Difference between revisions of "Araki Sotaro"
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The Nagasaki Museum of History and Culture owns a Vietnamese mirror in gilded and lacquer mounting which was first brought to Japan by Wakaku as one of her personal possessions, along with a Japanese manuscript translation of an original letter from the Ruan family to Araki. | The Nagasaki Museum of History and Culture owns a Vietnamese mirror in gilded and lacquer mounting which was first brought to Japan by Wakaku as one of her personal possessions, along with a Japanese manuscript translation of an original letter from the Ruan family to Araki. | ||
− | Araki and his wife are buried in Nagasaki; their gravesite at the temple of [[Daion-ji]] has been designated a city cultural property. | + | Araki and his wife are buried in Nagasaki; their gravesite at the temple of [[Daion-ji]] has been designated a city cultural property. Their half-Japanese, half-Vietnamese son is represented by one of the ''[[chigo]]'' ("sacred boys") who rides a parade float in Nagasaki's annual [[Kunchi festival]]. |
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Revision as of 20:32, 3 April 2014
- Died: 1636
Araki Sotarô was a Nagasaki-based shuinsen merchant known for his travels in Southeast Asia and marriage to a daughter of a Vietnamese aristocratic family.
A samurai originally from Higo province (Kumamoto), he moved to Nagasaki in 1588, and shortly afterwards began sailing to Vietnam, Thailand, and Cambodia. In 1619, he returned to Japan with a wife, a daughter of the Ruan family & adopted daughter of the King of Annam known as Wakaku or Anio in Japanese. He and Wakaku then established a trading emporium at Nagasaki.
The Nagasaki Museum of History and Culture owns a Vietnamese mirror in gilded and lacquer mounting which was first brought to Japan by Wakaku as one of her personal possessions, along with a Japanese manuscript translation of an original letter from the Ruan family to Araki.
Araki and his wife are buried in Nagasaki; their gravesite at the temple of Daion-ji has been designated a city cultural property. Their half-Japanese, half-Vietnamese son is represented by one of the chigo ("sacred boys") who rides a parade float in Nagasaki's annual Kunchi festival.
References
- Matt Matsuda, Pacific Worlds, University of Cambridge Press (2012), 89.
- "Mirror from Vietnam, owned by lady Araki Sotaro," Virtual Collection of Asian Masterpieces, 2013.