Viscount Toshisada Maeda (前田利定, Maeda Toshisada, 10 December 1874 – 2 October 1944) was a Japanese politician who was Minister of Communications and Minister of Agriculture and Commerce in the pre-war Empire of Japan.

Toshisada Maeda
前田利定
Born(1874-12-10)December 10, 1874
Tokyo, Japan
DiedOctober 2, 1944(1944-10-02) (aged 69)
Tokyo, Japan
NationalityJapanese
Occupation(s)politician, cabinet minister

Biography

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Toshisada Maeda was born in Tokyo, as the eldest son of Maeda Toshiaki, the final daimyō of Nanokaichi Domain in Kōzuke Province, and inherited his father’s kazoku peerage title of shishaku (viscount). His brother, Toshinari, was a general in the Imperial Japanese Army.

Toshisada Maeda was a graduate of Tokyo Imperial University. He served briefly in the infantry during the First Sino-Japanese War in 1894, and afterwards assumed his family’s seat in the House of Peers of the Diet of Japan. In 1922, he was appointed Minister of Communications in the cabinet of Katō Tomosaburō. He subsequently served in the cabinet of Prime Minister Kiyoura Keigo as Minister of Agriculture and Commerce. He retired from public life in January 1944, and died in October of the same year. He was posthumously awarded the Order of the Sacred Treasures, 1st class.

Maeda studied poetry under Sasaki Nobutsuna. His daughter married post-war Foreign Minister Katsuo Okazaki.

Family tree

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Matsushita Uemon
Yasuda KoichiroToku EdaMastsushita KusunokiHirata TosukeMaeda ToshiakiMitsui Takamine
Tetsujiro NakaoYasueJun IueYurou IueToshio IueMumenoKonosuke MatsushitaHirata ShodoShizukoMaeda ToshisadaKeikoMitsui Hachirōemon
Satoshi IueMatsushita SachikoMasaharu MatsushitaHirata KatsumiNobuko
Iue ToshimasaHiro MatsushitaMasayuki Matsushita
(松下正幸
Atsuko
Political offices
Preceded by Minister of Agriculture & Commerce
Jan 1924 – Jun 1924
Succeeded by
Preceded by Communications Minister
Jun 1922 – Sept 1923
Succeeded by