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濠洲探撿報告書 — Gōshū tanken hōkokusho — Report of the expedition to Australia

Abstract

Record of the Japanese delegation to Australia in 1893, by Watanabe Kanjuro. Watanabe (1864-1926), a member of the Japanese House of Representatives, had been commissioned by the Japanese Governmentto undertake an exhaustive study of Australia that would prove useful in future bilateral talks regarding emigration to Australia (Imperial Japan at its Zenith: the Wartime Celebration of the empire’s 1,600th Anniversary, James Kenneth, 2010). Landing on July 16th, 1893, and departing on December 16th the same year, he visited Darwin, the Northern Territory, Thursday Island, The Torres Strait Islands, Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne, and so on. In this text, Watanabe records data on various townships’ populations (Split into ‘white’. Japanese, Chinese and so on), local jobs (especially pearl diving), the types and costs of local produce, and data on Japanese local population, like the number and ages of local Japanese prostitutes.
Date
1894-01-01
Place
Thursday Island
Subject
Category
Author
渡邊 勘十郎 (Watanabe Kanjurō)
Watanabe, Kanjuro
Publisher
外務省通商局第二課 (Gaimushō Tsūshōkyoku Dai Ni-ka)
Keywords
description of landscape and Aboriginal people
Torrens Island
reports
pearling
Current holder
Series number
OJN 3953 6521A
Item number
2020823
Access rights
Request at location
Rights
Out of Copyright
Country of origin
Language
Period of reference
1894
Description from source
289 pages, [11] leaves of plates (3 folded) : illustrations, maps ; 26 cm.
The 15 illustrations depict the Hambledon Sugar Mill, Japanese pearl divers, Thursday Island, Indigenous Australians, a goldmine. Includes 3 folding maps, of Australia, Queensland and the Northern Territory. This particular copy belonged to the publisher, the Gaimusho Tsushokyoku [Ministry of Foreign Affairs]. An important record of an early Japanese delegation to Australia, not originally for public sale.
289 pages, 11 unnumbered leaves of plates (3 folded): illustrations, maps; 26 cm

Record of the Japanese delegation to Australia in 1893, by Watanabe Kanjuro. Watanabe (1864-1926), a member of the Japanese House of Representatives, had been commissioned by the Japanese Governmentto undertake an exhaustive study of Australia that would prove useful in future bilateral talks regarding emigration to Australia (Imperial Japan at its Zenith: the Wartime Celebration of the empire’s 1,600th Anniversary, James Kenneth, 2010). Landing on July 16th, 1893, and departing on December 16th the same year, he visited Darwin, the Northern Territory, Thursday Island, The Torres Strait Islands, Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne, and so on. In this text, Watanabe records data on various townships’ populations (Split into ‘white’. Japanese, Chinese and so on), local jobs (especially pearl diving), the types and costs of local produce, and data on Japanese local population, like the number and ages of local Japanese prostitutes. The 15 illustrations depict the Hambledon Sugar Mill, Japanese pearl divers, Thursday Island, Indigenous Australians, a goldmine. Includes 3 folding maps, of Australia, Queensland and the Northern Territory. This particular copy belonged to the publisher, the Gaimusho Tsushokyoku [Ministry of Foreign Affairs]. An important record of an early Japanese delegation to Australia, not originally for public sale.
Physical format
Books
Maps
Pictures
Journey
Darwin
Thursday Island
Torres Straight Islands
Brisbane
Sydney
Melbourne
Bibliographic citation
Place of Publication
Tokio
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