Field Marshal (Japan)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Field Marshal (元帥 gensui?) was the highest rank in the prewar Imperial Japanese Army. The term gensui was used for both the Army and the Imperial Japanese Navy, and was a largely honorific title awarded for extremely meritorious service to the Emperor. In the Meiji period, the title was awarded to 5 generals and 3 admirals. In the Taisho period it was awarded to 6 generals and 6 admirals, and in the Showa period it was awarded to 6 generals and 4 admirals.
Saigō Takamori is sometimes included in lists of gensui, However, his title of “Commander of the Armies” predates the formal establishment of the title of gensui in 1872.
Note that several were promoted the same year they died - these were posthumous promotions.
Field Marshal | Name | (Birth-Death) | From | |
---|---|---|---|---|
X | 19 July 1872 | Saigō Takamori | (1827-1877) | Kagoshima |
1 | 20 January 1898 | Prince Yamagata Aritomo | (1836-1922) | Yamaguchi |
2 | 20 January 1898 | Prince Komatsu Akihito | (1846-1903) | Imperial Family |
3 | 20 January 1898 | Duke Oyama Iwao | (1842-1916) | Kagoshima |
4 | 31 January 1906 | Marquis Nozu Michitsura | (1840-1908) | Kagoshima |
5 | 24 October 1911 | Count Oku Yasukata | (1847-1930) | Fukuoka |
6 | 9 January 1914 | Count Hasegawa Yoshimichi | (1850-1924) | Yamaguchi |
7 | 9 January 1914 | Prince Fushimi Sadanaru | (1858-1923) | Imperial Family |
8 | 9 January 1914 | Baron Kawamura Kageaki | (1850-1926) | Kagoshima |
9 | 24 June 1916 | Count Terauchi Masatake | (1852-1919) | Yamaguchi |
10 | 12 December 1919 | Prince Kan'in Kotohito | (1865-1945) | Imperial Family |
11 | 27 April 1922 | Baron Uehara Yusaku | (1856-1933) | Miyazaki |
12 | 27 January 1929 | Prince Kuni Kuniyoshi | (1873-1929)) | Imperial Family |
13 | 8 August 1932 | Prince Nashimoto Morimasa | (1875-1951) | Imperial Family |
14 | 3 May 1933 | Baron Muto Nobuyoshi | (1868-1933) | Saga |
15 | 21 June 1943 | Duke Terauchi Hisaichi | (1879-1946) | Tokyo |
16 | 21 June 1943 | Sugiyama Hajime | (1875-1945) | Fukuoka |
17 | 2 June 1944 | Hata Shunroku | (1879-1962) | Fukushima |