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| See also: | Other events of 1899 History of Japan • Timeline • Years  | ||||
Events in the year 1899 in Japan. It corresponds to Meiji 32 (明治32年) in the Japanese calendar.
Incumbents
Governors
- Aichi Prefecture: Mori Mamoru
 - Akita Prefecture: Takeda Chiyosaburo
 - Aomori Prefecture: Munakata Tadashi
 - Ehime Prefecture: Tai Neijro
 - Fukui Prefecture: Saburo Iwao
 - Fukushima Prefecture: Kimumichi Nagusami then Arita Yoshisuke
 - Gifu Prefecture: Tanaka Takamichi then Kawaji Toshikyo
 - Gunma Prefecture: Suehiro Naokata
 - Hiroshima Prefecture: Asada Tokunori
 - Ibaraki Prefecture: Prince Kiyoshi Honba then Fumi Kashiwada
 - Iwate Prefecture: Ganri Hojo
 - Kagawa Prefecture: Yoshihara Saburo
 - Kochi Prefecture: Tadashi Tanigawa
 - Kumamoto Prefecture: Tokuhisa Tsunenori
 - Kyoto Prefecture: Baron Utsumi Tadakatsu then Baron Shoichi Omori
 - Mie Prefecture: Yuji Rika then Duke Isaburo Yamagata then Arakawa Yoshitaro
 - Miyagi Prefecture: Motohiro Onoda
 - Miyazaki Prefecture: Sukeo Kabawaya
 - Nagano Prefecture: Oshikawa Sokkichi
 - Niigata Prefecture: Minoru Katsumata
 - Oita Prefecture: Marques Okubo Toshi Takeshi
 - Okinawa Prefecture: Shigeru Narahara
 - Osaka Prefecture: Tadashini Kikuchi
 - Saga Prefecture: Seki Kiyohide
 - Saitama Prefecture: Marquis Okubo Toshi Takeshi
 - Shiname Prefecture: Matsunaga Takeyoshi
 - Tochigi Prefecture: Korechika
 - Tokyo: Baron Sangay Takatomi
 - Toyama Prefecture: Kaneoryo Gen
 - Yamagata Prefecture: Baron Seki Yoshiomi
 
Events
- February 1 – Telephone service begins between Tokyo and Osaka.
 - February 7 – Keiō and Waseda become Japan's first private universities.
 - February 13 – The income tax law is promulgated.
 - March 1 – Sankyo Pharmaceutical established in Yokohama, as predecessor of Daiichi Sankyo.
 - March 4 – Japan passes its first copyright law
 - July 17 – NEC Corporation is organized as the first Japanese joint venture with foreign capital.
 - November – Momijigari, the oldest extant Japanese film, is shot an open space behind the Kabuki-za in Tokyo.[2]
 - Unknown date – Morinaga Confectionery was founded, as predecessor name was Morinaga Western Confectionery.
 - Unknown date – The Hokkaido Former Aborigines Protection Act is enacted by the Imperial Diet
 
Births
- January 20 – Kenjiro Takayanagi, television engineer, creator of the world's first all-electronic television receiver (d. 1990)
 - February 10 – Suihō Tagawa, manga artist (d. 1989)
 - February 13 – Yuriko Miyamoto, novelist (d. 1951)
 - March 7 – Jun Ishikawa, writer (d. 1987)
 - June 11 – Yasunari Kawabata, writer, novelist, Nobel laureate in Literature (d. 1972)
 - August 1 – Saburō Matsukata, journalist, businessman and mountaineer (d. 1973)
 - August 5 – Sakae Tsuboi, novelist and poet (d. 1967)
 - September 8 – Akiko Seki, soprano (d. 1973)
 - October 1 – Matsutarō Kawaguchi, novelist, playwright and film producer (d. 1985)
 - November 7 – Daisuke Nanba, communist activist (d. 1924)
 - December 3 – Hayato Ikeda, Prime Minister of Japan (d. 1965)
 - Unknown – Genkei Masamune, botanist, (d. 1993)
 
Deaths
- January 21 – Katsu Kaishū, statesman and naval engineer (b. 1823)
 - May 11 – Kawakami Soroku. General (b. 1848)
 - September 26 – Ōki Takatō, statesman, Mayor of Tokyo (b. 1832)
 - December 26 – Harada Naojirō, yōga-style painter (b. 1863)
 
References
- ↑ "Meiji | emperor of Japan". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
 - ↑ Irie, Yoshiro (2009). "Saiko no Nihon eiga ni tsuite" (PDF). Tōkyō Kokuritsu Kindai Bijutsukan Kenkyū Kiyō (in Japanese). National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo (13): 67. ISSN 0914-7489. Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 January 2013. Retrieved 9 December 2014.
 
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