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  1. Fukuzawa Yukichi (福澤 諭吉, January 10, 1835 – February 3, 1901) was a Japanese educator, philosopher, writer, entrepreneur and samurai who founded Keio University, the newspaper Jiji-Shinpō [ jp], and the Institute for Study of Infectious Diseases. Fukuzawa was an early advocate for reform in Japan.

  2. Yukichi Fukuzawa to Armed Detective Agency members[1]To us, praise and rewards are a light drizzle. Even if we were underground thieves with no honor, we must stake our lives to prevent this murder. Yukichi Fukuzawa (福 (ふく)沢 (ざわ) 諭 (ゆ)吉 (きち),, Fukuzawa Yukichi?) is the president of the Armed...

  3. Fukuzawa Yukichi (born January 10, 1835, Buzen, Japan—died February 3, 1901, Tokyo) was a Japanese author, educator, and publisher who was probably the most influential man outside government service in the Japan of the Meiji Restoration (1868), following the overthrow of the Tokugawa shogunate.

  4. Yukichi Fukuzawa, who is most visible as the man portrayed on Japan's 10,000-yen note, is best known as one of modern Japan's first statesmen, a man responsible for introducing Western education, institutions, and social thought to Japan.

  5. Sep 4, 2019 · Educator and entrepreneur Fukuzawa Yukichi was a highly influential figure in nineteenth-century Japan. He wrote many popular works, including An Encouragement of Learning, and founded Keiō ...

  6. Fukuzawa Yukichi 福澤 諭吉 (January 10, 1835 – February 3, 1901) was a Japanese author, educator, translator, entrepreneur, political theorist and publisher, and was probably the most influential man outside the Japanese government during the Meiji Restoration, following the overthrow of the Tokugawa shogunate in 1868.

  7. Representative enlightenment thinker in the Meiji Era. Born in Osaka, the son of a samurai of the Nakatsu Clan, who was serving at the clan's storehouse in Osaka when Fukuzawa was born.

  8. Fukuzawa Yukichi (1834-1901) was Japans preeminent interpreter ofcivilization and enlightenment” (bunmei kaika) — the lifestyles, institutions, and values of the modern West that Japan strove to understand and embrace in the early decades of the Meiji period.

  9. Dec 8, 2022 · Fukuzawa Yukichi made this statement in Japan in 1872, a few years after the end of Japan’s last samurai (military) government, the Tokugawa Shogunate. Historians resist, as they should, attributing sweeping changes in intellectual culture—new eras in national life—to a single individual.

  10. Fukuzawa, Yukichi (18351901) Article by Nishikawa Shunsaku. In Japan, one can see a portrait of Fukuzawa Yukichi on every 10,000-yen note. This is official recognition of his dedication to the cause of introducing Western institutions and thought into Japan. Some people, however, may wonder why such a man wears traditional Japanese robes.