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Manjirō detailed his travels in a report to the Tokugawa Shogunate, which is kept today at the Tokyo National Museum. On July 8, 1853, when Commodore Matthew Perry's Black Ships arrived to force the opening of Japan, Manjirō became an interpreter and translator for the Shogunate and was instrumental in negotiating the Convention of Kanagawa ...
Works by or about Inagaki Manjirō at the Internet Archive; Japanese Students at Cambridge University in the Meiji Era, 1868-1912: Pioneers for the Modernization of Japan, by Noboru Koyama, translated by Ian Ruxton, (Lulu Press, September 2004, ISBN 1-4116-1256-6) Portrait of Inagaki Manjirō on the website of the National Diet Library of Japan
The Vice Captain of the Tokyo Manji Gang. He is Mikey's best friend and is known for his mature and big brother attitude, he also befriended Takemichi when witnessing his resolution whilst fighting Kiyomasa. During the conflict against Moebious he was stabbed by Kiyomasa and died in first timeline but Takemichi saved him and he survived.
The sentence "In September 1853, Manjirō was summoned to Edo (now known as Tokyo), questioned by the shogunate government, and made a hatamoto (a samurai in direct service to the shogun" isn't quite right... the date is wrong.
Season 2 of “Tokyo Vice,” the neo-noir crime drama set in Tokyo, Japan, and loosely based on a memoir written by journalist Jake Adelstein, has come to a close in an explosive finale that both ...
Manjirō (written: 満次郎 or 万次郎) is a Japanese masculine given name, and may refer to: Nakahama Manjirō ( 中濱 万次郎 , 1827–1898) , one of the first Japanese people to visit the United States
The Ichimura-za reopened in 1798, and Uzaemon X died the following year. Manjirō, as he was then known, took on the name Uzaemon XI in 1800, officially becoming zamoto at the age of nine, though the actual administrative matters were handled by Fukuchi Zenbei, the owner of a shibai jaya (a teahouse within the theatre).
Hasegawa Manjirō (長谷川 萬次郎, né Yamamoto, November 30, 1875 − November 11, 1969), known by his pen name Hasegawa Nyozekan (長谷川 如是閑), was a Japanese social critic, and journalist during the Taishō and Shōwa eras. He was one of the most important and widely read supporters of liberalism and democracy in inter-war Japan.