The foreign employees in Meiji Japan, known in Japanese as Oyatoi Gaikokujin, were hired by the Japanese government and municipalities for their specialized knowledge and skill to assist in the modernization of the Meiji period . The term came fromYatoi (a person hired temporarily, a day laborer), was politely applied for hired foreigner asO-yatoi gaikokujin .
   The total number is over 2000, probably reaches 3000 (with thousands more in the private sector). Until 1899, more than 800 hired foreign experts continued to be employed by the government, and many others were employed privately. Their occupation varied, ranging from high salaried government advisors, college professors and instructor, to ordinary salaried technicians.
   Along the process of the opening of the country, the Tokugawa Shogunate government first hired German diplomat Philipp Franz von Siebold as diplomatic advisor, Dutch naval engineer Hendrik Hardes for Nagasaki Arsenal and Willem Johan Cornelis, Ridder Huijssen van Kattendijke for Nagasaki Naval Training Center , French naval engineer François Léonce Verny for Yokosuka Naval Arsenal , and British civil engineer Richard Henry Brunton . Most of the O-yatoi was appointed through government approval with two or three years contract, and took their responsibility properly in Japan, except some cases.
   As the Public Works hired almost 40% of the total number of the O-yatois, the main goal in hiring the O-yatois was to obtain transfers of technology and advice on systems and cultural ways. Therefore, young Japanese officers gradually took over the post of the O-yatoi after they completed training and education at the Imperial College, Tokyo , the Imperial College of Engineering or studying abroad.
   The O-yatois were highly paid; in 1874, they numbered 520 men, at which time their salaries came to 2.272 million, or 33.7 percent of the national annual budget. The salary system was equivalent to the British India, for instance, the chief engineer of the British India's Public Works was paid 2500 Rs/month which was almost same as 1000 Yen, salary of Thomas William Kinder, superintendent of the Osaka Mint in 1870.
   Despite the value they provided in the modernization of Japan, the Japanese government did not consider it prudent for them to settle in Japan permanently. After the contract terminated, most of them returned to their country except some, like Josiah Conder and William Kinninmond Burton .
   The system was officially terminated in 1899 when extraterritoriality came to an end in Japan. Nevertheless, similar employment of foreigners persists in Japan, particularly within the national education system and professional sports .
United States William Smith Clark
United States Edwin Dun
German Empire Max Fesca
German Empire Oskar Kellner
German Empire Oskar Löw , agronomist
United States William Penn Brooks , agronomist
German Empire Erwin von Bälz
German Empire Johannes Ludwig Janson
German Empire Heinrich Botho Scheube
German Empire Julius Scriba
France Georges Appert , legal scholar
France Gustave Emile Boissonade , legal scholar
German Empire Hermann Roesler , jurist and economist
German Empire Georg Michaelis , jurist
German Empire Albert Mosse , jurist
German Empire Switzerland Otfried Nippold , jurist
German Empire Heinrich Waentig , economist and jurist
France Georges Hilaire Bousquet , legal scholar
United Kingdom Horatio Nelson Lay , railway developer
United Kingdom Alexander Allan Shand , monetary
United States Henry Willard Denison , diplomat
German Empire Karl Rathgen , economist
France Jules Brunet , artillery officer
France Léonce Verny , constructor of the Yokosuka Naval Arsenal
German Empire Klemens Wilhelm Jakob Meckel , Army instructor
German Empire Carl Köppen , Army instructor
United States James R. Wasson , Civil engineer and teacher, army engineer
United States Douglas R. Cassel , Naval instructor
United States Henry Walton Grinnell , Navy instructor
Spain José Luis Ceacero Inguanzo , Navy instructor
United Kingdom Charles Dickinson West , naval architect
United Kingdom Henry Spencer Palmer , military engineer
United Kingdom Archibald Lucius Douglas , Naval instructor
United Kingdom William Edward Ayrton , physicist
United Kingdom Edward Divers , chemist
United States Thomas Corwin Mendenhall , physicist
United States Edward S. Morse , zoologist
United States Charles Otis Whitman , zoologist, successor of Edward S. Morse
German Empire Heinrich Edmund Naumann , geologist
German Empire Curt Netto , metallurgist
United Kingdom Sir James Alfred Ewing , physicist and engineer who founded Japanese seismology
United Kingdom Cargill Gilston Knott , succeeding J.A. Ewing
United States Benjamin Smith Lyman , mining engineer
United States William P. Brooks , agriculture
United Kingdom Richard Henry Brunton , builder of lighthouses
United Kingdom France Charles Alfred Chastel de Boinville , architect
United Kingdom Josiah Conder , architect
United Kingdom William Kinnimond Burton , engineering, architecture, photography
United States Horace Capron , agriculture, road construction
United Kingdom Henry Dyer , engineering education
German Empire Hermann Ende , architect
Switzerland François Perregaux , mechanical watchmaker
Switzerland Italy Albert Favre Zanuti , mechanical watchmaker
Netherlands George Arnold Escher , civil engineer
United Kingdom John G.H. Godfrey , geologist, mining engineer
United Kingdom John Milne , geologist, seismologist
United Kingdom Colin Alexander McVean , civil engineer
United Kingdom Edmund Morel , civil engineer
Netherlands Johannis de Rijke , civil engineer, flood control, river projects
United States John Alexander Low Waddell , bridge engineer
United Kingdom Thomas James Waters , civil engineer
United Kingdom William Gowland , mining engineer, archaeologist
Switzerland James Favre-Brandt , mechanical watchmaker
France Jean Francisque Coignet , mining engineer
United Kingdom Henry Scharbau , cartographer
German Empire Wilhelm Böckmann , architect
Netherlands Anthonie Rouwenhorst Mulder , civil engineer, rivers and ports
Italy Edoardo Chiossone - engraver
United States Luther Whiting Mason , musician
United States Ernest Fenollosa , art critic
German Empire Franz Eckert , musician
Austria-Hungary Rudolf Dittrich , musician
Italy Antonio Fontanesi , oil painter
Italy Vincenzo Ragusa , sculptor
United Kingdom John William Fenton , musician
United States Alice Mabel Bacon , pedagoge
United Kingdom Basil Hall Chamberlain , Japanologist and Professor of Japanese
United Kingdom James Summers , English literature
United Kingdom Lafcadio Hearn , Japanologist
German Empire Viktor Holtz , educator
Russian Empire German Empire Raphael von Koeber , philosopher and musician
German Empire Ludwig Riess , historian
United States Leroy Lansing Janes , educator, missionary
United States Marion McCarrell Scott , educator
United Kingdom Edward Bramwell Clarke , educator
United States David Murray , educator
United States William Elliot Griffis , clergyman, author
Netherlands Guido Verbeck , missionary, pedagoge
United States Horace Wilson , missionary and teacher credited with introducing baseball to Japan
United Kingdom Francis Brinkley , journalist
Ottmar von Mohl , court protocol
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