From Firewood to Coal: Deforestation and the Development of the Silk Reeling Industry in Modern Japan
Abstract
The purpose of this article is to study the link between deforestation and the development of the silk reeling industry in Suwa district in Nagano prefecture from the 1870s to the 1900s, and the subsequent shift from firewood to coal. Since the Tokugawa period, firewood for the silk industry had come from land held in common by several villages. From the late 1870s, the development of silk as the most important export industry produced a shortage of firewood; by the mid-1880s, traditional sources were being supplemented by the transfer to silk producers of trees on government land. An attempt by the prefectural government to encourage tree-planting was unsuccessful, and in the early 1890s it became necessary to transport firewood from neighbouring districts.
The steam boilers which had been used in the silk industry since the late 1870s were cheap to buy, but too weak for use with coal. Coal, therefore, did not become important until around the turn of the twentieth century, when steam boilers had become stronger and the gap in the relative prices of coal and firewood had been reduced.
Keywords
Firewood Coal Commons Deforestation Silk reelingReferences
- Andō, Seiichi. 1992. Kinsei kōgaishi no kenkyū (Studies in the history of pollution in pre-modern Japan). Tokyo: Yoshikawa Kōbunkan.Google Scholar
- Chiba, Tokuji. 1991. Hageyama no kenkyū (Studies in mountain deforestation), revised and expanded edn. Tokyo: Soshiete.Google Scholar
- Chiba, Tokuji. 1953. Chūbu Shinano no tokuchochi (Deforestation in central Shinano). Chirigaku Hyōron 26(7).Google Scholar
- Crosby, Alfred W. 1986. Ecological imperialism: The biological expansion of Europe, 900–1900. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
- Eguchi, Zenji, and Hidaka, Yasoshichi (eds.). 1937. Shinano sanshigyō-shi (A history of the Shinano silk industry), 3 vols. Nagano: Dai-Nihon Sanshikai Shinano Shikai.Google Scholar
- Elvin, Mark, and Liu, Ts’ui-jung (eds.). 1998. Sediments of time: Environment and society in Chinese history. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
- Fukushima, Masao, et al. (eds.). 1956. Meiji nijūroku-nen zenkoku sanrin gen’ya iriai kankō chōsa shiryō (Documents from the 1893 national survey of the customs related to commonly held forests and fields), 1. Tokyo: Shinrin Shoyūken Kenkyūkai.Google Scholar
- Fukushima, Masao, et al. (eds.). 1958. Shōwa go-nen zenkoku sanrin gen’ya iriai kankō chōsa shiryō (Documents from the 1930 national survey of the customs related to commonly held forests and fields), 2, Nagano Prefecture. Tokyo: Shinrin Shoyūken Kenkyukai.Google Scholar
- Hayami, Yujirō. 1995. Kaihatsu keizaigaku (Development economics). Tokyo: Sōbunsha.Google Scholar
- Hirano, Yasushi. 1990. Kindai yōsangyō no hatten to kumiai seishi (Silk reeling associations and the development of sericulture in modern Japan). Tokyo: Tokyo Daigaku Shuppankai.Google Scholar
- Hiranomura. 1932. Hirano sonshi (A topography of Hirano Village), 2 vols. Nagano: Hiranomura Yakuba.Google Scholar
- Horie, Sangorō. 1930. Suwako hanran sanbyakunen-shi (Three hundred years of flooding by Lake Suwa). Kami-Suwa: Suwako Hanranshi Kankōkai.Google Scholar
- Ishii, Kanji. 1972. Nihon sanshigyō-shi bunseki (A historical analysis of the modern Japanese silk industry). Tokyo: Tokyo Daigaku Shuppankai.Google Scholar
- Kamioka, Namiko. 1984. Nihon no kōgai-shi (A history of pollution in Japan). Tokyo: Sekai Shoin.Google Scholar
- Kitajima, Masamoto (ed.). 1970. Seishigyō no tenkai to kōzō (The development and structure of the silk reeling industry of Japan). Tokyo: Hanawa Shobō.Google Scholar
- Kiyokawa, Yukihiko. 1995. Nihon no keizai hatten to gijutsu fukyū (The diffusion of technology and the economic development of Japan). Tokyo: Tōyō Keizai Shinpōsha.Google Scholar
- Makino, Fumio. 1996. Manekareta Prometheus (Invited Prometheus). Tokyo: Fūkōsha.Google Scholar
- Matsumura, Satoshi. 1992. Senkanki Nihon sanshigyō-shi kenkyū (Studies in the history of the Japanese silk industry during the interwar period). Tokyo: Tokyo Daigaku Shuppankai.Google Scholar
- Matsunami, Hidezane. 1919. Meiji ringyō shiyō (A history of Meiji forestry). Tokyo: Dai-Nihon Sanrinkai.Google Scholar
- Naganoken Kangyōka (Nagano Prefecture, Division of the Promotion of Industry) (NKG). 1885. Kangyō geppō (Monthly report on the promotion of industry) Nagano: Naganoken.Google Scholar
- Naganoken Kangyōka (NKN). 1878–1896. Naganoken kangyō nenpō (Annual report on the promotion of industry in Nagano Prefecture). Nagano: Naganoken.Google Scholar
- Naganoken Sanshigyō Kumiai. 1887. Naganoken sanshigyō kumiai torishimarijo nenpō (Annual report of the regulatory agency of silk reeling industry associations in Nagano prefecture), 1, December.Google Scholar
- Naganoken Sanshigyō Kumiai. 1888. Naganoken sanshigyō kumiai torishimarijo nenpō, 2, December.Google Scholar
- Naganoken-shi Kankōkai (ed.). 1980. Naganoken-shi: kindai shiryō-hen (The history of Nagano Prefecture, documents related to the modern period), 5–3. Nagano: Naganoken-shi Kankōkai.Google Scholar
- Naganoken-shi Kankōkai (ed.). 1986. Naganoken-shi: Kindai shiryō-hen. 5–4.Google Scholar
- Naganoken Suwagun Yakusho. 1905–1918. Suwagun gunchi ippan (A general survey of the Suwa region). 1–6.Google Scholar
- Naganoken Tōkeisho (NT). 1883–1911. Naganoken tōkeisho (Annual statistical survey of Nagano Prefecture). Nagano: Naganoken.Google Scholar
- Nakamura, Kichiji (ed.). 1956. Sonraku kōzō no shiteki bunseki (A historical analysis of village structure). Tokyo: Nihon Hyōronsha.Google Scholar
- Nakamura, Kichiji, et al. 1962. Hōkenki kaitai nōson no kenkyū (Studies on rural communities during the decline of the feudal system in Japan). Tokyo: Sōbunsha.Google Scholar
- Nōshōmushō Nōmukyoku (Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce, Division of Agriculture). 1895, 1898, 1902, 1907. Zenkoku seishi kōjō chōsahyō (National survey of silk filatures). 1 (October 1895), 2 (April 1898), 3 (March 1902), 4 (June 1907).Google Scholar
- Oda, Yasunori. 1983. Kindai Nihon no kōgai mondai (Problems of pollution in modern Japan). Kyoto: Sekai Shisōsha.Google Scholar
- Ōi, Takao. 1973a. Kindai ni okeru ringyō hatten no kisoteki zentei (Basic prerequisites for the development of forestry in modern Japan) (1). Shinano 25(11).Google Scholar
- Ōi, Takao. 1973b. Kindai ni okeru ringyō hatten no kisoteki zentei (Basic prerequisites for the development of forestry in modern Japan) (2). Shinano 25(12).Google Scholar
- Ōishi, Kaichirō. 1968. Nihon seishigyō chinrōdō no kōzōteki tokushitsu (Structural characteristics of wage labour in the Japanese silk reeling industry). In Kokumin keizai no shoruikei (Patterns of national economies), ed. Takeyoshi Kawashima, and Tomoo Matsuda. Tokyo: Iwanami Shoten.Google Scholar
- Okayashi. 1976. Okayashi-shi (The history of the city of Okaya), vol. 2. Okaya: Okayashi.Google Scholar
- Pomeranz, Kenneth. 2000. The great divergence: China, Europe, and the making of the modern world economy. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
- Ponting, Clive. 1992. A green history of the world: The environment and the collapse of great civilizations. New York: St. Martin’s Press.Google Scholar
- Shimo-Suwa Chōshi Hensan Iinkai (ed.). 1963. Shimo-Suwa chōshi (A topography of the town of Shimo-Suwa), vol. 1. Tokyo: Kōyō Shobō.Google Scholar
- Shimo-Suwa Chōshi Hensan Iinkai (ed.). 1969. Shimo-Suwa chōshi, vol. 2. Tokyo: Kōyō Shobō.Google Scholar
- Shinano Sanrinkai. 1902–1928. Shinano Sanrin kaihō (Bulletin of the Shinano Forest Association), 1 (November 1902) – 39 (April 1928).Google Scholar
- Shinano Sanrinkai (ed.). 1904. Naganoken shinrin tōkeisho (A statistical survey of forests in Nagano Prefecture), 1.Google Scholar
- Sugiyama, S. 1988. Japan’s industrialization in the world economy, 1859–1899: Export trade and overseas competition. London: Athlone Press.Google Scholar
- Suwa Denki Kabushiki Kaisha (Suwa Electric Power Co.). 1896a. Setsuritsu mokuromisho (Company prospectus).Google Scholar
- Suwa Denki Kabushiki Kaisha. 1896b. Sōritsu shutsugansho (Application to found the company).Google Scholar
- Suwa Denki Kabushiki Kaisha. 1919. Sōgyō nijū-shūnen kinen (Twenty-year anniversary of the company).Google Scholar
- Suzuki, Jun. 1996. Meiji no kikai kōgyō (The machine industry of Meiji Japan). Kyoto: Minerva Shobō.Google Scholar
- Takamura, Naosuke. 1995. Saihakken Meiji no keizai (The Meiji economy rediscovered). Tokyo: Hanawa Shobō.Google Scholar
- Tetsudōin (Railway Agency). 1916. Honpō tetsudō no shakai oyobi keizai ni oyoboseru eikyō (The socio-economic effects of railways in Japan), 3 vols. Tokyo: Tetsudōin.Google Scholar
- Tetsudōshō (Ministry of Railways) 1925. Mokuzai ni kansuru keizai chōsa (An economic survey of timber). Tokyo: Tetsudōshō.Google Scholar
- Tōjō, Yukihiko. 1990. Seishi dōmei no jokō tōroku seido (Silk associations and their systems for registering female workers). Tokyo: Tokyo Daigaku Shuppankai.Google Scholar
- Totman, Conrad. 1989. The green archipelago: Forestry in pre-industrial Japan. Berkeley/Los Angels: University of California Press.Google Scholar
- Tsutsui, Michio. 1978. Nihon rinsei-shi kenkyū josetsu (An preliminary study of the history of forest policies in modern Japan). Tokyo: Tokyo Daigaku Shuppankai.Google Scholar
- Umemura, Mataji, et al. (eds.). 1966. Chōki keizai tōkei (Long-term economic statistics), 9, Agriculture and forestry. Tokyo: Tōyō Keizai Shinpōsha.Google Scholar
- Worster, Donald. 1993. The wealth of nature: Environmental history and the ecological imagination. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
- Wrigley, E.A. 1988. Continuity, chance and change: The character of the industrial revolution in England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
- Yagi, Haruo. 1960. Nihon kindai seishigyō no seiritsu (The formation of the silk reeling industry in modern Japan). Tokyo: Ochanomizu Shobō.Google Scholar
- Yamaguchi, Kazuo (ed.). 1966. Nihon sangyō kin’yū-shi kenkyū: Seishi kin’yu-hen (Studies in the history of industrial financing in Japan: The silk reeling industry). Tokyo: Tokyo Daigaku Shuppankai.Google Scholar
- Yano, Makoto (ed.). 2008. The Japanese economy: A market quality perspective. Tokyo: Keio University Press.Google Scholar