Oki Kibatarō
{{Short description|Japanese engineer}}
{{family name hatnote|Oki|lang=Japanese}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Oki Kibatarō
| image = Oki Kibataro.png
| image_size = 130px
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| occupation = Businessman, telecommunications engineer
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| nationality = Japanese
| known_for = Oki Electric Industry
| education = Tokyo Imperial University
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{{Nihongo|Oki Kibatarō|沖 牙太郎||1848–1906}} was a Japanese businessman and telecommunications engineer formerly employed at a Japanese Ministry of Industry (Kōbushō) factory. In 1877, only a year after Alexander Graham Bell's invention, Kōbushō had started an effort to make telephone receivers by reverse engineering and Oki was in the team that came up with the first prototype.{{cite book
| last = Odagiri
| first = Hiroyuki
| title = Technology and Industrial Development in Japan
| publisher = Clarendon Press, Oxford
| year = 1996
| isbn = 0-19-828802-6
| pages = 161
}}
In January 1881, convinced that the nation was about to enter the age of communications, Oki founded Meikōsha, which was later renamed Oki Electric Industry. The company manufactured the first telephones in Japan in 1881, only five years after the device was invented by Bell.
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Category:19th-century Japanese businesspeople
Category:Japanese company founders
Category:People of Meiji-era Japan
Category:University of Tokyo alumni
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