Japan–United Kingdom relations

Japanese–British relations
Map indicating locations of Japan and United Kingdom

Japan

United Kingdom
Diplomatic mission
Embassy of Japan, LondonBritish Embassy, Tokyo
Envoy
Ambassador of Japan to the United Kingdom
Hiroshi Suzuki
(since November 2024)
Ambassador of the United Kingdom to Japan
Julia Longbottom
(since 1 March 2021)
Emperor Naruhito and Empress Masako with King Charles III at Buckingham Palace in 2024; monarchs of both countries have exchanged their highest honours since 1906
British Prime Minister Keir Starmer with Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba at the 2024 G20 Rio de Janeiro summit

Foreign relations between Japan and the United Kingdom (日英関係, Nichieikankei) were established on 26 August 1858 and involve diplomatic, economic, and historical ties between the two countries.[1]

Both countries are members of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership, G7, G20, International Criminal Court, OECD, United Nations, and World Trade Organization. They also share a free trade agreement called the Japan–United Kingdom Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement, a tax treaty,[2] and a reciprocal access agreement; the United Kingdom is one of only three countries to share the latter with Japan,[a] and is the only European country to do so.

History

The history of the relationship between Japan and England began in 1600 with the arrival of William Adams (Adams the Pilot or Miura Anjin), who became the first of very few non-Japanese samurai after arriving on the shores of Kyushu at Usuki (present-day Ōita Prefecture). There were no formal relations between the two countries during the Sakoku period (1641–1853), with the Dutch acting as intermediaries.

Formal diplomatic ties began with the treaty of 1854, which eventually led to the Anglo-Japanese Alliance of 1902. This marked the end of the "splendid isolation" philosophy Britain had followed since 1815, while Japan received much-needed British support ahead of the looming Russo-Japanese War. Japan's victory over Russia solidified the alliance, which lasted for two decades, but pressure from the United States and the subsequent Four-Power Treaty of 1921 brought it to an end. Relations deteriorated rapidly during the 1930s due to the Japanese invasion of Manchuria, and the cutoff of oil supplies in 1941 further escalated tensions. Japan declared war in December 1941 and used overwhelming force to seize most British possessions east of the British Raj (present-day India) such as Borneo (with its vital oil reserves), Burma, Hong Kong, Malaya, and Singapore. However, the British began pushing Japanese forces back after they reached the outskirts of India.

Beginning in the 1950s, relations between Japan and the United Kingdom improved notably as memories of the past conflict faded. In the 1970s, Emperor Hirohito and Queen Elizabeth II paid state visits to each other's countries. The United Kingdom and Japan currently have strong economic ties, with both being members of the G7 and CPTPP. The two are also collaborating in the field of defence, most notably through the GCAP Programme alongside Italy.

Timeline of relations

1500s

  • 1577. Richard Wylles writes about the people, customs and manners of Giapan in the History of Travel published in London.
    Mercator based map of Japan (1570)
  • 1580. Richard Hakluyt advises the first English merchants to find a new trade route via the Northwest passage to trade wool for silver with Japan (sending two Barque ships, the George piloted by Arthur Pet and William by Charles Jackman) which returned unsuccessfully by Christmas the same year.[3]
  • 1587. Two young Japanese men named Christopher and Cosmas sailed on a Spanish galleon to California, where their ship was captured by Thomas Cavendish. Cavendish brought the two Japanese men with him to England where they spent approximately three years before going again with him on his last expedition to the South Atlantic where they were heading to Japan to begin trade relations. They are the first known Japanese men to have set foot in the British Isles.[4]
  • 1593. Richard Hawkins leaves England on board the Dainty in a bid to discover the 'Iſlands of Japan' via the Magellan Strait in 1594, the very route William Adams would take himself in 1599.[5] Hawkins however was captured by the Spanish at Peru, only returning in 1603 after a ransom of £12,000 was paid by his mother for his release.

1600s

William Adams meets Tokugawa Ieyasu (1564–1620)
  • 1600. William Adams, a seaman from Gillingham, Kent, was the first English adventurer to arrive in Japan. Acting as an advisor to the Tokugawa shōgun, he was renamed Miura Anjin, granted a house and land, and spent the rest of his life in his adopted country. He also became one of the first English samurai.
  • 1605. John Davis, the famous English explorer, was killed by Japanese pirates off the coast of Thailand, thus becoming the first known Englishman to be killed by a Japanese.[6]
The 1613 letter of King James I remitted to Tokugawa Ieyasu (preserved in the Tokyo University archives)
  • 1613. Following an invitation from William Adams in Japan, the English captain John Saris arrived at Hirado Island in the ship Clove with the intent of establishing a trading factory. Adams and Saris travelled to Suruga Province where they met with Tokugawa Ieyasu at his principal residence in September before moving on to Edo where they met Ieyasu's son Hidetada. During that meeting, Hidetada gave Saris two varnished suits of armour for King James I, today housed in the Tower of London.[7] On their way back, they visited Tokugawa once more, who conferred trading privileges on the English through a Red Seal permit giving them "free licence to abide, buy, sell and barter" in Japan.[8] The English party headed back to Hirado Island on 9 October 1613. However, during the ten-year activity of the company between 1613 and 1623, apart from the first ship (Clove in 1613), only three other English ships brought cargoes directly from London to Japan.
  • 1623. The Amboyna massacre was perpetrated by the Dutch East India Company. After the incident England closed its commercial base at Hirado Island, now in Nagasaki Prefecture, without notifying Japan. After this, the relationship ended for more than two centuries.
  • 1625. A number of documents including the Iaponian Charter, are the first published translated Japanese documents into English by Samuel Purchas.
  • 1639. Tokugawa Iemitsu announced his Sakoku policy. Only the Dutch Republic was permitted to retain limited trade rights.
  • 1640. Uriemon Eaton the son of William Eaton (a worker at the EIC post in Japan) and Kamezo (a Japanese woman), becomes the first Japanese to join Academia in England as a scholar at Trinity College, Cambridge.
Japan and Kore (1646)
  • 1646. Robert Dudley publishes a detailed original map of Japan and Yezo in his Secrets of the Sea treatise, based on the Mercator Projection.
  • 1668. 25 February. Henry Oldenburg addresses the Royal Society on the letters of Richard Cocks, particularly noting English trading privileges from the time of Cocks, striking new interest in trade with Japan in England. Based on this new interest, surviving member of the original factory William Eaton (fl.1613-1668), was contacted in order to reopen trade between England and Japan.[9]
  • 1670. John Ogilby publishes the first translation of Atlas Japanensis in London, reprinted in 1671 & 1673.[10]
  • 1670. The EIC factories are set up at modern day Taiwan (1670–1685) after Koxinqa invites the British to set up a factory.[11]
  • 1672. Tongking EIC factory begins operations (along with 'Tywan') with the intention by the British to be used as bases for further trade with Japan.
  • 1673. An English ship named Returner visited Nagasaki harbour with factors from the first Hirado factory, and asked for a renewal of trading relations. But the Edo shogunate refused after Dutch prompting. The government cited the withdrawal 50 years earlier, and found it unacceptable that the English king had married the Portuguese Catherine of Braganza, claiming the English to favour the Roman Catholic Church. (cf. ja:リターン号)
Moxon's 1681 World Map showing Iapan
  • 1683. Molly Verney begins learning Japanning as a handicraft in London.

1700s

  • 1703. James Cunninghame FRS attempts to initiate trade with Japan from Cochinchina and the chaplain James Pound in his service notes of VOC activity in Japan until they are attacked by locals in 1705.
  • 1713. Daniel Defoe writes of William Adams and his 'famous voyage to Japan' in his satire Memoirs of Count Tariff.
  • 1723-25. Hans Sloane send the English court physician Johann Georg Steigerthal to Lemgo to retrieve Engelbert Kaempfer's East Asian collection for his personal library.
  • 1727. Johann Caspar Scheuchzer translates and publishes the first edition of Engelbert Kaempfers History of Japan in London.
  • 1731. Arthur Dobbs advocates the finding of the North West Passage to 'be able to send a Squadron of ships, Even to force Japan into a Beneficial Treaty of Commerce with Britain.'
  • 1740. Robert Petre, 8th Baron Petre imports the first Camellia japonica into England.
  • 1741. The Middleton Expedition is launched to find the Northwest Passage with orders to not engage 'Japanese ships' until the following year should they come across one, with plans halting to trade or settle Japan owing to the circumstances surrounding the Seven Years' War.
  • 1745. Thomas Astley reprints by popular demand the Logbook of William Adams in his A New General Collection of Voyages and Travels; in Europe, Asia, Africa and America under Nippon.[12]
  • 1753. 50 Japanese objects from the Sloane collection acquired by Kaempfer during his residence in Japan are bequeathed to the British Museum.
  • 1791. James Colnett sails HMS Argonaut from Canton to Japan becoming the second unsuccessful attempt at trade with Sakoku Japan.
  • 1796. William Robert Broughton surveys the North-western coast of Japan, becoming shipwrecked on the coast of Miyako-jima.

1800s

  • 1808. The Nagasaki Harbour Incident: HMS Phaeton enters Nagasaki and lays an unsuccessful ambush on Dutch shipping.
  • 1812. The British whaler HMS Saracen (1812) stopped at Uraga, Kanagawa and took on water, food, and firewood.
  • 1813. Thomas Raffles attempts trade with Japan under a British flag to oust Dutch trade monopoly, only for the ooperhoofd to fly the ships under Dutch colours, being rescinded by Governor-General of India on the basis of excessive expense in 1814, also finally being halted in May 1815 by Raffles after the handover of the British colony of Java to the Dutch.
  • 1819. The third British ship 'The Brothers' piloted by Captain Peter Gordon, visited Uraga on 17 June seeking to trade with Japan, unsuccessful at Edo to get any treaty.
  • 1819. August 3. The first British Whaler HMS Syren begins to exploit the Japan whaling grounds.
  • 1824. 12 English whalers stray ashore looking for food and are apprehended by Aizawa Seishisai leading to new repulsion acts against foreign vessels.
  • 1830. The convict crew of the Cyprus piloted by William Swallow are repelled under the repulsion acts of 1825.
  • 1831. Discussions are held at the British East India Company to hold a base on the Bonin Islands to trade with Japan and the Ryukyuu Archipelago.
  • 1832. Otokichi, Kyukichi and Iwakichi, castaways from Aichi Prefecture, crossed the Pacific and were shipwrecked on the west coast of North America. The three Japanese men became famous in the Pacific Northwest and probably inspired Ranald MacDonald to go to Japan. They joined a trading ship to the UK, and later Macau. One of them, Otokichi, took British citizenship and adopted the name John Matthew Ottoson. He later made two visits to Japan as an interpreter for the Royal Navy.
  • 1840. Indian Oak becomes shipwrecked off the coast of Okinawa and a junk is built by Okinawan peoples for the survivors.
  • 1842. On the basis of the British naval victory at the First Opium War, the Repel Edicts are renounced by the Bakufu.
  • 1843. Herbert Clifford founds the Loochoo Naval Mission.
  • 1850. Bishop Smith arrives at Ryukyu to carry out missionary work.
  • 1852. Charles MacFarlane publishes Japan: An Account, Geographical and Historical, from the Earliest Period at which the Islands Composing this Empire Were Known to Europeans, Down to the Present Time, and the Expedition fitted out in the United States, which surmises all known European accounts of Japan and travels to Japan before the Ansei Treaties.[13]
  • 1854. 14 October. The first limited Anglo-Japanese Friendship Treaty was signed by Admiral Sir James Stirling and representatives of the Tokugawa shogunate (Bakufu).
  • 1855. In an effort to find the Russian fleet in the Pacific Ocean during the Crimean War, a French-British naval force reached the port of Hakodate, which was open to British ships as a result of the Friendship Treaty of 1854, and sailed further north, seizing the Russian-American Company's possessions on the island of Urup in the Kuril archipelago. The Treaty of Paris (1856) restitutes the island to Russia.[14]
  • 1858. 26 August. The Anglo-Japanese Treaty of Amity and Commerce was signed by the Scotsman Lord Elgin and representatives of the Tokugawa shogunate for Japan, after the Harris Treaty was concluded. Britain obtained extraterritorial rights on Japanese with the British Supreme Court for China and Japan, in Shanghai. A British iron paddle schooner named Enpiroru was presented to the Tokugawa administration by Bruce as a present for the Emperor from Queen Victoria.
  • 1859. Merchant Thomas Blake Glover arrives in Japan via China.
  • 1861. The Tsushima Incident occurs which sees the British repel a Russian naval vessel from invading Tsushima on request from the Bakufu.
  • 1861. 5 July. The British legation in Edo was attacked.
The First Japanese Embassy to Europe, in 1862
Japanese Village in Knightsbridge, 1886
  • 1879 British Court for Japan was established in Yokohama.
  • 1880. Japan government established Yokohama Specie Bank for only foreign transaction bank in Japan, with the support of HSBC.
  • 1881. Azusa Ono suggests using the British model for the new Japanese constitution.
  • 1886. Normanton incident British merchant vessel sinks off the coast of Wakayama Prefecture. Crew escape while 25 Japanese passengers perish. Widespread Japanese public outrage as subsequent Board of Enquiry under extraterritorial court finds the British crew not guilty. The case is later reopened, and the crew are given three month sentences.
  • 1885–87. Japanese exhibition at Knightsbridge, London.[15]
  • 1887–89. Jurist Francis Taylor Piggott, the son of ex-MP Jasper Wilson Johns, was inaugurated as a legislational consultant for Itō Hirobumi, then and the first Prime Minister of Japan.
  • 1890. Government of Japan established the Constitution of Imperial Japan which House of Peers was not come with Universal suffrage.
  • 1891. The Japan Society of London is founded by Arthur Diosy.
  • 1894. The Anglo-Japanese Treaty of Commerce and Navigation was signed in London on 16 July. The treaty abolished extraterritoriality in Japan for British subjects with effect from 17 July 1899.
  • 1899. Extraterritorial rights for British subjects in Japan came to an end.

1900s

Mikasa, the flagship of the Japanese Navy during the Russo-Japanese War, was built in Scotland and is the only remaining example of a British-built battleship in the world.
  • 1900. (January). Last sitting of the British Court for Japan.
  • 1902. The Japanese–British alliance was signed in London on 30 January. It was a diplomatic milestone that saw an end to Britain's splendid isolation, and removed the need for Britain to build up its navy in the Pacific.[16][17]
  • 1905. The Japanese–British alliance was renewed and expanded. Official diplomatic relations were upgraded, with ambassadors being exchanged for the first time.
  • 1907. In July, British thread company J. & P. Coats launched Teikoku Seishi and began to thrive.
  • 1908. The Japan-British Society was founded in order to foster cultural and social understanding.
  • 1909. Fushimi Sadanaru returns to Britain to convey the thanks of the Japanese government for British advice and assistance during the Russo-Japanese War.
Guide to the Japan–British Exhibition of 1910

2000s

Second Japan-UK Foreign and Defence Ministerial Meeting on 8 January 2016 in Tokyo

See also the chronology on the website of British Embassy, Tokyo.[64]

Britons in Japan

Embassy of the United Kingdom in Tokyo
  • William Adams (Miura Anjin) - Hatamoto and advisor to the Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu
  • Arthur Adams - zoologist who studied Japanese sealife onboard HMS Samarang in 1845
  • Rutherford Alcock - British diplomat to Japan from 1858 to 1864 and the first 'outsider' to climb Mount Fuji in 1860
  • Anna d'Almeida - first female British travel writer to have visited Japan in 1862, not the first known female writer on Japan however, that being the translator Mary Margaret Busk in 1841
  • William Anderson - a prominent collector who donated to the British Museum
  • Edwin Arnold - Author of The Light of Asia, visited Japan in 1889 and married Lady Tama Kurokawa
  • William George Aston - consular official and japanologist
  • Matilda Chaplin Ayrton - scholar and founder of a Midwife Hospital between 1873 and 1875 in Japan
  • William Edward Ayrton - professor of physics and telegraphy at the Imperial College of Engineering, introduced the Arc Lamp to Japan in 1878
  • Michael Buckworth Bailey - first Anglican consular staff from 1862 to 1874
  • Thomas Baty - legal advisor to the Japanese Empire
  • John Batchelor - Anglican missionary specialist on the Ainu
  • Felice Beato - British/Italian/Corfiote photographer
  • Edward Bickersteth - first Anglican bishop of South Tokyo
  • Isabella Bird - Victorian traveller and author
  • John Reddie Black - publisher of newspapers, principally The Far East, which issued photos by Suzuki Shin'ichi I in 1873 to 1874
  • Carmen Blacker - English japanologist Cambridge lecturer
  • Thomas Blakiston - English naturalist noted for Blakiston's Line and Blakiston's Fish Owl
  • Reginald Horace Blyth - helped to introduce Zen and Haiku to the West during WWII into the 1950s, one of his students being Alan Watts
  • Alan Booth - author of The Roads to Sata and a Noh enthusiast
  • Duncan Gordon Boyes - winner of the Victoria Cross at Shimonoseki, 1864
  • Anna Brassey - an early traveller was Brassey in 1877
  • William Robert Broughton - surveyed Eastern Honshu and Hokkaido in HMS Providence between 1795 and 1798
  • Richard Henry Brunton - father of Japanese Lighthouses
  • Ella Du Cane - British artist who visited in 1904
  • Helen Caddick - travelled to Japan in 1893
  • Basil Hall Chamberlain - translator and prominent japanologist
  • Edward Bramwell Clarke - professor who helped introduce rugby to Japan
  • Richard Cocks - head merchant of the first British venture in Hirado from 1613 to 1623
  • Samuel Cocking - Yokohama merchant
  • Josiah Conder - architect known for the Rokumeikan, his books on Japanese gardening and being a pupil of Kawanabe Kyosai
  • Hugh Cortazzi - japanologist and former ambassador
  • James Main Dixon, former FRSE - Scottish professor who taught Natsume Soseki
  • William Gray Dixon - see Land of the Morning
  • Archibald Douglas - foreign advisor to the Imperial Japanese Navy, introduced football to Japanese naval cadets
  • Christopher Dresser - designer and major influence on the Anglo-Japanese style and writer on Japan
  • Henry Dyer - first principal of the Imperial College of Engineering (Kobu Daigakko), taught Tanabe Sakuro in 1877 who designed Lake Biwa Canal which became Japan's first hydroelectric power facility
  • Alfred East - English watercolour artist commissioned by the Fine Art Society to paint scenes in Japan in 1889
  • Lord Elgin - signatory to the British 'unequal' treaty of 1858
  • William Empson - lived in Japan during the 1930s, known for The Face of the Buddha
  • James Alfred Ewing - Scottish professor
  • Reginald Farrer - Field botanist who lived in Tokyo in 1903
  • Henry Faulds - Scottish doctor who founded a hospital in Tsukiji which became the basis for St. Luke's International Hospital and helped introduce Joseph Lister's antiseptic methods to Japanese Surgeons
  • Hugh Fraser - British minister 1889–94
  • Mary Crawford Fraser - see Diplomatist's Wife in Japan
  • Thomas Blake Glover - Scottish trader who was key to the industrialisation of Meiji Japan, smuggled over the Choshu Five to Britain
  • Abel Gower - consul
  • William Gowland - father of Japanese archaeology
  • Thomas Lomar Gray - engineering professor and seismologist
  • Arthur Hasketh Groom - creator of the first golf course in Japan
  • John Harington Gubbins - diplomat to the Empire of Japan
  • Nicholas John Hannen - British barrister for the British Supreme Court for China and Japan from 1871 to 1900 in varying roles
  • Charles Holmes - owner of the Studio Magazine, visited Japan in 1889, who along with Walter Crane were heavily influenced by Japanese aesthetics
  • Edward Atkinson Hornel - Scottish artist influenced by Japanese design who visited from 1893 to 1894
  • Collingwood Ingram - known as "Cherry Ingram", a specialist cherry tree collector
  • Grace James - Japanese folklorist and children's writer
  • Elizabeth Keith - artist who visited from 1915 to 1935 intermittently, working in the Shin-hanga style
  • Cargill Gilston Knott - Scottish physicist whose work in seismology led to the first earthquake hazard survey of Japan
  • Frank Toovey Lake – young sailor who died aged 19 interred in Sanuki Hiroshima whose grave has been up-kept since 1868
  • Bernard Leach - an influential potter whose formative years were spent in Japan
  • Mary Cornwall Legh - Anglican missionary who worked with those with leprosy
  • John Liggins - Anglican missionary who landed in 1859
  • Arthur Lloyd - Anglican missionary notable for his work on Mahayana Buddhism
  • Ernest A Hart - prominent 19th century art collector, visited Japan in 1891 with Alice Hart
  • Jan Linton - British musician active in Tokyo and Juliana's club from 1990 to 2005
  • Joseph Henry Longford - consul and academic
  • Claude Maxwell MacDonald - diplomat
  • Ranald MacDonald - the first native English teacher in Japan
  • Charles Maries - English botanist sent by Veitch Nurseries who collected in Japan from 1877 to 1879
  • Annette Meakin - first Englishwoman to get to Japan via the Trans-Siberian Railway, also wrote about the Ainu people in 1901
  • John Milne - professor and father of seismology
  • Bertram Freeman-Mitford, 1st Baron Redesdale - diplomat and author of Tales of Old Japan
  • Edmund Morel – 'the father of Japanese railways', a foreign advisor to the Meiji government on railways
  • Augustus Henry Mounsey - British diplomat in the 1870s
  • Ivan Morris - Japanese academic, translator of the Sarashina Nikki in 1971
  • James Murdoch - wrote the first academic history of Japan in English
  • Iso Mutsu - author of Kamakura: Fact and Legend
  • Edward St. John Neale, Lt.-Col, secretary of legation, then chargé d'affaires 1862–1863
  • Mary Clarke Nind, Methodist missionary who toured Japan in May 1894
  • Marianne North, Victorian traveller and botany painter who visited in 1875
  • Laurence Oliphant – secretary of the legation in 1861
  • Bathia Catherine Ozaki - - Saburo Ozaki's wife, who married in 1869 and are considered an early 'International' Japanese couple, akin to Alethea Sannomiya (m. 1874),[65] the earliest example being Yuki Magome who married William Adams about 1605[66][67]
  • Sherard Osborn - cisited and published in 1859 some of the first woodcut illustrations from Japan in England
  • Yei Theodora Ozaki - a 20th-century translator of Japanese fairy tales for children in English
  • Henry Spencer Palmer - foreign advisor on civil engineering for the Yokohama area and The Times correspondent
  • Harry Smith Parkes - diplomat during Boshin War
  • Alfred Parsons - visited and wrote of Japan from 1892 to 1895 in "Notes in Japan"
  • John Perry - colleague of Ayrton at the Imperial College of Engineering, Tokyo
  • Charles Lennox Richardson - slain in the Namamugi Incident
  • Hannah Riddell - opened the first leprosy research laboratory in Japan in 1918
  • Frederick Ringer - industrialist and Nagasaki businessman
  • George Bailey Sansom - japanologist of the early 20th century
  • Ernest Mason Satow - notable diplomat and japanologist
  • Timon Screech - SOAS - professor of arts
  • John William Robertson Scott - writer of The Foundations of Japan which describes rural life in WWI Japan
  • Alexander Allan Shand - British banker who proposed the idea of the central bank in the 1870s
  • Alexander Croft Shaw - Anglican missionary
  • Alexander Cameron Sim - founder of Kobe Regatta & Athletic Club, introduced lemonade (Ramune) to Japan.
  • Admiral Sir James Stirling – signatory to the 1854 treaty
  • F.W. Strange - introduced collegiate rowing to Meiji Japan in 1877 at Yokohama YARC
  • Frederick William Sutton - early English photographer
  • Arthur Waley - first native English translator of The Tale of Genji
  • Walter Weston - Rev. who publicised the term "Japanese Alps"
  • William Willis - doctor
  • Channing Moore Williams - founder of Rikkyo University, he also helped to set up the Anglican Church in Japan
  • Ernest Henry Wilson - plant collector who brought 63 sakura to the West from 1911 to 1916, the Wilson stump (ウィルソン株, Wilson kabu) also has his namesake
  • Charles Wirgman - editor of Japan Punch
  • Annie Yeamans - circus performer who toured Yokohama in 1866
  • Chris Broad - filmmaker, author, and notable YouTuber

The chronological list of Heads of the United Kingdom Mission in Japan.

Japanese in the United Kingdom

Embassy of Japan in London

The family name is given in italics. Usually the family name comes first in regards to Japanese historical figures, but in modern times not so for the likes of Kazuo Ishiguro and Katsuhiko Oku, both well known in the United Kingdom.

  • Aoki Shuzo - Diplomat, signed the 1894 treaty in London
  • HRH Arisugawa Takehito - Served with the Royal Navy and frequently visited England between 1879 and 1905
  • Ruth Okabe Buhicrosan (1851 - 1914) - Japanese-British published author in 1885, wife of Tannaker Buhicrosan
  • Uriemon Eaton - First person of Japanese descent to attend British College in 1639
  • Misao Gamo - Japanese socialite and diplomats wife in Edwardian Britain
  • Tsuneko Gauntlett - Prominent Social Rights Activist, member of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union
  • Genda Minoru - Naval attaché and planner of the Pearl Harbor strike; in 1940 he saw Spitfires and Bf 109s in combat over London during the Battle of Britain
  • Hayashi Gonsuke - Minister who promoted Japanese arts in 1894 in London
  • Hayashi Tadasu - A student in London from 1866 - 1868
  • Yuzuru Hiraga - IJN naval officer who was educated at London from 1905 - 1908, part of the design team for the famous Yamato battleship
  • Taka Hirose - Bassist of the band Feeder
  • Hoshi Tōru - First Japanese lawyer in 1877
  • Inagaki Manjirō - Cambridge University graduate and diplomat
  • Imekanu - Ainu Yukar poet who worked with John Batchelor
  • Kazuo Ishiguro - Famous Writer, see The Remains of the Day
  • Iwakura Tomomi - see Iwakura mission especially
  • Shinji Kagawa - played for English football club Manchester United
Sadayakko as Ophelia in Hamuretto (1903)

Education

Japanese School in London
In Japan
In the UK
  • Japanese School in London
  • Rikkyo School in England
  • Teikyo School United Kingdom
  • Chaucer College
  • Teikyo University of Japan in Durham
Former institutions in the UK
  • Gyosei International School UK (closed)
  • Shi-Tennoji School in UK (closed)
  • Gyosei International College in the U.K. (merged into the University of Reading)

Cultural relations

Sports

British sports had an impact on Japan during the Meiji modernisation.[69] Cricket was present in Japan's foreign settlements, played by both British and American expatriates, until baseball grew in popularity by the early 20th century.[70]

List of Japanese diplomatic envoys in the United Kingdom (partial list)

Ministers plenipotentiary

Ambassadors

  • Hayashi Tadasu 1905–1906
  • Komura Jutarō 1906–1908
  • Katō Takaaki 2nd time, 1908–1912
  • Katsunosuke Inoue 1913–1916
  • Chinda Sutemi 1916–1920
  • Gonsuke Hayashi 1920–1925
  • Keishiro Matsui 1925–1928
  • Matsudaira Tsuneo 1929–1935
  • Shigeru Yoshida 1936–1938
  • Mamoru Shigemitsu 1938–1941
  • Shunichi Matsumoto 1952–1955
  • Haruhiko Nishi 1955–1957
  • Katsumi Ōno 1958–1964
  • Morio Yukawa 1968–1972
  • Haruki Mori 1972–?
  • Masaki Orita 2001–2004
  • Yoshiji Nogami 2004–2008
  • Shin Ebihara 2008–2011
  • Keiichi Hayashi 2011–2016
  • Koji Tsuruoka 2016–2019
  • Yasumasa Nagamine 2019–2021
  • Hajime Hayashi 2021–2024
  • Hiroshi Suzuki 2024–present

List of ambassadors of the United Kingdom to Japan

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The other two are Australia and the Philippines.

References

  1. ^ "Japan-UK 150". Embassy of Japan in the United Kingdom. Archived from the original on 13 July 2023. Retrieved 13 August 2024.
  2. ^ HM Revenue and Customs (16 February 2015). "Japan: tax treaties". GOV.UK. Archived from the original on 8 April 2025. Retrieved 16 March 2025.
  3. ^ Samurai William, Giles Milton, 2003
  4. ^ English Dreams and Japanese Realities: Anglo-Japanese Encounters Around the Globe, 1587-1673, Thomas Lockley, 2019, Revista de Cultura, p 126
  5. ^ The observations of Sir Richard Hawkins, Knt in his voyage into the South sea in the year 1593 :reprinted from the edition of 1622, Charles Ramsay Drinkwater Bethune, Richard Hawkins, 1847[1622], p.7
  6. ^ Stephen Turnbull, Fighting ships of the Far East (2), p 12, Osprey Publishing
  7. ^ Notice at the Tower of London
  8. ^ The Red Seal permit was re-discovered in 1985 by Professor Hayashi Nozomu, in the Bodleian Library. Massarella, Derek; Tytler Izumi K. (1990) "The Japonian Charters" Monumenta Nipponica, Vol. 45, No. 2, pp 189–205.
  9. ^ See https://www.haringey.gov.uk/sites/haringeygovuk/files/pages_from_connections_3_-_pages_16-23.pdf p.20
  10. ^ https://www.electricscotland.com/history/nation/ogilby.htm (Accessed 2 March 2021)
  11. ^ See The English factory in Taiwan, 1670-1685, 1995, Anthony Farrington, Ts'ao Yung-ho, Chang Hsiu-jung, Huang Fu-san, Wu Mi-tsa, pp.1-20, National Taiwan University, Taipei
  12. ^ See
  13. ^ see https://play.google.com/store/books/details?id=Jy0QAAAAYAAJ&rdid=book-Jy0QAAAAYAAJ&rdot=1 (Accessed 12/04/2022)
  14. ^ Thierry Mormanne : "La prise de possession de l'île d'Urup par la flotte anglo-française en 1855", Revue Cipango, "Cahiers d'études japonaises", No 11 hiver 2004 pp. 209–236.
  15. ^ Information about 1885–87 Japanese exhibition at Knightsbridge
  16. ^ Phillips Payson O'Brien, The Anglo-Japanese Alliance, 1902–1922. (2004).
  17. ^ William Langer, The Diplomacy of Imperialism 1890–1902 (2nd ed. 1950), pp. pp 745–86.
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Further reading

  • The History of Anglo-Japanese Relations, 1600–2000 (5 vol.) essays by scholars.
  • Akagi, Roy Hidemichi. Japan's Foreign Relations 1542–1936: A Short History (1979) online 560pp
  • Auslin, Michael R. Negotiating with Imperialism: The Unequal Treaties and the Culture of Japanese Diplomacy (Harvard UP, 2009).
  • Beasley, W.G. Great Britain and the Opening of Japan, 1834–1858 (1951) online
  • Beasley, W. G. Japan Encounters the Barbarian: Japanese Travelers in America and Europe (Yale UP, 1995).
  • Bennett, Neville. "White Discrimination against Japan: Britain, the Dominions and the United States, 1908–1928." New Zealand Journal of Asian Studies 3 (2001): 91–105. online
  • Best, Antony. "Race, monarchy, and the Anglo-Japanese alliance, 1902–1922." Social Science Japan Journal 9.2 (2006): 171–186.
  • Best, Antony. British intelligence and the Japanese challenge in Asia, 1914–1941 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2002).
  • Best, Antony. Britain, Japan and Pearl Harbour: Avoiding War in East Asia, 1936–1941 (1995) excerpt and text search
  • Buckley, R. Occupation Diplomacy: Britain, the United States and Japan 1945–1952 (1982)
  • Checkland, Olive. Britain's Encounter with Meiji Japan, 1868–1912 (1989).
  • Checkland, Olive. Japan and Britain after 1859: Creating Cultural Bridges (2004) excerpt and text search; online
  • Britain & Japan: Biographical Portraits edited by Hugh Cortazzi Global Oriental 2004, 8 vol (1996 to 2013)
  • British Envoys in Japan 1859–1972, edited and compiled by Hugh Cortazzi, Global Oriental 2004, ISBN 1-901903-51-6
  • Cortazzi, Hugh, ed. Kipling's Japan: Collected Writings (1988).
  • Denney, John. Respect and Consideration: Britain in Japan 1853 – 1868 and beyond. Radiance Press (2011). ISBN 978-0-9568798-0-6
  • Dobson, Hugo and Hook, Glenn D. Japan and Britain in the Contemporary World (Sheffield Centre for Japanese Studies/Routledge Series) (2012) excerpt and text search; online
  • Fox, Grace. Britain and Japan, 1858–1883 (Oxford UP, 1969).
  • Harcreaves, J. D. "The Anglo-Japanese Alliance." History Today (1952) 2#4 pp 252–258 online
  • Heere, Cees. Empire Ascendant: The British World, Race, and the Rise of Japan, 1894-1914 (Oxford UP, 2020).
  • Kowner, Rotem. "'Lighter than Yellow, but not Enough': Western Discourse on the Japanese 'Race', 1854–1904." Historical Journal 43.1 (2000): 103–131. online Archived 8 November 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  • Langer, William. The Diplomacy of Imperialism 1890–1902 (2nd ed. 1950), pp. pp 745–86, on treaty of 1902
  • Lowe, Peter. Britain in the Far East: A Survey from 1819 to the Present (1981).
  • Lowe, Peter. Great Britain and Japan 1911–15: A Study of British Far Eastern Policy (Springer, 1969).
  • McOmie, William. The Opening of Japan, 1853–1855: A Comparative Study of the American, British, Dutch and Russian Naval Expeditions to Compel the Tokugawa Shogunate to Conclude Treaties and Open Ports to their Ships (Folkestone, Kent: Global Oriental, 2006).
  • McKay, Alexander. Scottish Samurai: Thomas Blake Glover, 1838–1911 (Canongate Books, 2012).
  • Marder, Arthur J. Old Friends, New Enemies: The Royal Navy and the Imperial Japanese Navy, vol. 1: Strategic illusions, 1936–1941(1981); Old Friends, New Enemies: The Royal Navy and the Imperial Japanese Navy, vol. 2: The Pacific War, 1942–1945 (1990)
  • Morley, James William, ed. Japan's foreign policy, 1868–1941: a research guide (Columbia UP, 1974), toward Britain, pp 184–235
  • Nish, Ian Hill. China, Japan and 19th Century Britain (Irish University Press, 1977).
  • Nish, Ian. The Anglo-Japanese Alliance: The Diplomacy of Two Island Empires 1984–1907 (A&C Black, 2013).
  • Nish, Ian. Alliance in Decline: A Study of Anglo-Japanese Relations, 1908–23 (A&C Black, 2013).
  • Nish, Ian. "Britain and Japan: Long-Range Images, 1900–52." Diplomacy & Statecraft (2004) 15#1 pp 149–161.
  • Nish, I., ed. Anglo-Japanese Alienation, 1919–1952 (1982),
  • Nish, Ian Hill. Britain & Japan: Biographical Portraits (5 vol 1997–2004).
  • O'Brien, Phillips, ed. The Anglo-Japanese Alliance, 1902–1922 (Routledge, 2004), Essays by scholars.
  • Scholtz, Amelia. "The Giant in the Curio Shop: Unpacking the Cabinet in Kipling's Letters from Japan." Pacific Coast Philology 42.2 (2007): 199–216. online
  • Scholtz, Amelia Catherine. Dispatches from Japanglia: Anglo-Japanese Literary Imbrication, 1880–1920. (PhD Diss. Rice University, 2012). online
  • Sterry, Lorraine. Victorian Women Travellers in Meiji Japan (Brill, 2009).
  • Takeuchi, Tatsuji. War and diplomacy in the Japanese Empire (1935); a major scholarly history online free in pdf
  • Thorne, Christopher G. Allies of a kind: The United States, Britain, and the war against Japan, 1941–1945 (1978) excerpt and text search
  • Thorne, Christopher. "Viscount Cecil, the Government and the Far Eastern Crisis of 1931." Historical Journal 14, no. 4 (1971): 805–26. online.
  • Thorne, Christopher G. The Limits of Foreign Policy: The West, The League and the Far Eastern Crisis of 1931–1933 (1973) online free to borrow
  • Towle, Phillip and Nobuko Margaret Kosuge. Britain and Japan in the Twentieth Century: One Hundred Years of Trade and Prejudice (2007) excerpt and text search
  • Woodward, Llewellyn. British Foreign Policy in the Second World War (History of the Second World War) (1962) ch 8
  • Yokoi, Noriko. Japan's Postwar Economic Recovery and Anglo-Japanese Relations, 1948–1962 (Routledge, 2004).