• Thumbnail for Hasekura Tsunenaga
    Hasekura Rokuemon Tsunenaga (支倉 六右衛門 常長, 1571–1622) was a kirishitan Japanese samurai and retainer of Date Masamune, the daimyō of Sendai. He was of Japanese...
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  • Japanese writer Hasekura Tsunenaga (支倉 六右衛門 常長, 1571–1622), Japanese samurai and daimyō This page lists people with the surname Hasekura. If an internal link...
    335 bytes (74 words) - 11:36, 5 January 2018
  • one of the sons of Japanese Emperor Go-Daigo 11514 Tsunenaga, a minor planet Hasekura Tsunenaga, a Japanese samurai and retainer of Date Masamune, the...
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  • Thumbnail for Naval history of Japan
    The naval history of Japan began with early interactions with states on the Asian continent in the 3rd century BCE during the Yayoi period. It reached...
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  • Thumbnail for San Juan Bautista (ship)
    to Pope Paul V, headed by Hasekura Tsunenaga and accompanied by the Spanish friar Luis Sotelo. After transporting Hasekura to Acapulco in the Spanish...
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  • Thumbnail for Christianity in Japan
    Hasekura Tsunenaga led a diplomatic mission, accompanied by over one hundred Japanese Christians and twenty-two samurai, to see Pope Paul V. Hasekura...
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  • Thumbnail for Saint-Tropez
    Saint-Tropez was visited by a delegation led by the Japanese samurai Hasekura Tsunenaga that was on its way to Rome but was forced by weather to stop in the...
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    Japanese life like dances and music. Several decades later, when Hasekura Tsunenaga became the first Japanese official arriving in Europe, his presence...
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  • Masamune of Sendai sent a delegation led by Hasekura Tsunenaga (1571–1622) to Europe. In 1613, Hasekura and the delegates visited the Spanish court of...
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  • Thumbnail for Asia–France relations
    Nanjing, China in 1611. France-Japan relations started in 1615 when Hasekura Tsunenaga, a Japanese samurai and ambassador, sent to Rome by Date Masamune...
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  • Thumbnail for Date Masamune
    (European) ship-building techniques. He sent one of his retainers, Hasekura Tsunenaga, Sotelo, and an embassy numbering 180 on a successful voyage to establish...
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  • Thumbnail for Mon (emblem)
    Examples include the swastika with arrows used by Japanese ambassador Hasekura Tsunenaga, the Canadian-granted arms of the Japanese-Canadian politician David...
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  • 1611, he again went to North America in 1613, with the embassy of Hasekura Tsunenaga. In total, he accomplished two round trips between Japan and North...
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  • Thumbnail for Sendai
    Date Masamune's famous suit of armour and artifacts related to Hasekura Tsunenaga's visit to Rome (National Treasures of Japan) are sometimes on display...
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  • Thumbnail for Japanese Mexicans
    viewed as the beginning of Japan–Mexico relations. They were led by Hasekura Tsunenaga, who was accompanied by more than one hundred Japanese Christians...
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    to the presence of descendants of members of the delegation led by Hasekura Tsunenaga, the first Japanese official envoy to Spain in the early 17th century...
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    raíz" of Mexico. On January 25, 1614, a delegation led by samurai Hasekura Tsunenaga, which included over one hundred Japanese Christians as well as twenty-two...
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  • Thumbnail for Samurai
    to the Tokugawa shogunate's suppression of Christianity. In 1612, Hasekura Tsunenaga, a vassal of the daimyo Date Masamune, led a diplomatic mission and...
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  • Thumbnail for Pope Paul V
    1615, Paul V welcomed the embassy of the Japanese samurai Hasekura Tsunenaga in Rome. Hasekura gave the Pope a letter (from Date Masamune) which requested...
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  • Thumbnail for Kirishitan
    (千々石ミゲル Chijiwa Migeru) Akashi Takenori Leonardo Kimura (1575-1619) Hasekura Tsunenaga (支倉常長) Murayama Tōan "Antonio" (村山等安) (d.1619) Naitō Joan Gohime ''Monica''...
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  • Thumbnail for Edo period
    500-ton galleon-type ship that transported a Japanese embassy headed by Hasekura Tsunenaga to the Americas and then to Europe. Also during that period, the bakufu...
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  • Thumbnail for First Japanese Embassy to Europe (1862)
    preceded by the Tenshō embassy (1582–1590) and the expedition led by Hasekura Tsunenaga between 1613 and 1620. Leaving Shinagawa, Tokyo on 21 January 1862...
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  • Thumbnail for National Treasure (Japan)
    paintings, documents, ceremonial tools, harnesses, and items of clothing Hasekura Tsunenaga brought back from his 1613 to 1620 trade mission (Keichō Embassy)...
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  • Thumbnail for William Adams (samurai)
    media related to William Adams (sailor). Anglo-Japanese relations Hasekura Tsunenaga Ernest Mason Satow List of foreign-born samurai in Japan List of Westerners...
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  • Thumbnail for Second Japanese Embassy to Europe (1864)
    even though the Tensho Embassy (1582–1590) and the expedition led by Hasekura Tsunenaga (between 1613 and 1620) had previously reached Europe centuries earlier...
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    factory in Hirado. 1613 – England opens a trading factory in Hirado. – Hasekura Tsunenaga leaves for his embassy to Europe. He returns in 1620. 1614 – Expulsion...
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  • of diplomats of Japan. Yasushi Akashi (1931-) Ken Harada (?-1973) Hasekura Tsunenaga (1571-1622) Inagaki Manjirō (1861-1908) Hiroshi Inomata Komura Jutarō...
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  • Samurai Hasekura Tsunenaga converted to Catholicism in Madrid in 1615....
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    actively in foreign trade. In 1615, an embassy and trade mission under Hasekura Tsunenaga was sent across the Pacific to Nueva España (New Spain) on the Japanese-built...
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  • Thumbnail for Mukai Shōgen Tadakatsu
    recorded as having participated to the preparation of the embassy of Hasekura Tsunenaga to America and Europe in 1613, by giving his support to the mission...
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