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First Japanese Visitor After Sakoku Describes European Life // 1862 Tokugawa Embassy Primary Source 

Voices of the Past
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More from Japanese national icon Fukuzawa Yukichi. After his groundbreaking trip to America, here we have the first detailed Japanese perspective of Europe, after the Sakoku period of isolation. England, France, Holland and Russia.
Extract from The Autobiography of Fukuzawa Yukichi translated by Eiichi Kiyooka, 1934 edition.
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- Music courtesy of:-
- Epidemic Sound
- Voice actor & editor:-
David Kelly
We try to use copyright free images at all times. However if we have used any of your artwork or maps then please don't hesitate to contact me and we’ll be more than happy to give the appropriate credit.
Thanks to:
OKJaguar
opethpainterFlickr: Hôtel du Louvre
Alessio Bragadini
CharmaineZoe's Marvelous Melange French Fashion Plate - 1848-1864
Operating theatre: The original uploader was MykReeve at English Wikipedia.
This Wikipedia and Wikimedia Commons image is from the user Chris 73 and is freely available at //commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sea_of_Japan_Map.png under the creative commons cc-by-sa 3.0 license.

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17 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 2,7 тыс.   
@VoicesofthePast
@VoicesofthePast 4 года назад
Hello! So, continuing the adventures of Fukuzawa Yukichi. Here he is as part of the first Japanese embassy to Europe after the Sakoku period of isolation. Hope you enjoy it! Let me know if you would like to see a third and final part...because it's coming Saturday!
@yodef6828
@yodef6828 4 года назад
Good video
@MAGICOmagique
@MAGICOmagique 4 года назад
Absolutely fascinating.
@henryasselin123
@henryasselin123 4 года назад
You should do like an hour video just about this guy this is gold
@fraserhenderson7839
@fraserhenderson7839 4 года назад
What a ride! I am Completely Engaged in this character. Thank you! This gentleman has his head screwed on correctly. He is a kind of Marco Polo in a different setting and with higher morals. He exhibits such grace and wisdom. I ache that there is no video record of this man. Those living today will never experience the cultural divides this adventurous soul worked so hard to bridge. We know now about each other's peculiarities because of him and those of his mindset. His manner of thinking and action brings the world closer together wherever it happens.
@killerkonnat
@killerkonnat 4 года назад
Is there more to his story, or was this the end? This and the first European visitors to Japan have been my favourite stories so far.
@Growmetheus
@Growmetheus 3 года назад
Dude went from “can i buy a house” to “I WILL CONQUER HOLLAND” way too fast.
@rider8751
@rider8751 3 года назад
it is never too fast
@heliotropezzz333
@heliotropezzz333 3 года назад
And the Dutch only understood the question in terms of trade (merchants). They used to have a saying 'God is good, but trade is better'.
@DutchmanDavid
@DutchmanDavid 3 года назад
@@heliotropezzz333 welk gezegde is dat?
@swamidude2214
@swamidude2214 3 года назад
Basically what we did in other countries, buy land from the locals, then build a fortress on it xd
@heliotropezzz333
@heliotropezzz333 3 года назад
@@DutchmanDavid It's the saying I quoted. 'God is good but trade is better'. I'm not sure who said it. I'll have to check. I can't find it on google but my husband told me of it. P.S. Apparently it is a Dutch proverb.
@Pedro-et2pu
@Pedro-et2pu 4 года назад
"Nearly all the people I've talked to were eager to come to Japan " Them OG weeabos
@nuralibolataev4474
@nuralibolataev4474 4 года назад
I don't wanna be "that guy" but...eager, sorry.
@Pedro-et2pu
@Pedro-et2pu 4 года назад
@@nuralibolataev4474 lul
@tonytomato100
@tonytomato100 4 года назад
@@nuralibolataev4474 he's typing in accents
@honkeyhoohaa9307
@honkeyhoohaa9307 4 года назад
Sweetbutter Cupcakes Lol atleast they cared about Japanese traditional culture. Cant say the same about Weebs.
@mhikosale7233
@mhikosale7233 4 года назад
Wait so the whole weabo thing was heridetary all along
@ginochristiano1397
@ginochristiano1397 4 года назад
"Prussia...spreading like a rising sun." *foreshadowing*
@semiperfekt
@semiperfekt 4 года назад
Oof
@buzzyinurface
@buzzyinurface 4 года назад
Only a few years later Germany was formed when Prussia steamrolled France in the Franco Prussian war
@fumomofumosarum5893
@fumomofumosarum5893 4 года назад
yet, he didn't even visit it apparently : (
@michaelbalfour3170
@michaelbalfour3170 4 года назад
Literally paused the video to find such a comment. Was not disappointed lol
@kissarococo2459
@kissarococo2459 4 года назад
Claiming to be a prussian today is a revolutionary act.
@B0XMATTER
@B0XMATTER 4 года назад
3:45 Just imagine for a moment. Walking to get a cup of coffee to you and your companion waiting for you in your hotel room. Suddenly, a group of no less than ten samurai, confused and lost, face you in the hallway, swords, ponytails and all. Must have been quite a sight indeed.
@rogerr.8507
@rogerr.8507 3 года назад
damn my revolver only has 6 shots, i guess ill have to shoot the chandelier!
@futavadumnezo
@futavadumnezo 3 года назад
It's crazy today not to mention back then. Japan was and always be that awkward and weird cousin of the World.
@Xandros999
@Xandros999 3 года назад
The Lost Samurai, sequel to The Lost Vikings.
@ShonaMcCarthy
@ShonaMcCarthy 3 года назад
None of them were samurai. All of them were diplomats.
@basedeltazero714
@basedeltazero714 3 года назад
@@ShonaMcCarthy Those are not mutually exclusive. At all, and while they weren't all samurai, a significant number including Fukuzawa Yukichi were.
@jayasuryangoral-maanyan3901
@jayasuryangoral-maanyan3901 4 года назад
The stories of these diplomats honestly feel like period fiction, the fact that they're real makes it so wholesome
@Mnnvint
@Mnnvint 4 года назад
Remember it was written down considerably later, at a time everyone had a much better understanding of what was going on.
@shen1801
@shen1801 4 года назад
Gives you a really nice perspective on how things used to be like 100 years ago
@growingmelancholy8374
@growingmelancholy8374 4 года назад
Who said it's real?
@RefinedRetroReviews
@RefinedRetroReviews 4 года назад
@@growingmelancholy8374 that sir is by nature what calling something a primary source is. A historian is arguing that it can at least be used as source of what one person's view of the past was.
@jed-henrywitkowski6470
@jed-henrywitkowski6470 4 года назад
He mentioned an observing an arrogant Brit... I, an American have something in common with this long-dead Japanese man. And his surname is Alcock, to boot! I was a salesperson in a mall once, when I observed two English service members walking in step, with one another. Their demeanor was saying, we are English troops back on American soil, and there is nothing any of you Yanks can do about it. If I had not been on company time, I likely have approached the whole situation, rather differently.
@caesar4237
@caesar4237 4 года назад
What a humble fellow. When he receives his salary the first thing he does is give it to his parents instead of blowing it on something.
@GiveMeBackMyUsernameYouTube
@GiveMeBackMyUsernameYouTube 4 года назад
It astounds and disgusts me the amount of millionaire footballers today whose parents are left dirt poor because their own child doesn't see fit to give back to those that raised them. Honestly, I don't want much in the way of material possessions, I have pretty much everything I want or need, but if I ever became rich I can think of so many things I could do to make my parents' lives better. A new leg so my mother wouldn't be stuck in a wheelchair for the rest of her life would be a good start.
@juanzulu1318
@juanzulu1318 4 года назад
@@GiveMeBackMyUsernameRU-vid honoring the older is a cultural thing. We in the West seem to have lost it or maybe never had.
@Pittigpiertje
@Pittigpiertje 4 года назад
@@GiveMeBackMyUsernameRU-vid do you have examples? i have big doubts about your claim
@M4gl4d
@M4gl4d 4 года назад
@@GiveMeBackMyUsernameRU-vid On the ther hand, consider the huge number of child actors whose education was destroyed because their parents wanted to make money off their children's talent, and were thus raised as penyless and uneducated adults because their parents did not give them ANY education, and got all the money from their children's contracts.
@Aiveq
@Aiveq 4 года назад
that like... what many of us would do. think if you suddenly received 1 mil of local currency, wouldnt you share some of it with close ones? yes, many would
@n0isyturtle
@n0isyturtle 3 года назад
"We were overburdened by the useless gear we brought so we shoved it off onto some poor sap and acted like it was a gift." and thus the rumors of Japanese being great gift givers began...
@jonathanwells223
@jonathanwells223 3 года назад
Sounds like half of the MMO players I know
@nopingengie2102
@nopingengie2102 3 года назад
Selling off common quality items
@AbsolXGuardian
@AbsolXGuardian 3 года назад
I mean if he meant a servant by a lesser member of the welcoming committee, it would legimately be a nice gift for his family and community.
@dans9097
@dans9097 3 года назад
@@AbsolXGuardian Seriously though, a diplomatic envoy's supply of food is probably pretty substantial, and given it's rice it could store well. Being suddenly given your family's grocery budget in a year, alongside trinkets that in Europe might sell for their novelty alone, that's quite the gift. Food and general goods are cheap in much of the modern world, but most don't appreciate that barely a century or two ago, even a full set of cutlery might be a luxury.
@lightzpy8049
@lightzpy8049 4 года назад
Japanese people in Paris: "Too many alleyways and doors" Japan Tokyo in 21st century: *HOLD MY BEER*
@TheSuperKiwy
@TheSuperKiwy 3 года назад
Guess they had to compensate
@hhero4841
@hhero4841 3 года назад
@Pikora Animation hold my ochinchin
@staycgirlsitsgoingdown4745
@staycgirlsitsgoingdown4745 3 года назад
@@hhero4841 👁️👄👁️
@hhero4841
@hhero4841 3 года назад
@hij hold my unko kek
@arb985
@arb985 3 года назад
Hold my biiru
@anonimosu7425
@anonimosu7425 4 года назад
*will it be fine for a foreigner to buy a piece of land to build a fortress*
@Balajohn_
@Balajohn_ 4 года назад
Asking for a friend
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz 4 года назад
As long as it is an unarmed fortress...
@-gemberkoekje-5547
@-gemberkoekje-5547 4 года назад
@@LuisAldamiz I geuss that does make sense. Just, allow them to build whatever they want, but make it illegal to station any troops there.
@josefstalin4532
@josefstalin4532 4 года назад
@@LuisAldamiz Not really, firearms were pretty much as unregulated as they were in the United States until roughly the 1890s
@shudheshvelusamy7644
@shudheshvelusamy7644 4 года назад
I think one of the reasons he asked that question was that in many colonies of European countries, many Europeans bought land then built fortresses on them, which sometimes caused conflicts.
@DevonPalmer98
@DevonPalmer98 4 года назад
This guy’s life was super rad, can’t believe I never heard of him before this series
@thekhans2823
@thekhans2823 4 года назад
@ Devon Palmer , Well you have now
@ConstantinKlose-sj4mb
@ConstantinKlose-sj4mb 4 года назад
That's the thing right? We never hear of non-western travellers (or even other important people besides the occasional Genghis Khan). We always see the world through the perspective of the Westerner discovering things.
@DevonPalmer98
@DevonPalmer98 4 года назад
天龍 Surprised only one movie has been made about him in the 90’s, this would be the perfect story to adapt. A reverse on the usual western traveler cliche would be nice to see
@scorpixel1866
@scorpixel1866 4 года назад
@@ConstantinKlose-sj4mb No, we flat out don't hear anything beside the most known ones and our own national figures, do you know about commandant Cousteau? He's reputed for his immense contribution to marine life research here in France, what about General Leclerc or Jean Moulin, the second and third most important leaders of the résistance, Moulin is even a martyr as he died from torture in the hands of the germans. And i couldn't get the name of any non pre-germany important figure, because i'm not German and i would have to actively search instead of opening school manuals (as far as what's asked in university) to know about it. There's no worldwide bias toward "westerners" there's bias toward our own ones and the ones that shaped history on the front scene.
@brianlav1
@brianlav1 4 года назад
@@scorpixel1866 I thought everyone knew about Jacques-Yves Cousteau. He did an English documentary series. He is probably less familiar with the younger generations. I loved his show and inspired by him.
@tobiasglendenning7966
@tobiasglendenning7966 4 года назад
I have absolutely fallen in love with Fukuzama Yukichi's writings. He feels so human, it really humanises the past.
@iancanavan2324
@iancanavan2324 3 года назад
I agree Tobias. I wonder how he would feel about us now in the future. It’s a very interesting listen.
@ayymao1017
@ayymao1017 3 года назад
Yeah, because going by progressiveness it was impossible that humans existed before 2008- I mean before we abolish all cops. Everything was just evil and demon and misery.
@kwj_nekko_6320
@kwj_nekko_6320 3 года назад
Go to your local bank (better if it's specialized for foreign exchanges), pay approximately $100 and boom! You have your own Fukuzawa Yukichi portrait in handheld size!!!
@jceepf
@jceepf 3 года назад
But he is detested by the other Asians as you can imagine. In part, because he realized rapidly that neither China nor Korea could modernize. Thus Japan had to become like the West, ultimately imperialist. It is hard to blame 100% the Japanese for that reaction to Korean and Chinese arrogance.
@user-si7so1kb5j
@user-si7so1kb5j 2 года назад
@@jceepf huh? Japan helped modernize China and South Korea because of the fear that Asia would become a prey to Europe. But it turned into a wrong choice when it could be done by colonization.
@Metaphix
@Metaphix 4 года назад
lol his synopsis could've been "The people are nice, governments are annoying tho" Perfect description of Europe
@GlamStacheessnostalgialounge
@GlamStacheessnostalgialounge 4 года назад
Perfect example of the whole world honestly.
@napoleon8017
@napoleon8017 4 года назад
@@GlamStacheessnostalgialounge not america
@vincentcabezas7147
@vincentcabezas7147 4 года назад
@@dr282 nah not america
@vincentcabezas7147
@vincentcabezas7147 4 года назад
@@dr282 thats true, but not the part about "people are nice"
@automnejoy5308
@automnejoy5308 4 года назад
Yes, democracy does tend to be petty and annoying because you actually have to let people voice opinions. Imagine that.
@idot3331
@idot3331 4 года назад
I like how the most confusing thing for him was understanding two-party politics and parliament. Watch a video from the house of commons today and it's still just a bunch of people yelling at each other.
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz 4 года назад
Ooordah, oooordah!
@juanzulu1318
@juanzulu1318 4 года назад
I find it interesting that it was hard for him to see the difference between fighting with words and fighting wirh weapons.
@axelpatrickb.pingol3228
@axelpatrickb.pingol3228 4 года назад
While the presiding officer is screaming "Order!" in the most British manner possible and being a pompous git about...
@HeriSuranegara
@HeriSuranegara 4 года назад
@@LuisAldamiz oh.. i know that reference
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz 4 года назад
@@juanzulu1318 - True. I guess that Japan was (and to some extent still is) such a hierarchical society that divergence of opinion within a common (national) framework was not conceived: either you agree with the Emperor or you agree with the Emperor, there's no choice.
@DsfgrdLzrd
@DsfgrdLzrd 4 года назад
Russian Evoys said they could claim the world by painting it red? They were truely ahead of their time xD
@DennisTrovato
@DennisTrovato 4 года назад
They were obviously bluffing. There is no way they actually had that amount of red paint.
@slavj
@slavj 4 года назад
@@DennisTrovato Arghm... Soviet... *Cough*
@Cd5ssmffan
@Cd5ssmffan 4 года назад
@@slavj no shit
@houstonhelicoptertours1006
@houstonhelicoptertours1006 4 года назад
But instead: communism and breadlines :^)
@CleversonSantos
@CleversonSantos 4 года назад
Lol...trully
@gibbethoskins8621
@gibbethoskins8621 3 года назад
Imagine walking around London at that time dressed like that and casually carrying... two Samurai swords 😆
@jamiej5229
@jamiej5229 3 года назад
dont forget they are trained in swords, they must have felt pretty save ;)
@TheDemons2011
@TheDemons2011 3 года назад
Jamie J in a country that had guns? Yeah no.
@michaelsrite822
@michaelsrite822 3 года назад
Sounds like the blks in london now.... Except our "diverse" people carry machetes instead. "Diversity is our strength" and all that bullshit.
@carolesmith4864
@carolesmith4864 3 года назад
@@michaelsrite822 Yeah, and the English people have no guns. Or butter knives.
@Wiktorino1984
@Wiktorino1984 3 года назад
In that times people walk with sabre.
@stumilesyt
@stumilesyt 4 года назад
I actually read this book when I studied at Hokkaido Uni for a year, it was so expensive you weren't allowed to take it out the library! Amazing read though, Fukuzawa is pretty funny even if he wouldn't admit it himself! Thanks for doing it justice
@simtak89
@simtak89 3 года назад
Keio Uni has a free pdf of the original book on their website now!
@Ennocb
@Ennocb 3 года назад
Tak Oshima Oh what! Where? I wanna read it! Gonna search for it rn
@Ennocb
@Ennocb 3 года назад
Found it!
@jasonchen6840
@jasonchen6840 3 года назад
@@Ennocb can you give a link?
@moritamikamikara3879
@moritamikamikara3879 3 года назад
@@simtak89 Link pls
@fledadmiral8826
@fledadmiral8826 4 года назад
Today Yukichi travels everywhere in this world as a paper currency
@gogl0l386
@gogl0l386 4 года назад
Ey that's a beautiful poetic point
@antikokalis
@antikokalis 4 года назад
That was beautiful. Thank you
@darthcheney7447
@darthcheney7447 4 года назад
Very fitting that he should be on the currency
@ulutiu
@ulutiu 4 года назад
He's the guy on 10,000 yen notes
@samuraijaydee
@samuraijaydee 4 года назад
Which note is he on?
@wyattrivers700
@wyattrivers700 4 года назад
I like the inclusion of the anecdote at 7:55 This confusion was reflective of all Japanese attitudes at the time. The concept of public speaking and debate were utterly foreign to Japan. A feudal society doesn't have need for debate after all; one is expected to follow one's master without question. In order to try to explain this concept of public speaking, Fukuzawa had to invent an entirely new word, _enzetsu_ (演説). When Fukuzawa returned to Japan, he wrote a series of books called _Seiyo Jijo_ (Conditions in the West) describing how Western people lived. These were written in plain Japanese vernacular, as opposed to scholarly Chinese, allowing the common people of Japan to learn about these foreign lands. It was immensely popular.
@Ruhrpottpatriot
@Ruhrpottpatriot 4 года назад
Not quite. In a feudal society (as opposed to an absolutist one), there's lots of debate. Yes, you owe your allegienace to a lord, but the lord owes you equivalent amounts back in protection, it's a symbiotic relationship, in theory at least. No feudal society was entirely feudal, no absolutist society was entirely absolutist. Sparse public speaking and debate is a distintively asian trait, however.
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz 4 года назад
Most interesting. I thought something on the line you say but you explain it better than I could.
@wyattrivers700
@wyattrivers700 4 года назад
@@Ruhrpottpatriot That's perhaps a better way to put it; it's the strict hierarchy of Japanese society that was responsible for the lack of public speaking and debate, not its feudal system.
@whyuhatan
@whyuhatan 4 года назад
I'm sure the members of the anti-foreigner movement for not happy about that
@kirgan1000
@kirgan1000 4 года назад
What do "enzetsu" translate to? Public argumentation?
@flintyleader7168
@flintyleader7168 3 года назад
France: Bonjour Misure, enjoy your stay at our one of our greatest hotels and sample our fine foods Britain: Greetings sirs, let us debate political theory Holland: Hallo our friends from the east, make yourselves comfortable Russia: Hey kids wanna see a dead body
@Terminatror43
@Terminatror43 3 года назад
*Monsieur
@fatitankeris6327
@fatitankeris6327 3 года назад
An operated body isn't always dead I thought...
@warlock5718
@warlock5718 3 года назад
@@fatitankeris6327 just go with the joke, comrade.
@sunhoodednomadranger
@sunhoodednomadranger 3 года назад
Ancient Greek Philosophers: " too bad we never meet those japanese embassy to ask them deep ass question's : ( "
@psiFellow
@psiFellow 3 года назад
@Longface John Don't comment in English when you have nothing
@admiralbutterscotch5147
@admiralbutterscotch5147 4 года назад
Starting to think Napoleon could of just bought Holland with that loophole.
@AdmiralVortex
@AdmiralVortex 4 года назад
If he had, I'm convinced it'd be the most Dutch thing he's ever done
@roodborstkalf9664
@roodborstkalf9664 4 года назад
He didn't have the money, so he took the forts without paying.
@drpepper3838
@drpepper3838 3 года назад
Netherlands is small but do you really think he had enough money to buy all of the Netherlands...please
@xandercorp6175
@xandercorp6175 3 года назад
@@drpepper3838 Just enough of the Netherlands to build a strategic fort that would have given him Holland. Investment, my good man.
@viracocha6093
@viracocha6093 3 года назад
*could have
@2012escapee1
@2012escapee1 4 года назад
I like this guy. He has an open spirit of adventure.
@chiefpurrfect8389
@chiefpurrfect8389 4 года назад
Sending his money to his mom, being embarrassed on his friend's behalf for not knowing european bathroom etiquette, dancing around admitting blood/gore scares him clearly being embarrassed about it... Dude was a cinnamon roll.
@More_Row
@More_Row 4 года назад
Chief Purrfect Hes A decent thinking human, unsure what you mean by cinnamon roll but I’m guessing you’re calling him a pussy or something?
@KipTM
@KipTM 4 года назад
Moriarty Vivaldi more so seems like infantilzation than that
@diablo.the.cheater
@diablo.the.cheater 4 года назад
@@More_Row I am not sure, but I think saying someone is a "cinnamon roll" is praise, like saying cute or heartwarming.
@dragonbane4577
@dragonbane4577 4 года назад
@@More_Row it means hes sweet and likeably
@scrambled5948
@scrambled5948 4 года назад
There should be a movie based on this guy
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz 4 года назад
Not enough action, it'd be "nouvelle vague".
@griffca4814
@griffca4814 4 года назад
I think there is. An old Japanese movie
@jamesmeyer6081
@jamesmeyer6081 4 года назад
I think you misspelled 5 Season Television Series
@rokkfel4999
@rokkfel4999 4 года назад
James Meyer the story of yukichis journeys or the Japanese diplomat either one works
@brachiator1
@brachiator1 4 года назад
A movie would be very cool. Of course, you would have to add a love interest. ;) I am curious, though, as to whether he met or had opinions about European women.
@marcolin7721
@marcolin7721 4 года назад
"The country in Europe which gave us the kindest welcome, was Holland." Mooi!
@robertdegroot8302
@robertdegroot8302 4 года назад
It's because we used to be the only country (apart from China) that was allowed to trade with Japan for 250 years before that point. See William Adams' fascinating story.
@appleslover
@appleslover 4 года назад
Just makes me love the dutch even more
@AdmiralVortex
@AdmiralVortex 4 года назад
"We don't want any foreigners!" "... except the Dutch. You gotta love those guys!"
@yvonnecampbell7036
@yvonnecampbell7036 4 года назад
Gelukkig ja ;)
@maximus4375
@maximus4375 3 года назад
apple's lover, wait. Is that a person who actually likes The Netherlands? Woah, don’t see much of those on the internet
@connormcsweeney9489
@connormcsweeney9489 3 года назад
“Napoleon III was the greatest statesmen of his time” Otto Von Bismarck: Halte mein bier
@emilnarud5955
@emilnarud5955 3 года назад
Life comes at you fast
@northwestpassage6234
@northwestpassage6234 3 года назад
German laughing*
@e.s.6275
@e.s.6275 3 года назад
@@northwestpassage6234 ein Volk! ein Kanzlerin! ein Rei... errr... Euro!
@northwestpassage6234
@northwestpassage6234 3 года назад
@@e.s.6275 woah man, did you come up with that yourself? What a profound take man, it’s like, the EU, is like totally the 4th reich man. Like it’s pretty much, like, the exact same thing as the third reich, man. Shut up, boomer.
@SiriusSphynx
@SiriusSphynx 2 года назад
@@northwestpassage6234 you're cringe
@checkmate9099
@checkmate9099 4 года назад
its kinda weird to hear a wholesome story of travelling in the past. Most stories that we hear(or that we remember most) are the ones of anger/hate/violence/wars. Here? Just some guys stepping into a world they have heard so much about, yet never experienced.
@Tanerion
@Tanerion 4 года назад
Yeah, people forget that life back then was mostly peaceful for normal people. Exploration and adventure were some of the few things they had to keep themselves from getting bored. Most young men in my country wanted to go sailing and see the world. Too many people only know about history from movies and documentaries and everyday life isn't prominently featured in those.
@checkmate9099
@checkmate9099 4 года назад
Percival Hans , I disagree All it takes to change the world, is the will of a single man. Nelson Mandela, Ghandi, Napoleon.(they changed the world, for better or for worse)
@Neion8
@Neion8 4 года назад
@@checkmate9099 Yet those men would've been as nothing without those that took up their will and stood beside them. Leaders can only lead when followers follow.
@DBT1007
@DBT1007 4 года назад
It's you that read less. Know about ibnu battuta? He's the most famous world adventurer.
@checkmate9099
@checkmate9099 4 года назад
Neion8, true But that still means that a single man can be a threat. Enough to change History, change the world. Butterfly effect.
@balazskiss3695
@balazskiss3695 4 года назад
The Japanese: *arrived to Russia* The Russians: Hey, wanna see me yank a stone out of this guy's kidney?
@KHtrinity1
@KHtrinity1 4 года назад
@Buddha Buddha How does "Masculine" have any relevance?
@jimbob3332
@jimbob3332 4 года назад
To be fair, the Japanese physicians seemed all for it.
@Typhy7
@Typhy7 4 года назад
@@KHtrinity1 Come on. Don't be a pathetic SJW.
@KHtrinity1
@KHtrinity1 4 года назад
@@Typhy7 it's a valid question
@LoGStein
@LoGStein 4 года назад
@@Typhy7 How is it pathetic to ask what a surgery has to do with masculinity. It's a matter of science and research, completely unrelated to gender. So the question is valid.
@eamon5468
@eamon5468 4 года назад
This guy was the man. Haters gone hate he just wants to do his thing and take care of momma, class act.
@TheHadMatters
@TheHadMatters 4 года назад
Jerry, get a job.
@mysteriousdude280
@mysteriousdude280 4 года назад
Pride in his culture, respect for others, humble, high self drive, love of his country and a great desire and dedication of learning new things and everything. Makes you understand why and how Japan was able to make such a big leap in a very short time
@El-Californio
@El-Californio 4 года назад
In Spain there's a small village where the descendants of some Japanese samurai reside
@El-Californio
@El-Californio 4 года назад
@shishming Coria del Río
@erika002
@erika002 4 года назад
Is it related to this? ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CHUEblgnwV0.html
@nachoolo
@nachoolo 4 года назад
Yeah. Their surname is Japón if I remember correctly, as it seems that their original Japanese surnames were a mouthful for the locals. If I remember correctly, not long ago a really bad Spanish comedy was made about it, with the protagonist becoming the Emperor of Japan because he was the last person in the family line. Edit: Found it (site on Spanish, btw) www.filmaffinity.com/es/film463046.html
@TheFreshEC
@TheFreshEC 4 года назад
Those are from an earlier time, they left the samurai there and took some priests with them instead. Hasekura Tsunenaga wanted Japan to open up trade with Spain as well as converting the Japanese people to Christianity. When he went back to Japan, though, all foreigners were banned as well as their religions with exception of the Dutch.
@mikicerise6250
@mikicerise6250 4 года назад
I had no idea... this is awesome! :D
@HrHaakon
@HrHaakon 4 года назад
A ryo had a nominal value of about 15g of gold. 400 * 15 = 6000. So nominally, he was given 6kg of gold.
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz 4 года назад
Wow!
@Elmithian
@Elmithian 4 года назад
That's pretty hefty even in today's society
@IudiciumInfernalum
@IudiciumInfernalum 4 года назад
Damn, that's a lot of gold.
@jic1
@jic1 4 года назад
Which, at current prices, is roughly $336,312.
@Louiscare
@Louiscare 4 года назад
yeah, my conversion gives that in reality 100 ryo would be at least 100 000 USD nowadays, probably even more. there is no way in knowing for sure though
@AC39942
@AC39942 3 года назад
Japanese: Arrive in Europe Also Japanese: Where can I cook my rice?
@risasb
@risasb 3 года назад
What, did you forget to bring your Zojirushi?
@ChlnkGuuk
@ChlnkGuuk 3 года назад
In Spain
@ChlnkGuuk
@ChlnkGuuk 3 года назад
@@erent7455 We do care as much as Americans eat Burgers ;-)
@jinhunterslay1638
@jinhunterslay1638 3 года назад
I’m from Taiwan, and I might the only Asian student around my campus who don’t use a rice cooker because I learned to use my cooking pot to cook rice (WAY more difficult compared to a rice cooker though)
@drfye
@drfye 3 года назад
@@erent7455 couldn't they just cook it in a pot with boiling water? or microwave?
@fatosreaisdeverdade
@fatosreaisdeverdade 4 года назад
Fukuzawa is an absolute legend in Japan and maybe its most influential intellectual, even though he never held any government position. This was a guy that defended things like free speech and gender equality when samurais with katanas still walked around and people thought the emperor was a literal god.
@kn2549
@kn2549 3 года назад
Well, what do you expect? You’re comparing one individual who had the chance to actually go overseas and experience western civilization for the purpose of researching to a group of warrior class(samurai) that never left their province. The existence of the emperor itself were almost like a myth to the common Japanese people, except for the few high ranking daimyos.
@richardcleaver5440
@richardcleaver5440 3 года назад
Probably most Japanese think of him as the founder of Keio University, one of the most prestigious private universities in the country. His picture is on the 10,000 yen note.
@kn2549
@kn2549 3 года назад
And to say that he “defended” western free speech and western “gender equality” is ridiculous since those things were almost foreign to Japan at that time. He didnt “defend” anything, he INTRODUCED them to Japan. Atleast learn a bit about Japanese history if you want to act like you know about my country.
@fatosreaisdeverdade
@fatosreaisdeverdade 3 года назад
@@kn2549 That is a very pedantic take, sure, say introduce instead of defend them, the argument remains the same, he was a champion of enlightenment values in a feudal society. P.S. I'm a research fellow at Waseda with a 文部科学省奨学金, for whatever it is worth...
@kn2549
@kn2549 3 года назад
@@fatosreaisdeverdade No, “defending” free speech and gender equality is completely different from introducing them to an almost isolated country. 研究が足りていないんじゃねえかお前?
@yodef6828
@yodef6828 4 года назад
I really like how he discovers the geopolitical situation of Europe at that time, and how bizarre it is for him as he's coming from Japan. I'd like to see more of that honestly.
@antonioscendrategattico2302
@antonioscendrategattico2302 4 года назад
After all, Japan had mostly been at war with itself for most of its history. The closest neighbors were Korea and the immovable giant that was China. Rather different from the precarious peaces and endless rivalries in Europe.
@yaosio
@yaosio 4 года назад
Europe was already well on it's way to WW1 even though it was still 52 years away. The Franco-Prussian war happened 8 years afterwards in 1870, which resulted in an arms race. in 1888 Friedrich Engels said that the only war possible for Prussia was a world war, one in which all the devastation of the 30 years war would be condensed into 3 or 4 years. The entire continent would embroiled in this war, with famine and pestilence spreading everywhere, and the crowns being struck down. WW1 destroyed many feudal empires.
@herrakaarme
@herrakaarme 4 года назад
@@yaosio The trip depicted in the video happened during the last years of the Tokugawa shogunate, which means Japan itself was just about to enter its own civil war, resulting in the final collapse of the ultra conservative shogunate and the seek for the modernisation with the new Meiji era.
@JakeN482
@JakeN482 4 года назад
The tremendous political upheaval that was occurring was barely even documented by Fukuzawa here, and it still was so much for a feudalist envoy to process. He seemed to only talk with people who already had significant political or economic power during this trip, which means he completely missed the beginnings of radical socialism and syndicalism brewing among the workers. Very interesting times.
@MsSomebodyyyy
@MsSomebodyyyy 4 года назад
Jake4 Socialism was a very fringe thing until WW1.
@tinkywinky1238
@tinkywinky1238 4 года назад
In the West, people ask how to move to Japan. In Tsarist Russia, people ask Japan ambassador to stay.
@sodinc
@sodinc 4 года назад
As far as I know there was a problem with teachers in russian school of japanese language - it worked for a century already but there weren`t a lot of well-educated native speakers of the language in russia. It was a century-long constant mission for the natives and cossacks of the russian far east to safely transport all japanese sailors from the shipwrecks to the authorities.
@francisdrake6622
@francisdrake6622 4 года назад
@@sodinc Interesting! The empire would have needed to open dialogue with the Japanese to compete with the west/US in trade. Thank you!
@Apelles42069
@Apelles42069 4 года назад
Technically, it would be Imperial Russia. By 1721, the Empire of Russia was founded to replace the entity of the Tsardom of Russia. Although the emperor still held the title of tsar in many regions, and has been informally referred to as tsar ever since, the highest sovereign title in Russia until the revolution was Imperator. And yes, I get the Soviet Russia joke, but still, precision is always necessary on History RU-vid!
@captainnerd6452
@captainnerd6452 4 года назад
Tinky Winky they did that through the Cold War, too
@1MinuteFlipDoc
@1MinuteFlipDoc 4 года назад
@@ross6753 he probably would have been well taken care of by the Russian government. not treated like a typical/usual teacher i bet.
@DrOwn-hq9ot
@DrOwn-hq9ot 3 года назад
"Ok, so let's say that some foreigner, from anywhere really, wanted to purchase some land" "Well that's quite alright" "Well what if, hypothetically, this was a very large piece of land, would they be able to do anything with it?" "Surely!" "Can I build a fort?"
@linhhoang1363
@linhhoang1363 3 года назад
Sure! Why not?
@marcusaurelius4941
@marcusaurelius4941 Год назад
came from feudal Japan and immidiately asked if he could create feudalism
@goldengear22
@goldengear22 4 года назад
"what if someone were to build a fortress" Dutchman: *Nervous sweating*
@anarchyandempires5452
@anarchyandempires5452 3 года назад
Why? They can let them build their fort......and then tax the ever lovin' hell out of it!!!!!
@thegradyfiles3272
@thegradyfiles3272 3 года назад
It’s genius
@goldengear22
@goldengear22 3 года назад
@Robert Campbell I think it's more like the "what about roads" phenomenon that happens today when the topic of libertarianism is debated. The Japanese were amazed at the dichotomy between morality and practicality. They were testing the idea of the free market in Amsterdam by challenging it with something they assumed would bring outrage, but the response they got was that it would of course be morally permissable and entirely legal, but in the real world why would any rational person have that concern?
@HDrobveelben
@HDrobveelben 3 года назад
Aidhog the Dutchman would be thinking how much money can be made from that?
@goldengear22
@goldengear22 3 года назад
@@HDrobveelben no, he lives in the reality of the chances of anyone doing that are slim to none because of the lack of economic sense
@spyrofrost9158
@spyrofrost9158 4 года назад
"Yeah I had some down time so I wrote a Japanese to English dictionary."
@thehoneyeffect
@thehoneyeffect 3 года назад
That made me lol
@justinnamuco9096
@justinnamuco9096 3 года назад
He made something useful
@jonathanwells223
@jonathanwells223 3 года назад
@•PikoraGhoul • *distracted, being lazy implies that you have the time and are not occupied yet do nothing anyway
@red2theelectricboogaloo961
@red2theelectricboogaloo961 3 года назад
@•PikoraGhoul • i guess but nowadays people are at least looking for information. even if it might be misinformation
@ronj9448
@ronj9448 3 года назад
No freakin RU-vid, cellphones, text messages and other worthless activities. I read a book a month, I used to read a book a week. Too many interesting items steal your time - forever.
@PrzybyszzMatplanety
@PrzybyszzMatplanety 4 года назад
What an intelligent, open minded and kind man he was. Truly beautiful human being.
@Kriosaivak
@Kriosaivak 4 года назад
Someone really needs to make a movie about this guy’s life.
@Novusod
@Novusod 4 года назад
A Netflix series would be better. Season 1 America Season 2 Europe Season 3 ?
@anhduc0913
@anhduc0913 4 года назад
@@Novusod season 3 japan civil war to remove the shogunate and open up to the world. Yes it's real events.
@anarchyandempires5452
@anarchyandempires5452 3 года назад
@@anhduc0913 season 4: American mercenaries and weapons. Season 5: Why the fuck are there so many american samurai!? Season 6: modernization. Season 7: Mexico and becoming Cristian. Season 8: kickin' the bucket.
@shadowbirdcat7500
@shadowbirdcat7500 3 года назад
@@anarchyandempires5452 wait what happen between Mexico and Japan?
@manycinnamon4544
@manycinnamon4544 3 года назад
Hi, Yukichi is an very influential figure in Japan and his face is on the 10000 yen bill (like 100 usd or 80 pound). Keio University is made by him (one of the best private universities in Japan - although I want to say depending on the subjects, Waseda University by Okuma is the best). There are some movies made about his life (although not highly rated). But why not? We deserve a good Fukuzawa movie...
@vasily1099
@vasily1099 3 года назад
My hear warmed so much when they talked about the Netherlands. As a person born and raised in the Netherlands it makes me very happy about the culture alive within this beautiful country for such a long time. 🇳🇱🇳🇱
@tommeakin1732
@tommeakin1732 4 года назад
This was a pleasure to listen to this. To be frank, he's far more pleasant, curious and open than I've grown to expect from the Japanese of this broad period. Obviously I already knew that not everyone within a culture is going to feel the same way as "the mainstream" permits, but I think this is the first time I've heard an account from a Japanese person from the pre-modern period that wasn't layered with a kind of condescending superiority. This is the kind of guy you want to be your ambassador
@saint_matthias
@saint_matthias 4 года назад
It was refreshing indeed!
@juanzulu1318
@juanzulu1318 4 года назад
Indeed a very unusual, remarkable, warm, open minded and free thinking person. He later on became the founder of the first japanese university. No wonder....
@KamiKaZantA
@KamiKaZantA 4 года назад
It would be interesting to place a man like that in a modern metropolis with buildings hundreds of meters tall.
@aswler
@aswler 4 года назад
I believe he was an interpreter. Often a difference to the people these professionals interpret for.
@francisdrake6622
@francisdrake6622 4 года назад
@@juanzulu1318 WOW. Thanks for that information!
@sclair2854
@sclair2854 4 года назад
It's sad to hear him talk so much about anti-foreigner sentiment when he clearly has a great interest in cultural exchange. I dunno why but his experience with the surgeon makes him seem so much more real
@Myemnhk
@Myemnhk 4 года назад
Well atleast he felt welcome in the us
@algonzalez6853
@algonzalez6853 4 года назад
@Al Strider good times
@lewistaylor2858
@lewistaylor2858 4 года назад
@wargent99 *everyone did
@TheBarser
@TheBarser 4 года назад
Japanese really disliked foreigners at this time. Well even now they dont really like foreigners settling down in there country. And people say white people are racists. Try most of east asia then.
@napatora
@napatora 4 года назад
@Al Strider societies have never been as homogeneous as we've been led to believe. japan is a bit of a different story but if you look around people have always moved around, lived with and married people from other cultures and countries. diplomats and ambassadors have been a thing for a looong time and even many common people picked up and moved to foriegn places. all over the world there are enclaves of expats, some of which have been there for centuries. a lot of people seem to think that nobody ever moved around in the past but it happened much more than we realize.
@TehJumpingJawa
@TehJumpingJawa 4 года назад
I wonder how Fukuzawa Yukichi would respond to his stories being enjoyed all across the world, broadcast in real-time, to devices as small as the palm of a hand. I suspect he'd shrug at the technological marvel, and instead ponder on the motivation of those indulging. Truly fascinating and insightful tales, a historical treasure.
@MariaVosa
@MariaVosa 3 года назад
I am so immensly impressed with Fukuzawa Yukichi. He was not only very intelligent, but has a level of curiosity, insightfulness and most of all humour that makes him truly stand out in history. I would have loved to get to know him.
@Cuuniyevo
@Cuuniyevo 3 года назад
@ST H In English, "not only very intelligent, but…" means "very intelligent, but that's not all, he was also…". It's a way to say the same thing with fewer words, and not in any way an insult.
@rheinhartsilvento2576
@rheinhartsilvento2576 3 года назад
Yes! Exactly my feeling too 🤗
@Big_E_Soul_Fragment
@Big_E_Soul_Fragment 4 года назад
Fukuzawa Yukichi's Bizarre Adventure: Europe Arc
@irongeneral7861
@irongeneral7861 4 года назад
Today, Europe. Tomorrow, ZA WARRRRRRRRRRUDO!
@kouron
@kouron 4 года назад
Sadly they cut the Berlin Books :_(
@mueezadam8438
@mueezadam8438 3 года назад
Waltz like an Englishman
@rootintootinputin5898
@rootintootinputin5898 3 года назад
Fuyu's Bizarre Adventure
@chilliam00
@chilliam00 3 года назад
@@irongeneral7861 STAR PLACHINUM. ZAAA WARRUDDOOO.
@ramonvalencia5719
@ramonvalencia5719 4 года назад
I think someone has already said this, but this piece of history would make a great movie.
@Yojinj
@Yojinj 4 года назад
No, you and everyone else will get reboots and remakes of everything that came before. Sad times.
@DBT1007
@DBT1007 4 года назад
Anime
@Amadeus8484
@Amadeus8484 4 года назад
They probably HAVE in Japan...
@TRak598
@TRak598 Год назад
Yukichi was truly a man ahead of his time. Saw the isolation for the mistake it was, but never dropped his guard when there was a suspiciously good offer given to him and quickly realized Europe's delicate political situation.
@WeaveDreamer
@WeaveDreamer 3 года назад
The conversation between the Dutch and the Japanese over the purchasing of land for a fortress was basically A request to build an embassy. Hearing the events of history explained by those who travel the world are some of the best you will ever hear. Thank You for sharing this story.
@crossbones116
@crossbones116 4 года назад
The old Japanese map of Europe is funky as hell.
@FirefoxisredExplorerisblueGoog
@FirefoxisredExplorerisblueGoog 4 года назад
Pretty sure that big blob north of the Alps is supposed to be The Netherlands, lol.
@dinok7630
@dinok7630 4 года назад
old maps are funky in general
@crossbones116
@crossbones116 4 года назад
@@dinok7630 Well, you're not wrong there.
@Anima-bribe
@Anima-bribe 4 года назад
Most knowledge of the world was acquired from the dutch during their lockdown as only the dutch were allowed to trade with japan. So it might explain why the netherlands is so big
@deadby15
@deadby15 4 года назад
Columbus: Let me show you the most accurate map I just got.
@nathanielbanks3562
@nathanielbanks3562 4 года назад
I find it funny that, shortly after being shown that people in Europe have strongly diverse opinions on political actions, he finds the idea of a Parliament that represents these differing views to be incomprehensible. Well, I guess in reality Parliament is just a bunch of people shouting at each other on stage, then being friends afterwards, so I can see why that is so confusing...
@gg-sr6ju
@gg-sr6ju 4 года назад
@Weston Meyer what
@Gomjibar
@Gomjibar 4 года назад
His confusion makes more sense when you think about how Japan at that time just came out of one period of political violence/turmoil and was in another. Add on to that the traditional honor system of Japan, and it makes the who thing of politicians calling their opponents enemies, but then sitting down to have a meal with them externally confusing. It probably also didn't help that the two parties held many similar views (to his eyes) so their differences weren't as readily noticeable (I'm sure the language barrier didn't help in explaining the differences too).
@Guttlegob
@Guttlegob 3 года назад
It's amazing that a Japanese person 170 years ago fugured out that western politics is all one big clown show in just one visit
@xandercorp6175
@xandercorp6175 3 года назад
You misunderstood, I think. The liberal/ambiguous western use of 'fight' to refer to a figurative dispute was not really the case in the Japanese language at that time. The Japanese was demonstrably familiar with factional politics, after all, they just took combat and enmity rather seriously.
@jonathanwells223
@jonathanwells223 3 года назад
@@Guttlegob better than spilling each other’s guts all over the floor
@nachgeben
@nachgeben 4 года назад
Man, I hate when I go on a trip and the villagers decide to tell my mother I DIED.
@brucey5232
@brucey5232 3 года назад
lol.
@red2theelectricboogaloo961
@red2theelectricboogaloo961 3 года назад
that's how the village idiots get on no matter where you are
@KevinBFG
@KevinBFG 4 года назад
-Guy shitting with the door open -Other guy squatting on the doorway with lamp -This guy slowly gets close and proceeds to *CLOSE THE BLOODY DOOR* What a mad lad! Loved it!
@KingMoon110
@KingMoon110 4 года назад
This dude could easily get an anime based on his life, dude sounds way too ahead of it's time.
@BurakkuHishou
@BurakkuHishou 4 года назад
I would love to see an anime of this. Like a serious adaptation
@IudiciumInfernalum
@IudiciumInfernalum 4 года назад
I'd watch that for sure.
@tristanbackup2536
@tristanbackup2536 4 года назад
Agree, add some comedy elements as well. This needs to happen! You reading this Japan! Make it happen!
@scorpixel1866
@scorpixel1866 4 года назад
You do know they'll immediately turn him into a teenage girl right?
@feethebunny
@feethebunny 4 года назад
@@scorpixel1866 It's already sorta happened. It's called Croisee in a Foreign Labyrinth.
@VersusARCH
@VersusARCH 4 года назад
The first Japanese to visit Europe were members of an embassy of Tokugawa shogunate to Spain in 17th century (that travelled via Spanish colony of Mexico)
@VoicesofthePast
@VoicesofthePast 4 года назад
This is post Sakoku, as mentioned in the title. The embassy you are talking about will be covered next week EDIT: next month
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz 4 года назад
16th century via Indian Ocean, not Mexico: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensh%C5%8D_embassy
@VersusARCH
@VersusARCH 4 года назад
@@LuisAldamiz I was referring to en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hasekura_Tsunenaga I wasn't aware there was an even earlier one. Thanks.
@lucas9269
@lucas9269 4 года назад
The envoy’s purpose was Portugal, but since Portugal and Spain were in a personal union under the King of Spain, they went to Spain to see the King of Portugal.
@saddgod
@saddgod 4 года назад
@@lucas9269 this is a very important point to make and an important distinction between going directly to Spain.
@watson-tv
@watson-tv 4 года назад
8:33 "Beyond my comprehension what they were 'fighting' for." Still true today
@trdoorn
@trdoorn 3 года назад
Man, I always love to hear about the very special relationship Japan and The Netherlands had and have!
@llenny_uwu1398
@llenny_uwu1398 4 года назад
This guy should be in history books and discussed all over Asia. He just seemed like such a wholesome fellow. Are we going to get some accounts from Commodore Perry on how Japan was like? Great vid by the way! 😁
@johnmuth3971
@johnmuth3971 4 года назад
He is quite well known in Japan. His picture is on the 10,000 Yen note.
@francisdrake6622
@francisdrake6622 4 года назад
@@johnmuth3971 HAH! I did not know that. He's Ben Franklin.
@Hannodb1961
@Hannodb1961 4 года назад
The Marco Polo of Japan. What a civilized and pleasant chap he must have been. I think I would've enjoyed his company.
@peepingtom9342
@peepingtom9342 4 года назад
@@francisdrake6622 ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-KEP6DMyFq9M.html
@deadby15
@deadby15 4 года назад
I think he used to be sorta well known in China and Korea, too, because he represented ideologies of modernization and industrialization, and other Asian nations were struggling to achieve the same goals.
@gwarfanatik
@gwarfanatik 4 года назад
Dude really just took a shit with the door open while his samurai was guarding him haha!
@roberthansson8222
@roberthansson8222 4 года назад
Witness me!
@100RAmen
@100RAmen 4 года назад
@@roberthansson8222 hhhahahaha senbei!
@mr.q337
@mr.q337 4 года назад
What a mad lad XD
@owen1737
@owen1737 3 года назад
Why does it feel so cool that the guy had a great time in the Netherlands and im dutch myself
@parsifal2299
@parsifal2299 3 года назад
Apparently you guys are always kind and welcoming to strangers even in the 1800s
@robertdegroot8302
@robertdegroot8302 3 года назад
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dejima This is why this man and most other Japanese people in the mission knew how to speak Dutch, but not English, French or Russian.
@magnusengeseth5060
@magnusengeseth5060 2 года назад
If you enjoyed that part, you should really check out his autobiography. He and his mates spend their student days trying to both self-learn Dutch, and then use that language try to extract as much information about western civilization as possible out of their collection of about a dozen Dutch books. It's a really fascinating to read about a group of young fanatical counter-culture dudes treating a couple of Dutch books as a font of almost unlimited knowledge that they could extract if they can learn to understand it. Of course, they must first learn the language, which they mostly learn from the same books that they will later extract knowledge from. So here you have about a dozen or so Dutch books, mostly about medicine and fortifications, some of them decades out of date, that have been copied hundreds of times by the students when they try to teach each other the language. Like, when they learn that some rich dude has an up to date Dutch book about scientific knowledge, that these students wouldn't be able to afford in their lifetime, one of their group asks if he can borrow the book for a couple of days to look at the interesting pictures. Then their entire dorm stays up for days without sleeping frantically trying to copy the entire chapter about electricity, since this is the subject they know almost nothing about, which they barely manage with diagrams and all, but they're still devastated when they have to return the book since they can only imagine how much of this new information they might never have a chance to read about again. Then this group of students, who now are fairly sure that they are by far the best Dutch speakers in the entire country, all get super depressed when it turns out that Dutch is not the one true Western language of science and knowledge. Here's a link to the entire book online: archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.172747/page/n285/mode/2up
@blackout6772
@blackout6772 4 года назад
2:25 - Paris 6:33 - London 9:25 - Holland 11:55 - Russia
@AgentBO
@AgentBO 4 года назад
Small note: 2:52 - Is a misplaced picture of Amsterdam, you can see the Dutch style buildings and the Palace on the Dam behind them.
@Louiscare
@Louiscare 4 года назад
For anyone who cares, 100 ryo would be at least 100 000 USD nowadays, probably even more
@Marci124
@Marci124 4 года назад
And it's also worth considering that this isn't "real buying power" yet, so not Big Mac units. Judging by other accounts of this envoy, where he describes meals costing 50x as much in the US as it did in Japan it might still be worth much more than that.
@Louiscare
@Louiscare 4 года назад
@@Marci124 Actually, i did the conversion from ryo to yen first and as rice would be much cheaper nowadays in yen, while other goods stayed more constant it would probably mean less buying power than 100k for food. (also, these are contemporary usd so you cant say 50x more in 1860 is 50x more now.)
@Bialy_1
@Bialy_1 4 года назад
​@@Louiscare Coins were 57% pure gold so there was 8.55g of pure gold per single coin... so 100ryo =855g of gold now=$47,935.12
@Blayze
@Blayze 4 года назад
So basically, he sent his mum a house. Or several.
@oliverizzard8751
@oliverizzard8751 3 года назад
So. Pocket money for a wall street banksters.
@yodef6828
@yodef6828 4 года назад
I'd like to bring this man to the present to see his reaction.
@LuisAldamiz
@LuisAldamiz 4 года назад
He already had more than enough cultural shock, don't you think? Anyhow, he'd probably shake his head as if somehow everything made sense to him, as if he could have foreseen all what has happened (not in the fine detail maybe but in general terms) from his vintage point of the late 19th century. Let's see: rising Prussia/Germany defeats France takes Alsace-Lorraine, then France defeats Germany and takes Alsace-Lorraine back, and then it happens all over again a few decades later. Already forecast in the halls of Paris hotels. Check. Let's see: rising Japan defeats Russia and paints the map their own color... for a while? Check. Let's see: Russia undergoes a revolution and becomes a global superpower under a Tsar-like figure who rules with a Parliament that has only one political party? Makes some sense if you are between Britain and Japan, I guess. Check. Maybe the hardest things to swallow would be not so much Japanese defeat (again) by the USA but Hiroshima and Nagasaki utter destruction by weapons unthinkable in his time. Or maybe the rise of China after experiencing a Russia-like revolution. But up to the 1940s he was savy.
@sppukiwk4859
@sppukiwk4859 4 года назад
yesss
@syroco
@syroco 4 года назад
He would be horrified
@diablo.the.cheater
@diablo.the.cheater 4 года назад
sees globalization: **Happy Japanese scholar noises**
@chisps_
@chisps_ 4 года назад
I think he might like a great deal of it. It’s so much easier to explore the world and talk to new and various people, which seems like just what this guy wanted to do
@DavidInSydney1
@DavidInSydney1 4 года назад
Fascinating, thank you “Voices of the Past”. Also enjoyed your video on Fukuzawa’s first trip to California ("First Japanese Visitor to USA Describes American Life"). As a result I’m now reading his autobiography.
@goatwarrior3570
@goatwarrior3570 4 года назад
What a beautiful and fascinating moment in history. Thank you so much for uploading this.
@kpp28
@kpp28 4 года назад
Please do a video on when the Siam embassy visit Frace in 1687 or when the France embassy visit Siam in 1684 as it's one of the first modern history visit between the east and west. Both the French and the Thais kept a very precise journal I believe.
@thibaudduhamel2581
@thibaudduhamel2581 4 года назад
It is indeed a fascinating story!
@Rebeyvapara
@Rebeyvapara 4 года назад
Seconding this!!!!
@deathsheadknight2137
@deathsheadknight2137 4 года назад
this perspective was so interesting, and he seemed like such a well-spoken man. More of this kind of thing please.
@scpdatabase969
@scpdatabase969 4 года назад
This is one of the coolest history channels I have found. The inflection in the narrator's voice really helps pull me into the narrative.
@sagacious03
@sagacious03 4 года назад
Pretty neat! Thanks for uploading!
@avanticurecanti9998
@avanticurecanti9998 4 года назад
The Russians wanted him to help set up an anime industry.
@JameBlack
@JameBlack 4 года назад
They failed
@deadby15
@deadby15 4 года назад
Back in the USSR days, they made excellent artistic animations, in all fairness.
@goldensp3038
@goldensp3038 4 года назад
@@deadby15 in fact, USSR animation cartoon called Cheburashka is more popular in Japan than in it's homeland country.
@Eridelm
@Eridelm 4 года назад
@@goldensp3038 Cheburashka was quite non-realistic in my eyes, he was cute but I liked Croco much more, he was like a greatest shield of Cheburashka and my childhood :)
@cianakril
@cianakril 4 года назад
In fact, Japanese anime was heavily influenced by Soviet animations. The 1957 Soviet Snow Queen set up an entire life choice as animator for Hayao Miyazaki.
@HuevoBendito
@HuevoBendito 4 года назад
Thanks for posting another one!
@midnightchannel7759
@midnightchannel7759 3 года назад
Wonderful, thank you so much has for posting!
@chidigoziem1482
@chidigoziem1482 4 года назад
This is all more intriguing than I can put into words. I'm Nigerian, but I grew up in Japan. I've always observed their culture from my perspective, but never really saw the world from their traditional perpective. This is truly fascinating.
@weinhold0204
@weinhold0204 4 года назад
What an interesting life you must lead!
@AlleluiaElizabeth
@AlleluiaElizabeth 4 года назад
@wargent99 That's not what's actually happening in America, either. So please do shut up.
@jansettler4828
@jansettler4828 4 года назад
@@AlleluiaElizabeth Every 1000th black american can expect to die at the hands of Police. So...
@sean668
@sean668 4 года назад
@@AlleluiaElizabeth I'm American and can confirm it is exactly what's happening in America
@AlleluiaElizabeth
@AlleluiaElizabeth 4 года назад
@@sean668 I'm American and can confirm it isn't. Cops are not just going around murdering black people. Since 2015, 5400 people have been shot by cops. 45% have been white, 23% black, 16% hispanic, 9% other. It is not open season on black people. Or anyone, for that matter.
@isaacshultz8128
@isaacshultz8128 4 года назад
I bought his autobiography after listening to your first video. His writing style is so personable and interesting
@StudioArtFX
@StudioArtFX 4 года назад
Did you buy a physical book or digital?
@maligjokica
@maligjokica 4 года назад
do you recomend me to buy it? i was wondering.thanks anyway:))
@saddgod
@saddgod 4 года назад
What version did you purchase and from where? I'm interested myself. And was it audio or literature. If it's audio who's the narrator and where did you buy it?
@henkhenk902
@henkhenk902 4 года назад
I'm also interested :). Let us know of your discoveries!
@sergeantmajor_gross
@sergeantmajor_gross 4 года назад
Title?
@boofs2776
@boofs2776 4 года назад
"Prussia is like a rising sun [and war is being prophesied]" hahaha little did they know
@davidwagner6116
@davidwagner6116 2 года назад
What a fascinating trip report! Thank you, this guy was way ahead of his time.
@Detheroc420
@Detheroc420 4 года назад
No way its fukuzawa!! He was first to America now Europe!! He lived a dope life -Yes I learned he wasnt first to Europe, just first as a Japanese ambassador-
@peepingtom9342
@peepingtom9342 4 года назад
He wasn't "the first" strictly speaking (there were Japanese embassies to Spain and Papal State centuries earlier).
@Detheroc420
@Detheroc420 4 года назад
@@peepingtom9342 why does this video say hes one of the first then? I've looked it up and you are right, it was a samurai back in the 1600's
@deadby15
@deadby15 4 года назад
Detheroc technically, the previous embassies didn’t represent Japan. They represented some Christian warlords (天正), or a local warlord who wanted to trade (Date-clan), respectively.
@elimalinsky7069
@elimalinsky7069 4 года назад
Japanese envoys visited Mexico and Europe in the early 17th century, so no, he wasn't the first by several centuries.
@Anactualfungus
@Anactualfungus 4 года назад
Hasekura Tsunenaga and his envoys were the first known and confirmed Japanese to travel to Europe. Their journey through the Americas lead to the establish of the Americas' first Asian community, in Mexico City.
@wesleynishi6081
@wesleynishi6081 4 года назад
In case anyone is wondering, this man is on the 10000 Yen Banknote. He also founded Keio University. Bonus funny factoid: Yukichi Fukuzawa spent summers at his home nude ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-JiQge8TXHGQ.html
@Galvion1980
@Galvion1980 4 года назад
I did not know that! Thank you very much!
@kleuafflatus
@kleuafflatus 4 года назад
Wait what...? Lol been to Japan a few times and only now I learn this! Thanks haha
@jemiu9525
@jemiu9525 3 года назад
Stuff like this is so cool. Thank you for creating it. Hearing about the past through someone's own words is so powerful.
@taytemusic7750
@taytemusic7750 4 года назад
I'm so glad I found this series. Fantastic channel, I can't wait for the third part
@gmrn3014s
@gmrn3014s 4 года назад
Sometimes i forget being nice was a real thing
@this_is_ironic5659
@this_is_ironic5659 4 года назад
this is literally the most interesting video i've ever seen. this is awesome.
@1MinuteFlipDoc
@1MinuteFlipDoc 4 года назад
captivating story and your narration is wonderful!
@jakeku2662
@jakeku2662 4 года назад
I enjoyed this very much. Great video!
@tecumsehcristero
@tecumsehcristero 4 года назад
I think me and this Japanese guy would be friends. We'd get along.
@tecumsehcristero
@tecumsehcristero 4 года назад
@@ross6753 it sure sounds like it. I got that impression just from this reading. He seems like a wonderful man
@slc679
@slc679 4 года назад
I have been waiting for this video for so long, thank you!
@VandalCleaver
@VandalCleaver 4 года назад
After listening to the whole thing, I feel like I've just made a new friend :') thank you for the stories Yukichi, wherever you are. And to this channel for communicating them ^
@EndlessBreathDidges
@EndlessBreathDidges 3 года назад
Easily my favorite video on you channel. Your voice truly brings Fukuzawa to life.
@deutschamerikaner
@deutschamerikaner 4 года назад
Yes! Thanks for continuing this story.
@Kujien
@Kujien 4 года назад
Thank you so much for these, really cant express how much I enjoy these videos. Great narration
@clockworkkirlia7475
@clockworkkirlia7475 3 года назад
Oh my gosh... this is so fascinating. Thank you bringing this beautiful perspective to my attention.
@Balderhash
@Balderhash 4 года назад
Incredibly interesting and riveting narration. Thank you for this video.
@beniaminosani2719
@beniaminosani2719 4 года назад
The translator was smarter than the entire diplomatic envoy
@readmore8302
@readmore8302 4 года назад
This was absolutely enthralling! I simply couldn't stop listening. I hope there is plenty more content to be made from the words of Mr Yukichi.
@readmore8302
@readmore8302 4 года назад
@Johnny Nemo You must be a "really" nice person. Like how did that comment warrant such sarcastic assholism?
@Kryonyde
@Kryonyde 4 года назад
I love your channel but hearing someone so much closer to the present was a mind blowing experience. Your narration was flawless and expressive. I hope you are adequately compensated for your efforts, and I cannot thank you enough for bringing a resource of this depth to the public.
@demitreburger707
@demitreburger707 4 года назад
Very captivating at some points, thank you for sharing
@captainbanannahead
@captainbanannahead 4 года назад
Great videos bringing real history alive! Always enjoy these. Look forward to the new and watching the backlog. Thank you
@filchett
@filchett 4 года назад
Wonderful! Thank you for enlightening me on these fascinating interactions. This is great stuff, and read very nicely. Delighted to have found this channel. Big up.
@raresmac
@raresmac 4 года назад
I love the series and the fact that you bring these writings to us. Keep up the good work!
@Lightning_Lance
@Lightning_Lance 4 года назад
I just found this channel and I'm so glad I did. This is amazing!
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