Isaac Titsingh

Isaac Titsingh (10 January 1745 in Amsterdam – 2 February 1812 in Paris) was a Dutch surgeon, scholar, merchant-trader and ambassador. During a long career in East Asia, Titsingh was a senior official of the Dutch East India Company (the Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie or VOC, literally "United East India Company"). He represented the European Asia-wide trading company in exclusive official contact with Tokugawa Japan. He traveled to Edo twice for audiences with the Shogun and other high bakufu officials. Later, he was the Dutch and VOC Governor General in Chinsura, Bengal. Titsingh worked with his counterpart, Charles Cornwallis, who was Governor-General of the English East India Company. In 1795, Titsingh represented Dutch and VOC interests in China, where his reception at the court of the Emperor Qianlong stood in stark contrast with rebuffs to England's ambassador George Macartney just prior to celebrations of Qianlong’s sixty year reign. In China, Titsingh effectively functioned as ambassador for his country at the same time as he represented the VOC as a trade representative.

Contents

Japan, 1779-1784

Original caption: "Nagasaki and bay, Japan -- The only port open to foreign trade" (Illustrated London News. March 26, 1853)

Titsingh was the commercial Opperhoofd or Chief factor in Japan in 1779-1780, 1781-1783, and 1784. The singular importance of the head of the VOC in Japan during this period was enhanced by the Japanese policy of bakufu-imposed isolation.[1] Because of earlier religious proselytizing during this period, no European or Japanese could enter or leave the Japanese archipelago on penalty of death. The sole exception to this "closed door," was the VOC "factory" or trading post on the island of Dejima in Nagasaki bay on the southern Japanese island of Kyūshū. In this highly-controlled context, the VOC traders became the sole official conduit for trade and for scientific-cultural exchanges. The VOC Opperhoofd was nominally accorded standing similar to that of a Japanese daimyo during the obligatory once-a-year visits of homage to the Shogun in Edo. In such rare opportunities, Titsingh's informal contacts with bakufu officials and Rangaku scholars in Edo may have been as important as his formal audiences with the Shogun, Tokugawa Ieharu.[2]

India, 1785-1792

In 1785, Titsingh was appointed Director of the VOC trading post at Chinsura in Bengal. Chinsura is up-river from Calcutta on the Hooghly River, an arm of the Ganges. He seems to have savored the intellectual life of the European community. Titsingh was described as “the Mandarin of Chinsura” (see Mandarin (bureaucrat) and scholar-bureaucrat) by William Jones, the philologist and Bengal jurist.[3]

Batavia, 1792-1793

Titsingh’s return to Batavia (now Jakarta, Indonesia) led to new positions as Ontvanger-Generaal (Treasurer) and later as Commissaris ter Zee (Maritime Commissioner).

China, 1794-1795

The only known contemporary image of Titsingh is in van Braam book about Titsingh embassy to the Qianlong Emperor's Court. Titsingh is the seated European wearing a hat.

Titsingh was appointed Dutch Ambassador to the court of the Emperor of China for the celebrations of the sixtieth anniversary of the reign of the Emperor Qianlong. In Peking, the Titsingh delegation included Andreas Everardus van Braam Houckgeest[4] and Chrétien-Louis-Joseph de Guignes,[5] whose complementary accounts of this embassy to the Chinese court were published in the U.S. and Europe.

Titsingh's gruelling, mid-winter trek from Canton to Peking allowed him to see parts of inland China which had never before been accessible to Europeans. His party arrived in Peking in time for New Year's celebrations. By Chinese standards, Titsingh and his delegation were received with uncommon respect and honors in the Forbidden City, and later in the Yuang ming yuan (the Old Summer Palace).[6] Unlike the unsuccessful British embassy of the previous year under Lord George Macartney, Titsingh made every effort to conform with the demands of the complex Imperial court etiquette -- including kowtowing to the Emperor. Neither the Chinese nor the Europeans could have known that this would be the last appearance by any European ambassador at the Imperial court until after the Opium Wars of the next century.

Return to Europe, 1796-1812

Mary Camper-Titsingh with her grand-daughter, Meriah Druliner, at Père-Lachaise -- July 13, 1996

Titsingh returned to Europe where, among several other "firsts", he became the first to introduce the unique Wasan/Euclidean mathematics of sangaku to the West.[7]...link to sangaku overview, Princeton University...link to sangaku explanation -- digitized photos and geometry graphics (text in Dutch)

He died in Paris (February 2, 1812), and he is buried in Père-Lachaise cemetery. His gravestone reads: "Ici repose Isaac Titsingh. Ancien conseiller des Indes hollandaises. Ambassadeur à la Chine et au Japon. Mort à Paris le 2 Février 1812, agé de 68 ans." [Here lies Isaac Titsingh, formerly a councillor of the Dutch East India Company, Ambassador to China and to Japan. Died at Paris the 2nd of February 1812, aged 68 years.]

Legacy

Titsingh's text attempts to present the Japanese in the context of their own narratives. This Title Page is from the 1822 English version of the French original which was published two years earlier.

Titsingh’s experiences and scholarly research in Japan were the genesis for posthumously published books, most notably:

Notes

  1. Edo-Tokyo Museum exhibition catalog. (2000). A Very Unique Collection of Historical Significance: The Kapitan (the Dutch Chief) Collection from the Edo Period -- The Dutch Fascination with Japan, p. 207.
  2. Edo-Tokyo Museum exhibition catalog, p. 210.
  3. Jones, W. (1835). Memoirs of the life, writings and correspondence of Sir William Jones, by Lord Teignmouth. London.
  4. van Braam Houckgeest, Andreas Everardus. (1797). Voyage de l'ambassade de la Compagnie des Indes Orientales hollandaises vers l'empereur de la Chine, dans les années 1794 et 1795; see also 1798 English translation: An authentic account of the embassy of the Dutch East-India company, to the court of the emperor of China, in the years 1974 and 1795, Vol. I.
  5. de Guignes, Chrétien-Louis-Joseph (1808). Voyage a Pékin, Manille et l'Ile de France.
  6. van Braam, An authentic account..., Vol. I (1798 English edition) pp. 283-284.
  7. Association of American Geographers. (1911). Annals of the Association of American Geographers, (Vol. I) p. 35.

References

See also

Preceded by
Arend Willem Feith
VOC Opperhoofd of
Dejima

1779–1784
Succeeded by
Hendrik Casper Romberg