Why samurai?
From its establishment in 1874 to 1890, the Tondenhei exclusively recruited samurai/ex-samurai, primarily from the five loyalist prefectures of northern Honshu. What's the reason for recruiting only samurai at first, and then heavily favouring them?
- They were trained soldiers with, especially directly after the Meiji Restoration, combat experience.
- Simple classism: prejudice against commoners, commoners were not trusted as soliders.
- They were entrusted with national defence, and the right to kill was largely the exclusive domain of the samurai, and only slowly was expanded with the draft.
- Moving Aizu, etc., samurai to Hokkaido reduced the samurai population in Tohoku.
- It rehabilitated these Tokugawa loyalists as patriots.
Gender:
Class:
The Tondenhei represented a very 'safe' option for anyone who would want to immigrate to Hokkaido. They would have two years of generous material support, including a home and land, and would be placed into a high social position in settler society. For poor samurai, this would represent a second chance. In the 1890s and until the system as abolished with the coming of universal conscription in 1905, this would also be a significant step up in the world for many commoners. Interestingly, though, a short history of Tondenhei of local lineage published online by Aichi Prefecture mentions that high ranking samurai applied, and groups of retainers for the same lord applied together as a group. Here too, getting to the heart of this sort of dynamic would be interesting.
The same Aichi Prefecture essay discusses, un-self-consciously reflecting settler narratives, a literal fight against nature as the "conquest of the soul" for young, brave Tondenhei pioneers. Getting into this sort of discourse from the period would be interesting, especially as it relates larger settler myths.
Tondenhei and Ainu:
One frustrating thing is it's still entirely unclear how the Tondenhei were historically related to the Ainu, other than simply as settling land stolen from the latter. The only time I've seen these two groups overlap in scholarship is Shinya Gyō's description of the Tondenhei as driving Ainu off their land at gunpoint. While they certainly occupied Ainu land, and as Michele Mason pointed out, while they were tantamount to a military occupation of colonized Ainu land, I've not seen any evidence besides Shinya's unsourced claim that the Tokdenhei had anything to do with the Ainu at all. It seems to have been the prefectural police who were more directly connected to issues of oppression and relocation of the Ainu. But, the fact that the Ainu and Tondenhei are otherwise never talked about together is itself a bit suspicious.
References to look into:
明治18年屯田 兵条例
明治20年屯田 兵徴募手続き
明治26年11月 29日官報 (new orders for prefectures regarding Tondenhei recruitment)
明治41年3月 移住者成績調査 (from the Hokkaido 道庁)
屯田兵顧録
No comments:
Post a Comment