Before the issuing of the exclusion edicts in 1633, Japanese fascination with European culture brought trade of various goods and commercial success to the country. Items such as eyeglasses, clocks, firearms, and artillery were in high demand in Japan, and trade began to flourish between the Japanese and Europe. With the exchange of goods came the exchange of ideas as well. Christian
missionaries, such as
Francis Xavier, were among the first to travel to Japan to teach
Catholicism. For a time, they were encouraged to enlighten the Japanese people, and
Oda Nobunaga, during his reign as military leader of Japan in the 1570s and 1580s, encouraged the conversion of the Japanese to Catholicism. His hopes of competing with his
Buddhist rivals led him to allow Catholic missionary activity in Japan. In
Kyoto, Japan's capital city, a large portion of the population had already been converted to Christianity by the seventeenth century. Following Nobunaga was
Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who ruled over Japan from 1582 to 1598. Anti-European attitudes began under Hideyoshi, whose suspicion of the Europeans first began with their intimidating appearance; their armed ships and sophisticated military power produced doubt and distrust, and following the conquest of the
Philippines by the Spanish, Hideyoshi was convinced they were not to be trusted. The true motives of the Europeans came quickly into question. Those who converted to Catholicism were questioned about their loyalty to Japan, and in 1597, Hideyoshi ordered the crucifixion of nine Catholic missionaries and seventeen Japanese converts. This was only the start of the hostility towards European influence and interaction; persecutions, decapitations, and forced conversions would all but eliminate the Christian community over the next few decades.
Tokugawa Ieyasu, who conquered Japan in 1600, was skeptical of the Spanish and Portuguese, due in part to the influence of his English advisor
William Adams. After the establishment of the
Tokugawa shogunate in 1603, Japan began trading with the
Dutch East India Company and
English East India Company through factories at
Hirado in present-day
Nagasaki Prefecture. Ieyasu's successor
Hidetada significantly curtailed Catholic activity in Japan and banned foreign trading in Osaka and Kyoto. == Decrees of the Edict ==