Prime Minister of Japan/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz m (→Pre-1945) |
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{{r|Giichi Tanaka}} | {{r|Giichi Tanaka}} | ||
{{r|Fumimaro Konoe}} | {{r|Fumimaro Konoe}} | ||
{{r| | {{r|Hideki Tojo}} | ||
{{r|Kantaro Suzuki}} | {{r|Kantaro Suzuki}} | ||
==Post-1945== | ==Post-1945== | ||
{{r|Yukio Hatoyama}} | {{r|Yukio Hatoyama}} |
Revision as of 12:12, 29 August 2010
- See also changes related to Prime Minister of Japan, or pages that link to Prime Minister of Japan or to this page or whose text contains "Prime Minister of Japan".
Parent topics
- Politics of Japan [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Formal Title [r]: Add brief definition or description
Subtopics
Pre-1945
- Hirobumi Ito [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Aritomo Yamagata [r]: In the Meiji Restoration, architect of the Imperial Japanese Army, military commander and three-time Chief of Staff; Three-time President of the Privy Council; two-time Prime Minister of Japan and genro (elder statesman) of immense influence [e]
- Tsuyoshi Inukai [r]: (1855 - 1932) Japanese civilian political leader, belonging to constitutionalist movements; Prime Minister 1931-1932 but assassinated in the May 15 incident [e]
- Giichi Tanaka [r]: Japanese military officer, statesman, and Prime Minister in 1929; cabinet resigned to protest increasing militarization and the assassination of Chang Tso-Lin [e]
- Fumimaro Konoe [r]: Prince and Japanese statesman, close to Emperor Hirohito; fascist politics but generally opposed to war with the U.S.; Prime Minister twice; asked to serve in postwar government but committed suicide before he was arrested as a war criminal [e]
- Hideki Tojo [r]: General of the Imperial Japanese Army and Prime Minister of Japan 1941-1944; Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Army), (21 Feb 1944 - 18 Jul 1944); executed for war crimes in 1948 by order of the International Military Tribunal (Tokyo) [e]
- Kantaro Suzuki [r]: Last Prime Minister of Japan before its surrender in 1945; Admiral in the Imperial Japanese Navy including Commander-in-Chief, Combined Fleet; became a Palace official in 1929; resigned after escaping death in the February 26, 1936 Incident; returned as member of the Privy Council in 1944 and twice was its President [e]
Post-1945
- Yukio Hatoyama [r]: (鳩山由紀夫 Hatoyama Yukio) former Prime Minister of Japan and ex-leader of the Democratic Party of Japan (2009-2010); led the party to its first election victory, ousting the Liberal Democratic Party of which he was a former member after 55 years of near-uninterrupted rule (born 1947). [e]
- Kunio Hatoyama [r]: (鳩山邦夫 Hatoyama Kunio) Japanese politician and younger brother of Yukio Hatoyama, also a politician. [e]
- Democratic Party of Japan [r]: (民主党 Minshutou) political party formed in 1998 through the merger of parties in opposition to the governing Liberal Democratic Party, including former members of the LDP; won the 2009 Japanese general election and formed a coalition government, but lost heavily to the LDP in 2012. [e]
- March 1931 Incident [r]: Failed 1931 coup by Imperial Japanese Army young officer group that wanted to install the head of the Control faction as Prime Minister of Japan [e]
- Nanking Incident of 1927 [r]: Attacks, on 24 March 1927, by Chinese Nationalist Revolutionary Army attack on the Japanese, American and British consulates in Nanking; used as a casus belli for deployment of Japanese troops to China [e]
- Kwangtung Army [r]: Imperial Japanese Army formation that initially garrisoned the Kwangtung Leasehold, and, after Japan took control of Manchuria, was their major force there and fighting China; contained some of the most hard-line officers [e]