The Merchant's Tale

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The Merchant's Tale Page 38

by Simon Partner


  de Coningh, Cees, 19, 38, 73–74

  Dejima, 12, 15

  democracy, in Japan, 207, 208, 219

  diseases: cholera epidemics, 34–35, 51, 183, 255n129; measles epidemics, 34–35, 185; prevention of, 182–83; scabies in Shinohara Chūemon’s family, 65–67, 68, 89, 185, 224; smallpox, 183, 184, 186; syphilis, 183, 184. See also hygiene; public health

  Dresden uprising of 1849, 106

  dressmaking services, 108

  drunkenness, 15, 51, 53–55, 55, 57, 119, 123, 145

  Dutch merchants: and antiforeign sentiment in Yokohama, 73; and Nagasaki trade, 8, 10, 12, 15; and Yokohama trade, 19, 24

  Dutch Reformed Church, 24, 25, 52

  Echigoya, 18, 43

  Echizen domain, 74, 157

  Edo: administration of, 44; and alternate-attendance system, 5, 81, 139, 165, 213; and antiforeign sentiment, 77, 78, 81, 83, 92, 93, 140; bookshops of, 114; British legation, 77, 78; British preparations for attack on, 84; brothel quarter of Yoshiwara, 15–16; cotton market in, 94, 97; decline of, 81–82, 139–40, 161–62, 213, 214; departure of shogun, 139–40; fall of, 160–61; inflation in, 136–37; licensed wholesalers in, 91–92; map of, 130; merchant houses of, 12, 13, 28, 40; murder of Japanese merchants for dealing with foreigners, 93; and Perry, 9; and political destabilization, 138, 140, 153–54, 156, 157, 159, 165; population of, 5, 139–40, 213; renamed as Tokyo, 161; restrictions on foreigners in, 11; route from Kōshū, 1; samurai in, 5, 44, 139, 153–54, 157, 161; Shinohara Chūemon in, 6, 7, 133, 149–50, 153, 154, 156–57, 165–66; Shinohara Chūemon’s business partners in, 101, 102; silk market in, 102; and Tokugawa shogunate, 5, 10, 11, 72, 133; urban consumer culture of, 5. See also Tokyo

  Edo Castle, 70, 154, 161–62

  “Ee janaika” (Everything’s good, isn’t it?) movement, 154

  Egawa Taroemon, 135

  eggs: trade in, 63, 64. See also silkworm egg cards

  Egypt, 94

  Elmira Gazette, 123

  entertainers, 45, 48, 110, 112

  expositions: Exposition universelle d’art et d’industrie, Paris (1867), 127, 129–30; Great International Exposition of 1862, Crystal Palace, London, 114, 127–28, 129

  Exposition universelle d’art et d’industrie, Paris (1867), 127, 129–30

  Ezo region, 8

  farmers: commercial crops of, 3, 208; dried sardines used as fertilizer, 63; economic opportunities for, 135, 136; and global markets, 137; and gōnō class, 5, 100; and land-tax system, 190–91; and loans, 100; as merchants, 7, 45, 100, 198; prohibitions on owning weapons, 132, 203; and quartz mining, 144; and rickshaws, 171–72; samurai as, 188; Shinohara Chūemon as, 3, 5, 6; and silkworm cultivation, 5–6; small-scale farmers, xix, 136, 208, 210; Steele on, 211; and technological advances, 121; tenant farmers, 100, 136; and Tokugawa shogunate, 139; and trade disputes, 30; trading networks of, 208–9; and transformation of local marketplace, 210; and transportation networks, 98–99; use of suffix “-emon,” 2; work of, 1; of Yokohama, 24

  Favre-Brandt, Charles, 109

  Favre-Brandt, James, 109

  ferry service, 46, 115–16, 161, 170

  feudal domains, 121–22, 187, 188. See also specific domains

  financial distress, 139, 190–91

  fires: fire of January 3, 1860, 73–74; fire of May 7, 1862, 75; fire of November 26, 1866, 62, 144–45, 147, 167

  fish: dried fish, 63, 64; salted fish, 64; trade in, 30, 64, 148

  five-household groups (goningumi), 44

  Five Products Edo Circulation Law (Gohin Edo Mawashi Rei), 91–92, 101–2

  food culture: changes in, 179, 180–81, 186; meat consumption, 25, 64, 83, 119, 123, 179, 181, 182, 241n82

  foods for foreigners, trade in, 64

  foreign merchants in Yokohama: banquet at foreign mercantile house, 119; and brothel quarter, 59–60; Chinese employees of, 54; Japanese employees of, 52; and market information, 176; proposed expulsion of, 79; relationship with Japanese merchants, 22–24, 30–32, 50, 51, 57, 77–78, 83, 92–93, 96, 138, 140, 156; and steamship services, 177. See also lifestyles of foreigners

  foreign military community in Yokohama: British military forces, 55–56; and military parades, 85, 120; population of, 56; sailors, 15, 50, 53–55, 55, 56, 60, 71, 74, 119, 180; and threat of war with Japan, 79, 81–86, 123, 140

  Fortune, Robert, 80

  France, 9, 11, 56

  Franco-Prussian War, 194

  fruit, trade in, 210

  fruit cultivation, 1, 3, 205

  Fujino Shōzaburō, 237n91

  Fujisawa, 171

  Fukuchi Gen’ichirō, 77–78

  Furushima Toshio, 209

  Fuzhou, 27

  gambling, 53

  Gankirō brothel, 26–27, 58–59, 59, 60, 61

  Genshichi, 172

  Genzaemon (business associate of Chūemon), 18

  Goble, Jonathan, 51, 171

  goji berries, 144

  gold: trade in, 105; world market rate for, 137

  gold rush: in California, 9, 106; in Yokohama, 35–39, 63

  gold-silver ratio, 36

  gōnō class, 5, 100, 209

  Gorōemon (business associate of Chūemon), 2, 7–8, 17, 70, 148

  Goseda Yoshimatsu, 110

  Gotō Sanemon, 6

  Gower, Samuel J., 31, 92–93

  grain production, and Kōshū province, 3

  grape cultivation, Kōshū grapes, 3, 5, 8, 246n50

  grapes: dried grapes, 3, 18, 30; trade in, 25, 63

  Great Britain: and disputes between Japanese merchants and British merchants, 31; and effect of American Civil War on cotton market, 94; imperial expansion into East and Southeast Asia, 9; Japanese trade relations with, 11, 39; soldiers and sailors in Yokohama, 54–56; and telegraph, 177

  Great International Exposition of 1862, Crystal Palace, London, 114, 127–28, 129

  grog shops, 56, 180

  Guangzhou, 27

  guidebooks of Yokohama: on customs house, 21–22; on foreign merchants, 50; on life in Yokohama, 105; on mistresses of foreigners, 60–61; on neighborhoods of Yokohama, 21; on photography, 112; on population of Yokohama, 45–46; portrayal of “Japaneseness,” 123, 219; and representations of foreigners, 114, 116–20, 121, 123; and “walking tour,” 115–16; and Western technology, 117–18, 120, 121, 212, 215; on Yokohama streets, 48

  gunboat diplomacy, in Yokohama, xviii, 85

  Gunma prefecture, 172, 182, 196, 198

  Gunnai region, 18

  Gunnaiya Kōemon, 17

  guns, 51, 79, 109, 125, 132, 133, 134

  Hachiōji: as commercial center, 13; protest of, 134–35; Shinohara Chūemon settling in, 200; silk market in, 6, 171

  hairstyles, 2, 108, 182, 201, 203, 204

  Hakodate: foreigners in, 92, 106; as port, 15; trade regulations in, 10

  Hall, Francis: on antiforeign sentiment, 76, 77, 83; on children’s theatrical troupes, 112; on clothing changes, 178; on farming and fishing community of Yokohama, 24; on impressions of Japan, 123; on inflation, 138; on Japanese servants, 58; on kobangs, 38; on leather workers, 47; on missionaries, 58; on peddlers, 48; on professional couriers, 98; tourism, 105; on villages in Edo hinterland, 4; on Yokohama brothel district, 26; on Yokohama festival, 41–42; on Yokohama porters, 46; on Yokohama shops, 20

  Hamaikari Umekichi “Little All Right,” 131–32

  Hamaikari troupe, 112, 131–32, 247n80

  Hanjirō (business associate of Chūemon), 103

  Hara Zenzaburō, 198–99

  Harris, Townsend, 9, 11–12, 15, 24

  Hatsukiku (Yokohama prostitute), 60

  Hayami Akira, 209

  Hayashi Tadasu, 109, 180

  Hayashi Yūteki, 109

  Hayashi village, 139

  Heco, Joseph (Hamada Hikozō), 106–7, 109, 174

  Heiei (business associate of Chūemon), 103

  Heijiemon (business associate of Chūemon), 139

  Heine, Wilhelm, 106–7

  Hepburn, Cl
ara, 24–25, 52, 109, 180

  Hepburn, James, 24–25, 52, 109

  Heusken, Henry, 15

  Higashi-Aburakawa: agriculture in, 3, 4–5; population of, 4; as Shinohara Chūemon’s home, 18, 49, 121, 122, 200, 205–6, 223; and silkworm egg cards, 103, 104, 147

  highways: Kaidō highway, 1; Kōshū Kaidō highway, 1–2, 84, 215; Nakasendō highway, 1, 134; Ōshu Kaidō highway, 1; post stations on, 3, 11, 98; Tōkaidō highway, 1, 11, 16, 47, 49, 74, 78, 171, 172, 178; woodblock prints of major highways, 1–2

  hikyaku (professional couriers), 95, 98–99, 162, 163–64, 169, 176, 177, 216

  Hillsborough, Romulus, 211

  Hitotsubashi, Lord (Tokugawa Yoshinobu, last shogun of Japan), 161

  Hizen domain, 130

  Hockley, Alan, 249n109

  Hodogaya, 17, 44, 79, 138, 161

  Holmes, Henry, 19

  Hong Kong, 51, 108, 170, 177, 178, 237n91

  Honjo, Yuki, 31, 236n72

  Hori Shōsuke, 101

  Hori Toshihiro, 138

  horse-drawn carriage services, 112, 170–71, 186, 215

  horse riding, 21, 51–52, 170

  Hotaru (Firefly), 169

  Hotta Masayoshi, 9–10

  household registration, 188–89

  housepainters, 108–9

  housing: housepainters, 108–9; housing changes in Yokohama, 178, 179, 186; Japanese-style one-story houses, 180; of leather workers, 47; and Paris exposition of 1867, 130; residential development of Yokohama for foreigners, 11, 19; shortage of housing for foreigners, 24; Western-style houses, 21, 49–50, 53, 80, 116, 117, 118

  Howell, David, 209

  hunting, 51

  hygiene, xx, 53, 178, 180, 182–83, 184, 186. See also public health

  Hyōgo, 156

  identity of Japanese people: local identities, 7, 121, 122, 141, 218, 223; national identity, xx, 82–83, 90, 121, 122–23, 130, 141, 181, 208, 216, 217, 218–19, 220; regional identities, 121–22, 141, 218

  Iemochi: death of, 140, 151; promise to expel foreigners, 79

  Ii Naosuke, 11–12, 39, 73

  Illustrated London News, 84–85, 110, 111, 124, 129

  imperial dynasty: and Japanese political ideology, 72–73, 76, 79, 80, 81, 83, 141, 157, 158, 208, 217–18. See also Meiji government

  “Imperial Japanese Troupe,” 131–32

  imported goods, 8, 109, 120, 121, 139, 179, 187, 196, 227

  indemnity payments, 79, 82, 83, 84, 86, 91

  India, 94, 101, 177

  individual freedom, 44, 238n9

  Inegawa-maru (steamship), 169

  inflation, in Japan, 136, 137, 138, 250n135

  inn of Shinohara Chūemon, 35, 165, 191, 192, 196, 197, 223, 224

  insurance networks, 45

  interest rates, 33, 65, 100, 173

  Isawa, 189, 200

  Ise, shrine of, 154

  Ishii Kanji, 53

  Ishikawaya Heiemon, 198

  Itakura Katsukiyo, 151

  Itō Chōgorō, 109

  Itō Jihei, 169

  Itō Kametarō, 109

  Itō Kōtarō, 109

  Iwakura, Lord, 160

  Iwase Tadanao, 10, 11

  Izumi Yōsuke, 171

  Japan: commercial economy of, 208–9, 210; connection to global markets, xix–xx, 8, 132, 135, 136–38, 209–10; and cultural exports, 131–32; democracy in, 208; domains of, 121–22, 143, 187, 188; financial system of, 35–39, 40, 137; food prices in, 137, 139; historical provinces of, 121–22; inflation in, 136, 137, 138, 250n135; Japanese images of, 127; lack of animal husbandry in, 25; major highways of, 1–2; manufacturing of, xx, 130; modern history of, 207; modern transformation of, xviii–xix, 114, 130, 168, 210; perceptions of, xx, 114–32, 219, 220; and perceptions of time, xx, 99, 123, 124, 214, 215; representations of, xx, 124, 127–30, 131, 132, 220; as unitary state, 40, 122, 130; Western conceptions of, 123–27, 249n109. See also specific cities and villages

  Japan Brewing Company, 181

  Japanese bodily practice: and clothing changes, 179–81, 186; and food culture, 179, 180–81, 186; and public urination, 180; transformations of, xx, xxi, 186

  Japanese clothes makers, 108

  Japanese-English dictionary, 109

  Japanese foreign policy: and commissioners of foreign affairs (gaikoku bugyō), 11, 12–14, 16; and export of currency, 33, 36–37; and gold-silver ratio, 36; and Perry’s U.S. naval fleet, 9; and sakoku no ryohō (the good policy of isolation), 12; and trade restrictions, 8, 9–10, 81, 101, 135–36

  Japaneseness, 123, 131, 141, 218–19

  Japanese New Year, 39, 65, 69, 75, 99

  Japan Gazette, 174

  Japan Herald, 174

  Japan Punch, 110

  Japan Times, 53, 58, 174

  japonisme, xx, 127, 130, 220

  Jardine, William, 23

  Jardine, Matheson firm, 23, 30, 31, 38, 50, 92, 145, 194, 237n82

  jinrikisha (rickshaws), 125, 168, 171–72, 215

  Johnston, William, 255n129

  Johnstone, Jean, 23

  Kagoshima, 86, 124

  Kaidō highway, 1

  Kaigai shinbun (Overseas news), 109, 174

  Kami Tsuruma village, 200

  Kanagawa: and Bashamichi, 170; brothel quarter of, 16; foreigners staying in, 19, 24–25; and laws against public urination, 180; and Meiji reforms, 187; merchants from, 17; murder of Japanese silk merchant in, 92; office of commissioners of foreign affairs in, 14, 16; and political destabilization, 138; and rickshaws, 172; road to Yokohama, 15; trade regulations in, 10–12; and village administration system, 189

  Kanagawa commissioners: and British military parade, 85; and brothel quarter of Yokohama, 15–16, 60; and building of Yokohama, 12–16; and construction of administrative buildings, 13; headquarters of, 13–14, 168; and installation of drains in streets of foreign settlement, 183–84; management of Yokohama, 39, 44–45; mediation between Japanese merchants and foreign merchants, 31; and merchants’ applications for building lots in Yokohama, 12–13; and plan for opening of Yokohama, 11–12, 14–15, 17; and regulations of Japanese behavior with foreigners, 20–21, 45; and restriction on foreign merchants’ export of staple foods, 138; and Richardson’s murder, 79; and taxation of Yokohama merchants, 152; and threat of attacks, 74

  Kanagawa court (saibansho), 31

  Kansai region, 139, 210

  kanten (agar-agar), xx, 30

  Kantō Plain, 5, 6, 63, 132, 160, 162, 198

  Kantō region: breakdown of law and order in, 132–35; iron bridge in, 168; relationship with Yokohama, xix, xxi–xxii, 74, 86, 168, 172, 214; and social class, 209; and taxes on Edo merchant houses, 152; and Tōdō, 157

  Katsu Kaishū, 159, 161–62, 211

  Katsunuma, 3, 160

  Kawada village, 189

  Kawahara Eikichi, 181

  Kawasaki region, 211

  Kawasaki Taishi (Buddhist temple), 78

  Kawauchi, 18

  Kazeshima (Yokohama prostitute), 60

  Keisan Eisen, Kōnosu, 2

  kelp, trade in, xx

  Keswick, William, 23–24, 30, 32, 34, 38, 50, 93

  Kin (foreign merchant’s mistress), 61

  King, Vincent, 58–59

  Kirin Beer, 181

  Kishida Ginkō, 109

  Kiyū, 60

  koban coins, 36, 37, 38, 137

  kobangs, 38

  Kōfu: amulets and talismans of Shinto and Buddhist deities in, 154; and food shortages, 139; jurisdiction of, 4; plan to evacuate shogun’s harem to, 81; quartz industry in, 144; Satsuma occupation of, 160; Shinohara Chūemon buying socks from, 88; silk market in, 3, 5–6, 135–36, 210; and village administration, 189

  Kōfu basin, 4

  Kōfu plain, 18

  Kojikahara Jihei, 96

  Kojima Tamemasa, 132

  Kokugaku (National Learning) school, 72, 83, 217

  Komatsu, Prince, 158

  Komazawa Buzaemon, 5, 148

  Komazawa family, 5

 
; Kōmei-maru (steamship), 169

  Kōmura Senjirō, 43, 62, 80–81, 149, 198

  Korea, and Japanese foreign policy, 8

  Kōshū Kaidō highway, 1–2, 84, 215

  Kōshū Products Company (Kōshū Sanbutsu Kaisho), 7–8, 63, 221

  Kōshū province: agriculture in, 3, 5–6; amulets and talismans of Shinto and Buddhist deities in, 154; cotton market of, 94, 95–96, 97, 99–100, 101, 135–36; economy of, xxii, 3, 5, 135, 136, 149, 212; military service in, 132, 133–34, 139; and political destabilization, 138; products of, 30, 101, 122, 218, 219, 246n50; and profit-seeking dynamic of rural capitalist system, 100; route to Edo and Yokohama, 1, 162; Shinohara Chūemon as representative of, 7, 18, 29, 30, 40, 45, 63, 82, 83, 100–101, 121–22, 141, 218, 219, 223; Shinohara Chūemon’s business network in, 96, 101, 102, 143, 148, 168–69, 197, 216, 217; silk market of, 102, 104, 135–36, 148, 162, 163, 196, 210; and taxation, 190–91; and telegraph, 178; Tokugawa family in, 4; and village administration system, 189–91

  Kōshūya (House of Kōshū), 17, 18, 122, 218

  Kuper (admiral), 84

  Kuroiwa Jubei, 22

  Kurokoma village, 18

  Kusakabe Kinbei, 111

  Kusumoto Ine, 106

  Kyoto: imperial dynasty in, 2, 72, 81; Mitsui family headquarters in, 43, 150; rebels advancing on, 133–34; reports of civil war in, 151–52; and samurai proimperial loyalists, 76–77, 79; Shinohara Chūemon on strife in, 86, 175; silk merchants murdered in, 92; textile industries in, 139, 210; and Tokugawa shogunate, 79–80, 83, 140

  Kyōya, 162, 176

  laborers, 45, 46, 136–38, 179

  lacquerware: and bindings of photographic albums, 126; and Paris exposition of 1867, 130; trade in, 20, 21, 22, 30, 64, 219

  Lancashire and Cheshire Operatives Relief Fund, 94, 244n14

  land reclamation, 168

  land reform of 1946, 188

  land registration, 188

  land survey, 190

  land-tax system, 14, 152, 155, 188, 190–91

  laundry services, 108

  lawsuits, 51

  Lay, N. H., 173

  leather workers, 47

  lending, money-lending businesses, 100, 164–65, 190, 208, 223, 245n33

  lifestyles of foreigners: and alcohol consumption, 180–81; and daily routines, 21, 117, 118, 121; foreigners playing billiards, 118; foreigners shopping in Yokohama, 19–20, 21, 22; and meat consumption, 24–25, 61, 64, 72, 118–19, 123, 181, 199–200, 219; and racial hierarchy, 120, 219; and technology, 118–20, 121, 212; and Western-style hairdressers, 108; and Western-style tailors, 107–8, 121, 182, 199, 224; and Yokohama’s first dairy, 113

 

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