English merchants of the East India Company …

Years: 1616 - 1616

English merchants of the East India Company complain that the great troubles and wars in Japan since their arrival have put them to much pains and charges.

Two great cities, Osaka and Sakaii, have been burned to the ground, each one almost as big as London, and not one house left standing, and it is reported above three hundred thousand men have lost their lives, “yet the old Emperor Ogusho Same hath prevailed and Fidaia Same either slain or fled secretly away, that no news is to be heard of him.” Jesuits, priests, and friars are banished by the emperor and their churches and monasteries pulled down; they put the fault on the arrival of the English; it is said if Fidaia Same had prevailed against the emperor, he promised them entrance again, when without doubt all the English would have been driven out of Japan.

Tokugawa Ieyasu dies in June 1616 and is replaced by his xenophobic son Tokugawa Hidetada; Japan moves towards the "Sakoku" policy of isolation.

The Tokugawa shogunate (Bakufu) forbids foreigners other than Chinese from traveling freely or trading outside of ...

Related Events

Filter results