Matsukata Masayoshi (Q714039)

De Wikidata
Salta a la navegació Salta a la cerca
polític japonès
modifica
Llengua Etiqueta Descripció També conegut com a
català
Matsukata Masayoshi
polític japonès
    anglès
    Matsukata Masayoshi
    Japanese politician (1835-1924)
    • Prince Masayoshi Matsukata

    Declaracions

    4 MatsukataM.jpg
    1.024 × 1.330; 373 Ko
    MatsukataM kao.png
    128 × 100; 4 Ko
    0 referències
    松方正義 (japonès)
    0 referències
    Matsukata anglès
    0 referències
    まつかた まさよし
    Matsukata Masayoshii
    松方正義 (japonès)
    25 feb 1835Gregorià
    0 referències
    0 referències
    0 referències
    1 referència
    Mrs. Reischauer rounds off her book with a portrait gallery of other colorful relatives - mostly Matsukata's sons. We meet, for example, Matsukata's sixth son, Otohiko, a gregarious member of the Hasty Pudding Club at Harvard, where he became friendly with Franklin Delano Roosevelt. ''Oto,'' as Roosevelt and other friends called him, later tried to plead for peace over tea at the White House, when all his Government in Tokyo was thinking of was war. We also meet Matsukata's third son, Kojiro, who made a fortune during World War I selling battleships from his Kawasaki shipyards to the British. Then there is Saburo, the youngest son, who was a ''Marx boy'' during the 1910's, full of socialist ideals. During World War II he ran a news agency disseminating Japanese propaganda in occupied China, where he also indulged his great fondness for cooking. He ended life as a celebrated Boy Scout winning the Bronze Wolf award. (anglès)
    1 referència
    Mrs. Reischauer rounds off her book with a portrait gallery of other colorful relatives - mostly Matsukata's sons. We meet, for example, Matsukata's sixth son, Otohiko, a gregarious member of the Hasty Pudding Club at Harvard, where he became friendly with Franklin Delano Roosevelt. ''Oto,'' as Roosevelt and other friends called him, later tried to plead for peace over tea at the White House, when all his Government in Tokyo was thinking of was war. We also meet Matsukata's third son, Kojiro, who made a fortune during World War I selling battleships from his Kawasaki shipyards to the British. Then there is Saburo, the youngest son, who was a ''Marx boy'' during the 1910's, full of socialist ideals. During World War II he ran a news agency disseminating Japanese propaganda in occupied China, where he also indulged his great fondness for cooking. He ended life as a celebrated Boy Scout winning the Bronze Wolf award. (anglès)
    0 referències
    0 referències
    0 referències
    0 referències
    0 referències
    0 referències
    Masayoshi Matsukata

    Identificadors

    0 referències
    0 referències
    1 referència
    松方正義 (初版) - 『人事興信録』データベース (japonès)
    10 feb 2024
    1 referència
    松方正義 (第4版) - 『人事興信録』データベース (japonès)
    10 feb 2024
    0 referències
    金次郞 正義 金次郎, Kinjirō, Kinzirô, 助左衞門, 助左衛門, Jozaemon, Jozayemon, Zyozaemon, まさよし, Masayoshi, Masayosi 松方 aka Matsugata, Matugata, まつかた, Matsukata, Matukata (25 Feb 1835 - certain 2 Jul 1924)
    0 referències
     
    modifica
      modifica
        modifica
        modifica
        modifica
          modifica
            modifica
              modifica