- Source: 1867 in Japan
- Jepang
- Kaisar Jepang
- Kaisar Kōmei
- Restorasi Meiji
- Kaisar Meiji
- Imperium Jepang
- Yatarō Mishima
- Fukuoka Takachika
- Daftar stasiun kereta api di Indonesia
- Majapahit
- 1867 in Japan
- French military mission to Japan (1867–1868)
- 1867
- Japan
- Emperor Kōmei
- Ee ja nai ka
- Empire of Japan
- Exposition Universelle (1867)
- Sakamoto Ryōma
- Japanese yen
Events in the year 1867 in Japan. It corresponds to Keiō 2 and Keiō 3 in the Japanese calendar.
Incumbents
Monarch:
Kōmei until January 30
Meiji from February 3
Shōgun: Tokugawa Yoshinobu until November 19
Events
January 30 (Keiō 2, 25th day of the 12th month) – Emperor Kōmei dies of smallpox. He had suffered a fatally violent bout of vomiting and diarrhea. Since he had consistently opposed the anti-bakufu forces this was distinctly convenient for them and it was rumored that he was assassinated, either by radicals from Choshu or radical officials in the court. However, there is no evidence of this and it is generally believed that he was simply one more victim of what was a worldwide pandemic at the time.
February 3 (Keiō 2, 29th day of the 12th month) – Musuhito ascended to the throne as Emperor Meiji.
November 10 (Keiō 3, 15th day of the 10th month) – An Imperial edict was issued sanctioning the restoration of Imperial government.
November 19 – Shōgun Tokugawa Yoshinobu resigns the shogunate.
Births
February 9 – Natsume Sōseki, novelist and writer (d. 1916)
February 14 – Sakichi Toyoda, inventor and industrialist (d. 1930)
July 23 – Kōda Rohan, writer (d. 1947)
October 14 – Masaoka Shiki, poet, author, and literary critic (d. 1902)
October 15 – Fujishima Takeji, painter (d. 1943)
Deaths
January – Yamamoto Otokichi, castaway (b. 1818)
January 30 – Emperor Kōmei (b. 1831)
May 17 – Takasugi Shinsaku, samurai (b. 1839)
June 22 – Takeda Kanryūsai, samurai and fifth unit captain of the Shinsengumi (b. 1834)
December 10 – Sakamoto Ryōma, samurai and revolutionary (assassinated) (b. 1836)
December 13 – Tōdō Heisuke, samurai and eighth unit captain of the Shinsengumi (b. 1844)
Full date unknown:
Motsugai Takeda (1795–1867), Zen priest and martial artist