[Prince].  Japanese field-marshal, born in Satsuma. He was a nephew of Saigō, with whom his elder brother sided in the Satsuma insurrection of 1877, but he nevertheless remained loyal to the imperial cause and commanded a brigade against the insurgents. When war broke out between China and Japan in 1894, he was appointed commander-in-chief of the second Japanese army corps, which, landing on the Liaotung Peninsula, carried Port Arthur by storm, and, subsequently crossing to Shantung, captured the fortress of Wei-hai-wei. For these services he received the title of marquess, and, three years later, he became field-marshal. When (1904) his country became embroiled in war with Russia, he was appointed commander-in-chief of the Japanese armies in Manchuria, and in the sequel of Japan’s victory the mikado bestowed on him (1907) the rank of prince. He received the British Order of Merit in 1906. In 1914 he was nominated Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal, and in this capacity he attended the accession ceremony of the Emperor Yoshihito, which took place in Kyoto in November 1915. In December of the following year the Prince died, being accorded a State funeral by the imperial court. In him Japan lost one of her “Elder Statesmen.”