Carl Peter Thunberg Laxmann already had some knowledge about Japan before he met Japanese castaways, reading books written by
Carl Peter Thunberg, with whom Laxmann had some communication.
Daikokuya Kodayu In 1789, while doing research in Irkutsk, Laxmann came across six Japanese who had been found in
Amchitka, one of the
Aleutian Islands, by Russian furriers whose leader was a person called Nivizimov. Laxmann escorted the castaways to St. Petersburg, where
Daikokuya Kōdayū, their nominal leader, pleaded with Empress
Catherine the Great to be allowed to return to Japan. During this stay in the capital, Laxmann began discussions on various matters with Alexander Bezborodko, but succumbed to a bout of
typhoid fever which left him incapacitated for three months. Laxmann recovered consciousness in early May when Catherine had just moved to
Tsarskoye Selo for the summer. Laxmann sent Kodayu to Tsarskoye Selo ahead of him, and Kodayu was able to meet with the Empress several times over six months, as a result of Laxman's dedicated efforts among the Russian bureaucracy, especially with Alexander Bezborodko and chancellor
Alexander Vorontsov. At each presentation at Tsarskoye Selo, Laxmann walked along with Kodayu in order to assist him in the proper etiquette required in the Empress' presence. In 1791, Catherine agreed to a plan conceived by Laxman, under which Laxman's son, Lt.
Adam Laxman would command a voyage to Japan, where he would exchange the castaways for economic agreements and concessions. Grigory Shelikhov had proposed another plan that would make the Japanese castaways Russian citizens so that they would be Japanese teachers and translators, but Catherine chose Laxmann and Bezborodko's plan. The elder Laxmann remained in Russia while his son traveled with the castaways.
Letters to Japanese scholars Laxmann wrote letters to two Japanese scholars,
Nakagawa Junan and
Katsuragawa Hoshū, at the recommendation of Carl Peter Thunberg, their teacher. There is no record that the letters ever reached the scholars, even though Adam Laxmann handed the letters to Ishikawa Tadafusa, a staff member of Tokugawa Shogunate, in
Matsumae, Hokkaidō. Erik Laxmann had shown Kodayu the letters before Kodayu left
Okhotsk. Katsuragawa Hoshu had much communication with Kodayu after Kodayu lived in
Yedo so Hoshu edited some books on Russia and Kodayu's experience. It would be possible to think that Hoshu may have known that Laxmann had sent him a letter. == His family ==