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58 British Consuls and British Merchants
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgements xiii
- Map of Japan’s open ports and cities xiv
- List of Plates xv
- Introduction and Restrospective xvii
-
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
- 1 Convention between Great Britain and Japan, 1854 1
- 2 Treaty of Amity and Commerce, 1858 5
- 3 Treaty of Commerce and Navigation between Great Britain and Japan 13
- 4 Treaty of Friendship, Commerce and Navigation between the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy and Empire of Japan 23
- 5 Land Regulations etc 33
- 6 That ‘Naughty Yankee Boy,’ Edward H. House, and Meiji Japan’s Struggle for Equality 77
- 7 Early Western Architecture in Japan 93
- 8 Japan and the Western Powers 104
- 9 The Bund: Littoral Space of Empire in the Treaty Ports of East Asia 120
- 10 Western Entrepreneurs and the Opening of Japanese Ports (c. 1858–1868) 140
- 11 The First Women Religious in Japan: Mother Saint Mathilde Raclot and the French Connection 167
- 12 Gentlemanly Capitalism and the Club: Expatriate Social Networks in Meiji Kobe 185
- 13 Japanese Industrialization and Western Imperialist Institutions* 212
- 14 The Revision of Japan’s Early Commercial Treaties 243
- 15 Lafcadio Hearn on Foreign Settlements 282
- 16 An Englishman’s Right to Hunt: Territorial Sovereignty and Extraterritorial Privilege in Japan 283
- 17 RESIDENTIAL RHYMES: SYMPATHETICALLY DEDICATED TO FOREIGNERS IN JAPAN BY OSMAN EDWARDS [1864–1936] 299
- 18 The Life of Sir Harry Parkes 305
- 19 Treaties with Foreign Powers 308
- 20 Kokusai Kekkon and Meiji Japan 314
- 21 What the Passport Requires 328
- 22 Dr. S.R.Brown 330
- 23 Two Remarkable Australians of Old Yokohama 332
- 24 Visitors to Japan 346
- 25 Japan Reverses the Unequal Treaties: The Anglo-Japanese Commercial Treaty of 1894 348
- 26 Extraterritoriality in Japan, 1858–1899 361
- 27 The Chinese in the Japanese Treaty Ports, 1858–1899: The Unknown Majority 380
- 28 The Stage Is the World: Theatrical and Musical Entertainment in Three Japanese Treaty Ports 393
- 29 ‘Shades of the Past’: The Introduction of Baseball into Japan 418
- 30 ‘Competitors with the English sporting men’. Civilization, Enlightenment and Horse Racing: Anglo-Japanese Relations, 1860–2010 425
-
VOLUME 2 : THE TREATY PORTS
- Contents 2 435
-
HAKODATE
- 31 Dr. John Batchelor, British Scholar and Friend of the Natives of Hokkaido 449
- 32 Thomas Wright Blakiston: The Blakiston Line 465
- 33 Hakodadi: General Geographical Description 471
- 34 The Murder Of Ludwig Haber 476
- 35 Hokkaido (Ezo): Some Impressions of British Visitors, 1854–1873 479
- 36 Departure from Japan 496
- 37 ‘Mr. Enslie’s Grievances’ : The Consul, The Ainu and The Bones 498
-
KOBE
- 38 Kobe’s Modern History 509
- 39 Mr. Van Valkenburgh to Mr. Seward/No.1 537
- 40 A Swede in Meiji Japan: Herman Trotzig (1832–1919) 541
-
NAGASAKI
- 41 Nagasaki 564
- 42 British Influence in the Foreign Settlement at Nagasaki 576
- 43 City of Nagasaki 588
- 44 Italian Influence in the ‘Naples of Japan’ 1859–1941 592
- 45 Thomas Glover of Nagasaki 599
-
YOKOHAMA
- 46 ‘Yokohama’ 609
- 47 Mr. Van Valkenburgh to Mr. Seward/No.64 618
- 48. The Vocabulary of the Japanese Ports Lingo 620
- 49 Treaty Port Attitudes 639
- 50 Yokohama 642
- 51 The First Six Months of the Asiatic Society of Japan 652
- 52 Yokohama Before the Catastrophe 661
- 53 The Gankiro Teahouse and No. 9 in Old Yokohama 668
- 54 Life in a Buddhist Temple at Kanagawa 680
- 55 The Story of the Yokohama Union Church (1872–1923) 682
- 56. Yokohama in 1872: A rambling account of the community in which the Asiatic Society of Japan was founded. Asiatic Society of Japan, 685
- 57. Revised and Enlarged Edition of Exercises in the Yokohama Dialect 748
- 58 British Consuls and British Merchants 779
- 59 Yokohama Ballads 788
- Select Bibliography 797
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgements xiii
- Map of Japan’s open ports and cities xiv
- List of Plates xv
- Introduction and Restrospective xvii
-
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
- 1 Convention between Great Britain and Japan, 1854 1
- 2 Treaty of Amity and Commerce, 1858 5
- 3 Treaty of Commerce and Navigation between Great Britain and Japan 13
- 4 Treaty of Friendship, Commerce and Navigation between the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy and Empire of Japan 23
- 5 Land Regulations etc 33
- 6 That ‘Naughty Yankee Boy,’ Edward H. House, and Meiji Japan’s Struggle for Equality 77
- 7 Early Western Architecture in Japan 93
- 8 Japan and the Western Powers 104
- 9 The Bund: Littoral Space of Empire in the Treaty Ports of East Asia 120
- 10 Western Entrepreneurs and the Opening of Japanese Ports (c. 1858–1868) 140
- 11 The First Women Religious in Japan: Mother Saint Mathilde Raclot and the French Connection 167
- 12 Gentlemanly Capitalism and the Club: Expatriate Social Networks in Meiji Kobe 185
- 13 Japanese Industrialization and Western Imperialist Institutions* 212
- 14 The Revision of Japan’s Early Commercial Treaties 243
- 15 Lafcadio Hearn on Foreign Settlements 282
- 16 An Englishman’s Right to Hunt: Territorial Sovereignty and Extraterritorial Privilege in Japan 283
- 17 RESIDENTIAL RHYMES: SYMPATHETICALLY DEDICATED TO FOREIGNERS IN JAPAN BY OSMAN EDWARDS [1864–1936] 299
- 18 The Life of Sir Harry Parkes 305
- 19 Treaties with Foreign Powers 308
- 20 Kokusai Kekkon and Meiji Japan 314
- 21 What the Passport Requires 328
- 22 Dr. S.R.Brown 330
- 23 Two Remarkable Australians of Old Yokohama 332
- 24 Visitors to Japan 346
- 25 Japan Reverses the Unequal Treaties: The Anglo-Japanese Commercial Treaty of 1894 348
- 26 Extraterritoriality in Japan, 1858–1899 361
- 27 The Chinese in the Japanese Treaty Ports, 1858–1899: The Unknown Majority 380
- 28 The Stage Is the World: Theatrical and Musical Entertainment in Three Japanese Treaty Ports 393
- 29 ‘Shades of the Past’: The Introduction of Baseball into Japan 418
- 30 ‘Competitors with the English sporting men’. Civilization, Enlightenment and Horse Racing: Anglo-Japanese Relations, 1860–2010 425
-
VOLUME 2 : THE TREATY PORTS
- Contents 2 435
-
HAKODATE
- 31 Dr. John Batchelor, British Scholar and Friend of the Natives of Hokkaido 449
- 32 Thomas Wright Blakiston: The Blakiston Line 465
- 33 Hakodadi: General Geographical Description 471
- 34 The Murder Of Ludwig Haber 476
- 35 Hokkaido (Ezo): Some Impressions of British Visitors, 1854–1873 479
- 36 Departure from Japan 496
- 37 ‘Mr. Enslie’s Grievances’ : The Consul, The Ainu and The Bones 498
-
KOBE
- 38 Kobe’s Modern History 509
- 39 Mr. Van Valkenburgh to Mr. Seward/No.1 537
- 40 A Swede in Meiji Japan: Herman Trotzig (1832–1919) 541
-
NAGASAKI
- 41 Nagasaki 564
- 42 British Influence in the Foreign Settlement at Nagasaki 576
- 43 City of Nagasaki 588
- 44 Italian Influence in the ‘Naples of Japan’ 1859–1941 592
- 45 Thomas Glover of Nagasaki 599
-
YOKOHAMA
- 46 ‘Yokohama’ 609
- 47 Mr. Van Valkenburgh to Mr. Seward/No.64 618
- 48. The Vocabulary of the Japanese Ports Lingo 620
- 49 Treaty Port Attitudes 639
- 50 Yokohama 642
- 51 The First Six Months of the Asiatic Society of Japan 652
- 52 Yokohama Before the Catastrophe 661
- 53 The Gankiro Teahouse and No. 9 in Old Yokohama 668
- 54 Life in a Buddhist Temple at Kanagawa 680
- 55 The Story of the Yokohama Union Church (1872–1923) 682
- 56. Yokohama in 1872: A rambling account of the community in which the Asiatic Society of Japan was founded. Asiatic Society of Japan, 685
- 57. Revised and Enlarged Edition of Exercises in the Yokohama Dialect 748
- 58 British Consuls and British Merchants 779
- 59 Yokohama Ballads 788
- Select Bibliography 797