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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dan_TakumaDan Takuma - Wikipedia

    Dan Takuma. 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 .

  2. 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。

  3. 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. A graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and an important member of Japan’s business elite, Dan was assassinated by ...

  4. 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.

  5. www.wikiwand.com › en › Dan_TakumaDan Takuma - Wikiwand

    Dan Takuma. 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.

  6. Takuma Dan was born September 7, 1858 in Fukuoka Japan and died in Tokyo, March 5, 1932. He earned S.B. in mining engineering, 1878, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, located at that date in Boston, Massachusetts, before returning to Japan as technical officer at the Japanese Government Meteorological Observatory.

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  8. 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 relations, business and political needs and objectives.