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Hendrik Doeff

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Hendrik Doeff
Portrait by Charles Howard Hodges, c. 1817–1822
Opperhoofd of Dejima trading post
In office
14 November 1803 – 6 December 1817
MonarchsLouis I (1806–1810)
Louis II (1810)
William I (from 1813)
Preceded byWillem Wardenaar
Succeeded byJan Cock Blomhoff
Personal details
Born2 December 1777
Amsterdam, Dutch Republic
Died19 October 1835
Amsterdam, Netherlands

Hendrik Doeff (2 December 1777 – 19 October 1835) was the Dutch commissioner in the Dejima trading post in Nagasaki, Japan, during the first years of the 19th century.

Biography

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Doeff was born in Amsterdam. As a young man, he sailed to Japan as a scribe for the Dutch East India Company. He became chief of the Dejima post in 1803, succeeding Willem Wardenaar, who was Director from 1800 to 1803. Doeff remained in Japan until 1817, when Jan Cock Blomhoff succeeded him. After Britain captured the Dutch East Indies in 1811, Dejima became the only place in the world flying the Dutch flag. The Netherlands was restored in 1814, and Doeff was later decorated for his loyalty and courage.

Doeff wrote a Dutch-Japanese dictionary, and a memoir of his experiences in Japan, titled Recollections of Japan. He was notable for his strong activity in maintaining the Dutch trade monopoly in Japan. He is the first westerner known to have written haiku, two of which have been found in Japanese publications from the period of his stay in Japan.[1][2] One of his haiku:

イナヅマ ノ
Inadsma no
カヒナ ヲ カラン
Kaÿna Wo karan
クサ マクラ
Koesa Makura.
lend me your arms,
fast as thunderbolts,
for a pillow on my journey

The Phaeton incident

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After the French had annexed the Batavian Republic in 1806 and Napoleon I had begun to use its resources against Great Britain, Royal Navy ships started to capture Dutch merchant shipping. In 1808, HMS Phaeton, under the command of Captain Fleetwood Pellew, entered Nagasaki's harbour to ambush some Dutch trading ships that were expected to arrive shortly.[3]

The Phaeton entered the harbour on 14 October surreptitiously under a Dutch flag. As was the custom, Dutch representatives from Dejima rowed out to welcome the visiting ship, but as they approached, Phaeton lowered a tender to capture the Dutch representatives, while their Japanese escorts jumped into the sea and swam back to land. The Phaeton, holding the Dutch representatives hostage, demanded that supplies (water, food, fuel) be delivered to her in exchange for their return. Because the harbor cannon defenses were both old and poorly maintained, the meager Japanese forces in Nagasaki were seriously outgunned and unable to intervene.[3]

At the time, it was the Saga clan's turn to uphold the policy of sakoku in Nagasaki, but they had economized by stationing only 100 troops there, instead of the 1,000 men officially required for the station. The Nagasaki Magistrate, Matsudaira Genpei, immediately ordered troops from Kyūshū. The Japanese mobilized a force of 8,000 samurai and 40 ships to confront the Phaeton, but it would take them a few days to arrive. In the meantime, the Nagasaki Magistrate provided supplies to the British, and the Dutch representatives were released.[3]

The Phaeton left two days later on 17 October, before the arrival of Japanese reinforcements, and after the crew had learned that the Dutch trading ships would not be coming that year. They also left a letter for Doeff.[3] The Nagasaki Magistrate, Matsudaira, took responsibility by committing suicide by seppuku. Following Phaeton's visit, the Bakufu reinforced coastal defenses and promulgated a law prohibiting foreigners coming ashore, on pain of death (1825-1842, Muninen-uchikowashi-rei). The Bakufu also requested that official interpreters learn English and Russian, departing from their prior focus on Dutch studies. In 1814, the Dutch interpreter Motoki Shozaemon produced the first English-Japanese dictionary (6,000 words).

Hendrik Doeff and a Balinese servant in Dejima, Japanese painting, c. early 19th century

Works

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  • Recollections of Japan, Hendrik Doeff, ISBN 1-55395-849-7
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See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Max Verhart, "Haiku in the Netherlands and Flanders" Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine, German Haiku Society website
  2. ^ Otterspeer, W. Leiden Oriental Connections, 1850-1940, Volume 5 of Studies in the History of Leiden University, Brill, 1989, ISBN 978-90-04-09022-4. p 360
  3. ^ a b c d Martin, Robert Montgomery (1847). China: Political, Commercial, and Social; in an Official Report to Her Majesty's Government. Vol. 1. J. Madden. p. 305.
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