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Yasuda zaibatsu (安田財閥) was a financial conglomerate owned and managed by the Yasuda clan. One of the four major zaibatsu of Imperial Japan, it was founded by the entrepreneur Yasuda Zenjirō .
The "Big Four" zaibatsu (四大財閥, Yondai Zaibatsu) of, in chronological order of founding, Sumitomo, Mitsui, Mitsubishi, and Yasuda were the most significant zaibatsu groups. Two of them, Sumitomo and Mitsui, had roots in the Edo period while Mitsubishi and Yasuda traced their origins to the Meiji Restoration .
Yasuda Zenjirō (安田 善次郎, November 25, 1838 – September 28, 1921) was a Japanese entrepreneur from Toyama, Etchu Province (present-day Toyama Prefecture) [1] who founded the Yasuda zaibatsu (安田財閥). He donated the Yasuda Auditorium (安田講堂, Yasuda Kōdō) to the University of Tokyo.
It was the main bank of the Yasuda zaibatsu until World War II, and afterwards of the Fuyo Group. The Fuji Bank combined with Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank and the Industrial Bank of Japan in 2000 to form Mizuho Financial Group, and changed its name to Mizuho Corporate Bank in 2002 after transferring its retail banking operations to Mizuho Bank.
Yasuda Trust & Banking (YT&B) was a Japanese financial institution, based in Tokyo. It was founded in 1925 within the Yasuda zaibatsu , and as such worked in concert with Yasuda Bank . Following World War II , simultaneously as Yasuda Bank was renamed Fuji Bank , and Yasuda Trust became Chuo Trust & Banking , but reverted to the Yasuda name in ...
The Yasuda clan was a Japanese samurai kin group in the Sengoku period and Edo period. [1] History ... Yasuda zaibatsu; Yoko Ono; Paul Hisao Yasuda; References
Zaibatsu — Japanese conglomerate companies of the Empire of Japan. ... Yasuda zaibatsu This page was last edited on 11 December 2024, at 15:35 (UTC). ...
Hajime Yasuda (安田一, Yasuda Hajime, 14 April 1907 – 26 March 1991) was a Japanese businessman. He was head of the Yasuda zaibatsu at the end of World War II . He is best known for the "Yasuda plan" which proposed dissolving the zaibatsu in Japan.