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| [[File:Kanrinmaru.jpg|right|thumb|320px|A painting of the ''Kanrin maru'', by ''[[yoga|yôga]]'' painter [[Iizuka Reiji]], on display at the [[Yokohama Port Opening Memorial Hall]]]] | | [[File:Kanrinmaru.jpg|right|thumb|320px|A painting of the ''Kanrin maru'', by ''[[yoga|yôga]]'' painter [[Iizuka Reiji]], on display at the [[Yokohama Port Opening Memorial Hall]]]] |
| + | *''Other Names: Japan'' |
| *''Japanese'': 咸臨丸 ''(kanrin maru)'' | | *''Japanese'': 咸臨丸 ''(kanrin maru)'' |
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| The ''Kanrin Maru'' was the first ship to cross the Pacific Ocean with a Japanese pilot, doing so in the early months of [[1860]], as part of the [[1860 Japanese Embassy to the United States|first Japanese embassy to the United States]]. It is generally considered Japan's second Western-style modern warship, after the ''[[Soembing|Kankô Maru]]'',<ref name=iizuka>Gallery label, Yokohama Port Opening Memorial Hall.</ref> though the ''[[Shoheimaru|Shôheimaru]]'' was constructed by [[Satsuma han]] and gifted to the [[Tokugawa shogunate|shogunate]] around the same time. | | The ''Kanrin Maru'' was the first ship to cross the Pacific Ocean with a Japanese pilot, doing so in the early months of [[1860]], as part of the [[1860 Japanese Embassy to the United States|first Japanese embassy to the United States]]. It is generally considered Japan's second Western-style modern warship, after the ''[[Soembing|Kankô Maru]]'',<ref name=iizuka>Gallery label, Yokohama Port Opening Memorial Hall.</ref> though the ''[[Shoheimaru|Shôheimaru]]'' was constructed by [[Satsuma han]] and gifted to the [[Tokugawa shogunate|shogunate]] around the same time. |
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− | The ship was a 292-ton, screw-driven corvette of Dutch construction. It was 49 meters long, and could travel at up to six knots.<ref name=iizuka/> It set out from [[Yokohama]] along with the ''[[USS Powhatan]]'' on 1860/1/19 (Feb 10), bound for [[San Francisco]]. Captained by [[Katsu Kaishu|Katsu Kaishû]] and commanded by [[Minister of the Navy|Navy Minister]] [[Kimura Kaishu|Kimura Kaishû]], its crew of 96 Japanese was joined by a number of American sailors and one American officer, since no Japanese crew had ever made such a long journey. The ''Powhatan'' carried the three lead ambassadors and their direct entourage, while the remainder of the more than 170 members of the mission rode on the ''Kanrin Maru''. | + | The ship was a 292-ton, screw-driven corvette of Dutch construction. It was 49 meters long, and could travel at up to six knots.<ref name=iizuka/> Originally named the ''Japan'', the Dutch-built ship first arrived in [[Nagasaki]] on [[1857]]/8/5.<ref>Ishin Shiryô Kôyô 維新史料綱要, vol 2 (1937), 393.</ref> |
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| + | Renamed the ''Kanrin-maru'', the ship set out from [[Yokohama]] along with the ''[[USS Powhatan]]'' on 1860/1/19 (Feb 10), bound for [[San Francisco]]. Captained by [[Katsu Kaishu|Katsu Kaishû]] and commanded by [[Minister of the Navy|Navy Minister]] [[Kimura Kaishu|Kimura Kaishû]], its crew of 96 Japanese was joined by a number of American sailors and one American officer, since no Japanese crew had ever made such a long journey. The ''Powhatan'' carried the three lead ambassadors and their direct entourage, while the remainder of the more than 170 members of the mission rode on the ''Kanrin Maru''. |
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| The ''Kanrin Maru'' was damaged in a storm during the voyage, and returned directly to Japan after receiving repairs in San Francisco, while the ''Powhatan'' continued onwards to Panama. | | The ''Kanrin Maru'' was damaged in a storm during the voyage, and returned directly to Japan after receiving repairs in San Francisco, while the ''Powhatan'' continued onwards to Panama. |