Episode 132 – The Fall of the Samurai, Part 15

This week, we’ll cover the military campaigns of 1868. Edo will (surprisingly anticlimactically) fall, the north will rebel, and Matsudaira Katamori’s domain of Aizu will be overrun after a brutal two month siege. In the end, only the small splinter territory of the Ezo Republic will be left standing.

Listen to the episode here.

Sources

Jansen, Marius. The Making of Modern Japan.

Drea, Edward. Japan’s Imperial Army: Its Rise and Fall, 1853-1945.

Goro, Shiba, Mahito Ishimitsu and Teruko Craig. Remembering Aizu.

Images

2000px-Boshin_war.svg
A map of the major engagements of the Boshin War. Note that the dates are different on this one; that has to do with the fact that around this point, the new government was switching away from the old lunar calendar to the Western solar calendar, creating some confusion about what events happen when.
yamanote029
This monument shows the site in modern Tokyo where Katsu Kaishu and Saigo Takamori sat down to negotiate the fate of the city.
Battle_of_Ueno_4_July_1868
The Shogitai, shown here defending their bastion at Kan’eiji, made a futile last stand against the loyalists. Saigo Takamori crushed them with his Western style artillery.
350px-SendaiTroops
Troops from Sendai domain mobilize to fight the loyalists, June 1868.
会津戦争錦絵
Aizu samurai defending their domain. The one on the far left is a woman; many Aizu women took up arms to defend their home against the loyalist assault.
shogunate-troops-travelling-to-ezo
Pro-Tokugawa troops being shipped to Hakodate to join in Enomoto Takeaki’s rebellion.
200px-EnomotoFleet
The vessels of the Ezo Republic navy, depicted in part here, were the greatest asset of the Ezo Republic.

5 thoughts on “Episode 132 – The Fall of the Samurai, Part 15”

  1. Oh, also, in the latest renovation of the Edo-Tōkyō Museum, they dedicated a whole wall to Kaishū and the peaceful surrender of Edo a Castle and the transfer of power.

    1. Sorry, I should have been clearer about the lack of monuments specifically to Katsu Kaishu. Haven’t had the chance to go to the Edo-Tokyo Museum in a…long time (can’t even remember the last time). Glad to hear he’s getting some love, though. I read a biography of his once and I think it shows that I’m something of a fan.

Comments are closed.