Nanban Trade Link
★★★★☆ (4/5) – Transformative in technology and art, but short-lived, geographically restricted to Kyushu, and ultimately tragic in its suppression of religious freedom. Essential for understanding Japan’s subsequent “semi-closed” era.
Overview The term Nanban (literally "Southern Barbarians") was originally a Chinese-derived epithet used by the Japanese to refer to peoples from South and Southeast Asia. However, from the mid-16th century, it became specifically associated with the first Europeans to arrive in Japan—primarily the Portuguese, but later the Spanish. The Nanban trade refers to the commercial and cultural exchange between Japan and these European powers, beginning with the arrival of Portuguese shipwreck survivors on Tanegashima in 1543 and ending with the expulsion of the Spanish in 1624 and the Portuguese in 1639, following the Shimabara Rebellion (1637–38). nanban trade