Aimaro Satō
Yoshimaro Satō (佐藤 愛麿, April 22, 1857 – January 12, 1934) was the Japanese Ambassador to the United States from 1916 to 1918.
Yoshimaro Satō | |
---|---|
Japanese Ambassador to the United States | |
In office 1916–1918 | |
Preceded by | Chinda Sutemi |
Succeeded by | Ishii Kikujirō |
Personal details | |
Born | April 22, 1857 |
Died | January 12, 1934 76) | (aged
Education | DePauw University |
Biography
He was born in 1857 in Hirosaki, Japan. He migrated to the United States and attended DePauw University and graduated in 1881.[1][2]
In 1896 he published Agitated Japan: The life of Ii Kamon-no-kami Naosuke, under the name "Henry Satoh".
He was the Japanese Ambassador to the United States from 1916 to 1918.[2][1] He replaced Chinda Sutemi when he was appointed.
He died of arteriosclerosis on January 12, 1934 in Tokyo.[2]
gollark: Most do.
gollark: Yes, I am aware of its desktop-ish nature.
gollark: I have a nice Mandelbrot set renderer which is GPU-accelerated.
gollark: GPUs are mostly useful for parallel computing tasks of some kind. Of course, yours is probably worse than the CPU in your... laptop or whatever, I assume you have one.
gollark: Roughly.
References
- The Beta Theta Pi. Beta Theta Pi. 1916. p. 113.
- "Aimaro Sato Dies. Japanese Envoy". The New York Times. January 13, 1934. Retrieved 2015-03-04.
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