Birth in Osaka and return to Nakatsu Fukuzawa Yukichi was born on 10 January 1835 in
Osaka, Japan, into a low-ranking but respected
samurai family of the Okudaira clan of
Nakatsu. His father, Fukuzawa Hyakusuke, held the rank of
nakakosho with a low stipend of a little over thirteen
koku of rice, and served as the domain's overseer of the treasury in Osaka. The family's position, though clerical, provided some material comforts beyond their small official stipend. Fukuzawa was the youngest of five children, with one older brother and three older sisters. ,
Ōita PrefectureHis father was a
Confucian scholar who opposed his children learning practical skills like mathematics, considering them the "tool of merchants" and demeaning to their
samurai status. Hyakusuke died in 1836, forcing the family to return to their home castle town of Nakatsu in Kyushu. The move was difficult for Fukuzawa's mother, O-Jun, who had grown accustomed to city life. The family faced a significant reduction in income, living on their small official stipend. As the younger son, Fukuzawa had no prospect of inheriting the headship of the family and its associated stipend, which would go to his older brother. His options were limited to being adopted into another family, becoming a priest, or remaining at home and supporting himself through odd jobs.
Life in a feudal society Nakatsu was a small, provincial castle town governed by the Okudaira clan, loyal vassals of the ruling
Tokugawa shogunate. Society was rigidly stratified by law. The
samurai class was at the top, followed by peasants, artisans, and merchants. Within the
samurai class, strict feudal discipline reinforced the lower samurai’s inferiority to the upper. A lower samurai had to use honorific language, speak with a different accent, and in some cases, prostrate himself on the ground when in the presence of an upper samurai. The Fukuzawa family was of lower
samurai status, living in a district far from the central castle, a physical indicator of their social standing. Advancement beyond one's inherited rank was nearly impossible; as Fukuzawa later wrote, there was as much chance of promotion as a "four-legged beast [might] hope to fly like a bird." This rigid class system instilled in Fukuzawa a lifelong resentment of the feudal system, which he declared he hated "as though it were my father’s murderer." Poverty forced many low-ranking
samurai families, including the Fukuzawas, to engage in side jobs to survive, such as making sandals or umbrellas, despite the official disdain for commercial activities. Education was also stratified; upper
samurai studied
Confucian classics and military strategy, while lower
samurai were primarily instructed in practical skills like writing and arithmetic. Fukuzawa did not begin his formal education until the age of fourteen, but he quickly excelled, leading discussions and debates on Chinese philosophy. Encouraged by his liberal-minded mother, he developed a desire to leave the "narrow stiffness" of Nakatsu.
Western studies In February 1854, at the age of nineteen, Fukuzawa left Nakatsu for
Nagasaki, one of the few places in
secluded Japan with contact with the West. He traveled there to study Dutch (
Rangaku), then the primary language for Western learning, and the technical operation of modern weaponry. This was shortly after Commodore
Matthew C. Perry's "
Black Ships" had arrived in
Edo Bay, signaling the end of Japan's long isolation. In Nagasaki, Fukuzawa lived in the home of a
bakufu official and quickly progressed in his language studies. However, his success aroused the jealousy of his patron, who concocted a false story that Fukuzawa's mother was ill to force him to return home. Seeing through the ruse, Fukuzawa decided not to return to Nakatsu but instead to travel to
Edo. On his journey, he stopped in Osaka in March 1855, where his brother Sannosuke was now the domain's storehouse manager. Sannosuke persuaded him to stay and continue his Dutch studies at the renowned
Tekijuku, a school run by the physician and scholar
Ogata Kōan. The students at Tekijuku worked with fanatical zeal, studying physics, chemistry, and medicine from the few Dutch books available. Fukuzawa's studies were interrupted in 1856 by the death of his brother, which forced him to return to Nakatsu to become the head of the Fukuzawa family. He detested the boring life of a lower-level
samurai and, after three months, received permission from the domain lord to return to Tekijuku. He became a boarder at the school, where he excelled, eventually becoming the head student. During this time, he developed a disdain for Chinese studies, which he saw as impractical, and fully embraced Western learning. == Travels abroad and early career ==