Bodies and Structures 2.0: Deep-Mapping Modern East Asian History

From the National Frontier to the Border

Unlike the modern nation-state system, which demarcates independent states by clear borders, the Sino-centric world did not necessarily maintain clear boundaries between countries and regions.

Yezochi, inhabited by Ainu people or the islands of Hokkaido, Sakhalin and Kuril Archipelago, and the Ryukyu Islands were, thus, frontiers without clear borders between Japan and two countries: Russia and China. However, these ambiguous zones became problematic when Japan was pressured to join the modern nation-state system. Hence, during the late nineteenth century, the Meiji government attempted to clarify boundaries in the frontiers of both North and South.

It was the time which Japan was still negotiating its southern border with its big neighbor, China. In 1872, in an attempt to show that the Ryukyu Islands had been the formal territory of Japan, the Japanese government designated the archipelago the Ryukyu-han, which impled that the Tokugawa Shogunate regarded Ryukyu Kingdom as one of the Japanese clans. Yet the government initially did not deny the Kingdom had been a tributary country of China. Rather, the government claimed that Ryukyu Kingdom was not an independent country, but belonged to two countries: Japan and China. In other words, Japan still partly dealt with the diplomatic issues with China by employing the language of Sino-centrism (Kokaze 2001, 5-7).

The Japanese government began to negotiate the southern border in terms of modern nationalism after troops were sent to Taiwan in revenge for the murder of some Miyako fishermen, who accidentally drifted to Taiwan in 1874. Okubo Toshimichi, who was determined to establish diplomatic relations with China under the nationalistic discourse, took responsibility for the sending of Japanese troops to Taiwan. While the Japanese government justified the sending of the troops by claiming that the Ryukyuans who wer ekilled by the Taiwanese aborigines were Japanese nationals, the Qing government demanded Japan remobed the troops. In the end, in October 1875, they reached an agreement that the Qing government pay compensation in exchange for the removal of the Japanese troops from Taiwan. This did not autonmatically mean that the Ryukyu Islands would be exclusively owned by the Japanese nation. But in reaching the agreement, the Qing government implicitly admitted that the Ryukyu Kingdom had been under the Japanese control as well as being a tributary country of China and that the Japanese government was thus entitled to demand compensation from the Qing government on behalf of the Miyako fishermen, who were Ryukyuans (Kokaze 2001, 12-18). 
 

The definition of the boundary was not simply a matter of diplomatic relations. Civilians also actively participated in drawing the national border in the southern frontier. This section explores two pioneer Japanese: Tashiro Antei and Nakagawa Toranosuke.

 

Nakagawa Toranosuke, born in Tokushima prefecture, was the first Japanese Main Islander who conducted the first reclamation project in a large scale on Ishigaki Island. His project gave a great social and economic impact on Yaeyama Islands of that time.

Interestingly, both pioneers, who first claimed the significance of Yaeyama Islands, migrated to Taiwan soon after the Japanese victory over the Sino-Japanese War (1894-1895).

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