Difference between revisions of "Kaigai Iden"

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(Created page with "*''Written: 1850, Saitô Masakane'' *''Japanese'': 海外遺伝 ''(kaigai iden)'' The ''Kaigai iden'', written by Saitô Masakane in...")
 
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*''Written: [[1850]], [[Saito Masakane|Saitô Masakane]]''
 
*''Written: [[1850]], [[Saito Masakane|Saitô Masakane]]''
*''Japanese'': 海外遺伝 ''(kaigai iden)''
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*''Japanese'': 海外異傳 ''(kaigai iden)''
  
 
The ''Kaigai iden'', written by [[Saito Masakane|Saitô Masakane]] in [[1850]], tells the stories of [[Yamada Nagamasa]] and [[Hamada Yahyoe|Hamada Yahyôe]]<!--浜田弥兵衛-->, Japanese figures prominent in [[Ayutthaya]] (Siam) and [[Taiwan]] in the early 17th century.
 
The ''Kaigai iden'', written by [[Saito Masakane|Saitô Masakane]] in [[1850]], tells the stories of [[Yamada Nagamasa]] and [[Hamada Yahyoe|Hamada Yahyôe]]<!--浜田弥兵衛-->, Japanese figures prominent in [[Ayutthaya]] (Siam) and [[Taiwan]] in the early 17th century.

Revision as of 14:59, 23 April 2016

The Kaigai iden, written by Saitô Masakane in 1850, tells the stories of Yamada Nagamasa and Hamada Yahyôe, Japanese figures prominent in Ayutthaya (Siam) and Taiwan in the early 17th century.

The text was translated into English by J.M. James, and was published in 1879 under the title "A Short Narrative of Foreign Travel of Modern Japanese Adventurers."

References

  • Cesare Polenghi, Samurai of Ayutthaya: Yamada Nagamasa, Japanese warrior and merchant in early seventeenth-century Siam. Bangkok: White Lotus Press (2009), 7.