Misplaced Pages

Meiji Yasuda Life

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance Company ( 明治安田生命保険相互会社 , Meiji Yasuda Seimei Hoken Sōgo Kaisha ) is a Japanese life insurance company, which is headquartered in Tokyo and created in 2004 from the merger of Meiji Life and Yasuda Life . The company is one of the oldest and largest insurers in Japan. The Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance Company is a member of the Mitsubishi and Fuyo groups and participates in the former's Friday Conference. It is the main sponsor of the J1 League since 2015.

#490509

7-616: In 1881, entrepreneur Zenjiro Yasuda founded the Yasuda Mutual Life Insurance Company, making it part of the Yasuda zaibatsu . On January 1, 2004, Meiji Mutual Life Insurance Company and Yasuda Mutual Life Insurance Company merged to create the Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance Company. This article on an insurance company is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about

14-462: A Japanese corporation- or company-related topic is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Zenjiro Yasuda 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 ) who founded the Yasuda zaibatsu (安田財閥). He donated the Yasuda Auditorium ( 安田講堂 , Yasuda Kōdō ) to

21-532: The Meiji Restoration , he provided the same services to the new Meiji government . Yasuda profited from the delay between the collection of taxes and their forwarding to the government. He greatly magnified his wealth by buying up depreciated Meiji paper money that the government subsequently exchanged for gold . Yasuda helped establish the Third National Bank in 1876. Later, in 1880, Yasuda set up

28-594: The University of Tokyo . He was a maternal great-grandfather of Yoko Ono via his daughter Teruko, and adoptive son, Yasuda Zenzaburō (安田善三郎). Yasuda Zenjirō was the son of a poor samurai and a member of the Yasuda clan in Etchu Province. Zenjirō moved to Edo at the age of 17 and began working in a money changing house. In 1863, he started providing tax-farming services to the Tokugawa Shogunate . After

35-572: The Yasuda Auditorium to the Tokyo Imperial University and the Hibiya Kokaido hall. He owned a lot of land in Tokyo which was later used as Yasuda Garden, Yasuda Gakuen, and Doai Memorial Hospital. Yasuda was assassinated in 1921 by nationalist lawyer Asahi Heigo because Yasuda had refused to make a financial donation to a worker's hotel. Yasuda’s adopted son, Yasuda Zenzaburō (安田善三郎)

42-682: The Yasuda Bank (later the Fuji Bank , now Mizuho Financial Group ) and the Yasuda Mutual Life Insurance Company (later merged to form Meiji Yasuda Life Insurance ), which he organized into a zaibatsu holding company. In 1893, the Yasuda zaibatsu absorbed the Tokyo Fire Insurance Company (renamed the Yasuda Fire and Marine Insurance Company, now Sompo Japan Insurance ). Yasuda was among

49-490: The best financiers that Japan had; however he was not adventurous and hardly expanded the business beyond finance. Most of the industrial houses associated with Yasuda were actually those that Asano Soichiro (the founder of the Asano zaibatsu ) started, whom Yasuda trusted and provided loans to. More accurately, therefore, they belonged to Asano zaibatsu and were merely affiliated to Yasuda Zaibatsu. In his later years, he donated

#490509