The Iwakura Mission . It was made 1872 in San Francisco. In the middle is sitting Iwakura Tomomi, the leader of the Japanese diplomats. From left to right,
Kido Takayoshi,
Yamaguchi Masuka,
Iwakura Tomomi,
Itō Hirobumi,
Ōkubo Toshimichi. After the victory in the civil war,
Emperor Mutsuhito began the complicated task of modernizing the country. In order to renegotiate the terms of previous treaties and better study western culture and technology, a great expedition around the globe was organized, led by
Iwakura Tomomi. In England, he held fruitful talks with
Lord Granville, British Foreign Secretary, in November 1872, in which Japan was asked to modernize its laws before it could effectively renegotiate treaties and abrogate extraterritoriality. Modernizing Japanese institutions thus became a priority for the imperial government. Extraterritoriality had previously been imposed to protect British citizens, but by the time the Japanese had built a reliable system of laws that could also be observed by westerners, it would no longer have been necessary.
The modernization of Japan Internationally, all of the imperial government's efforts were concentrated on the abrogation of the so-called '
Unequal Treaties', which were in fact unilateral, non-reciprocal pacts that subscribed to an implicit subservience of the Japanese country to western nations. For the British authorities, the extraterritoriality clause was necessary to protect British citizens in Japan from Japanese law, which was considered barbaric and excessively cruel. The fact that there were no clear rules and that the
Daimyo had full legislative and judicial autonomy within their own fiefdom was a further obstacle. Unknown to the British and other Westerners at the time, however, Japan had a long judicial history, beginning with the
Seventeen-article constitution enacted on 6 May 604AD, and the legislative and judicial autonomy was a reflection of the confederate characteristic of the central government (
Bakufu) in the
Han system, in which Daimyo's were
monarchs. Nevertheless, it was therefore necessary for the imperial government to carry out substantial legislative, and judicial reform, in addition to the preparations for the new
Meiji Constitution. In 1871 a decree was issued abolishing the
Han, the territories of the
Daimyo, reorganizing them into
prefectures, while in the same year the Mikado worked to reduce the death penalty and flogging. In May 1873, a new penal code was drafted that abolished torture, further reduced the use of
capital punishment, and almost eliminated corporal punishment. However, these changes were not enough to ensure the abolition of extraterritoriality, which continued to be constantly discussed at the country's various embassies.
The popular opposition In 1882, the Japanese public, also taking advantage of
printing, began to mobilize to demand full judicial and tariff autonomy. On 15 June 1886, in order to satisfy the imperial authorities, an Anglo-German delegation presented a plan to introduce mixed courts in the country to supervise cases between two parties of different nationalities. Such an initiative had already been successfully tested in
Egypt and it was assumed that it could represent a further step towards the abrogation of extraterritoriality. But when the text of this proposal appeared in Japanese newspapers, the population greeted it with open hostility, considering such a judicial reform humiliating and dangerous. The dissent led the Japanese government to adopt a stricter attitude towards western diplomats and this inevitably stalled the negotiations at the very moment when a timid opening by the great powers was looming. In February 1888,
Ōkuma Shigenobu became foreign minister. He engaged in a series of separate negotiations with each of the Western powers in the belief that if he could persuade one of them to sign a new treaty, the others would be forced to follow suit. He decided to turn to a lesser power that was more willing to concede more advantages to Japan. The choice fell on Mexico, which had no residents in Japan and did not trade extensively with it. On 30 November 1888, the
Treaty of Friendship, Commerce, and Navigation between the two powers was signed in
Washington, the first to actually provide for a level playing field between the signatories, as Foreign Minister
Matías Romero renounced extraterritoriality in exchange for the right of Mexican citizens to trade and reside in the Japanese hinterland. However, this success was quickly thwarted by the intervention of Great Britain and France, who used the
most-favored-nation clause to extend these concessions to them as well. One event that favorably influenced the attitude of the powers towards Japan was the Emperor's granting of a
constitution, promulgated by him on 11 February 1889. This event was a key step in the westernization of Japanese institutions, which now also had a Prussian-inspired bicameral
Diet. The latter, however, would have been extremely counterproductive for treaty revision negotiations. The representatives of the lower house, elected by the people and with little political experience, would undoubtedly have opposed concessions to the West and obstructed the government's work, while there were loud calls in the streets for a unilateral abrogation of the existing treaties. Okuma succeeded in October 1889 in making new agreements with the United States, Germany, and Russia, but the Japanese population regarded these new treaties as yet another surrender against Japan. On 18 October 1889, after a meeting, Okuma was the victim of a bomb attack in front of the Department of Foreign Affairs by a fanatic from the nationalist group ''
Gen'yōsha''. This caused him to temporarily withdraw from political life, while Prime Minister
Kuroda Kiyotaka resigned, effectively suspending all negotiations with the West. Following these events, the government was temporarily presided over by
Sanjō Sanetomi and then handed over to
Yamagata Aritomo. The new Minister of Foreign Affairs, Viscount Aoki Shūzō, was in charge of the delicate situation concerning the re-discussion of the treaties. Aoki then attempted to propose a new treaty that could avoid the emergence of internal problems. However, just when it seemed that an agreement had been reached, on 11 May 1891 a fanatic attacked a young westerner in the town of
Ōtsu, leaving him partially disfigured. The victim was none other than
Nikolai Alexandrovich Romanov, the future Tsar Nicholas II, and such a scandal forced the incumbent government to resign due to the difficult internal situation in the country. == The new Treaty ==