Toward the end of the Tokugawa shogunate, namely the
bakumatsu in which the Shimazu clan played an important role, there have been a chain of events such,
bombardment of Kagoshima, also known as the Anglo-Satsuma War (Satsu-Ei Sensō), which took place on 15–17 August 1863 during the Late Tokugawa shogunate,
Meiji Restoration (1868), abolition of the han system (1871) and
Satsuma Rebellion (1877). In 1872, the Ryukyu islands were made the Ryukyu
han. The Sword Abolishment Edict and the abolishment of the Samurai system were issued in 1876, and
samurai were angered and became furious.
Saigō Takamori, the hero and leader of
Meiji Restoration left the central Meiji Government and returned to Kagoshima, with dissatisfied samurai. In 1877,
Satsuma Rebellion army went up to Kumamoto, but could not invade the Kumamoto Castle and Saigō committed
seppuku at his native place Kagoshima. In 1883, Kagoshima Prefecture was founded after the re-establishment of
Miyazaki Prefecture. In 1914, Mt.
Sakurajima erupted and the island of Sakurajima connected with the Osumi Peninsula. ==World War II and after==