Hoare, James Edward
- Biographical Portraits Volume III (Editor)
- Captain Francis Brinkley (1841-1912): Yatoi, Scholar and Apologist
- Britain's Japan Consular Service, 1859-1941
- Britain's Japan Consular Service, 1859-1941*
- British Journalists in Meiji Japan
- Captain Broughton, HMS Providence (and her tender) and Japan 1794-98
- Ernest Cyril Comfort: The Other British Aviation Mission and Mitsubishi 1921-24
- Editor's Introduction
- Introduction: Scholar Diplomats and Consuls
- Korea, Taiwan and Manchuria: Britain's Japan Consular Service in the Japanese Empire, 1883-1941
- William Keswick, 1835-1912: Jardine's Pioneer in Japan
Captain Francis Brinkley provides the subject of this essay, in particular his journalism and scholarship regarding Japan over his forty year career in the country.
This portrait provides a detailed account of the establishment and modus operandi of the Japan Consular Service (1859-1941) from the opening of Japan to the end of the Second World War.
This portrait provides a detailed account of the establishment and modus operandi of the Japan Consular Service (1859-1941) from the opening of Japan to the end of the Second World War.
In laying out an overview of British journalistic efforts and establishments in Meiji Japan, this portrait asks the question, 'What was the importance of the foreign press in Anglo-Japanese relations during the Meiji period?'.
This portrait details the sailing and surveying exports of Captain William Broughton in the Pacific and North East Asia.
Ernest Cyril Comfort played a significant role in the post First World War Civil Aviation Mission to Japan. This essay provides an account of the mission and Comfort's role in aiding Mitsubishi Heavy Industries.
James Edward Hoare's Introduction to Biographical Portraits Volume III.
J. E. Hoare's Introduction to Part IV: Scholar Diplomats and Consuls.
This portait gives an account of the activities of the Japan Consular Service outside of Japan in Korea, Taiwan, and Manchuria (then parts of the Japanese Empire), and how they paved the way for the 1943 Eden reforms which ended the distinction between the British diplomatic and consular services.
This portrait details William Keswick's (1835-1912) impact upon trade between Britain and Japan as part of his long involvement in East Asian trade from the mid 19th to early 20th century.
This book forms part of a series recording the lives of men, women and institutions who have played a significant role in the development of UK-Japan relations. The current volume, which contains 27 ‘portraits’, contributes further to the Japan Society’s collection of individual memoirs. When read together these give a many-faceted picture of modern history, shedding light on controversial issues, illuminating past successes and failures, and providing a valuable point of reference for researchers and historians.