Edward St. John Neale
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Edward St. John Neale was a British Lieutenant-Colonel and Diplomat who was active in Asia in the 1860s. He was the Chargé d'affaires of Great Britain in Japan in 1862-1863. Neale, who had been stationed in Beijing from 1860 as Secretary of the Legation following the settlement of the Second Opium War,[1] was transferred to Japan in March 1862, when Rutherford Alcock went home on leave. Alcock returned to Japan in 1864 (to be replaced by Sir Harry Parkes as British Minister in Japan in 1865).
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[edit] Actions in Japan
In March 1863, the Emperor of Japan issued an Order to expel barbarians, which led Neale to issue an ultimatum to the Japanese government, which was on the brink of starting a war with foreign powers in order to return to the isolation policy.[2] Neale was extremely vocal when the Bakufu, under pressure from the Emperor, was finally forced to issue a declaration promulgating the end of relations with foreigners. The order was forwarded to foreign legations by Ogasawara Zusho no Kami on June 24, 1863.[3] Lieutenant-Colonel Neale, responded on very strong terms, equating the move with a declaration of war:
"It is, in fact, a declaration of war by Japan itself against the whole of the Treaty Powers, and the consequences of which, if not at once arrested, it will have to expiate by the severest and most merited chastisement"
A few days later, on July 2, 1863, Colonel Neale was involved in the negotiations for the reparations following the 1862 Namamugi incident, in which foreigners were killed by a party from Satsuma,[5] The failure of Satsuma to apologize and pay for reparations led to the Bombardment of Kagoshima by the British Navy in August 1863, in which Neale participated onboard the flagship Euralyus.[6]
[edit] Modern appraisal
Neale recently received a rather poor review in the 2004 book by Cortazzi on the relations between Japan and Great Britain:
"Despite his limitations Neale... should not be dismissed as a weak and bone-headed ex-army officer... He was something of a martinet (understandable in view of his military background), had a short fuse . . . [and] was probably not outstandingly intelligent."
—British Envoys In Japan, 1859-1972, edited and compiled by Hugh Cortazzi. London: Japan Society, 2004.[7]
[edit] Notes
- ^ Cranmer-Byng, p.64
- ^ New York Times, May 19th, 1863 [1]
- ^ "The orders of the Tycoon, received from Kyoto, are to the effect that the ports are to be closed and the foreigners driven out, because the people of the country do not desire intercourse with foreign countries."|Missive of Ogasawara Dzusho no Kami, June 24, 1863. Quoted in A Diplomat in Japan, Ernest Satow, p75
- ^ Quoted in A Diplomat in Japan, Ernest Satow, p77
- ^ Polak, p.92
- ^ Rennie p.382
- ^ Quoted in The Japan Times, Sunday, March 13, 2005, [2]
[edit] References
- Polak, Christian (2001) Soie et Lumieres. L'Age d'or des échanges franco-japonais (des origines aux années 1950), 日仏交流の黄金期(江戸時代~1950年代), (French and Japanese), Chambre de Commerce et d'Industrie Française du Japon, Hachette Fujingaho.
- Cranmer-Byng, J.L. (1962) The old British Legation at Peking, 1860-1959 [3]
- Rennie, David Field, The British Arms in North China and Japan, Adamant Media Corporation, ISBN 1402181841
- Sir Ernest Satow (1921), A Diplomat in Japan, Stone Bridge Classics, ISBN 9781933330167
[edit] External links
- Sir Hugh Cortazzi (2003) "The British Bombardment of Kagoshima in 1863" The Asiatic Society of Japan [4]