Shintaro Sakamoto Raritan

Find Shintaro Sakamoto bio, music, credits, awards, & streaming links on AllMusic - The leader of Japanese psych-rockers Yura Yura.

BornMay 6, 1838
Kitagawa, Tosa Domain
DiedDecember 12, 1867 (aged 29)
Cause of deathassassination
NationalityJapan
OccupationSamurai
Japanese name
Kanji中岡 慎太郎
Hiraganaなかおか しんたろう
Katakanaナカオカ シンタロウ
Transcriptions
RomanizationNakaoka Shintarō

Nakaoka Shintarō (, May 6, 1838 – December 12, 1867) was a samurai in Bakumatsu periodJapan, and a close associate of Sakamoto Ryōma in the movement to overthrow the Tokugawa shogunate.[1]

Biography[edit]

Nakaoka Shintarō on Nov 24, 1866

Nakaoka was born in Tosa Domain, in what is now the village of Kitagawa, Kōchi Prefecture, as the son of a village administrator. In 1861, he enrolled in the academy run by Takechi Hanpeita where he studied swordsmanship. He was one of the founding members of the Tosa Kinno-tō, a paramilitary shishi organization created by Takeichi to support the sonnō jōi movement.[1] After the coup d’etat of September 30, 1863, led to the suppression of the sonnō Jōi faction, he fled to Chōshū Domain together with pro-Sonnō Jōinobles, including Sanjō Sanetomi. In 1864, he participated in a failed plot to assassinate Shimazu Hisamitsu, and fought alongside Chōshū forces during the Kinmon Incident and the Bombardment of Shimonoseki. Later that year, as a member of the Kaientai formed by Sakamoto Ryōma, he worked to bring about the Satsuma-Chōshū Alliance and to obtain the backing and support of Sanjō Sanetomi for the project. Asphalt duell the challenge free download. In March, 1867, he travelled with Sakamoto Ryōma to their native Tosa Domain to negotiate a similar alliance between Tosa and Satsuma. In June, he began negotiations to further expand the new alliance to include Chōshū as well as Hiroshima Domain, but the issue was rendered moot when shōgunTokugawa Yoshinobu formally returned governing power to the Emperor. Realizing that civil war was now increasingly probable, Nakaoka returned to Tosa and established the Rikuentai militia.[1] Rikuentai was modeled after the Kiheitai in Chōshū in July. On December 10, 1867, he traveled to Kyoto for discussions with Sakamoto Ryōma, but was killed together with Sakamoto when unknown assailants attacked their lodgings (i.e. the 'Ōmiya Incident').[1] Sakamoto was killed immediately, but the critically injured Nakaoka lingered for two days, although never regaining enough consciousness to identify the attackers. His grave is located at the Ryosen Gokoku Jinja in Higashiyama-ku, Kyoto. He was posthumously awarded with the court rank of 4th grade in 1891 by Emperor Meiji.

There is a large bronze statue of Nakaoka Shintarō at Murotomisaki lighthouse in Cape Muroto in his native Kochi Prefecture, and another (together with Sakamoto Ryōma) at Maruyama Park in Kyoto.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ abcdNational Diet Library (NDL), Portraits of Modern Japanese Historical Figures, Nakaoka, Shintaro

References[edit]

  • Jansen, Marius B. (1961). Sakamoto Ryoma and the Meiji Restoration. Princeton: Princeton University Press. OCLC 413111
  • Miyaji, Saijiro. (1993). Nakaoka Shintaro: Ishin no shusenka. Tokyo: Chuo-Koronsha, ISBN4-12-101146-5 (Japanese)

External links[edit]

Japanese Wikisource has original text related to this article:
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nakaoka Shintaro.
  • Nakaoka Shintaro Museum (Japanese)
  • Shotentai.com -About Nakaoka Shintaro (Japanese)
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nakaoka_Shintarō&oldid=925126883'

Artist Biography by Heather Phares

Raritan
The former leader of Japanese psych rockers Yura Yura Teikoku, Shintaro Sakamoto struck out on his own in 2010 almost immediately after the group disbanded. Inspired by breezy '70s pop from around the world, ranging from bossa nova to folk-rock to sounds popular in his homeland, Sakamoto began recording a set of songs almost completely by himself -- except for female backing vocals, percussion, and woodwinds. The results, How to Live with a Phantom, were released in 2012. Early in 2014, Sakamoto collaborated with Mayer Hawthorne on a split single for that year's Record Store Day. Let's Dance Raw, which incorporated slack key guitar, Latin percussion, vocal effects, and more, arrived that September. In 2016, a version of the song 'Disco Is' featuring vocals by Synsuke Ono preceded Sakamoto's third album, Love If Possible. The album was released in Japan that July and received a wider release in 2017.