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Kikuchi Dairoku

Dairoku Kikuchi (Born March 17, 1855 - Died August 19, 1917) (or in the Japanese order Kikuchi Dairoku, 菊池大麓) was born in Edo, the second son of Mitsukuri Shuhei.

Kikuchi was the first ever Japanese student to graduate from Cambridge University (St. John's College) and the only one to graduate from London University in the 19th century. He first came to Britain in 1866 aged 11, the youngest of a group of Japanese sent by the Tokugawa shogunate (Bakufu) which was enrolled at University College School on the advice of the then British foreign minister Edward Stanley, 15th Earl of Derby.

Kikuchi later became a President of Tokyo Imperial University, Minister of Education and President of Kyoto Imperial University. He was made a baron in 1902, and was the first President of the Science Research Institute of Japan (Rikagakukenkyusho or RIKEN, equivalent of the Cavendish Laboratory at Cambridge University) before his death in 1917.

Kikuchi was a member of Japan's most distinguished family of scholars, the Mitsukuri family, and at the centre of Japan's educational system in the Meiji era. His grandfather had been a student of Dutch studies (Rangaku). His father had taught at the Bansho-shirabesho (Institute for investigating Barbarian books). His children were famous scientists.

See also

External Links

  • 'Kikuchi Dairoku, 1855-1917: Educational Administrator and Pioneer of Modern Mathematical Education in Japan,' by Noboru Koyama, Chapter 7, Britain & Japan: Biographical Portraits Volume 5, Global Oriental 2005, ISBN 1901903486
  • RIKEN - The Science Research Institute of Japan


10-26-2009 08:16:03
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