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Events from the year 1897 in Japan. It corresponds to Meiji 30 (明治30年) in the Japanese calendar.
Incumbents
Governors
- Aichi Prefecture: Tokito Konkyo then Egi Kazuyuki
 - Akita Prefecture: Saburo Iwao
 - Aomori Prefecture: Naomasa Maki then Ichiro Konoshu
 - Ehime Prefecture: Chang Masaya Komaki then Yutori Kojiro then Park Shin Maki Naomasa
 - Fukui Prefecture: Kunizo Arakawa then Denzaburo Hatano then Shingo Seki
 - Fukushima Prefecture: Akiyama then Kimumichi Nagusami
 - Gifu Prefecture: Sukeo Kabayama then Yoshinori Yumoto
 - Gunma Prefecture: Masataka Ishizata
 - Hiroshima Prefecture: Orita Hiraochi then Asada Tokunori
 - Ibaraki Prefecture: Egi Kazuyuki then Motohiro Onoda then Prince Kiyoshi Honba
 - Iwate Prefecture: Ichizo Hattori
 - Kagawa Prefecture: Tsunenori Tokuhisa
 - Kochi Prefecture: Ishida Eikichi then Hiroshi Shikakui
 - Kumamoto Prefecture: Kanetake Oura
 - Kyoto Prefecture: Baron Nobumichi Yamada then Baron Utsumi Tadakatsu
 - Mie Prefecture: Terumi Tanabe
 - Miyagi Prefecture: Minoru Katsumata then Sukeo Kabayama
 - Miyazaki Prefecture: Senda Sadakatsuki
 - Nagano Prefecture: Takasaki Chikaaki then Gondo Ka'nichi
 - Niigata Prefecture: Asada Tokunori then Minoru Katsumata
 - Oita Prefecture: Yasuhiko Hirayama then Shigetoo Sugimoto
 - Okinawa Prefecture: Shigeru Narahara
 - Osaka Prefecture: Utsumi Tadakatsu then Tokito Konkyo
 - Saga Prefecture: Akira Oyama
 - Saitama Prefecture: Tomi Senketaka
 - Shiname Prefecture: Michio Sokabe then Hikoji Nakamura
 - Tochigi Prefecture: Sato Nobu then Egi Kazuyuki then Sento Kiyoshi
 - Tokyo: Marquis Michitsune Koga then Viscount Okabe Nagahon
 - Toyama Prefecture: Ando Kinsuke then Tsurayuki Ishida
 - Yamagata Prefecture: Shuichi Kinoshita then Kikuchi Karasu
 
Events
- January 17 – A first issue newspaper, Kahoku Shinpō was published in Miyagi Prefecture.
 - May – Opening of the Kyoto National Museum.
 - June 1 – Opening of Matsugishi Station in Chōshi, Chiba.[2]
 - June 10 – Founding of the publishing company Jitsugyo no Nihon Sha.
 - June 18 – establishment of Kyoto University under the name Kyoto Imperial University.
 
Births
- March 2 – Shizue Kato, politician and activist (d. 2001)
 - March 28 – Yusuke Hagihara, astronomer (d. 1979)
 - April 19 – Jiroemon Kimura, supercentenarian, oldest man ever, world's oldest living person from December 2012 to June 2013. (d. 2013)
 - October 10 – Shigeji Tsuboi, poet (d. 1975)
 - October 23 – Yae Ibuka, nurse (d. 1989)
 - November 12 – Eddie Imazu, art director (d. 1979)
 - November 17 – Kinichiro Sakaguchi, agricultural chemist and microbiologist (d. 1994)
 - November 28 – Chiyo Uno, writer and author (d. 1996)
 - December 8 – Prince Fushimi Hiroyoshi, naval officer (d. 1938; myocardial infarction)[3]
 - December 26 – Unno Juza, writer, founding father of Japanese science fiction (d. 1949)
 
Deaths
- August 24 – Mutsu Munemitsu, statesman and diplomat (b. 1844)
 - November 29 – Mitsukuri Rinsho, statesman and legal scholar (born 1846)
 
References
- ↑ "Meiji | emperor of Japan". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
 - ↑ 日本国有鉄道停車場一覧 [JNR Station Directory]. Japan: Japanese National Railways. 1985. p. 145. ISBN 4-533-00503-9.
 - ↑ Fujitani,T. Splendid Monarchy: Power and Pageantry in Modern Japan. University of California Press; Reprint edition (1998). ISBN 0-520-21371-8
 
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