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Suematsu Kencho


Suematsu Kencho (末松 謙澄 Suematsu Kenchō, September 30, 1855 - October 5, 1920) graduated with a law degree from Cambridge University (St. John's College, Cambridge) in the 1870s. He was active as a translator, historian, journalist, politician and statesman in the Meiji Era, 1868-1912. His reputation has suffered somewhat at the hands of the anti-elitist Ryotaro Shiba, and hence he is little-known in Japan.

Suematsu wrote the first English translation of Genji Monogatari. In 1904-5 he came to Europe to counteract anti-Japanese propaganda of the Yellow Peril variety and argue Japan's case, much as Harvard-educated Kaneko Kentaro was doing at the same time in the USA. He married the second daughter of Ito Hirobumi.

Suematsu was born in the hamlet of Maeda, now part of Yukuhashi city, Fukuoka prefecture.

See also

External Links

  • "Suematsu Kencho, 1855-1920: Statesman, Bureaucrat, Diplomat, Journalist, Poet and Scholar," by Ian Ruxton, Chapter 6, Britain & Japan: Biographical Portraits, Volume 5, edited by Hugh Cortazzi, Global Oriental, 2005, ISBN 1901903486

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