Japan–Netherlands relations
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Japan–Netherlands relations are the
History
Early trade
In April 1600, the ship "de Liefde" arrived on the coast of Bungo (present-day
When formal trade relations were established in 1609 at the behest of
Military cooperation
After the forcible opening of Japan by an American fleet commanded by Commodore Perry in 1854, the Netherlands was one of five countries to conclude a treaty with Japan in 1858, the so-called Ansei Treaties.

In 1860s, the
World War II

Post war Japanese–Dutch relations
The relations between Japan and the Netherlands after 1945 have been complicated. The invasion and
Emperor Hirohito landed in the Netherlands for a state visit on 8 October 1971. The visit was controversial because of the World War II troubles, and his delegation had to be protected from protesters.[9] Japanese flags were burned by radical far-left activists of the Red Youth in front of the media and a bomb alert was reported when the Japanese embassy was threatened. The Japanese press reacted furiously to the reception. After the visit, the Dutch government repeatedly apologised to Japan, and the mood in Japan turned positive when Hirohito called the visit a "success."[10]
Increasingly positive relations were largely felt in the consumer electronics industry, where the Netherlands's Philips and Japan's Sony - both major electronics companies at the time - worked together in making several popular mass market technologies such as the compact disc (CD).[11]
On the 24 August 2009, the Netherlands released a commemorative 5 euro coin to celebrate 400 years of relations.[12]
Education
Amsterdam has one Japanese-medium day school, the Japanese School of Amsterdam. There is also a school in Rotterdam, the Japanese School of Rotterdam.
The Saturday Japanese supplementary schools in the Netherlands include Japanese Saturday School Amsterdam, Den Haag-Rotterdam Japanese Saturday School in Rotterdam, Stichting the Japanese School of Tilburg, and Stichting Maastricht Japanese Supplementary School.[13] The Maastricht school was founded in 1992 as an outgrowth of the Joppenhoff International School. It began with 15 students, and grew as large as 30, but declined in concert with the economy, and as of 2004 enrolled just 20 students.[14] The Saturday School of The Hague and Rotterdam was formed in 1996 from a merger of the two separate Saturday Japanese schools of those cities.[15]
Diplomacy

Japan has an embassy in The Hague. The Netherlands has an embassy in Tokyo and a Consulate-general in Osaka.
See also
- Foreign relations of Japan
- Foreign relations of the Netherlands
- Dutch Empire
- Huis Ten Bosch
- Japanese people in the Netherlands
- Japan-Netherlands Institute
References
- ^ Matthi Forrer, Dutch-Japanese Relations, 1600-2000: A Brief History (2001).
- ^ Mitsubishi Corporation – Regional Report on the Kingdom of the Netherlands Archived 2008-11-20 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b 400 jaar handel – Four centuries of Japanese–Dutch trade relations: 1609–2009 Archived 2008-01-11 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Grant Kohn Goodman, Japan: the Dutch experience (A&C Black, 2013).
- ^ Kazuhiko Togo,. Japan's foreign policy, 1945-2009: The quest for a proactive policy (Brill, 2010).
- ^ Japan-Netherlands Exchange in the Edo Period (National Diet Library. Japan)
- ^ Edo-Tokyo Museum exhibition catalog, p. 207.
- ^ Japanese-Netherlands Exchange in the Edo Era: Stranding of De Liefde, retrieved from www.ndl.go.jp, April 14, 2012.
- ^ "Keizer Hirohito's controversiële staatsbezoek aan Nederland". 8 August 2016.
- ^ "Digibron.nl, Boegeroep en stenen voor de keizer".
- ^ "Stronger together: The partnership between Philips & Sony".
- ^ (in Dutch) News Video of the 5 euro commemorative coin
- ^ "欧州の補習授業校一覧(平成25年4月15日現在)" (Archive). Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT). Retrieved on May 10, 2014.
- ^ O'Dell 2004
- ^ "Introduction" (Archive). The Hague-Rotterdam Japanese Saturday School. Retrieved on April 5, 2015. Dutch version (Archive). Japanese version (Archive).
Works cited
- O'Dell, Casey (June 2004), "Japanese at home in Maastricht", Crossroads, Maastricht, archived from the original on 2008-09-05, retrieved 2008-11-03
Further reading
- Matthi Forrer, Dutch-Japanese Relations, 1600-2000: A Brief History (2001).
- Grant Kohn Goodman, Japan: the Dutch experience (A&C Black, 2013).
- M. C. Ricklefs. The Dutch East India Company and Japan, 1600-1850: Trade and the Cultural Exchange (Brill, 2013)
- Yasuko Suzuki. Japan-Netherlands Trade 1600-1800: The Dutch East India Company and Beyond (2012).
External links
- The Netherlands–Japan: Collections: the Memory of the Netherlands (het Geheugen van Nederland)
- Japan-Netherlands Exchange in the Edo Period (National Diet Library. Japan)
- Embassy of Japan in the Netherlands (在オランダ日本国大使館)
- Embassy of the Netherlands in Japan Archived 2008-12-16 at the Wayback Machine
- Japanese business communities in the European Union (plus Switzerland) - an onomastics view (2013)