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  1. Sakuma Shōzan (佐久間 象山) (sometimes called Sakuma Zōzan; March 22, 1811 – August 12, 1864) was a Japanese politician and scholar of the Edo period. Biography [ edit ] Born Sakuma Kunitada , he was the son of a samurai and scholar Sakuma Ichigaku [ jp ] ( 佐久間 一学 ) and his wife Arai Mann ( 荒井 まん ) , and a ...

  2. 19 de jul. de 2013 · Also called Sakuma Zōzan, Shōzan (佐久間象山, 1811-1864) was a progressive samurai intellectual of the Bakumatsu period. Born in Matsushiro, the castle town of the Matsushiro domain (松代藩 Matsushiro-han, modern-day Nagano Prefecture), Shozan studied Chinese learning (漢学) under his father, a scholar-administrator of ...

  3. Sakuma Shōzan (佐久間 象山, 22 de marzo de 1811 - 12 de agosto de 1864), a veces llamado Sakuma Zōzan, fue un político y erudito japonés del período Edo. Nacido como Sakuma Kunitada , era hijo de un samurái y erudito Sakuma Ichigaku ( 佐久間 一学 ) y su esposa Arai Mann ( 荒井 まん ) , y nativo de Shinshū ( 信州 ) (o ...

  4. Kawakami se hizo famoso con el asesinato de Sakuma Shōzan en 1864, un prominente político y erudito japonés que estaba a favor de la presencia extranjera en Japón; dicho asesinato fue hecho a plena luz del día. Se presume que cometió otros asesinatos, pero no han podido ser probados hasta la fecha.

  5. Sakuma Shōzan (1811–1864) was a samurai from the Matsushiro domain in Shinano province. He proposed that Japan respond to the West by combining Eastern morality with Western technology (東洋道徳西洋学芸 tōyō dōtoku, seiyō gakugei ).

  6. 5 de abr. de 2024 · Sakuma Zōzan was an early and influential proponent of Westernization in Japan whose slogan Tōyō no dōtoku, seiyō no geijutsu (“Eastern ethics, Western techniques”) became the basis of the Japanese modernization effort in the late 19th century. Sakuma’s ideas, especially as they became known.

  7. Shozan Sakuma (佐久間象山, Sakuma Shōzan) is a samurai from the Matsushiro Clan. He is a scholar and Western-style artillerist who travels to Kyoto to preach his theory of opening the country to the outside world.