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자료유형
학술저널
저자정보
저널정보
동아시아일본학회 일본문화연구 日本文化硏究 第24輯
발행연도
2007.10
수록면
147 - 174 (28page)

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This book examined Japan’s policy that prohibited Christianity in the early modern period by studying Tokugawa-Bakuhu’s(德川幕府) request to Joseon to ban Christianity and how Bakuhu handled the foreign ships that drifted into Joseon and made the following summary.
First, the reasons why Bakuhu requested Joseon to cooperate with its request to prohibit Christianity were because of Shimabara?Amakusa Insurrection, a rumor of the Jesuits’ infiltrating Japan, and illegal entry by Christians into Japan from Joseon’s coastal areas. Second, the ruler of Tsushima was representing Bakuhu and the reason why he was acting on behalf of Bakuhu in making the request to Joseon government was not out of his loyalty to Bakuhu but because he had been entrusted by Bakuhu to handle diplomatic matters with Joseon. Through the diplomatic activities, Tsushima pursued its own interests by asking Joseon government in such delicate matters as expanding exports and relocation of the Japanese trade settlement in Busan. The reason why Joseon accepted Bakuhu’s request to ban Christianity was that at that time Joseon was in the turmoil of Chinese invasion(Qing Dynasty) and had no need to create a dispute with Japan and the acceptance was a normal means of appeasing Japan. Third, one of Bakuhu’s ways of exposing Christianity was to use Meakashi(目明かし), an apostate who had been a Christian but relinquished the faith and informed on Christians, which showed Bakuhu’s craftiness, and such practice should be given a proper place in the history of Christian prohibition in Japan.

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