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  1. Inoue Kowashi war ein bedeutender japanischer Staatsmann, der sich insbesondere in den Bereichen der Verfassungskunde und der Bildungspolitik der Meiji-Zeit erfolgreich engagiert hatte.

  2. Viscount Inoue Kowashi (Japanese: 井上 毅, February 6, 1844 – March 15, 1895) was a Japanese statesman of the Meiji period.

    • March 15, 1895 (aged 51), Tokyo, Japan
    • Takuma
    • Japanese
  3. Inoue Kowashi opposed the Confucian educational ideology advanced by Motoda, and at the same time challenged the freedom and civil rights movement. Yet both of the anti-government movements afforded some perspective to Inoue. His experience in Confucian scholarship also influenced the development of Inoue's educational theory focusing on

  4. Inoue Kowashi (japanisch 井上 毅; * 18. Tag des Zwölften Monats im Jahr 1843 [1] (Tempō 14) bzw. am 6. Februar 1844 in Takebe [2], Kumamoto-han, Provinz Higo; † 17. März 1895 [1]) war ein bedeutender japanischer Staatsmann, der sich insbesondere in den Bereichen der Verfassungskunde und der Bildungspolitik der Meiji-Zeit erfolgreich ...

  5. Government official and statesman. Born in Kumamoto, the son of a samurai of the Kumamoto Clan. In 1871, he started serving at the Ministry of Justice, and in 1872 was sent to Europe, returning to Japan in the following year. In 1874, he accompanied Toshimichi Okubo to Qing.

  6. Kowashi INOUE (February 6, 1844 - March 17, 1895) was a Japanese samurai, a bureaucrat and a statesman. He was a viscount. He successively worked as Director General of the Cabinet Legislation Bureau, the Minister of Education, and so on.

  7. This article explores a specific role of Confucianism in the myth-making that shaped modern Japan. To this end, I consider the political thought of Inoue Kowashi (1844-95), a literary-minded statesman involved in the making of the Meiji constitution. I develop three arguments.