HMS Phaeton (1782)
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Contemporary Japanese drawing of the HMS Phaeton (Nagasaki Municipal Museum) |
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Career (UK) | |
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Name: | HMS Phaeton |
Operator: | Royal Navy |
Ordered: | 3 March 1780 |
Builder: | John Smallshaw, Liverpool |
Laid down: | June 1780 |
Launched: | 12 June 1782 |
Completed: | 27 December 1782 |
Commissioned: | March 1782 |
Fate: | Sold to break up 26 March 1828. |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Minerva class frigate |
Tons burthen: | 944 |
Length: | 141 ft 0 in (43.0 m) |
Beam: | 39 ft 0 in (11.9 m) |
Depth of hold: | 13 ft 10 in (4.2 m) |
Propulsion: | Sail |
Complement: | 280 |
Armament: | UD: Twenty-eight 18-pounder guns QD: Eight 9-pounder guns, six 18-pounder carronades FC: Two 9-pounder guns, four 18-pounder carronades |
HMS Phaeton was a 38-gun, fifth-rate frigate of the Minerva Class of the Royal Navy, most noted for its intrusion into Nagasaki harbour in 1808. The Phaeton was built in Liverpool in 1780 to 1782 and was involved in numerous engagements during the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars. The Phaeton was sent to the Pacific in 1805, and returned in 1812. She was initially sold on 11 July 1827, but this sale fell through and a new sale took place on 26 March 1828..
[edit] Nagasaki Harbour Incident
As Napoleon had conquered the Netherlands, and begun to use its resources against England, Royal Navy ships started to prey on Dutch shipping. In 1808, Phaeton entered Nagasaki harbour to attack a couple of Dutch trading ships planned for arrival.
Phaeton entered Nagasaki harbour on October 14th under a Dutch flag. As was the custom, Dutch representatives from the Nagasaki trading enclave of Dejima rowed out to welcome the visiting ship, but as they approached a tender was lowered by Phaeton to capture the Dutch representatives. The Phaeton demanded supplies (water, food, fuel) to be delivered to the ship in exchange for the release of the Dutch employees. The Phaeton also fired cannons and muskets to press her demands, and threatened to destroy the Japanese and Chinese ships in the harbour.
The meagre Japanese forces in Nagasaki were unable to repel the Phaeton. At the time, it was the Saga clan's turn to uphold the policy of Sakoku and to protect Nagasaki harbour, but they had limited expenses by sending only 100 troops there, instead of the 1,000 officially required for the station. The Nagasaki Magistrate, Matsudaira Genpei, immediately ordered troops from the neighbouring areas of Kyūshū island to be sent. A force of 8,000 samurai and 40 ships was mobilized to confront the Phaeton, but they could not arrive for a few days. In the meantime, the Nagasaki Magistrate decided to respond to the ship's demands, and provided supplies.
The Phaeton left two days later on October 17th, before the arrival of Japanese reinforcements, and after it had learnt that the Dutch trading ships would not be coming that year. A letter for the Dutch director Hendrik Doeff was also left. The Nagasaki Magistrate, Matsudaira, took responsibility by committing suicide by seppuku.
Following the attack of the Phaeton, the Bakufu reinforced coastal defenses, and promulgated a law prohibiting foreigners coming ashore, on pain of death (1825-1842, Muninen-uchikowashi-rei). The Bakufu also requested official interpreters to learn English and Russian, departing from their focus on Dutch studies. In 1814, the first English-Japanese dictionary (6,000 words) was written by the Dutch interpreter Motoki Shozaemon.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- General Information - The Perry Expedition
- The Role of English in Japan: Past and Present, by Marek M. Koscielecki
- Korea in the Eye of the Tiger, Chapter 16 - The End of Asian Isolation
- Sailing Ships of the Royal Navy
- Robert Gardiner, The Heavy Frigate, Conway Maritime Press, London 1994.
- Rif Winfield, British Warships in the Age of Sail, 1714 - 1792, Seaforth Publishing, Barnsley 2007. ISBN 978-1-84415-700-6.