Sunday, January 8, 2017

Madrid, Spain.............Japan to Holland.....

Dejima - Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dejima
Dejima (Japanese: 出島, "exit island"), in old Western documents latinized as Decima, Desjima, ... In 1922, "Dejima Dutch Trading Post" was designated a Japanese national historic site. ... jurisdiction of Nagasaki to the Jesuits, and the Portuguese obtained the de facto monopoly on the silk trade with China through Macau.
History · ‎Organization · ‎Trade · ‎Ship arrivals

Japan–Netherlands relations - Wikipedia

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JapanNetherlands_relations
JapaneseDutch relations describes the foreign relations between Japan and the Netherlands. Relations between Japan and the Netherlands date back to 1609, when the first formal trade ...
Missing: monopoly

The Dutch in Nagasaki - artelino

https://www.artelino.com/articles/dutch_nagasaki.asp
This was the beginning of a successful Dutch trade monopoly with Japan that lasted until 1854. However, the presence of the Dutch was restricted to the tiny, ...

Dutch-Japanese relations | Netherlands Missions, Japan

japan.nlembassy.org › You and the Netherlands
The first Dutch ship ever to arrive in Japan was the "Liefde " ("Charity" or "Love"); it was one ... The protestant Dutch, whose first objective was trade and not the ...
Missing: monopoly

Beginning of Exchange between Japan and the Netherlands

www.ndl.go.jp/nichiran/e/s1/s1_1.html
The ship was de Liefde and was the first Dutch ship to reach Japan. ... trading companies and was given by the government a trading monopoly for areas east of ...

Challenges to Dutch Monopoly of Japanese Trade During the ... - JStor

https://www.jstor.org/stable/2049620
by PE Eckel - ‎1942 - ‎Cited by 1 - ‎Related articles
THE most serious threat to the Dutch monopoly of Japanese trade came from the ... Eastern trade the Dutch chartered neutral ships to freight cargoes be-.

7. The Dutch Monopoly on Trade

www.city.nagasaki.lg.jp/dejima/enbk/07_e.html
In 1609, the Dutch sent two ships to Japan and received permission from Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu to establish a factory (trading post) in Hirado in present-day 

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