Moriyama Einosuke

Moriyama Einosuke
Moriyama Einosuke (left)
Native name 森山 栄之助
Born (1820-07-10)July 10, 1820
Died May 4, 1872(1872-05-04) (aged 51)
Other work Interpreter

Moriyama Einosuke (森山 栄之助, July 10, 1820 – May 4, 1872) was a samurai during the Tokugawa shogunate, and an interpreter of Dutch and English. He studied English under Dutch merchants and Ranald MacDonald. He was called upon to assist shogunate officials during the "Manhattan Incident" of 1845, during which the American whaling ship Manhattan approached Edo to repatriate 22 castaway Japanese seamen. [1] As Chief Dutch Interpreter, he was later one of the chief men involved in the negotiations with Commodore Perry in regard to the opening of Japan to the outside world.

Samuel Wells Williams, a member of Perry's second visit noted in 1854:

Notes

  1. Van Zandt, Howard (1984). Pioneer American Merchants in Japan. Tuttle Publishing. p. 68-72. ISBN 9994648144.
  2. Sōritsu nijisshūnen kinen ronshū
  3. Treaties and other international acts of the United States of America
  4. Native American in the land of the shogun by Frederik L. Schodt p.288

See also


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