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Yamada then made his way to Siam. It is unclear when this took place, or aboard what type of ship. Historian Cesare Polenghi writes that Nagamasa found a job as a dockworker in [[Sakai]], joined the crew of a [[shuinsen|red seal ship]] bound for Siam in [[1612]], and arrived in Ayutthaya some ten weeks later, after stopping at a number of other ports.<ref>Polenghi, 2.</ref> However, Polenghi also writes that "the year of Nagamasa's departure [from Japan] is not known,"<ref name=pol17>Polenghi, 17.</ref> and that it can only be estimated based on [[Dutch East India Company]] factor [[Jeremias van Vliet]] having indicated that Nagamasa's Siamese-born son Oin (aka Ockon Senaphimuk) was ''about'' eighteen years old in 1630. Polenghi then suggests a number of different possibilities for Nagamasa's arrival in Ayutthaya, including having traveled there on a Japanese ship, on a European ship, or via elsewhere in Southeast Asia.<ref name=pol17/>
 
Yamada then made his way to Siam. It is unclear when this took place, or aboard what type of ship. Historian Cesare Polenghi writes that Nagamasa found a job as a dockworker in [[Sakai]], joined the crew of a [[shuinsen|red seal ship]] bound for Siam in [[1612]], and arrived in Ayutthaya some ten weeks later, after stopping at a number of other ports.<ref>Polenghi, 2.</ref> However, Polenghi also writes that "the year of Nagamasa's departure [from Japan] is not known,"<ref name=pol17>Polenghi, 17.</ref> and that it can only be estimated based on [[Dutch East India Company]] factor [[Jeremias van Vliet]] having indicated that Nagamasa's Siamese-born son Oin (aka Ockon Senaphimuk) was ''about'' eighteen years old in 1630. Polenghi then suggests a number of different possibilities for Nagamasa's arrival in Ayutthaya, including having traveled there on a Japanese ship, on a European ship, or via elsewhere in Southeast Asia.<ref name=pol17/>
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Once in Ayutthaya, [[Kiya Kyuemon|Kiya Kyûemon]], head of the Japantown, took Yamada under his wing. Yamada also began studying Siamese and at least one European language, and soon found a job working as a middleman in the lucrative deerskin trade. At some point while in Siam, or perhaps during his time in Sakai, Yamada Nizaemon took on the name Nagamasa.
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Once in Ayutthaya, [[Kiya Kyuzaemon|Kiya Kyûzaemon]], head of the Japantown, took Yamada under his wing. Yamada also began studying Siamese and at least one European language, and soon found a job working as a middleman in the lucrative deerskin trade. At some point while in Siam, or perhaps during his time in Sakai, Yamada Nizaemon took on the name Nagamasa.
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At one point, Yamada traveled to the northern borders of Siam, and volunteered to help fight alongside Siamese warriors against a Burmese invasion. Killing the Burmese general, he found himself invited to the royal palace by King [[Songtham]], and granted aristocratic title. When Kyûemon decided to return to Japan, he named Yamada his successor; by this time, Yamada had become a head of the royal guards, and a wealthy merchant in his own right, even owning his own ship.
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At one point, Yamada traveled to the northern borders of Siam, and volunteered to help fight alongside Siamese warriors against a Burmese invasion. Killing the Burmese general, he found himself invited to the royal palace by King [[Songtham]], and granted aristocratic title. When Kyûzaemon decided to return to Japan, he named Yamada his successor; by this time, Yamada had become a head of the royal guards, and a wealthy merchant in his own right, even owning his own ship.
    
In [[1621]], acting as representative of the royal court, Nagamasa sent three letters to Shogun [[Tokugawa Hidetada]] and two of the ''[[roju|rôjû]]'', in advance of Ayutthaya sending an embassy to [[Edo]] to negotiate for formal relations. This marks the first time anyone in the shogunate heard of (or from) Nagamasa, and as a result of [[Ishin Suden|Ishin Sûden]] investigating the identity of this mysterious "Yamada Nagamasa" and then recording it in his ''[[Ikoku nikki]]'', it also marks Yamada's first appearance in official shogunate documents.
 
In [[1621]], acting as representative of the royal court, Nagamasa sent three letters to Shogun [[Tokugawa Hidetada]] and two of the ''[[roju|rôjû]]'', in advance of Ayutthaya sending an embassy to [[Edo]] to negotiate for formal relations. This marks the first time anyone in the shogunate heard of (or from) Nagamasa, and as a result of [[Ishin Suden|Ishin Sûden]] investigating the identity of this mysterious "Yamada Nagamasa" and then recording it in his ''[[Ikoku nikki]]'', it also marks Yamada's first appearance in official shogunate documents.
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