著者
影山 昇
出版者
放送大学
雑誌
放送教育開発センター研究紀要 (ISSN:09152210)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.12, pp.63-98, 1995

Japan, an island nation, owed much of its prosperity to the exploitation of marine resources during the Meiji period. In 1888, a Fisheries Institute called "Suisan Denshujo" was founded in Tokyo. "Suisan Denshujo", which was the predecessor of the Tokyo University of Fisheries, was established to teach techniques in fishing, manufacturing and cultivation, and to train technical experts in the fishing industry. The first schoolmaster was Akekiyo Sekizawa (1843-1897) and the second, Tamotsu Murata (1842-1925). In this article, the author reviews the two schoolmasters' contributions to the development of the Fisheries Institute.
著者
影山 昇
出版者
東京海洋大学
雑誌
東京水産大学論集 (ISSN:05638372)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.34, pp.41a-25a, 1999-03-29

東京水産大学教育学研究室
著者
影山 昇
出版者
東京水産大学
巻号頁・発行日
1996

東京水産大学博士学位論文 平成8年度(1996) 論文博士 乙第39号
著者
影山 昇
出版者
東京水産大学
巻号頁・発行日
1996

全文公表年月日: 2008-03-31
著者
影山 昇 カゲヤマ ノボル Noboru Kageyama
雑誌
放送教育開発センター研究紀要
巻号頁・発行日
vol.12, pp.63-98, 1995

Japan, an island nation, owed much of its prosperity to the exploitation of marine resources during the Meiji period. In 1888, a Fisheries Institute called "Suisan Denshujo" was founded in Tokyo. "Suisan Denshujo", which was the predecessor of the Tokyo University of Fisheries, was established to teach techniques in fishing, manufacturing and cultivation, and to train technical experts in the fishing industry. The first schoolmaster was Akekiyo Sekizawa (1843-1897) and the second, Tamotsu Murata (1842-1925). In this article, the author reviews the two schoolmasters' contributions to the development of the Fisheries Institute.
著者
影山 昇
出版者
放送大学
雑誌
放送教育開発センター研究紀要 (ISSN:09152210)
巻号頁・発行日
vol.11, pp.81-128, 1995

With the Meiji Restoration of 1868, the Meiji government appointed lesato Tokugawa, the master of the Tokugawa family, as governor of the Shizuoka-clan. The Tokugawa administrator was an earnest promotor of education, and established modern schools mainly in Shizuoka and Numazu for the study of foreign books and languages, western military organization and science. In this article the author attempts to research schools estab-lished by the Tokugawa administrator in the Shizuoka-clan during the early Meiji period.