Yuri Kimimasa


Viscount Yuri Kimimasa was a statesman in Meiji period Japan. During the Meiji Restoration he used the alias Mitsuoka Hachirō

Life and career

Yuri was a samurai born in Fukui, Echizen Province. He studied under the Confucian scholar Yokoi Shōnan. He worked towards the financial reform and modernizing Fukui domain and received preferential treatment from daimyō Matsudaira Yoshinaga due to his great ability.
Yuri joined the new Meiji government as a san'yo, and took charge of the financial and monetary policy of the new government. Together with Fukuoka Takachika, he was the principal author of the Charter Oath.
Yuri was involved in the issuance of Japan's first national paper banknotes in 1868.
In 1871, he became the fourth governor of Tokyo.
Yuri left government the following year, but was selected as one of the members of the Iwakura Mission on its around-the-world voyage to the United States and Europe. After his return to Japan, he joined Itagaki Taisuke in petitioning for a representative national assembly.
In 1875, he was appointed to the Genrōin.
In 1887 he was elevated to the rank of shishaku in the kazoku peerage system. He was nominated to serve in the House of Peers of the Diet of Japan in 1890.
In 1891, Yuri quit government service, moved to Kyoto, and founded the Yurin Seimeihoken K.K., one of Japan's first life insurance companies. The company later merged with Meiji Seimei, the predecessor to modern Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance Company.