Kurihara Yasuhide
Kurihara Yasuhide | |
---|---|
栗原 安秀 | |
Kurihara Yasuhide in 1930 | |
Personal details | |
Born | November 17, 1908 Matsue, Shimane Prefecture, Japan |
Died | July 12, 1936 Tokyo, Tokyo Prefecture, Japan | (aged 27)
Military service | |
Branch/service | Imperial Japanese Army |
Years of service | 1929–1936 |
Rank | Lieutenant (中尉, chūi) |
Battles/wars | 26 February Incident |
Kurihara Yasuhide (Japanese: 栗原 安秀; 1908–1936) was an Imperial Japanese Army officer and lieutenant of infantry.
Biography
Born November 17, 1908, in Matsue City, Shimane Prefecture with a honseki registry in Tokyo. His father was Col. Kurihara Isamu (栗原 勇), originally from Saga Prefecture. When Yasuhide was young, he lived with his father who was stationed in Asahikawa. He had a close family relationship Saitō Ryū.
Kurihara graduated from the Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1929. He was politically active in Kōdōha circles, and hoped for a National Socialist revolution of the kind advocated by Kita Ikki.
Kurihara had a habit of saying "yaru yaru" (ヤルヽヽ; transl. "go ahead"), such that he was called Lt. Yaru Yaru (ヤルヽヽ中尉, yaru yaru chūi).[1]
Kurihara played a major role in the February 26 incident in 1936.[2] On February 29, three days after the incident, he was ordered to relinquish his court rank and was stripped of his medals.[3] Kurihara was executed by firing squad on July 12.