Dai Kai wo shiradzu.
(The frog in the well
Knows naught of the ocean.)
Things outside were completely shut off from their view. Along with this perplexity the advocates of the virtual authority of the Throne assailed the Shogunate. Baron Ii Naosuke was the person who had to face these great problems. Confident in the wisdom of his policy, he bravely opposed public opinion, and was hated even by his relations. The result was that he had to sacrifice his life for his perseverance in the policy that he followed. Yet this sad event not only saved our country from the misfortune that befell our neighbour, China, but opened the pathway of civilisation in our own land. The merit of this is attributable to no one but Baron Ii Naosuke.” This powerful championship of a nobleman to whom Japan owes much—further reference to the part which he took in connection with the foreign treaties and the manner of his death will be found in this volume in the chapter devoted to Prince Tokugawa Keiki—does justice to the memory of one whose fate it was to be much maligned during life, and also to Marshal Yamagata’s goodness of heart, and there must have been many of the former adherents of the Tairo who read this eulogy of their murdered chieftain with genuine satisfaction.
It was on Yamagata’s return from France in 1871 that the reform and expansion of the military system were definitely taken in hand, the barons of Satsuma, Choshiu, and Tosa presenting their provincial armies to the Emperor, and it was then that four military centres were formed for the troops that likewise were drafted into the imperial service from the military establishments of the other feudal lords. In 1872 conscription became the law of the land. Six divisions of the army were formed, and regular drill and instruction were provided for. Several French officers were engaged to give tuition in military subjects. Yamagata himself occupied the post of Minister of War, and to the army he appointed as Commander-in-chief General Saigo Takamori. General Yamada ranked next, and other appointments to high command were those of Kirino, the close friend of Saigo in the events of 1877, General Tani, who in that year defended Kumamoto, and Generals Toriwo, Miura, Nodzu, Asa, Miyoshi, Nishi, Osawa, etc.: all capable men who in after years greatly distinguished themselves, some having taken part prominently in the war, now happily at an end, with Russia.
The first regulations promulgated remain in most of their essential features but little changed, notwithstanding the lapse of thirty-five years, and this is testimony in itself to the soundness of the system for which Marquis Yamagata was mainly responsible. All Japanese subjects on reaching the age of twenty were to be liable for three years’ active service in the army or the navy. The officers of the lower grades were to be chosen by the officers of the corps. Commissions were to be granted only after a course of instruction and rigid examination. After their three years’ term conscripts were to form a first reserve, assembling once a year for drill. On the expiration of two years in the first reserve they were to be placed in a second reserve, only liable to be called out in case of a levy en masse. The militia was to be formed of all males between the ages of seventeen and forty, who had been otherwise exempted from service, and these were to be formed into troops for district protection whenever a general levy might take place. The term in the first reserve has been extended far beyond that originally contemplated, but in practice the service in the first and second reserves is merely nominal, and in the militia or national army likewise, as the men are only called out once a year for manœuvres, save in case of war or emergency. The six provincial divisions, inclusive of the Imperial Guards, who were maintained at the capital, were stationed in the first place as under:—
| Headquarters | Brigade | Headquarters | Regiment | Quarters | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Provincial Division | I. | Tokio | I. | Tokio | I. | Tokio |
| XV. | Takasaki | |||||
| II. | Sakura | II. | Sakura | |||
| III. | Tokio | |||||
| Do. | II. | Sendai | III. | Sendai | IV. | Sendai |
| XVI. | Shibata | |||||
| IV. | Aomori | V. | Aomori | |||
| XVII. | Sendai | |||||
| Do. | III. | Nagoya | V. | Nagoya | VI. | Nagoya |
| XVIII. | Toyohashi | |||||
| VI. | Kanazawa | VII. | Kanazawa | |||
| XIX. | Nagoya | |||||
| Do. | IV. | Osaka | VII. | Osaka | VIII. | Osaka |
| IX. | Otsu | |||||
| VIII. | Himeji | X. | Himeji | |||
| XX. | Osaka | |||||
| Do. | V. | Hiroshima | IX. | Hiroshima | XI. | Hiroshima |
| XXI. | Hiroshima | |||||
| X. | Matsuyama | XXII. | Matsuyama | |||
| XII. | Marugame | |||||
| Do. | VI. | Kumamoto | XI. | Kumamoto | XIII. | Kumamoto |
| XXIII. | Kumamoto | |||||
| XII. | Kokura | XIV. | Kokura | |||
| XXIV. | Fukuoka |
In addition to the six divisions detailed under the earlier scheme of military organisation—viz. those having their headquarters at Tokio, Sendai, Nagoya, Osaka, Hiroshima, and Kumamoto—divisions were subsequently established at Asahigawa in the island of Yeso, at Hirosaki in Northern Hondo, at Kanasawa on the west coast, at Himeji, near Kobé, close to the Inland Sea, at Kokura, facing Shimonoseki across the Straits, and at Marugame in the island of Shikoku.
All the divisional headquarters are now served by public or State railways, and practically the same may be said of the various Brigade headquarters, numbering twelve more.