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Japanese invasion of Taiwan (1616)

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dispersed the invasion force and only one ship managed to reach the island, but it was repelled by local forces. This failure put an early end to the invasion effort. A other single ship was ambushed in a river, and all her crew committed suicide to avoid capture by the Ming force or the Taiwanese
347:, Univ of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, ç1991. p.34 - "...ordered the Governor of Nagasaki, Murayama Toan, to invade Formosa with a fleet of thirteen vessels and around 4000 men. Only a hurricane thwarted this effort and forced their early return" 328: 433: 438: 299: 428: 285: 229:) they left Nagasaki. Murayama's fleet of 13 ships and 4,000 warriors, under the command of one of his sons. However a 28: 159:
Possibly several hundred - Several thousand (Many of which presumably by way of typhoon & mass suicide known as "
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Several Japanese ships diverted themselves to plunder the Chinese coast. Some Japanese ships reached the coasts of
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and did not return to Nagasaki until July 1617. They are said to have killed over 1,200 Chinese people.
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launched the invasion against Taiwan. The objective was to establish a base for the direct supply of
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Jansen, Marius B. (1992). China in the Tokugawa World. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
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Recent Trends in Scholarship on the History of Ryukyu's Relations with China and Japan
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also planned to conquer Taiwan and increase to the Japanese power at sea. However the
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Index

Sino-Japanese Wars

Red seal ship
Taiwan
China
South China Sea
Vietnam
Ming dynasty
Taiwanese indigenous peoples
Tokugawa (Edo) shogunate
Murayama Tōan
seppuku
Tokugawa shogunate
Ming dynasty
Taiwan
Nagasaki
Murayama Tōan
Chinese silk
Macao
Manila
Toyotomi Hideyoshi
king of Ryukyu
Sho Nei
Wanli
typhoon
Vietnam
Murayama Tōan


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