- Pavel Lebedev-Lastochkin
Pavel Sergeyevich Lebedev-Lastochkin (Russian: Павел Сергеевич Лебедев-Ласточкин) was a Russian merchant from
Yakutsk who, in the late 18th century, became one of the first Russians to make contact with the Japanese. The government had hoped to enlist the efforts of private merchants, to help them open Japan at far less cost to the government than if they had sent official emissaries or military.Latoschkin volunteered for the mission, seeking the profits from either Japanese trade goods or furs from
Hokkaidō . His first attempt failed entirely when his ship sank in theSea of Okhotsk . But he, along with another merchant namedGrigory Shelikhov , was granted trade monopoly over theKuril Islands (a string of islands extending north from Japan to Siberia). The plan was to sail toUruppu , one of the islands, with an expedition crew and about 40 settlers. They would set up a small colony town near Uruppu, and try to persuade some Ainu to guide them down to Japan. This second expedition failed as well when, after reaching Uruppu in the summer of1775 , the ship sank in a storm.Latoschkin tried yet again, this time bringing a number of extra ships. It was now
1778 , and the expedition met with the Lords ofMatsumae , the Japanese guardians of the northern borders, for the first time. They bestowed gifts upon the "samurai" lords, and asked to trade. The "samurai" informed Latoschkin's party that they did not have the authority to make such agreements on behalf of theShogun , but that they should return the following year. Doing so, Latoschkin's gifts were returned, forbidden to return to Hokkaido, and informed that he should inquire at Nagasaki, on the southern island ofKyūshū , and inconveniently far from Russian holdings, if he wished to trade. Latoschkin returned to Uruppu to plan his next move.Two years later, an earthquake caused a massive "
tsunami ", which tossed the Russian ship some distance inland. This finally convinced Latoschkin to give up on seeking trade with Japan. However, despite his failure to 'open' Japan to trade, he was still one of the first, if not the very first, Russian (and non-Dutch European) to meet Japanese, in Japan, in any official capacity.References
*McDougall, Walter (1993). "Let the Sea Make a Noise: Four Hundred Years of Cataclysm, Conquest, War and Folly in the North Pacific." New York: Avon Books.
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