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The Life of the Characters in Yamamoto Gonnohyō e's Works
1852 10 June 15 was born in Satsuma (now Kagoshima Prefecture). 1863 participated in the war with Britain.

1868, he joined the Chen Wu war. After the war, he was introduced to Shenghaizhou by Saigō Takamori and joined the navy.

1869 studied at the Naval Training Academy as a tribute student of Samoyed.

/kloc-the penultimate graduate among 0/7 people.

1874 warrant officer Ren Haijun, studying in Germany. After returning to China, he served as the captain of Kaohsiung and Gao Qianzhen.

189 1 year, he worked under Saigou Jyuudou, the secretary of the navy, preaching that Japan is an island country and that the navy should be parallel to the army, if not the first. As a result, he finally established a naval military command department independent of the army, which made him prosperous.

1895 military director of Ren Haijun.

1898 served as the second minister of the navy in Yamagata Cabinet, and remained in office during the fourth Ito Cabinet and the first Kwai Cabinet.

1904 promoted to general.

19 13 years to form a cabinet and abolish the military attache system in active service. The following year, he was forced to step down because of the Siemens incident.

1923 formed a cabinet again, imposed martial law during the Great Kanto Earthquake, and promulgated a security law, which was widely opposed. Later, he resigned due to the Humen incident. After retirement, he sat with Samoan warlords in the navy.

1928 was awarded the Chrysanthemum Medal. Like most Japanese naval officers at that time, Yamamoto Gonnohyō e came from Kagoshima and belonged to Samoan. At the age of eleven, he took part in the English-speaking War, helped move artillery shells at Yatian Fort, and moved artillery shells with Tougou Heihachirou. The gunner was none other than ōyama Iwao, the earliest Japanese marshal (this castle is priceless ~ ~). The captain and deputy captain of the flagship Iuria of the British fleet were sent to heaven by this battery. Yamamoto Gonnohyō e is the second phase of the Naval Academy. He was one of the most troublesome students when he served in the navy. Many of the first naval students fought alongside the British. In addition to the instinctive resistance to the enemies who fought in the past, there is also the conceit of "Lao Zi came from the battlefield". He simply ignored those instructors with big noses who had no actual combat experience. He was as drunk as a fiddler all day, and even the British instructors dared to fight when the fire came.

Major Douglas's inculcation of "being a gentleman" is useless to these students who are similar to local ruffians and hooligans. Finally, they can only use the most primitive "expulsion" method. 1872 As many as 158 students were expelled. Yamamoto Gonnohyō e was the first stubborn student in the second period, but somehow escaped the fate of being expelled.

Yamamoto Gonnohyō e's nonsense is not limited to drinking and fighting. Once, I went to a brothel in Shinagawa with other non-commissioned officers to drink Hua San, and I took a fancy to a young prostitute. That night, Captain Yamamoto hired several people as helpers, put a ladder on the back wall of the brothel and stole the prostitute from the brothel. Later, the brothel came to the door, and Yamamoto's friends helped him raise money to redeem the prostitute. And that child prostitute is the later Mrs. Yamamoto Gonnohyō e, Kanazawa Deng Xizi.

Make friends

After Yamamoto Gonnohyō e entered the Central Navy as a naval provincial officer, he didn't go back and forth between the fleet and the central government as often as others, but he always worked in the Central Navy (you're welcome to say that he just didn't "squat" at the grassroots level). However, he rose step by step, and was almost the only naval general in the Japanese navy who had never served as a fleet commander. This strange experience has a lot to do with Saigou Jyuudou, the Secretary of the Navy. Minister Yamamoto Hiroshi

The Japanese government cut its budget and began administrative reform in 1892. At that time, Yamamoto Gonnohyō e was an official of the Naval Province. Under his leadership, he set up the Naval Military Command (General Staff), which was relatively independent of the Naval Province (military administrative organ), so that the navy behind the army was equal to the army. At the same time, in the process of personnel transfer, he also listed fellow villagers, predecessors and people who remained neutral during the Meiji Restoration as the adjustment targets, and dismissed 8 generals and 89 school officials. Colonel Yamamoto had a dagger on his desk. He met the officers on the list one by one and announced their dismissal. Whether it was the roar of "anti-chaos" or the pleading, Yamamoto was unmoved and completed the first "slimming action" in the history of the Japanese navy with a heart of stone. Use useful talents without prejudice. Tougou Heihachirou, Saito, Katsuya Okada and Yamashita Shintaro, who later became important figures, were all promoted by Yamamoto Gonnohyō e at that time. Born in the army, Yamagata Aritomo and Noue Kaoru appreciated his political talents. When Yamamoto Gonnohyō e was a director, people around him called him "Minister Gombe". As a Samoan, Yamamoto Gonnohyō e realized the disadvantages of nepotism, so he decided the way to ascend and descend with the academic achievements of military schools, and implemented the hammock number system to ensure meritocracy, thus eliminating the phenomenon that Samoans were born to dominate the navy. At the end of Meiji, Japanese politics entered a long period of transition from vassal politics to party politics. Before the establishment of the third Keitaro Cabinet, Yamamoto Gonnohyō e was excluded from the candidate for the second Saionji Kinmochi Cabinet, and the critic Morizaki said that "Yamagata Aritomo's opposition prevented him from leading the political situation". Compared with the "first generation Cheung Chau Army" which has been the mainstream of politics so far, Yamamoto Gonnohyō e belongs to the "second generation of Samoan navy", which is also an important factor to prevent him from becoming prime minister.

Before Yamamoto Gonnohyō e became prime minister, Samoan-born prime ministers were only Haruhiko Kuroda and Masayoshi Matsuzaka, while "theoretically" prime ministers from the navy were only Masayoshi Matsuzaka, not to mention Matsuzaka was just a civilian with no rank. Although there are only two prime ministers with military background from Changzhou, Yamagata Aritomo and Kyotaro, their terms of office are much longer than those from Samoa (Kyotaro is the longest Japanese prime minister so far). If you count Ito Bowen, the advantage of Changzhou Francisco is even more obvious.