right|200px|thumb|Japanese 10 [[Japanese yen|sen postage stamp depicting a map of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere]]

The was a cabinet-level ministry in the government of the Empire of Japan from 1942 to 1945, established to replace the Ministry of Colonial Affairs. Its purpose was to administer overseas territories obtained by Japan in the Pacific War and to coordinate the establishment and development of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.

History and development

The Ministry of Greater East Asia was established on 1 November 1942 under the administration of Prime Minister Hideki Tōjō, by absorbing the earlier and merging it with the East Asia Department and South Pacific Department of the Foreign Ministry and the , which looked after affairs in Japanese-occupied China.

Theoretically, the ministry had political and administrative responsibilities in a vast area under Japanese influence (extending south from the Aleutians to the Solomon Islands, and west from Wake Island to Burma and the Andamans), with perhaps a population of over 300 million inhabitants. In reality, wartime conditions meant that the ministry was little more than a paper creation. Aside from the first Minister of Greater East Asia, Kazuo Aoki, all succeeding ministers simultaneously held the portfolio of the Foreign Minister.

The Ministry of Greater East Asia was abolished on 26 August 1945 by order of the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers after the surrender of Japan brought an end to Japan's overseas holdings.

List of ministers of Greater East Asia

{| class=wikitable style="text-align:center"

!

! Portrait

! Name

! colspan=2 | Term of office

! Cabinet

|-

| 1

| 75px

| Kazuo Aoki<br>青木 一男

| <small>1 November</small><br>1942

| <small>22 July</small><br>1944

| Tōjō

|-

| 2

| 75px

| Mamoru Shigemitsu<br>重光 葵

| <small>22 July</small><br>1944

| <small>7 April</small><br>1945

| Koiso

|-

| 3

| 75px

| Kantarō Suzuki<br>鈴木 貫太郎

| <small>7 April</small><br>1945

| <small>9 April</small><br>1945

| rowspan=2 | Suzuki

|-

| 4

| 75px

| Shigenori Tōgō<br>東郷茂徳

| <small>9 April</small><br>1945

| <small>17 August</small><br>1945

|-

| 5

| 75px

| Mamoru Shigemitsu<br>重光 葵

| <small>17 August</small><br>1945

| <small>25 August</small><br>1945

| Higashikuni

|-

|}

See also

  • Greater East Asia Conference
  • Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere
  • Japanese colonial empire
  • List of territories occupied by Imperial Japan

References

  • WW2DB: Greater East Asia Conference
  • "Foreign Office Files for Japan and the Far East". Adam Matthew Publications. Accessed 2 March 2005.