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A Japanese [[Christianity|Christian]], he fled to [[Macao]] when the [[Tokugawa shogunate]] issued bans on Christianity in [[1614]]. He later found work as an agent for a Portuguese vessel, trading chiefly in raw [[silk]] in the ports of [[Quang Nam]]. He then relocated to [[Tonkin]], where he established himself in the silk and [[copper]] trades, and eventually gained a position in the [[Le Dynasty]] imperial court. In [[1654]], he helped broker a treaty between the Tonkin authorities and the Spanish Governor of Luzon.<ref>Wray, 87.</ref>
 
A Japanese [[Christianity|Christian]], he fled to [[Macao]] when the [[Tokugawa shogunate]] issued bans on Christianity in [[1614]]. He later found work as an agent for a Portuguese vessel, trading chiefly in raw [[silk]] in the ports of [[Quang Nam]]. He then relocated to [[Tonkin]], where he established himself in the silk and [[copper]] trades, and eventually gained a position in the [[Le Dynasty]] imperial court. In [[1654]], he helped broker a treaty between the Tonkin authorities and the Spanish Governor of Luzon.<ref>Wray, 87.</ref>
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Wada was also a significant investor in Chinese and [[VOC|Dutch]] trading endeavors.<ref>Wray, 86.</ref>
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Wada was also a significant investor in Chinese and [[VOC|Dutch]] trading endeavors,<ref>Wray, 86.</ref> though he was also financed in turn, receiving roughly 1,000 [[tael]]s a year from his mother-in-law, which he used to pay for shipping goods to Japan aboard Dutch ships. This woman's daughter, Wada's wife Ursula, served as a translator and intermediary for Portuguese merchants in Tonkin as well.<ref>Wray, 89.</ref>
    
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