The Correspondence of Sir Ernest Satow, British Minister in Japan, 1895-1900 - Volume One

by Ian Ruxton

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ISBN: 978-1-4116-3857-0
Publisher: Lulu.com
Rights Owner: Ian Ruxton
Copyright: © 2005  Standard Copyright License
Language: English
Country: Japan

Printed: 571 pages, 8.5" x 11", perfect binding, black and white interior ink

Download: 1 documents, 6972 KB

Description:

This book contains part of the voluminous work-related private correspondence sent to Sir Ernest Satow while he was Her Britannic Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary in Japan (1895-1900) from the Satow Papers held at The National Archives, Kew, London, transcribed and published in full from handwritten originals with annotations for scholars and researchers. Some of the letters are from superiors at the Foreign Office and some from the Office of Works about buildings, but most are from subordinates (Tokyo legation staff and consular staff at Hakodate, Kobe and Nagasaki). A very few replies from Satow himself are included. This book offers a rare glimpse at hitherto unpublished material. Crown copyright material is reproduced by permission of the Controller of HMSO. Also on all amazon websites.


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History

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This content can be found in the following groups: UK Writers Group, European creators Group, Japan group Group

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Reviews:

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Historic and Fascinating
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16 Aug 2005
In making these historic documents available to the general public Professor Ruxton has performed a valuable service. They make fascinating reading.
Fascinating Insight and a boon to students and enthusiasts of British-Japanese Diplomacy
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4 Aug 2005
Firstly, let's dispel a myth that the subject matter would be deemed by many to be elitist in nature and therefore attractive to only the same, and boring with it - bunkum - it's great. This is a fascinating series of correspondal exchanges between Sir Ernest Satow, British Minister in Japan at the rapidly closing Victorian era, and many of his subordinates, and a goodly stack of letters and notes etc which flew to and fro between his peers and superiors, from his own Department and others, at home and in Japan, throughout his tenure. There are letters which are concerned with the possible dire implications if the correct protocol etc was not adhered to. There are the more usual 'grist to the mill' within the Diplomatic Service musings, of trade problems involving China, Russia, Germany and France, and of course, the UK ( I am British, so please allow me this perspective! ), in relation to Japan, its trade relations and even its marine accesibility - and even a quintessentially British exchange in the face of possible disaster of, wait for it - 'I don't like the climate!'Who else but a bowler hatted Englishman abroad with rather itchy tweeds in the Far-East? Technically, this is a work of great devotion, skill, diligence and application in the salvaging and digital preservation of the sepia-tinged Bull Dog Spirit, ironically manifest here in the formal comfortably reserved words of a British Diplomat of a gone but not forgotten age, complete with salary of £4,000 PA Plus £1,000 for 'outfits'. If this 'money for clobber' was Per Annum, then I'll have to see 'Er Indoors' - I don't even get that now! Well done, Ian Ruxton, on the excellent presentation of another window into Britain and Japan's Diplomatic past. Cheers, and here's to the next instalment.
John Haines
An outstanding Work
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28 Jul 2005
This book gives a detailed account of impressions of the preoccupation and language of Victorian diplomacy and consular work in late 19th Century Japan.This informations will be of immense help to the researchers as well as the general readers.On the whole, an outstanding work By Ian Ruxton.
Gopal Lahiri
www.lulu.com/gopallahiri

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