Background
Ume Kenjirō was born on July 24, 1860 in Matsue, Shimane, Japan. He was the second son of the domain doctor of Matsue domain, Izumo Province (present-day Shimane Prefecture).
梅 謙次郎
Ume Kenjirō was born on July 24, 1860 in Matsue, Shimane, Japan. He was the second son of the domain doctor of Matsue domain, Izumo Province (present-day Shimane Prefecture).
Ume Kenjirō was sent to study French at Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, and upon graduation was employed by the Ministry of Justice. He also taught at Tokyo Imperial University. Ume was sent by the government for advanced studies to the University of Lyon in France in 1886, completing his studies in 1889. After an additional year of study at the Humboldt University of Berlin in Germany, he returned to Japan in 1890. He was awarded the degree of doctorate of law by University of Lyon in 1891.
On his return, Ume Kenjirō became embroiled in the Civil Code controversy, and urged the immediate adoption of the code as drawn up by French foreign advisor to the government, Gustave Emile Boissonade. When the adoption of the code was delayed in 1892, he appealed to Prime Minister Itō Hirobumi to establish a committee to prepare the new draft, and was chosen to be a member of the new committee in 1893. Together with Hozumi Nobushige and Tomii Masaaki, he is regarded as the father of Japan's civil law, which was put into effect in 1898.
In 1894, Ume Kenjirō was one of a group of lawyers who established the Tokyo Law School, the forerunner of present-day Hosei University, of which he served as president in 1899. In 1906, Ume Kenjirō was asked by Itō to help codify the laws for the Japanese protectorate of Korea.
Ume Kenjirō died in Keijo (Seoul) in 1910, of typhoid fever at the age of 51. He was awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasure (1st class) on his deathbed, one day before he died. His grave is at Gokoku-ji in Tokyo.
(Japanese Edition)
1898(Japanese Edition)
(Japanese Edition)
(Japanese Edition)