Sentō Takenaka (仙頭武央, Sentō Takenaka, October 3, 1864 – December 11, 1919) was a Japanese Vice Admiral of the First Sino-Japanese War and the Russo-Japanese War. He commanded the Japanese cruiser Tsushima during the Battle of Korsakov and the Battle of Tsushima.

Sentō Takenaka
仙頭武央
Born(1864-10-03)October 3, 1864
Anai, Tosa Province, Tokugawa
DiedDecember 11, 1919(1919-12-11) (aged 55)
Tokyo, Tokyo Prefecture, Japan
Buried
Anai, Aki City, Kōchi Prefecture, Japan
Allegiance Japan
Branch Imperial Japanese Navy
Years of service1883 – 1919
Rank Vice Admiral
CommandsTsushima
Battles / wars
Alma materImperial Japanese Naval Academy

Biography

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Takenaka was born on 1864 at Anai Village, Aki District, Tosa Province (now Aki City). His father, Takehide, was a yakuyaku in Akimachi during the old clan era. He studied under Kusukichi Funamoto at Shingi Gakusha and graduated from the Imperial Japanese Naval Academy as part of its tenth class in October 1883 and became an assistant lieutenant in the navy. In April 1886, he was appointed as an ensign.[1]

During the First Sino-Japanese War, he went to war as a squad leader of the Chiyoda. In July 1896, he became Gunnery Chief of the Zhenyuan and after working as Deputy Commander of the Pingyuan. In December 1897, he was promoted to Lieutenant Commander of the Navy and was appointed to the Asama and sent to the United Kingdom as part of a business trip. After working as chief of gunnery at the Asama, he was promoted to Commander in October 1898.

In December 1898, he assumed the post of Military Construction Supervisor and successively served as vice-commander of the Suma , Naniwa and Yakumo. He then took up the role of a marine artillery instructor, marine inspector general, Kure Naval Base outfitting committee, etc. on 1903. In October, he assumed the post of captain of Tsushima. She took part in the Battle of Korsakov and the Battle of Tsushima. In January 1905, he was promoted to captain. In August of the same year, he assumed the post of captain of Naniwa, and thereafter served as captain of the Kasuga, Yakumo, Suwo, and Suzuya. In May 1908, he became Commander of the Kaiheidan and successively served as Commander of the Naval Gunnery School [ja] and Commander of the Kure Marine Corps.[1]

In December 1910, he was promoted to Rear Admiral and assumed the post of Commander of the Chinkai Guard District and Head of the Temporary Building Department Branch. Since then, he has served as commander of the Kure Reserve Fleet and commander of the Kure Naval Base Fleet in December 1913. On December 1, 1914, he was promoted to Vice Admiral and at the same time, was transferred to the reserves.[2] He died on December 11, 1919, while living at Tokyo.[1]

Awards

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Court Ranks

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  • July 8, 1886: Junior Eighth[3]
  • December 16, 1891: Junior Seventh[4]
  • October 31, 1898: Junior Sixth[5]
  • March 1, 1909: Senior Fifth[6]
  • March 10, 1914: Junior Fourth[7]
  • January 11, 1915: Senior Fourth[8]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "仙頭武央 ~日本海海戦 対馬艦長~". bujinkensyokai. Retrieved September 4, 2022.
  2. ^ Official Gazette No. 701, December 2, 1914.
  3. ^ "Official Gazette" No. 931 "Appointment" August 7, 1886.
  4. ^ "Official Gazette" No. 2541 "Appointment and Appointment" December 17, 1891.
  5. ^ "Official Gazette" No. 4603 "Appointment and Appointment" November 1, 1898.
  6. ^ "Official Gazette" No. 7701 "Appointment and Appointment" March 2, 1909.
  7. ^ "Official Gazette" No. 483 "Appointment and Appointment" March 11, 1914
  8. ^ "Official Gazette" No. 731 "Appointment and Appointment" January 12, 1915.