Japan voyage: Difference between revisions
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== {{See also}} == |
== {{See also}} == |
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* [[Leonel de Sousa]] |
* [[Leonel de Sousa]] |
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* [[Luso-Chinese |
* [[Luso-Chinese agreement (1554)]] |
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* [[Nanban Period]] |
* [[Nanban Period]] |
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* [[Santa Catarina (ship)]] |
* [[Santa Catarina (ship)]] |
Revision as of 12:24, 25 November 2017
Japan's voyage or Macau Japan Voyage (viagem do Japão in Portuguese) was a trade route established by the Portuguese from 1550 to 1639 linking Goa, then capital of the Portuguese India, to Japan. This lucrative annual trip was carried out under monopoly of the Portuguese crown, and was in charge of a Captain general. The charge of Captain general of the Japan's trip was officially attributed by the governor of Portuguese India as a reward for services rendered. The large ships involved in this trade were referred to as the nau do trato, the silver ships, China's ships, and became known among the Japanese as Kurofune (black ships), a term that came to be used to name all Western ships that supplied in Japan during the Edo period.
The trade route
Upon arriving in Japan in 1543, Portuguese merchants and adventurers engaged in a profitable trade on the island of Kyushu, on their own ships and Chinese reeds, without a stable port. Because of a ban on the relations between China and Japan, they acted as intermediaries. In 1550, the importance of this trade led to the creation of an annual trip under the monopoly of the Portuguese Crown. To this end, a chief captain was appointed. This was a coveted position assigned by the official authorities as a reward for services rendered. The right to carry on the "Japan voyage" was donated by the local Crown entities such as the city of Macao, Kochi, Malacca. Later, it was auctioned in Goa to the highest bidder.
Given the long distance between Goa and Japan, the route initially departed from Malacca. After several attempts to create an intermediate stop in China, in 1554 Leonel de Sousa, the chief captain of Japan's voyage, reached anagreement with Canton authorities to legalize the Portuguese trade, on condition of paying specially stipulated customs duties.[1] From 1557, the Portuguese achieved the official establishment in Macau. The city began to integrate the route of the ship of the deal, in a triangular commerce that finished in Japan. There, in 1570, after an agreement with the local daimyo, they founded the city of [ [Nagasaki]]. The ship sailed from Goa in April or May, loaded with fabrics, glass and glass objects, Flanders watches and Portuguese wines. [2]
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- ^ DIFFIE, SHAFER, WINIUS, Bailey Wallys, Boyd C., George Davison, "Foundations of the Portuguese empire, 1415-1580", p.389
- ^ Rodrigues, Helena. "Nau do trato". Cham. Cham. Retrieved 5 June 2011.