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  1. Okada Keisuke war ein japanischer Admiral der Kaiserlichen Marine, der unter anderem von 1927 bis 1929 sowie erneut zwischen 1932 und 1933 Marineminister war. Er war vom 8. Juli 1934 bis zum 9. März 1936 31. Premierminister Japans und musste knapp zwei Wochen nach dem Putschversuch vom 26. Februar 1936 zurücktreten.

  2. Okada Keisuke (岡田 啓介, Okada Keisuke, 20 January 1868 – 7 October 1952) was a Japanese admiral and statesman who served as Prime Minister of Japan from 1934 to 1936. Born to a samurai family in the Fukui Domain, Okada became an officer Imperial Japanese Navy and served during the First Sino-Japanese War and the Russo ...

  3. 29. März 2024 · Okada Keisuke (born Jan. 20, 1868, Fukui, Japan—died Oct. 17, 1952, Tokyo) was a Japanese admiral and prime minister who attempted to moderate extremist military influence in the government. Okada graduated from the Naval War College in 1901 and became a full admiral in 1924.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Porträt von Okada Keisuke (1868-1952) Das Kabinett Okada (japanisch 岡田内閣, Okada naikaku) regierte Japan unter Führung von Premierminister Okada Keisuke vom 8. Juli 1934 bis zum 9. März 1936. Finanzminister Takahashi Korekiyo wurde beim Putschversuch vom 26. Februar 1936 getötet.

  5. After serving as director of the Naval Personnel and Fleet Control Bureaus, director-general of the Fleet Control Department, and Vice Minister of Navy, he became an admiral and commander-in-chief of the Combined Fleet in 1924.

  6. 28. März 2023 · Go Kotera, Keisuke Okada. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 137 145-159 2017年5月 査読有り. Corruption, financial development and economic growth: Theory and evidence from an instrumental variable approach with human genetic diversity. Takuma Kunieda, Keisuke Okada, Akihisa Shibata.

  7. Keisuke Okada (kā´sŏŏkā ōkä´dä), 18621952, Japanese statesman and admiral. He was (1927–29, 1932–34) minister of the navy before serving (1934–36) as premier. He resigned the premiership after the abortive military coup of Feb., 1936, in which he narrowly escaped assassination.