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Baron Dan Takuma (團 琢磨, September 7, 1858 – March 5, 1932) was a Japanese businessman who was Director-General of Mitsui, one of the leading Japanese zaibatsu (family conglomerates). He was a graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology and was married to the younger sister of statesman Kaneko Kentarō .
半導体・電子デバイス業界の求めるクリーン環境の創造|株式会社ダン・タクマ 半世紀世に及ぶ卓越した技術・サービスと蓄積された実績で、お客様の様々なご依頼に親身に耳を傾け、的確なソリューションを提案いたします。
Dan Takuma (born Sept. 7, 1858, Fukuoka, Chikuzen province, Japan—died March 5, 1932, Tokyo) was the manager of the giant Mitsui zaibatsu, the greatest of the family-owned combines in pre-World War II Japan.
DAN Takuma was a businessman and leader of the Mitsui Zaibatsu (Mitsui financial group) in Japan. He studied mining engineering in the US, worked at the Miike Coal Mines, and became a danshaku (baron) in 1928.
Baron Dan Takuma was a Japanese businessman who was Director-General of Mitsui, one of the leading Japanese zaibatsu. He was a graduate of Massachusetts Institute of Technology and was married to the younger sister of statesman Kaneko Kentarō.
The collection of Takuma Dan includes correspondence and a 1921 speech which Dan delivered before a convocation of students, faculty and alumni of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Dan was a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Class of 1878.
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In March 1932, the head executive of Mitsui, Dan Takuma, was assassinated amidst the waves of anti-zaibatsu reactions and the rise of ultranationalism. The assassination gave rise to the Mitsui zaibatsu tenkō (conversion) of 1932-1936, a series of reforms conducted by Dan's successor, Ikeda Seihin, which were intended to fulfill the public ...