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  1. Nov 9, 2009 · In September 1923, an earthquake struck the Tokyo area, killing about 100,000 people and destroying 63 percent of the city’s houses. Rampaging Japanese mobs subsequently murdered several thousand...

  2. Jul 20, 2017 · Emperor Hirohito was uneasy with Japan's drift to war in the 1930s and 1940s but was too weak to alter the course of events, according to a declassified British government assessment of the Japanese monarch upon his death in January 1989.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › HirohitoHirohito - Wikipedia

    "By personality and temperament, Hirohito was ill-suited to the role assigned to him by destiny. The successors of the men who had led the Meiji Restoration yearned for a charismatic warrior king. Instead, they were given an introspective prince who grew up to be more at home in the science laboratory than on the military parade ground.

  4. Jan 2, 2022 · But Hirohito died at 87 years old on January 7, 1989, 62 years after he first took power. He was still the emperor of Japan. Why? The surrender

    • Ryan Fan
  5. On 22 September 1987, Hirohito underwent surgery on his pancreas after having digestive problems for several months. Doctors discovered that he had duodenal cancer, but had refused to disclose this condition to the Emperor because it was considered taboo to do so at the time.

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  7. Courtesy of Asahi Shimbun. One line of argument about Japan’s surrender maintains the crucial step was a US pledge that Emperor Hirohito could remain on the throne. This superficially seems plausible because in the end, the United States did permit Hirohito to remain on the throne.