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Challenges to Dutch Monopoly of Japanese Trade During the Wars of Napoleon
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 March 2011
Extract
The most serious threat to the Dutch monopoly of Japanese trade came from the English during the wars of Napoleon. As early as 1794 Holland was overrun by French forces, and French propaganda transformed the Dutch East Indies into a Batavian Republic allied to France. Grave complications immediately arose with Great Britain who was at war with France. The situation became even more acute when in 1801 Napoleon gave to Holland a new constitution and demanded a more enthusiastic cooperation with his policies.
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References
1 From 1639 to 18S4 the Dutch were the only Westerners allowed by law to have trade relations with the Japanese and to retain in Japan a permanent commercial representative.
2 The use the Dutch made of neutral ships during the French Revolution and the period of Napoleon is discussed in some detail by Van Hendrik Doeff who was the chief Dutch resident in Japan from 1804 to 1817. Doeff, Van Hendrik, Herrtrmcrmgen uit Japan (Te Haarlem, 1833), pp. 61–64 and 80–84.Google Scholar
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