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A special exhibition named "King of advertisement, Red Tengu - King of cigarettes in Meiji era, Matsuhei Iwaya" was held at the Cigarette & Salt Museum in Shibuya from January to March, 2006. At the exhibition hall, the red jackets that Matsuhei Iwaya wore, his desk, reproduced reception room of his Ginza house were shown with various cigarettes, posters, and valuable items in Meiji, and visitors enjoyed Meiji era's colorful and prosperous atmosphere. |
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Matsuhei Iwaya was born in 1849 (Kaei 2) in Satsuma (now Kagoshima Prefecture) and inherited the house of Iwaya in 1869 (Meiji 2). But since the household goods were burnt down at the Satsuma Rebellion in 1877 (Meiji 10,) Matsuhei went to Tokyo and opened a store "Satsumaya" in 1878 (Meiji 11) in the Ginza 3 Street to sell kimono fabrics and specialty goods of Satsuma. From the beginning of Meiji, the paper rolled cigarette, which was a symbol of sophistication at that time, was becoming popular replacing pipe tobacco in big cities like Tokyo; Iwaya started manufacturing cigarettes from 1884 (Meiji 17) and sold "Tengu cigarette," the paper-roll cigarette with a mouthpiece. Iwaya himself promoted the advertisement of cigarettes vigorously, and created his original advertising strategy that was hardly seen in Japan those days: it was newspaper advertisement of paper cigarettes to sell them with premium, which was not common yet in Japan. |
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His company name was "Iwaya Shokai," and the brand name of cigarette was "Tengu Cigarette": the character was "red tengu," and letters on the package were designed similar with the insignia of Shimazu family, then everything was red as the corporate color was red, and coats Iwaya wore were red, too. He called himself, "Captain of discounters," and rode on a red wagon in Ginza area as if the wagon were an advertising car. His promotional phrase was "King of cigarette in the Orient," and "Boss of national benefit," and he also publicized his company's prosperity saying, "Don't be surprised; our tax is only 500,000 yen and 30,000 charity men are working in the company!" (500,000 yen was large sum of money in the beginning of 1897's.) He was trying to dominate the industry with provocative advertisement. |
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Around that time, Kichibei Murai in Kyoto, who was also quick to be aware of the trend, began production of paper cigarettes knowing Iwaya's reputation, and founded a company with the name, "Murai Brothers Shokai" in 1892 (Meiji 25,) and opened a branch in Nihonbashi Ward Muromachi 2. From then on, a violent sales battle started between Iwaya, a Kyushu man who used only Japanese tobacco leaves, and a Westernized man, Murai who united with foreign capitals and used some American tobacco leaves.
Murai named his company's cigarettes in sophisticated foreign-style such as "Sunrise" (first sold in 1891) and "Hero" (first sold in 1894), and his company's package designs that were imitations of Western style designs won popularity in Japan.
On the other side, Iwaya, a patriotic man, created packages mainly with Japanese style designs like tengu, hawk, Mt. Fuji, and family crests, applying national traits in naming cigarettes: in quality ranking the names were Golden Tengu and Silver Tengu, in cigarette size ranking names were Large Tengu and Medium Tengu: we can see thatIwaya had competed the cigarette-sales fiercely by learning his naming such as "Importation Eradicator Tengu," "Patriotic Tengu," "Country Benefit Tengu," and "Happy Nation Tengu."
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While the advertising battle of Iwaya Shokai and Murai Brothers' Shokai was provoking social problems, cigarette manufacturers like Matsubei Chiba {Tokyo, Chiba Shoten; his brand was "Botan Cigarette" (Peony cigarette)} were more than 5000, and brand designs were as many as 100,000 kinds in Meiji Era.
As the cigarette competition was influenced also by designs of packages which were needed to look very attractive to entice people to buy, printing technique was another important element to know the cigarette history.
| Product Name | How many in a box | Price(sen) | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iwaya Tengu | 20 | 3 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| White Tengu | 50 | 5 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Red Tengu | 50 | 5 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Blue Tengu | 50 | 6 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Black Tengu | 100 | 5 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Silver Tengu | 50 | 10 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Golden Tengu | 50 | 12 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Small Tengu | 50 | 7 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Medium Tengu | 50 | 8 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Large Tengu | 50 | 10 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Sunrise Tengu | 20 | 3 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Moon Tengu | 50 | 15 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Army Tengu | 10 | 1 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Navy Tengu | 10 | 2 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Royal Army Tengu | 20 | 2 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Seisei Tengu | 20 | 4 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Nippon Tengu | 50 | 10 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Patriotic Tengu | 20 | 4 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| National Benefit Tengu | 20 | 5 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Importation Eradicator Tengu | 10 | --- | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Japanese-England alliance Tengu | 10 | 5 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Pelri Tengu | 20 | --- | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Gyokei Tengu | --- | --- | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Hawk Tengu | 20 | 6 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Leaf Tengu | 100 | 6 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Strong Tengu | 100 | 28 | Paper-rolled cigarette w/mouthpiece |
| Hinoto Tengu | 50 monmes (approx. 187.5g) | 15 | cut tobacco |
| Hinoe Tengu | 50 monmes (approx. 187.5g) | 18 | cut tobacco |
| Kinoe Tengu | 50 monmes (approx. 187.5g) | 28 | cut tobacco |
Murai established Toyo Printing Co., Ltd that employed the latest technology from foreign countries, while Iwaya united with the relief printing joint-stock company founded in 1900 (Meiji 33) by Enkichi Kimura, former general manager of the relief department, and Furuya Ginjiro, the sculpture department general manager of Ministry of Finance Printing Bureau, and succeeded to print exquisite packages and advertising items such as posters and brochures that were as beautiful as Murai's products. This is the antecedent company of present Toppan Printing Co., Ltd.
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