Changes

From SamuraiWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
1,717 bytes added ,  18:16, 12 July 2014
Created page with " Nikolai Rezanov was a Russian envoy sent to Nagasaki in 1804 in order to attempt to secure commercial trade access for Russian ships. Rezanov arrived in Nagasaki in ..."

Nikolai Rezanov was a Russian envoy sent to [[Nagasaki]] in [[1804]] in order to attempt to secure commercial trade access for Russian ships.

Rezanov arrived in Nagasaki in 1804/9, bearing a permit granted to [[Adam Laxman]] in [[1793]], permitting him simply to enter into negotiations. His two ships were commanded by [[Adam Johann von Krusenstern]], who had a few years earlier presented to the court at St. Petersburg suggestions for a more active maritime engagement in the Pacific, tying together Russian settlements in Siberia and North America with markets and sources of food and other goods elsewhere in the Pacific.

In approaching Japan at this time, the Russians hoped that with the [[Dutch East India Company]] severely weakened in the aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars, it might create an opening for them to be able to enter into trade with Japan. It was hoped they could trade furs, walrus ivory, fish, leather goods, and woolen cloth for [[silk]], [[rice]], and [[copper]], as well as other luxury goods such as [[porcelain]]s and [[lacquer]]wares. Given the great distance between Russian settlements in Siberia and Alaska, and Russia's breadbasket in eastern Europe / central Asia, it was also hoped that such a trade relationship could help feed these areas.

Rezanov sat in harbor at Nagasaki for several months, as port defense forces from [[Fukuoka han]] stood at alert, before being dismissed in 1804/11; Rezanov was ultimately denied any trade permissions, and was sent away early in the next year ([[1805]]).

{{stub}}

==References==
*Robert Hellyer, ''Defining Engagement'', Harvard University Press (2009), 98-100.

[[Category:Foreigners]]
[[Category:Diplomats]]
[[Category:Edo Period]]
contributor
26,982

edits

Navigation menu