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Revision as of 21:35, 12 June 2007
Akizuki Satsuo (秋月左都夫) (February 24, 1858 - June 25, 1945) was a diplomat and government official of the upper third rank (正三位, shōsanmi) in the Imperial Household Ministry. He was born in Hyūga Province.
He was the third of four sons. His father, Akizuki Taneyo (秋月種節) was an elder of the Takanabe Han. His younger brother, Suzuki Masaya (鈴木馬左也), was an official in the Ministry of Agricultural and Trade Affairs, and contributed to the growth of the Sumitomo zaibatsu. Makino Nobuaki (牧野伸顕) was his brother-in-law.
He graduated from the Han school called Meirindō (明倫堂) founded by Akizuki Taneshige (秋月種茂). He attended Kagoshima Medical School, but dropped out. He graduated from the Japanese Ministry of Justice Law School.
He worked in the Ministry of Justice for a time, but then became a diplomat. He worked as a diplomat to Sweden, the Japanese ambassador to Belgium, and the ambassador extraordinary to Australia, before leaving office in 1914. He worked as a plenipotentiary advisor at the Paris Peace Conference in 1919.
During his time as ambassador to Belgium, in 1908, he observed a British Boy Scout event. He reported his findings to others, which spread word of the Boy Scout movement to Japan.
He was an editorial advisor for (and later president of) the Asahi Shimbun newspaper, worked as the head of the Keijō Nippō (京城日報) newspaper, and was also deputy leader of the Association for the Accession of the True Emperor in Greater Japan (大日本皇道立教会, Dainippon Honkō Dōritsu Kyōkai). Together with the politician Furushima Kazuo (古島一雄), he put much effort into the foundation of Sōka Kyoiku Gakkai (創価教育学会), "The Value-Creating Education Society", the former incarnation of Soka Gakkai.
Sources
Much of this article was translated from the equivalent article in the Japanese Wikipedia, as retrieved on October 20, 2006.