Hosei University


Hosei University formerly known as Tokyo University of Law is a research university in Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan. Hosei University and four other private universities in Tokyo are collectively known as MARCH.
The university is also a member of the Tokyo Big6, which refers to six universities in Tokyo known for their historic rivalry in baseball. The Tokyo Big6 Baseball League was established in 1925. The league is known for players who go on to have careers in Japan's professional baseball leagues.
Hosei University is a member of the Top Global University Project, funded by the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology in 2014. This program supports universities aiming to enhance their global competitiveness and internationalization.

Overview

The university originated as a school of law, Tōkyō Hōgakusha, established in 1880, and the following year renamed Tōkyō Hōgakkō. This was from 1883 headed by Dr. Gustave Boissonade, and was heavily influenced by the French legal tradition. It merged in 1889 with a school of French studies, Tōkyō Futsugakkō, that had been founded three years earlier. It adopted the name Hosei University in 1903 and gained university status in 1920.

History

Hosei University traces its roots to 1880, when Tokyo Hogakusha was founded in Surugadai, Tokyo, by Tetsu Kanamaru, Osamu Ito, and Masakuni Sattva. The institution emerged during Japan's liberal civil rights movement and the establishment of a modern legal system, focusing on training legal professionals. Its guiding principle of “liberty and progress” was inspired by the influence of French law, introduced by Gustave Boissonade, a French legal scholar invited to Japan to draft key legal codes and train lawyers.
In 1881, after the government banned private law schools, Tokyo Hogakusha briefly closed, but the Koho Bureau split off and renamed itself the Tokyo Law School in 1883, with Boissonade serving as vice principal. In 1889, the school merged with the Tokyo French School, established in 1886 by the French Society, becoming the Franco-Japanese Law School. Its first principal, Rinsho Minosaku, translated the French Civil Code and introduced key legal terms such as “rights,” “duties,” and “civil rights.”
In 1899, under principal Ume Kenjirō, the school implemented significant reforms, launching advanced courses for continuing education, language programs in English, German, and French, and systems for independent study, auditing, and preferential enrollment. These reforms laid the foundation for the institution's growth.
In 1903, the school was renamed Hosei University under the, offering preparatory courses for daytime students, university and specialized courses for evening students, and a graduate school of advanced studies. The university expanded further under Ume's leadership, embodying his philosophy of “open education.”
In 1920, Hosei University gained official status as a private university under the. It initially included the Faculty of Law and Faculty of Economics, along with preparatory and professional studies. The university relocated to its current campus in Fujimi-cho, Tokyo, in 1921. By 1922, the Faculty of Letters was added, including departments such as Philosophy and Literature, and the university transitioned from night classes to full-time day programs with a dedicated faculty structure.
Today, it is a comprehensive institution with 15 faculties, 13 graduate schools, a School of Correspondence Education, and professional graduate schools.

Faculty of Law and Faculty of Economics

The Faculty of Law traces its origins back to 1880, with the establishment of Tokyo Hogakusha, a school dedicated to training legal professionals during the transformative Meiji era. This period marked the modernization of Japan, including the adoption of Western legal systems, and the Faculty of Law played a key role in that movement. Influential in its early development was Dr. Gustave Emile Boissonade, a distinguished French legal scholar who served as a legal advisor to the Japanese government.
The Faculty of Economics, established in 1920. Also, Hosei University still offers an economics program in English, which is called IGESS. It also offers opportunities for international exchange.

Campus

Hosei has three main campuses, which it calls Ichigaya, Koganei, and Tama. The Ichigaya campus is an urban campus halfway between Ichigaya and Iidabashi stations in central Tokyo; its 26-story Boissonade Tower, completed in 2000, can be seen from either station. The campus is located close to the Yasukuni Shrine. Natural sciences are studied at the Koganei campus to the west of Tokyo, and other subjects are split between Tama, and Ichigaya.

Facilities

Ichigaya

Undergraduate

  • Faculty of Law
  • Faculty of Letters
  • Faculty of Business Administration
  • Faculty of Intercultural Communication
  • Faculty of Sustainability Studies
  • Faculty of Lifelong Learning and Career Studies
  • Faculty of Engineering and Design
  • Faculty of Global and Interdisciplinary Studies
  • Sports Science Institute

    Graduate schools

  • Graduate School of Humanities
  • Graduate School of Economics
  • Graduate School of Law
  • Graduate School of Politics
  • Graduate School of Sociology
  • Graduate School of Business Administration
  • Graduate School of Policy Sciences
  • Graduate School of Environmental Management
  • Graduate School of Intercultural Communication
  • International Japan-Studies Institute
  • Law School
  • Business School of Innovation Management

    Tama

  • Faculty of Economics
  • Faculty of Social Sciences
  • Faculty of Social Policy and Administration
  • Graduate School of Social Well-Being Studies

    Koganei

  • Faculty of Engineering
  • Faculty of Science and Engineering
  • Faculty of Bioscience and Applied Chemistry
  • Faculty of Computer and Information Science
  • Graduate School of Engineering
  • Graduate School of Computer and Information Science

    Research Institutes

  • Sports

Baseball :
'''American Football :'''

Notable alumni

Academia

* dropped out before graduation

Notable faculty