequisitionmoneyor supplies fromthepeoplealongtheroutewithoutlosingface,soheappealed to
theMitsuis.Theysuppliedseveralthousandryo,buttooktheprecau-
tionofassigning to thechimbutwoaccountantsasquartermasters.As theexpeditionmovedeastwardbyfitsandstartsthoseunhappybanto spentmostoftheirtimetravelingbackto Kyotowithemptystrongboxesandrejoiningthehungrytroopswithfullones. ZigzageingthroughcentralHonshu,thechimbucrossedthemountainsandapproachedEdo,thestrongholdofpro-Tokugawasentiment, whereIwakurahopedto makethegreatestimpression.Encampedon
theMusashi plains,hismenwereonlyaday’s marchfromEdo,readyto occupyitwhenthecircumstances permitted.Butagain,tohisdiscom-
fiture,suppliesranshort,andtheimperialtroopscouldnotverywell haveenteredthecityasbeggars.Lackinganyalternative,heissuedan otderto theMitsuiclerksfora thousandbalesofpolishedriceto be storedinEdoinreadinessforthearrivalofhischimbu.Themoneyfor
purchasing itwasofcoursetobeadvanced byMitsui-gumi. Whenthe clerksacceptedthisorderwithouthesitationhewassodelightedthathe summonedthemintohispresenceandcommendedthempersonallyfor theirspirit. It wasnot an easyassignmentto purchasefoodforfivethousand
enemytroopsintheveryshadowofthebakufu’scitadel,butMitsuigumimanaged todoit andstoredthericeinoneofthefirm’swarehousesatFukagawa alongtheSumida River.Whentheyreported back
to chimbuheadquarters,Iwakurashowedhisgratitudebyinvitingthe HouseofMitsuitoprovideanadditionalonehundredthousandryofor thecampaign,whichwasapproachingaclimaxasthemainbodyofim-
perialtroopsapproached fromthedirectionofKyoto.
Iwakura’srequestput theMitsuisin a tightspot.Thesituationin Edowasbecoming chaoticandtheexchangebusinesswasparalyzed. Unableto borrowfromestablished ryogaeya,the Mitsuissentout clerkstoborrowcashfromsmallshopkeepers, andamassed35,000ryo,
allinsilverzchibu piecesworthabitmorethan a shillingeach.Ifraising thismuchmoney onshortnoticewasdifficult, delivering ittoIwakura’s
headquarterswasevenmoreso.Edowassurrounded bythebakufu’s
troopsindefensive positionsandambushes, andwayfarers werebeing harassedbyirregularsandmarauders.Anycargonotconfiscated by
BYAPPOINTMENTTOTHEEMPEROR =: 89
thebakufuwouldprobably havefallenpreytorobbers.Mitsui’sresourcefulclerkswerenottobethwartedsoeasily,however.Onthe SumidaRiver,especially whereit passedbetweenMukojimaand Yoshiwara’sbrothelquarters,thereweremanypleasurecraftforrent.
Thosesmall,roofedboats,somefittedwithslidingscreensforthe
sake
ofprivacy,wereusedinfineweatherforoutings,bathingparties,or
discreetdalliance,oftenwithgeishaorcourtesans.Butinthemonthof Marchtherewaslittledemandfor
them,and one of the boatmenwas
easilypersuadedto takea partyofrespectablydressedmerchantsona longcruise.
Ontheeveofdeparture Mitsui’semployees wrappedthebagsof silverinstrawmattingandhidthemundertheflooringoftheboat.
Threeclerkswereaboardwhenthefloatingtreasury,ladenwithapproximatelyatonandahalfofsilver,headedupstream inthemorning. Buttheydidn’tlooklikeclerks,andmuchlesslikeconspirators. Tothe casualobservertheyseemedtobecarefreegentlemenona holiday,and
whenotherboatscamewithinhailing distance thetriostrengthened the
illusionbypouringsakeforeachotherandsingingtipsily.Nevertheless,theboatwasstoppedbya bakufupatrol,andtheboatmanwas askedwhysucha craftwithonlya fewpassengersrodesolowin the
water.Theamateur smugglers thoughtthattheirgamewasended, and oneofthemreportedlaterthathis“liverwaschilled” withfear.But, somehow,theytalkedtheirwayout of the trap,andat lastarrived safelyat their destination,near Iwakura’sheadquarters,with
their
preciouscargo.’
Despitethesefinancial difficulties, withintwomonthsafterseizing powertheSat-Chogrouphadorganizeda powerfularmyandthe bakufu’spositionhadbecomehopeless.Butin Edosomediehards,in defianceofthedeposedshogun’swishes,weredeterminedto resistthe imperialists.Leadingtheirreconcilables wereLordOguri,thenminister ofthe bakufu’sarmedforces,andEnomotoTakeaki,commanderofits
navy.Enomotorefusedto surrenderthe fleetand withdrewit to Hokkaido,continuingfromtherethewarat sea.Oguri,equallyobsti-
nate,gathered remnantsofthebakufu’sarmyandformed a threethousand-man militiaunitcalledtheshogitai. BythentheMitsuis presumably hadseveredtheirbusinessconnectionswiththebakufu.Butin Japan
theacceptanceof favorsincursalifelongobligation,calledgiri,the fulfillment ofwhichisasbindingasisdutytoone’sancestors.Minomura’ssenseofobligation towardhisbenefactor Oguriwasparticularly strong.Thus,evenaftertheformalsurrenderofEdoto theimperial forces,Mitsui-gumi gavefinancialsupporttoOguri’sshogitai,although theirfortunewasstakeduponthevictoryofitsenemies. Thissupportwasunavailing,however.EntrencheduponUenohill
90 - MITSUI
(nowincluded inTokyo’sUenoPark)theshogitai foughtamemorable butlosingbattle,in whichmostof Kan’eitemple,enshrining the guardiandeitiesof theTokugawadynasty,wasconsumedbyfire. Oguri,Lordof Bungo,wouldstillnot admitdefeat.Escapingfrom Edowithsomeofhismen,hemadehiswaynorthwardto joinother
holdouts,butwascapturedandbeheaded. Thisexceptional instanceofdrumheadjusticewastragicandalsoun-
fair,forthenolessintransigent Enomotoandotherbakufustalwarts werepardonedandbecameprominentstatesmenoftheMeijiera.Itwas alsoshortsighted, becauseOgurialoneknewthe answersto many
questionsthatpuzzledthebakufu’ssuccessors. Onemystery,stillunsolved,wasthedisappearance oftheshogun’srumoredtreasure,ac-
cumulatedsincethedaysofTokugawa Ieyasu.It isgenerallybelieved that Ogurihadtakenthe precautionof hidingit in the mountains duringthe bakumatsuperiodandhopedto useit for supportinga
countercoup inthenameoftheTokugawas. Sincehisdeathtalkabout theshogun’shoardof goldcoins,believed tobeworthhundredsof millionsof dollars,hasluredinnumerabletreasurehunters,who
have
literallyriddledthelowerslopesof MountAkagi,in GummaPrefecture, whereOguriwasslainandwherethe goldis supposedto lie
buried.*
AfterEdowaspacifiedit wasrenamedTokyo,meaning“easterncapi-
tal,” on December3, 1868,andthe shogun’sspaciouscastlewas reno-
vatedforoccupancybytheyoungemperorandhiscourt.InNovember 1868,whenmilitaryoperationsin the northernprovinceshadbeen
completed, EmperorMeijiemerged fromseclusion inKyotoandmade thefour-hundred-mile journeytohisnewcapital.Hisgrandprocession
to Tokyowasactuallya proclamationof theimperialgovernment’s legitimacy,andnoexpensewassparedtomakethetriumphimpressive. HisMajesty’spalanquin,borneby sixteenrobustmen,wasescorted alongtheTokaidoby onethousandnobles,lords,samurai,andfoot
soldiers,allwearingtheirmostsplendidattire.
Oneofthosesaidtohaveaccompaniedtheemperorwashistreasurer,
MitsuiSaburosukeTakaaki,sonandheirofHachiroemonKofuku.The
privilegewascostly,inasmuchasthehousehadbeentappedforfifty
thousandryotodefrayexpenses ofthejourney.Butitwasasbreadcast uponthewaters,forthetransferofthecourttoTokyostartedaveri* MostpersistentofthetreasurehuntersaremembersoftheMizunofamily,
descendedfromhereditaryretainersoftheTokugawas,whohavebeendiggingtrenchesandtunnelsonMountAkagiforthreegenerations, according toTanakaYoshihiro,writingintheMainichi DailyNews, January3, 1973.
BYAPPOINTMENTTO THE EMPEROR-
91
tableboominthenewcapital. Althoughthesophisticated Edokkoin genetalwereunenthusiastic aboutbeinggoverned by“countrysamutai,”theywantedto looktheirbestfortheoccasionandspenttheir moneyfreelyatTokyo’sstores,includingEchigoya,onclothes,ornaments,andotherextravagancesforthewelcoming on November26. Themilitarycampaignofthecivilwarandtheemperor’sjourneycost
theMitsuisatleast250,000 ryoinadditiontoallthecontributions they hadmadebeforetheRestoration. Yettheimperialtreasuryremained empty,and the merchants,disillusionedby the newgovernment’s abuseoftheoldsystemof levyingloans,wereunresponsiveto pleas formorefunds.Becausetheirdistrustwasparalyzingtheeconomy,the
government decidedtoissuepapermoney asameansofrepaying funds alreadyborrowedandofprimingtherustypumpofbusiness.This papercurrency, calleddajokansatsu, otfinance-ministry notes,wasmade byawoodblockprinterwholivedinoneoftheMitsuicompounds.The reputablecompaniesof Mitsui,Ono,andShimadaweredelegated to
distributethenotesinaccordance witha plandevisedbyYuriKimimasa:eachofthethreehundredlordsofthecountrywasallowedto borrowoneryoforeachkokuofriceproduced uponhisland,without interestif repaidwithinfiveyears. Thosefinance-ministrynoteswerenot convertible,andtheironly guaranteewastheimperialchrysanthemumcresttheybore.Theywere
accepted fairlywellintheKyotoareaandinOsaka, wheremerchants weteaccustomed to handlingpapercurrency,butwerespurnedby peopleinTokyoandthenorth,whotrustedonlyhardcash.Whenthe decisionwasmadeto movetheimperialcapitalto Tokyo,it became imperativeto establisha soundmonetarysystemthere,andthiscould
notbedonewithoutthehelpofTokyo’smerchants.Apparently it wasMinomura whosawtheonlywaytowintheircooperation. Ina
lettertoKido,a leadingmemberofthegoverningjunta,Okubowrote: “Wehavediscussed raisingmoneyandforcedloans.Concerning the propositionbyMitsuiandothersaboutcirculating themoney,Mitsui, Kashima,etc.willsoonstudyitamongthemselves.AMinomuraRizaemon,proxyofMitsui,hasguaranteed circulationofpapermoney,and
thelike-minded merchants willdotheirbest.’
Minomuraproposedthatthegovernmentorganizetherichchoninof Tokyoand,bypromisingappropriatebenefits,persuadethemtoundertakecirculationoftheunpopulardajokansatsu.Naturally,hisemployers
wereto beat thecenteroftheoperation.Fourleadingmerchants, advisedbyMinomutra, agreedthatinordertoinspirepublicconfidence inthepapermoneyit shouldbedistributed togetherwiththefamiliar
goldandsilvercurrency whenitwasputintocirculation. Asanincen-
tive,thosemerchants whohandledthenewmoneywereto
receivea
92 - MITSUI
commissionforeverynotepassed.Accordingly,anofficialbureauwas establishedwithMitsuiSaburosukeandtwoofhisassistants incharge. Tokyo’smerchantswerepersuadedto acceptthis plan,and within eighteenmonthsforty-eightmillionryoinpapermoneywereputinto citculation.Suchwasthe precariousbeginningof Japan’smodern
currencysystem. Nevertheless, thegovernmentlackedthecoinandbullionneeded bothforpayingitsdebtsabroadandespecially forbackingitsdubious
cutrencyat home.Consequently, severalbig merchantsweresummonedto a meetingwheretheyweregivena shockingultimatum: theywereto supply860,000ryoin goldor silverat once,inexchange forpaper.ThelargestquotafelltotheMitsuis,whoweteinstructedto providea totalof300,000ryo.Theyalsoweredelegated to collectthe quotasfroma dozenothermerchantsbeingheldresponsible for the remainderof the sum.Minomuraconvincedthe treasurythat the
Mitsuiscouldnotproducesomuchmoneyondemand, butagreedto advancefiftythousandryo.Howtheydidit isa mystery,butonthe appointed daytheypaidthefiftythousand ryo,togetherwithtenthousandmore from Ono and Shimada,and sometens of thousandsthat
ostensiblywere“donated”bythepeopleof Tokyobutactuallywere advancedbyMitsuiwithoutinterest.
Forthissignalservice tothegovernment fourMitsuifamilyheads—
Hachiroemon,Jiroemon,Gennosuke,andSaburosuke—wereawarded fivehundredbalesof riceeach,appointedofficialaccountantsto the government,andgrantedthesamurais’privilegeofbearingtwoswords —anhonorthattheirancestorSokubeihadforswornhappilytwoanda
halfcenturiesearlier.
TheMeijileaders,mostofwhomwerestillintheirearlythirties,were
drivenbytheambition tomodernizeJapan’sinstitutions sothenation couldbecome strong,remain independent, andcommand respectinthe world.Blandlyignoringthefactthatnotlongagotheyhadbeeninthe vanguardofthemovementtoexpelthebarbarians,theyexhortedtheir countrymento imitatethosesamebarbariansasa patrioticduty.More
ot lessunitedinfealtytotheirjuvenilegod-monarch, theyplunged
impatientlyaheadwitha hostofreformsaffectingeveryaspectofpub-
liclife.
Theirmostcriticalproblemswereeconomic.Japan’speoplesub-
sistedmainly upontheproductsofagriculture,inwhichsomeeighty percentofthemwereengaged. Sincetheincome perpersonwasonly aboutsixty-five dollarsayear,theaccumulation of capitalevenfor
agriculturaldevelopmentwaspainfullyslow.Industrywasstillalmost entirelyin the handicraftstage,transportationwasrudimentary,and
communications wereprimitive.Becausethedivisionofthecountry
BYAPPOINTMENTTO THE EMPEROR«
93
intoapproximatelythreehundredsemiautonomoushanprecludedthe effectiveapplicationofanyuniformprogramofdevelopment,feudalism andeverythingit entailedhadto beabolished.Thedaimyo.ofChoshu wasthe firstto returnhisfiefto theemperor.Otherdaimyowhose
clansmen hadbeenmostactive intherestoration agreedtodothesame andsigneda memorial, composed byKido,whichstatedinpart:“The placewhereweliveistheEmperor’s land,andthefoodwhichweeat is grownbytheEmperor’smen.Howcanwemakeit ourown?We nowteverentlyofferupthelistofourpossessions andmen,withthe
prayerthattheEmperor willtakegoodmeasures forrewardingthose towhomreward isdue,andfortaking fromthemtowhompunishment isdue.. . . Letalltheaffairsoftheempiregreatandsmallbereferredto huon,** Thisdeclaration,likemanyofthosemadeinthenameoftherestora-
tion,seemstohavebeentakenalmostverbatim fromworksbythe Mitsuis’ oldteacherMotoori,orbytheChoshuprophetYoshidaShoin, whointurnhadbased theirthoughtsandwritings uponJapan’s earliest classics. Inthiswayreformsthatotherwisemighthavebeenregarded asextremelyradicalweregiventheauraof unimpeachableauthority andwereaccepteddutifully,if not withenthusiasm. In 1869allthedaimyoofferedtheirfiefstotheemperor.Withinapetiodoftwoyearstheprefectural systemwasestablished,replacingthe hundredsofhan,andthefeudalordercrumbled,clearingthewayfor thecreationofnewandcentralized nationalinstitutions. Mostsignificantwerethelegalabolitionofclassdistinctionsandthe
liberationofthepeopleto followoccupations oftheirchoice,travel
freely,marryastheywished,andbuyorsellland.Manyobstructionsto commerceandindustrywereremoved.Japanesewereencouragedtogo abroadforstudy,foreignerswereinvitedto cometo Japanandwere
paidwelltoteachorpractice theirspecialties, andthegovernment took an activerolein importingforeigngoods,apparatus,andmanufac-
turingplantstofamiliarize thepeoplewithmodernindustryandits
products. Theburdenoffinancingthoseinnovations,togetherwiththecostsof armaments,payinginterestonforeigndebts,andcompensating about 400,000joblesssamurai,wasalmostunbearable.In 1868,thefirstyear of the Meijiera,the governmentspenttwenty-five millionyen,althoughordinaryrevenuewasonly3.5millionyen.(Theyen,at that timeapproximatelyequivalentin valueto the UnitedStatesdollar, replacedtheoldryodenomination inthatinaugural year.)Forcedloans andotherborrowings fromJapaneseandforeignmerchantsamounted
to 5.4millionyen,leavinga deficitofaboutsixteenmillion,which
increasedbyanothertenmillionin 1869.Partlyin orderto meetthis
Muroran steel works
Tokyo
shipbuilding
Kamioka
nonferrous metals
Kyoto
Tamano
silkweaving Kobe banking,textiles
Ol petrochemicals Yokohama eavy machinery
shipbuilding
Kawasaki
=
heavymachinery
——
Hiroshima heavy machinery
Nagoya textiles,woolens
vel" Yuta
shipbuilding, heavymachinery
—
Kushikino gold Makurazaki ‘tea
TheMitsuis inModern Japan
BY APPOINTMENT
TO THE EMPEROR
= 95
emergencythe governmenthadstartedissuingthosenonconvertible
banknotesthattheMitsuishelpedtopromote.Butbecausetheirex-
changevalueagainstspeciequicklydroppedby nearlyone-half,the financialsituationremainedverydelicateindeed,andtheeconomywas floundering. :
AtthecenterofpowerinJapanwastheso-called Sat-Chooligarchy,
consistingofOkubo,Saigo,MatsukataMasayoshi,andKurodaKiyotakafromSatsuma, andKido,Ito,InoueKaoru,Yamagata Aritomo, and KatsuraTarofromChoshu.Thesedaringmen,togetherwith OkumaShigenobuof Hizen,ItagakiTaisukeof Tosa,and,later,the noblemanfromKyoto,SaionjiKimmochi,dominatedJapan’ssucces-
sivegovernments from1868untilaftertheMeijieraendedin1912.
MostintimatelyassociatedwiththeMitsuiswasInoueKaoru,who servedthegovernmentundervarioustitlesasan all-aroundadminis-
trator. Inoue,likeso manyof the other newleaders,had takenhis ap-
prenticeshipasyonin,orbusinessmanager,forhishaninChoshu.It was
quitenaturalthattheyoninshouldhavecloserelations withthemerchants,andit hasbeensaidwithsomereasonthatbasically theMeiji Restorationwasa consequence ofthecoalitionbetweenyoninand
chonin.It maybeassumedthattheMitsuis’houseruleofcultivating the“honorablemenin power”firstdrewthemto Inoue,justasthey
hadbeendrawntoOguri,hisrecentpredecessor inthebakufu.Butin
thislatertimethe attractionbetweenInoueandtheMitsuiswasmutual,
becausethefinancialsituationwhichconfrontedInouewasunimaginablycomplex,andnonebutthebigmerchants andtheirbantocould understandhowtodealwithit.Inadditiontosustaining therisingflood ofits owndepreciatingbanknotes,thegovernmentundertookto re-
deemthedifferent kindsofscripthathadbeenissuedbymanyofthe formerhan,allofwhichbrought theamountofpapermoney incitculationto almostonehundredmillionyen.ThusInoueandhisstaff recruitedforthenewMinistryofFinancepracticallywallowedinmore
thansixteenhundreddifferentkindsofpapernotes,aswellasindebasedgold and silvercoinsfrom assortedperiods,and
copper,brass,
andironcoinsofthemostdiverseshapes,sizes,andprovenance—not to mentioninnumerablecounterfeitsin allcategories. The currencyproblemwasameliorated somewhatafterIto Hirobumi,alsoservingasavice-ministeroffinance,returnedin1871froma visitto theUnitedStates,wherehehadstudiedtheAmerican money system.Hepersuadedhisgovernmenttoadoptthedecimalsystem(the
yenbeingvalued atonehundredsen)andsupervised theestablishment ofa modernmintin Osaka. The Mitsuiswereappointedagentsfor the mint,underInoue’s supervision,to exchangenewcoinsorbullionforoldmoney.Forthe
96 - MITSUI
purposeMitsui-gumi setupofficialmoney-exchange officescalledgoyo
kawase-zain Yokohama,Kyoto,Osaka,Kobe(the new namefor Hyogo),andHakodate.Suchclosecollaborationbetweenthetreasury andMitsui-gumibroughtcomplaintsfromrivalsto theeffectthatthe MinistryofFinancewasactuallylocatedintheMitsuiheadquartersat Surugacho.Thebarbwasnot unjustifiedfor,in 1872,soonafterthe mintopened,theMitsuiswereauthorizedtoissueabouttenmillionyen worthof convertiblenotes,naturallyat an attractiveprofit.Mitsui-
gumi’sgoyokawase-za furtherextended itsactivitiesto handlemoney exchanging foraboutseventy-five localgovernments inthenewprefectures. SuchafriendlyrelationshipbetweenthegovernmentandtheMitsuis wasblamedonInoue,whohadextendedhisinfluence intoeverydepartmentof thecentraladministration,althoughhe wasonlya vice-
minister.Hisself-aggrandizement, financialaswellaspolitical,was especially repugnantto SaigoTakamoriofSatsuma,anidealistwho despisedpoliticalchicanery andpersonalcovetousness. Whenhewas invitedto a partygivenbyInoueforPrinceIwakuraandotherstatesmen,Saigoexpressedhisfeelingswithhisusualbluntness. Pouringa cupof saké,heofferedit to hishost,sayingloudly:“Thisisforyou, Inoue,thebantoofMitsui.”Inoueseemednotto beoffended,butthe
remarkalarmedotherswhosensedgrowingcleavages intheSat-Cho ranks. Tensionswererelievedsomewhatbythedepartureof a missionto theUnitedStatesandto Europewiththedoublepurposeoftryingto gainrevisionsoftheunequaltreatiesthathadbeenthrustuponJapan
bytheWesternpowersinthe1850sandofobservingWesternsociety inordertoimproveJapanese institutions. Themission,whichdeparted latein 1871,washeadedbyPrinceIwakuraandincludedforty-sixhigh officials,among whomwereOkubo,Ito, andKido.Accompanying themweremorethanfiftystudentsofbothsexeswhointendedtostudy abroad.Among the studentswereDanTakuma,a futureobantoof
Mitsui,andhisfriendKanekoKentaro,wholaterhelpedItotowrite theMeijiconstitution, promulgated in1889.
Mostof thosestudentswereoffspringof noblesor prominent samuraifamilies;thechildrenofhelpfulmerchants seemto havebeen
ovetlooked.Inoue,whohadmorethana
casualinterestin the futureof
theMitsuis,realizedthatiftheyweretokeeppacewiththetimesthey wouldhavetobroadentheexperiences oftheirsons.Untilthenno Mitsuihad evertraveledabroad,so
nonehadmorethan
a secondhand
knowledgeofmodernmethodsofbusinessandfinance.Inconsultation withMinomura,InoueprevaileduponOmotokatato sendfiveof the Mitsuiyouths,rangingin agefromseventeento twenty-twoyears,to
BY APPOINTMENT
TO THE
EMPEROR
- 97
theUnitedStatesforstudyandtraining.TheysailedfromJapanin February1872.Atfirsttheyattendeda preparatoryschoolin New Jersey,butthen,insteadofgoingontocollege,theytooktheirhigher
educationin the textilemillsof Lowell,Massachusetts. Onediedin the
UnitedStates,buttheothersspenttwoyearsabroadandlaterserved theirfamily’sHousewithdistinction.
Thiswisemoveindicated Inoue’sconcernoverthefactthatfewof the old-linemerchants,includingthe Mitsuis,hadshownenough imaginationor flexibilityto becomeleadersinthechangingeconomy. WhileMitsui-gumi,asusual,hadaligneditselfwiththemeninpower andsecuredthelion’sshareofofficialbusiness,ithadmadenoadjust-
menttothetremendoussocialchanges thatwereoccurring. Theeconomicupheaval hadbroughtruintomanymerchants, whoaccordingly wereunabletorepaytheirdebtstoMitsui.Theclothingandtextile
business,uponwhichtheprosperityof thehousehadlongrested,had goneto pieces.And.especiallysincetherecentshiftof thecenterof
politicalactionfromKyototoTokyo,theoldstructure ofOmotokata hadbecomeobsolete.ButtheMitsuis,asthoughmesmerized bytheit venerable traditions,wereunable tocopewiththesenewdevelopments
andtheproblemstheycreated.Instead,theydependeduponthegenius ofMinomuraforeverything.Inthesixyearssincehe hadattainedhis newnameandposition“themanfromnowhere”had madehisinfluencesopervasivethat heseemedto havebecomethe Mitsui’smaster
ratherthantheirservant.
Intheearly1870s,attheinsistenceofMinomura,theMitsuis’textile brancheswereseparatedfromtheirmoneyexchanges,andtheauthority oftheTokyooffice,inwhichhewasthepower,tookprecedence over
Omotokata. Controloverholdings ofspecie,government funds,loans, andsecurities wastransferred totheexchangeoffices,andOmotokata
(inotherwords,thefamilyheads)no longerwasentrustedwithdirect managementofthebusiness.Insteadofcontinuingtoenjoytheirfixed sharesof Mitsui-gumi’sprofits,the severalbranchesof the concern wereput on a self-supportingbasis and maderesponsiblefor their
respective losses.Thethree-year accounting periodwasreduced tosix months,andeachbranchofficewasentitledtokeeptwentypercentof
theprofitsitproduced duringthatperiod.Bonuses weretobepaidto
thecompany’sofficersaccordingto thequalityof theirperformance;
andmembers ofthefamilywereenjoined to“devotethemselves tothe promotionofbusinesswithoutobjection.” Clerksweregivenhigher salaries, butalsotheyweretobeheldstrictly responsible forshortages in theiraccounts.
Thisdowngrading ofthefamilieswasresented,naturally,buteven
moreoutrageouswasMinomura’sdecisionto uprootthemfromtheir
98 .- MITSUI
luxurioushomesinKyotoandtransplantthemtoTokyo,Osaka,Kobe,
andYokohama. Notonlyweretheirsocial habitstobedisrupted: they weregivenbluntorderstogettowork.Thearticleofreorganization concerning theirexilefromKyotostated:“Theheadsofthefamilies willgoto theofficesofwhichtherespective familyisin charge.The eldestsonofeachwillbefreeto selectlive-outorlive-instatus,[but]
thesecondsonandyoungersonswillliveinandworkthesameas
clerks.Omotokatawillincreasepaymentforboard,butwillnolonger payforincidental expenditures.’”” BehindMinomutra’sstrategywashis cherishedhopeto convert Mitsui-gumifroma generalmerchanthouseandmoney-changerintoa greatbankingconcern.Anopportunitytodosoappearedin1871,when Inouegavehimto understandthatthefinanceministrywouldfavor Mitsui’sestablishinga full-fledgedbankaftertheAmerican or Europeanpattern,withbranchesinJapan’smajorcitiesandtheprivilegeof
issuingitsownnotesaslegaltender.Apetition tothateffectwassubmittedbyMitsui-gumi andapprovedbythecabinetwithinamonth. Confidentof success,Minomurahireda mastercarpenternamed ShimizuKisuke,whodrewup plansandstartedto constructanimposingfive-storybuilding.Shimizu,whosedescendants nowbuild skyscrapersandatomicenergyplants,hadneverseena bank,buthis
imagination wasuninhibited, andsoonTokyoites watchedwithwonder andadmiration asJapan’slargestforeign-style buildingtookshape.As onenon-Japaneseobservercommented,it wascalled“foreign-style” becauseit wasforeignto anystyleofarchitectureonearth.Butbefore thesplendidedificewasfinishedthegovernmentcanceleditsapproval ofaMitsuibankinfavorofaplantoestablish nationalbankslikethose
in theUnitedStates.Thisreversalseemstohavebeentheworkof
Inoue’sassistant,ShibusawaEiichi,whoconvincedhissuperiorsthata bankcapableofsupportingthenation’scurrencysystemandfostering itsindustrieswouldhaveto bemorebroadlybasedthana familybank couldbe.Inoueagreedthatthebestcourseforthecountrywastoform
a coalitionofbigfinanciersforthejointestablishmentofa national bank,withsharesopentopublicsubscription. Thebiggestexchangehouseswerethoseof MitsuiandOno,then competingfiercelytoexpandtheirsharesofgovernmentbusiness.The firstproblemwastopersuadethemtoworktogether.Asapreliminary
step,InoueandShibusawa summoned representatives ofthetwohouses openeditwiththisadmonitoameetingatInoue’smansion.Shibusawa tion:“ThereisarumorthattheMitsuiandOnocompanies arenoton good terms.If the rumorbe true,it is regrettableindeed,asboth com-
paniesaredoingthesamebusinessforthegovernment. Theyshould
notbepreytothespiritofrivalryandjealousy.”
BYAPPOINTMENTTO THE EMPEROR«
99
Thecompetingfinanciersmanagedto suppresstheirhostility,and theMitsui-OnoGinkowassetupimmediatelyasexclusiveagentforthe
government’s exchange business, inanticipation oftheNationalBank Actthenbeingdrafted byIto.Theactwaspromulgated in1872,anda yearafterward theMitsui-Ono partnership becametheDai-IchiKoku-
titsuGinko,orFirstNationalBank.Thirtythousandshares,eachwith afacevalueofoneyen,wereissued.Twentythousandweretakenupby MitsuiandOno,andtheothertenthousandwereofferedtothepublic. The equaldivisionof sharesbetweenMitsuiandOnoraisedthe
problemofwhowouldbebossofthebank.Theneatbutimpracticable
solutionwasto havetwopresidents,MitsuiHachiroemon andOno Zensuke,servingtermsinalternatemonths.Therewerealternatevicepresidentsandalternatemanagingdirectorsaswell.Toaverttheconfusionsuretoarisefromthisdichotomy, ShibusawapromisedMinomura
secretly thathewouldserveintheposition ofgeneralsuperintendent. However,Minomuraalsoenteredthegrouppictureasdeputypresident,inplaceofHachiroemon, whoexcusedhimselffromtakingan activerolebecause ofageandinfirmity. TheMitsuis’chagrinat havingbeendeniedan exclusivefranchise wasaggravatedby the government’sinsistencethat theysurrender
theirnewbuildingtoDai-IchiKokuritsuGinko.Mitsui-gumi House, asitwascalled,hadbecome theshowplace ofTokyoandnolesspopularasa subjectforpaintersandprintmakersthanEchigoyahadbeenin anearliertime.Minomurashruggedoffthisdisappointmentandcalled
inShimizutodesigna newbankbuilding,havingnodoubtthathis petitionwouldbeaccepted eventually, astheorganicweaknesses in Dai-IchiKokuritsuGinkoshowedtheireffects. Grippedby the feverto modernize,the Meijireformersraidedthe treasurywithoutrestraint,incurringbiggerandbiggerdeficits.Roads,
railways, andtelegraph lineswerespreading acrossthecountry.Harbor wotks,lighthouses, warehouses, andpublicbuildings wereprovided to assistforeigntradeandshipping,whichwereburgeoning. Prefectural governments,compulsoryuniversaleducation,a postalsystem,and mandatorymilitaryserviceforallablemaleswereinauguratedinquick succession.OkumaShigenobureturnedfromEuropeexcitedwiththe
ideaofindustrialization; butthemeninchargeoffinances,knowing thatrevenues stillbroughtinlittlemorethanhalftheamount ofmoney beingspent,foresawonlydisasterratherthanOkuma’s vision.
Partlytoavoidbeingblamedforthenation’sfinancial difficulties,
InoueandShibusawa(alreadyundersharpattackfortheirfavoritism
towardcertainbusinessmen) resignedtogether,but not without releasing ajointstatementinwhichtheycriticized themanagement of
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privatebusiness aswellasofpublic finance. Thereupon Shibusawa took
thesupervisoryjobatDai-IchiKokuritsuGinko.AndInouehadtime at lastto takestockoftheungainlyMitsuienterprises andto analyze theiroperations. WhatInouefoundwasdeplorable. The Houseof Mitsui,oncea modelof progressivebusinessorganization, had become,likethe
shogunate uponwhichitwasmodeled, alooseagglomeration ofsemiindependent operations, eachencrusted withthebarnacles oftradition. TheTokyoofficeandOmotokata inKyotoworkedat cross-purposes,
asresentfulfamilyheadsandjealous bantoeitherignored orsabotaged
theinnovationsof the upstartMinomura.He knewhowto winthe
affectionandcooperationof hisunderlings,buthisbluntplebeian mannerrepelledsomeMitsuis,andhisappearance mayhave embarrassedthem.Althoughinhisownluxurioushome(agiftfrom Hachiroemon)hewotethefinestof silks,onthejobheworecheap cotton kimonoanddirtystrawsandals.Healsohadahabitoflaughing loudly, therebyexposingthegapsleftbyseveralmissingfrontteeth.
ThefamilyheadslivinginKyotohadresisted hisordertomoveto
new posts, so upon Inoue’s advicea second general headquatters,
TokyoOmotokata, wassetup.Minomura wasputinchargeofliaison andplanning,undernominalsupervision ofMitsuiSaburosuke and MitsuiJiroemon, whoappearedattheofficeonalternatedays.Very
soonit becameclearthatwithno moreauthoritythanthatconferred uponhimby Hachiroemon(whohadlittleof it himself)Minomura couldnot enforcehisreforms.In 1875,whenanothergreatnational
ctisisloomed,Inoueintervened directlyto shaketheclanoutofits
complacency.Summoningeighteenfamilyheadsandseniorbantotohis palatialresidencein Tokyo,he told them how mattersstood.His un-
sparingassessmentmusthavefrightenedthem,for afterwardMinomurawaspresentedwitha powerofattorneybearingthesealsofthe
headsoffivemainfamilies. Thisamazing document gavehimavirtual dictatorshipovertheaffairsoftheclananditsbusinessorgan,Mitsuigumi. Thefamilies’? membersweregiventhreedaystoexpresstheir“frank opinions”concerningthisdispensation. However,it wasmadeper-
fectlycleartothemthattheonlyalternative toapprovalwastopart
companywiththeclan.Therewasnoaudibleobjection,andMinomura becamesuperintendentof Omotokataas the proxyof Hachiroemon Kofuku,who now wasftee to devotehimselfto his silkcollages,the
teaceremony, andwhatremainedof a cultivatedsociallifein those materialisticMeijitimes.
Undertheinfluence ofInoueandMinomura,TokyoOmotokata’s charterwasrevised inamannerforeshadowing themodernconceptof
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corporatemanagement asdistinctfromsimpleownership ofassets: “Omotokata isthesolidbaseoftheMitsuiclan,whosedutyistopro-
tectthepropertyandotherassetsbequeathed byitsancestors. . . . The familyassetsof Mitsui-gumibelongto Mitsui-gumiandnot to the Messrs.Mitsui.Allthoseconcerned shouldrecognizethedistinction, andnoneshouldregardthoseassetsas his privateproperty.”®The charteralsostatedthatanyfamilymemberwhomightbe foundunworthyof hispositionbecauseof extravagance,disobedience,or unauthorizedindebtednesswastobepunishedwithconfinementathome,
or,ifheprovedtobeincorrigible, withexpulsion fromtheclan. Minomura musthaveexercised hispowerjudiciously, forhewonthe respectofhisemployersandcolleagues andtheaffectionofhissub-
otdinates.Indeed,theMitsuishada tendencyto dependuponhimtoo much.Once,whenhesoughttheirhelpinimprovingthebusiness, he pleaded:“I cannotovercomethisdifficulty alone....I amnot confidentofsuccessunlessallMitsuifamilymemberscooperateandwork as oneperson.... AsI havetoldyourepeatedly, I amjustan employee,andifyourelyonmeyoucannotexpecttheclantosurvivevery long.’”®
Perhapsworriedaboutwhatwouldhappen tothehouseintheevent ofhisdeath,hetriedtorecruitShibusawa Eiichi,anextremely talented financier whohadentered thebusinessworldunderhisauspices. Inhis
oldageShibusawarecalledMinomura’seffortsin thisdirection:“Mr. MinomuraoftheMitsui,wishingto makemehissuccessor, oneday
calledonmeandgavemeasuitofclotheswiththefamilycrestofthe Mitsui.ButItoldhimthatIwouldbepleased toservetheMitsuiasan adviser,butnotasitsemployee. I feltthatI couldbeofsomehelpto thefirm.Thisincidentwasthe originof thefriendshipbetweenthe Mitsuiandmyself.’’!°
ByalternateentreatiesandbrowbeatingMinomuramanagedto reinvigorate theenterprise, givingtheviable unitssomecoherence and loppingoffmuchdeadwood. TheTokyoEchigoya, theninperilous
condition,wassetup as a separatecompanycalledMitsuiClothing
Store,underthemanagement ofa relatedfamilybearingthename Mitsukoshi. (“Koshi’” isanalternatereadingofthe charactermeaning “echi”inEchigoya. It willberemembered thattheformerhereditary titleoftheMitsuifamilyheadwasLordofEchigo, andthatthename
hadbeenassociated withthe claneversince.)Withthe retaillines permanentlydivorcedfromthe money-exchange business,Minomura consolidatedthefinancialofficestoforma neworganizationcalledExchangeBankMitsui-Gumi.In 1874thenewedificewascompletedand toppedwitha hugedolphincastin bronze.Accordingto folklore, thegreendolphinwouldprotectit fromfire;but thebankneededa
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motepotenttalismanagainsttheholocaustthat,asInouehadprtedicted,wouldsoonthreaten thefinancial structureofJapan. AftertheestablishmentofDai-IchiKokuritsuGinko,theprivateex-
changehouses,likeMitsui’s,nolongerissuedpapermoney for the
government,althoughtheystillperformed exchequerservicesforprefectutesandcollectedtaxesfor the centralgovernment. Mitsuialso retaineditsappointmentasagentforthemint.Ono-gumi, lackingthis perquisite,concentratedits effortson taxcollecting,faroutstripping Mitsui.However,Mitsuiwasalsoholdingfundsfor the army,five ministries,andothergovernment agencies.Depositsof officialmoney,
withoutinterest,providedthethreehouseswithamplefunds.Onogumi,tryingto overtakeMitsui,was investingadventurously in mining,speculating in rice,and otherwiseexpandingits business. MitsuiandShimadaalsowereoperatingquitefreelywithtaxfunds,
becausethegovernment requirednocollateral. In1874,whenagainthefinance ministrywasintroublewithitspaper money,it demanded thatprivateholdersofofficial fundspostsound collateralamountingto asmuchasone-thirdofthevalueof such deposits.Despitethiswarningsignalthethreehousescontinuedtheir profitablegamesuntillatein 1875,whenthe ministrysuddenlyannouncedthattheywouldhaveto postcollateralequalin valueto the amountsofthedeposits.AtthattimeOno-gumi,whichhadextended itstax-collectingnetworkto fortyprefectures,haddebtsof morethan sevenmillionyenandassetsofonly170,000 yen.Unableeitherto put
upenoughcollateral ortorepaytheofficial deposits,thefirmcollapsed. AtthesametimeShimada-gumi alsowentbankrupt. Mitsuiwasinpoorconditiontoo,withgovernment depositsofsome fourmillionyen,andonlytwomillionyenworthof acceptablesecurities.The House,includingthe bank,held generaldepositsand silveramountingto abouteightmillionyen,butwitha financialpanic
infullcrytheMitsuiscouldnotriskusingthatmoney topaythegovernment. How,then,didtheyescapebankruptcy?Theanswertothatquestion mayhavebeenlost foreverwhenthe Minomurastorehousewas destroyedbytheearthquake in 1923.Butbymaneuversthatappeared
tobemiraculous,Minomutapresented thefinanceministrywithgovernmentbonds,landcertificates, andothergilt-edgedsecurities sufhcientto savetheHouseof Mitsui. It isknownthathewasnottakenbysurprise.Sometimebeforethe
ministry’s ultimatumInoue,byhisownaccount,hadwarnedMinomurathatOno-gumiwasonthevergeof bankruptcy,andadvised Mitsuitodisentangle itsfinancesfromthoseofOno.SinceInouewas
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inclosecontactwiththeMinisterofFinance,OkumaShigenobu, it seemslikelythatheknewoftheminister’s intentiontodemandhigher
collateral.Infact,thereisreasontobelievethattheministry’s movewas partof a planto eliminatethetworivalhousesof OnoandShimada (whohadbeentardyintheirsupportoftheRestoration’s regime)and to makeMitsuisupreme.Thishypothesisis supportedbyRizaemon’s gteat-grandson,MinomuraSeiichiro,whowroterecently:“It is true thatthecollateral-increasedecreebroughtona crisisforMitsui[aswell
asforOnoandShimada].Butit wassoarrangedthatMitsuialone wouldsurvive,takingadvantage ofofficialprotection.” Anotherpossiblemotiveforthisplot,ifsuchexisted,wastheneed
to shakeOno-gumiout of the managementof Dai-IchiKokuritsu Ginko,whoseaffairshadfallenintodisorderunderits schizophrenic
management. AfterOno-gumi’s collapse,Shibusawa hadthebank’s booksexamined byAllanShand,ayoungEnglishbankeremployed
by the financeministryto teachWesternbookkeeping to Japan’s buddingbureaucrats. His competenceand thoroughnessimpressed Shibusawa,who relieduponhim heavilyduringhis incumbency andformanyyearsafterward.Themare’s-nest thatShanduncovered is clearlydescribedby a modernhistorian:“This,the firstgovern-
mentalinspectionofa bankinJapan,revealedcompletelackofuniformityandconfusion inbookkeeping practices ofthefirstyearsofthe nationalbanks.Violationsof
the BankLawhad occurred,suchas:the
grantingoflargeloans(¥1,300,000) toOnogumiandlesseramountsto someindividuals withoutsecurity.Thecurrencyreservewasnotsufficienttomeetasuddendemandbydepositors fortheirmoney.TheinfluenceofOnogumiwastoogreat,theevaluation ofthebank’shold-
ingsoflandswastoohigh,andthemainbuildingitselfwasnotsuitable for Westernbankingprocedures.”!* Whenthese“extraordinaryevents”hadended,theMitsuisboreno |
illwilltowardtheirerstwhile rivalandmagnanimously interceded with ministerOkumatogivethevanquishedhouseenoughtimeforliquidatingits indebtedness. TheOnosdidso punctiliously, andtheir obantoturnedoverevenhispersonal fortunetocreditors,endingup withonlythekimonoonhisback.TheOnosandShimadas remainedin
business,but on so diminisheda scalethat Mitsuistood aloneas the
greatfinancialhouseinJapanandthemajorshareholder inthenational bank.
TheMitsuisgavefullcreditfortheirsalvationto Minomuta,ex-
tollinghimina letterofcommendation:“Youhaveforgottento sleep or eatin yourintenseeffortsto supportandpromotetheinterestsof theMitsuihouse.Whentheextraordinaryeventsconcerningthemott-
104 - MITSUI gagesoccurred,youtookunutterable painsandexperienced agonies
thatwouldhavewrungthebowels ofanordinaryman.Butthanksto youreffort,peacehasbeenrestored toMitsui.’ For this achievementMinomurareceived,alongwithmoresubstantialemoluments,a treasuredkakemonohandeddownthroughthe generationsfromtheMitsuis’ancestors. And,perhapsbecauseofhis
unendingworries,heacquiredatthattimea stomachdisorderfrom whichhe neverrecovered.
10 - Foundationsin
BankingandCommerce THROUGHOUT THEREMAINDER oftheMeijieratheimperial party’soligarchswentto extraordinary lengthstonurtureandprotecta few
favoredcommercialhouses.It is easyto imaginethattheir solicitude forthosemerchants, whomtheyrescuedfrombankruptcy againand again,wasinspiredbyacquisitiveness. Butalthoughmostofthestatesmeneventuallywereenrichedbytheirrelationshipwiththe entrepre-
neursandlivedaslavishlyashadmanya daimyobeforethem,they werenomerehenchmen ofbigbusiness. InWesternsocieties capitalists habitually subornedcomplaisant politicians intoservingtheirpurposes; butinMeijiJapanthepoliticians hadto createthecapitalistsfirst. Beinginchargeofthenation’sfinancesatatimewhentheaccounting
systemwasinchaos,thestatesmen needednopersonalassistance from themerchants inthemakingoffortunes.Politicians wereinaposition todisposeofpublicassets andtodispenseconcessions astheypleased.
Rewardsforloyalservicewereunstinting,andthemeninpowerusuallylookedtheotherwaywhentheircolleaguespassedoutthoserewards todeservingfriendsoreventothemselves.(Itiswrittenthatoneminis-
teroffinance,havingprepared theissueofsomenewpapermoney, arrangedto havea cartloadof “samples”deliveredprivatelyto his home.!)Butin generalthe newstatesmenusedthe country’sscant
wealthjudiciously, andtheirpamperingofcertainmerchants, which borea superficial resemblance toTammanyHallgraft,actually wasa partoftheirpeculiarstrategyforbuildinga strong,richcountry. Inthepoliticalrealmthenewoligarchs heldcontrolovertheimperial family,theunassailable bulwarkoftraditionandsymbolofthenational faith.Inmilitarymattersthequalificationsoftheirassociateswererecognized:Choshu’smentook chargeof the army,whileSatsuma’s dominatedthenavy.Butin questionsoffinance,whichcouldalsode-
terminethesuccessorfailureoftheimperialgovernment, theymost frontwas certainlyneededoutsidehelp.Theircitadelontheeconomic Mitsui,whosegoodnametheyusedasamarkofrespectability forunoftheMitsuis Theskillandexperience triedandoftenriskyprojects. themselves werevaluable, ofcourse.Butinthekaleidoscopic shiftsand 105
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changesoftheearlyrestoration periodtheMitsuis’ alreadyoutmoded knowledge waslessrelevant thanwastheirusefulness asanimpressive
facadebehindwhichto hidea makeshiftfinancialstructure. Thepaternalisticroleofthegovernment wasa decisivefactorinthe tiseofMitsuiasamodernbank.TherecentlyorganizedExchangeBank Mitsui-Gumi,a joint-stockcompany,wasalreadyoperatingunderits ownregulations,butMinomurawasanxiousto obtainfinancialsanc-
tionaswellaspermission tousethetitle“ginko,”asa nationalbank did,andtoadoptalimited-liability systemthatwouldprotect thehouse frommeetingthesamefateashadbefallen Ono-gumi. In 1875theMitsuissubmitteda petitionto thiseffect,pointingout thattherewerenoofficiallyrecognizedrulesconcerninggeneralbanks, andpleaded:“Thoughweareignorantanduninformed andnotconfidentthatweourselvescanformulateperfectrules,yetwedaretopresentforyouresteemedconsideration. . . ourdraftsofbankrulesand
otherdocuments inthehopethatyouwillinstructandenlightenus.”
Theformof organizationchosenandthereasonsforits choicewere statedintheprospectus:“Companiesareofvariouskinds,butthebest istheSociétéAnonyme,inwhichthenamesofmembersdonotappear. Itspolicyandsystemaredecidedbymajorityvotesandarecarriedout openly,thusinsuringjusticeandfairness.Moreover,thearticlesofas-
sociation andregulations areallsubjecttotheapprovaloftheGovernmentandmustbestrictlyobserved.Theneworganization terminates
therelationshipofmasterandservant.Weallbecome,equally,friends as membersofthenewsocietyandhopeto sharethebenefitsit may bringbymakingourheartsasoneandworkingtogether.”
FinanceministerOkumaignoredthepetitionatfirst,buta national crisiswasdeveloping overanexpectedrebellion,andDai-IchiNa-
tionalBankwasstillweakfromthecollapseofOno-gumi.Mitsui’srequestwasgrantedfinally,withtheexceptionthatthestockholderswere requiredtoassumeunlimited liability.Thatis,intheeventofthebank’s
failureeachstockholder wasresponsible notonlyforhisownshareof thedebtsbutalsoforthatofothersunabletorepaytheirs.Otherwise thenewlycharteredbankwasallowedto followitspreviouslyestablishedrulesandwasgiventheprivilegeofhandlingthegovernment accountsthathadbeenentrustedto itspredecessor.Thesetermswere
accepted. MitsuiBank,withoffices inJapan’sfourbiggestcitiesandtwenty-
fourmajortowns,wasinauguratedonJuly1,1876. Attheceremony Minomura’smessagerevealedhisconcernoverthe weaknessof the clanandtheexasperationhemusthavefeltathaving topushitsmembersupthehillofsuccess: “It mustnotbeforgotten thatinundertak-
inga deedonetendstopaygreatattention toit inthebeginningbut
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getstiredastheworkproceeds.... Thisisthegeneralhabitofhu-
manity.Soevenif thepurposeis beautifulandthereisagoodsystem, lazinessmakesone’seffortsuseless.ThatiswhyI hopethatyou,dear partners,willresistthistendency... continuingto do yourbestso thatthisbankwilldevelopgloriouslyandmakeprofitstobesharedby allofyou.’’8
Unfortunately, Minomura couldnotdeliver hisadmonition inperson becausehewasseriously ill.Buthewasstillworriedaboutthebank’s excessivedependenceuponofficialbusinessanditsvulnerabilitytothe
whimsofpoliticians.Therefore,hedictatedanotherpetitiontothe
financeministry:“Ifthegovernmentshouldchangeitscurrentpractice
andwithdrawthemoneydeposited withus,weshallfinditverydif-
ficulttokeepgoing.. . . Ifsuchasituationshouldarise,ourcompany’s distressaside,theflowofprivatecapitalwouldbeobstructed andfinancialoperationsparalyzed.Consideringthis,weurgeyouto continueto allowus,forthecomingfewyearsatleast,to handleofficialmoneyof governmentministriesandagenciesandnot to changethatpolicy.’’
TothispleaOkuma replied:“Yourrequest willbegrantedandyouwill beentrustedwithofficial moneywithoutfail.”>Sodespitetheexistence of thestate-sponsored Dai-IchiNationalBank,Mitsuicontinued to handlea majorshareof thegovernment’sfinancesuntiltheBankof
Japanwasfoundedin 1882. MitsuiBank(known asMitsuiGinkoinJapan),withheadquarters inTokyo’sSurugacho, startedwithacapitaloftwomillionyendivided intotwentythousandshares,ofwhichtenthousandweresubscribed by Omotokata,fivethousandbynineMitsuifamilies,andtheremainderby employees.Therewere383shareholders,mostofwhomheldonlyone
ortwoshares.Thisformalparticipation ofthestaffintheprofitsofthe enterprise wasoneofthefruitsofMinomura’s democratic policy,under whichtheprincipal managers, includingvice-directors, wereelected by theshareholders, andalltheemployees downtothejuniorclerkswere called“officers.” Theeconomicthinkersin government—especially Inoue,Shibusawa, andOkuma—wereunderconstantharassmentin theireffortsto stabilizefinance.ButmeanwhiletheyneverlostsightofthefactthatJapan’s survivalasanindependentcountrylayinforeigntrade.Evenafterthe openingof thetreatyports,virtuallyalloverseascommerce hadremainedinthehandsofforeignmerchants.Andsincetreatyprovisions hadsetcustomsdutiesat thelowrateoffivepercent,thegovernment
earnedverylittlerevenue fromthissource.Althoughoverseastrade wasincreasing rapidly,importsgreatlyexceeded exports;andtopay forimportsthegovernmenthadtoexpendabroadapproximatelyseven-
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tymilliondollarsingoldandsilverduringthe1870s—a ruinoussum considering thenation’spoverty.Indeed,withsuchanadversetrade
balanceJapancouldillaffordtheimportedmachinery,transportation equipment,steel,andothermaterials necessaryfor startingitsindustrialrevolution. Soonaftercomingto power,thegovernmentorganizedtheTokyo CommerceandTradeCompany, a jointenterpriseof whichMitsui Hachiroemonwaspresident.At the sametimethe Houseof Mitsui soughttoexpanddomesticandforeigntradethroughitsretailshopsin
Tokyo,Yokohama, Osaka,andtheoldbranchinNagasaki. Thoseeffortsmetwithlittlesuccess; andin1875Minomura, atInoue’surging, decidedtousetheprefectural branches ofMitsui’s reorganized bankfor handlingmerchandiseaswellasmoney.Aspartofthisprogramvarious tradingactivitieswereconsolidatedto forma newcompany,Mitsui-
gumiKokusan-kata (NationalProductsCompany). Onesectionofit consistedofanold,ratherhumdrumventureconducting tradewith theIzuIslands,southofTokyo.A secondsectionsupplied silkand grainto foreigntradersandimportedblanketsforthearmyministry. Athirdtransported cargobetweenNiigataandYokohama.Therewas alsoa sectionsupplyingMitsui-brandteaforexport. Kokusan-kata’s firstbigbusinesscamewhenthegovernmentbegan
toemphasize theexportation ofriceinordertosustainpricesandearn foreigncurrency.Withaloanofhalfa millionyenfromthetreasury, thecompanyboughtupricefromtheprovincesandshippedit to Europe.Havingno branchesabroad,Mitsui-gumiworkedthrough
Japanesegovernmentofficialsstationedin London,whoactedas Kokusan-kata’s agents.In thiswayKokusan-katabecamethefirst Japanesecompanytoconductforeigntradeabroad. Whilehelping theMitsuistoorganizeKokusan-kata, Inoueusedhis governmentconnectionsto starthisowntradingenterprise.Knownas SenshuKaisha,orFirstProfitCompany,thefirmhandledriceexports throughforeignmerchants,marketedthe outputof lead,silver,and
coalminesownedbythegovernment, andobtained amonopolyforthe importingofsteel.Themanager Inouerecruited wasMasudaTakashi, onceacavalryofficerforthebakufu,whohadshowntalentasoneof
hissubordinatesinthemint.AsaladMasudahadbeenanofficeboyat
theUnitedStatesLegationinEdo,wherehelearned Englishandstood readytodefendMinister TownsendHarrisagainstthreatenedattacks byantiforeignronin.Because hisfatherwasabakufuofficial, Masuda
hadbeeneducatedintheChineseclassics;andhehadseensomethingof theworldasa memberofa governmentmissionto theUnitedStates andFrance.AftertheMeijiupheaval hisfatherwasemployedbyphilos-
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opher-educator FukuzawaYukichiand,ashisassistant,tookpartin theWesternization ofmanyJapanese intellectuals. Masuda’s background, especially inforeignlanguages andWestern
thinking,wastoproveveryusefulinsurmountingthecommunications barrier,whichhadlongobstructed trade.SinceJapaneseandforeign merchantswereequallyignorantof oneanother’slanguage,theyem-
ployedChinese clerks,knownbythePortuguese nameofcompradors, toconducttheactualbusiness. Thecompradors couldreadJapanese
(itbeingwrittenmainlyin Chineseideographs)andspokea littleof thelanguage,aswellasthepidginEnglishcurrentinAsia’sseaports. Manyforeignersconsideredthecompradorsto be morehonestthan theirJapaneseemployers,butthelatterdespisedanddistrustedthem. Masuda’saversiontothecompradorswasstronganddidnotmellow withtheyears.In 1910hewrote:“Theyaimedonlyatobtainingcom-
missions... nevertroublingthemselves abouttherealinterestsof trade.Therelations betweenJapanese andforeignmerchants werethus greatlyestranged, andtheintimacyandconfidence sonecessary tothe smoothworkingofbusinessrelations. . . wereentirely lacking.Great inconvenience wasexperienced byJapanesemerchants, whocouldneitherobtaingoodswithoutcashpayments,norreceivetheirowndues
withoutactualdelivery ofthegoods.Thecompradors invariably took
theprofits,andit wasnotanuncommon occurrenceto seea foreign
merchant, whohadfailedinbusiness, workingintheemployment of
hisoldcomprador.”’6
Masudahadbeentrained inpracticalmathematics byhisfather,who wasfamousforhisrapidcalculations byancientChineseformulasand for hisabilityto usethreesorobansimultaneously. ThusSenshu Kaisha’syoungmanager wasmorethanamatchforanycomprador. Histalent,however,wasoutweighedbythedefectsof Inoue’sother
partners,whoeitherwithdrew theircapital abruptlyorembarrassed the firmby speculation,bribery,or counterfeiting.Inouehimselfwasin
troublebecauseofhis(andShibusawa’s) conspicuous liberality insellingthegovernment-owned AshiocopperminestoFurukawa Ichibei, son-in-lawofOno-gumi’sobanto,at a suspiciouslylowprice.In consequence,whileSenshuKaishawasstillonlya
fewweeksold,the Min-
istryof JusticebroughtInoueto trialandhe wasfoundguiltyon
chargesthatcouldhaveincurred aprisontermoftwoyears.Suchwas
hisprestige,however,thathegotoffwithafineofthirtyyenandsoon
wasappointed tothenewlyformednationalsenate.Immediately thereafterhewassenttoKoreaasJapan’sambassadorplenipotentiary. Even
beforehereturnedfromthismissionin 1877hewastoodeeplyengrossedinpoliticalproblemsto keephismindonanythingsomun-
110 - mrTsul daneastrading.AlthoughtheveryableMasudahadearneda profitof
150,000 yenforthefirm,Inouedecided togooutofbusiness.
TheneedfordevelopingJapanesetradeindependentofforeigncontrolwasasurgentasever,butMitsui’s Kokusan-kata,withitshaphaz-
_ardstructure,wasobviouslyinadequate forthepurpose.Ministerof FinanceOkuma, concernedover Inoue’sintendedwithdrawalfrom
trade,calledinMinomuraRizaemon andproposedthatMitsuiabsorb SenshuKaishaandbuilda strongerfirm.Minomura, knowingthat OkumawascloselyconnectedwithTosaandSatsumamerchants in
competition withMitsui,wasincredulous. Butuponconsulting Inoue anddeputyfinanceministerMatsukata Masayoshi, he wasassured thatOkumameantwhathesaid.Withthisencouragement, Mitsuiin 1876—after theestablishmentofMitsuiBank—mergedSenshuKaisha
with Kokusan-katato formMitsuiBussanKaisha,knownabroadever
sinceasMitsuiandCompany. Masudadescribedthecreationofthecompanyinhisautobiography:
“Minomura proposedtoInouethatatradingfirmbeorganized aspart oftheMitsuibusiness andthatpeoplefromSenshuKaishabeinvited totakechargeofit.Inoueagreedandaskedmetobepresident ofthe
newcompany.Minomuraalsocameto meto makethesamerequest. AtlastI agreed.Asalarywastobepaidmeundercontract,butI hadto assumefullresponsibility forthecompany.Evenifitshouldfail,Mitsui
wouldbeabsolvedofallresponsibility. Myassetsweresmall,butI
pouredthemallintothe newcompany. “TtoldMinomurathat businessmustbecommission-based. I meant thatthecompany shouldnotundertakebusinessthatwouldcompelit to assumealltherisk.I alsosaidthatspeculationshouldbeavoided.
Minomura agreed,andInoueofcourse wasofthesameopinion. Once weagreedonthispointIsaidthateverything shouldbelefttome,with nointerference. Theysaid“allright,’andentrusted mewitheverything. Buttheysaidtheywouldnotprovide anycapital.AllI couldgetwas permission tooverdrawmyaccountatMitsuiBankbyfiftythousand
yen.””?
Thenewcompany’s ratherfloweryprospectusexpressed thepromoters’intention“toexportoverseas surplusproductsoftheImperial Land,to import...
productsneededat home,andtherebyto engagein
intercoursewiththetenthousandcountriesof theUniverse.”8Upon thisgranddesignandslendercapitalMasudadevelopedtheprototype ofthesogoshosha, orgeneraltradingcompany,thatplayedsuchasignificantrolein modernizingtheJapaneseeconomy.
InfoundingthecompanytheMitsuistooknoinitiativewhatever, andevenMinomura’s approachwasextremely hesitant.Insteadofassigningfamilyheadsortheirfirst-born sonstoitsmanagement, heap-
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pointedTakenosuke,seventhsonofHachiroemonKofuku,andYonosuke,thirdsonofanotherofKofuku’ssons,bothofwhomhadgoneto theUnitedStatesforstudyfiveyearspreviously. Otherwise,theclan tooka strictlyhands-offattitudeforreasonsapparentin thecontract signedbytheheadsofthemainandthebranchfamilies(whichbynow
hadincreased toeleven).Thecontractbeganoptimistically: ““We have carriedoutextraordinary reformsinMitsui,abolished Mitsui-gumi and established MitsuiExchange Bankonthegreatfortress ofOmotokata. Weourselvesarestockholdersof thebank,sothatourbusinesswill prosperforeverandbeenjoyedbyusequally.”
Butafterthatpreamblethepromoters’anxietyasserteditself:“As statedalready, thepurposeoffoundingthenewcompany istoensure ourlivelihoodin caseMitsuiBankiscloseddown.Thatiswhywe
pickedTakenosukeandYonosukeasinitiatorsof thenewcompany. Havingentrustedthesetwopersonswiththemanagementofthenew companyasdistinctfromMitsuiBank,therestofuswillbeabsolvedof responsibilityevenifthenewcompany shouldsufferfatallossesorbe forcedoutofbusinessbynaturaldisaster.Thentherestofuswould
havenodutytorepaydebtsrunupbythenewcompany.”® Thisodd disavowal seemstohavebeenintended toconvincetheMitsuisthatthe newfirm,whichtheycalled simply“Bussan”’ (literally, “productcompany’’),wouldprotecttheirfuture.Butitisevidentthatthewritershad
littleconfidence intheundertaking andactually wereprotecting themselvesagainstcriticismandindebtednessin theeventofitsfailure. ThemanagerofBussan’sforeigntradesectionwasMagoshiKyohei, whoseonlypreviousbusinessexperiencehadbeenthemanagingofan inn.A riddlemakingtheroundsinMitsui’sparentfirmrevealedtheir opinionofBussan:“WhatisthecheapestthinginTokyonowadays?”
Theanswer:“‘Magoshi’s salary.”Thebrightyoungman,wholaterput Bussanintothebrewingbusinessandbecame abeertycooninhisown right,wasearningthirteenyena month. Otherpromising talentswhojoinedBussan’s smallstaffintheearly yearswereFujiseSeijiro,whoseheirmarriedintoMasuda’s family;
Yamamoto Jotaro,lateragreatpolitical bossandpresident oftheSouth
ManchurianRailway;andFukuiKikusaburo,whodidmuchtobroaden
andinternationalize Mitsui’sbusiness.Thesethreeinturnservedas obantoofBussanundertheguidance ofMasuda, whowatched overthe
firmformorethanseventyyears. Atthetimeofitsfoundingin 1876Bussan’smainexportswerecoal fromthestate-ownedcollieryatMiikeinKyushuandsurplusrice.‘The
firmalsoimported blanketsandwoolensforthearmy.Mostvaluable wastheagencyforcoal,whichMasuda tookonattherequestofIto Hirobumi,thenMinisterofIndustry.Later,in relatingthecircum-
112 « MITsuUl stances,MasudaquotedItoassaying:“Masuda,sinceyouareestablish-
ingMitsuiBussantoengageinforeigntrade,itwouldbegoodifyou
handledthecoalfromMiikecolliery.If youarewillingto undertake this,wewillnotbetight.Youcanacquirethecoalatcostpriceandget startedonit directly.”’1° Masudadidn’tknowmuchaboutcoal,but
he hadbeenfamiliarwith
miningadministrationsincechildhood.Hisfatherhadservedasmagistrateinchargeofconvictlaborat thegoldmineson SadoIslandand
laterwasassigned todevelopingmininginHokkaido. Masudaknew thatBussancouldnot competein copper,dominatedasthatwasby
Sumitomo, underthepatronage ofPrinceIwakura, andbyFurukawa
Ichibei,whohadboughttheAshiomines.Wantingtoestablisha footholdin mining,MasudaacceptedIto’sofferwithalacrity,andBussan becamesolepurchasingagentfor the government’sminingbureau. Thisgaveit a monopolyoverexportsof coal.In duecourseBussan cameintopossessionofthenation’srichestcoal,lead,andzincmines,
aswellasimportantdepositsofgold,silver,andsulfur.
Througha branchin Shanghai,Bussanbeganexportingcoaljustas theEuropeanswereestablishingmodernfactoriesandmillsthere;and eventuallyit securedalion’sshareoftheChinamarket,aswellasa ship bunkeringbusinessin HongKong,Singapore, and otherOriental
ports.At thebeginningof its historyBussan’s annualcoal-export volumewasamere27,000 tons.DuringthenextnineyearsMasuda and Magoshiboostedit to 1,837,000tons,an increaseof 6,800percent. Theyhaddiscoveredthe magicformulafor makingprofitswithout takingrisks.
Whetherbydesignorotherwise, BankandBussan formedamostfelicitouscombination,theadvantagesof whichsoonbecameapparent. Thefirstsuccessfulinnovationmadepossibleby Bank-Bussanteamworkwastheissuanceofexchangebillsforcommodities.Aftertheinternalrevenuesystemhadbeenmodernized, thefarmerswererequired
topaytheirlandtaxesincashinstead ofgrain.Butitseemed thatwhenevertherewasabumpercroppricessagged andproducerswerehard pressedto meettheirobligations to thegovernment.Seeingopportunityinthissituation,Minomuraobtainedpermissionfromthefinance
ministrytoundertakethepurchaseofricewithbillsthatcouldbeused topaytaxes.Untilthenmerchants handlingofficialmoneywereprohibitedfromoffering loans,butunderthenewplanBussan’s branches
werethusable,in effect,to lendmoney.Theinauguration of Mitsui BankandBussanin 1876happenedtocoincidewithanotherbumper cropof rice,but withBussanconductinga widespreadpurchasing
BANKINGANDCOMMERCE-
113
operationwithBank’s money,theHouseofMitsuisupported theprice ofriceandsavedmanyfarmers fromruinwhilesubstantially increasing thegovernment’s revenue,aswellasitsownprofits.
BysuchintegrationoffinanceandcommerceMitsuiinfactlaidthe groundworkforarationallyorganizedcapitalistsystemtosupplantthe economyoffeudalism.Becauseofhisforesightandpersistencein assistingthatchange,MinomuraRizaemonhasbeencalled,withsome justice,the“fatherof Japanesecapitalism.”Theroleof Mitsuiin Japan’seconomicdevelopment—asa publicinstitutionratherthana privateenterprise—wasconfirmedsixmonthsafterBank’sfounding, whentheheadsofsevenMitsuifamiliesweresummonedtotheMinis-
tryofFinance. ThereministerOkumainformed themverybluntlythattheprivilegestheyhadbeengrantedbythegovernmentwerepredicated not
upontheirpersonalworthinessbutuponexpectationsof theirfuture servicesto thestate:“Thetimesarechanging,” thefinanceminister’s lecturebegan.“Thedaimyohavereturnedtheirfiefsto theemperor,
andthesystemofhereditarystipendsforthenobilityandsamuraihas
beenrevised.RichfamilieslikeShimadaandOnohavegonebankrupt, andhavebeendispersed;onlytheMitsuismaintaintheirtraditional prestige.... Thegovernment,onitspart,hasbeendeeplyconcerned withprotectingtheMitsuiclan.Asto thefoundationofMitsuiBank,
itmustberemembered thatMinomura Rizaemon, foreseeing thetrend ofthetimes,petitioned thegovernment tothateffect.Believing thatthe preservation ofa traditionalwealthyhousewouldcontribute to the generalinterestsofthenation,thegovernment decided. . . topermit theestablishment ofMitsuiBanksolely toperpetuatetheprosperityof thefamily. “Therefore, theMitsuishavenocauseforcomplaint. Ifanyshould
bedissatisfiedwiththenewsystemandclingto traditionalways,the government’sintentionoffavoringMitsuiwithspecialprivilegeswill notbebinding.Thesemattersconcernnotonlytheprivateaffairsof yourfamilybut alsothe developmentof the statetreasury,since Mitsui’sfinancialconditioninvolvesthatofthestate.Allwhosharethe
familytitleofMitsuiassumeaninescapable responsibility.” Possiblythiswarningwasinspiredbythefactthattheguidinghand ofMinomurahadslippedfromthehelm,andbythediscovery thatthe
familyheadshadbeenlaggard inobeyinghisearlierinstructions. While MinomuraRizaemonlayuponhis deathbed,Ministerof Finance
OkumaorderedOmotokatato makeHachiroemonKofukumovepetmanentlyfromKyototoTokyo.Othermembersofthefamilywhohad beenassignedto localbranchesofthebankwereinstructedto report
114 - mitTsur
immediately to theirrespectiveofficesandto settletheirhouseholds nearby.Furthermore,allmembersoftheMitsuifamilywereto“refrain
frommisconduct.”
ThetimingofOkuma’sadmonitionissignificant,fortheMeijigovernmenthadjustsurvivedits worstpoliticaltestandanticipated an
economiccrisisinconsequence. Theproblemcentereduponthedisplacedsamurai. Ingeneraltheyhadadjusted quitewelltotheneworder bytakingupcareers inthemilitaryservices, policeforce,assorted businesses,or theprofessions.Butamongthelessadaptableindividuals discontentsmoldered.Thiswasincreasedin1876when,initsperennial attemptstobalancethebudget,thegovernmentcommutedthepensions ithadbeenpayingsamuraisince1872todisappointingly smallterminal paymentsinbonds.Aggravatingtheinjury,a lawwaspasseddepriving theproudwarriorsoftheprivilegeofwearingtheirtwoswords.The indignationofdisaffectedsamuraiwasexploitedbypatriotsandpoliti-
cianswhochosetobecritical oftheoligarchy’s arbitraryrule,corruption,anddisregardfortradition. ThemosteloquentcriticoftheoligarchywasMarshalSaigoTakamori,whohadwonthepeople’s affectionbyhisopenheartednessand incandescentpatriotism.Aself-righteousdefenderofthenationalpurity andanadvocateofa vaguekindofpopulism,Saigowasoutragedby OkuboToshimichi’s opportunismandimperiouspoliticalstyle.Hewas
disgustedbybacksliders, suchasOkubo,Ito,andInoue,whohaving seizedpowerinthenameoftheemperor,nowconsorted withmoneylendersandlivedin suspectopulence,attendedbyscoresof servants. Uncomfortableinhiscommandofthenation’snewpeasantarmyand
thwartedinhishopesforanexpedition tosubdueKorea,Saigostalked outofthegovernmentandwithdrewtohisnativeKagoshima. There, surrounded bymenofsimilarsentiments, heincitedopposition against Okubo’sdictatorial management ofthegovernment. Hedidnotadvocatearmedrevolt,butby1877hisfollowershadmobilizedanarmyof aboutfortythousandmen,mostlyimplacable samurai;andtheirofficers
persuaded himtoleadtheminarebellion thatagainplunged thenation intocivilwar. MinisterofHomeAffairsOkubo,backedbytheimperialcourtand mostof theMeijioligarchs,wasequalto thechallenge.Witha considerablylargerconscriptarmy—organized by GeneralYamagata
Aritomo,transported byMitsubishi’s ships,supplied byMitsuiBussan, andpaidbyMitsui Bank—the centralgovernment executed asuccessful counteroffensive in Kyushu,the centerof disaffection,and demonstratedonceandforallitsabilityto rulethenation. TheSatsumaRevoltof1877wasfarmorecostlythantherestoration
skirmishes hadbeen,takingatollofsomethirtythousand lives,includ-
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inJapan.Mitsukoshi Department StoreinTokyo isEchigoya’s directsuccessor.
founded in 1’ssecondventureinfore ignstyleedifices SUi-QUIM wasbuiltfor 7tsuiBank, 6. Mitsui building todaystandsina lmostthesame location,nearNihom1876.TheMitsui Mmainoffice bashi,Tokyo.
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toJapan'sprogress. showstheYawataIronandSteelWorkscontributing 42, Fortune’sphotograph government formedintheearly1930sbyconsolidating state-runmonopoly TheYawataWorkswasa facilitieswiththoseofsixzaibatsuconcerns, including Mitsui’s. Kyodo
43.Carryingout ordersfrom Washington to dissolve themajor\\
zaibatsuholdingcompanies—foremostofwhichwereMitsui,Mitsubishi, Sumitomo, and Yasuda—
SCAP beganthe processbyim-
pounding thefirms’securities. On October8, 1945,aconvoy oftrucks,
complete withMPguards,hauled
awayMitsui’ssecurities,valuedat morethantwohundredmilliondol-
lars.StoredintheHypothec Bank bytheHolding Company Liquidation Commission, theimpounded securities eventually weresoldtothepublic. The holdingcompaniesthemselves ‘ didnotrevivewhentheoccupation
ofwy egroups the companies have erespectiv merged stronger than ed,but end ever.
AsahiShimbun
44,OnAugust6,1945thefirstatomic bomb everusedinwarfare demolished Hiroshima. At MitsuiBank’sHiroshimabranch,therewerenosurvivors.
es
45.Aspartofthepostwar democratization program, theemperor wasencouraged tomeethispeople. In 1949,whenhevisitedtheMiikemines at Omuta,Yamakawa Ryoichi, presidentofMitsuiMining
Company, ledtheinspection tour.
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47. IshizakaTaizo,formerpresident ofTo- 48. HirashimaToshiro,first chairmanof reorkyoShibaura ElectricCompany andofKeidan- ganizedMitsuiBussan.(1959) fen.(1F52)