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The
first contact with the West occurred about 1542, when a Portuguese
ship, blown off its course to China, landed in Japan. Firearms introduced
by Portuguese would bring the major innovation to Sengoku period
culminating in the Battle of Nagashino where reportedly 3.000 rifles
(actual number is believed to be around 2.000) cut down charging
ranks of Samurai. During the next century, traders from Portugal,
the Netherlands, England, and Spain arrived, as did Jesuit, Dominican,
and Franciscan missionaries.
During
the early part of the 17th century, Japan's Tokugawa Shogunate suspected
that the traders and missionaries were actually forerunners of a
military conquest by European powers. This caused the shogunate
to place foreigners under progressively tighter restrictions. An
English mariner named William Adams had journeyed with a Dutch fleet
and been shipwrecked in Japan in 1600. He had managed to impress
Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu with his seafaring knowledge and was made
an honorary Samurai and granted a large estate. When English traders
from the East India Company made landfall in 1613 they were able
to obtain Adams' assistance, as a favourite of the Shogun, in establishing
a factory for trading. Ultimately, Japan forced all foreigners to
leave and barred all relations with the outside world except for
severely restricted commercial contacts with Dutch and Chinese merchants
at Nagasaki.
Russian
encroachments from the north led the shogunate to extend direct
rule to Hokkaido and Sakhalin in 1807 but the policy of exclusion
continued. This isolation lasted for 200 years, until, on July 8,
1853, Commodore Matthew Perry of the U.S. Navy with four warships:
the Mississippi, Plymouth, Saratoga, and Susquehanna, steamed into
the bay at Edo (Tokyo) and displayed the threatening power of his
ships' cannon. He demanded that Japan open to trade with the West.
These ships became known as the kurofune, the Black Ships.
The
following year, at the Convention of Kanagawa (March 31, 1854),
Perry returned with seven ships and forced the Shogun to sign the
"Treaty of Peace and Amity," establishing formal diplomatic
relations between Japan and the United States. Within five years
Japan had signed similar treaties with other western countries.
The Harris Treaty was signed with the United States on July 29,
1858.
Within
several years, renewed contact with the West profoundly altered
Japanese society. After the brief Boshin War of 1868, the shogun
was forced to resign, and the emperor was restored to power. The
subsequent "Meiji Restoration" initiated many reforms.
The feudal system was abolished, and numerous Western institutions
were adopted, including a Western legal system and constitutional
government along quasi-parliamentary lines.
Russian
pressure from the north appeared again after Muraviev had gained
Outer Manchuria at Aigun (1858) and Peking (1860). This led to heavy
Russian pressure on Sakhalin which the Japanese eventually yielded
in exchange for the Kuriru islands (1875). The Ryukyu Islands were
similarly secured in 1879, establishing the borders within which
Japan would "enter the World". In 1898, the last of the
"unequal treaties" with Western powers was removed, signalling
Japan's new status among the nations of the world. In a few decades,
by creating modern social, educational, economic, military, and
industrial systems, the Emperor Meiji's "controlled revolution"
had transformed a feudal and isolated state into a world power.
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