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This page describes the history of the relationship between the United Kingdom and Japan. This began in 1600 with the arrival of William Adams (Adams the Pilot, Miura Anjin) on the shores of Kyūshū at Usuki in Ōita Prefecture. During the Sakoku period (1641-1853) there were no relations, but the treaty of 1854 saw the resumption of ties which, despite the hiatus of the Second World War, remain very strong in the present day.
[edit] Chronology of Anglo-Japanese relations
- 1587. Two young Japanese men named Christopher and Cosmas travelled on a Spanish galleon to California, where their ship was seized by Thomas Cavendish. Cavendish brought the two Japanese with him to England, where they spent around three years, before going again with him on his last expedition to the South Atlantic. They are the first known Japanese to have set foot in England.
- 1600. William Adams, a seaman from Kent, was the first Briton to arrive in Japan. Acting as an advisor to the Tokugawa Shogun, he was renamed Miura Anjin, granted a house and land, and spent the rest of his life in his adopted country.
- 1605. John Davis, the famous English explorer, was killed by Japanese pirates off the coast of Thailand, thus becoming the first Englishman to be killed by a Japanese.[1]
- 1832. Otokichi, Kyukichi and Iwakichi, castaways from Aichi Prefecture, crossed the Pacific and were shipwrecked on the west coast of North America. The three Japanese became famous in the Pacific North West and probably inspired Ranald MacDonald to go to Japan. They joined a trading ship to the UK, and later Macau. One of them, Otokichi, took British citizenship and adopted the name John Matthew Ottoson. He later made two visits to Japan as an interpreter for the Royal Navy.
- 1872. The Iwakura mission visited the United Kingdom as part of a diplomatic and investigative tour of the United States and Europe.
- 1905. The alliance was renewed and expanded.
- 1912. The alliance was renewed.
- 1913. The IJN Kongō the last of the British-built Japanese warships enters service.
- 1914. Japan joined World War I as the United Kingdom's ally under the terms of the alliance and captured German-occupied Qingdao.
- 1921. Arrival in September of the Sempill Mission in Japan, a British technical mission for the development of Japanese Aeronaval forces.
- 1923. The Anglo-Japanese alliance was officially discontinued on August 17 after U.S. pressure and other factors brought it to a close.
- 1978 Beginning of the BET scheme (British Exchange Teaching Programme) first advocated by Nicholas Maclean [3]
- 2001. The year-long "Japan 2001" cultural-exchange project saw a major series of Japanese cultural, educational and sporting events held around the UK.
- 2008. UK-Japan 2008 celebrates the 150th anniversary of the Anglo-Japanese Treaty of Amity and Commerce [4].
See also the chronology on the British Embassy website in Tokyo.
[edit] Britons in Japan
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- Revisions and sourced additions are welcome.
- William Adams (Miura Anjin)
- Rutherford Alcock, diplomat
- William George Aston, consular official and Japanologist
- William Edward Ayrton, Professor of physics & telegraphy
- Felice Beato - British/Italian/Corfiote photographer
- Isabella Bird - Victorian traveller and author
- John Reddie Black, publisher of newspapers
- Duncan Gordon Boyes - winner of the Victoria Cross at Shimonoseki, 1864
- Richard Henry Brunton, Father of Japanese lighthouses
- Basil Hall Chamberlain, Professor and Japanologist
- Edward Bramwell Clarke, Professor who helped introduce rugby to Japan
- Samuel Cocking - Yokohama merchant
- Josiah Conder, architect
- Hugh Cortazzi, scholar and former ambassador
- James Main Dixon (1856-1933). Former FRSE. After teaching at the Imperial University of Tokyo, he moved to the University of South California.
- Archibald Douglas, leader of a naval mission to Japan in the early 1870s
- Henry Dyer, first principal of the Imperial College of Engineering (Kobu Daigakko)
- Lord Elgin, signed the 1858 treaty
- James Alfred Ewing, Professor
- Hugh Fraser, British minister 1889-94
- Thomas Blake Glover, Scottish trader
- Abel Gower, consul
- William Gowland, 1842-1922, Father of Japanese archaeology
- Thomas Lomar Gray, engineering professor
- Arthur Hasketh Groom, creator of the first golf course in Japan
- John Harington Gubbins, diplomat
- Joseph Henry Longford, consul and academic
- Claude Maxwell MacDonald, diplomat
- Ranald MacDonald, the first English teacher in Japan
- John Milne, Professor and Father of Seismology
- Algernon Bertram Mitford (Lord Redesdale), diplomat
- James Murdoch - eccentric teacher, journalist, historian
- Laurence Oliphant - Secretary of Legation in 1861
- Henry Spencer Palmer - engineer and Times correspondent
- Harry Smith Parkes, diplomat
- John Perry, colleague of Ayrton at the Imperial College of Engineering, Tokyo
- Charles Lennox Richardson - slain in the Namamugi Incident
- Ernest Mason Satow, diplomat and Japanologist
- Alexander Cameron Sim - founder of Kobe Regatta & Athletic Club, introduced lemonade (ramune) to Japan.
- Admiral Sir James Stirling - signed the 1854 treaty
- Walter Weston, Rev. who publicised the term "Japanese Alps"
- William Willis, Dr.
- Charles Wirgman, editor of Japan Punch
The chronological list of Heads of the United Kingdom Mission in Japan.
[edit] Japanese in the United Kingdom
The family name is given in italics. Usually the family name comes first, but in modern times not so for the likes of Kazuo Ishiguro and Katsuhiko Oku, both well-known in the United Kingdom.
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- Revisions and sourced additions are welcome.
- Aoki Shuzo - diplomat, signed the 1894 treaty in London
- Hayashi Tadasu
- Inagaki Manjiro, Cambridge University graduate and diplomat
- Kazuo Ishiguro
- Iwakura Tomomi - see Iwakura mission especially
- Kikuchi Dairoku, Cambridge University graduate and politician
- Mori Arinori
- Natsume Sōseki
- Katsuhiko Oku - Oxford University rugby player, diplomat in Japanese embassy in London who died in Iraq, 2003. Posthumously promoted to ambassador. See also the Oku-Inoue fund for the children of Iraq.
- Okura Kishichiro, entrepreneur
- Hisashi Owada, Cambridge University graduate, father of Princess Masako
- Suematsu Kencho, Cambridge University graduate and statesman
- Tanaka Ginnosuke, Cambridge University graduate, introduced rugby to Japan
- Togo Heihachiro - the Nelson of the East
- Yamao Yozo
[edit] See also
[edit] Reference books
[edit] External links