The Role of the Merchant Class in Japanese History: A Case Study of the Mitsui Family (1639-1895)
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.35516/jjha.v18i3.2514Keywords:
Mitsui family, Japan, privatize, capitalism, political economyAbstract
The birth of the Mitsui family was a necessity in the historical development of Japan in the context of changes in social classes, in particular, the role of the merchant class is increasingly recognized by the government through the contributions of merchants to the economic development of the country, onward, the unstable political situation and complicated financial and monetary confusion when there are two types of money, old and new, circulating at the same time. The Mitsui family which specialized in foreign trade and monetary finance, was born to promptly meet the changing and developing needs of Japan at that time. The main research methods are historical and logical. Using historical methods, we began to research the origins of the Mitsui family and the process of development and transformation of the business model from feudal society to capitalism. The logical method is used to determine the characteristics and nature of the relationship between economics and political values when analyzing the role of the Mitsui family according to a system. This study clarifies the formation conditions, ownership characteristics, form of management, and fields of activity of the Mitsui family as well as analyzes the role of this family in the development of Japan during the period of capitalism.
References
Addicott, David A. C. (2017); “The Rise and Fall of the Zaibatsu: Japan’s Industrial and Economic Modernization”. Global Tides, Pepperdine University, vol. 11, Article 5, pp.: 1-16.
Allen, G. C. A. (2003); Short Economic History of Modern Japan 1867-1937, London: Routledge.
Craig, Albert M. (1984); Japan – Tradition and Tranformation, Cambridge: Tuttle Publishing. (In English).
Fukao, Kyoji (2020); Japan’s Growth and Stagnation from The Perspective of World Economic History (1868-2018), Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten. (In Japanese).
Goto ; Sasaki, Ryuji and Fuji, Shoichi (1979); History of Japanese Capitalism Development. Tokyo: Yuhikaku Sosho. (In Japanese).
Jonen, Tsukasa (2016); Understanding the Meiji Restoration Through Economics (Unraveling the Mysteries of the Development of Edo and the Success of the Meiji Restoration Using the “Rules of Economics”), Tokyo: KK Bestsellers. (In Japanese).
Jonen, Tsukasa (2019); Understanding Japanese History Through Economics 4: Meiji Period, Tokyo: Asuka Shinsha. (In Japanese).
Kikkawa, Takeo (2016); Zaibatsu and Corporate Groups, Industrial Management History Series, Tokyo: Japan Institute of Business History - General Incorporated Foundation. (In Japanese).
Kikuchi, Hiroyuki (2017a); Mitsui, Mitsubishi; Sumitomo, Fuyo and Sanwa, Ikkan, Japan’s six major corporate groups, Tokyo: Kadokawa Shoten. (In Japanese).
Kikuchi, Hiroyuki (2017b); Mitsui Group Research, Tokyo: Yosensha. (In Japanese).
Macpherson, W. J. (2007); The Economic Development of Japan 1868-1941, edited for the Economic History Society by Michael Sanderson, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2007. 108p. (In English).
Maruni Igeta San (2009); The Picture of The MITSUI Public Relations Committee, accessed in: 21.01.2024. URL: https:// www.mitsuipr.com/history/columns/004/ ()
Mason, R. H. P. and J. Teranishi (2003); History of Japan, Nguyen Van Sy tran., Hanoi: Labor. (In Vietnamese).
Matsumoto, Hiroshi (2017); Research on the Mitsui Zaibatsu, Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kobunkan. (In Japanese).
Mitsui Bank– Japan’s First Private Bank (2008); the Picture of the MITSUI Public Relations Committee, accessed in: 21.01.2024, URL: https://www.mitsuipr.com/history/meiji/02/
Nagahara, Yutaka and Gavin, Walke (2023); Japanese Capitalism and Governing Apparatus, Tokyo: Hosei University Press. (In Japanese).
Nagamine, Mitsuhisa (2020); The Life of Rizaemon Minomura, Who Laid the Foundation for Mitsui from the End of the Edo Period to the Meiji Period, Tokyo: Kobunken, accessed in 21.01.2024 (In Japanese). www.mitsuipr.com/history/columns/004/
Kiyonaga, Torii (2020); New Year Scene at Echigoya in Surugacho, The Picture of Mitsui Group 350th Anniversary, accessed in: 24.01.2024, URL://mitsui350th.com/en/
Nguyen, Quoc Hung (2012); Japanese History, Hanoi: World Publisher. (In Vietnamese).
Nguyen, Tien Luc (2010); Meiji Restoration and Vietnam, Hanoi: Vietnam Education. (In Vietnamese).
Nguyen, Tien Luc (2013); Japan: Lessons from History, Hanoi: Information and Communication. (In Vietnamese).
Nguyen, Tri Dinh and Pham, Thi Quy (2006); Economic History, Hanoi: National Economics University. (In Vietnamese).
Nguyen, Van Hoan (2004); “Development of Commodity Economy in Japan During the Edo Period and the Role of the Sumitomo Family”, Japanese and Northeast Asian Studies, No 2, Pp.: 55-62. (In Vietnamese).
Nguyen, Van Kim (2003); Japan and Asia: Historical Connections and Socio-Economic Changes, Hanoi: Hanoi National University. (In Vietnamese).
Okazaki, Saburo (1979); Stages of Japanese Capitalist Development, Tokyo: Socialist Association Press. (In English).
Reischauer, Edwin (1998); Japan - The Story of a Country, Nguyen Binh Giang et al. trans., Hanoi: Statistics. (In English).
Richardson, Bradley M.(1993); The Political Economy of Japan, Working Paper n.81, Ohio: Ohio State University. (In English).
Roberts, John (1973); Mitsui: Three Centuries of Japanese Business, New York: Weatherhill. (In English).
Russell, Oland D. (2021); The House of Mitsui. United States: Hassell Street Press. (In English).
Sagers, John (2019); “The Importance of Entrepreneurship in Japan’s Late Nineteenth-Century Meiji Industrial Transformation”, Education About ASIA, vol. 24, No. 2, Pp.: 40-45. (In English).
Shibagaki, Kazuo (1968); Mitsui and Mitsubishi’s 100 Years of Japanese Capitalism and Zaibatsu. Tokyo: Chuokoronsha. (In Japanese).
Takei, Naoko and Igata, Koji (2021); Innovation and Governance at Mitsukoshi: The Interface Between the Mitsui Zaibatsu and Mitsukoshi, Tokyo: Gogensha. (In Japanese).
Abe, Takeshi, Shirai, Izumi and Takenobu, Yuki (2017); Socio-Economic Activities of Former Feudal Lords in the Meiji Japan, accessed in: 24.01.2024. URL:
https:// www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/ 10.1080/00076791.2020.1828354
Tanimoto, Masayuki (2006); The Role of Tradition in Japan’s Industrialization: Another Path to Industrialization, Japanese Studies in Economic and Social History, vol. 2, Oxford: Oxford University Press. (In English).
Teranishi, Juro (2006); Was Japan’s Prewar Financial System Centered on Banks?, Tokyo: Bank of Japan Financial Research. (In Japanese).
Tetsuji, Okazaki (2000); “The Industrialization and Global Integration of Meiji Japan”. In: East Asian Growth and Japanese Aid Strategy, Kenichi Ohno ed., chapter 5, Tokyo: Tokyo
Keizai Shimposha. (In English).
Yamaki, Iku (1993); Mitsui’s Founder's Spirit - Management Philosophy Seen from Its Origin, Tokyo: Business Company. (In Japanese).
Yamamoto, Shiro (1986); History of Japanese Politics, Seoul: Geibunkan. (In Japanese).
Yoshio, Tsugai (2021); A Portrait of Japanese Capitalism, Tokyo: Chikuma Shobo. (In Japanese).
Yotsume-Musubi (2011); The Picture of The MITSUI Public Relations Committee, accessed in: 21.01.2024. URL: https:// www.mitsuipr.com/history/columns/004/
Zaibatsu, Kenkyukai (2016); Mitsubishi, Mitsui, and Sumitomo: A Book That Helps You Understand the Three Major Conglomerates, Tokyo: Mikasa Shobo. (In Japanese).

