Shintarō Suzuki
Shintarō Suzuki (鈴木 信太郎, Suzuki Shintarō, November 8, 1884 - June 27, 1958) was a Japanese politician. He was born in Yamagata Prefecture. He was the son-in-law of Tokonami Takejirō. He was governor of Nara Prefecture (1923-1926), Gifu Prefecture (1926-1927), Yamanashi Prefecture (1927-1929), Nagano Prefecture (1929-1931), Nagasaki Prefecture (1931-1935) and Kyoto Prefecture (1935-1936). He was a member of the Government-General of Taiwan.[1][2]
Preceded by |
Governor of Nara Prefecture 1923-1926 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by |
Governor of Gifu Prefecture 1926-1927 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by |
Governor of Yamanashi Prefecture 1927-1929 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by Ryo Chiba |
Governor of Nagano 1929-1931 |
Succeeded by Kuraji Ishigaki |
Preceded by |
Governor of Nagasaki Prefecture 1931-1935 |
Succeeded by |
Preceded by |
Governor of Kyoto Prefecture 1935-1936 |
Succeeded by Keiichi Suzuki |
References
- 『山梨Encyclopedia』増補改訂版、518-519頁。
- 『官報』第2858号・付録、「辞令」1922年02月14日。
Bibliography
- Ueda Masaaki他『Japan人名大辞典』講談社、2001.
- Successive governor編纂会編『新編Japanのsuccessive governor』successive governor編纂会、1991.
- Ikuhiko Hata編『Comprehensive Encyclopedia of the Japanese Bureaucracy:1868 - 2000』University of Tokyo Press、2001.
- 『山梨Encyclopedia』増補改訂版、山梨日日新聞社、1989.
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