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Yoriyasu Arima

Count
Yoriyasu Arima
有馬 頼寧
Yoriyasu Arima in 1940
Minister of Agriculture and Forestry
In office
4 June 1937 – 5 January 1939
Prime MinisterFumimaro Konoe
Preceded byTatsunosuke Yamazaki
Succeeded byYukio Sakurauchi
Member of the House of Peers
In office
3 August 1929 – 19 September 1940
Member of the House of Representatives
In office
11 May 1924 – 1 April 1927
Personal details
Born( 1884 -12-17)17 December 1884
Tokyo, Japan
Died9 January 1957(1957-01-09) (aged 72)
Cause of deathAcute pneumonia
SpousePrincess Sadako Kitashirakawa
Alma materTokyo Imperial University

Yoriyasu Arima (有馬 頼寧, Arima Yoriyasu; 17 December 1884 – 9 January 1957) was a Japanese politician before and during World War II. His wife was the daughter of Prince Kitashirakawa Yoshihisa.

Biography

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Arima was born in Tokyo as a son of the former daimyō of Kurume Domain (now part of Fukuoka Prefecture). He studied agricultural science at the Tokyo Imperial University, and later became a professor there.

He read Karl Marx and Max Stirner, and other radical philosophers, and became attracted to the agrarian movement and radical political ideas. Arima founded the Nihon Nomin Kumiai (Japan Farmers' Union) together with Kagawa Toyohiko. He was active in various social programmes, including the establishment and support of night school, women's education, farmers' rights, and the rights of the burakumin, and was chairman of a cultural association aimed at improving education and cultural awareness in rural areas.

Arima was elected to the House of Representatives in the Diet of Japan in 1924 under the Rikken Seiyūkai party. In 1929, after he succeeded his father to the title of hakushaku (count) under the kazoku peerage system, he was nominated to the House of Peers.

Arima was a close personal friend of Fumimaro Konoe, and when Konoe became Prime Minister of Japan in 1937, Arima was requested to serve as his Minister of Agriculture. He also participated in Konoe's Showa Studies Society "Brain trust".

In 1936, Arima helped organize the Tokyo Senators baseball team, and built a baseball stadium at the site where the present Korakuen Stadium in Tokyo is now located. Despite pressure from the Japanese military to ban the "western sport", Arima helped sustain it during the war years, and later helped to revive professional baseball in Japan in the postwar period.

Arima became Secretary General of the Imperial Rule Assistance Association when it was founded in October 1940, but he resigned after five months due to opposition from conservative factions in the government.

In the post-war period, he was active in promoting horse racing and was one of the founders of the Nakayama Racecourse. He died in 1957 of acute pneumonia.[where?] The Arima Kinen horserace was named in his honor.

Books

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  • Bix, Herbert P. (2001). Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan. Harper Perennial. ISBN 0-06-093130-2.
  • Sims, Richard (2001). Japanese Political History Since the Meiji Renovation 1868–2000. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 0-312-23915-7.

References

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