Hermann Roesler and the Making of the Meiji State. Johannes Siemes

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Hermann Roesler and the Making of the Meiji State - Johannes Siemes страница 14

Hermann Roesler and the Making of the Meiji State - Johannes Siemes

Скачать книгу

everywhere. But it cannot in its particulars be criticized according to the constitutional law or practice of special other countries; in its own peculiar features it must be regarded as a pure Japanese law, adapted to the national character of the Japanese people.

      His Majesty the Emperor, in graciously granting a constitution to His faithful subjects, makes use of His indisputable sovereign right of modifying the Imperial Government in consideration of the actual internal and international condition of the Empire. No doubt that constitution, so as it is granted, must be accepted and obeyed by the people. The Japanese Constitution will be a constitution by charter, and not by compact between the Sovereign and the subjects. But once being in force, it becomes the law of the land and cannot be altered without the vote of the national representation. Frequent changes of the constitution are not desirable and therefore should be somewhat checked. The constitution of a country should be as firm and stable as the character of a man; a nation which lightly changes its constitution, is similar to a man shaked and whirled by various violent passions. It is to be hoped that the admirable stability of the old constitution will pass over into the new one; and this reason affords a sufficient justification for the time-proven elements of the old monarchical system being transferred into the new constitution as much as it may seem compatible with the principles of a constitutional government.

      Footnote

      * This document is found in the National Diet Library in the collection Itō Miyoji Bunko. As much as possible, the original text was copied faithfully; this accounts for inconsistencies in capitalization, punctuation, and abbreviations, as well as for the occasional Germanic-English expressions which sometimes had to be clarified. Obvious spelling errors in the original have been corrected, however.

      Frontispiece: Takahashi Yuichi: Portrait of Emperor Meiji.

      (Courtesy of the Department of the Imperial Household)

      1889

      THE CONSTITUTION

      OF THE

      EMPIRE OF JAPAN

      (Meiji Constitution, 1889)

      The Preamble

      Having, by virtue of the glories of Our Ancestors, ascended the Throne of a lineal succession unbroken for ages eternal; desiring to promote the welfare of, and to give development to the moral and intellectual faculties of Our beloved subjects, the very same that have been favoured with the benevolent care and affectionate vigilance of Our Ancestors; and hoping to maintain the prosperity of the State, in concert with Our people and with their support, We hereby promulgate, in pursuance of Our Imperial Rescript of the 12th day of the 10th month of the 14th year of Meiji, a fundamental law of State, to exhibit the principles, by which We are to be guided in Our conduct, and to point out to what Our descendants and Our subjects and their descendants are forever to conform.

      The rights of sovereignty of the State, We have inherited from Our Ancestors, and We shall bequeath them to Our descendants. Neither We nor they shall in future fail to wield them, in accordance with the provisions of the Constitution hereby granted.

      We now declare to respect and protect the security of the rights and of the property of Our people, and to secure to them the complete enjoyment of the same, within the extent of the provisions of the present Constitution and of the law.

      The Imperial Diet shall first be convoked for the 23rd year of Meiji and the time of its opening shall be the date when the present Constitution comes into force.

      When in the future it may become necessary to amend any of the provisions of the present Constitution, We or Our successors shall assume the initiative right, and submit a project for the same to the Imperial Diet. The Imperial Diet shall pass its vote upon it, according to the conditions imposed by the present Constitution, and in no otherwise shall Our descendants or Our subjects be permitted to attempt any alteration thereof.

      Our Ministers of State, on Our behalf, shall be held responsible for the carrying out of the present Constitution, and Our present and future subjects shall forever assume the duty of allegiance to the present Constitution.

      CHAPTER ONE

      The Emperor

      Article I: The Empire of Japan shall be ruled over by Emperors of the dynasty, which has reigned in an unbroken line of descent for ages past.

      This article sets forth two fundamental principles of the Japanese Constitution; they are not at all new, but have been in force since times immemorial. They are pronounced in such a strict manner as to exclude for the future even such modifications of the old system of government as have taken place in past times, but have already been abolished since the late restoration.

      1 The Japanese Empire shall remain an Imperial Monarchy, so that any other form of government, and especially the republican government, can never be made the law of Japan. The monarchical government has been established in Japan without any interruption for more than 2500 years; in fact, the Japanese Monarchy is the oldest and firmest of the world, and it must therefore be assumed that the monarchical government is the one which is exclusively suitable to the country and congenial to the national character. Consequently, no republican government and no republican institutions can ever be lawfully introduced into Japan; the government and the institutions of the country shall remain forever purely monarchical.

      2 The Empire shall be reigned over and governed by the Emperor. This confirms not only the abolition, as effected by the late restoration of the Imperial government, of any divisional power of government, as it has been exercised in old Japan by the territorial princes (Daimyōs) or by a military commander (Shōgun). It confirms also the entire unity and concentration of the monarchical power in the person of the Emperor. It has been said by a modern French politician (Mr. Thiers) that the King reigns, but does not govern. According to this opinion, the monarch would enjoy the honors of royalty and might also exercise a certain sanctioning power over the parliament, but the governmental or executive power would be a separate ministerial power, independent of the monarch and not responsible to him. Such a division of the monarchical power cannot be admitted in Japan. In this country the monarchical power is entirely vested in the sovereign. Although the sovereign cannot personally perform functions of public officials, yet these functions constitute no separate and independent power in the state; and especially there shall not be in Japan a separate ministerial power, but the ministers perform their functions subject to the supreme decision of the Emperor and are responsible to him.

      In this article two important principles are established:

      1 the Japanese monarchy is hereditary; and

      2 the line of succession to the Imperial Throne is determined by the Imperial House Law.

      The first principle is so deeply rooted in the immemorial history of Japan that it needs neither explanation nor justification; it pronounces only the old and never disputed law of the country. In some countries, as in the old German Empire, the Monarch was elected by the princes, the electors of the Empire; in other countries, as in modern France, the principle is set forth that the right of the Monarch to the throne should, in order to be legitimate, be confirmed by the vote of the people at large, a so called 'plebiscite'. But

Скачать книгу