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OverviewIn February 1877, a man led twenty thousand warriors out of Kagoshima and into a war he knew he could not win. He was the most celebrated soldier in Japan. He had helped overthrow one government and build another. He had survived two exiles, a dozen battles, and thirty years of a country tearing itself apart. And now, at forty-nine years old, Saigo Takamori was walking back into the fire - not because he believed he could win, but because some things are worth dying for even when dying changes nothing. Seven months later, surrounded on a hilltop by thirty thousand government troops, he sat down and waited for dawn. This is that story. The Last Samurai's Japan is the definitive account of the Satsuma Rebellion of 1877 - the last stand of the samurai class against the most radical government transformation any nation has ever attempted in a single generation. When the Meiji government stripped Japan's warrior class of their swords, their stipends, their schools, and their legal identity, it did so in the name of progress. What it could not strip away was the question that Saigo Takamori's rebellion forced into the open - a question that has never fully been answered. Was it worth it? Drawing on historical records, battlefield accounts, and the private letters of men who fought on both sides, author Takamori A. Shimazu-Wells reconstructs not just the military campaign but the full human tragedy behind it: the friendship between Saigo and his closest ally that curdled into the bitterest opposition; the young men of Satsuma who followed their hero into an unwinnable war and died in the mountains of Kyushu believing they were doing something necessary; the government soldiers - most of them peasants' sons, conscripted into an army that had not existed a decade earlier - who faced down samurai warriors and discovered they could match them. This is a book about what happens when a civilization decides to become something else entirely, and the men who refuse to go quietly. It is about loyalty taken to its absolute limit. It is about a country that destroyed its greatest hero and then could not stop honoring him. And it is about the question that every society eventually faces - what do we owe to the people our progress leaves behind? Saigo Takamori has been dead for nearly a hundred and fifty years. His statue still draws crowds in Tokyo. His grave still receives fresh flowers in Kagoshima. His face still appears on surveys of Japan's most admired historical figures. Some questions refuse to stay buried. Perfect for readers of: Antony Beevor - Stephen Turnbull - James Clavell - David Grann - Ian Toll - Barbara Tuchman Full Product DetailsAuthor: Takamori A Shimazu-WellsPublisher: Umar Imprint: Umar Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.159kg ISBN: 9798235131514Pages: 112 Publication Date: 28 April 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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