William adams
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William Adams: English Adviser to the Shogun
In 1600 a Dutch galleon arrived on the shores of a small fief on Kyushu, the westernmost of Japan’s four main islands. It was the first Dutch ship to reach Japan. Among the crew was an English navigator, William Adams, who managed to gain the trust of Tokugawa Ieyasu, a powerful warlord who became a shogun (the military leader of the samurai caste) in 1603. Adams eventually rose to the rank of Hatamoto, the shogun’s direct retainer. How did an English navigator come to serve the shogun? To answer this, we must first look at the situation in Japan at the time and the policies of Ieyasu.
By 1600 Japan had endured several centuries of warfare, known as the Sengoku period (Sengoku means ‘the country at war’). Originally ruled by the emperor in Kyoto, from the 12th century the shogunate had ruled the country, leaving the emperor with only nominal power. However, as the influence of the Ashikaga shoguns waned the country descended into chaos, with numerous warlords vying for supremacy. In the middle of the 16th century, great unifiers a
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William Adams (samurai)
English navigator who travelled to Japan (1564–1620)
For other uses, see William Adams (disambiguation).
William Adams | |
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William Adams before Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu | |
Born | (1564-09-24)24 September 1564 Gillingham, Kent, Kingdom of England |
Died | 16 May 1620(1620-05-16) (aged 55) Hirado, Nagasaki Prefecture, Edo shogunate |
Resting place | William Adams Memorial Park, Sakigata Hill, Hirado, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan |
Nationality | English |
Other names | Miura Anjin (三浦按針) |
Citizenship | Japanese |
Occupation | Navigator |
Known for |
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Term | 1600–1620 |
Successor | Joseph Adams |
Spouses | Mary Hyn (m. 1589)Oyuki (m. 1613) |
Children | John Adams (son) Deliverance Adams (daughter) Joseph Adams (son) Susanna Adams (daughter)[1][
In the Service of the ShogunReviews
Robert Whiting | Wall Street Journal
Peggy Kurkowski | Washington Independent Review of Books
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