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| *''Birth: [[1900]]'' | | *''Birth: [[1900]]'' |
− | *''Death: [[1997]]''<ref>http://www.samurai-archives.com/jia.html</ref> | + | *''Death: [[1988]]''<ref>Yanai Kenji et. al. "Reminiscences of the late Dr. Iwao Seiichi (1900-1988): His scholarship and personality as a pioneer in the study of the history of Dutch-Japanese relations." ''Tôhôgaku'' 80 (July 1990).</ref> |
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| ==Overview== | | ==Overview== |
| + | Iwao Seiichi was a professor at Tokyo University for many years, and a leading scholar on Dutch-Japanese relations, on Edo period foreign relations, and related subjects. His work on [[Nihonmachi]] in Southeast Asia, and on ''[[shuinsen]]'' (red seal ships) was particularly groundbreaking. |
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| Iwao Seiichi attended the Tokyo Imperial University--staying in Tokyo, his birthplace--and graduated in [[1925]]. | | Iwao Seiichi attended the Tokyo Imperial University--staying in Tokyo, his birthplace--and graduated in [[1925]]. |
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| Moving to the Taihoku Imperial University, he was assistant professor of literature and politics before he went to England and the Netherlands for two years, studying. | | Moving to the Taihoku Imperial University, he was assistant professor of literature and politics before he went to England and the Netherlands for two years, studying. |
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− | Back in Tokyo, he filled the role of professor of literature from [[1948]] to [[1961]]. In [[1951]], he was honored with a Doctor of Literature degree. | + | Back in Tokyo, he filled the role of professor of literature at Tokyo University from [[1948]] to [[1961]]. In [[1951]], he was honored with a Doctorate of Literature. |
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| + | ==Selected Publications== |
| + | ===Books=== |
| + | *''Nan'yô Nihonmachi no kenkyû'' (Studies of the Japantowns of the South Seas), 1941. |
| + | *''Early Japanese Settlers in the Philippines'', 1943. |
| + | *''Shuinsen bôekishi no kenkyû'' (Studies in the History of the Red Seal Ship Trade), 1958. |
| + | *''Japanese Gold and Silver in World History'', 1959. |
| + | *''Shuinsen to Nihonmachi'' (Red Seal Ships and Japantowns), 1962. |
| + | *''Siebold-sensei: sono shôgai oyobi kôgyô'' ([[Philipp von Siebold|Siebold]]: His life and accomplishments), 1967-1968 (2 parts). |
| + | *''Biographical Dictionary of Japanese History''. (English language version, trans. by Burton Watson, 1978.) |
| + | *''Nihon no Rekishi 14: Sakoku'' (Japanese History 14: [[Sakoku]]), 2005 (latest edition) |
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| + | ===Articles=== |
| + | *"Li Tan, Chief of the Chinese Residents at Hirado, Japan, in the Last Days of the Ming Dynasty." Memoirs of the Research Department of the [[Toyo Bunko|Tôyô Bunko]], 1958. |
| + | *"Reopening of the diplomatic and commercial relations between Japan and Siam during the Tokugawa period." ''[[Acta Asiatica]]'', 1963. |
| + | *"Japanese foreign trade in the 16th and 17th centuries." ''Acta Asiatica, 1976. |
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| ==Awards and Associations== | | ==Awards and Associations== |
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| * Japan Academy Prize ('''1941''') | | * Japan Academy Prize ('''1941''') |
| * Asahi Culture Prize ('''1968''') | | * Asahi Culture Prize ('''1968''') |
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| * Director of the Institute of Eastern Culture (''Tôhô Gakkai'') | | * Director of the Institute of Eastern Culture (''Tôhô Gakkai'') |
| * Director of the Internation Society for Educational Information | | * Director of the Internation Society for Educational Information |
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− | ==Sources==
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− | Iwao Seiichi's ''Biographical Dictionary of Japanese History
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| ==Notes== | | ==Notes== |