born Oct. 14, 1841, Su province, Japan died Oct. 26, 1909, Harbin, Manchuria, China Japanese statesman, prime minister, and writer of the Meiji Constitution. He played a minor role in the Meiji Restoration, through which he came in contact with Kido Takayoshi and kubo Toshimichi. When kubo was assassinated in 1878, Ito succeeded him as home minister. He persuaded the government to adopt a constitution, then traveled abroad to research constitutions. In 1889 the emperor promulgated the resultant document. Later, as prime minister, It negotiated an end to extraterritoriality with Britain; other Western nations followed suit, signaling that the West was beginning to treat Japan as an equal. Frustrated with the ability of the political parties to impede passage of government programs in the Diet, in 1900 It founded his own party, the Rikken Seiykai. This foray cost him control of the genro (elder statesmen) but made cooperation between high-ranking bureaucrats and party politicians acceptable. In 1906 Ito became resident general in Korea; he was assassinated in 1909 by a Korean nationalist
born Aug. 30, 1627, Kyto, Japan died April 4, 1795, Kyto Japanese Confucian scholar. The son of a lumberman, he devoted himself to scholarship. He opposed the authoritarian Neo-Confucianism of the Tokugawa shogunate (see Tokugawa period) and advocated a return to the authentic teachings of Confucius and Mencius. He helped establish the Kogaku school of Neo-Confucianism and, with his son, founded the Kogi-d academy in Kyto, which was run by his descendants until 1904. His writings include Gmjigi (1683), a commentary on Confucianism that tried to develop a rational basis for morality and the pursuit of happiness
{i} Japanese company that operates a large supermarket chain and more than 10,350 "7-Eleven" stores in Japan (also operates department stores, restaurants, specialty stores and more)
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