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- John_Blackthorne abstract "John Blackthorne is the hero of James Clavell's 1975 novel Shōgun, and is loosely based on the life of the 17th century British trader William Adams, who was the first Briton to visit Japan. The character also appears in the 1980 TV miniseries Shōgun, played by Richard Chamberlain.In the novel, Blackthorne is a British pilot working for Dutch traders in 1600 who navigates his ship, the Erasmus, to Japan, where he and the surviving crew are immediately imprisoned. A Protestant like his crewmates, Blackthorne is branded as a heretic by the Portuguese Jesuits who control all foreign trade in Japan, though the Jesuits are powerless to kill him outright due to local political considerations. Blackthorne is taken to Lord Toranaga (also based on an historical figure, Tokugawa Ieyasu), the daimyo in control of the territory in which Blackthorne and the Erasmus first landed. Toranaga quickly realizes that Blackthorne and his ship present a great opportunity, not only in his dealings with the Portuguese, but also in his struggle with his main rival, Lord Ishido (Ishida Mitsunari), over future control of all of Japan. Toranaga orders Blackthorne's imprisonment, not to punish Blackthorne, but to keep him out of Ishido's hands. While in prison Blackthorne meets a Franciscan priest who gives him a much greater understanding of the political and economic situation in Japan, and how the Portuguese and the Jesuits fit into it. The priest also begins teaching Blackthorne the rudiments of the Japanese language.Having been told by the priest that all who enter the prison are eventually executed, Blackthorne is prepared to die when his name is called (like the historical Adams, the Japanese call him "Anjin-san" - Mr. Pilot - because his English name is too difficult to pronounce, there being no sounds or characters in Japanese for much of his name). Instead, the guards take him to Osaka Castle, where he is cleaned up and told by Mariko - the Christian wife of one of Toranaga's samurai who, like Blackthorne, is fluent in Portuguese and Latin - that Lord Toranaga wishes to know more about England and its war against the Spanish and Portuguese.As a result of a series of events, Blackthorne eventually finds himself very close to Toranaga, saving his life occasionally. He is awarded the titles of hatamoto and samurai, as he begins to understand and deeply respect Japanese culture. But to complicate matters, he starts to fall in love with the interpreter, Mariko, and they eventually become lovers. Though Blackthorne asks Toranaga to sever Mariko's marriage so she will be free to marry him, Toranaga refuses and orders Blackthorne never to speak of the matter again. In spite of this, Blackthorne becomes a trusted friend of Toranaga.At the end of the book Toranaga defeats Ishido's forces (this is reference to the Battle of Sekigahara) and becomes shogun. Though Toranaga secretly had Erasmus burned and beached, he permits Blackthorne to begin constructing another ship as a way to keep him occupied, but also determines that he will never be allowed to leave Japan for the rest of his life. It can be assumed that Blackthorne eventually dies in Japan without ever having returned to England.Although Blackthorne's later life is never covered in any real detail in Clavell's later Asian Saga novels, Gai-Jin mentions that Blackthorne later built ships for Shogun Toranaga, and had families in Nagasaki and Izu. One of Blackthorne's Nagasaki descendants, Shin Komoda, is mentioned as having been a samurai who died in a brawl shortly before the events in Gai-Jin take place (during the early 1860s). Komoda and his wife Gekko had one son, who was sent to live with his grandparents shortly after Komoda's death.It is also revealed that Blackthorne is later used by Toranaga to destroy Osaka Castle after the Battle of Sekigahara.In Noble House (also by Clavell), a minor character named Riko Anjin makes a brief appearance. When main character Ian Dunross notes her blue eyes, she relates a family legend that she is descended from a shipwrecked Englishman who became a samurai. Dunross considers the story implausible.".
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageID "3243779".
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageLength "4896".
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageOutDegree "26".
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageRevisionID "679458750".
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Asian_Saga.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Battle_of_Sekigahara.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Category:Asian_Saga_characters.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fictional_English_people.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fictional_sailors.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Category:Fictional_samurai.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Daimyo.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink English_language.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Erasmus_(Shōgun).
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink File:Blackthorne&Mareko.jpg.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Gai-Jin.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Gai-Jin_(novel).
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Ian_Dunross.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Ishida_Mitsunari.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Izu,_Shizuoka.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink James_Clavell.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Japan.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Jesuits.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Nagasaki.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Nagasaki,_Nagasaki.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Noble_House.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Osaka_Castle.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Protestant.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Protestantism.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Chamberlain.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Shōgun_(TV_miniseries).
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Shōgun_(miniseries).
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Shōgun_(novel).
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Society_of_Jesus.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink The_Asian_Saga.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink Tokugawa_Ieyasu.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLink William_Adams_(sailor).
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageWikiLinkText "John Blackthorne".
- John_Blackthorne hasPhotoCollection John_Blackthorne.
- John_Blackthorne wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- John_Blackthorne subject Category:Asian_Saga_characters.
- John_Blackthorne subject Category:Fictional_English_people.
- John_Blackthorne subject Category:Fictional_sailors.
- John_Blackthorne subject Category:Fictional_samurai.
- John_Blackthorne hypernym Hero.
- John_Blackthorne type Article.
- John_Blackthorne type Person.
- John_Blackthorne type Article.
- John_Blackthorne type Character.
- John_Blackthorne comment "John Blackthorne is the hero of James Clavell's 1975 novel Shōgun, and is loosely based on the life of the 17th century British trader William Adams, who was the first Briton to visit Japan. The character also appears in the 1980 TV miniseries Shōgun, played by Richard Chamberlain.In the novel, Blackthorne is a British pilot working for Dutch traders in 1600 who navigates his ship, the Erasmus, to Japan, where he and the surviving crew are immediately imprisoned.".
- John_Blackthorne label "John Blackthorne".
- John_Blackthorne sameAs John_Blackthorne.
- John_Blackthorne sameAs John_Blackthorne.
- John_Blackthorne sameAs m.090vss.
- John_Blackthorne sameAs Q6222105.
- John_Blackthorne sameAs Q6222105.
- John_Blackthorne wasDerivedFrom John_Blackthorne?oldid=679458750.
- John_Blackthorne isPrimaryTopicOf John_Blackthorne.