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Red Seal ships

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1604–1635 Japanese armed merchant sailing ships
For the RCA or RCA Victor record series, seeRCA Red Seal Records.

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A modern scale model reconstruction of a Red Seal ship in theNational Museum of Japanese History.
A 1634 JapaneseRed Seal ship, incorporating both European-stylelateen sails and Chinese-stylejunk rig sails,rudder and aft designs. The ships were typically armed with 6 to 8 cannons. Tokyo Naval Science Museum.
Japanese Red Seal trade in the early 17th century.[1]

Red Seal ships (朱印船,Shuinsen) were Japanese armed merchant sailing ships bound forSoutheast Asian ports with red-sealedletters patent issued by the earlyTokugawa shogunate in the first half of the 17th century.[2] Between 1600 and 1635, more than 350 Japanese ships went overseas under this permit system.[3]

Origins

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Record of a Red Seal license, dated 11 January 1608.

From the 13th to the 16th century, Japanese ships were quite active in Asian waters, often in the role of "wakō" pirates, that raided theKorean andChinese coasts.[4][5] Often paid by various Japanese feudal leaders, they were frequently involved in Japan's civil wars during the early part of this period.[6] Quasi-official trading missions were also sent to China, such as theTenryūji-bune around 1341.[7] The wakō attacks became less frequent by the third quarter of the sixteenth century.[8] Wakō activity was efficiently curbed in the late 16th century with the interdiction of piracy byToyotomi Hideyoshi, and the successful campaigns against pirate activity on the Chinese coast by Ming dynasty generals.[citation needed]

Between the 15th and 16th centuries, the main trading intermediary in East Asia was the islandkingdom of the Ryūkyū (modernOkinawa), which exchanged Japanese products (silver, swords) and Chinese products for Southeast Asiansappan wood and deer hides. Altogether 150 Ryukyuan ships are recorded between the kingdom and Southeast Asia, 61 of them forĐại Việt (Vietnam), 10 forMalacca, 10 forPatani, 8 forJava, etc. Their commerce disappeared around 1570 with the rise of Chinese merchants and the intervention of Portuguese and Spanish ships and corresponds with the beginnings of the Red Seal system. Japan finally invaded the Ryūkyū Kingdom in 1609.[citation needed]

When the first Europeans started to navigate in the Pacific Ocean (see alsoNanban trade), they regularly encountered Japanese ships, such as when the Spanish welcomed inManila in 1589 a storm-battered Japanese junk bound for Siam, or when the Dutch circumnavigatorOlivier van Noort encountered a 110-ton Japanesejunk in thePhilippines in December 1600, and on the same voyage a Red Seal ship with a Portuguese captain offBorneo through which they learned about the arrival ofWilliam Adams in Japan.[citation needed]

Red Seal system

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Red Seal ship with Japanese and Portuguese sailors, early 17th century
Sueyoshi Red Seal ship in 1633, with foreign pilots and sailors.Kiyomizu-deraEma (絵馬) painting,Kyoto.
Suminokura Red Seal ship with foreigners.Kiyomizu-deraEma painting,Kyoto.

The Red Seal system appears from at least 1592, underToyotomi Hideyoshi, date of the first known mention of the system in a document. The first actually preserved shuinjō (Red Seal permit) is dated to 1604, underTokugawa Ieyasu, first ruler of Tokugawa Japan. Tokugawa issued red-sealed permits to his favorite feudal lords and principal merchants who were interested in foreign trade. By doing so, he was able to control Japanese traders and reduce Japanese piracy in the South Sea. His seal also guaranteed the protection of the ships, since he vowed to pursue any pirate or nation who would violate it.[citation needed]

Besides Japanese traders, 12 European and 11 Chinese residents, including William Adams andJan Joosten, are known to have received permits. At one point after 1621, Jan Joosten is recorded to have possessed 10 Red Seal ships for commerce.[citation needed]

Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, and English ships along with Asian rulers basically protected Japanese Red Seal ships, since they had diplomatic relations with the Japanese shōgun. OnlyMing China had nothing to do with this practice, because the Empire officially prohibited Japanese ships from entering Chinese ports. However, Ming officials were not able to stop Chinese smugglers from setting sail to Japan.[citation needed]

Ship design

[edit]
A 17th-century Red Seal ship of the Araki trading family, sailing out ofNagasaki forĐại Việt (Vietnam)

Red Seal ships usually ranged in size between 500 and 750 tons, a size equal or superior to Europeangalleons, but inferior to that of the massive Portuguesecarracks or toManila galleons, which were often in the vicinity of 1,000 and 2,000 tons, respectively.[citation needed]

The complement is speculated to have been about 200 people per ship; the average of the fifteen Red Seal ships for which the number of people is known is 236.[original research?]

Red Seal ships varied in style and place of construction. Some, especially those built inNagasaki, employed Chinese and European techniques to Japanese ship designs. Others were captured Chinese junks. Later, when the Southeast Asian trade was well-established, numerous ships were ordered and purchased inAyutthaya in Siam, on account of high-quality construction and materials.[citation needed]

The ships were managed by rich trading families such as theSuminokura, Araki,Chaya, and Sueyoshi, or by individual adventurers such as Suetsugu Heizō,Yamada Nagamasa, William Adams, Jan Joosten, orMurayama Tōan. The funds for the purchase of merchandise in Asia were loaned to the managers of the expedition for an interest of 35% to 55% per trip, going as high as 100% in the case of Siam.[citation needed]

Import and export

[edit]

Japanese merchants mainly exportedsilver,diamonds,copper,swords, and other artifacts, and imported Chinesesilk as well as some Southeast Asian products (likesugar and deer skins).Pepper and other spices were rarely imported into Japan, where people did not eat a great deal of meat due to the local preponderance of adherents to the Buddhist belief system. Southeast Asian ports provided meeting places for Japanese and Chinese ships.[citation needed]

Destinations

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Japaneseportolan sailing map, depicting the Indian Ocean and the East Asian coast, early 17th century.

The crew of the Red Seal ships were international, for many Cantonese, Portuguese, and Dutch pilots and interpreters joined the sails. The first Red Seal ships were required to have a Portuguese pilot on board, although the Japanese progressively developed pilots of their own. ThePortolan maps used on the Red Seal ships were drawn on the Portuguese model, with directions in the Japanese language.[citation needed]

Major Southeast Asian ports, including FilipinoManila, VietnameseHội An, SiameseAyutthaya, MalayPattani, welcomed the Japanese merchant ships, and many Japanese settled in these ports, forming smallJapanese enclaves.[9]

The Japanese seem to have been feared throughout Asian countries, according to a contemporary, Sir Edward Michelbourne:

The Japons are not suffered to land in any port in India (Asia) with weapons; being accounted a people so desperate and daring, that they are feared in all places where they come.[10]

A Dutch commander wrote (c. 1615): "they are a rough and a fearless people, lambs in their own country, but well-nigh devils outside of it".

Philippines

[edit]

Around 50 Red Seal ships toLuzon in thePhilippines are recorded between 1604 and 1624 (and only 4 more recorded by 1635). The Japanese had established quite early an enclave atDilao, a suburb ofManila, where they numbered between 300 and 400 in 1593. In 1603, during theSangley rebellion, they numbered 1,500 and 3,000 in 1606. TheFranciscan friarLuis Sotelo was involved in the support of the Dilao enclave between 1600 and 1608.[citation needed]

The Japanese led an abortive rebellion in Dilao against the Spanish in 1606–1607. Their numbers rose again with the interdiction of Christianity byTokugawa Ieyasu in 1614, when 300 Japanese Christian refugees underDom Justo Takayama settled in the Philippines. In the 16th and 17th centuries, thousands ofJapanese traders also migrated to the Philippines and assimilated into the local population.[11] They are at the origin of today's 200,000-strongJapanese population in the Philippines.

Siam (Thailand)

[edit]
Yamada Nagamasa c.1630.

The Siamese "Chronicles of theKingdom of Ayutthaya" record that already in 1592, 500 Japanese troops under the King of Siam helped defeat an invading Burmese army.[12]

Around 56 Red Seal ships to Siam are recorded between 1604 and 1635. The Japanese community in Siam seems to have been in the hundreds, as described by thePortugueseCatholic priest,António Francisco Cardim, who recounted having administered sacrament to around 400 Japanese Christians in 1627 in the Thai capital ofAyuthaya ("a 400 japões christãos") (Ishii Yoneo, Multicultural Japan).[citation needed]

In December 1605,John Davis, the famous English explorer, was killed by Japanese pirates off the coast of Siam, thus becoming the first Englishman to be killed by a Japanese.[13]

The colony was active in trade, particularly in the export of deer-hide and sappan wood to Japan in exchange for Japanese silver and Japanese handicrafts (Japanese swords,Japanese lacquerware, high-quality papers). They were noted by the Dutch for challenging the trade monopoly of theDutch East India Company (VOC), as their strong position with the King of Siam typically allowed them to buy at least 50% of the total production, leaving small quantities of a lesser quality to other traders.[citation needed]

A Japanese adventurer,Yamada Nagamasa, became very influential and ruled part of the Kingdom of Siam (Thailand) during that period. The colony also had an important military role in Thailand.[citation needed]

Macau

[edit]

Although prohibited by China from touching Chinese soil, Japanese sailors from Red Seal ships transited through the European Portuguese port ofMacau on the Chinese Cantonese coast in some numbers. On 30 November 1608,a fight with about 100 Japanese samurai, wieldingkatana andmuskets, confronting Portuguese soldiers under the acting governor and Captain of the Japan voyageAndré Pessoa led to a fight in which 50 Japanese lost their lives. The remaining 50 were released by the authorities after having to sign anaffidavit blaming themselves for the incident. Ieyasu prohibited visits to Macau by Japanese nationals in 1609:

Since it is an undoubted fact that the going of Japanese in ships to Macau is prejudicial to that place, this practice will be strictly prohibited for the future. (25 July 1609, Ieyasu Shuinjo, remitted to Mateus Leitão)[14]

Indonesia

[edit]
Nine Japanesesamurai were employed atAmboyna in 1623, when they were victim of theAmboyna massacre.

Although few Red Seal ships are recorded for the areas of modern Indonesia (Java,Spice Islands), possibly because of the remoteness and because of the direct Dutch involvement there, Japanese samurai were recruited by the Dutch in the area. They distinguished themselves in the capture of theBanda Islands from the English and the defense ofBatavia, until the practice of hiring Japanese mercenaries was prohibited by the Shōgun in 1621. In 1618,Jan Pieterszoon Coen, the Dutch governor of Java, requested 25 Japanese samurai to be sent to him from Japan. In 1620, the Dutch record that 90 Japanese samurai were recruited from the islands surrounding Java, in order to reinforce the fort of Batavia.[citation needed]

In 1623, during theAmboyna massacre, 9 Japanese mercenaries were recorded to have been with the 10 English traders of theEnglish East India Company factory. They were tortured and killed by Dutch forces from the neighboring factory. This event was partly the cause for the advent of theAnglo-Dutch Wars.[citation needed]

India

[edit]
Tenjiku Tokubei, 17th century.

The Japanese adventurerTenjiku Tokubei is related to have traveled to Siam as well as India on board a Red Seal ship of Jan Joosten. Upon his return to Japan, Tokubei wrote an essay titledTenjiku Tōkai Monogatari ("Relations of travels to India") on his adventures in foreign countries, which became very popular in Japan. He is sometimes referred to as theMarco Polo of Japan.[citation needed]

Other destinations

[edit]

Other major destinations includedĐàng Trong in central Vietnam (74 ships),Cambodia (44 ships),Taiwan (35 ships), and other parts ofVietnam (14 ships).[citation needed]

Relative importance

[edit]

The 350 Red Seal ships recorded between 1604 and 1634, averaging about 10 ships per year, could be compared to the single Portuguesecarrack visitingNagasaki fromMacau every year, which was larger in tonnage (between 2 and 3 times a single Red Seal ship), and carried a rich cargo of silk directly obtained from China.[citation needed]

Japanese exports1604-1639
(From "Red Seal Ships", Nagazumi Yoko)
TypeNumber
of ships
(Average
per year)

Export
Value
(in kg of Silver)
Of which:
Silver export
Volume
(in kg of Silver)
Red Seal ships101,053,750843,000
Portuguese ships1813,375650,700
Chinese shipsN/A429,825343,860
Dutch ships3286,245228,996
Total2,583,1952,066,556

Also in comparison, the Englishfactory inHirado only received four ships from England in the space of 10 years (during its existence between 1613 and 1623), with generally non-valuable cargo. To survive, the factory actually had to resort to trade between Japan and Southeast Asia under the Red Seal system, organizing seven expeditions, four of which were handled by William Adams.[citation needed]

The Japanese shōgun was very defiant of Spain, and Spain very reluctant to divert shipping resources between distant territories, so that besides the few shipwrecks of the Manila galleon on the Japanese coast, only about one Spanish ship was dispatched to Japan every year for trade. They had a small base inUraga, where William Adams was put in charge of selling the cargo on several occasions.[citation needed]

Only Chinese shipping seems to have been quite important during the last years of theMing dynasty.Richard Cocks, head of the English factory in Hirado, reported that 60 to 70 Chinese junks visited Nagasaki in 1614, sailed byFukienese smugglers.[citation needed]

In 1612, overall, Portuguese priest Valentim de Carvalho, head of the Jesuit mission, stated that the annual "Great Ship" from Macau brought 1,300 quintals of silk, whereas 5,000 quintals were brought in Red Seal ships and ships from China and Manila.[citation needed]

End of the system

[edit]
Left image:Japanese Christian remained inBatavia (now renamed asJakarta) afterSakoku, c. 1656, byAndries Beeckman. Christianity indicated by the hat.
Right image: A similar Japanese figure appears on the right, in the forefront.The Castle of Batavia by Andries Beeckman, c. 1656.

In 1633–1639, ShogunTokugawa Iemitsu enacted thesakoku policy, which officially prohibited overseas travel by Japanese. This ended Red Seal trade voyages. TheDutch East India Company become the sole officially sanctioned party for European trade with Japan.[citation needed]

Timeline

[edit]
Olivier van Noort encounters a 110 tons Japanese junk in thePhilippines in December.
Hasekura Tsunenaga leaves for his embassy to Europe. He returns in 1620.
  • 1614 – Expulsion of the Jesuits from Japan.
– William Adams starts engaging in Red Seal trade to Southeast Asia.
  • 1615 – Japanese Jesuits start to proselytize inIndochina.
  • 1621 –Jan Joosten manages 10 Red Seal ships.
  • 1623 –Yamada Nagamasa sails fromSiam to Japan, with an Ambassador of the Siamese king Songtam (พระเจ้าทรงธรรม). He returns to Siam in 1626.
– Jan Joosten sinks in theSouth China Sea.
  • 1624 – Japanese Jesuits start to proselytize in Siam.
– Interruption of relations with Spain.
– Destruction of Takagi Sakuemon's (高木作右衛門) Red Seal ship in Ayutthaya by a Spanish warship.
– Destruction of the Japanese settlement inAyutthaya by Siamese forces.
  • 1633 – Re-establishment of the Japanese settlement in Ayutthaya (300–400 Japanese), with returnees from Indochina.
  • 1634 – Travel of Yamada Yahei (山田弥兵衛) from Japan to Indochina and Siam.
  • 1636 – Introduction of thesakoku policy and interdiction of foreign travel or return from foreign countries for Japanese nationals.

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^"Histoire du Japon", p. 72, Michel Vie,ISBN 2-13-052893-7
  2. ^Cesare Polenghi, Samurai of Ayutthaya: Yamada Nagamasa, Japanese warrior and merchant in early seventeenth-century Siam. Bangkok: White Lotus Press (2009), 18-19
  3. ^"Shuinsen, or 'Red Seal ships', were Japanese armed merchant sailing..."Getty Images. 20 November 2021. Retrieved1 June 2024.
  4. ^"Naval Warrior Groups – Matsura Historical Museum". Retrieved1 June 2024.
  5. ^Otake, Tomoko (22 December 2021)."Centuries-old scroll, maps at your fingertips".The University of Tokyo. Retrieved1 June 2024.
  6. ^"Wakō | Samurai, Raids, Pirates | Britannica".www.britannica.com. Retrieved1 June 2024.
  7. ^"Full text of "A History Of Japan 1334 1615"".archive.org. 1961.
  8. ^"Some Notes on "Japanese Pirates"".Association for Asian Studies. Retrieved1 June 2024.
  9. ^William Wray, "The Seventeenth-century Japanese Diaspora: Questions of Boundary and Policy", in Ina Baghdiantz McCabe et al (eds.), Diaspora Entrepreneurial Networks, Oxford: Berg (2005), 82.
  10. ^Boxer,The Christian Century, p. 268
  11. ^Leupp, Gary P. (January 2003).Interracial Intimacy in Japan: Western Men and Japanese Women, 1543-1900. A&C Black.ISBN 9780826460745.
  12. ^Yoko Nagazumi
  13. ^Stephen Turnbull,Fighting ships of the Far East, p. 12, Osprey Publishing
  14. ^ C. R. Boxer,The Christian Century (University of California Press, 1951) p. 272
  15. ^Boxer, The Christian Century, p. 100-101

References

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  • Yoko Nagazumi,Red Seal ships, 2001, 永積洋子 「朱印船」2001 日本歴史会館, Japan Historical Society ISBN 4-642-06659-4 (in Japanese)
  • Boxer, Charles Ralph.The Affair of the Madre de Deus: A Chapter in the History of the Portuguese in Japan, London, K. Paul, Trench, Trubner & co., ltd., 1929.
  • Boxer,The Christian century in Japan 1549–1650 CarcanetISBN 1-85754-035-2
  • Stephen Turnbull,Fighting Ships of the Far-East, Osprey Publishing,ISBN 1-84176-478-7

External links

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