Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

THE CAPITÃES MORES OF THE JAPAN VOYAGE: A GROUP PORTRAIT

View through CrossRef
Starting from the premise that all empire building involves ideological constructs justifying the violence that accompanies such efforts, this article concentrates on elucidating the case of the Portuguese in Asia, specifically in Japan. Although well beyond the formal Portuguese thalassocracy in Asia, the Japanese islands were exposed for about a century, between 1543 and 1640, to the informal presence of Portuguese traders and missionaries. The symbiotic relationship between these two groups was based on the experience that, in Japan, the trade was difficult to conduct, for violence was always lurking beneath the surface of the trading relationship. We know of several instances when such violence actually exploded into major armed clashes, and many other times violence was narrowly averted through the mediation of the missionaries.Based on original research in the archives of Portugal and Spain, this article analyzes the records that the leaders of the Portuguese who came to Japan in the sixteenth century, the so-called capitães mores, have left behind. Finding that a significant number of these men were or later became members of the Order of Christ or were closely related to such members, it then explores their mindset through a survey of the function of this military order in Portuguese society of the late Middle Ages. The result is a group portrait of thirty-seven men who may be considered a representative sample of the Portuguese leading both the formal and informal empires in Asia. This portrait will clarify why both Japanese and Portuguese authorities agreed, at least during the second half of the sixteenth century, that the Jesuit missionaries were an indispensable presence in Japan.
Title: THE CAPITÃES MORES OF THE JAPAN VOYAGE: A GROUP PORTRAIT
Description:
Starting from the premise that all empire building involves ideological constructs justifying the violence that accompanies such efforts, this article concentrates on elucidating the case of the Portuguese in Asia, specifically in Japan.
Although well beyond the formal Portuguese thalassocracy in Asia, the Japanese islands were exposed for about a century, between 1543 and 1640, to the informal presence of Portuguese traders and missionaries.
The symbiotic relationship between these two groups was based on the experience that, in Japan, the trade was difficult to conduct, for violence was always lurking beneath the surface of the trading relationship.
We know of several instances when such violence actually exploded into major armed clashes, and many other times violence was narrowly averted through the mediation of the missionaries.
Based on original research in the archives of Portugal and Spain, this article analyzes the records that the leaders of the Portuguese who came to Japan in the sixteenth century, the so-called capitães mores, have left behind.
Finding that a significant number of these men were or later became members of the Order of Christ or were closely related to such members, it then explores their mindset through a survey of the function of this military order in Portuguese society of the late Middle Ages.
The result is a group portrait of thirty-seven men who may be considered a representative sample of the Portuguese leading both the formal and informal empires in Asia.
This portrait will clarify why both Japanese and Portuguese authorities agreed, at least during the second half of the sixteenth century, that the Jesuit missionaries were an indispensable presence in Japan.

Related Results

PO-238 Urinary metabolomics study on the anti-depression effect of different exercise modes on CUMS model rats
PO-238 Urinary metabolomics study on the anti-depression effect of different exercise modes on CUMS model rats
Objective To study the effects of different exercise modes on CUMS depression model rats by 1H-NMR metabolomics technique, and to explore the mechanism of exercise anti-depression ...
PO-217 Plasma metabolomics study on the anti-depression effect of different exercise modes on CUMS model rats
PO-217 Plasma metabolomics study on the anti-depression effect of different exercise modes on CUMS model rats
Objective Objective: To study the anti-depression effect of different modes of exercise on CUMS rats and explore the mechanism by 1 H-NMR metabonomics methods. Methods Method...
Uchimura Kanzo and Modern Japan
Uchimura Kanzo and Modern Japan
The period in which Uchimura Kanzo lived was a time when modern Japan achieved national unity. He experienced a series of victories in the Sino-Japanese and Russo-Japanese wars, an...
Catalogus van schilderijen van Jan Claesz
Catalogus van schilderijen van Jan Claesz
AbstractIn Enkhuizen, the fifth major town in the region of Holland at the time, dozens of portraits were painted in the last years of the sixteenth and first decades of the sevent...
Korean Books in Japan
Korean Books in Japan
This article examines the evidence for the importation of Korean books into Japan, including texts of both Korean authorship and Chinese authorship. Although K...
“It’s a big world in here”: Contemporary Voyage Drama and the Politics of Mobility
“It’s a big world in here”: Contemporary Voyage Drama and the Politics of Mobility
AbstractIn Renaissance and Restoration England, many popular plays functioned as “voyage dramas,” offering opportunities for vicarious tourism to their audiences (McInnis 2012). Th...

Back to Top