
Talking Strategy S5E3: Katsu Kaishū and the Foundations of the Modern Japanese Navy
Nov 5, 2024
Haruo Tohmatsu, Professor of Diplomatic and War History and Oxford DPhil, discusses Admiral Katsu Kaishū. He traces Katsu’s Dutch naval training and command of Kanrin Maru. He explores Katsu’s pragmatic plans for financing and building a steam navy, reforms to personnel and shipyards, and his role in negotiating a peaceful regime change.
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Samurai Trained In Western Naval Science
- Katsu Kaishū combined samurai status with Western naval science to lead Japan's first modern naval officers.
- His Dutch training in Nagasaki made him a bridge between traditional Japan and Western maritime practice.
Voyage To Study The US Navy
- Katsu commanded the Kanrin Maru on Japan's first warship mission to the United States and used it to study US naval organisation.
- He observed squadrons, port defences and naval administration in San Francisco and applied those lessons back home.
Dual-Use Ships To Fund A Navy
- Katsu proposed dual-use steamships that earned revenue in peacetime and converted to warships in war to fund a navy without raising taxes.
- He framed naval expansion as an economic and organisational problem, not only a technical one.


