| Sir Edward James Reed - Japan - 1880 - 446 pages
...emperor's resumption of the governing power in 1868, Korea declined to acknowledge the Mikado, deeming him in league with the western barbarians. " It treated...the position formerly held by the Dutch at Decima (in Nagasaki). The attitude of the Koreans towards this settlement became indeed so menacing in 1873... | |
| Sir Edward James Reed - Japan - 1880 - 452 pages
...emperor's resumption of the governing power in 1868, Korea declined to acknowledge the Mikado, deeming him in league with the western barbarians. " It treated...Sorio to the position formerly held by the Dutch at Decimu (in Nagasaki). The attitude of the Koreans towards this settlement became indeed so menacing... | |
| Henry Dyer - Japan - 1904 - 482 pages
...two centuries sent tribute to the Tokugawa Shoguns. After the Restoration, however, they had refused to acknowledge the Mikado as Emperor of Japan or to...any official relations with his Government, which had given so much encouragement to Western barbarians. This caused great irritation to some sections... | |
| Henry Dyer - Great Britain - 1904 - 482 pages
...two centuries sent tribute to the Tokugawa Shoguns. After the Restoration, however, they had refused to acknowledge the Mikado as Emperor of Japan or to...any official relations with his Government, which had given so much encouragement to Western barbarians. This caused great irritation to some sections... | |
| Daniel Coit Gilman, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Moore Colby - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1906 - 910 pages
...tribute which had been paid for centuries to the Shogun's Government, and the1 further refusal of Korea "to acknowledge the Mikado as Emperor of Japan or...held to be in league with the Western barbarians." The war party failed, however, and Itagaki, believing that his countrymen would have favored such a... | |
| Daniel Coit Gilman, Harry Thurston Peck, Frank Moore Colby - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1909 - 914 pages
...tribute which had been paid for centuries to the Shogun's Government, and the further refusal of Korea "to acknowledge the Mikado as Emperor of Japan or...held to be in league with the Western barbarians." The war party failed, however, and Itagaki, believing that his countrymen would have favored such a... | |
| Henry Dyer - Eastern question (Far East) - 1909 - 452 pages
...relations of Japan with Korea and China. After the Restoration in 1867-8 the Korean Government refused to acknowledge the Mikado as Emperor of Japan, or to have any official relations with his Govern- Kortfind5 China. ment, which had given so much encouragement to Western barbarians. In the... | |
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