
Inoue Kowashi from Kokugakuin University Archives
';' (
6 February,
1844 -
13 March 1895) was a statesman in
Meiji period Japan.
Early Life
Inoue was born into a
samurai family
Higo Province (present-day
Kumamoto Prefecture), as the third son of Iida Kengoei. In 1866 Kowashi was adopted by Inoue Shigesaburō, another retainer of the Nagaoka
daimyo. Known as a highly intelligent child, Inoue entered the domain's
Confucian academy, eventually becoming one of the academy's resident students. He fought on the imperial side in the
Boshin War to overthrow the
Tokugawa bakufu.
After the
Meiji Restoration, Inoue joined the
Ministry of Justice, and was sent to
Germany and
France for studies. He became a protégé of
Okubo Toshimitsu, and accompanied him to
Beijing for negotiations following the
Taiwan Expedition of 1874. After Okubo’s assassination, he worked closely with
Ito Hirobumi and
Iwakura Tomomi, and became a member of the ''
Genroin.''
Meiji bureaucrat
In 1875, based upon his experiences in Europe, Inoue published two volumes of documents called ''Ōkoku Kenkoku Hō'' (Constitutions for Kingdoms), which was primarily a translation of the
Prussian and
Belgian constitutions with Inoue's own commentary, which he submitted Iwakura Tomomi. Iwakura recognized Inoue's talent and assigned him to work on the new constitution for Japan.
Working with German legal advisor
Karl Friedrich Hermann Roesler, Inoue worked on the drafts of the
Meiji Constitution, and also drafts of the
Imperial Household Law. He also cooperated with
Motoda Nagazane in the preparation of the
Imperial Rescript on Education.
In 1877 he was appointed Chief Cabinet Secretary, in 1881 Chief Secretary to the House of Councilors, in 1884 adjunct Chief Librarian of the Imperial Household Ministry, in 1888 Director General of the Cabinet Legislation Bureau.
Inoue became a member of the
Privy Council in 1890, and served as
Minister of Education in the third Ito administration from 1893. In 1895, he was ennobled with the title of ''shishaku'' (
viscount) in the ''
kazoku'' peerage system.
References and Further Reading
★ Khan, Yoshimitsu. ''Inoue Kowashi and the dual images of the Emperor of Japan'', Pacific Affairs, Summer 1998.