O-YATOI GAIKOKUJIN

The '' were foreign advisors hired by the Japanese government for their specialized knowledge to assist in the modernization of Japan at the end of the Bakufu and during the Meiji Era. The total number is uncertain, but is estimated to have reached more than 3,000 (with thousands more in the private sector).
The goal in hiring the foreign advisors was to obtain transfer of technology. The foreign advisors were highly paid; in 1874, they numbered 520 men, during which time their salaries came to ¥2.272 million, or 33.7 percent of the annual budget. Despite the value they provided in the modernization of Japan, the Japanese government did not consider it prudent for them to settle in Japan permanently. After training Japanese replacements to take over their places, many found that their contracts (typically for three years) were not renewed.
Some foreign advisors supplemented their activities as government employees by undertaking Christian missionary activities.
The system was officially terminated in 1899 when extraterritoriality came to an end in Japan. Nevertheless similar employment of foreigners persists in Japan, particularly within the national education system and professional baseball. Until 1899, more than 800 hired foreign experts continued to be employed by the government, and many others were employed privately.

Contents
Notable o-yatoi gaikokujin
Agriculture
Medical Science
Law, Administration and Economics
Military
Natural Science and mathematics
Engineering
Art and Music
Liberal Arts, Humanities and Education
Missionaries
Others
See also
External links

Notable o-yatoi gaikokujin


Agriculture


William Smith Clark

Max Fresca
Medical Science


Erwin von Bälz, physician [1] (in Japanese)

Leopold Müller

Johannes Ludwig Janson

Oskar Kellner, [2] (in Japanese)

Theodor Eduard Hoffmann

Ferdinand Adalbert Junker von Langegg
Law, Administration and Economics


Gustave Emile BoissonadeHosei University

Hermann Roesler, jurist and economist

Georg Michaelis, jurist

Ottmar von Mohl, master of ceremonies

Albert Mosse, jurist

Ottfried Nippold, jurist

Heinrich Waentig, economist and jurist

Ludwig Loenholm, jurist
Military


Jules Brunet, French artillery officer.

Léonce Verny, French constructor of the Yokosuka arsenal.

★ Klemens Wilhelm Jakob Meckel
Natural Science and mathematics


William Edward Ayrton, British physicist

Thomas Corwin Mendenhall, American physicist.

Edward S. Morse, zoologist.

Charles Otis Whitman, zoologist, successor of Edward S. Morse.

Heinrich Edmund Naumann, geologist. Arrived in August 1875 at the age of 21. Teaching in the University of Tokyo, he became the first professor of geology in Japan. His achievements include, among others, the first tectonic map of the country. Fossa Magna Museum (in Japanese)

Curt Netto

Gottfried Wagener

★ Sir James Alfred Ewing, Scottish physicist and engineer who founded Japanese seismology.

Cargill Gilston Knott, succeeding J.A. Ewing

Oskar Löw

Benjamin Smith Lyman
Engineering


Hermann Ende, architect

Wilhelm Boeckmann, architect

Thomas James Waters

Edmund Morel, railway engineer

Josiah Conder [3] (in Japanese)
[4] (in Japanese) pictures

Horace Capron, agriculture, road construction

William Brooks, agriculture

Henry Dyer

George Arnold Escher

John Alexander Low Waddell, bridge engineer

John Milne, geologist
Art and Music


Edoardo Chiossone

Luther Whiting Mason, Western music

Ernest Fenollosa, educator

Franz von Eckert, Western music

Rudolf Dittrich, Western music
Liberal Arts, Humanities and Education


Basil Hall Chamberlain, Japanologist and Professor of Japanese, Tokyo Imperial University

Antonio Fontanesi, painter

Emil Hausknecht, pedagogue

Lafcadio Hearn, Japanologist

Viktor Holtz, educator

Raphael von Koeber, philosopher and musician

Vincenzo Ragusa, sculptor

Ludwig Riess, historian.
Missionaries


William Elliot Griffis (18431928), American clergymen, author. Taught in Japan 18701874.

Guido Verbeck

Horace Wilson, U.S. missionary and teacher credited with introducing baseball to Japan.
Others


★ Captain Francis Brinkley

Johannis de Rijke

William S. ClarkSapporo Agricultural College (Hokkaidō University)

Edwin DunEdwin Dun Memorial House Hokkaido Prefecture website

Charles Edouard Gabriel Leroux

Thomas Alexander

Charles Dickinson West

Henry Walton Grinnell

William Gowland

See also



Anglo-Japanese relations

Foreign cemeteries in Japan

Franco-Japanese relations

German-Japanese relations

Working Holiday Program

JET Programme

Russian people in Japan

External links



Dentsu Advertising Museum

[5] (in Japanese)

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves