Sakuma Shozan

Sakuma Shōzan, (佐久間象山 March 22, 1811August 12, 1864) sometimes called Sakuma Zōzan, was a Japanese politician and scholar of the Edo era. Knowledgeable on naval and coastal defense issues, Shozan was imprisoned by the Tokugawa Bakufu from 1854 to 1862. He advocated opening Japanese ports to foreign traders. Shōzan was assassinated for his opinions by some radical anti-foreigner groups. The groups hired an assasin, or hitokiri named Kawakami Gensai who felled Shozan with one strike in broad daylight.
   
Shozan, Sakuma Shozan, Sakuma

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
agra
jehad.net
pitt meadows, british columbia
thomas bailey aldrich
william alexander
alenon
list of television stations in kentucky
psychological horror
disney's california adventure
soarin' over california
disneyland resort
role
translink (british columbia)
spindle
margaret murie
r. j. rummel
bedtime for democracy
d.h. peligro
rapti
edwin booth
east bay ray
ryukyu islands
sado province
sagami province
saito tatsuoki
sakuma morimasa
sanada masayuki
sanada yukimura
steller's eider
sanuki province
atlasov island
oundle
binnenhof
list of dos commands
cherokee language
skive
saikaido
yorb language
great spotted cuckoo
phut
gene regulatory network
bourguignon
gaius servilius ahala
letter from birmingham jail