Tanaka Yoshio Explained

Tanaka Yoshio
Native Name:田中芳男
Birth Name:Tanaka Yoshisuke
Birth Date:27 September 1838
Birth Place:Iida, Nagano, Japan
Nationality:Japanese
Occupation:Civil servant, naturalist
Notable Works:Yuyo Shokubutsu Zusetsu ("Illustrated Book of Useful Plants"), 1891
Dai Nihon Noshi ("Agriculture in Greater Japan"), 1891

was a Japanese civil servant and naturalist.

Born to a doctor of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Iida, Shinano Province, Tanaka studied pharmacognosy in his youth with Keisuke Ito. In 1861 he moved to Edo and joined the Bansho Shirabesho (Office for the Investigation of Foreign Documents) the following year. In this job, he worked on the documentation of local produce. He was part of the Japanese delegation at the 1867 Exposition Universelle in Paris, where he exhibited a number of entomological specimens; this journey also gave him the opportunity to learn about Western museum curation.[1] [2]

After the Meiji Restoration, the Japanese Civil Service was reorganised. Within the Daigaku (later the Ministry of Education) Tanaka joined the Bureau of Local Products, and then moved to the Museums Bureau in 1871. A decade later, his services were sought by the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce to oversee the menagerie attached to the National Museum of Natural History; Tanaka took advantage of the opportunity to create Ueno Zoo. Opened in 1882, it was Japan's first zoological park. The creation of the zoo resulted in Tanaka's promotion to Director-General of the Natural History Bureau, however he received little ministerial support for his botanical and zoological planning and resigned from the post the following year.[3]

In 1878 he helped to set up a school of agriculture in Komaba (which later became the University of Tokyo's Faculty of Agriculture) and in subsequent years was responsible for the founding of several societies, including the Dainippon Nokai ("Greater Japan Agricultural Society"), the Dainippon Sanrinkai ("Greater Japan Forestry Society") and the Dainippon Suisankai ("Greater Japan Fisheries Society"). He also published several books on botany and agriculture.

In 1890 he was elevated to the House of Peers and in 1915 he was granted the title of danshaku (baron).[4]

Tanaka died in 1916. The Saxifragaceae species Tanakaea radicans is named after him.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Ueno. Masuzo. The Western Influence on Natural History in Japan. Monumenta Nipponica. 1964. 19. 3/4. 335–336. 10.2307/2383175. 2383175.
  2. Book: Dōshin Satō. Modern Japanese Art and the Meiji State: The Politics of Beauty. 2011. Getty Publications. 978-1-60606-059-9. 63.
  3. Book: Mayumi Itoh. Japanese Wartime Zoo Policy: The Silent Victims of World War II. 15 November 2010. Palgrave Macmillan. 978-0-230-11744-0. 16–17.
  4. Web site: Tanaka, Yoshio. Portraits of Modern Japanese Historical Figures. National Diet Library of Japan. 3 August 2015.
  5. Book: Thomas H. Everett. The New York Botanical Garden Illustrated Encyclopedia of Horticulture. 1982. Taylor & Francis. 978-0-8240-7240-7. 3297.