Gakushūin

The Gakushūin (学習院) or Peers School (Gakushūin School Corporation), also known as Gakushūjo, is a Japanese educational institution in Tokyo, originally established to educate the children of Japan's nobility.[1] Gakushuin is composed of Kindergarten, Elementary School, Middle School, High School, and University.

Gakushūin in 1933
Gakushuin Crest and Logo

History

The Peers' School was founded in 1847 by Emperor Ninkō in Kyoto.[2] Its purpose was to educate the children of the Imperial aristocracy (kuge).[3] Prior to the disestablishment of the Peerage in 1947, commoners had restricted access to Gakushuin, with limited slots only to the Elementary School and Middle School. In 1947, with the US mandated disestablishment of the Kazoku system, enrollment in Gakushuin was fully opened up to the general public. The Administration of the School was transferred to the Ministry of Education at this time. Previous to 1947, Gakushuin was administered by the Imperial Household Agency.

Precepts

Emperor Ninko had four maxims inscribed on the walls of the Gakushūin building,[4] including

  1. Walk in the paths trodden by the feet of the great sages.[4]
  2. Revere the righteous canons of the empire.[4]
  3. He that has not learned the sacred doctrines, how can he govern himself?[4]
  4. He that is ignorant of the classics, how can he regulate his own conduct?[4]

The school was moved to Tokyo in 1877.[1] Its new purpose was to educate the children of the modern aristocracy. Members of the Imperial Family continue to study at Gakushūin.

Timeline

  • 1847: founded as Peers' School[1]
  • 1877: the school was established in Tokyo[1]
  • 1884: Gakushūin became an Imperial institution.[1]
  • 1885: Peeresses' School was created[2]
  • 1947: Gakushūin became a private institution.[1]

Presidents

No.NameYearTitleMilitary rankNote
1 Tachibana Taneyuki 18771884 Viscount Last lord of Miike Domain.
2 Tani Tateki 18841885 Viscount Lieutenant General (IJA) Former president of Imperial Japanese Army Academy
3 Ōtori Keisuke 18851887 Baron Member of Privy council.
4 Miura Gorō 18871891 Viscount Lieutenant General (IJA)
5 Iwakura Tomosada 1891 Duke
6 Tanaka Mitsuaki 18911894 Viscount Major General (IJA)
7 Konoe Atsumaro 18941903 Duke The heir of Konoe family. The president of House of Peers (18921905)
8 Kikuchi Dairoku 19031904 Baron Mathematician and Minister of Education (19011903).
9 Yamaguchi Einosuke 19051906 Physicist.
10 Nogi Maresuke 19061912 Count General (IJA) Emperor Showa entered school in 1908 and graduated in 1914.
11 Ōsako Naoharu 19121917 Viscount General (IJA)
12 Hōjō Tokiyuki 19171920 Mathematician. Former president of Tohoku Imperial University (19131917).
13 Ichinohe Hyoe 19201922 General (IJA) The Inspectorate General of Military Training
14 Fukuhara Ryojirō 19221929 Former president of Tohoku Imperial University (19171919)
15 Araki Torasaburō 19291937 Medical scientist. Former president of Kyoto Imperial University (19151929)
16 Nomura Kichisaburō 19371939 Admiral (IJN)
17 Yamanashi Katsunoshin 19391946 Admiral (IJN)

Notable alumni and faculty members

Teachers

Alumni

For alumni of Gakushuin University, see: Gakushūin University#Notable alumni
Imperial House of Japan


House of Yi


Others

In fiction

In the novel Spring Snow by Yukio Mishima, set in the early 1910s, the characters Kiyoaki Matsugae and Shigekuni Honda attend the school.

gollark: It is amazing and excellent.
gollark: There actually is a build *counter* in the potatOS build tooling now.
gollark: In Hypercycle it has a full SHA256 hash for the version "number".
gollark: PotatOS actually does have buildIDs and has for a while, but those aren't really intended as an ordering scheme.
gollark: For PotatOS, what we do is just keep the version number identical but constantly make changes.

See also

References

  1. Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2002). "Gakushū-in" in Japan Encyclopedia, p. 230.
  2. "History of Gakushuin" at Gakushuin Women's College; retrieved 2013-2-27.
  3. Ponsonby-Fane, Richard. (1915). The Imperial Family of Japan, p. 26.
  4. Brinkley, Frank. (1915). A History of the Japanese People, p. 664.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.