| Meiji Emperor Assassinated  by Jeff Provine 
     Author 
    says: what if the the Meiji Emperor has been assassinated in 1868? muses 
    Jeff Provine's on his excellent blog
    This Day in 
    Alternate History. Please note that the opinions expressed in this post 
    do not necessarily reflect the views of the author(s). 
     
      On January 3rd 1868,
     
      Please click the
        
        
          
           icon to follow us on Squidoo.in one of the most pivotal moments in 
        
        Japanese history, fifteen-year-old Emperor Mutsuhito was discovered dead 
        
        in his chambers. 
 His father had died from illness (arguably caused by poisoning) just over 
        
        eleven months earlier, and now the country fell into civil war as the 
        
        imperial court attempted to edge out the old guard. Many historians 
        
        conclude that the assassination promoted war as each side blamed the other 
        
        for the unsolved death.
 
 It was a troubling time for Japan. After hundreds of years of the Sakoku 
        
        ("locked country") policy, Japanese ports were forced open by the American 
        
        Admiral Perry in his 1853 display of Western prowess and demands of a 
        
        treaty. Other Europeans followed, and it was obvious that Japan had fallen 
        
        behind as it attempted to keep its society pure from Westerners. Many 
        
        Japanese agreed that something should be done, the shishi, young warlords, 
        
        calling for barbarians to be expelled from Japan, which Emperor Komei 
        
        granted in 1863. Many foreigners were attacked and counter-attacked, and 
        
        rebels in the south went undefeated by the Shogunate. In 1866, the 
        
        fifteenth shogun, Tokugawa Yoshinobu, ascended to the highest office and 
        
        began reforms to modernize the nation, inviting an expedition from the 
        
        Second French Empire to assist in building up a new army and steam-powered 
        
        navy.
 
 "The big event in japan was commodore perry who 
          
          demonstratd to the japanese that they were helpless when it came to 
          
          foriegn intervention. This led to the creation of th modern japanese army 
          
          that was able to challenge american hegemony in the far east, while they 
          
          lost the war they became number three economically. many japanese still 
          
          have issues with foriegners " - reader's commentA coup from the 
        
        rebelling south in Satsuma and Choshu surrounded the emperor and gained 
        
        great influence. They orchestrated an order in the emperor's name to call 
        
        for the execution of Yoshinobu, who resigned in a ceremony of stripping 
        
        him of land and titles despite his having performed no crime. He fell into 
        
        retirement as according to the emperor's wishes, but Mutsuhito would be 
        
        assassinated some weeks later. Yoshinobu was blamed and demands of his 
        
        life were sent by the southerners. He refused to comply with the imperial 
        
        court, whose coup he saw now as clearly murderous, and he sent forces 
        
        southward. The Tokugawa armies, though improved by French advisers, were 
        
        still largely samurai while the imperial army at Edo was modernized while 
        
        outnumbered three to one.
 
 The war followed samurai gains, which spread anti-foreigner sentiment 
        
        around the islands. On March 8, at Sakai near Osaka, eleven French sailors 
        
        were killed, which prompted the French ambassadors to send for help from 
        
        Indochina, where the French were currently warring with rebels to maintain 
        
        peace. French naval ships and troops arrived, coming to aid the imperial 
        
        court. A puppet emperor was installed, and the French pushed samurai 
        
        forces back, stomping out pockets of resistance over the next year, which 
        
        also enabled them to gain footholds militarily over the islands. Japan was 
        
        named a French colony in June of 1870, mere weeks before the disastrous 
        
        Franco-Prussian War began.
 
 The Japanese would prove stubborn subjects, and the French routinely sent 
        
        new expeditions over the course of the Third Republic to put down 
        
        uprisings, most notably the push for an end to Western rule in 1904, 
        
        mirroring the struggles America had with its colony in the Philippines to 
        
        the south. France and the United States would share resources to bolster 
        
        their western Pacific colonies until World War I, when attention would 
        
        turn to Europe. Russia's grossly outdated army would collapse almost 
        
        immediately under German invasion, a quick end on the eastern front in 
        
        sharp contrast to the dragging trench warfare of the west. After the war 
        
        and the economic collapse following rebuilding of Europe, communism arose 
        
        as a new strategy for society. Coming out of China, Japan would be fertile 
        
        soil for communism after years of objecting to the hierarchy imposed by 
        
        westerners. With the fall of France to the Third Reich, Japan and 
        
        Indochina would undergo revolutions, then channeling supplies to China and 
        
        Russia for their own civil wars.
 
 Communism took firm root in the Far East, spreading to other nations 
        
        previously under colonial control. It met stiff resistance from the West, 
        
        and the two worlds would battle economically and militarily for decades 
        
        through the twentieth century.
 
        
        
       
      
      
 
     
     Author 
    says in reality Emperor Meiji announced his restoration to supreme 
    authority and, after a brief resistance by Yoshinobu and the samurai, began 
    a new era of reforms. Their economic influence and military prestige would 
    become obvious in their defeat of a western nation in the Russo-Japanese War 
    in 1905. Japan continued its growth of political clout as it joined Hitler's 
    Axis, prompting the Pacific theater of World War II. After suffering the 
    only military use of atomic weapons, Japan would rebuild to become an 
    economic world leader. To view guest historian's comments on this post 
    please visit the
    
    Today in Alternate History web site. 
 
     Jeff Provine, Guest Historian of
    
    Today in Alternate History, a Daily Updating Blog of Important Events In 
    History That Never Occurred Today. Follow us on
    
    Facebook, 
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    Twitter.  Imagine what would be, if history had occurred a bit 
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    superpower, aliens influencing human history in the 18th century and Teddy 
    Roosevelt winning his 3rd term as president abound in this interesting 
    fictional blog. 
 
 
    
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