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Great Tenmei famine

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Great Tenmei famine

The Great Tenmei famine (天明てんめいだい飢饉ききん, Tenmei no daikikin) affected Japan during the Edo period.[1] The famine was the deadliest one during the early modern period in Japan.[2] It is considered to have begun in 1782 and lasted until 1788. It was named after the Tenmei era (1781–1789) during the reign of Emperor Kōkaku. The ruling shoguns during the famine were Tokugawa Ieharu and Tokugawa Ienari.

Causes

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1783 eruption of Mount Asama. This eruption is said to have caused the Great Tenmei famine.[3][4]

The 1783 eruption of Mount Asama is said to have caused the Great Tenmei famine.[5][4] Starting in the 1770s, there was a sharp decline in crop yield in Tōhoku, the north-eastern region of Honshū, due to poor and cold weather, so food stocks in rural areas were exhausted. The situation was exacerbated by natural disasters: Mount Iwaki erupted on April 13, 1783 (3rd month, 12th day, in the year Tenmei-3, according to the Japanese calendar), as well as Mount Asama on July 6, so volcanic ash was thrown into the atmosphere of Japan. Aside from the direct damage caused by the eruptions, this led to a fall in solar radiation, resulting in cold weather that catastrophically damaged crops. The massive Icelandic Laki eruption of 1783 disrupted weather patterns all over the Northern Hemisphere and may have worsened matters as well.[6][2]

Another cause of the famine was the government's economic policies. The famine spread largely due to mismanagement by the shogunate.[2] During this period, a mercantilist policy was implemented by Tanuma Okitsugu, a minister of the Tokugawa shogunate cabinet. This was intended to commercialize agriculture and thus increase tax income, which was paid in rice. The policy caused economic difficulties for many hans and led to excessive investment in rice production (which was vulnerable to cold weather) in order to pay the higher taxes. It also resulted in local emergency stores of food becoming depleted. The climatic, volcanic and economic factors combined to result in poor harvests and a lack of emergency stores, which led to skyrocketing rice prices, so serious famine expanded to a national scale as a result.

Results

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The summer on the Pacific side of the Tōhoku region was foggy and rainy.[2] The cold weather required people to wear thick cotton clothing.[2] According to Nochi-mi-gusa, written by Genpaku Sugita, approximately 20,000 people starved to death, mainly in rural areas of the Tōhoku region. However, many local authorities, afraid of being accused of economic mismanagement, did not report the full extent of the damage, so the actual death toll may have been far higher, perhaps even ten times Sugita's estimate.[original research?] The outcome was particularly severe in Mutsu Province, where it was reported that over 100,000 people died.[7] Including people who fled the area, Hirosaki (Tsugaru) Han lost almost half of its population. The combined impact of famine and outbreaks of disease resulted in a population decline of more than 920,000 people across Japan between 1780 and 1786.[8][9]

Population history

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The effects of the famine can be seen from the census numbers for the years before, during, and after the famine recorded for all of Japan and in the Tohoku region, specifically.[10][11]

Japan

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  • 1774 (An'ei 3): 25,990,000
  • 1780 (An'ei 9): 26,010,000
  • 1786 (Tenmei 6): 25,090,000
  • 1792 (Kansei 4): 24,890,000
  • 1798 (Kansei 10): 25,470,000

Tohoku

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  • 1750 (Kan'en 3): 2,680,000
  • 1786 (Tenmei 6): 2,370,000
  • 1804 (Bunka 1): 2,470,000
  • 1828 (Bunsei 11): 2,630,000

References

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  1. ^ "天明てんめい飢饉ききんとは". コトバンク (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-03-25.
  2. ^ a b c d e "江戸えど飢饉ききん巨大きょだい噴火ふんかかげ 気温きおん低下ていか凶作きょうさく人災じんさいも" (in Japanese). Nikkei. April 30, 2022. Archived from the original on May 5, 2022.
  3. ^ "天明てんめい3ねん(1783ねん浅間山あさまやま噴火ふんか | 利根川とねがわ水系すいけい砂防さぼう事務所じむしょ | 国土こくど交通省こうつうしょう 関東かんとう地方ちほう整備せいびきょく". www.ktr.mlit.go.jp. Retrieved 2022-03-25.
  4. ^ a b "浅間山あさまやま噴火ふんか 1783ねん火砕流かさいりゅうやく1500にん死亡しぼう天明てんめいだい飢饉ききんこした強暴きょうぼう火山かざんたつみ好幸よしゆき) - 個人こじん" (in Japanese). Yahoo!ニュース (Yahoo! News Japan). Retrieved 2022-03-25.
  5. ^ "天明てんめい3ねん(1783ねん浅間山あさまやま噴火ふんか | 利根川とねがわ水系すいけい砂防さぼう事務所じむしょ | 国土こくど交通省こうつうしょう 関東かんとう地方ちほう整備せいびきょく" (in Japanese). www.ktr.mlit.go.jp. Archived from the original on 6 July 2022. Retrieved 2022-03-25.
  6. ^ Mikami, Takehiko; Tsukamura, Yasufumi (1992). "The climate of Japan in 1816 as compared with an extremely cool summer climate in 1783". In Harrington, C. R. (ed.). The Year Without a Summer?: World Climate in 1816. Canadian Museum of Nature. p. 475. ISBN 9780660130637. Retrieved 2021-10-25.
  7. ^ "詳説しょうせつ日本にっぽん研究けんきゅう" 山川やまかわ出版しゅっぱんしゃ, page 289.
  8. ^ 石井いしい寛治かんじ "日本にっぽん経済けいざい", University of Tokyo Press, page 77.
  9. ^ "佐久さく歴史れきし文化ぶんか" (PDF). Wako City. April 1, 2005. p. 9. Archived from the original (PDF) on October 27, 2022. Retrieved July 12, 2022.
  10. ^ "近世きんせい日本人にっぽんじんこう研究けんきゅう", 関山せきやま直太郎なおたろう, りゅう吟社ぎんしゃ, 1948.
  11. ^ "近世きんせい日本にっぽん人口じんこう構造こうぞう", 関山せきやま直太郎なおたろう, 吉川弘文館よしかわこうぶんかん, 1958.