Pemberontakan Saga (佐賀ノ乱code: ja is deprecated ,
Saga no ran) adalah
Pemberontakan yang terjadi pada tahun 1874 di Kyūshu melawan pemerintah Meiji yang baru Jepang. Dipimpin oleh Etō Shinpei dan Shima Yoshitake di wilayah asal mereka Hizen.
Background
Following the 1868 Meiji Restoration, many members of the former samurai class were disgruntled with the direction the nation had taken. The abolition of their former privileged social status under the feudal order had also eliminated their income, and the establishment of universal military conscription had eliminated much of their reason for existence. The very rapid modernization (Westernization) of the country was resulting in massive changes to Japanese culture, language, dress and society, and appeared to many samurai to be a betrayal of the jōi (“Expel the Barbarian”) portion of the Sonnō jōi justification used to overthrow the former Tokugawa shogunate.
Hizen Province, with a large samurai population, was a center of unrest against the new government. Older samurai formed political groups rejecting both overseas expansionism and westernization, and calling for a return to the old feudal order. Younger samurai organized the group Seikantō political party, advocating militarism and the invasion of Korea.
Prelude
Etō Shimpei, former Justice Minister and sangi (Councilor) in the early Meiji government resigned his posts in 1873 to protest the government's refusal to launch a military expedition against Korea (Seikanron). Eto then assisted Itagaki Taisuke in organizing the Aikoku Kōtō political party, and in composing the Tosa Memorial, a sharp criticism of the government. In January 1874, frustrated by the government's rejection of his efforts, he returned to his native
Saga where both the traditionists and the Seikantō samurai rallied to his support.
Alarmed by growing rumors of unrest, Home Minister Ōkubo Toshimichi dispatched his henchman Iwamura Takatoshi to
Saga to restore order. Iwamura only made the situation worse with his overbearing attitude. On the ship to
Saga, he made an enemy of Shima Yoshitake, the former governor of Akita Prefecture, who was traveling to
Saga at the request of Sanjō Sanetomi. Iwamura so outraged Shima that Shima decided to throw his lot in with Etō and his rebels.
Etō memutuskan untuk mengambil tindakan pada 16 Februari 1874, dengan merampok bank dan menduduki kantor-kantor pemerintah di halaman kastil
Saga lama. Etō expected mengharapkan bahwa samurai yang sama-sama tidak puas di Satsuma dan Tosa akan melancarkan
Pemberontakan ketika mereka menerima kabar tentang tindakannya, tetapi dia salah perhitungan, dan kedua wilayah tetap tenang.
Etō decided to take action on the 16th of February 1874, by raiding a bank and occupying government offices within the grounds of old
Saga castle. Etō had expected that similarly disaffected samurai in Satsuma and Tosa would stage insurrections when they received word of his actions, but he had miscalculated badly, and both domains remained calm.
On February 19, Ōkubo set up his headquarters in Hakata and issued a proclamation condemning the
Saga rebels as traitors. Government troops marched into
Saga the following day. After losing a battle on the border of
Saga and Fukuoka on February 22, Eto decided that further resistance would only result in needless deaths, and disbanded his army.
Etō told his followers that he intended to escape to Kagoshima to obtain help from Saigō Takamori and his Satsuma samurai. If Saigō refused, he intended to go to Tosa, and if Tosa likewise refused, he would make his way to Tokyo to commit seppuku.
Although the
Saga rebels were greatly demoralized by Etō's flight, they continued to fight on, with some of the most violent combat occurring in the streets of
Saga on February 27. Shima, who announced his decision to die fighting at
Saga castle, fled that night for Kagoshima with his staff. Government forces seized
Saga Castle of March 1 without further bloodshed.
Arrest warrants were circulated for Etō and Shima, and it is ironic that Etō was on the run as a fugitive from the very police force whom he had helped create. Etō was refused support in Kagoshima, and fled to Tosa in a fishing boat, where he was received coldly. While attempting to find a boat to take him to Tokyo, he was apprehended on March 28.
Sympathy for Etō was high, with Sanjo Sanetomi writing to Ōkubo to remind him that Etō's motives were not evil, and with Kido Takayoshi likewise writing to suggest that Etō be employed in the upcoming Taiwan Expedition of 1874. However, Okubo was adamant that an example be set, and Etō and Shima were tried by a military tribunal on April 12, and executed the next day along with eleven other leaders of the revolt. Etō was beheaded at Ōkubo's orders, and his severed head placed on public display – considered a demeaning punishment for someone of samurai class. Photographs were taken and were sold in Tokyo; however, the Tokyo government later banned their sale and ordered people who purchased the photographs to return them. Ōkubo, however, refused to comply and hung a copy of the photograph in the reception room of the Home Ministry.
Konsekuensi
Meskipun
Pemberontakan samurai di
Saga telah ditekan oleh kekuatan militer, masalah yang menyebabkan
Pemberontakan tetap tidak terselesaikan. Kyūshū terus menjadi sarang
Pemberontakan terhadap pemerintah pusat selama dekade 1870-an, yang berpuncak pada
Pemberontakan Satsuma.
Lihat juga
Hagi Rebellion
Akizuki Rebellion
Shinpūren Rebellion
Satsuma Rebellion
Catatan
Referensi
Beasley, William G. (1972). The Meiji Restoration. Stanford: Stanford University Press. ISBN 9780804708159; OCLC 579232
Jansen, Marius B. (2000). The Making of Modern Japan. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 9780674003347; OCLC 44090600
Keene, Donald. (2002). Emperor of Japan: Meiji and His World, 1852-1912. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-12340-2; OCLC 46731178
Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric and Käthe Roth. (2005). Japan encyclopedia. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01753-5; OCLC 58053128