| Stirling first arrived in Japan on 1854/int.7/15, entering [[Nagasaki]] harbor aboard his flagship the [[HMS Winchester|HMS ''Winchester'']], alongside three other ships: the [[HMS Encounter|HMS ''Encounter'']], [[HMS Styx|HMS ''Styx'']], and [[HMS Barracouta|HMS ''Barracouta'']]. With the help of interpreter [[Yamamoto Otokichi]],<ref>Mitani, 223.</ref> he explained that Britain was currently [[Crimean War|at war with Russia]], and requested permission from the [[Tokugawa shogunate]] to freely come and go in and out of Japanese ports. According to most historians' accounts, seeking out and attacking Russian ships including those headed by Captain [[Yevfimy Vasilyevich Putyatin]] was among his chief aims. Another was to see if Japan would be willing to help shelter, repair, and supply British ships while denying the same to their Russian adversaries; according to historian [[Mitani Hiroshi]], Stirling expected the shogunate to not agree to this and to insist upon neutrality in the British vs. Russian conflict. Mitani also suggests that Stirling had neither the expectation or intention, nor the rightful power, to seek or conclude formal treaties with other countries but that because of the shogunate's stressful and very recent experiences with Putyatin and with [[Commodore Perry]], the shogunate presumed that Stirling came seeking similar concessions, and in light of the outcome of the [[Opium War]] a decade earlier were fearful of the possible repercussions of resisting what they imagined would be the British captain's demands. It was amidst this context, and some degree of misunderstandings and miscommunications due to matters of language and interpretation, that roughly a month after Stirling's arrival, the Anglo-Japanese Convention of 1854 was drafted and signed. | | Stirling first arrived in Japan on 1854/int.7/15, entering [[Nagasaki]] harbor aboard his flagship the [[HMS Winchester|HMS ''Winchester'']], alongside three other ships: the [[HMS Encounter|HMS ''Encounter'']], [[HMS Styx|HMS ''Styx'']], and [[HMS Barracouta|HMS ''Barracouta'']]. With the help of interpreter [[Yamamoto Otokichi]],<ref>Mitani, 223.</ref> he explained that Britain was currently [[Crimean War|at war with Russia]], and requested permission from the [[Tokugawa shogunate]] to freely come and go in and out of Japanese ports. According to most historians' accounts, seeking out and attacking Russian ships including those headed by Captain [[Yevfimy Vasilyevich Putyatin]] was among his chief aims. Another was to see if Japan would be willing to help shelter, repair, and supply British ships while denying the same to their Russian adversaries; according to historian [[Mitani Hiroshi]], Stirling expected the shogunate to not agree to this and to insist upon neutrality in the British vs. Russian conflict. Mitani also suggests that Stirling had neither the expectation or intention, nor the rightful power, to seek or conclude formal treaties with other countries but that because of the shogunate's stressful and very recent experiences with Putyatin and with [[Commodore Perry]], the shogunate presumed that Stirling came seeking similar concessions, and in light of the outcome of the [[Opium War]] a decade earlier were fearful of the possible repercussions of resisting what they imagined would be the British captain's demands. It was amidst this context, and some degree of misunderstandings and miscommunications due to matters of language and interpretation, that roughly a month after Stirling's arrival, the Anglo-Japanese Convention of 1854 was drafted and signed. |