This list contains notable Europeans and Americans who visited Japan before the
Meiji Restoration. The name of each individual is followed by the year of the first visit, the country of origin, and a brief explanation.
16th century
Two
Portuguese traders,
António da Mota and Francisco Zeimoto (possibly a third named António Peixoto), land on the island of
Tanegashima in 1543. They are the first documented Europeans to set foot in
Japan.
Fernão Mendes Pinto (1543,
Portugal) Visited Japan and claimed to have introduced
guns to the Japanese, though the account is almost certainly untrue.[1]
Cosme de Torres (1549, Spain) A Spanish Jesuit (on Portuguese mission) who successfully converted
Ōmura Sumitada to Christianity – the first Christian daimyō.[3]
Luis de Almeida (1552, Portugal) A Portuguese Jesuit who established the first western hospital in Japan and negotiated the opening of the port of
Yokoseura to Portuguese traders.[4]
Gaspar Vilela (1556,
Portugal) A Portuguese Jesuit who, in a departure from Xavier's methods, learned the Japanese language and talked directly with daimyos, opening the center of Japan to the mission.[5]
Luís Fróis (1563,
Portugal) A
Jesuit who befriended
Oda Nobunaga and published the account later.[6][7] His record still serves as an important resource for Japanese historians.[8]
João Rodrigues (1577,
Portugal) A Portuguese
Jesuit priest who carried out missionary work in Japan and served as an interpreter for both
Toyotomi Hideyoshi and
Tokugawa Ieyasu. Rodrigues is also known for authoring notable works on Japanese culture and language.[9]
Jan Joosten van Lodensteyn (1600, Dutch Republic) – Adams' shipmate, also among the first Westerners to become a samurai, who became an advisor for the shōgun. He is remembered in Japan (based on their variation of his name) in the
Yaesu area of Tokyo and as Yaesu on one exit of the Tokyo Station.[10][11]
17th century
Cristóvão Ferreira (1609, Portugal) – A Jesuit missionary who committed
apostasy after being tortured in the anti-Christian purges of Japan. His apostasy is the main theme of the novel Silence by
Shūsaku Endō.[12]
Luis Sotelo (1609, Spain) – A
Franciscan friar who proselytized in the
Tōhoku region of Japan with the help of Daimyo
Date Masamune. He was executed after re-entering Japan illegally in 1624.
John Saris (1613, England) – Captain of the English ship Clove, who met with shōgun Tokugawa Ieyasu to establish a trading post in Japan.
(Note: In 1639, the Japanese government promulgated the
Sakoku policy, which prohibited foreigners from entering Japanese territory. The only exceptions were Dutch traders and associated workers permitted to live on
Dejima Island. This policy lasted until 1854.)
Giuseppe Chiara (1643, Italian) – He entered Japan at a time when Christianity was strictly forbidden in an attempt to locate fellow priest Cristóvão Ferreira who had apostatized his Christian faith at the hands of torture by the Japanese authorities in 1633. Chiara was also tortured and eventually became an apostate as well.
Engelbert Kaempfer (1690,
Holy Roman Empire) – A German naturalist and physician. His descriptions in History of Japan (posthumously published in English in 1727) became the chief source of Western knowledge about the country for nearly two centuries.[14]
Giovanni Battista Sidotti (1700, Italy) – An Italian Jesuit priest who entered Japan illegally and was arrested. His communication with the scholar
Arai Hakuseki resulted in the book Seiyō Kibun.[15]
18th century
Robert Janson (1704, Ireland), a native of
Waterford seized off the coast of Kyushu and brought to Dejima Island.[16]
Martin Spanberg (Denmark) visited the island of
Honshu in 1738, being in command of the first Russian naval squadron specifically sent to seek for a diplomatic encounter with the Japanese. The Russians landed in a scenic area which is now part of the
Rikuchu Kaigan National Park. Despite the prevalent policy of
sakoku, the sailors were treated with politeness if not friendliness.[17]
Adam Laxman (1792, Russia) Son and representative of Finnish-born researcher
Eric Laxman, led a Russian expedition to Hokkaido, ostensibly to return
Daikokuya Kōdayū to Japan.[19]
Carl Peter Thunberg (1775, Sweden) A Swedish naturalist who came as a surgeon on a Dutch East India Company ("VOC") ship. He was a follower of
Carl Linnaeus whose scientific activities resulted in the first detailed description of the flora and fauna of Japan.[20]
Hendrik Doeff (1799, Dutch Republic) former Dutch East India Company ("VOC") Opperhoofd (Chief Officer) who maintained the Dutch nationality of Dejima even after
Napoleon conquered the Netherlands. He presided over the Dutch East India Company ("VOC") during the Phaeton incident.[21]
19th century
Nikolai Rezanov (1804, Russia) A Russian diplomat who stayed in Nagasaki for 6 months. He was commissioned by
Alexander I as Russian ambassador to Japan to conclude a commercial treaty, but his efforts were thwarted by the Japanese government.
Vasily Golovnin, Fedor Mur,
Andrey Khlebnikov with the crew (1811, Russia) – Russian navigators who were held captive for two years on the island of
Hokkaido. Golovnin's book, Captivity in Japan During the Years 1811, 1812, 1813,[22] was widely read by Europeans. Khlebnikov's mémoires left unpublished.
Philipp Franz von Siebold (1823, Netherlands/Germany) A German physician, botanist in Dutch service at
Dejima who brought Western medicine to Japan. He was expelled from Japan after being accused as a spy (Siebold Incident).[23]
Heinrich Bürger (1825..1835, Netherlands/Germany), A German scientist in Dutch service who became a pharmacist and botanist on Dejima.
Mercator Cooper (1845, United States) First formal American visit to Edo (now Tokyo), Japan.
Townsend Harris (1855, United States) The first United States Consul-General to Japan.[25]
Henry Heusken (1855, United States) A Dutch-American interpreter for the American consulate in Japan who was assassinated by anti-foreigner
rōnin. His diary was published as Japan journal, 1855–1861.[26]
José Luis Ceacero Inguanzo (1855, Spain) Spanish Captain in Manila, Philippines. He was named samurai by the lord of Chikuzen. Advisor to the Meiji Government.
Dirk de Graeff van Polsbroek (1857, The Netherlands) aristocrat, merchant and diplomat. He was Dutch Consul General and Minister-Resident and due his relationship with Emperor Meiji he laid the foundation for modern diplomatic representation in Japan of various European States.
Rutherford Alcock (1859, United Kingdom) The first British diplomatic representative to live in Japan. His book, The Capital of the Tycoon,[27] became one of the first books to describe Edo-period Japan systematically.
James Curtis Hepburn (1859, United States) An American physician, educator and Christian missionary who is known for the Hepburn romanization system, enabling westerners to read and write Japanese in Roman script.[28]
Frederik Blekman (1859, Amsterdam / Holland) reached Nagasaki on 16 April 1859 via Jakarta. Translator and impresario.
Margaret Tate Kinnear Ballagh (1861, United States) An American missionary who lived in Yokohama. Her account Glimpses Of Old Japan, 1861–1866[30] is the only book written by a Western woman staying in Edo period Japan.
Aimé Humbert (1863, Switzerland) A Swiss politician who established a treaty with Japan and later published Japan and the Japanese Illustrates, which captured many detailed scenes of Edo-period Japan.[35]
^The First European Description of Japan, 1585: A Critical English-Language Edition of Striking Contrasts in the... by Luis Frois SJ, Daniel T. Reff and Richard Danford (Mar 7, 2014)
^Cooper, Michael. Rodrigues the Interpreter: An Early Jesuit in Japan and China. New York: Weatherhill, 1973
^
abSamurai William: The Englishman Who Opened Japan. By Giles Milton
^
abPars Japonica: The First Dutch Expedition to Reach the Shores of Japan. Brought by the English Pilot Will Adams, Hero of Shogun, (2006) by William de Lange.
^The making of an enterprise: the Society of Jesus in Portugal, its empire, and beyond, 1540–1750, Dauril Alden, Stanford University Press, 1996
^Yasuko Suzuki, Japan-Netherlands Trade 1600–1800: The Dutch East India Company and Beyond
^Kaempfer's Japan: Tokugawa Culture Observed by Engelbert Kaempfer, Beatrice Bodart-Bailey and Beatrice M. Bodart-Bailey (1998)
^Mikkou Saigo no Bateren Sidotti. By Furui Tomoko. 2010.
ISBN978-4404038562.
^Matthew Jones, "The Oriental Irish", History Ireland, Volume 22, Issue 1 (January/February 2014)
^Glynn Barratt. Russia in Pacific Waters, 1715–1825. UBC Press, 1981.
ISBN9780774801171. Pages 35–37.
^Boxer, C.R. (1950) Jan Compagnie in Japan, 1600–1850. Martinus Nijhoff: The Hague, p. 135.
^Kodayu to Rakusuman: Bakumatsu Nichi-Ro koshoshi no ichi sokumen (Tosui rekishi zensho) (Japanese Edition) by Ryohei Kisaki (1992)
^"Phaeton Incident and Saga-han." by Saga Castle History Museum
"幕末・維新期の佐賀:佐賀城本丸歴史館". Archived from
the original on 2014-07-15. Retrieved 2014-07-06.
^Narrative of my Captivity in Japan, etc. To which is added, an account of voyages to the coasts of Japan, and for the release of the author. by Capt. Rikord by Vasily Mikhailovich Golovnin
^Siebold and Japan. His Life and Work. by Arlette Kouwenhoven, Matthi Forrer, M. Forrer and A. Kouwenhoven (2000)
^The Perry mission to Japan, 1853–1854 by William Gerald Beasley, Aaron Haight Palmer, Henry F. Graff, Yashi Shōzan, Ernest Mason Satow, Shuziro Watanabe
^Townsend Harris, First American Envoy in Japan by William Elliot Griffis.