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  1. Viscount Keizō Shibusawa (渋沢 敬三, Shibusawa Keizō, August 25, 1896 – October 25, 1963) was a Japanese businessman, central banker, philanthropist and folklorist. He was the 16th Governor of the Bank of Japan (BOJ).

  2. Shibusawa researched and collected numerous historical documents and tangible goods ( mingu) and carried out research and analysis based on ethnographic fieldwork centered around fishing villages. Founder of ISJFC, Keizo Shibusawa (1896-1963) was born as a grandson of entrepreneur Eiichi Shibusawa.

  3. Businessperson and folklore researcher. The grandson of SHIBUSAWA Eiichi, he graduated from Imperial University of Tokyo in 1921 and worked at Yokohama Specie Bank. In 1925, he became a director of Daiichi Bank, founded by his grandfather, and became its president in 1941.

  4. That individual’s name is Shibusawa Keizo (1896-1963), who served as governor of the Bank of Japan in 1944 and as Minister of Finance in 1945 right after WWII. He was also a family successor to his renowned grandfather, Shibusawa Ei’ichi (1840-1931), the so-called “father of Japanese capitalism.”

  5. Purpose. Keizo Shibusawa, in addition to being the scholar who presided over the Attic Museum, the forerunner of today’s Institute for the Study of Japanese Folk Culture (ISJFC), Kanagawa University, was also a businessman who followed in the footsteps of his grandfather Eiichi, holding key positions in both politics and business.

  6. 5 de ene. de 2018 · Although not well known outside Japan, Keizo Shibusawa’s contribution to the advancement of Japanese business anthropology was truly remarkable. Keizo Shibusawa was born in 1896 as a grandson and heir of Eiichi Shibusawa, the banker-entrepreneur and the founder of Japan’s Capitalist economy.

  7. Between 1932 and 1965, Shibusawa Keizo was the driving force in assembling a team of scholars to organize Eiichi’s documents into the sixty-eight volumes of the Shibusawa Eiichi Denki Shiryo (Biographical Sources).