Synopsis
A window into early 17th‑century global trade and diplomacy, told through a shipboard diary. This nonfiction collection presents the day‑to‑day workings, plans, and adventures of an English merchant in Japan, with letters and correspondence that reveal the challenges of cross‑cultural exchange, navigation, and diplomacy in a turbulent era.
The diary chronicles life around Firando and Cochi, detailing shipments, political meetings, ship arrivals, and the daily routines of merchants and mariners. It offers firsthand glimpses of how trade routes linked Java, the Philippines, Malacca, Canton, and beyond, and how local rulers and foreign powers interacted with English traders.
What you’ll experience
- Firsthand entries on ship movements, arrivals, and cargoes in 1615–1622
- Descriptions of negotiations, gifts, and tensions between English merchants and local authorities
- References to letters, correspondence, and the flow of information across continents
- A vivid sense of life at sea and in port towns during a formative era of global trade
Ideal for readers of maritime history, colonial diaries, and early English diplomacy in Asia.
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