Baron Kishichiro Okura (大倉 喜七郎, Ōkura Kishichirō, June 16, 1882 – February 2, 1963) was a Japanese entrepreneur and hotelier.
Biography
editBaron Kishichiro Okura was the son of Okura Kihachiro (1837-1928), an entrepreneur who built up the Okura-gumi and founded the giant Okura Zaibatsu (family owned conglomerate) and the Okura Shogyo Gakko, which later became Tokyo Keizai University (Tokyo University of Economics), in 1949.
Okura studied at Trinity College, Cambridge from 1903 to 1906 but did not graduate. He competed in the first ever car race held at Brooklands in Surrey on July 6, 1907, where he came in second. Okura was also one of the pioneers who introduced the motor car to Japan. He was President of the Imperial Hotel and Okura luxury hotel chain that is still important in Japan today.
Okura Kishichiro was a primary patron in the establishment of the Nihon Ki-in or Japanese Go Association in 1924, where he organized and supported professional go players in Japan following the Meiji Restoration and subsequent ceasing of government support for the four go houses.
He also invented the musical instrument the Okraulo, a type of vertical flute.[1]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Okraulo". Oruka Shukokan. 公益財団法人 大倉文化財団. 7 July 2016. Archived from the original on 27 November 2010. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
External links
editMedia related to Kishichirō Ōkura at Wikimedia Commons
- Reminiscences from the website of the Cambridge & Oxford Society, Tokyo
- Japanese Students at Cambridge University in the Meiji Era, 1868-1912: Pioneers for the Modernization of Japan, by Noboru Koyama, translated by Ian Ruxton. Lulu Press, September 2004, ISBN 1-4116-1256-6
- La Maison Italienne, musical composition in collaboration with Sekiya Toshiko to welcome the Italian Maestro Adolfo Gandino on his visit to Japan, April 1938