Shirahama Kenki (白濱顕貴,[1] Viet: Bạch Tân Hiển Quý[2]) was a Japanese pirate of the late 16th-early 17th centuries, one of the first Japanese with whom the southern Vietnamese principality of the Nguyễn lords made contact.

Shirahama Kenki
白濱顕貴
NationalityJapanese
OccupationPirate
Years activeLate 16th-early 17th centuries
Known forOne of the first Japanese with whom the southern Vietnamese kingdom of the Nguyễn lords made contact
Piratical career
Base of operationsVietnam

He first arrived on the Vietnamese coast in 1585, with five ships, and began to engage in pirate raids and coastal assaults. He was eventually driven off by a fleet of at least ten ships led by the sixth son of Lord Nguyễn Hoàng; two of the pirate ships were destroyed, and Shirahama fled. It is said that he was mistaken for a Westerner by the Vietnamese he encountered at the time.[3]

Fourteen years later, in 1599, Shirahama's craft was wrecked near the port of Thuận An. The local magistrate, correctly believing him to be some variety of pirate or brigand, attacked Shirahama and was killed. Shirahama was then imprisoned, and Nguyễn Hoàng sent a missive to Tokugawa Ieyasu, new shōgun of Japan, asking how to deal with Japanese sailors in the future. This was the first official contact between the two governments, and marked the beginning of a friendly relationship lasting several decades.[3]

References

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  1. ^ Kondō, Jūzō (ed.)(c. 1808–1819). 『外蕃通書』 (Gaiban Tsūsho, "Communications from Foreign Lands"). Chapter 11, p97. As reprinted in Kondō, Heijō (ed.) 『史籍集覧』 (Shiseki shūran, "Collection of Historical Works"). vol. 21. Tokyo: Sumiya shobō, 1968. p287.
  2. ^ Thương mại Việt Nam – Nhật Bản thế kỷ XVI–XVII Archived 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine, Accessed 12 June 2007.
  3. ^ a b Li, Tana. Nguyen Cochinchina: Southern Vietnam in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1998. pp60–61.