The history of goes back to the early 17th century, when a Japanese samurai and ambassador on his way to
Rome landed for a few days in Southern
France, creating a sensation.
After nearly two centuries of seclusion by "
Sakoku" Japan, the two countries became very important partners from the second half of the
19th century in the military, economic, legal and artistic fields. The
Bakufu modernized its army through the assistance of French military missions (
Jules Brunet), and Japan later relied on France for several aspects of its modernization, particularly the development of a shipbuilding industry during the early years of the
Imperial Japanese Navy (
Emile Bertin), and the development of a Legal code.
France derived part of its modern artistic inspiration from
Japanese art, essentially through
Japonism and its influence on
Impressionism, and almost completely relied on Japan for its prosperous
silk industry.
Chronology of Franco-Japanese relations
★
1615.
Hasekura Tsunenaga a Japanese samurai and ambassador, sent to
Rome by
Date Masamune, lands at
Saint-Tropez for a few days, initiating the first contacts between
France and
Japan.
★
1619.
François Caron, son of French
Huguenot refugees to the
Netherlands enters the
Dutch East India Company, and becomes the first person of French origin to set foot in Japan in 1619. He stays in Japan for 20 years, where he becomes a Director for the company. He later became the founding Director General of the
French East India Company in
1664.
★
1636.
Guillaume Courtet, a French
Dominican priest, sets foot in Japan. He penetrates into Japan in clandestinity, against the
1613 interdiction of
Christianity. He is caught, tortured, and dies in
Kagoshima on September 29,
1637.
★ No French people visit Japan between 1640 and 1780.
★ Around 1700, the impostor known as
George Psalmanazar claims to come from the Japanese tributary island of
Formosa.
★
1787.
La Perouse (1741-1788) navigates in Japanese waters in
1787. He visits the
Ryukyu Islands (now
Okinawa), and the strait between
Hokkaidō and
Sakhalin, giving it his name.
★
1808. The French language is taught to five Japanese translators by the Dutch chief of
Dejima,
Hendrik Doeff.
★
1844. A French naval expedition under Captain Fornier-Duplan onboard ''Alcmène'' visits
Okinawa on April 28, 1844. Trade is denied, but Father Forcade is left behind with a translator.
★
1846. Admiral Cecille arrives in Nagasaki, but is denied landing.
★
1855. Following the opening of Japan by the American
Commodore Perry, France obtains a treaty with
Okinawa on November 24, 1855.
★
1858. The first treaty between France and Japan is signed in
Edo on October 9, 1858, by
Jean Baptiste Louis Gros, opening diplomatic relations between the two countries.
★
1859. Arrival of
Gustave Duchesne de Bellecourt.
★
1862. The
Shogun sends
First Japanese Embassy to Europe, led by
Takenouchi Yasunori.
★
1863.
Second Japanese Embassy to Europe
★
1864. Arrival of
Leon Roches in Japan.
★
1864.
Bombardment of Shimonoseki by allied ships (9 British, 3 French, 4 Dutch, 1 American).
★
1864. In November
Leonce Verny arrives in Japan for the construction of the
Yokosuka arsenal.
★
1865.
Takenaka Shibata visits France to prepare for the construction of the
Yokosuka arsenal and organize a French military mission to Japan.
★
1867. The first
French Military Mission to Japan arrives in
Yokohama January 13, 1867. Among them is Captain
Jules Brunet.
★
1867. Japan sends a delegation to the
1867 World Fair in
Paris.
★
1867. The French mining engineer
Francois Coignet is sent to Japan and is put in charge of the gold mines of
Ikuno in 1868.
★
1868. Kobe incident (January 11th). A fight erupts in
Akashi between 450 samurai of the
Okayama fief and French sailors, leading to the occupation of central Kobe by foreign troops.
[1]
★
1868. Eleven French sailors from the ''
Dupleix'' are killed in the
Sakai incident, in
Sakai, near
Osaka, by southern rebel forces.
★
1869. Former French advisors under
Jules Brunet fight alongside the last
Shogun loyalists of
Enomoto Takeaki, against Imperial troops in the
Battle of Hakodate.
★
1870.
Henri Pelegrin directs the construction of Japan's first gas-lightning system in the streets of
Nihonbashi,
Ginza and
Yokohama.

Japan's first modern silk reeling factory at
Tomioka, established by the French engineer Paul Brunat in
1872.
★
1872.
Paul Brunat opens the first modern Japanese silk spinning factory at
Tomioka. Three craftsmen from the
Nishijin weaving district in
Kyoto,
Sakura tsuneshichi,
Inoue Ihee and
Yoshida Chushichi travel to
Lyon. They travel back to Japan in 1873, importing a
Jacquard loom.
★
1872. Start of the second
French Military Mission to Japan (1872-1880).
★
1873. The legal expert
Gustave Emile Boissonade is sent to Japan to help build a modern legal system.
★
1874. The Second French Military Mission is sent to Japan, and builds the military school of
Ichigaya.
★
1882. The first
tramways are introduced from France and start functioning at
Asakusa, and between
Shinbashi and
Ueno.
★
1884. Third
French Military Mission to Japan (1884-1889).
★
1886. The French Navy engineer
Emile Bertin reinforces the Japanese Navy, and directs the construction of the arsenals of
Kure and
Sasebo, contributing to the Japanese victory in the
First Sino-Japanese war.
★
1898. The first automobile (a
Panhard-Levassor) is introduced in Japan.
★
1909. The first Japanese mechanical flight, a
biplane tracted by an automobile, occurs in 1909 in
Ueno through the collaboration of
Shiro Aihara and Le Prieur, French military attaché in Tokyo.
★
1910. Captain
Tokugawa Yoshitoshi, trained in France as a pilot, makes the first self-propelled flight onboard a
Henri Farman plane.
★
1910.
Sakichi Toyoda, founder of the
Toyota Corporation, visits France to study spinning techniques.
★
1918. Fourth
French Military Mission to Japan (1918-1919)
★
1924. First air flight from France to Japan, by Pelletier Doisy and Besin.
★
1925. First air flight from Japan to France, by Kawauchi and Abe.
★
1941.
Imperial Japan attacks the South-East Asian colony of
French Indochina which is controlled by
Vichy France. On March 9, 1945, Japan takes full control of French Indochina for a few months until September 1945.
★
1952. First
Air France flight to Japan.
Franco-Japanese relations today
Recently France has been very involved in trade and cultural exchange initiatives with Japan. Some people see this as being a result of former French president
Jacques Chirac being a
Japanophile. Chirac has visited Japan over 40 times, probably more than any other world leader outside of Japan, and is an expert on the country. France has started the export promotion campaign ''
Le Japon, c'est possible'' and the international liaison personnel exchange program
JET. Together they built the ''
Maison de la Culture du Japon à Paris''.
France and Japan have also worked together to improve dire health situations from HIV and underdevelopment in Djibouti, Madagascar, Uganda, and other countries.
Japan and France are also known to share ideas with each other in the realms of
art and
cooking. Japan has been heavily influenced by French cuisine within the past few decades, as seen on the television show
Iron Chef.
Anime is popular in France, and French historical figures and settings from
medieval,
Renaissance,
Napoleonic, and
World War eras have served as models for certain popular stories in Japanese entertainment. The purity of Japanese painting and illustration, and likewise the modernity and elegance of French visual arts has resulted in hybrid styles in those creative fields.
The two countries have been collaborating closely in the area of
nuclear energy generation.
In June 2005, France and Japan have announced a collaboration to build the next generation supersonic commercial aircraft, a successor to the
Concorde.
French in Japan
★
Léon Roches
★
Jules Brunet
★
Léonce Verny
★
Gustave Emile Boissonade in Japan from 1873 to 1895
★
Paul Claudel French embassador in Tokyo from 1922 to 1928
Japanese in France
★
Hasekura Tsunenaga
★
Fukuzawa Yukichi as a translator in the 1862 mission
★
Shibata Takenaka (1823-1878)
★
Tsuguharu Foujita (in France from 1913 to 1931)
Notes
1. Source and [1]
See also
★
o-yatoi gaikokujin - foreign employees in
Meiji era Japan
★
Foreign cemeteries in Japan
★
Foreign relations of Japan
External links
★
Japan-France Relations.
References
★ "日仏交流の黄金期 Soie et Lumière, L'Âge d'or des échanges Franco-Japonais" (French and Japanese), Christian Polak, Hachette Fujingaho