Тёмный

Japanese Castaway Gives First Description of USA (1852) // Incredible Story of John Manjiro 

Voices of the Past
Подписаться 978 тыс.
Просмотров 563 тыс.
50% 1

Get your special offer for MagellanTV here: try.magellantv.com/voicesofth.... It's an exclusive offer for our viewers! Start your free trial today. MagellanTV is a new kind of streaming service run by filmmakers with 3,000+ documentaries! Check out our personal recommendation and MagellanTV’s exclusive playlists: www.magellantv.com/explore/hi...
--------------
Extracts taken from "Drifting Toward the Southeast: The Story of Five Japanese Castaways : a Complete Translation of Hyoson Kiryaku (a Brief Account of Drifting Toward the Southeast) as Told to the Court of Lord Yamauchi of Tosa in 1852 by John Manjiro
Translated by: Junya Nagakuni and Junji Kitadai
(Spinner Publications, 2003)
www.spinnerpub.com/Drifting_To...
www.amazon.com/-/es/Junya-Nag...
If this channel is something you like, if you think saving primary sources is important, head over to the patreon and join up!
/ voicesofthepast
- Don’t forget to subscribe to my brother's channel History Time, where he makes full length historical documentaries:-
/ historytime
- Music courtesy of:-
Epidemic Sound
Artlist.io
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.
Image credits:
Thanks to Matthew Cartwright for his work on the images of the boat in the ocean, the men arriving on the island and Manjiro in the Gold Rush.
Thanks to The Rosenbach, Philadelphia, Manjiro Exhibition for the use of images 3, 4, 23, 24, and 25 in their collection from the manuscript of Hyoson Kiryaku.
rosenbach.org/visit/exhibitio...
Island of Torishima By Copyright © National Land Image Information (Color Aerial Photographs), Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, Attribution, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index...
Political Graveyard from Ann Arbor, MI, CC BY 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons

Опубликовано:

 

26 июн 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 1,6 тыс.   
@VoicesofthePast
@VoicesofthePast 3 года назад
Big thanks to Spinner Publications for the use of this translation: www.spinnerpub.com/Drifting_Toward_the_Southeast.html
@jeremymain7303
@jeremymain7303 3 года назад
They really make America sound like Oz.
@dw620
@dw620 3 года назад
Beautifully produced as ever, thank you. Is Wikipedia incorrect about Whitfield's first wife having died at an earlier date?
@lamalien2276
@lamalien2276 3 года назад
That was amazing!
@nanajiji765
@nanajiji765 2 года назад
There is a statue in Tosashimizu city where he was born. The statue of himself has compass and square in his left hand. COMPASS AND SQUARE.
@steven95N
@steven95N Год назад
You guys make great videos. you'd think you would be smart enough to just get Cocoa to Translate for you. Spinner Publications seems nice too though.
@jazzycat8917
@jazzycat8917 3 года назад
What type of welcome home is "go to jail, also you're banned from sailing and here is infinite money, have a good day"
@Exodon2020
@Exodon2020 3 года назад
One that's saying "you might be a pioneer and did outstandingly - but by getting cast away you have still broken the law and need to be punished!"
@jamesgeorge7579
@jamesgeorge7579 3 года назад
A bureaucratic welcome
@kireta21
@kireta21 3 года назад
@@Exodon2020 well, that does sound very Japanese
@wulfherecyning1282
@wulfherecyning1282 3 года назад
I guess they would argue it as "more than fair"? At that time, if I have my dates correct, Japan was in self-imposed isolation, and would execute foreigners who landed on Japanese shores. With rules like that, the law probably punished Japanese who fraternized with or attempted travel to other countries? Maybe it was a slap on the wrist so as to comply with the word of the law, but was light because everyone could see it wasn't their fault and the information they'd brought home was worth its weight in gold? I dunno. Just speculating.
@JP-rf8rr
@JP-rf8rr 3 года назад
Honestly, they were quite lucky to get the kind of reception they did or even allowed back in Japan without being under constant watch. Japan's isolation policy and fear if Western ideas was extreme.
@mike-0451
@mike-0451 3 года назад
A Japanese man who washed up onto America, traveled to California to take part in the gold rush to earn a wage to return home, who finds himself precariously in the middle of the Wild West. Incredible.
@VoicesofthePast
@VoicesofthePast 3 года назад
Its an adventure!
@NoalFarstrider
@NoalFarstrider 3 года назад
But Master, what happened to you? Did you end up in the wild western unknown regions?
@mike-0451
@mike-0451 3 года назад
@@NoalFarstrider It’s a secret
@leefithian3704
@leefithian3704 3 года назад
Worthy of an accurate film
@jozeph2932
@jozeph2932 3 года назад
@@VoicesofthePast You could say that it's *Bizzare.*
@freddofrog9892
@freddofrog9892 2 года назад
“For government, the people elected a man of wisdom and learning for their president” what a time to be alive
@skillfuldabest
@skillfuldabest 2 года назад
Now it’s all identity politics because of multiculturalism.
@hollowkid97
@hollowkid97 2 года назад
@@skillfuldabest so ur against the Japanese guy going to America?
@stephenjenkins7971
@stephenjenkins7971 2 года назад
Must have missed the various crappy Presidents across the US' history. Or how "learned" men were essentially college-educated men which even Trump counts as. Wisdom as a trait also barely applies to any US Presidents, let alone many world leaders in all of human history. So that bit is just a general complement. No way this guy would know if the US President was wise or not.
@goldman6506
@goldman6506 2 года назад
Now we have someone with literal dementia
@markmogensen5518
@markmogensen5518 2 года назад
And the "women had exceptional virtue"... what a time indeed
@namekman01
@namekman01 3 года назад
eating alot after starving is dangerous, and can cause a whole heap of medical issues. the captain was very smart to give them a small amount of food at first, and slowly give them more to eat.
@noxscotchxtape
@noxscotchxtape 3 года назад
especially back then he must have been quite intelligent
@thebigenchilada678
@thebigenchilada678 3 года назад
@@noxscotchxtape that’s something humans have known since we were hunter gatherers.
@logans6619
@logans6619 3 года назад
I remember reading about US/USSR liberators of German concentration camps over feeding freed Jews to the point of death
@noxscotchxtape
@noxscotchxtape 3 года назад
@@thebigenchilada678 Possibly
@thebigenchilada678
@thebigenchilada678 3 года назад
@@noxscotchxtape people have always been smart man. We often misconstrue knowledge with intelligence, or ver the years we’ve learned about more things but our capacity for learning (intelligence) has remained the same.
@AshizuriArt
@AshizuriArt 2 года назад
I have lived in the town where Manjiro was from, for the past 25 years. Tosashimizu City, in Kochi Prefecture. I‘ve helped out a couple of authors with research for their books, interpreting etc and I am the Deputy Chair of the local Manjiro Society. His life story is amazing and the more I find out, the more I am in awe of this guy. Remember at this time social mobility was not possible in a feudal society. However, when he returned to Japan he was quickly promoted to the rank of samurai, allowed to take a surname and became a retainer to the local lord. He went on to be an adviser to the Japanese government and a professor in Tokyo. There was even a Kabuki play made about him while he was still alive. Thanks "Voices of the Past" for bringing attention to John Manjiro's incredible, true story of adventure and human perseverance.
@uno322
@uno322 2 года назад
That's awesome
@AnIdiotsLantern
@AnIdiotsLantern Год назад
John Manjiro should be more famous in the west! What an adventure he had. Can you imagine the sort of stories he must have told as an old man?
@The_WatchList
@The_WatchList Год назад
That is amazing! I am truly glad the man became so well respected!
@sfjessevideo
@sfjessevideo Год назад
Did he ever reunite with his fishing partners?
@danielguy3581
@danielguy3581 Год назад
Could you shed some light on him being imprisoned for three days? The way it's described, I get the impression it was punishment for some violation of regulations, rather than detainment for questioning. Yet apparently his status was not only restored following release, but elevated. Seems I am missing some relevant context to understand what happened there.
@williammays9408
@williammays9408 3 года назад
"He had made so much money he thought it indecent to continue" class act
@blupyxi5669
@blupyxi5669 3 года назад
Dumb af!
@MajesticSkywhale
@MajesticSkywhale 3 года назад
@@blupyxi5669 japanese would be embarrassed about amassing that kind of wealth. He would certainly prefer to return home to retire in a small village as a farmer or woodworker or baker or something, continue working hard, and help others make their own fortunes
@MajesticSkywhale
@MajesticSkywhale 3 года назад
@Florida Man its not hard labor if it's a hobby you love
@MajesticSkywhale
@MajesticSkywhale 3 года назад
@Florida Man well you're florida man, not Edo Period Japanese Man, so let's let him just tell us what he did
@sunshineskystar
@sunshineskystar 3 года назад
@@blupyxi5669 japanese are mostly buddist and based on how he describe the captains lodge in the ship, it is clear that he is one. thats why he didnt want to amass more wealth than he already need since it is looked down upon in buddist believe.
@Nemesis_T_Type
@Nemesis_T_Type 3 года назад
I love the artistic interpretation of Americans in a Japanese way. It makes it look like an alternate universe.
@whoelsebutmeofcoursei
@whoelsebutmeofcoursei 3 года назад
They make westerners look like how we see easterns: exotic, weird, funny outfits..
@Coffeeisnecessarynowpepper
@Coffeeisnecessarynowpepper 3 года назад
The drawing painting of the World Trade Center is good
@whoelsebutmeofcoursei
@whoelsebutmeofcoursei 3 года назад
@@Coffeeisnecessarynowpepper which one is that?
@banegas0411
@banegas0411 3 года назад
@@whoelsebutmeofcoursei 2 piles of rubble on fire
@extremosaur
@extremosaur 3 года назад
Only because Media wants you to see us as a dark, and hateful people.
@peace-yv4qd
@peace-yv4qd 3 года назад
I'm struck by the compassion that the Captain and his crew showed these wayward fisherman. Truly inspirational.
@n3tw0rk_n3k0
@n3tw0rk_n3k0 3 года назад
I would assume it's an unwritten sailor's rule. It could have been them stranded in that island.
@goatface6602
@goatface6602 3 года назад
The law of the sea is taken seriously everywhere, by all seaman.
@ibnyahud
@ibnyahud 3 года назад
It's well known as the "law of the sea" for millenia....all humanity shares it
@mikeoxmaul5465
@mikeoxmaul5465 3 года назад
Not always there are pirates about
@hotlanta35
@hotlanta35 3 года назад
Ok Mike... all sailors except pirates👍
@ashleypenn7845
@ashleypenn7845 3 года назад
It really does make you wonder why Hollywood continues to scrape the bottom of the barrel with reboots and remakes when they have fascinating real life stories like this they could be telling instead.
@ashleypenn7845
@ashleypenn7845 2 года назад
@God Slayer I'd watch it.
@AceMonkeyIlium
@AceMonkeyIlium Год назад
You’re speaking facts
@semplybalanced3210
@semplybalanced3210 4 дня назад
Capitalism doesn’t support creativity.
@thylacine1154
@thylacine1154 День назад
Agree! I'd think this could be an interesting series on Netflix.
@bartolomeestebanmurillo4459
@bartolomeestebanmurillo4459 2 года назад
This deserves a movie or even television adaption. Kid and his friends are stranded at sea, rescued by a captain of a young United States, gets educated in America and becomes part of the crew of an American vessel, witnesses the Wild West at its height, though returned to a hostile gov he and his friends were given pensions eventually, helped modernize Japan and became a well known scholar and diplomat. He and the captain who rescued him remained life long friends!
@kennethnielsen935
@kennethnielsen935 15 дней назад
Absolutely! It’s like the inverse of that show, Shogun!
@markvoelker6620
@markvoelker6620 6 дней назад
It would be a great mini-series!
@Abby_Doodles
@Abby_Doodles 4 дня назад
Surprised Disney didn’t slurp up this story
@sussurus
@sussurus 3 года назад
"Rain gathering, Winding into streams, Like the roads to Boston." -Manjiro, July 1853
@garywebster3044
@garywebster3044 3 года назад
Wow. Made me shiver.
@Dukevares1
@Dukevares1 3 года назад
Death poem
@chucknorris277
@chucknorris277 3 года назад
All roads lead to boston out here lol
@DomisylirAppallith
@DomisylirAppallith 3 года назад
“Your turn”
@keithwallace1688
@keithwallace1688 2 года назад
Now THATS a haiku 😂
@jonb5310
@jonb5310 3 года назад
I bet when he got back to his family the first words out of his mouth were, "you're not gonna believe this shit"
@kathryncarter6143
@kathryncarter6143 2 года назад
I'd love to have heard the "sea horse" story out of his own mouth.
@kakalimukherjee3297
@kakalimukherjee3297 2 года назад
Black Manjiro be like:
@TheBroly2020
@TheBroly2020 3 года назад
Gets lost and literally survives in a alien world and gets back home. Government: three days dungeon no trial.
@Steir12
@Steir12 3 года назад
They probably were checking their backgrounds and either their story holds water or not. You know, better safe than sorry.
@kebabkebob7808
@kebabkebob7808 3 года назад
It was a slap on the wrist for losing the boat
@LeoPlaw
@LeoPlaw 3 года назад
None were able to return to Japan, for this was during Japan's period of isolation when leaving the country was an offence punishable by death. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakahama_Manjir%C5%8D#Voyage_to_America
@wordforger
@wordforger 2 года назад
It was a slap on the wrist. The government realized they couldn't just let the men go because they did technically violate the law. But because they did it by accident and brought back good intelligence, keeping them around was an asset. That's probably why they were given a living stipend while being forbidden to sail anymore. The Japanese government wanted to be able to call them up at will and avoid any more "accidents."
@lenney872
@lenney872 2 года назад
@@LeoPlaw yes they were able to return. Read the whole page.
@MaoMoney
@MaoMoney 3 года назад
The craziest part about this entire story was "manjiro made over 700$ in 70 days an enormous amount of money and decided to continue would be INDECENT" amazing.
@sunchaser424
@sunchaser424 3 года назад
Lmao true
@bluesdealer
@bluesdealer 2 года назад
It sounds like he quit while he was ahead. As he described, California was almost lawless at the time, with lots of thugs and gangs.
@rayart88
@rayart88 Год назад
$700 is worth about 26k today...not bad for 2 months+ of work lol
@Tirocoa
@Tirocoa Год назад
​@@bluesdealer So... Nothing changed?
@BartimaeusCarbulo
@BartimaeusCarbulo 5 дней назад
That's $25k ! Respect to him for quitting while he was ahead.
@ChaplainJoshua
@ChaplainJoshua 3 года назад
Captain Whitfield is my great great Grandfather. This is amazing to see.
@ChaplainJoshua
@ChaplainJoshua 3 года назад
My grandmother Patricia Whitfield has a copy of the John Howland's ship registry papers
@roberthimself7813
@roberthimself7813 3 года назад
@@ChaplainJoshua that's crazy
@leatheryfoot6354
@leatheryfoot6354 3 года назад
Small World.
@netro4680
@netro4680 3 года назад
Your grandfather is breathtaking
@Shinobi33
@Shinobi33 3 года назад
Really? That's awesome
@patrickholt2270
@patrickholt2270 3 года назад
It's a wise man who knows to get out when he's ahead, and not so loaded he's an easy mark. Modesty makes good protection.
@morganrobinson8042
@morganrobinson8042 3 года назад
Seriously, I was so proud of him when he folded and went to get his friends. That boy had sense.
@thatguy-yn8ji
@thatguy-yn8ji 3 года назад
tired of hearing about gold fever, good riddance!
@CoercedJab
@CoercedJab 3 года назад
that guy you mean the psyop meant to cover up the discovery of the ancient civilizations found when exploring westward
@andrewhall6867
@andrewhall6867 3 года назад
Thank you for posting about John Majiro, my favorite and most overlooked historical badass. What is omitted is that he goes on to be an important court advisor and is made a samurai. He studied military science in Europe during the Franco-Prussian war and returned to Japan via the United States. He was formally received in DC and meets up with Captain Whitfield again. From there he returns and helped modernized the Japanese navy in the buildup to the Russo-Japanese war. There's also a minor planet named after him.
@Nemesis_T_Type
@Nemesis_T_Type 3 года назад
This story needs to be told. Imagine Captain Whitfield's surprise when he finds out that a former fisherman is now a Samurai and serves the Japanese government.
@stephenferguson9756
@stephenferguson9756 3 года назад
He sounds like a Japanese Joseph.
@bajiraosingham9495
@bajiraosingham9495 3 года назад
What a life he's lived.
@catguy00
@catguy00 2 года назад
Ironically the video I just watched before this was one the Franco-Prussian War.
@randomvintagefilm273
@randomvintagefilm273 2 года назад
That is amazing. That young fisherman could never have dreamed that a strong wind would take him on a one in a million experience
@hihohe4067
@hihohe4067 3 года назад
Poor Captain Whitfield. Lost his wife and only learned of it when he came home to an empty house.
@gypsyemperor7535
@gypsyemperor7535 3 года назад
Yes, hits hard. But seems he lived to 81 and married again, so happy ending.
@jamesyanchek779
@jamesyanchek779 3 года назад
It was more then typical for a woman to find out her husband had died @ sea months ago not learn it until his shape came in.
@FitzPenn
@FitzPenn 3 года назад
@@jamesyanchek779 It sucks either way.
@jamesyanchek779
@jamesyanchek779 3 года назад
@@FitzPenn How 'bout this wrinkle. Since the man was out to sea, his pay was sent to the wife. Now, either the royal navy or the independent private shipping company employing the sailor would also only learn about the death when the ship came in. The navy or the company would send someone out on a condolence call when they heard the news. After informing the woman she was a widow, perhaps for a year or more, they would then demand back all the pay from the day her husband died. She'd be expected to hand back as much as a year or more of pay then on the spot. I suppose the reverse happened as well, the husband would come home to learn his wife had run off w/ all his pay.
@jlselc
@jlselc 3 года назад
It was common for this situation to play out this way. Or in reverse(the wife learning of no return of her husband ). Finances changed drastically especially for the "common folk" due to this.
@randomvintagefilm273
@randomvintagefilm273 2 года назад
The boy had the trip of a lifetime and even saw Haley's comet! What an amazing story and how lucky are we to know hear this! Thank you so much for making these videos, I know they are a lot of work.
@briancastro7758
@briancastro7758 Год назад
I thought it was Haley's too but apparently not! en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Comet_of_1843
@SiriProject
@SiriProject 3 года назад
Knew the story overall, but the actual return has a nice, warm "There and Back Again" feeling about it, I love it.
@kebabkebob7808
@kebabkebob7808 3 года назад
It’s a heroes journey
@el6700
@el6700 3 года назад
Right?!
@skudzer1985
@skudzer1985 3 года назад
Can you imagine living in a world in which such an adventure is even possible? To set sail at sea and be lost, to stumble upon a strange new land with totally different people and cultures, have them take you in and eventually find your way back to your homeland? The closest thing we can associate with that today is accidentally getting lost in space and landing on another planet. What was it like to live on the earth and NOT know the name and location of every continent? To have a fresh, untouched mind and see everything as new.
@dangerdan2592
@dangerdan2592 2 года назад
Yeah, this could basically never happen today. This is why I find history so interesting. It's hard not to romanticize the past when I hear stories like this. For all the strides advancements we have made, the interconnectedness of our world has take a lot of that mystery out of it. I know we are living in the best time in terms of quality of life (not in all countries, of course, but overall) but I still find myself wanting to see and experience what life was like in the past. This story needs to be made into a movie or something.
@D4RK4NG3L_
@D4RK4NG3L_ Год назад
Surely theres still a couple undiscovered islands out there with some crazy shit on it
@briancastro7758
@briancastro7758 Год назад
Islands that no one lives on and parts of those islands no one has ever been to/seen, sure. Islands that are truly undiscovered... no. You can bring up high resolution satellite images of every island on Earth on your phone on a whim.
@D4RK4NG3L_
@D4RK4NG3L_ Год назад
@@briancastro7758 aw man haha to the stars then🤣
@robertortiz-wilson1588
@robertortiz-wilson1588 2 месяца назад
Really underrated point.
@lyra1255
@lyra1255 3 года назад
I like how he felt like he was finding so much gold he was afraid of getting too rich and decided to stop. Guess it worked out coming back home and being rewarded with basically infinite money anyway?
@FatGouf
@FatGouf 3 года назад
I mean, getting rich wasn't his real goal. Dude has integrity.
@Harthorn
@Harthorn 3 года назад
@@FatGouf tegrity....
@augustday9483
@augustday9483 Год назад
He got out while the going was good. That's true wisdom.
@luckystranger4312
@luckystranger4312 Год назад
Even though it happened more than a century, i feel sorry for the death of the Captains wife, i just can imagine how excited he was to tell her about his trip, just to find out about her death, it must have been heartbreaking, to say the least
@liamflynn1120
@liamflynn1120 3 года назад
Ah, the olden days. When you could ask a kid's coworkers if you could take them home to the other side of the world. Good times, good times.
@mombaassa
@mombaassa 3 года назад
It paid off, though. The kid eventually got them all home.
@rustedcake879
@rustedcake879 3 года назад
@@mombaassa And he got rich/famous + made history. Certainly surpassed expectations I bet.
@ricksflicks-
@ricksflicks- 3 года назад
Yes, those were the days, and if you got bored you just headed west and made a shit load of money digging gold. Easy peesy.
@liamflynn1120
@liamflynn1120 3 года назад
@@ricksflicks- Which honestly has a romantic appeal. Like shit I'd do it if I didn't have debt to worry about.
@telesphoros
@telesphoros 3 года назад
@Hernando Malinche You can't find bitcoins in the river
@areallyrealisticguyd4333
@areallyrealisticguyd4333 3 года назад
The Japanese drawings really brings this together
@airmanjoe
@airmanjoe 2 года назад
I love how they drew the captain as a hideous freak lmao
@Brunaa00098
@Brunaa00098 2 года назад
@@airmanjoe It's not the captain
@Rooster_Sailing
@Rooster_Sailing 3 года назад
@10:58 "a strange star that filled the western sky." en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Comet_of_1843
@JavierChiappa
@JavierChiappa 3 года назад
Thats awesome, you know it's true when the astronomy checks out, lol
@noahjuanjuneau9598
@noahjuanjuneau9598 3 года назад
I have a copy of this book (translated from Japanese) The title is ‘Drifting toward the Southeast’ by John Manjiro... it’s from a publisher in New Bedford, Mass. and includes numerous illustrations and hand-drawn maps by Manjiro. Fascinating adventure tale...AND it’s true!
@johnpeteru4844
@johnpeteru4844 3 года назад
I blubbered when he found his mother still alive , what an epic story
@lkrnpk
@lkrnpk 3 года назад
They shouted "Nihonjin, Nihonjin (?)'' Captain: ''Aye, give these men some gin, will you? They sure need it''
@themonkeyhand
@themonkeyhand 2 года назад
Japanese artist interpretations are so amazing and amusing.... How pimp is Manjiro to pull up to Oahu with a boat full of gold and tell his homies to hop on we goin' home!!!!!
@danielkellyuk
@danielkellyuk 3 года назад
A fascinating story, and one that didn't end there. Manjirō later became a Samurai in the service of the Shogun and returned to the United States and Europe on official missions: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nakahama_Manjir%C5%8D
@athingwhichexists
@athingwhichexists 3 года назад
Reading that, he actually went back to Massachusetts to Visit Captain Whitfield while he was on his way home from studying military science in Europe as a Japanese Ambassador, that sounds straight out of a movie, and I wonder how that convo went.
@jlselc
@jlselc 3 года назад
@@athingwhichexists would love to have been a fly on the wall during that.
@boyanpenev9822
@boyanpenev9822 3 года назад
The story says that he was made a retainer to the local lord, wouldn't that make him a samurai anyway?
@hattorihaso2579
@hattorihaso2579 3 года назад
@@boyanpenev9822 yup
@vitabricksnailslime8273
@vitabricksnailslime8273 3 года назад
I wondered, when they briefly showed his portrait, that he looked more like a noble than a fisherman.
@JAGzilla-ur3lh
@JAGzilla-ur3lh 3 года назад
I just got home from work a little while ago, and was exhausted and generally in a bad mood. The wholesomeness of this story cleared that right up.
@brokenbridge6316
@brokenbridge6316 3 года назад
Nice that the Captain of that Whaling ship treated Najiro and friends with such kind consideration. This story was an interesting one. Maybe it can become a movie one day.
@lisaa.4667
@lisaa.4667 2 года назад
I'd watch it.
@brokenbridge6316
@brokenbridge6316 2 года назад
@@lisaa.4667---Awesome. Me too.
@12345678900987659101
@12345678900987659101 3 года назад
"I was shipwrecked and landed in a fantastical new land inhabited by Nanban and have many adventures."
@henrymonroe4300
@henrymonroe4300 3 года назад
When you gear a guy say that you shut up and start listening
@condty3123
@condty3123 3 года назад
us is not Nanban
@orev5035
@orev5035 3 года назад
@@condty3123 Wasn't Nanban the term they used for white people?
@condty3123
@condty3123 3 года назад
@@orev5035 It has become a term that mainly refers to cultural objects and people in Southern Europe, Southeast Asia, Spain, and Portugal. By the way, Western Europeans and Dutch were called red-haired people to distinguish them.
@erika002
@erika002 3 года назад
sounds like a light novel title
@HistoryOfRevolutions
@HistoryOfRevolutions 3 года назад
Fun fact: The first American diplomat was consul general Townsend Harris, who was present in Japan from 1856 until 1862 but was denied permission to present his credentials to the Shōgun until 1858. He successfully negotiated the Treaty of Amity and Commerce, or the "Harris Treaty of 1858," securing trade between the two nations and paving the way for greater Western influence in Japan's economy and politics
@FlamingBasketballClub
@FlamingBasketballClub 3 года назад
What's your channel about?
@HistoryOfRevolutions
@HistoryOfRevolutions 3 года назад
@@FlamingBasketballClub it's about revolutions throughout history and how they shaped and changed the world. I also make videos about thinkers and philosophers who contributed towards changing the world and challenging the powers that be
@StefanScripca
@StefanScripca 3 года назад
He did so with a bunch of cannons behind him... makes it a bit easier to do the diplomacy stuff
@DuelJ007
@DuelJ007 3 года назад
What kinda trade deals me made are preety good to know when describing him
@rsmith02
@rsmith02 3 года назад
@Irish Jester The answer was less trade and more a port to support whaling vessels. The US was incensed by poor treatment of its sailors when they shipwrecked or otherwise landed in Japan needing supplies. Also, Britain and Russia were starting to pressure Japan to trade at that time too, and America saw them as rivals.
@thescarlethunter2160
@thescarlethunter2160 3 года назад
The very first Isekai
@dorian4646
@dorian4646 3 года назад
To Massachusetts!
@Rose-yt5hi
@Rose-yt5hi 3 года назад
Instead if truck-kun, it was ship-kun.
@notatallheng
@notatallheng 3 года назад
"That Time When I Got Shipwrecked And Ended Up In A Land Where Everything Runs On Steam." Now in a Kinokuniya near you.
@namekman01
@namekman01 3 года назад
@@notatallheng is 'kinokuniya' a 'cinema'? the word looks like japan-glish
@muhammadnursyahmi9440
@muhammadnursyahmi9440 3 года назад
@@notatallheng bookstore actually
@drewpamon
@drewpamon 3 года назад
That map must have been extremely valuable in Japan. I can hardly imagine.
@petemartyn
@petemartyn 3 года назад
Right? What presence of mind and courage (or very fortunate curiosity) to have not only found such a route back home but to have snagged a treasure like that along the way!
@mvb565
@mvb565 2 года назад
Super knowledgeable the captain, not introducing solids to quickly to the men that had been starving. Instead, herb soup and a little bit of meat. This is amazing that he was aware of this, similar to fasting for long periods.
@KyuuDesperation
@KyuuDesperation Год назад
Yeah Science! And yet.... There's still people who believe the Earth is Flat....
@dwightchaos9449
@dwightchaos9449 Месяц назад
@@KyuuDesperation I know huh.. it’s crazy how one can do experiments themselves to see the earth is round, yet they still rather fall right in line and believe some ridiculous RU-vid videos. And they call us the “sheep”..😂
@zenolachance1181
@zenolachance1181 3 года назад
I live in New Bedford Massachusetts, and in New Bedford whaling museum you can find this story, with artifacts from the journey and I believe the captain's Journal. Fairhaven celebrates this encounter with a Japanese citizen to this day and they have a sister city somewhere in Japan I forget the name. But I do know that it is a coastal fishing Village. I also believe there is a monument to this in Fairhaven. The owner of the whaleship has a street named after him. Howland Street, also they have to this day the Whitfield manjiro friendship society which is still active
@Abdulhakeembennette
@Abdulhakeembennette 2 года назад
As part of the celebration Massachusetts should invite one random Japanese fisherman to fly to Logan, check out our state, and then send him to see California.
@KorKhan89
@KorKhan89 3 года назад
A “man of wisdom and learning” being elected as President. Those were the days!
@Acetyl53
@Acetyl53 3 года назад
Blame the central bankers and their multi-century war to end all wars.
@Lachausis
@Lachausis 2 года назад
bUt rEaL cOmMuNiSm hAsN't bEeN tRiEd yEt. gIvE uS a cHaNcE, rAySiSsss!
@lordofchromium1534
@lordofchromium1534 2 года назад
@@Lachausis don’t fight a straw man with a straw man
@serdnae
@serdnae 2 года назад
We cannot elect people of wisdom and learning until we ourselves value wisdom and learning.
@KitKat_293
@KitKat_293 2 года назад
I think that was very much the idealistic and hope filled perspective of a teenager in a strange and amazing world who received a lot of genuine kindness and welcoming there, and all immediately after an extremely traumatic near death experience. Idk I think we gain a lot by seeing how his perspective on America was very rose tinted, though remarkably artistic and emotional and personal in a way you rarely get from historic first hand accounts. And the idealism, bordering on naivety is understandable after going through something so horrific at such a young age, but encountering some truly kind people in the world and all the things he felt and saw that were so remarkable compared to most peoples lives. To me it misses the point to take that and believe that the government was actually any better or worse back then
@ReynaSingh
@ReynaSingh 3 года назад
The storytelling is nothing short of cinematic 🙏 keep up the good content
@user-lt6er2ud2i
@user-lt6er2ud2i 3 года назад
Agreed
@yaleyoon6856
@yaleyoon6856 3 года назад
These accidental shipwreck accounts are always interesting
@VoicesofthePast
@VoicesofthePast 3 года назад
They are! Any suggestions for more? They are a joy to make
@yaleyoon6856
@yaleyoon6856 3 года назад
@@VoicesofthePast Yes! Actually in the comments here I posted a story of another (a Korean guy this time) fisherman named Mun Sundeuk who shipwrecked on Okinawa & the Phillipines and finally made it back to Korea via China after 3 yrs. Around 1799~1802. Crazy story, he even learned Luzon Island dialect Filipino while living there
@jobrimar8291
@jobrimar8291 3 года назад
@@VoicesofthePast the Siberian voyages are quite the roistering tales, frequently ending in icy doom. The Willem Barents, Semyon Dezhnev or Vitus Berings voyages are worth a look if you are unfamiliar with them (Bering had a zoologist/boffin named Steller in the crew who left a good account of those expeditions
@John_on_the_mountain
@John_on_the_mountain 3 года назад
Id like to hear more accounts of purposeful shipwrecks
@rztrzt
@rztrzt 2 года назад
@@VoicesofthePast Charles Rawden Maclean aka "John Ross"
@TheLastSoundNL
@TheLastSoundNL 2 года назад
The idea of the mother seeing her lost son again really pulled on my heartstrings. So good.
@ricksflicks-
@ricksflicks- 3 года назад
Also love that Manjiro had a homie named Terry.
@prism8278
@prism8278 3 года назад
XD
@DejectedCat
@DejectedCat 3 года назад
NHK just greenlit a taiga historical drama on this guy's life story.
@nemoatlantis7148
@nemoatlantis7148 3 года назад
can't wait to see low wage bad acting gaijin protray
@ThePooper3000
@ThePooper3000 3 года назад
Imagine spending 3 days in jail and getting banned from fishing because you got lost.
@darryljones3009
@darryljones3009 3 года назад
Well, at least you won't get lost again.
@digitalnomad9985
@digitalnomad9985 3 года назад
He also failed to return the borrowed boat.
@juliantotriwijaya9208
@juliantotriwijaya9208 3 года назад
@@chrissi.enbyYT lol XD why does this fit perfectly?
@redcrown0694
@redcrown0694 3 года назад
North Korea: lost at sea, declared a traitor; sentence to be killed by Anti-AirCraft Gun. Family members sent to slave labor camp.
@heatherv3417
@heatherv3417 3 года назад
Japan was isolationist during this era, so that’s why he wasn’t allowed to sail for fear of contacting people he knew outside of Japan or trying to return
@daftnord4957
@daftnord4957 3 года назад
i'm so used to hearing about shitty deadly and horrific stories from this time period, this was such a beautiful story, and well told
@amya3980
@amya3980 3 года назад
Wonderful to hear a story filled with kindness and cooperation. It's amazing how much humans can achieve by working together instead of hate and intolerance.
@kimiokadota8740
@kimiokadota8740 3 года назад
John Manjiro brought back American cultures to Japan, which awakened many Japanese intellectuals who reformed the feudal system and Japan succeeded in modernization in Asia. Thus, I can say John Manjiro was an enlightenment of Western civilization for Japan.
@diegoflores9237
@diegoflores9237 Месяц назад
Fake
@nicholasbreazeale3472
@nicholasbreazeale3472 3 года назад
Dude lived a hell of a life and had a happy fucking ending. Why isn’t this an anime. I’d binge it.
@el6700
@el6700 3 года назад
Also, the way Old America was described sounds so lovely.
@richiecuzzz1
@richiecuzzz1 3 года назад
It’s crazy how much our relationship with Japan has changed from time to time.
@MrTsiolkovsky
@MrTsiolkovsky 3 года назад
Howland, who the rescuing ship is named after, was my direct ancestor (and the ancestor of many other Americans). That was fun to hear. His story is quite remarkable as well. He fell overboard on the Mayflower and nearly drowned, holding on for dear life to a rope still attached to the vessel. It's so crazy to think that me and so many others are only here because he did a good job holding on to a rope.
@treebeard8475
@treebeard8475 2 года назад
I can’t imagine my wife dying while I’m at sea for months on end what a blast that must have been to the captain. People were and are very resilient.
@Friquido
@Friquido 2 года назад
Considering how that period of time was it's so heart warming for the captain to treat them nicely. Smart and a nice man
@AZTigerMMA
@AZTigerMMA 3 года назад
This was nice to hear of the humanity in this one!
@user-xe2hl7cj4c
@user-xe2hl7cj4c 3 года назад
He must've been quite tenacious to actually profit from the Gold Rush without falling into the wrong crowd and spending his earnings on vice under the lawless sun. Manjiro definitely loved his home.
@The_Gallowglass
@The_Gallowglass 3 года назад
When a man is homesick there's not much that can stop him.
@AntiJovian
@AntiJovian 3 года назад
Truly he was a man with character, with a pure sense of adventure.
@miguelrodrigues2705
@miguelrodrigues2705 3 года назад
@@jannguerrero i mean all the money he would make extra would be useless back home unless he brougth the gold which was impossible. duo to japand isolation there was no such thing as a usd to japan money exchange
@alswann2702
@alswann2702 3 года назад
@@miguelrodrigues2705 Gold spends anywhere by weight, not dollars, yen, pounds, etc.
@miguelrodrigues2705
@miguelrodrigues2705 3 года назад
@@alswann2702 I didnt mean being American gold, I meant there's no way he'd be able to carry pure gold througth the sea all the way to Japan without trading license, something that Japan just isn't have.... also as soon as he'd arrive the gold would be confiscated as to not incentive other Japanese to try their luck in America or any other exterior country
@lenardregencia
@lenardregencia 3 года назад
John Manjiro needs his own Anime Series.
@nulnoh219
@nulnoh219 3 года назад
Search up Appare Ranman. A Samurai and a young Japanese inventor shipwrecks in California and participates in a cross country motor race.
@wordforger
@wordforger 2 года назад
No kidding.
@PenumbranWolf
@PenumbranWolf 2 года назад
I WOULD WATCH SIX SEASONS, 3 OVAs, AND BUY THE WAIFU PILLOW. I DEMAND A BEACH EPISODE.
@robbypodobinski824
@robbypodobinski824 2 года назад
Make him a samurai and let's go!!!
@thelastdrive-inscreen2393
@thelastdrive-inscreen2393 2 года назад
Johnny Manj
@phillipisbell2568
@phillipisbell2568 3 года назад
I love the pause in his voice when he writes about "the city of New York, in the province of...New York." Like even then people were confuaed about why they had the same name.
@robdee81
@robdee81 3 года назад
Adventure like this is impossible in todays world and that makes me a little sad.
@Gilgamoth
@Gilgamoth 3 года назад
Yeah the rise in over-imposed nationalism(I said over-imposed because, nationalism has multiple narratives nowadays) is kinda disheartening. Sure the old world was filled with war, but the one who doesn't want war was truly kind.
@garyoakham9723
@garyoakham9723 3 года назад
@@Gilgamoth what’s the point of country or taxes if you have no heritage
@Gilgamoth
@Gilgamoth 3 года назад
@@garyoakham9723 "mutiple marratives" also, if you show the modern world to a soldiers, maybe 50 years ago what's like in this world today. They may realize it might be not worth fighting for. It's all just a fallacy coming from insecurities and the powerful ones likes to take advantages of us. On the other hand, there's an island in southeast Asia where all of the people are fully colorblind because of inbreeding. So who knows, maybe war may serve as the human way of "the strongest one gets to continue their heritage" (because I don't think full colorblind perdon makes even at least useful soldiers) and it does proven that if you decided to scramble your DNA, there's a higher chance of surviving multiple diseases, viruses, and god knows whatever thing that could mess up our human dna real good. So yeah, in no ways I am attacking traditionalism and etc. But it is pretty stupid if that's the reason of you are being unkind to others.
@wordforger
@wordforger 2 года назад
Well, there's still one or two isolated tribes in the world.
@CantusTropus
@CantusTropus 2 года назад
This is why we need to find aliens, so we can do this again.
@mikesuniverse1789
@mikesuniverse1789 3 года назад
amazing how historys most minute events can have great impacts... like how a fisherman getting lost at sea and rescued by a whaling ship ends up providing Japan with its first world map.
@Darklazer230
@Darklazer230 3 года назад
As the past speaks to us, we all constantly speak to the future
@goldenrepublic6848
@goldenrepublic6848 3 года назад
I don’t think the future likes what it hears
@dcraexon
@dcraexon 3 года назад
My dogs have gas
@seand.g423
@seand.g423 3 года назад
@@dcraexon out of all you could have posted on this of all threads...
@InnerDness
@InnerDness 3 года назад
rEaLLy mAkEs YoU tHiNk
@Acetyl53
@Acetyl53 3 года назад
The record of our shame will be more vivid than ever before.
@brictator
@brictator 3 года назад
19:20 indecent!
@billymartin2220
@billymartin2220 3 года назад
Did not expect to see you here. Your videos are very entertaining dude.
@qetoun
@qetoun 3 года назад
shameful display!
@Zampan0
@Zampan0 3 года назад
Both Japanese and Americans were on the whole decent people in those days.
@sk_lurks
@sk_lurks 3 года назад
That stuck out to me too. Seems like a very healthy mindset to think "this is enough money, I don't need more"
@bryanblack505
@bryanblack505 3 года назад
@@sk_lurks There's people who have that mindset today. Just last year at the age of 40 I quit and sold my business along with my house in the suburbs of SoCal. Gonna move to a small town somewhere in the country and live modestly. I'm done wasting my life making money. After I sell the rest of my cars and other junk I should have just enough money to buy a truck, modest cabin, chunk of forest, and have no bills till I die. Already growing a beard! lol
@pepperspray7386
@pepperspray7386 3 года назад
"Incredible Story" is an understatement.
@HoneyMike
@HoneyMike 2 года назад
I was so happy to hear his mother was still alive
@joesantana180
@joesantana180 3 года назад
This is fucking sick, it would make a great movie
@geoffreyherrick298
@geoffreyherrick298 3 года назад
Orca great anime!
@AJWRAJWR
@AJWRAJWR 3 года назад
Back in the olden days when seahorses were still just a kind of walrus... I get nostalgic.
@_AvgWellInformedCitizen
@_AvgWellInformedCitizen 3 года назад
He was eventually officially recognized with a “favor of the country” and granted a coveted job working for the Lord, probably as a trade advisor. This is up and above a lifelong stipend, their version of a pension. The map he brought back with him, a national treasure of modern cartography.
@Rvoid
@Rvoid 3 года назад
He was made a Hatamoto nonetheless. A personal retainer to the Shogun himself. Truly, his adventure has done him well.
@_AvgWellInformedCitizen
@_AvgWellInformedCitizen 3 года назад
@@Rvoid thank you for being specific. A retainer for the Shogun himself!
@FakeAnarchist
@FakeAnarchist 3 года назад
This makes me feel the United States and Japan have been close friends for a very long time actually
@rsmith02
@rsmith02 3 года назад
Had its ups and downs, though : )
@att7364
@att7364 3 года назад
@@rsmith02 they gave us a surprise once and we generously gave them a double surprise!
@stupidleftists2580
@stupidleftists2580 3 года назад
Well there was that whole World War Two thing
@tylerdurden3722
@tylerdurden3722 3 года назад
Not really. More like a long rivalry that slowly escalated and concluded with two nukes.
@drzerogi
@drzerogi 3 года назад
@@att7364 And by doing so, we gave the people their freedom back from their tyrannical government, and have been good friends since.
@DisentDesign
@DisentDesign 3 года назад
19:20 earns 600$ in 7 days (equal to roughly $20,000) and stops because he thought it would be "indecent" to continue. The thing I've learned mostly from listening to these and that people, in general, were better in harder times.
@ninny65
@ninny65 3 года назад
"Technically we're meant to punish you for this but you've advanced our country by 200 years so 3 days in jail and everything you want forever?"
@knutkarstensen3114
@knutkarstensen3114 3 года назад
When people told real stories.. Hundreds of years later they still have such an impact. What is first is what is human. Universal. Unchanging. True. This storie is a treasure
@McFaddenWasRight
@McFaddenWasRight 2 года назад
I am happy he and his family got to reunite. It sounds like he was a wonderful fellow.
@Danosauruscrecks
@Danosauruscrecks 3 года назад
This would make a cool manga
@billbillson3129
@billbillson3129 3 года назад
I felt genuinely happy to hear that his old mom was still alive XD What an adventure!
@briankaras1767
@briankaras1767 2 года назад
A good friend of mine is descended from Manjiro. He had told me this story before. It’s truly amazing.
@ryudai1
@ryudai1 3 года назад
Happy Holidays from Oahu! Thrilled to hear my home mentioned in a video.
@LiteralCrimeRave
@LiteralCrimeRave 3 года назад
Adjusted for inflation, those $600 would be worth a bit over $100,000 today
@skillfuldabest
@skillfuldabest 2 года назад
If this was during the Californian gold rush around 1850 then the $600 would actually be $21k today.
@ricksflicks-
@ricksflicks- 3 года назад
What a freakin Boss Manjiro was. Total badass. Full on legit Hero's Journey with a clean ending. Well done!
@T4G0E
@T4G0E 2 года назад
Considering the high regard many Japanese people have for trains, I kind of feel like Manjiro should have a statue of him in a station somewhere. Literally the first Japanese person to ever ride a train to work.
@ollipuumalainen8932
@ollipuumalainen8932 3 года назад
The so called sea horse couldn't have been a walrus (pictured in the video) as they live only in the Arctic regions of the Northern Hemisphere. It was most likely a southern elephant seal. A great video once again! Your channel is among my absolute favourites.
@wasp586
@wasp586 Год назад
same goes for that narwal ...
@jackmurray7135
@jackmurray7135 14 дней назад
I was born and raised in New Bedford and now live in Fairhaven and I'm extremely proud that my home got to play such a role in the history of both nations. The town of Fairhaven takes great pride in it's history as well, there are a few monuments to Manjiro and Whitfield around the town, a small stone pillar with small excerpts about the two men sits infront of the Northeast Maritime Institute, the little school house where Manjiro learned English still stands and is very well preserved, and now every odd numbered year we play host to the Manjiro Festival while Manjiro's hometown and our sister city, Tosashimizu, hosts on the even numbered years. As I said I am very proud of my home and it's history, New Bedford especially, though it may be in rough state now it's practically overflowing with a rich maritime history so I encourage anyone interested in that sort of thing to take a look, I promise you will not be disappointed. It's kinda surreal to hear my lil neck of the woods mentioned in a youtube video but not at all unpleasant lol.
@user-qs7gx7rp7m
@user-qs7gx7rp7m 13 дней назад
Ain't history great ? Don't need a 'Time Machine' to go anywhere in time or place, if you have eyes, ears and a touch of curiosity in your spirit to visit where ever you care in todays world ?
@ll.fleischer1736
@ll.fleischer1736 Год назад
This was such a good story! Currently crying happy tears. I’m so glad manjiro got what he wanted in the end and got to return to his family. That rarely happens in life what an extraordinary man
@trenttalley924
@trenttalley924 2 года назад
Now Americans look at Japanese cities in admiration, longing to move there.
@bambrose1565
@bambrose1565 3 года назад
Really enjoyed watching that. Thank you!
@christaylor6654
@christaylor6654 3 года назад
I love these episodes, thank you for the time capsule back in time.
@metacob
@metacob 4 дня назад
Imagine coming home after an multi-year adventure like this. I think back then people generally had good memories and storytelling ability, so listening to him must have been like watching several seasons of a drama series today.
@oilman7718
@oilman7718 3 года назад
I had never heard of this before. Seems like something that a talented screenwriter/producer/director could make into an interesting film.
@zane62135
@zane62135 3 года назад
I think this is the greatest story that I've ever heard.
@adreamingwolf
@adreamingwolf 2 года назад
What an amazing piece of history. Thank you so much for this.. I was enthralled the whole time.
@JonnyBgood123
@JonnyBgood123 3 года назад
Recently discovered the channel and your other 1. Have listened to everything on this channel can't get enough!
@rsmith02
@rsmith02 3 года назад
What I was most impressed by was the hanga prints illustrating life in the US. While the Library of Congress has a good collection of Japanese prints, they don't seem to include these ones. The museum in Philly you cited also doesn't include many on their page about Manjiro so I have to say you've done a great job digging to find these. It really brought the Japanese view of pre-civil war America to life.
@VoicesofthePast
@VoicesofthePast 3 года назад
Here is the amazing exhibition from the Rosenbach, a lot of it is online: rosenbach.org/visit/exhibitions/manjiro-drifting-1841-2020/
@jonathanprime1507
@jonathanprime1507 3 года назад
Damm when he talks about the president he speaks with repsect to the position
@Thesinistereyes1
@Thesinistereyes1 3 года назад
cause when you live in times of monarchy and emperors. An elected person to be a leader is a breathe of fresh air.
@roderickclerk5904
@roderickclerk5904 2 года назад
Back then US presidents were real presidents and for good or bad led the country
@UCannotDefeatMyShmeat
@UCannotDefeatMyShmeat 2 года назад
@@roderickclerk5904 I can’t say for sure, but I get the impression it wasn’t because “I like this guy, fuck that other dude” but because they were actually capable, most of the time
@esinohio
@esinohio 3 года назад
This was very produced and voiced extremely well. I'm so glad I found this channel.
@curiositeconstante404
@curiositeconstante404 3 года назад
Thanks for your wonderful work, and the image you use with delicate attention
@procinctu1
@procinctu1 3 года назад
Thank you for posting that that was a great video. We need more stuff like that in the world.
@102938475646665
@102938475646665 2 года назад
what a wonderful story. that reunion with his mother must have been quite moving.
@derfliv206
@derfliv206 3 года назад
You do a fantastical presentation of these age old stories and perspectives of the world. Keep it up man !
@ElectricMoonlight
@ElectricMoonlight 3 года назад
This is absolutely fascinating.
Далее
💋🧠
00:38
Просмотров 61 тыс.
This Is Why You Can’t Go To Antarctica
29:30
Просмотров 1,9 млн
What's inside this crater in Madagascar?
24:33
Просмотров 8 млн
How many plants do you need to breathe?  TESTED
27:44
Просмотров 2,6 млн
Japan in 1960 was insane.
26:37
Просмотров 1,3 млн