Source 19.1: Continuing Japanese Isolation

In response to concerns about Western intervention, the Japanese government, known as the Tokugawa shogunate, issued an edict that reiterated in the strongest possible terms the country’s long-standing posture of isolation from the West.

Questions to consider as you examine the source:

An Edict of Expulsion, 1825

We have issued instructions on how to deal with foreign ships on numerous occasions up to the present. In the Bunka era [1804–1817] we issued new edicts to deal with Russian ships. But a few years ago a British ship wreaked havoc in Nagasaki, and more recently their rowboats have been landing to procure firewood, water, and provisions. Two years ago they forced their way ashore, stole livestock and extorted rice. Thus they have become steadily more unruly, and moreover seem to be propagating their wicked religion among our people. This situation plainly cannot be left to itself.

All Southern Barbarians and Westerners, not only the English, worship Christianity, that wicked cult prohibited in our land. Henceforth, whenever a foreign ship is sighted approaching any point on our coast, all persons on hand should fire on and drive it off. If the vessel heads for the open sea, you need not pursue it; allow it to escape. If the foreigners force their way ashore, you may capture and incarcerate them, and if their mother ship approaches, you may destroy it as circumstances dictate.

Note that Chinese, Korean, and Ryukyuans [people from a group of islands south of Japan] can be differentiated [from Westerners] by the physiognomy and ship design, but Dutch ships are indistinguishable [from those of other Westerners]. Even so, have no compunctions about firing on [the Dutch] by mistake; when in doubt, drive the ship away without hesitation. Never be caught offguard.

Source: Bob Tadashi Wakabayashi, Anti-Foreignism and Western Learning in Early-Modern Japan (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1985), 60.