長崎稲佐ロシア海軍基地をめぐる明治初期日露関係 : 借地交渉とその意義

In 1875, soon after the sealing of the St. Petersburg Treaty stipulating the exchange of Sakhalin and the Kurill Islands, Japan and Russia agreed on a land lease of Inasa Village in Nagasaki to the Russian navy. This was a juridical confirmation of the Russian Squadron’s long-standing practice of us...

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Main Author: 醍醐, 龍馬
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Japanese
English
Published: 北海道大学スラブ・ユーラシア研究センター
Subjects:
290
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2115/84290
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spelling fthokunivhus:oai:eprints.lib.hokudai.ac.jp:2115/84290 2023-05-15T18:09:19+02:00 長崎稲佐ロシア海軍基地をめぐる明治初期日露関係 : 借地交渉とその意義 A Russian Navy Base in Inasa, Nagasaki: A Case of Japan-Russia Negotiations in the Early Meiji Era 醍醐, 龍馬 http://hdl.handle.net/2115/84290 jpn eng jpn eng 北海道大学スラブ・ユーラシア研究センター http://hdl.handle.net/2115/84290 スラヴ研究, 68: 45-70 290 bulletin (article) fthokunivhus 2022-11-18T01:06:51Z In 1875, soon after the sealing of the St. Petersburg Treaty stipulating the exchange of Sakhalin and the Kurill Islands, Japan and Russia agreed on a land lease of Inasa Village in Nagasaki to the Russian navy. This was a juridical confirmation of the Russian Squadron’s long-standing practice of using this locality as its winter base, which would remain intact until the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese War in 1904. In fact, this agreement brought about stability of the bilateral relationship, serving as a prerequisite for Japan to embark on its subsequent Korean policy. This article attempts to contextualize this particular land lease in the increasingly entangled relationship between Japan and Russia. Nagasaki’s importance as a resort for the Russian navy increased, with its failure to obtain Tsushima as a strategic base under pressure from the British in 1861 and with its pivotal port moving from Nikolaevsk-on-Amur to Vladivostok in 1871. Against this backdrop in 1870 the Russians succeeded in renting a piece of land Hiradogoya for ten years by directly negotiating with the landowners and the Nagasaki administration. Two years later, when Grand Duke Alexei Alexandrovich visited Japan, he found it inconvenient to maintain a naval hospital and dock in Hiradogoya. This led one of his attendants, vice admiral of the navy Constantin Possiet, to propose to the Japanese government the Maruoyama foothills as an alternative for the Russian navy base. The Japanese government in turn rejected this proposal for two reasons. First, the Japanese navy was afraid that the occupation of this strategically important location by the Russian navy would raise security concerns. Second, the increase of places of mixed residence outside the fixed enclaves could threaten Japanese sovereignty. Undaunted, K. V. Struve, the Russian minister in Japan, tried to renegotiate in 1874, arguing that the lease of Maruoyama would have a positive effect on Russo-Japanese relations. However, the Japanese navy was a staunch opponent to this deal; it ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Sakhalin Hokkaido University Collection of Scholarly and Academic Papers (HUSCAP) Struve ENVELOPE(14.833,14.833,-72.067,-72.067)
institution Open Polar
collection Hokkaido University Collection of Scholarly and Academic Papers (HUSCAP)
op_collection_id fthokunivhus
language Japanese
English
topic 290
spellingShingle 290
醍醐, 龍馬
長崎稲佐ロシア海軍基地をめぐる明治初期日露関係 : 借地交渉とその意義
topic_facet 290
description In 1875, soon after the sealing of the St. Petersburg Treaty stipulating the exchange of Sakhalin and the Kurill Islands, Japan and Russia agreed on a land lease of Inasa Village in Nagasaki to the Russian navy. This was a juridical confirmation of the Russian Squadron’s long-standing practice of using this locality as its winter base, which would remain intact until the outbreak of the Russo-Japanese War in 1904. In fact, this agreement brought about stability of the bilateral relationship, serving as a prerequisite for Japan to embark on its subsequent Korean policy. This article attempts to contextualize this particular land lease in the increasingly entangled relationship between Japan and Russia. Nagasaki’s importance as a resort for the Russian navy increased, with its failure to obtain Tsushima as a strategic base under pressure from the British in 1861 and with its pivotal port moving from Nikolaevsk-on-Amur to Vladivostok in 1871. Against this backdrop in 1870 the Russians succeeded in renting a piece of land Hiradogoya for ten years by directly negotiating with the landowners and the Nagasaki administration. Two years later, when Grand Duke Alexei Alexandrovich visited Japan, he found it inconvenient to maintain a naval hospital and dock in Hiradogoya. This led one of his attendants, vice admiral of the navy Constantin Possiet, to propose to the Japanese government the Maruoyama foothills as an alternative for the Russian navy base. The Japanese government in turn rejected this proposal for two reasons. First, the Japanese navy was afraid that the occupation of this strategically important location by the Russian navy would raise security concerns. Second, the increase of places of mixed residence outside the fixed enclaves could threaten Japanese sovereignty. Undaunted, K. V. Struve, the Russian minister in Japan, tried to renegotiate in 1874, arguing that the lease of Maruoyama would have a positive effect on Russo-Japanese relations. However, the Japanese navy was a staunch opponent to this deal; it ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author 醍醐, 龍馬
author_facet 醍醐, 龍馬
author_sort 醍醐, 龍馬
title 長崎稲佐ロシア海軍基地をめぐる明治初期日露関係 : 借地交渉とその意義
title_short 長崎稲佐ロシア海軍基地をめぐる明治初期日露関係 : 借地交渉とその意義
title_full 長崎稲佐ロシア海軍基地をめぐる明治初期日露関係 : 借地交渉とその意義
title_fullStr 長崎稲佐ロシア海軍基地をめぐる明治初期日露関係 : 借地交渉とその意義
title_full_unstemmed 長崎稲佐ロシア海軍基地をめぐる明治初期日露関係 : 借地交渉とその意義
title_sort 長崎稲佐ロシア海軍基地をめぐる明治初期日露関係 : 借地交渉とその意義
publisher 北海道大学スラブ・ユーラシア研究センター
url http://hdl.handle.net/2115/84290
long_lat ENVELOPE(14.833,14.833,-72.067,-72.067)
geographic Struve
geographic_facet Struve
genre Sakhalin
genre_facet Sakhalin
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2115/84290
スラヴ研究, 68: 45-70
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