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Shimonoseki campaign

Shimonoseki campaign
Part of the Chōshū Rebellion

Capture of a Choshu battery at Shimonoseki by British sailors and marines; picture taken by Felice Beato
Date
  • 20 July – 14 August 1863
    (3 weeks and 4 days)
  • 5–6 September 1864
    (1 day)
Location
Result Allied victory
Belligerents
 Chōshū Domain
Commanders and leaders
Strength
Land:
2,000
Sea:
28 warships
Land:
1,500
100 artillery pieces
Sea:
6 warships
40 war-junks
Casualties and losses
12 killed
50 wounded
18 killed
29 wounded
2 ships destroyed
1 ship damaged
60 cannons captured

The Shimonoseki campaign (Japanese: 下関戦争/馬関戦争, Hepburn: Shimonoseki Sensō/Bakan Sensō, "Shimonoseki War") was a series of military engagements in 1863 and 1864, fought to control the Shimonoseki Straits of Japan by joint naval forces from the United Kingdom, France, the Netherlands, and the United States, against the Japanese feudal domain of Chōshū, which took place off and on the coast of Shimonoseki, Japan.[1]

Background edit

Despite efforts of appeasement by the Tokugawa shogunate to establish an atmosphere of peaceful solidarity, many feudal daimyōs remained bitterly resentful of the shogunate's open-door policy to foreign trade. Belligerent opposition to European and American influence erupted into open conflict when the Emperor Kōmei, breaking with centuries of imperial tradition, began to take an active role in matters of state and issued on March 11 and April 11, 1863, his "Order to expel barbarians" (攘夷実行の勅命 – Jōi jikkō no chokumei).

The Chōshū clan, under the daimyō Mōri Takachika, began to take action to expel all foreigners after the deadline of the 10th day of the 5th month, according to the traditional Japanese calendar. Openly defying the shogunate, Mōri ordered his forces to fire without warning on all foreign ships traversing Shimonoseki Strait. This strategic but treacherous 600-meter waterway separates the islands of Honshū and Kyūshū and provides a passage connecting the Inland Sea with the Sea of Japan.

Even before tensions escalated in Shimonoseki Strait, foreign diplomats and military experts, notably U.S. Minister to Japan Robert Pruyn and U.S. Navy Captain David McDougal had been aware of the precarious state of affairs in Japan. McDougal wrote a letter to the Secretary of the Navy, Gideon Welles, dated June 12, 1863, stating, "General opinion is that the government of Japan is on the eve of revolution, the principal object of which is the expulsion of foreigners."

"Revere the Emperor and expel the barbarians!" edit

 
Sonnō jōi: "Revere the Emperor and expel the barbarians!"

The Chōshū clan was equipped with mostly antiquated cannons firing cannonballs, but also some modern armament, such as five 8-inch (200 mm) Dahlgren guns, which had been presented to Japan by the United States, and three steam warships of American construction: the bark Daniel Webster of six guns, the brig Lanrick, or Kosei, with ten guns, and the steamer Lancefield, or Koshin, of four guns.[2]

The first attack occurred on June 25, 1863, soon after the Imperial "Order to expel barbarians" came into effect. The U.S. merchant steamer SS Pembroke, under Captain Simon Cooper, was riding at anchor outside Shimonoseki Strait when it was intercepted and fired upon by two European-built warships belonging to the rebel forces.

The crew of one enemy vessel taunted the frantic American seamen with a loud and unnerving cry: "Revere the Emperor and expel the barbarians!" (尊皇攘夷 sonnō jōi). Under incessant cannon fire, Pembroke managed to get underway and escape through the adjacent Bungo Strait with only slight damage and no casualties.

 
The Medusa forces its way through the Shimonoseki strait, by Jacob Eduard van Heemskerck van Beest

Upon arrival in Shanghai, Cooper filed a report of the attack and dispatched it to the U.S. Consulate in Yokohama, Japan. The next day, the French naval dispatch steamer Kien Chan was also riding at anchor outside the strait, when rebel Japanese artillery atop the bluffs surrounding Shimonoseki opened fire on her. Kien Chan sustained damage to its engine and suffered four casualties before escaping to the open ocean.

On July 11, despite warnings from the crew of the Kien Chan, the 16-gun Dutch warship Medusa cruised into Shimonoseki Strait. Her skipper, Captain François de Casembroot, was convinced that Lord Mōri Takachika would not dare fire on his vessel due to the strength of his ship and longstanding relations between the Netherlands and Japan.

However, Mōri did just that, pounding Medusa with more than thirty shells and killing or wounding nine seamen. De Casembroot returned fire and ran the rebel gauntlet at full speed, fearful of endangering the life of the Dutch Consul General, who was on board. Within a short time, the Japanese warlord had managed to fire on the flags of most of the nations with consulates in Japan.

Battle of Shimonoseki Straits edit

 
The USS Wyoming battling in the Shimonoseki Straits against the Choshu steam warships Daniel Webster, Lanrick and Lancefield

In the morning of July 16, 1863, under sanction by Minister Pruyn, in an apparent swift response to the attack on the Pembroke, the U.S. frigate USS Wyoming, under Captain McDougal, sailed into the strait and single-handedly engaged the U.S.-built but poorly manned local fleet for almost two hours before withdrawing.[3] McDougal sank two enemy vessels and severely damaged another one, along with inflicting some forty Japanese casualties. The Wyoming suffered a significant amount of damage, with four crew dead and seven wounded, one later dying of his injuries. The two Japanese steamers sunk by the Wyoming were raised again by Chōshū in 1864 and attached to the harbor of Hagi.

Campaign edit

First battle, July 20, 1863 edit

 
The French engagement at Shimonoseki, with the warships Tancrède and Sémiramis, under Rear Admiral Charles Jaurès. Le Monde illustré, October 10th, 1863.

On the heels of McDougal's engagement, on July 20, the French Navy retaliated for the attack on their merchant ship. The French force consisted of marines and two warships, the aviso Tancrède and the Admiral's flagship, Sémiramis. With 250 men, under Captain Benjamin Jaurès, they swept into Shimonoseki and destroyed a small town, together with at least one artillery emplacement.

The intervention was supported by the French plenipotentiary in Japan, Gustave Duchesne de Bellecourt, but the French government, once informed, strongly criticized their representatives in Japan for taking such bellicose steps, for the reason that France had much more important military commitments to honour in other parts of the world, and could not afford a conflict in Japan.[4] Duchesne de Bellecourt would be relieved from his position in 1864.

Jaurès was also congratulated by the shogunate for taking such decisive steps against anti-foreign forces, and was awarded a special banner.[5]

Diplomatic negotiations edit

Meanwhile, the Americans, French, British and Dutch feverishly opened diplomatic channels to negotiate the reopening of the passage to the Inland Sea. Months dragged by with no end in sight to the growing dilemma. By May 1864, various bellicose Japanese factions had destroyed thousands of dollars in foreign property, including homes, churches and shipping. This wanton destruction included the U.S. Legation in Edo, which housed Minister Robert Pruyn.

 
French Navy troops taking possession of Japanese cannons at Shimonoseki.

Throughout the first half of 1864, as Shimonoseki Strait remained closed to foreign shipping, threats and rumors of war hung in the air, while diplomatic efforts remained deadlocked. Then the British Minister to Japan, Sir Rutherford Alcock, discussed with his treaty counterparts such as American Minister Robert Pruyn and Dutch Minister Dirk de Graeff van Polsbroek, the feasibility of a joint military strike against Mōri.

They were soon making preparations for a combined show of force. Under the wary eyes of the Japanese, fifteen British warships rode anchor alongside four Dutch vessels, while a British regiment from Hong Kong augmented their display of military might. The French maintained a minimal naval presence, with the bulk of their forces in Mexico trying to bolster Emperor Maximilian's unstable regime.

The U.S., engaged in its Civil War, limited itself to demonstrate diplomatic and minimal military support for the allies. In the meantime, Mōri procrastinated in negotiations by requesting additional time to respond to the Allied demands, a response unacceptable to the treaty powers. The allies decided that the time for united action had arrived.

Despite retaliatory action from the treaty powers, another attack occurred in July 1864 when the rebel forces fired upon the U.S. steamer Monitor after she entered a harbor for coal and water. This provoked further outrage, even after a British squadron delivered a multi-national ultimatum to Mōri, threatening military force if the strait was not opened.

Final battle, September 5–6, 1864 edit

 
Map of the allied attack on Shimonoseki, in September 1864.
 
The bombardment of Shimonoseki by the French warship Tancrède (background) and the Admiral's flagship, Sémiramis. (foreground), Jean-Baptiste Henri Durand-Brager, 1865.
 
The bombardment of Shimonoseki, Jacob Eduard van Heemskerck van Beest
 
The British naval brigade and marines storm the stockade at Shimonoseki, The Illustrated London News, December 1864.
 
Replica cannons marking the battle.

On August 17, 1864, a squadron consisting of nine British (Euryalus, Conqueror, Tartar, Leopard, Barrosa, Perseus, Argus, Coquette, and Bouncer), four Dutch (Djambi, Metalen-Kruis, Medusa, and Amsterdam), and three French warships (Tancrède, Sémiramis, and Dupleix), together with 2,000 soldiers, marines and sailors, all under the command of Admiral Sir Augustus Leopold Kuper of the Royal Navy, steamed out of Yokohama to open Shimonoseki Strait.

The U.S. chartered steamer Ta-Kiang accompanied the operation in a token show of support. The two-day battle that followed on September 5 and 6 did what the previous operations could not; it destroyed the Chōshū Domain's ability to wage war on the Western powers. Unable to match the firepower of the international fleet, and amid mounting casualties, Takasugi Shinsaku negotiated peace with the four Western powers and Chōshū forces finally surrendered two days later on September 8, 1864.

Allied casualties included 72 killed or wounded; although Ernest Satow describes only 8 killed and 30 wounded for the British and two damaged British ships. A full account of the battle is contained in Ernest Satow's A Diplomat in Japan. Satow was present as a young interpreter for the British admiral, Augustus Kuper on the British flagship HMS Euryalus, commanded by Captain J. H. I. Alexander. It was also the action at which Duncan Gordon Boyes won his Victoria Cross (VC) at the age of seventeen. Satow described Boyes as receiving the award "for conduct very plucky in one so young." Another VC winner at Shimonoseki was Thomas Pride, and the third was the first American to win the medal, William Seeley. De Casembroot wrote his account of the events in De Medusa in de wateren van Japan, in 1863 en 1864.

The stringent accord, drawn up in the wake of the ceasefire and negotiated by U.S. Minister Pruyn, included an indemnity of $3,000,000 from the Japanese, an amount equivalent to the cost of about 30 steamships at that time.[6] The Tokugawa shogunate proved unable to pay such an amount, and this failure became the basis of further foreign pressure to open Japanese ports; Japan was forced to choose between paying compensation of three million piastres and opening another port on the Inland Sea.[7] The harbor of Hyōgo was opened to foreign trade, and customs tariffs were lowered uniformly to 5%.[8] In 1883, twenty years after the first battle to reopen the strait, the United States quietly returned $750,000 to Japan, which represented its share of the reparation payment.[citation needed]

Aftermath edit

 
Chōshū forces attacked Shogunal forces in Kyōto on August 20, 1864, in the Kinmon incident

Right after the foreign interventions, the Shogunal government also launched its own preparations for a punitive expedition against Chōshū, the First Chōshū expedition. The expedition was aimed at punishing the 1864 Kinmon incident in which Chōshū forces attacked Shogunal forces in Kyoto. The expedition was however cancelled after a compromise was brokered, involving the beheading of the leaders of the rebellion.

At the same time as this campaign, the British Royal Navy engaged Satsuma samurai at the Bombardment of Kagoshima, one of the several engagements of the Japanese conflict of 1863 and 1864.

Historical significance edit

Closely resembling the series of little conflicts fought by the European powers in Asia, Africa and elsewhere during the nineteenth century, the troubles in Japan seemed to exemplify their gunboat diplomacy, a prevalent tool in imperialism. Bitter resentment against foreign influence made the Chōshū clan feel justified in engaging in acts of military provocation in defiance of their own government.

 
A cannon captured by the French at Shimonoseki. Today on display at the northern gate of Les Invalides, Paris. Lower right inset: the emblem (mon) of the Mōri clan inscribed on top of the cannon.

While it was bitterly embroiled in the American Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln's government was carefully watched by the world for signs of weakness and indecision. The actions of USS Wyoming made it the first foreign warship to offensively uphold treaty rights with Japan; this fact coupled with the possibility that the events would mire the U.S. in a foreign war made the battle of Shimonoseki a significant engagement.[citation needed]

While the battles of Shimonoseki Strait were mere footnotes in the histories of the European powers, an interesting aspect of the affair was the resourcefulness displayed by the Japanese. The feudal Japanese had not set eyes on a steam-powered ship until Commodore Perry's arrival only a decade before USS Wyoming's battle. Yet they had rapidly advanced in such a short period of time.[9]

The Shimonoseki city government in 2004, in recognition of the importance of the bombardment in Japanese history, placed several life-size replicas of the guns used by Chōshū where they were captured.[citation needed] The replicas are made of hollow steel and include coin-operated sound effects and smoke from the barrels.[10]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Stephen A. Royle (21 April 2017). Anglo-Korean Relations and the Port Hamilton Affair, 1885-1887. Taylor & Francis. p. 17. ISBN 978-1-351-73787-6.
  2. ^ The Battle of the Straits of Shimonoséki
  3. ^ "Wyoming I (Sloop of War)". public2.nhhcaws.local.
  4. ^ Medzini, p.44
  5. ^ Medzini, p.46
  6. ^ Satow, p86
  7. ^ Paul Akamatsu (November 2010). Meiji 1868: Revolution and Counter-Revolution in Japan. Routledge. p. 111. ISBN 978-1-136-92827-7.
  8. ^ Satow, p145
  9. ^ Chris J. Magoc (14 December 2015). Imperialism and Expansionism in American History: A Social, Political, and Cultural Encyclopedia and Document Collection [4 volumes]: A Social, Political, and Cultural Encyclopedia and Document Collection. ABC-CLIO. p. 242. ISBN 978-1-61069-430-8.
  10. ^ Yoda, Hiroko (2 September 2010). "Ghosts of battles past in Shimonoseki". CNN. Retrieved 2 March 2019.

References edit

  • Denney, John. Respect and Consideration: Britain in Japan 1853–1868 and beyond. Radiance Press (2011). ISBN 978-0-9568798-0-6
  • Medzini, Meron. French Policy in Japan during the Closing Years of the Tokugawa Regime. Harvard University Press, 1971
  • Polak, Christian. (2001). Soie et lumières: L'âge d'or des échanges franco-japonais (des origines aux années 1950). Tokyo: Chambre de Commerce et d'Industrie Française du Japon, Hachette Fujin Gahōsha (アシェット婦人画報社).
  • Satow, Ernest, "A Diplomat in Japan", 2006 Stone Bridge Press, ISBN 978-1-933330-16-7
  • __________. (2002). 絹と光: 知られざる日仏交流100年の歴史 (江戶時代-1950年代) Kinu to hikariō: shirarezaru Nichi-Futsu kōryū 100-nen no rekishi (Edo jidai-1950-nendai). Tokyo: Ashetto Fujin Gahōsha, 2002. ISBN 978-4-573-06210-8; OCLC 50875162

This article incorporates text from OpenHistory.

External links edit

  • The Battle of the Strait of Shimonoseki (USS Wyoming)

shimonoseki, campaign, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, sept. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Shimonoseki campaign news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Shimonoseki campaignPart of the Chōshu RebellionCapture of a Choshu battery at Shimonoseki by British sailors and marines picture taken by Felice BeatoDate20 July 14 August 1863 3 weeks and 4 days 5 6 September 1864 1 day LocationShimonoseki JapanResultAllied victoryBelligerents United Kingdom France Netherlands United States Chōshu DomainCommanders and leadersAugustus Kuper Benjamin Jaures Francois de Casembroot David McDougalMōri Takachika Mōri Motochika jp Takasugi Shinsaku Akane Taketo jp StrengthLand 2 000Sea 28 warshipsLand 1 500100 artillery piecesSea 6 warships40 war junksCasualties and losses12 killed50 wounded18 killed29 wounded2 ships destroyed1 ship damaged60 cannons captured The Shimonoseki campaign Japanese 下関戦争 馬関戦争 Hepburn Shimonoseki Sensō Bakan Sensō Shimonoseki War was a series of military engagements in 1863 and 1864 fought to control the Shimonoseki Straits of Japan by joint naval forces from the United Kingdom France the Netherlands and the United States against the Japanese feudal domain of Chōshu which took place off and on the coast of Shimonoseki Japan 1 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Revere the Emperor and expel the barbarians 1 2 Battle of Shimonoseki Straits 2 Campaign 2 1 First battle July 20 1863 2 2 Diplomatic negotiations 2 3 Final battle September 5 6 1864 3 Aftermath 4 Historical significance 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBackground editDespite efforts of appeasement by the Tokugawa shogunate to establish an atmosphere of peaceful solidarity many feudal daimyōs remained bitterly resentful of the shogunate s open door policy to foreign trade Belligerent opposition to European and American influence erupted into open conflict when the Emperor Kōmei breaking with centuries of imperial tradition began to take an active role in matters of state and issued on March 11 and April 11 1863 his Order to expel barbarians 攘夷実行の勅命 Jōi jikkō no chokumei The Chōshu clan under the daimyō Mōri Takachika began to take action to expel all foreigners after the deadline of the 10th day of the 5th month according to the traditional Japanese calendar Openly defying the shogunate Mōri ordered his forces to fire without warning on all foreign ships traversing Shimonoseki Strait This strategic but treacherous 600 meter waterway separates the islands of Honshu and Kyushu and provides a passage connecting the Inland Sea with the Sea of Japan Even before tensions escalated in Shimonoseki Strait foreign diplomats and military experts notably U S Minister to Japan Robert Pruyn and U S Navy Captain David McDougal had been aware of the precarious state of affairs in Japan McDougal wrote a letter to the Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles dated June 12 1863 stating General opinion is that the government of Japan is on the eve of revolution the principal object of which is the expulsion of foreigners Revere the Emperor and expel the barbarians edit nbsp Sonnō jōi Revere the Emperor and expel the barbarians The Chōshu clan was equipped with mostly antiquated cannons firing cannonballs but also some modern armament such as five 8 inch 200 mm Dahlgren guns which had been presented to Japan by the United States and three steam warships of American construction the bark Daniel Webster of six guns the brig Lanrick or Kosei with ten guns and the steamer Lancefield or Koshin of four guns 2 The first attack occurred on June 25 1863 soon after the Imperial Order to expel barbarians came into effect The U S merchant steamer SS Pembroke under Captain Simon Cooper was riding at anchor outside Shimonoseki Strait when it was intercepted and fired upon by two European built warships belonging to the rebel forces The crew of one enemy vessel taunted the frantic American seamen with a loud and unnerving cry Revere the Emperor and expel the barbarians 尊皇攘夷 sonnō jōi Under incessant cannon fire Pembroke managed to get underway and escape through the adjacent Bungo Strait with only slight damage and no casualties nbsp The Medusa forces its way through the Shimonoseki strait by Jacob Eduard van Heemskerck van BeestUpon arrival in Shanghai Cooper filed a report of the attack and dispatched it to the U S Consulate in Yokohama Japan The next day the French naval dispatch steamer Kien Chan was also riding at anchor outside the strait when rebel Japanese artillery atop the bluffs surrounding Shimonoseki opened fire on her Kien Chan sustained damage to its engine and suffered four casualties before escaping to the open ocean On July 11 despite warnings from the crew of the Kien Chan the 16 gun Dutch warship Medusa cruised into Shimonoseki Strait Her skipper Captain Francois de Casembroot was convinced that Lord Mōri Takachika would not dare fire on his vessel due to the strength of his ship and longstanding relations between the Netherlands and Japan However Mōri did just that pounding Medusa with more than thirty shells and killing or wounding nine seamen De Casembroot returned fire and ran the rebel gauntlet at full speed fearful of endangering the life of the Dutch Consul General who was on board Within a short time the Japanese warlord had managed to fire on the flags of most of the nations with consulates in Japan Battle of Shimonoseki Straits edit nbsp The USS Wyoming battling in the Shimonoseki Straits against the Choshu steam warships Daniel Webster Lanrick and LancefieldMain article Battle of Shimonoseki Straits In the morning of July 16 1863 under sanction by Minister Pruyn in an apparent swift response to the attack on the Pembroke the U S frigate USS Wyoming under Captain McDougal sailed into the strait and single handedly engaged the U S built but poorly manned local fleet for almost two hours before withdrawing 3 McDougal sank two enemy vessels and severely damaged another one along with inflicting some forty Japanese casualties The Wyoming suffered a significant amount of damage with four crew dead and seven wounded one later dying of his injuries The two Japanese steamers sunk by the Wyoming were raised again by Chōshu in 1864 and attached to the harbor of Hagi Campaign editFirst battle July 20 1863 edit nbsp The French engagement at Shimonoseki with the warships Tancrede and Semiramis under Rear Admiral Charles Jaures Le Monde illustre October 10th 1863 On the heels of McDougal s engagement on July 20 the French Navy retaliated for the attack on their merchant ship The French force consisted of marines and two warships the aviso Tancrede and the Admiral s flagship Semiramis With 250 men under Captain Benjamin Jaures they swept into Shimonoseki and destroyed a small town together with at least one artillery emplacement The intervention was supported by the French plenipotentiary in Japan Gustave Duchesne de Bellecourt but the French government once informed strongly criticized their representatives in Japan for taking such bellicose steps for the reason that France had much more important military commitments to honour in other parts of the world and could not afford a conflict in Japan 4 Duchesne de Bellecourt would be relieved from his position in 1864 Jaures was also congratulated by the shogunate for taking such decisive steps against anti foreign forces and was awarded a special banner 5 Diplomatic negotiations edit Meanwhile the Americans French British and Dutch feverishly opened diplomatic channels to negotiate the reopening of the passage to the Inland Sea Months dragged by with no end in sight to the growing dilemma By May 1864 various bellicose Japanese factions had destroyed thousands of dollars in foreign property including homes churches and shipping This wanton destruction included the U S Legation in Edo which housed Minister Robert Pruyn nbsp French Navy troops taking possession of Japanese cannons at Shimonoseki Throughout the first half of 1864 as Shimonoseki Strait remained closed to foreign shipping threats and rumors of war hung in the air while diplomatic efforts remained deadlocked Then the British Minister to Japan Sir Rutherford Alcock discussed with his treaty counterparts such as American Minister Robert Pruyn and Dutch Minister Dirk de Graeff van Polsbroek the feasibility of a joint military strike against Mōri They were soon making preparations for a combined show of force Under the wary eyes of the Japanese fifteen British warships rode anchor alongside four Dutch vessels while a British regiment from Hong Kong augmented their display of military might The French maintained a minimal naval presence with the bulk of their forces in Mexico trying to bolster Emperor Maximilian s unstable regime The U S engaged in its Civil War limited itself to demonstrate diplomatic and minimal military support for the allies In the meantime Mōri procrastinated in negotiations by requesting additional time to respond to the Allied demands a response unacceptable to the treaty powers The allies decided that the time for united action had arrived Despite retaliatory action from the treaty powers another attack occurred in July 1864 when the rebel forces fired upon the U S steamer Monitor after she entered a harbor for coal and water This provoked further outrage even after a British squadron delivered a multi national ultimatum to Mōri threatening military force if the strait was not opened Final battle September 5 6 1864 edit nbsp Map of the allied attack on Shimonoseki in September 1864 nbsp The bombardment of Shimonoseki by the French warship Tancrede background and the Admiral s flagship Semiramis foreground Jean Baptiste Henri Durand Brager 1865 nbsp The bombardment of Shimonoseki Jacob Eduard van Heemskerck van Beest nbsp The British naval brigade and marines storm the stockade at Shimonoseki The Illustrated London News December 1864 nbsp Replica cannons marking the battle On August 17 1864 a squadron consisting of nine British Euryalus Conqueror Tartar Leopard Barrosa Perseus Argus Coquette and Bouncer four Dutch Djambi Metalen Kruis Medusa and Amsterdam and three French warships Tancrede Semiramis and Dupleix together with 2 000 soldiers marines and sailors all under the command of Admiral Sir Augustus Leopold Kuper of the Royal Navy steamed out of Yokohama to open Shimonoseki Strait The U S chartered steamer Ta Kiang accompanied the operation in a token show of support The two day battle that followed on September 5 and 6 did what the previous operations could not it destroyed the Chōshu Domain s ability to wage war on the Western powers Unable to match the firepower of the international fleet and amid mounting casualties Takasugi Shinsaku negotiated peace with the four Western powers and Chōshu forces finally surrendered two days later on September 8 1864 Allied casualties included 72 killed or wounded although Ernest Satow describes only 8 killed and 30 wounded for the British and two damaged British ships A full account of the battle is contained in Ernest Satow s A Diplomat in Japan Satow was present as a young interpreter for the British admiral Augustus Kuper on the British flagship HMS Euryalus commanded by Captain J H I Alexander It was also the action at which Duncan Gordon Boyes won his Victoria Cross VC at the age of seventeen Satow described Boyes as receiving the award for conduct very plucky in one so young Another VC winner at Shimonoseki was Thomas Pride and the third was the first American to win the medal William Seeley De Casembroot wrote his account of the events in De Medusa in de wateren van Japan in 1863 en 1864 The stringent accord drawn up in the wake of the ceasefire and negotiated by U S Minister Pruyn included an indemnity of 3 000 000 from the Japanese an amount equivalent to the cost of about 30 steamships at that time 6 The Tokugawa shogunate proved unable to pay such an amount and this failure became the basis of further foreign pressure to open Japanese ports Japan was forced to choose between paying compensation of three million piastres and opening another port on the Inland Sea 7 The harbor of Hyōgo was opened to foreign trade and customs tariffs were lowered uniformly to 5 8 In 1883 twenty years after the first battle to reopen the strait the United States quietly returned 750 000 to Japan which represented its share of the reparation payment citation needed Aftermath edit nbsp Chōshu forces attacked Shogunal forces in Kyōto on August 20 1864 in the Kinmon incidentRight after the foreign interventions the Shogunal government also launched its own preparations for a punitive expedition against Chōshu the First Chōshu expedition The expedition was aimed at punishing the 1864 Kinmon incident in which Chōshu forces attacked Shogunal forces in Kyoto The expedition was however cancelled after a compromise was brokered involving the beheading of the leaders of the rebellion At the same time as this campaign the British Royal Navy engaged Satsuma samurai at the Bombardment of Kagoshima one of the several engagements of the Japanese conflict of 1863 and 1864 Historical significance editClosely resembling the series of little conflicts fought by the European powers in Asia Africa and elsewhere during the nineteenth century the troubles in Japan seemed to exemplify their gunboat diplomacy a prevalent tool in imperialism Bitter resentment against foreign influence made the Chōshu clan feel justified in engaging in acts of military provocation in defiance of their own government nbsp A cannon captured by the French at Shimonoseki Today on display at the northern gate of Les Invalides Paris Lower right inset the emblem mon of the Mōri clan inscribed on top of the cannon While it was bitterly embroiled in the American Civil War President Abraham Lincoln s government was carefully watched by the world for signs of weakness and indecision The actions of USS Wyoming made it the first foreign warship to offensively uphold treaty rights with Japan this fact coupled with the possibility that the events would mire the U S in a foreign war made the battle of Shimonoseki a significant engagement citation needed While the battles of Shimonoseki Strait were mere footnotes in the histories of the European powers an interesting aspect of the affair was the resourcefulness displayed by the Japanese The feudal Japanese had not set eyes on a steam powered ship until Commodore Perry s arrival only a decade before USS Wyoming s battle Yet they had rapidly advanced in such a short period of time 9 The Shimonoseki city government in 2004 in recognition of the importance of the bombardment in Japanese history placed several life size replicas of the guns used by Chōshu where they were captured citation needed The replicas are made of hollow steel and include coin operated sound effects and smoke from the barrels 10 See also editTreaty of ShimonosekiNotes edit Stephen A Royle 21 April 2017 Anglo Korean Relations and the Port Hamilton Affair 1885 1887 Taylor amp Francis p 17 ISBN 978 1 351 73787 6 The Battle of the Straits of Shimonoseki Wyoming I Sloop of War public2 nhhcaws local Medzini p 44 Medzini p 46 Satow p86 Paul Akamatsu November 2010 Meiji 1868 Revolution and Counter Revolution in Japan Routledge p 111 ISBN 978 1 136 92827 7 Satow p145 Chris J Magoc 14 December 2015 Imperialism and Expansionism in American History A Social Political and Cultural Encyclopedia and Document Collection 4 volumes A Social Political and Cultural Encyclopedia and Document Collection ABC CLIO p 242 ISBN 978 1 61069 430 8 Yoda Hiroko 2 September 2010 Ghosts of battles past in Shimonoseki CNN Retrieved 2 March 2019 References editDenney John Respect and Consideration Britain in Japan 1853 1868 and beyond Radiance Press 2011 ISBN 978 0 9568798 0 6 Medzini Meron French Policy in Japan during the Closing Years of the Tokugawa Regime Harvard University Press 1971 Polak Christian 2001 Soie et lumieres L age d or des echanges franco japonais des origines aux annees 1950 Tokyo Chambre de Commerce et d Industrie Francaise du Japon Hachette Fujin Gahōsha アシェット婦人画報社 Satow Ernest A Diplomat in Japan 2006 Stone Bridge Press ISBN 978 1 933330 16 7 2002 絹と光 知られざる日仏交流100年の歴史 江戶時代 1950年代 Kinu to hikariō shirarezaru Nichi Futsu kōryu 100 nen no rekishi Edo jidai 1950 nendai Tokyo Ashetto Fujin Gahōsha 2002 ISBN 978 4 573 06210 8 OCLC 50875162This article incorporates text from OpenHistory External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bombardment of Shimonoseki The Battle of the Strait of Shimonoseki USS Wyoming Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shimonoseki campaign amp oldid 1204626405, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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