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Mark Teeuwen & Fumiko Miyazaki 
Christian Sorcerers on Trial 
Records of the 1827 Osaka Incident

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In 1829, three women and three men were paraded through Osaka and crucified. Placards set up at the execution ground proclaimed their crime: they were devotees of the “pernicious creed” of Christianity. Middle-aged widows, the women made a living as mediums, healers, and fortune-tellers. Two of the men dabbled in divination; the third was a doctor who collected books in Chinese on Western learning and Christianity.
This was a startling development. No one in Japan had been identified and punished as a Christian for more than a century, and now, avowed devotees of the proscribed sect had appeared in the very heart of the realm. Just decades before the arrival of Perry’s black ships and the fall of the Tokugawa shogunate, the incident reignited fears of Christians as evil sorcerers, plotting to undermine society and overthrow the country.
Christian Sorcerers on Trial offers annotated translations of a range of sources on this sensational event, from the 1827 arrest of the alleged Christians through the case’s afterlife. The protagonists’ testimonies relate with striking detail their life histories, practices, and motivations. The record of deliberations in Edo and communications between Osaka and Edo officials illuminate the operation of the Tokugawa system of criminal justice. Retellings of the incident show how the story was transmitted and received. Translated and put in context by Fumiko Miyazaki, Kate Wildman Nakai, and Mark Teeuwen, the sources provide students and scholars alike with an extraordinarily rich picture of late Edo social life, religious practices, and judicial procedures.

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Table of Content

Acknowledgments
Maps
Introduction
Translation Strategies
Main Protagonists
Part I: Testimonies
1. Sano and Her Associates
2. Kinu and Her Associates
3. Mitsugi, Mizuno Gunki, and Wasa
4. Gunki’s Male Disciples Umon and Heizō
5. Gunki’s Associates and Son
6. Kenzō and Others Implicated in the Investigation
Part II: The Judicial Review Process
7. Submitting the Dossier for Review
8. Deliberations in Edo
9. The Senior Councillors’ Orders and Their Implementation
10. Aftermath
Part III: Rumors and Retellings
11. The State of the Floating World
12. Night Tales from the Kasshi Day
13. A Biography of Ōshio Heihachirō
Appendix 1: Mitsugi’s 1822 Arrest
Appendix 2: Disposition of the Proscribed Books
Appendix 3: Manuscript Versions of the Keihan Kirishitan Incident Dossier
Glossary
Notes
References
Index

About the author

Fumiko Miyazaki is professor emerita at Keisen University, Tokyo.Kate Wildman Nakai is professor emerita at Sophia University, Tokyo.Mark Teeuwen is professor of Japanese studies at the University of Oslo.Miyazaki, Nakai, and Teeuwen previously collaborated (with Anne Walthall and John Breen) on a translation of another late Edo source: Lust, Commerce, and Corruption: An Account of What I Have Seen and Heard by an Edo Samurai (Columbia, 2014).
Language English ● Format EPUB ● ISBN 9780231551885 ● File size 53.3 MB ● Editor Mark Teeuwen & Fumiko Miyazaki ● Publisher Columbia University Press ● City New York ● Country US ● Published 2020 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 7474229 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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