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・ Shisharestan
・ Shishavan
・ Shishbarak
・ Shishegu
・ Shisheh
・ Shisheh Garan
・ Shisheh Gurab
・ Shisheh Qaleh
・ Shisheh Rah
・ Shisheh, East Azerbaijan
・ Shisheh, Lorestan
・ Shishel
・ Shishgarh
・ Shishged River
・ Shishi
Shishi (organization)
・ Shishi (TV program)
・ Shishi Bunroku
・ Shishi, Fujian
・ Shishi-odoshi
・ Shishibu Station
・ Shishido
・ Shishido Baiken
・ Shishido Domain
・ Shishido Station
・ Shishiga
・ Shishigatani incident
・ Shishihō Yoshimasa
・ Shishikoh
・ Shishikui Station


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Shishi (organization) : ウィキペディア英語版
Shishi (organization)

''Shishi'' (志士; sometimes known as 維新志士 ''Ishin-shishi'') was a group of Japanese political activists of the late Edo period. The term ''shishi'' literally translates as "men of high purpose." While it is usually applied to the anti-shogunate, pro-''sonnō jōi'' (尊皇攘夷; "Revere the Emperor, Expel the Barbarian()") samurai primarily from the southwestern clans of Satsuma, Chōshū, and Tosa, the term ''shishi'' is also used by some with reference to supporters of the shogunate who held similar ''sonnō jōi'' views.
There were many different varieties of ''shishi''. Some, such as the assassins Kawakami Gensai, Nakamura Hanjirō, Okada Izō, and Tanaka Shinbei, opted for a more violent approach in asserting their views. Kawakami Gensai, in particular, is recalled as the assassin of Sakuma Shōzan, a renowned pro-Western thinker of the time. Several assaults on westerners in Japan have been attributed to the ''shishi'' and associated ''rōnin'' warriors. In a 2013 article, these assassins have been called "early terrorists" ((ドイツ語:frühe Terroristen)) since they opted to spread terror among the foreigners. Other more radical ''shishi'', such as Miyabe Teizō, plotted large-scale attacks with little regard for public safety. Miyabe himself was one of the ringleaders of the plot, foiled by the Shinsengumi at the Ikedaya Incident, to burn Kyoto at the height of the Gion Festival.〔
As mentioned above, ''shishi'' were not necessarily in support of bringing down the shogunate. ''Shishi'' from Mito were responsible for the death of the shogunal grand councilor Ii Naosuke, who was a signatory to treaties that favored foreign nations, and who had placed an underaged boy on the shogunal throne. Other Mito men and women arose in the Tengu-tō revolt, over the next several years. While these were definitely actions against the shōgun's government, they did not oppose the shōgun himself—indeed, the Mito ''shishi'', who were retainers of a relative of the shōgun, believed they were only helping him.
Other ''shishi'' had more scholastic leanings. A prime example of this was the scholar Yoshida Shōin of Chōshū. He founded the Shokason-juku school, and educated many of the future government leaders of Meiji era Japan. Yoshida had connections to many prominent figures of the Bakumatsu era: Kawai Tsugunosuke, Katsu Kaishū, the aforementioned Sakuma Shōzan, and others.
The more radical ''shishi'' from Chōshū and Satsuma went on to form the core leadership of the nascent Meiji Government. Some, such as Itō Hirobumi and Yamagata Aritomo, remained prominent figures in Japanese politics and society until the early decades of the 20th century.
==See also==

* Shinsengumi

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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