Foreign Office
- 'The Shanghai Temper': J.O.P. Bland (1863-1945) and Japan
- A.B. Mitford (1837-1916)
- Arnold Toynbee (1889-1975) and Japan: From Historian to Guru
- Arthur Balfour (1848-1930): A Skilled Politician Managaing the Emergence of Japan as a Great Power
- Benjamin Britten (1913-1976)
- Sydney Giffard: 'Early Days in the Kansai'
- Eddie Ripley: Cypher Officer, Language Student, Vice-Consul
- Edward Grey (1862-1933)
- Edward Heath (1916-2005) and Japan: The First Visit of a British Prime Minister to Japan in 1972
- Ernest Bevin (1881-1951) and British Policies towards Occupied Japan, 1945-1952
- In Proper Perspective: Sir Esler Dening (1897-1977) and Anglo-Japanese Relations
- Introduction: From the Alliance to Estrangement, 1900-41
- Introduction: Scholar Diplomats and Consuls
- Introduction: The Post-war Years
- Japanese Birthday: TaishÅ II, G.C. Allen (1900-1982) and Japan
- Korea, Taiwan and Manchuria: Britain's Japan Consular Service in the Japanese Empire, 1883-1941
- Alan Pinnell: Language Student, Commercial Officer, Information Officer
- Lees Mayall: Head of Chancery
- Lord Halifax (1881-1959): A Reassessment of British Far Eastern Policy, 1938-1941
- Lord Rosebery (1847-1929) and Japan
- Lord Salisbury (1830-1903)
- Lt Colonel Edward St John Neale: Chargé d'Affaires at Edo/Yokohama, 1862-64
- Major-General F.S.G. Piggott (1883-1966)
- Margaret Thatcher (1925-2013): Pragmatist Who Radically Improved Britain's Image in Japan and Successfully Promoted Japanese Manufacturing Investment in Britain
- Merrick Baker-Bates: From Diplomacy to Commerce and Back
- Nicholas Barrington: Head of Chancery
- Prime Minister Yoshida in London 1954: The First Visit to Britain by a Japanese Prime Minister
- The Reactions of Two Young Language Students in the 1950s
- Rt. Hon. Austen Chamberlain (1863-1937), Rt. Hon. Neville Chamberlain (1869-1940) and Japan, 1924-40
- Rt. Hon. Malcom MacDonald (1901-81) and Japan
- Sir Anthony Eden (1897-1977): Managing the Challenge of Anglo-Japanese Relations, 1936-1955
- Sir Cecil Spring Rice (1861-1918) and Japan
- Sir Charles Eliot (1862-1931) and Japan
- Sir Charles Eliot: Ambassador to Japan, 1919-25
- Sir Daniel Lascelles: Ambassador to Japan, 1957-59
- Sir Esler Dening: Ambassador to Japan, 1951-57
- Sir Francis Bertie (1844-1919): Key Figure in Framing the Anglo-Japanese Alliance
- Sir Francis Rundall: Ambassador to Japan, 1963-67
- Sir George Sansom (1883-1965): Historian and Diplomat
- Sir George Sansom: Pre-eminent Diplomat and Historian
- Sir John Simon (1873-1954) and 'This Manchurian Briar Patch'
- Sir Miles Lampson (Lord Killearn) (1880-1964) and Japan
- Sir Robert Heatlie Scott (1905-82) and Japan
- Sir Rutherford Alcock; Minister at Edo, 1859-62
- The Beginning of a Long Association: John Whitehead Remembers
- The Death of James Melville Cox (1885-1940) in Tokyo on 29 July 1940: Arrests of British Citizens in Japan in 1940 and 1941
- Timothy or Taid or Taig Conroy or O'Conroy, 1883-1935: 'The "Best Authority, East and West" on Anything concerning Japan'
- Two Scientists in Japan
- Banking and Financial Services: A View from the Bank of England and Treasury
- William Donald Patrick at the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, 1946-48
Author: Best, Antony
Journalist John O. P. Bland (1863-1945) is more commonly associated with China than Japan, although his 'treaty port mentality' means his career sheds light on the British trading communities views of Japan.
Author: Morton, Robert
A.B. Mitford (1837-1916) led a long, adventurous, and well-connected life. This essay recounts how his time in Japan under Sir Harry Parkes coloured the rest of his life.
Author: Turner, Louis
This portrait looks at doyen historian Arnold Toynbee's (1889-1975) cult status in Japan, detailing his three visits to the country.
Author: Nish, Ian
As future Prime Minister Arthur Balfour (1848-1930) was emerging as a prominant politician, Japan was coming on to the international map. Balfour's career came to reflect this change in Japan's stature, as the country went from low to high priority in the eyes of the British Foreign Office.
Author: James, Jason
The composer Benjamin Britten (1913-1976) was only in Japan for twelve days, in 1956, but his exposure to Japanese culture had a powerful impact on his music, resulting in his opera Curlew River.
Author: Giffard, Sydney
Having completed his time as a language student, future Ambassador Sydney Giffard was sent to the Kansai to gain experience as a Vice-Consul. Here he describes life in Kansai in the 1950s, putting it in the context of progressive centralization in Tokyo.
Author: Ripley, Eddie
Eddie Ripley gives an account of his efforts to study Japanese and of his early experiences as a vice-consul in Yokohama in the late 1950s and '60s.
Author: Nish, Ian
Edward Grey's (1862-1933) served as Foreign Secretary for a decade, setting a record for length of service. Through looking at his writings and minutes, the impressions of his closest officials and the impressions of Japanese diplomats, this essay uncovers the thinking which shaped his policy-making.
Author: Cortazzi, Hugh
Edward Heath (1916-2005) was the first British Prime Minister to make an official visit to Japan. This essay details Heath's 1972 visit and its aftermath.
Author: Buckley, Roger
This essay details Ernest Bevin's (1881-1951) role in Britain's post war attitudes and policies towards occupied Japan at the start of the Cold War, as Britain strived to remain a global power and public oppinion of Japan remained poor.
Author: Buckley, Roger
As the first British Ambassador to Japan after the War, Esler Dening (1897-1977) was the central figure in Anglo-Japanese relations at a time when British opinion was distinctly anti-Japanese.
Author: Nish, Ian
Ian Nish's Introduction to Part II of British Envoys to Japan: From the Alliance to Estrangement. .
Author: Hoare, James Edward
J. E. Hoare's Introduction to Part IV: Scholar Diplomats and Consuls.
Author: Lowe, Peter
Peter Lowe's Introduction to Part III of British Envoys in Japan: The Post-war Years.
Author: Metzger-Court, Sarah
A consideration of George Allen's (1900-1982) career as an economist and lecturer in Japan.
Author: Hoare, James Edward
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.
Author: Pinnell, Alan
Alan Pinnell's diplomatic career in Japan spanned some twenty years, from the late 1960s to the late '80s. Here he picks out some of the most memorable moments from his time in Japan, starting with his time as a language student and culminating with the visit of the Prince and Princess of Wales in 1986, via his time in the commercial department.
Author: Mayall, Lees
Lees Mayall was based in Japan from 1958 to 1961, tasked with keeping an eye on the Japanese Government's new 'American-imposed democracy'. This chapter comprises extracts from his memoir Fireflies in Amber, in which he describes his reactions to Japan.
Author: Best, Antony
This essay seeks to answer the question of Edward Wood's (1881-1959) attitudes towards Japan in his role as foreign secretary from 1938 to 1941, when relations between Britain and Japan were becoming increasingly frayed.
Author: Nish, Ian
This essay recounts Lord Rosebery's (1847-1929) role in Anglo-Japanese relations in the late 1800s to the early 1900s, including ultimately futile diplomatic efforts to bring about the end of the Sino-Japanese war.
Author: Otte, Thomas G.
Lord Salisbury (1830-1903) dominated British foreign policy for the better part of a quarter of a century at the close of the Victorian era, serving four times as Foreign Secretary and thrice Prime Minister. This essay sketches his attitudes towards Japan and analyses the emergence of Japan as a major power in the evolution of Anglo-Japanese relations.
Author: Cortazzi, Hugh
Detailing Lt Colonel Edward St John Neale's (1812-1866) time in charge of the British Legation in Japan during Sir Rutherford Alcock's time of leave. This article appraises Neale's actions in response to the Namamugi incident, the second TÅzenji incident and the bombardment of Kagoshima during a turbulent time in Anglo-Japanese affairs.
Author: Best, Antony
This essay details the miltary and diplomatic career of Major-General F.S.G. Piggott (1883-1966), whose efforts to secure peace and improve relations between Japan and Britain were fatally clouded by an uncritical love for Japan. Following the Pacific War he devoted his life to the restoration of Anglo-Japanese friendship.
Author: Cortazzi, Hugh
Margaret Thatcher (1925-2013) played a significant role in promoting Japanese manufacturing investment in Britain and opening up the Japanese markets, and ensured that Britain was no longer seen as suffering from what the Japanese called eikokubyÅ (the English disease).
Author: Baker-Bates, Merrick
Merrick Baker-Bates was first a diplomatic service language student in Japan before becoming Commercial Counsellor. Having transferred to commerce for four years he subsequently returned to the diplomatic service as Consul General in LA. Here he describes his various lives in Japan, with particular reference to his time as a language student, the shift in emphasis in the 1960s to promoting British exports, and to his time as General Manager of Cornes and Company.
Author: Barrington, Nicholas
Nicholas Barrington described himself as not a Japanese specialist, but an admirer. Here he recalls his time as Head of Chancery in Japan.
Author: Cortazzi, Hugh
Shortly before his resignation as Prime Minister in 1954 Yoshida Shigeru visited Britain. This essay examines the political controversy surrounding Yoshida's visit, as well as the visit itself and an assessment of its success.
Author: Ellingworth, Dick, and Brian Hitch
The pre-war Japan Consular Service sent selected new entrants each year to study Japanese, creating a corps of Japanese-speaking consuls. The Foreign Office realised that Japanese-speaking officers would be needed after the war in the embassy, and in consular posts in Japan, and so revived the practice in 1951. In this chapter Dick Ellingworth and Brian Hitch describe the system.
Author: Best, Antony
Austin (1863-1937) and Neville Chamberlain (1869-1940) played an important role in British public life, and particularly in the formation of foreign policy. This essay investigates Japanese perceptions and interpretations of their careers.
Author: Weste, John
Malcolm MacDonald (1901-81) presided over an era of Anglo-Japanese relations during which he was forced to consider Japan's position post Second World War and its impact upon the British Empire. This essay acknowledges his relative ambivelance towards Japan, but also his key role in diplomacy with the country.
Author: Best, Antony
This portrait seeks to assess Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden's (1897-1977) attitude towards Britain's former ally and contemporary adversary, Japan, as well as detail his efforts to rebuild relations in the wake of the bitter legacy of the Pacific War.
Author: Nish, Ian
Cecil Rice (1861-1918) played an important role in the Russo-Japanese War and subsequently served as Ambassador in Washington during the First World War. This chapter charts his diplomatic career through times of peace and of war, outlining his affection for and dealings with Japan.
Author: Smith, Dennis
Sir Charles Eliot (1862-1931) became British Ambassador at Tokyo in 1919. This chapter details his life and career as an often overlooked figure in Anglo-Japanese relations, who made significant contributions to scholarship and whose time as ambassador coincided with the end of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance.
Author: Smith, Dennis
This profile considers the career of Sir Charles Eliot (1862-1931) including his contributions to the field of oriental scholarship and his time as ambassador, overseeing the end of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance.
Author: Cortazzi, Hugh
Sir Daniel Lascelles (1902-1967) was an unlikely appointment as British ambassador to Japan having no connections or knowledge of the Japanse language, culture or people. This profile details his ineffectual time as ambassador.
Author: Buckley, Roger
Concerning Sir Esler Dening (1897-1977) as a main figure in Anglo-Japanese relations following the ending of the Pacific War, at a time when British opinion was anti-Japanese.
Author: Otte, Thomas G.
Despite having little interest in, or ever visiting Japan, diplomat Francis Bertie, in his role as Assistant Under-secretary at the Foreign Office, was instrumental in preparing the Anglo-Japanese Alliance. This portrait assesses the significance of this contribution as it established the broad parameters of British policy in East Asia for the next two decades.
Author: Cortazzi, Hugh
Concerning Sir Francis Rundall's (1908-1987) time as ambassador to Japan overseeing the confrontation between Indonesia and Malaysia in 1963, the Olympic games in 1964 and the British Exhibition at Harumi in 1965.
Author: Daniels, Gordon
This profile considers equally Sir George Sansom's (1883-1965) career as a diplomat, in which he pioneered the serious study of the Japanese economy, and historian.
Author: Daniels, Gordon
This profile considers equally Sir George Sansom's (1883-1965) career as a diplomat, scholar and historian.
Author: Best, Antony
This portrait offers an analysis of Sir John Simon's (1873-1954) flawed role in the foreign office and in Anglo-Japanese relations as a whole as they pertained to the Manchurian crisis.
Author: Steeds, David
Intertwined throughout Miles Lampson's (1880-1964) diplomatic career were dealings with and a genuine affection for Japan. This biography traces those dealings, beginning with his involvement in the 1906 Garter Mission, and provides a portrait of this British diplomatic figure.
Author: Lowe, Peter
Robert Scott’s (1905-82) career goes some way to illustrate Japan’s impact on the world in the 20th Century, particularly with regard to British and American foreign policy in South East Asia following the Second World War.
Author: Cortazzi, Hugh
A reassessment of the career of Sir Rutherford Alcock (1809-1897), the first British Minister to Japan from 1859-64.
Author: Whitehead, John
In the 1950s the Foreign Office maintained the tradition of sending language students to Japan. Here future Ambassador Tim Whitehead recalls his time, from 1956, as one such student, including his extensive travelling around the country.
Author: Cortazzi, Hugh
This essay uses the tragic death of Melville James Cox (1885-1940) in Tokyo to assess the misconduct of the Kempeitai in arresting British citizens during the Second World War.
Author: O'Connor, Peter
Timothy Conroy (1883-1935) had a high opinion of his knowledge pertaining to Imperial Japan, one which was not shared widely other than in Fleet Street. However, the publication of his book The Menace of Japan in 1933 coincided with the explosion of Japanese military activity in China, a fact that led considerable credibility to his writings.
Author: Bradley, Clive, and Bill Williamson
Bill Williamson did two separate tours as Atomic Energy Attaché at the British Embassy. His account of working with the Japanese government in the commissioning of the first nuclear power stations in Japan is a reminder of an important and often over-looked facet of Anglo-Japan relations. Clive Bradley meanwhile was Counsellor for Science and Technology in the British Embassy in the 1980s where he was responsible for reporting on scientific and technological developments and for promoting British science and technology.
Author: Elston, Chris, and Geoffrey Littler
Before the 1970s there seemed to be little scope for British financial services in the closed Japanese market. Japanese membership of the OECD, however, forced gradual changes, along with internal pressure from Japanese companies wanting access to foreign loans. Here Chris Elston, who joined the British Embassy as Financial Counsellor in 1979 recalls his time as Bank of England representative in Japan, and reflects on both the state of Japan's banking system and general accounting practices in the years leading up to the crisis. Meanwhile, Geoffrey Little of HM Treasury gives an account of negotiations to ensure that Britain kept pace with American financial institutions in Japan.
Author: Trotter, Ann
This essay details the role of William Patrick - Britain's appointed judge - in the International Military Tribunal for the Far East, 1946-48, along with the problems faced by the Tribunal.