Key Idea: In 1853 Japan was a closed, samurai-ruled country that could not build a modern rifle, let alone stop an American fleet. By 1894 it had a constitution, railways, factories and an army strong enough to defeat China. Topic 3.1 is the story of how — and why the change was so violent and unequal along the way.
How this topic is tested — Paper 1
Paper 1 gives you 3–4 unseen sources on the Meiji transition and asks: Q1 — use the CONTENT of two sources to answer an inquiry question [6]. Q2 — assess the CONTEXT (origin, purpose, value, limitation) of one source [6]. Q3 — examine the PERSPECTIVES across ALL the sources [12]. That's 24 marks total. You never need outside sources — everything you need is printed in front of you, but you must know the real history well enough to spot what each source is really claiming.
The trick across all three questions is the same: never just describe a source. Always link its content, or its origin/purpose, or its viewpoint, back to the actual inquiry question being asked.
Must-know facts from every sub-topic
| Sub-topic | Focus | Key names, dates & facts |
|---|---|---|
| 3.1.1 — Decline of the shogunate & foreign pressure | Why the old system collapsed | Tokugawa Shogunate weakened by debt and unpaid samurai stipends; sakoku isolation caused stagnation; Commodore Matthew Perry's 'black ships' (kurofune) arrived 1853; 1854 Convention of Kanagawa; 'unequal treaties' gave foreigners extraterritoriality and ended Japan's tariff autonomy |
| 3.1.2 — The Restoration & Meiji reforms | How the new state was built | January 1868: Satsuma/Choshu samurai 'restore' power to 15-year-old Emperor Mutsuhito; real rulers were the genro (Ito Hirobumi, Okubo Toshimichi, Yamagata Aritomo); slogan fukoku kyohei ('rich country, strong army'); 1873 land tax reform (fixed cash tax) funded industrialization; industries later sold to zaibatsu (Mitsubishi, Mitsui); Tokyo–Yokohama railway 1872; Meiji Constitution promulgated 11 February 1889, modelled on Prussia — limited constitutional monarchy, Emperor kept control of the military |
| 3.1.3 — Costs, resistance & the turn abroad | Who paid the price, and what came next | Fixed 3% land tax (from 1873) plus conscription hit peasants hard, sparking hyakusho ikki uprisings; samurai lost stipends and the right to wear swords (1873–76); Satsuma Rebellion (Jan–Sep 1877) led by Saigo Takamori, ~40,000 samurai, crushed by the new conscript army at the Battle of Shiroyama; Sino-Japanese War (1894–95) — Japan defeats Qing China over Korea, launching Japanese imperial expansion |
Worked example — Q3, perspectives [12]
Examine how the perspectives of the sources can be used to answer the inquiry question: 'How and why did Japan transform between 1853 and 1894?'
🔒 Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Important: Do not write a general history essay and forget the sources. Paper 1 marks come from what you do WITH the sources in front of you — naming exact details and tying them to content, context or perspective — not from how much outside knowledge you can recite.
What was 'sakoku' and why did it matter? Japan's centuries-long policy of near-total isolation. It kept out new technology and ideas, so by the 1850s Japan looked (and was) far behind Western military power — feeding the sense of crisis after Perry's arrival.
Who were the genro and how did they rule? The small group of former samurai — Ito Hirobumi, Okubo Toshimichi, Yamagata Aritomo — who ran Meiji Japan in practice. They ruled THROUGH young Emperor Mutsuhito, issuing reforms in his name to make radical change look traditional and legitimate.
How did the Meiji government pay for modernization? The 1873 land tax reform replaced flexible feudal rice dues with a fixed 3% cash tax on privately owned land, giving the state steady revenue that funded railways, factories and the army.
What did the Meiji Constitution (1889) actually change? It created a limited constitutional monarchy with an elected Diet, but the Emperor kept sole command of the military and ministers answered to him, not parliament — real power stayed with the genro.
Why did the Satsuma Rebellion (1877) matter so much? Saigo Takamori led about 40,000 samurai against the government, but the new peasant conscript army crushed them at Shiroyama — proving the samurai's military dominance, and the samurai age itself, was over.
How did the transition end by 1894? Japan's new industrial and military strength let it defeat Qing China in the Sino-Japanese War (1894–95) over influence in Korea — the moment Japan shifted from reforming itself to competing with the Western powers abroad.
Know the exact dates: 1853 (Perry), 1854 (Kanagawa), 1868 (Restoration), 1873 (land tax), 1877 (Satsuma Rebellion/Shiroyama), 1889 (Constitution), 1894–95 (Sino-Japanese War). For Q1, always name the specific content before explaining what it proves. For Q2, cover origin, purpose, value AND limitation — don't just praise or just criticise. For Q3, group sources by viewpoint and explain the 'why' behind their differences, not just the 'what'.