The Nanban Trade is a historical title, accounting Japanese Trade linked to Southeast Asian Trade networks [The World Spice Trade], recorded in the west by the Catholic Iberian-Spanish "middle-man" exporters in the 16th century. The Sino-Japanese term Nanban, Namban, or Nanman derives from a purely Asian coastal or "East Asian Trade network" of markets tied to China, Southeast Asia, Asia Pacific, and India.
Western contact with East Asian Trade Networks
During the Renaissance periods in Southern western Europe, territories including France, Italy, and Spain with Portugal, were recently freed from under an Arabian Caliphate regime, who left its "ship designs" in its libraries along with a mass of Arab education. The rebellious Catholics who had bartered their way into Mongol-Chinese favor, secured protection in Portuguese regions.
The Portuguese Spanish Catholics were then allowed access to East Asian markets. The Dutch Christian Protestants launched to East Asia in the year 1598, however their protection was not yet secured, who immediately bartered with Japanese Lords to stay in the region. The De Liefde was the first Dutch owned ship to arrive on Japanese Imperial shores.
This period involved The Portuguese Rutter Conflicts, where Dutch Protestant Christian ships soute the valued nautical secrets of "The Catholic Magellan's Pass", to Southeast Asian and Indus-Asian Markets. The Dutch were labeled pirates by Catholics, deeming them an illegal entity, who had not been sanctioned by the Mongol-Chinese Empire.
Multimedia on the beginning of European Trade in East Asia
The most famous western Media portrayal of New European trade in Ancient East Asia has been the 1980 movie "Shogun", a nine [9] hour movie series, based on historical events, starring George Richard Chamberlain. The film detailed the Protestant Christian trade feud with Catholic Iberian-Spanish, and the need for Japanese Imperial trade links. The Japanese impressions of first encounters are well remembered, partly for old western unhygienic routines.
The reputation of "stinking" followed European traders up until the first World War when medical attentions demanded strict cleanliness. Many traders from western Europe up until the 1800s, to the European Influenza epidemics to 1920, thought that baths would make a man "fowl sick". The first "public baths in Europe", link to increased international contact with Japanese, Indonesian, Mongolian-Chinese, and Polynesian cultures.
Priceless Japanese Art works are today references to the periods, created mostly between 1550-1600 AD, by the Kanō School of Art. The Kanō Art school worked only for the highest houses of Samurai, Shoguns, and for the Imperial houses of Japanese Dynasties.
Further Reading:
[-] History of The Black Ships to Asia
Western contact with East Asian Trade Networks
During the Renaissance periods in Southern western Europe, territories including France, Italy, and Spain with Portugal, were recently freed from under an Arabian Caliphate regime, who left its "ship designs" in its libraries along with a mass of Arab education. The rebellious Catholics who had bartered their way into Mongol-Chinese favor, secured protection in Portuguese regions.
The Portuguese Spanish Catholics were then allowed access to East Asian markets. The Dutch Christian Protestants launched to East Asia in the year 1598, however their protection was not yet secured, who immediately bartered with Japanese Lords to stay in the region. The De Liefde was the first Dutch owned ship to arrive on Japanese Imperial shores.
This period involved The Portuguese Rutter Conflicts, where Dutch Protestant Christian ships soute the valued nautical secrets of "The Catholic Magellan's Pass", to Southeast Asian and Indus-Asian Markets. The Dutch were labeled pirates by Catholics, deeming them an illegal entity, who had not been sanctioned by the Mongol-Chinese Empire.
Multimedia on the beginning of European Trade in East Asia
The most famous western Media portrayal of New European trade in Ancient East Asia has been the 1980 movie "Shogun", a nine [9] hour movie series, based on historical events, starring George Richard Chamberlain. The film detailed the Protestant Christian trade feud with Catholic Iberian-Spanish, and the need for Japanese Imperial trade links. The Japanese impressions of first encounters are well remembered, partly for old western unhygienic routines.
The reputation of "stinking" followed European traders up until the first World War when medical attentions demanded strict cleanliness. Many traders from western Europe up until the 1800s, to the European Influenza epidemics to 1920, thought that baths would make a man "fowl sick". The first "public baths in Europe", link to increased international contact with Japanese, Indonesian, Mongolian-Chinese, and Polynesian cultures.
Priceless Japanese Art works are today references to the periods, created mostly between 1550-1600 AD, by the Kanō School of Art. The Kanō Art school worked only for the highest houses of Samurai, Shoguns, and for the Imperial houses of Japanese Dynasties.
Further Reading:
[-] History of The Black Ships to Asia