Author(s): Joshua Provan
For over two centuries, Japan had been hidden behind a veil of seclusion. This changed when Commodore Perry arrived in 1853. Britain was fast to get in on the action; however, their sudden appearance had accelerated the pace of political change in Japan. The newcomers found themselves increasingly out of their depth in a power struggle that they did not understand.
The shogun and emperor were at each other’s throats and factions were jockeying for position. Britain’s first diplomats found themselves the targets of assassins and to their confusion discovered that the emperor had no legislative power and the shogun’s word was no longer law. Yet with the lessons of the opium wars still in recent memory, a slew of British soldiers, ambassadors, interpreters and adventurers attempted to protect imperial interests in Japan without causing outright war.
This is the story of the rocky beginning of Anglo-Japanese relations, a story of the ‘Wild East’, full of political schemes, gunboat diplomacy, assassins and samurai, set in the dying days of the Edo period and the twilight of the last shogun.
BOOK ISBN | 9781781557563 |
FORMAT | 234 x 156 mm |
BINDING | Hardback |
PAGES | 208 pages |
PUBLICATION DATE | 02 March 2020 |
TERRITORY | World |
ILLUSTRATIONS | 33 colour illustrations |