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  1. Count Hayashi Tadasu, GCVO (林 董, 11 April 1850 – 10 July 1913) was a Japanese career diplomat and cabinet minister of Meiji-era Japan.

  2. Count Hayashi Tadasu was a Japanese diplomat who negotiated the Anglo-Japanese Alliance of 1902. Hayashi studied in England, but upon his return home in 1868, at the time of the Meiji Restoration, he joined a short-lived rebellion of diehard Tokugawa loyalists against the new imperial government.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Diplomat. Born in Chiba, the son of Taizen Sato, a physician practicing Dutch medicine for Sakura clan. He was adopted as a child by Dokai Hayashi, a physician who served the Shogunate. In 1866, he studied in Britain as a student sent by the Shogunate.

  4. HAYASHI TADASU, 1850-1913 Working for the Alliance [London, 1900..Q6] IAN NISH Hayashi Tadasu Hayashi Tadasu was born in 1850 in Edo, the son of a doctor practising Rangaku (Dutch-style)medicine. He was quick to take up the study of the English language in Yokohama. Thanks to his father's prestige at the shogun's

  5. Mar 17, 2017 · During the first decade of the twentieth century, Katsura and Saionji alternated as prime minister, but while Komura was the preferred foreign minister for Katsura, Saionji clearly favored Hayashi Tadasu. Hayashi favored a pragmatic approach to issues and he also believed in the art of compromise.

  6. Variously described as a great, brilliant Diplomat and Statesman, an Anglophile, a world famous figure, patriotic, and a man who lived up to the noble teachings of Freemasonry, Tadasu Hayashi served Japan with uncommon devotion and dedication throughout his life.

  7. Count Hayashi Tadasu, GCVO was a Japanese career diplomat and cabinet minister of Meiji-era Japan.