Shimazu Shigehide (born November 1745, Kagoshima, Satsuma province, Japan—died March 22, 1833, Edo [Tokyo]) was a Japanese lord of the great han, or feudal fief, of Satsuma. Shimazu’s strong leadership and his interest in Western studies put Satsuma in a position to play a leading role in Japanese affairs from the mid-19th to the mid-20th century.
Succeeding his father as head of Satsuma in 1755, Shigehide soon acquired an intense curiosity about Western affairs. He studied Dutch, the Dutch being the only Westerners then allowed into Japan, and patronized specialists in Western studies. In 1774 he founded a medical school, and he later also established institutes for the study of astronomy and mathematics, making Satsuma one of the most technically advanced areas of Japan.
Shigehide married his daughter to the shogun, the hereditary military dictator of Japan. The alliance enabled Shigehide to exercise great influence over the central government, but the cost of pursuing that kind of power brought Satsuma to the verge of financial ruin. He therefore ordered reforms that included cancellation of all debts to merchants and reassertion of strong central authority. These measures so strengthened Satsuma’s economy that it was able to take a leading role in the Meiji Restoration (1868), which overthrew the shogun and established a new Imperial government.