Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7fkt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T07:27:02.733Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Shintoists in Restoration Japan (1868–1872): Towards a Reassessment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

J. L. Breen
Affiliation:
School of Oriental and African Studies, London

Extract

In April of 1868, the Restoration government issued an anti-Christian proscription—‘a fixed law for all ages’ it was styled. Christianity was declared a pernicious sect; rewards were offered for information leading to the discovery of Christians. In the name of the proscription, the government carried out a persecution which, in the first four years of the new era, resulted in the deaths of as many as 500 native Christians. These men, women and children died from torture, starvation or from sickness induced by the conditions in which they were kept. The native Christians were, of course, from the recently discovered hidden Christian communities around Nagasaki. The Nagasaki Christian affair is a fascinating one to which I shall return, but I mention it at the outset since it serves usefully to stress the climate of the times as far as Christianity was concerned. Given this climate, it is remarkable that there emerged by 1871, or thereabouts, a small number of enlightened intellectuals who criticized government policy on Christianity and went so far as to advocate religious freedom. The most famous of the few were Mori Arinori, Nakamura Keiu, Fukuzawa Yukichi and Nishi Amane—names known to anyone familiar with early Meiji intellectual history. There is, however, one other name that needs to be added to this short list. That is Fukuba Bisei. The little known Fukuba Bisei was, perhaps, the most remarkable of these men since he was an early Meiji Shintoist.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1990

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Research for this article was supported by the Japan Foundation. The author is greatly indebted to Professor Sakamoto Koremaru of Kokugakuin University, and Takeda Hideaki, one time graduate student of Kokugakuin, for their invaluable assistance, encouragement and friendship.

1 Kanbōchō, Naikaku (ed.), Hōrei Zensho (Tōkyō, Hara Shobō, 1974), vol. 1, p. 6.Google Scholar

2 On the leading role of Fukuba and the Ōkuni Takamasa faction see the recent research by Hideaki, Takeda: ‘Kindai Tennōsaishi Keisei Katei no Ichikōsatsu’ in Nobutaka, Inoue and Koremaru, Sakamoto (eds.), Nihongata Seikyō Kankei no Tanjō (Tōkyō, Daiichi Shobō, 1987).Google Scholar

3 Jingishō—gokaikaku shorui gairyaku basshō in Kyōkai, Nihon Shiseki (ed.), Iwakura Tomomi Kankei Monjo (Tōkyō, 1927), vol. 7, pp. 439–40.Google Scholar

4 Ibid., pp. 440–1.

5 Ibid., p. 439.

6 Yoshio, Yasumaru, Kamigami no Meiji Ishin (Tōkyō, Iwanami Shinsho, 1979), p. 206.Google Scholar

7 The most recent assertion is by Miyaji Masato in his otherwise very useful Nihontsūshi 3—Kokusai Seijika no Kindai Nihon—Kingendai (Tōkyō, Yamagawa Shuppansha, 1987), p. 42.Google Scholar

8 Shōji, Haga, ‘Meiji Jingikan no Seiritsu to Kokkasaishi no Saihen’ (ge), Jinbungakuhō, 51, p. 74.Google Scholar

9 Shōji, Haga, ‘Shintō Kokkyōsei no Keisei’, Nihonshi Kenkyū, 264, pp. 2 and 30.Google Scholar

10 Yasumaru, , op. cit., p. 48.Google Scholar

11 The religious nature of ‘restoration Shinto’ is dwelt on especially in Haga Shōji, ‘Shintō Kokkyōsei no keisei’, passim, and Nagao, Nishida, ‘Meiji Shintōshijosetsu’; ‘Meiji Shinseifu no Shūkyō Kaikaku’ in Nihon Shintōshi Kenkyū, vol. 7, Kinseihen (ge) (Tōkyō, Kodansha, 1978).Google Scholar

12 One reason for the confusion may be that Okuni went to considerable trouble on occasions to argue his claims to the position vacated by Hirata Atsutane in the Kokugaku lineage. He wrote his Gakutō Benron (Ōkuni Takamasa Zenshū (hereafter Zenshū) (Tōkyō, Yūkōsha, 1939, vol. 4) for this purpose.Google Scholar

13 The memorial, Kenkin Sengo (‘Humble Ramblings’), is published in Noboru, Haga, Sannosuke, Matsumoto et al. (eds), Nihon Shisō Taikei, 51: Kokugaku Undō no Shisō (hereafter Kokugaku Undō) (Tōkyō, Iwanami Shoten, 1971), pp. 548–85.Google Scholar

14 On the Jingikan revival see Shōji, Haga, ‘Meiji Jingikan no Seiritsu to Kokkasaishi no Saihen’ (jō, Jinbungakuhō, 49.Google Scholar

15 Hongaku Kyoyō, Zenshū, 1, p. 20.Google Scholar

16 Takeda, op. cit., p. 117. For the coronation plans, see ibid., pp. 117–21.

17 Fukuba's handling of the Meiji Daijōsai is another example. His innovative approach was attached by Yanō and others, and Fukuba responded by accusing them of being kaika no bōgai or ‘obstacles to enlightenments’ (Ehimeken, Ōzu Chūgakkō Yōshōkai, Yano Gendō Sensei Ryakuden (Ehime, 1915), p. 45).Google Scholar On the Meiji Daijōsai see Hiroshi, Takagi, ‘Meiji Ishin to Daijōsai’, Nihonshi Kenkyū, 300.Google Scholar

18 For a contemporary account of the Hasshinden controversy see Nagatane, Tokoyo, Shinkyō Soshiki Monogatari in Kokugakuin Daigaku Nihon Bunka Kenkyūjo Kiyō, vol. 52, pp. 184–5. See also Yasumaru, op. cit., pp. 120–1.Google Scholar

19 Shinkyō Soshiki Monogatari, p. 185.Google Scholar

20 Nagatane, Tokyo, Jingikan Senakaku Monogatari, in Kōkoku, 355, 6, pp. 88–9.Google Scholar

21 Takeda, , op. cit., pp. 139–41.Google Scholar

22 See, for example, Hongaku Kyoyō, p. 60.Google Scholar

23 Ibid., p. 3.

24 Amatsu Norito Futonoritoko, in Zenshū, vol. 7, pp. 227–8.Google Scholar

25 Bunbu Kyojitsuron, in ibid., vol. 1, pp. 156–7.

26 Shinshin Kōhōron, in Tsuguo, Tahara et al. (eds.), Nihon Shisō Taikei, 50: Hirata Atsutane, Ban Nobutomo, Ōkuni Takamasa (hereafter Ōkuni Takamasa) (Tōkyō, Iwanami Shoten, 1973), p. 501.Google Scholar

27 Gyoju Mondō, in Zenshū, vol. 1, p. 79. Ōkuni writes that Norinaga and Hirata Shinto ‘may be enough to convince Japanese people, but to convince foreigners they are insufficient.’ (ibid., p. 119).

28 Ibid., p. 112. See also Shinshin Kōhōron, pp. 495–6 for a variation.

29 Bunbu Kyojitsuron, p. 128.Google Scholar

30 The following is based on his ‘New True International Law’ (Shinshin Kōhōron) in Ōkuni Takamasa, pp. 493511.Google Scholar

31 Gakuunron, in Zenshū, vol. 4, pp. 7980.Google Scholar

32 Sonnōjōi Shinsakuben, in Zenshū, vol. 3, p. 390.Google Scholar

33 Sonnōjōi Isetsuben in Zenshū, vol. 2, p. 362. On shōjōi and daijōi see also his Shinshin Kōhōron, pp. 504–5.Google Scholar

34 Sonnōjōi Isetsuben, p. 358.Google Scholar

35 Quoted in Ōkuni Takamasa, p. 646.Google Scholar

36 Kyūjō Ichiran, not paginated (I have used the Kokugakuin Daigaku manuscript copy).Google Scholar

37 Gyoju Mondō, p. 75. See also p. 97.Google Scholar

38 Sonnōjōi Isetsuben, p. 358.Google Scholar

39 Shinshin Kōhōron, p. 504.Google Scholar

40 See Hiroyuki, Tamagake, ‘Bakumatsu ni okeru “Shūkyō” to “Rekishi”—Ōkuni Takamasa ni okeru shūkyōron to rekishiron to no kankei o megutte’, Tōhoku Daigaku Bungakubu Kenkyu Nenpō, 31, p. 90.Google Scholar

41 This translation of a passage in Hirata Atsutane's Honkyō Gaihen is by Donald Keene, who points out that Hirata lifted the passage almost verbatim from a work by Matteo Ricci.Google Scholar See Keene, Donald, ‘Hirata Atsutane and Western Learning’, T'oung Pao, 42, p. 308.Google Scholar

42 Koshiden, quoted in Kokugaku Undō, p. 529.Google Scholar

43 Satow, E., ‘The Revival of Pure Shintau’, Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan, vol. 2, p. 72.Google Scholar

44 On this point see Harootunian's stimulating study of Tokugawa, Kokugaku: Things Seen and Unseen: Discourse and Ideology in Tokugawa Nativism (Chicago, The University of Chicago Press, 1988), pp. 32 and 167.Google Scholar

45 Nagata, Hiroshi, ‘Fukko Shintō no Tokushitsu’ in Nihon Hōkensei no Ideorogī (Tōkyō, Hakuyōsha, 1960), pp. 276–7.Google Scholar

46 Ibid.Nagata questions whether these religious aspects of Hirata Shinto are really attributable to Christian influence, as many scholars have suggested.Google Scholar

47 Kyōikukai, Mitoshi (ed.), Tōko Sensei no Hanmen (Tōkyō, 1909), p. 72Google Scholar, and Toko, Fujita, Jutsugi, Kōdōkanki, in Usaburō, Imai et al. (eds.), Nihon Shinsō Taikei, 53: Mitogaku (Tōkyō, Iwanami shoten), 1973, p. 322.Google Scholar Interestingly, Fujita saw the influence of Christianity in Hirata's Kokugaku,

ibid., p. 265 and note.

48 In addition to the introductory section of Yano's Kenkin Sengo, see also his Zen'aku Ōhōron quoted in Nishida, op. cit., pp. 338–9. Yano's biographer informs us that in the early Meiji period his Shinto ideas led to his being branded as a Christian (Yano, Tarō, Yano Gendō Okina Ryakuden (Matsuyama, Matsuyamadō shoten, 1933), p. 140).Google Scholar

49 Hongaku Kyoyō, p. 451.Google Scholar

50 Shintō Michishirube, in Zenshū, vol. 1, p. 333. This statement is highly reminiscent of Confucius' ‘You are born into this world, so devote yourself to it’ (also quoted by the Mito scholar Fujita Toko (Kōdōkanki Jutsugi, p. 331).Google Scholar

51 Shigo Anshinroku, in Zenshū, vol. 5, p. 335.Google Scholar

52 Naobi no Tama Hochū, in Zenshū, vol. 2, p. 126.Google Scholar

53 Ibid., pp. 100–1.

55 Ibid., p. 117. The best piece on Amaterasu in Ōkuni Shinto is Tamagake, op. cit., pp. 102–10.Google Scholar

56 Koden Tsūkai, in Zenshū, vol. 6, p. 91.Google Scholar

57 Yamatogokoro Ihon 1, in Zenshū, vol. 2, p. 127.Google Scholar

58 Jingikan Hongi, in Zuishi, Inoue (ed.), Ishin Zengo Tsuwanohanshi Hōkō Jiseki (Tōkyō, Aoyama Kiyokichi, 1900), p. 38.Google Scholar

59 Hongaku Kyoyō, vol. 1, pp. 4–5.Google Scholar

60 Quoted in Ōkuni Takamasa, p. 550.Google Scholar

61 My interpretation of Ōkuni Shinto differs fundamentally from that of Professor Harootunian who writes, for example (op. cit., p. 346), that Ōkuni ‘eliminated the sharp differentiation between ruler and ruled;…[and] had manoeuvred to displace the perceived differences between social classes necessitated by politics, and their consequences for order.’ My understanding, however, is that his ethical Shinto aimed precisely at reinforcing the traditional social structure. He does not consider Ōkuni's own definition of Shinto as consisting essentially in the hierarchical principles of chūkōtei. Again he writes: ‘Ōkuni saw the Imperial Office as secondary in significance to the creation deities and the community.’ (op. cit., p. 356). While this judgement applies to Hirata Kokugaku, it does not do so to Ōkuni Kokugaku, Professor Harootunian arrives at his understanding here, without considering Ōkuni's Bankoku Sōtei theory in which the Imperial Office is primary.Google Scholar

62 See Takeda, , op. cit., pp. 131–8.Google Scholar

63 See above n. 48.Google Scholar

64 Gokui Zonnensho, in Kansaikō Hōmu Yōsho Zanpen (not paginated) (Iwanami Shoten copy).Google Scholar

65 See for example Haga, Shōji, ‘Shintō Kokkyōsei no keisei’, pp. 1112.Google Scholar

66 The pronouncement is translated in full in Shōzō, Kōno, ‘Kannagara no Michi’, Monumenta Nipponica, vol. 3, no. 2.Google Scholar

67 Sonnōjōi Isetsuben, p. 348.Google Scholar

68 Gyoju Mondō, p. 112.Google Scholar

69 Sekijubutsu, in Zenshū, vol. 4, p. 164.Google Scholar

70 Yamatogokoro, in Zenshū, vol. 3, p. 90.Google Scholar

71 Sandōsanyoku Shōkuzusetsu, in Zenshū, vol. 2, p. 299.Google Scholar

72 Sonnōjōi Isetsuben, p. 347.Google Scholar

73 Sekijubutsu, pp. 166–7.Google Scholar

74 Yasumaru, , op. cit., p. 86.Google Scholar

75 Shaji Onkaisei OnshuigakiGoogle Scholar, in Iwao, Kabe (ed.), Otoroganaka (Tōkyō, 1908), pp. 464–5.Google Scholar

76 Satoshigaki, in ibid., p. 474.

77 Shaji Onkaisei Onshuigaki, p. 464.Google Scholar

78 Kansaikō Hōmu Yōsho Zanpen.Google Scholar

81 See for example Yasumaru, op. cit., pp. 52–4. For further evidence of Hirata followers' involvement in local haibutsu activities see Yasumaru op. cit., pp. 98–100Google Scholar, and Tasaburō, Itō, Kinseishi no Kenkyū, vol. 1 (Tōkyō, Yoshikawa Kōbunkan, 1982), p. 59.Google Scholar

82 Kenkinsengo, in Kokugaku Undō, p. 582.Google Scholar

83 See above n. 3.Google Scholar

84 Tsunetugu, Muraoka, ‘Meiji Ishin no kyōkatosei to Hirata Shintō’, in Ken, Ishikawa (ed.), Hatano Sensei Kentei Ronbunshū— Tetsugaku oyobi Shūkyō to Sono Rekishi (Tōkyō, Iwanami Shoten, 1938), p. 582.Google Scholar

85 For Aizawa's views of Christianity, echoed closely by Ōkuni, see Wakabayashi, Bob Tadashi, Anti-Foreignism and Western Learning in Early Modern Japan: The New Theses of 1825 (Harvard East Asian Monographs 126, Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press, 1986), esp. pp. 6876.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

86 Bunbu Kyojitsuron, p. 400.Google Scholar

88 Kyūjō Ichiran (not paginated).Google Scholar

89 Shinri Shōgen is one example. I have again used the Kokugakuin Daigaku manuscript copy (not paginated) of this work.Google Scholar

90 Shinri Shōgen.Google Scholar

93 On this see, for example, Hongaku Kyōyō, p. 15.Google Scholar

94 Ibid., p. 30.

95 See my ‘The Restoration Government's Anti-Christian Measures: The Question of Motive’ (paper presented to the European Association of Japanese Studies Conference (Durham 1988)). The standard account of the Nagasaki affair is Wasaburō, Urakawa, Urakami Kirishitanshi (Tōkyō, Zenkoku Shobō, 1943).Google Scholar

96 See Dajōruiten, 1, 21, 28.Google Scholar

97 In Kansaikō Hōmu Yōsho Zanpen.Google Scholar

99 Ibid. We have seen Ōkuni equate Amenominakanushi with Tenshu, (the Christian God), but despite his identification of Amenominakanushi with Amaterasu, Amaterasu and Tenshu are here equated for the first time.

100 Ibid.

101 Kamei Koremi Kaki (Hensanjo, Shiryō, Tōkyō Daigaku).Google Scholar

102 Ōkuma Monjo A4 151, 15 (Waseda University).Google Scholar

103 Iwao, Kabe (ed.), Mokuen Fukuba Bisei Shoden (Tōkyō, Yōrōbunko, 1908), p. 73.Google Scholar

104 The Restoration government had declared the Christian proscription to be such a law (eisei no teihō) in the Gobō no Keiji published on April 7th 1868. See above n. 1.Google Scholar

105 See above. n. 3.Google Scholar

106 Ibid.