A brilliant linguist, Sir Ernest Satow (1843-1929) was recruited into the British consular service as a student interpreter in 1861. The following year he arrived in Japan, where he witnessed the overthrow of the Tokugawa Shogunate and the Meiji restoration of imperial rule. Drafted in the 1880s while he was consul-general in Bangkok, this 1921 account is based on the voluminous diaries Satow kept whilst in Japan between 1862 and 1869. As an interpreter he was present at many of the meetings between the diplomatic and military representatives of the Great Powers and of the Shogunate. Satow…mehr
A brilliant linguist, Sir Ernest Satow (1843-1929) was recruited into the British consular service as a student interpreter in 1861. The following year he arrived in Japan, where he witnessed the overthrow of the Tokugawa Shogunate and the Meiji restoration of imperial rule. Drafted in the 1880s while he was consul-general in Bangkok, this 1921 account is based on the voluminous diaries Satow kept whilst in Japan between 1862 and 1869. As an interpreter he was present at many of the meetings between the diplomatic and military representatives of the Great Powers and of the Shogunate. Satow gives his opinions of the various officials he met, and describes the rising tensions that led to conflict between the Shogunate and the Emperor, civil war, and the reassertion of the Emperor's power. Satow's classic Guide to Diplomatic Practice (1917) is also reissued in the Cambridge Library Collection.
Satow (1843-1929) arrived in Japan in 1862 and remained there for 21 years as a secretary of the British Legation of Tokyo, becoming an avid student of Japanese language, history, religion, and customs. He later served as Minister in Siam, Uruguay, Morocco, and China. He died at age 86 in England.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface 1. Appointment as student interpreter at Yedo 2. Yokohama society, official and unofficial 3. Political conditions in Japan 4. Treaties, anti-foreign spirit, murder of foreigners 5. Richardson's murder, Japanese studies 6. Official visit to Yedo 7. Demands for reparation 8. Bombardment of Kagoshima 9. Shimonoseki: preliminary measures 10. Shimonoseki: naval operations 11. Shimonoseki: peace concluded with Choshiu 12. The murder of Bird and Baldwin 13. Ratification of the treaties by the Mikado 14. Great fire at Yokohama 15. Visit to Kagoshima and Uwajima 16. First visit to Ozaka 17. Reception of foreign ministers by the tycoon 18. Overland from Ozaka to Yedo 19. Social intercourse with Japanese officials 20. Nanao to Ozaka overland 21. Ozaka and Tokushima 22. Tosa and Nagasaki 23. Downfall of the Shogunate 24. Outbreak of civil war (1868) 25. Hostilities begun at Yedo and Fushimi 26. The Bizen affair 27. First visit to Kioto 28. Harakiri 29. Massacre of French sailors at Sakai 30. Kioto 31. Return to Yedo 32. Miscellaneous incidents 33. Capture of Wakamatsu and entry of the Mikado into Yedo 34. Enomoto with the runaway Tokugawa ships seizes Yezo 35. 1869: audience of the Mikado at Yedo 36. Last days in Tokio and departure for home Glossary Index.
Preface 1. Appointment as student interpreter at Yedo 2. Yokohama society, official and unofficial 3. Political conditions in Japan 4. Treaties, anti-foreign spirit, murder of foreigners 5. Richardson's murder, Japanese studies 6. Official visit to Yedo 7. Demands for reparation 8. Bombardment of Kagoshima 9. Shimonoseki: preliminary measures 10. Shimonoseki: naval operations 11. Shimonoseki: peace concluded with Choshiu 12. The murder of Bird and Baldwin 13. Ratification of the treaties by the Mikado 14. Great fire at Yokohama 15. Visit to Kagoshima and Uwajima 16. First visit to Ozaka 17. Reception of foreign ministers by the tycoon 18. Overland from Ozaka to Yedo 19. Social intercourse with Japanese officials 20. Nanao to Ozaka overland 21. Ozaka and Tokushima 22. Tosa and Nagasaki 23. Downfall of the Shogunate 24. Outbreak of civil war (1868) 25. Hostilities begun at Yedo and Fushimi 26. The Bizen affair 27. First visit to Kioto 28. Harakiri 29. Massacre of French sailors at Sakai 30. Kioto 31. Return to Yedo 32. Miscellaneous incidents 33. Capture of Wakamatsu and entry of the Mikado into Yedo 34. Enomoto with the runaway Tokugawa ships seizes Yezo 35. 1869: audience of the Mikado at Yedo 36. Last days in Tokio and departure for home Glossary Index.
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