Taisho Era

Taisho Era

A transformative era shaped by World War I’s economic swings and the rise of democratic movements

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The 15 years from July 30, 1912 to December 25, 1926 are known as the Taisho Era.
During this period, universal male suffrage was achieved through the Taisho Democracy movement, ushering in an age when public opinion could shape government. With World War I as a turning point, Japan joined the ranks of the world powers and rose to become a permanent member of the League of Nations.
From the wartime boom to the postwar recession, and then the Great Kanto Earthquake, the death toll and missing totaled Approx. 105,000, making it the worst natural disaster in Japan’s history.
Though it lasted only 15 years, the Taisho Era was a time of rapid change. Let’s look back on it.

Highlights

  • The Taisho Democracy movement gained momentum, pushing Japan toward democracy
  • The world’s first global war, World War I, breaks out
  • The Great Kanto Earthquake hits the Kanto region
  • Taisho Roman: a unique, captivating world where Japanese and Western styles blend

How the Taisho Era Unfolded

Though it lasted just 15 years, from 1912 to 1926, the Taisho Era saw many shifts that connect directly to modern Japan.
Looking back at the major events of the time and considering how they shaped Japan today can be a fascinating exercise.

The Outbreak of World War I

Image of World War I
Image of World War I

World War I began after the assassination of the Austrian archduke, known as the Sarajevo Incident.
The Triple Entente (the UK, France, and Russia) and the Triple Alliance (Germany, Italy, and Austria) fought on a massive scale across Europe. Japan also entered the war under the Anglo-Japanese Alliance and fought Germany.

During this period, Japan moved to expand its influence on the Asian mainland, including presenting China with the Twenty-One Demands and joining the UK, the US, and France in the Siberian Intervention to obstruct the Russian Revolution.

From the Wartime Boom to the Postwar Recession

Image of a city devastated by the Great Kanto Earthquake
Image of a city devastated by the Great Kanto Earthquake

Japan escaped direct damage from World War I, and exports surged, creating an unprecedented economic boom later known as the “wartime boom.”
But the boom was followed by a backlash, and a downturn known as the postwar recession arrived.
At home, shortages drove prices up, squeezing daily life, and rice riots spread across the country.

Then, in 1923, the Great Kanto Earthquake struck, pushing Japan into a prolonged slump.
In 1920, the League of Nations was established to maintain international peace, reflecting on the immense devastation of World War I. From the start, Japan served as a permanent council member.

Taisho Democracy and the Shift Toward a Liberal Democratic Society

Image of universal male suffrage established in 1925
Image of universal male suffrage established in 1925

In Japan, democratic and liberal ideas spread during World War I.
The driving force was the Taisho Democracy movement.

Taisho Democracy is an umbrella term for various liberal and democratic movements.
It is highly regarded as the birth of democracy in Japan.

It expanded beyond politics into society and culture.
Movements such as the women’s liberation movement, the Buraku discrimination abolition movement, and the universal suffrage movement emerged, reshaping society.

In 1925, universal male suffrage was established, granting voting rights to all adult men aged 25 and over. This created a foundation for national politics to require public consent.

What Is Taisho Roman?

Image of bijinga (portraits of beautiful women) popular in the Taisho Era
Image of bijinga (portraits of beautiful women) popular in the Taisho Era

Taisho Roman refers to the era’s distinctive culture, where Japanese tradition intertwined with modern Western culture and ideas.
It is said to have begun around Kobe Port, then known as the leading port in the East. Wealthy residents of nearby satellite cities embraced the latest Western culture, helping modern Western art, culture, and lifestyles spread.
Its hallmarks are especially visible in art, architecture, and fashion.

Art in the Taisho Era

Artists in the Taisho Era incorporated Western culture into their own work.

One of the best-known figures of Taisho Roman is Takehisa Yumeji. His lyrical bijinga appeared on the covers of many magazines and sheet-music collections. His work went beyond painting, he also wrote poems and children’s songs. His legacy can be seen as a forerunner of modern art in Japan.

In nihonga (Japanese-style painting), many works depicted “women” in ways that went beyond simple “beauty.” A well-known example is Yokogushi by Kaishō Tadaoto, which portrays an eerie allure. Subjects were generally people, often women, with very few landscapes. He is considered a leading decadence painter, symbolizing the darker mood of the late Taisho period.

The painter Yorozu Tetsugoro also stood out as an exceptional talent. From Towa Town in Waga District, Iwate (now part of Hanamaki City), he is credited as a pioneer who introduced Fauvism, then an avant-garde style, to Japan’s Western-style painting scene.

Buildings in the Taisho Era

Taisho-era architecture is known for blending Japanese and Western elements.
Many public buildings, such as government offices, schools, and Tokyo Station, were built in Western-style designs. For private homes, people began pairing Japanese-style architecture with Western fixtures and furniture.
By the mid-Taisho period, “bunka jutaku” (culture houses) that adopted Western-style living became widely built as homes for the general public.

Iconic Taisho-era landmarks include Tokyo Station, the former Imperial Hotel, and the Former Asakura Residence.
Tokyo Station was designed by architect Tatsuno Kingo and completed in 1914.
The former Imperial Hotel was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, inspired by Byodo-in Phoenix Hall. However, the massive hotel, said to resemble an eagle with spread wings, no longer exists.
The Former Asakura Residence was the home of Asakura Torajiro, who served as Shibuya Ward Assembly chairman and Tokyo Prefectural Assembly chairman, and it is designated an Important Cultural Property.
Visiting surviving Taisho-era buildings is a great way to experience Taisho Roman firsthand.

Fashion in the Taisho Era

Taisho-era fashion also blended Japanese and Western styles.
Back then, Western-influenced and novel styles were called “haikara.”
Men often wore suits with shirts and ties, plus round glasses or a bowler hat. Women embraced looks like kimono paired with boots.

As haikara spread, “bankara” fashion also became popular.
It pushed back against Westernized style, featuring a stand-collar shirt with hakama and kimono, a student cap, and geta, a rough-and-tumble look known as the classic bankara style.

Surprising Taisho-Era “Common Sense” Today

Image of a Taisho-era dining table
Image of a Taisho-era dining table

As people lived through major changes that began with Japan’s modernization, everyday life in the Taisho Era was shaped by norms and values very different from today. Looking back, let’s imagine how people in the Taisho Era lived.

Eating on Individual Trays, Not at a Table

Chabudai (low dining tables) were fairly widespread, but in the early Taisho period many people still ate from individual trays.
A popular household item was the hakosen, a box-like personal tray set. Bowls and chopsticks were stored inside, and at mealtime the lid was flipped over and used as a tray to eat on.
As the era progressed, more households shifted from personal trays to chabudai.

Socializing in Back Alleys

Laundry, one of the most water-intensive chores, was often done around shared wells.
While washing, housewives chatted and exchanged all kinds of information.
The term “idobata kaigi” (wellside chat) is still used today, and this was the original meaning of it.
Back alleys also served as social hubs much like wells did.
Rather than meeting in polished settings like cafes, people connected in the places where they lived day to day, showing how much closer communities felt than they often do now.

A Starting Salary of 50 Yen?

In the late Taisho period, the starting monthly salary for a university graduate office worker was 50–60 yen.
The average monthly pay for working women was 40 yen for typists, 35 yen for telephone operators, and 30 yen for clerks.
Taxis began operating in the Taisho Era, and the initial fare was 60 sen.
In today’s terms, 30,000 yen now would be roughly equivalent to 10 yen back then.
By that estimate, a late-Taisho university graduate’s starting pay would be around 150,000–180,000 yen today.

Taisho-Era Tourist Spots

Here are some buildings and destinations where you can experience the Taisho Era.

Tokyo Station Marunouchi Building

Japan’s gateway, Tokyo Station, opened in December 1914.
It opened as the Central Station connecting Shinbashi Station, the starting point of the government-run Tokaido Main Line that was completed through to Kobe, with Ueno Station, the northern gateway of the former Nippon Railway. It was designed by Tatsuno Kingo, one of the leading architects of the Meiji and Taisho periods. The steel-framed brick building stretches north to south, has three above-ground floors, and measures Approx. 335 m in length.

Ginzan Onsen

A hot-spring town filled with Taisho Roman charm.
This onsen town shares its history with the mining of the Enzawa Silver Mine, which flourished in the Edo period.
After the mine closed, it became a lively therapeutic hot-spring destination, but a major flood in Taisho 2 (1913) devastated the town.
Later, with support from local business leaders, it was rebuilt by the early Showa period into a streetscape close to what you see today, with Western-style wooden multi-story buildings lining both banks of the Ginzan River.

Osaka City Central Public Hall

A public assembly facility on Nakanoshima. Completed in 1918 through a donation from Osaka citizen Iwamoto Einosuke, a stockbroker. The elegant red-brick building, based on Neo-Renaissance design with Baroque elements, has become a Nakanoshima landmark.

Photos

  • Image of Taisho-era buildings

    Image of Taisho-era buildings

  • Image of World War I

    Image of World War I

  • Image of a city devastated by the Great Kanto Earthquake

    Image of a city devastated by the Great Kanto Earthquake

  • Image of universal male suffrage established in 1925

    Image of universal male suffrage established in 1925

  • Image of bijinga (portraits of beautiful women) popular in the Taisho Era

    Image of bijinga (portraits of beautiful women) popular in the Taisho Era

  • Image of a Taisho-era dining table

    Image of a Taisho-era dining table

History

1912
Emperor Meiji dies, era name changes to Taisho
1914
World War I breaks out. Japan declares war on Germany under the Anglo-Japanese Alliance
1915
Exports rise due to World War I, leading to the wartime boom
1918
World War I ends
1923
The Great Kanto Earthquake
1925
Universal male suffrage is enacted (voting rights for men aged 25 and over)
1926
Emperor Taisho dies, era name changes to Showa