Ijuin Hikokichi

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Baron Ijuin Hikokichi
伊集院彦吉
Hikokichi Ijuin.jpg
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
19 September 1923 – 7 January 1924
Prime Minister Gombei Yamamoto
Preceded by Gombei Yamamoto
Succeeded by Keishiro Matsui
Personal details
Born 1864
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Tokyo

Ijuin Hikokichi (伊集院彦吉; 1864  – 26 April 1924) was a Japanese diplomat and politician who served as minister of foreign affairs and Japanese ambassador to Peking.

Early life

Hikokichi was born in 1864.[1][2]

Career

Hikokichi was appointed consul at Chefoo in China in 1893.[3] He served again in China as consul general at Tientsin from 1901 to 1907.[3] He was appointed ambassador to Pekin in 1908.[4] On 4 September 1909, he signed the Japan-China Agreement concerning Kando as the Japanese ambassador to the Ching Empire in Beijing.[5] During the Chinese revolution broke out in October 1911, together with then foreign minister Uchida Yasuya, he argued for the provision of support to the Ching government during the 1911 Chinese revolution.[6] His term as ambassador to Pekin lasted until 1913.[3]

Then, he was appointed the Japanese ambassador to Rome in 1916 and in office until 1920.[1] During his tenure, he was one of the leading members of Japanese delegation at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919.[5] Hikokichi is described as a conservative ambassador.[7]

Japanese delegation at the Paris Peace Conference 1919.

On the other hand, then prime minister Hara Takashi wanted Hikokichi to search for European institutions of public information when the latter was ambassador and a Versailles delegate.[8] Ijuin reported that the best way to create an influential information bureau was to coordinate all information sources, including army, navy and finance ministry.[8] Eventually, a public information office (Gaimusho Johobu) in the ministry of foreign affairs was established on 13 August 1921, and Hikokichi was appointed its head.[8][9] Then he served as governor-general of Kwantung Leased Territory in northeastern China for one year.[10] He was appointed on 8 September 1922, replacing Isaburo Yamagata as the governor-general.[11] Hikokichi was in office until 19 September 1923.[12][13]

Then he was appointed foreign minister on 19 September 1923 to the second cabinet of Gombei Yamamoto,[14][15] replacing him who also assumed the role of foreign minister briefly from 2 to 19 September.[14] Hikokichi was replaced by Keishiro Matsui on 7 January 1924 when a new cabinet was formed by Keigo Kiyoura.[15]

Personal life

Hikokichi married to Okubo Toshimichi's daughter.[1] And Hikokichi was brother-in-law of Makino Nobuaki.[1]

Death

Shortly after his removal from the office, Hikokichi died of neuralgia in Tokyo in April 1924.[5][16]

References

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