Tokugawa Japan: Peace, Isolation, and Hidden Power — Fexingo History
In an era of national isolation, a handful of Dutch surgeons on the artificial island of Dejima became conduits for Western medical knowledge that would reshape Japanese healing. This episode explores how figures like Caspar Schambergen, Willem ten Rhijne, and Engelbert Kaempfer introduced European anatomy, surgery, and botany to Japan — and how Japanese doctors like Sugita Genpaku and Maeno Ryōtaku risked their lives to translate Dutch anatomical texts. We delve into the tension between traditional kampō medicine and the new rangaku (Dutch learning), the famous 1771 dissection of a criminal's body that proved Western anatomy correct, and the quiet power struggle between the shogun's court physicians and the Nagasaki interpreters who controlled access to foreign knowledge. It's a story of intellectual curiosity flourishing under a regime that feared foreign influence — and the fragile human chain that carried scientific revolution from Dejima to Edo. #TokugawaJapan #Rangaku #DutchLearning #SugitaGenpaku #Dejima #KampoMedicine #HistoryOfMedicine #EdoPeriod #Shogun #Nagasaki #WillemTenRhijne #EngelbertKaempfer #Anatomy #Sakoku #JapanHistory #FexingoHistory #ScienceHistory #EastAsia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]
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