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| *''Japanese'': 横浜外国人墓地 ''(yokohama gaikokujin bochi)'' | | *''Japanese'': 横浜外国人墓地 ''(yokohama gaikokujin bochi)'' |
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− | The [[Yokohama]] Foreign Cemetery, located in [[Yokohama]]'s [[Motomachi]] neighborhood, contains the graves of a number of prominent Chinese, European, and American individuals who died in [[Bakumatsu period|Bakumatsu]] or [[Meiji period]] Japan. The cemetery covers a total of roughly 5600 ''[[Japanese Measurements|tsubo]]'' and is divided into 22 sections; most of the graves were severely damaged in the 1923 Great Kantô Earthquake, and today the cemetery documents record roughly 5000 names and 3000 extant tombstones. | + | The [[Yokohama]] Foreign Cemetery, located in Yokohama's [[Motomachi]] neighborhood, contains the graves of a number of prominent Chinese, European, and American individuals who died in [[Bakumatsu period|Bakumatsu]] or [[Meiji period]] Japan. The cemetery covers a total of roughly 5600 ''[[Japanese Measurements|tsubo]]'' and is divided into 22 sections; most of the graves were severely damaged in the 1923 Great Kantô Earthquake, and today the cemetery documents record roughly 5000 names and 3000 extant tombstones. |
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| It was established in [[1859]] after Russian sailors Roman Mophet and Ivan Sokoloff were killed by ''[[sonno|sonnô]] [[joi|jôi]]'' activists. The [[Tokugawa shogunate]] purchased an area of land adjacent to the temple [[Zotoku-in|Zôtoku-in]] in which to bury them; these remain the oldest graves in the cemetery today. Numerous other individuals were buried on the grounds over the years. The Japanese graves were moved in [[1861]], and the Chinese graves in [[1871]], in order to better differentiate between the groups. Zôtoku-in itself was moved to the Heiraku neighborhood, up on the Bluff, following the 1923 Great Kantô Earthquake. | | It was established in [[1859]] after Russian sailors Roman Mophet and Ivan Sokoloff were killed by ''[[sonno|sonnô]] [[joi|jôi]]'' activists. The [[Tokugawa shogunate]] purchased an area of land adjacent to the temple [[Zotoku-in|Zôtoku-in]] in which to bury them; these remain the oldest graves in the cemetery today. Numerous other individuals were buried on the grounds over the years. The Japanese graves were moved in [[1861]], and the Chinese graves in [[1871]], in order to better differentiate between the groups. Zôtoku-in itself was moved to the Heiraku neighborhood, up on the Bluff, following the 1923 Great Kantô Earthquake. |
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| ==Selected list of burials== | | ==Selected list of burials== |
− | *[[John Diack]] (d. [[1900]]) | + | *[[Henry James Black]], first foreign ''[[rakugo]]'' performer |
| + | *[[John Diack]] (d. [[1900]]), assistant to Morel, sub-architect of Japan's first railway |
| + | *[[Felix Evrard]], missionary, French language teacher, and aide to [[Ito Hirobumi|Itô Hirobumi]] |
| + | *Anton Geerts, influential in pharmaceuticals |
| + | *[[Hermann Grauert]], first mayor of the foreign settlement in Yokohama |
| + | *Clarence Griffin, founder of first Boy Scouts troupe in Japan (in [[1911]]) |
| + | *[[John Carey Hall]], consul general of Britain |
| + | *[[Edward Charles Kirby]], businessman who started an ironworks, which later became Yokohama's naval shipyard |
| + | *[[Andre Roger Lecomte]], introduced French bread into Japan; formally honored by both France and Japan |
| + | *[[John Frederic Lowder]], legal advisor to Yokohama Customs House |
| + | *[[Henry Maillot]], professor of physical sciences at [[Tokyo Imperial University]]; tutor to the [[Meiji Emperor]] in French language in [[1872]] |
| *[[Edmund Morel]] (d. [[1871]]), Engineer-in-Chief of Japan's first [[railroads]] | | *[[Edmund Morel]] (d. [[1871]]), Engineer-in-Chief of Japan's first [[railroads]] |
| + | *George Ramsay, influential in navigation |
| *[[Charles Richardson]] (d. [[1862]]), chief victim of the [[Namamugi Incident]] | | *[[Charles Richardson]] (d. [[1862]]), chief victim of the [[Namamugi Incident]] |
| + | *Elizabeth Scidmore, influential in getting [[cherry trees]] planted in Washington DC |
| + | *Hans Kurt Seebach, influential in development of modern prison system in Japan |
| + | *John Trumbull Swift, first fraternal secretary to Japan from YMCA of North America |
| + | *[[Thomas Thomas]], director of Japan's first Western-style horse racetrack |
| + | *[[Edwin Wheeler]], medical doctor formally honored by Japan in [[1908]] |
| *[[Charles Wirgman]], illustrator/cartoonist, journalist | | *[[Charles Wirgman]], illustrator/cartoonist, journalist |
| *Russian sailors Roman Mophet and Ivan Sokoloff | | *Russian sailors Roman Mophet and Ivan Sokoloff |
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| ==References== | | ==References== |
| *"[http://www.yfgc-japan.com/history_e.html History of The Yokohama Foreign General Cemetery]," Yokohama Foreign General Cemetery official website. | | *"[http://www.yfgc-japan.com/history_e.html History of The Yokohama Foreign General Cemetery]," Yokohama Foreign General Cemetery official website. |
| + | *Pamphlets available on-site. |
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| ==External Links== | | ==External Links== |