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The earliest historical relations between Mexico and Japan

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About This Book

A scholarly compilation translates and assembles original diplomatic letters, embassy reports, and contemporary accounts to document the earliest formal contacts between New Spain and Japan around the turn of the seventeenth century. It reconstructs how a Japanese ruler initiated correspondence seeking shelter for Spanish merchant ships, describes envoys and gift exchanges routed through the Philippines, and reproduces the archival evidence preserved in Spanish and Japanese repositories. The work highlights practical motives such as maritime safety and commerce, traces the sequence of missions and responses, and situates the primary documents within the broader archival and historiographic record.

About the Author

Nuttall, Zelia portrait

Zelia Nuttall

Zelia Nuttall was an American archaeologist and anthropologist known for her pioneering work in the study of ancient civilizations, particularly those of Mexico. Her notable works include "The Fundamental Principles of Old and New World Civilizations," where she explores the religious and sociological systems of ancient Mexico, and "The Earliest Historical Relations Between Mexico and Japan," which examines cross-cultural connections. Nuttall's research contributed significantly to the understanding of Mesoamerican cultures and their historical contexts, making her a key figure in the field of comparative anthropology.

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