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Meiji Graves in Happy Valley

Stories of Early Japanese Residents in Hong Kong

Stories of Meiji-era Japanese residents and their final resting place in Hong Kong.

The Hong Kong Cemetery in Happy Valley is home to over 470 graves connected to the city’s Japanese population. Most of these graves belong to individuals who died during the Meiji era (1868–1912), a remarkable period of modernization and opening up of Japan that saw thousands of its inhabitants travel to other parts of the world to study, work, and settle. Who were these people? What were they doing in Hong Kong? And why were unbaptized Japanese buried in what was called at one time the "Protestant Cemetery"?

Hong Kong’s Meiji-era Japanese community was one of two halves. Company executives sat atop the social ladder and karayuki-san, or prostitutes, occupied the lower echelons, with tradespeople and professionals somewhere in between. By revealing the personal journeys of these mostly forgotten Japanese, the authors aim to add to transnational perspectives on Hong Kong and Japan during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as well as increase recognition of this fragmented community’s place in the development of this diverse city.

216 pages | 3 color plates, 57 halftones, 8 tables | 7 x 10 | © 2024

Royal Asiatic Society Hong Kong Studies Series

History: Asian History


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Reviews

"The authors tell a number of stories about the early Japanese community in Hong Kong through grave stones uncovered in Happy Valley. We also gain insight as to why no 'Japanese cemetery' was established in Hong Kong (unlike Broome, Western Australia). The answer to this question tells us as much about the diversity of the 'Japanese community' in Hong Kong as it does about Hong Kong society at the turn of the century. Race, class, status, gender, and concepts of morality all influenced why no 'separate' Japanese cemetery emerged."

Charles Schencking, University of Hong Kong

"The authors do an excellent job assiduously piecing together bits of information from a broad range of historical sources to evoke the lives behind the names, draw connections between individual characters, and contextualize their endeavors within the local milieu of colonial Hong Kong."

Reijiro Aoyama, Chinese University of Hong Kong

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