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Chapter II

Katai's Literary Background up to 1907

Tayama Katai was born near Tokyo in Gumma Prefecture in 1872, four years after the Meiji Restoration.[1] His given name was Rokuya and he was the fourth of five children. His father Shōjurō was a lower class samurai and his mother Tetsu was a daughter of Tayama Gazō of a related samurai family. When Katai was five years old, he lost his father who had been a metropolitan police officer. His father was killed in Higo during the Satsuma Rebellion of 1877 in a fight between the government forces and the samurais; as a result of this misfortune Katai completed only three years of elementary schooling. When he was nine years old, he went to Tokyo with his grandfather to work as an apprentice in a bookstore.[2] About a year later Katai, due to some wrong doing on his part, was sent home to Gunma prefecture accompanied by his elder brother Miyato.

When he was eleven Katai went back to school in his home town in Gumma to improve his education, as he found that he was not cut out for the type of merchant's work he was doing in a bookstore. He studied literary Chinese under Yoshida Rōken, formerly a teacher of several feudal lords. Three years later his family went to Tokyo where his brother Miyato had secured a position.


  1. Hauptmann was born in Salzbrunn, Silesia, in 1862, the same year that Bismarck was appointed Prime Minister of Prussia.
  2. When Hauptmann was about nine years old, owing to the decline of his father's business, he was sent as an agricultural apprentice to his uncle's farm in the Silesian country-side where he did not prove to be a success. Soon he returned to Breslau, this time to study art, for which he had displayed a promising talent. His chronic rebellion against the discipline of the Royal Art School brought his connection with that institution to an early close.

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