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A34454 A true description of the mighty kingdoms of Japan and Siam written originally in Dutch by Francis Caron and Joost Schorten ; and novv rendred into English by Capt. Roger Manley.; Benschrijvinghe van het machtigh coninckrijcke Japan. English Caron, François, 1600-1673.; Schouten, Joost.; Manley, Roger, Sir, 1626?-1688. 1663 (1663) Wing C607; ESTC R22918 62,553 163

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wherein the Imperial Citie and Pallace of Iedo are scituated 27 daies North-East wards before they could reach the utmost point of the land of Sungaer bordering upon the Sea being come thither they passed over an Istmus of thirty three English miles broad leading into the Coūtry of Iezzo abounding in skins furrs of price This territorie is very great mountainous but litle inhabited The Iappaners attempted its discovery severall times but in vaine for though they entred to fro far into the Countrey yet they could never find its end nor any certainty cōcerning it their provisions ordinarily failing them which inforced their fruitlesse returnes The discoverers reports of these were soe imperfect that his Majestie dispaired of any further Satisfaction the countrey being presented as desolate and unpassable though in some place inhabited with a people all over hairy wearing their Beards long like the Chinesses brutish though otherwise well shaped To consider therefore the uncertianty whether this Countrey be an Island or no wee may observe that the passage betvveene Sungaer and Iezzo is no running water but an Inlet or long Istmus of the Sea it selfe 120 English Miles long extending it selfe betvvixt Iezzo and Iapan where it bounds upon vast mountaines and deserts about the Province of Ochio so that that way being vvholly unpassable by land travellers are forced to ferry over the aforesaid Isthmus from Sungaer to Iezzo in Barkes and such shipping as they have The tvvo great Islands of Chirkock and Saykock are governed by Kings and Lords that share vvith them in the Magistracie Chirkock hath one King and three Lords Saykock being the bigger of the tvvo hath more Governours but both are accounted Provinces of this great Empire though least in extent of those whereof it is composed How many Provinces it contaynes THat great Territory which we call Iapan the inhabitants Nippon borders upon those afore mentioned Islands and strecheth to the unknovvne Countrey of Iezzo is divided into five Provinces to wit Iam Aystero Ietsengo Ietsesen Quanto Ochio the which with the Islands of Saykock Chirkock make seaven in all whose Dominions Cities and Castles are subdivided under severall Kings and Lords as the follovving specification of the Revenue of the vvhole land aboundantly shevveth An Extract of the Sealed accompts and specification of the Revenue Excepting the Emperours of the Kings Princes Dukes and Lords of Japan together vvith the names of their Countreys and Castles according to the Japans accompt in Cockyens each Cockyen being ten Carolus Guilders vvich is some Tvventy Shillings Sterling CAngano Tsiunangon King of Canga Ge●tichu Natta hath his Residence in the Castle of Canga his Revenues amounts to 1190000. ●●rngano Daynangon King of Surngo Toto and Mitaunca dwells in the Castle Fayt●i●s hath in Revenue 700000 Ouvvarino Daynangou King of Ovvary and Mimo dwells in the Castle of Mangay and hath 700000 Sendaino Thiunangon King of Massamne and Ochio lives in the invinsible Castle of Senday and hath 640000 Satsumanon Thiunangon King of Satsumae Ossimus Fiungo and Quchio lives in Ka●gasima and hath 600000 Rinocaouny Daynangon King of Kimo and Ishe lives in the Castle of Wake Iamma and hath 550000 Catto Fingonocamy King of Tingo lives in the Castle of Koumam●tte and hath 554000 Matsendeyro Iemenofi● King of Tsunkis●n and Faccatia dwells in Foucosa and hath 510000 Matsendayro Ionocany King of the Great Province of Ietchesen lives at Ocede and hath 511100 Calto S. Kibo King of Osio dwells in the Castle of A●s and hath in Revenue 430000 Assaino Taysima King of Bingo dwells in the Castle of Oky and hath 420000 Matsendeyro Nangato King of Soua dwells in the Castle of Fangy and hath 370000 Mittono Thionangon King of Fitayt● dwells in the Castle of Mit. and hath 360000 Nahissima Simano King of Thisien dwells in the Castle of Logtois and hath 360000 Matsendeyro Sentairo King of Ianabasoky dwells in the Castle of Tackaham hath 360000 T●do Isumy King of Ianga Iche dwells in the Castle of Son hath 320000 Matsendeyro Lonuey King of Bissen dwells at Ossaiamma hath 310000 Inno Cammon the bravest of the Princes King of Totomy dwells in Savaiamma hath 300000. Fosso Covva Ietchin King of Boytes lives at Cokera and hath 300000. Oyesungi Daynsio King of Iotsengo dwells in the Castle of Gunisauvva and hath 300000. Matsendeyro Denrio King of the Province of Ietsengo lives at Formando and hath 300000. Matsendeyro Auvva Duke of Auvva dwells in the Castle Incts and hath 250000. Matsendeyro Ietchigonacam●● Duke of the land of Conge dwells at Takato and hath 250000. Matsendeyro Tsiusio Duke of Ioo dwells at Mats Iamma and hath 250000. Ariama Grimba Duke of Tsirkingo dwells at Courme hath 240000. Morimo Imasack Prince of Imasaka dwells at Tsiamma and hath 200000. Tory Inganocanij Prince of Sevvano dwells at Iummengatta hath 200000. Matsendeyro Tosa Prince of Tosnacorij dwells at Tocosiamma hath 200000. Satake Okion Prince of Wano dwells at Akita and hath 200000. Matsendevro Simo Sautamy Prince of Simosa dwells at Tatebays and hath 200000. Forriwo Iamaissiro Prince of Ins●●o dwells at Masdayt● and hath 200000. Ikouma Ikinocanij Prince of Sanike dwells at Couham and hath 180000. Forivvo Iamassiro Prince of Insimo dwells at Masdayts and hath 180000. Fonda Kayokamij Knight and Lord of Faryma dwells in Tayeno and hath 150000. Sackey Counay Knight Lord of the great Province of Wano dwells at Fakfio hath 150000. Tara sanvva Simado Knight and Lord of Fisen dwells in Lata●s and hath 120000. Kiongock vvakasa Knight and Lord of Wakasa dwells in Osamma and hath 120000. Fory Tango Knight and Lord of ●etchesen dwells at Kavvantisma and hath 120000. Minsio Fiongo Knight and Lord in Bingo dwells at F●u●ke Iamma hath 120000. Sackopharra Eskibon Knight and Lord of Kooske dwells in the Castle of Tattays hath 120000. Matsendeyr● Tavvayts Governor of the Emperors Castle in Quana hath 110000. Oeckendyero Imysacka Knight and Lord of Simotske dwells in O●tsnomio and hath 110000. Sannada Iut Knight and Lord of Sinano dwells at Koske and hath 110000. Taysibanna Finda Knight and Lord of Sickingo dwells in Imangonvva and hath 110000. Ongasaura Oucken Knight and Lord of Farima dwells at Kays and hath 100000. Indatiji Voutumij Knight and Lord of Gyo dwells in Itasima and hath 100000. Nambon Sinano Knight and Lord in the great Province of Ochio dwells at Mortiamma and hath 100000. Niwa Groysemon Knight and Lord in the great Province of Ochio dwells at Sirakovva and hath 100000. Abeno Bitchion Gouernor of the Emperors Castle Ivvatsuky in the Countrey of Moysays hath 80000. Kiongock Oenieme Knight and Lord of Tanga dwells in Tanabe and hath 70000. Makino Surnga Lord in Ietchingo dwells at Wangerecka and hath 70000. Nackangonvva Nysien Lord in Bong● lives in the Citie of Nangoun and hath 70000. Matsendayr● Comba Lord in Sinano dwells in Matsmo●● hath 70000. Nay●●o Samma Lord in Fitayts dwells in the Citie of
lest the great Lords of his Kingdom reflecting upon the lowness of his former condition might contemn his present Authority as disdaining to be governed by one less then themselves thought it best to keep them in action the better to divert them from caviling a new he therefore sent those Kings and Chiefs that he feared most with an Army of sixty thousand Men to war against Corea and reduce that Country to the obedience of the Iapan Empire These he held there with kinde messages and reiterated promises of succours seven whole years commanding they should not return till they had subdued and made conquest of all But the Army longing for their Country their Wives and Children and despairing of a return mutined and destroying burning and plundering all they could meet endeavoured the satisfaction of their pretended wrongs by the desolation of others The Coreans unable to endure this violence any longer sent an Ambassador to the Emperour Taycko who being admitted into his Court found means to take away his life by poison in revenge of the manifold wrongs his Country had suffered by the injurious ambition of this Prince The Kings and Lords commanding the Army in Corea hearing of their Emperor's death resolved to quit that Country and to return every one to his own in expectation and hopes who amonst them might be chosen to succeed in the Soveraignty The Emperor being removed left one only Son behinde him called Fideri about six years of age but before he died he appointed him a Governor one of the greatest Lords of his Country by name Ongoschio one whom he had obliged by his favors and relied upon above all others for his fidelity To this Person he delivered his Infant-Son with command that when he was fifteen years of age he should cause him to be crowned by the Deyro with the usual Pomps and Ceremonies as Emperor of Iapan Ongoschio being thus declared Governor of the Princes Person was likewise by Taycko's will and the consent of his Subject-Kings made Regent of the Kingdom during the minority which for some time he peaceably ruled in his Master's name But growing now weary of subordination he quickly forgot his promise made to Taycko and sealed with his blood Fideri being therefore to be removed to make place for his greatness he assaulted him first in his reputation by laying those things to his charge he was no way guilty of amongst others he accused him of distrust of his Tutor and that he made private preparations to extort the Government out of his hands by force before his time he laid likewise ambition and an untimely desire of honor to his charge in that he suffered himself to be adored as Emperor before he was invested with the Power and that the Kings and Lords of the Realm had done him that reverence which was only due to a received Emperor But armed ambition needs not many excuses Ongoschio musters his united forces in the Kingdom of Surnga and marching thence to Onsacka where Fideri held his Court besieged him with all his might Fideri having held out three moneths being now reduced to great extremity would prevent his ruine by a sordid submission he therefore sent to Ongoschio to beg his life quitting all his pretence to the Empire and desiring only to survive a Vassal to the Conqueror But Ongoschio refused all manner of capitulation and though Fideri sent out his Wife who was his Adversaries Daughter to supplicate his safety she could not be heard of her Father The Castle being taken the Palace where Fideri had retired himself with his Mother and chief Friends was encompassed with great posts and pallisadoes and much wood being piled up about it the unfortunate Prince and all them that were with him were miserably burnt and consumed with sire Ongoschio having thus destroyed his Master put all them to death who were considerable and of his party bringing the whole Empire under his obedience by force as Taycko had done before him The year following Ongoschio died not enjoying long what his violence had so quickly got him his Son Coubo or Coubosanna succeeded him who was Father to this present Emperor Chiongon now reigning The number of his Souldiers and their Arms. THe Revenue which is divided amongst the Kings and governing Lords amounts as is already demonstrated to 18400000 Coquyns or Pounds sterling according to which account each of them must proportionably entertain a select company of Souldiers always in readiness for the Emperor's service so that he who hath a thousand Coquyns yearly must bring into the field when ever he is commanded twenty Foot Souldiers two Horse-Men Thus the Lord of Fiarmor who hath 60000 Coquyns a year must entertain as he easily may one thousand two hundred Foot and one hundred and twenty Horse besides Servants Slaves and what more is necessary for the Train The number therefore of Souldiers which the Emperor hath continually in service entertained by the aforesaid Kings and Lords amount to three hundred sixty eight thousand Foot and thirty six thousand eight hundred Horse Besides these his Majesty hath one hundred thousand Foot and twenty thousand Horse which he paies out of his own Revenue and keeps for the Garrisoning of his Castles and Forts and the securing of his own Person Most of the Lords especially the most powerful do ordinarily keep double the number of Souldiers and many more then they are obliged to by their tax and all to out vie each other and the better to ingratiate themselves with their common Master as hath appeared at large in the late War The Horse-Men are all harnassed though the Foot have no other defensive arms then a Head-piece the Horse are armed some with short Guns some with short Pikes others with Bows and Arrows and all with Swords or Sables The Foot have likewise Sables Pikes and Halberts and those that are divided into Companies Fire-Arms every five Souldiers have their Commander armed as they are five of these Chiefs have likewise those who command them and their five and twenty and twice twenty five make a compleat Company commanded by two Heads who with their fifty are commanded by a Captain in chief five of these ordinary Companies are again commanded by another and fifty Companies have likewise their principal Officer the same method and order being held under the Horse His Majesty may easily and exactly know how many living souls how many Souldiers and how many Citizens he hath in his whole Kingdom Manie●e van Justitie in Jappon for the Houses being built by five and five and every five having their Commander who must register all them that are born and die within their Jurisdiction and report the same to their Lords who again are obliged to tell it their Kings and they to two Officers appointed by the Emperor for that purpose The Authority of his Councellors and Vassals THe Senators or Councellors hath each his Office apart excepting only four who are the principal
with his wings spread of pure Gold This structure was very beautiful being adorned on all sides with carved Images its angles plaited with pure Gold and the roof of it intimating the Heaven with Sun Moon and Stars There were fifty Persons all Gentlemen belonging to the Emperours clothed with long white Robes and Wax Head-pieces that carried this ambulatory Pallace Forty Gentlemen antickly dressed although armed with Europian Head-pieces and Pikes gilded at the ends went before the Deyro and these were of his Life-guard One of his principal Lords did immediately follow him armed as the other bearing in his hand a Shield stuck full of Arrows then came forty great Quirosols all covered with fine white linnen and belonging to the aforesaid Guards These were again followed by thirteen great Wax Chests carried by the Palanquyn Porters And lastly the whole procession was closed with four hundred persons all in white vestments marching six in a ranke in very good order The Deyro and his Traine were no sooner past but the evening came on and an innumerable company of people of all sorts the Stages and Houses which had been filled with Spectators had disgorged their burthens in the Streets so that the multitude was so immensly great that very many disorders happened as cutting of purses stealing murthering and robbing each other very many were stifled in the crouds and such as but once fell were sure never to rise being troden to death The noise all night was so great as if the City had been in an uproar and the insolencies grew to that heighth that many persons of quality who could not get out of the throng or were retiring to their houses were set upon and very many of them spoiled and murthered among others the Lord of Firandos Secretary saw his Servant robbed and a rich Cabinet of his taken from him before his own face whilest he himselfe had much ado to defend himself from the violence of these assaulters We were forced with our Servants to quit our stage and put our selves into the crowd because of the night and the danger to continue where we were which we durst not do without running the hazzard of being murthered the preass was so great that we were borne up by the people most of our way being but seldom able to put a foot upon the ground yet at length by Gods great blessing we got all without any considerable loss safely to our lodgings The Deyro and his Wives were lodged three daies and three nights in the Emperors Palace being served by their Majesties and their Brothers and the greatest Princes of their Court every meale consisting of one hundred and forty services This feasting being done the young Emperour gave the Deyro these following presents Three thousand Boates of Silver each of four Tayls and three Marses Two rich Sables Two hundred Iapan Gowns Three hundred pieces of wrought Sattin Twenty picols of raw Silk One great piece of Calombacq Five great Silver pots full of Musk. And ten beautiful Horses with their accoutrements The old Emperour gave him Two hundred pieces of Gold each worth fifty four Silver ones One hundred Indian gowns richly wrought Two great Silver pots full of Musk. Five Catti Calombacq Two hundred pieces of red Silk Five Silver pots full of Amber Greece And five brave Horses with their accoutrements His Secretary had given him Three hundred Boats of Silver equal with the other in worth And twenty Indian Gowns A Description of the Government Might Religion Customes Traffick and other remarkable Affairs in the Kingdom of SIAM Written in the Yeare 1636. by Joost Schouten Directour of the East-India-Company in that Countrey SIAM is a famous and potent Kingdom scituate upon the continent of Asia eighteen degrees Northern Latitude where it bordereth upon the Countries of Pegu and Ava twelve degrees it extendeth it selfe Westward to the Bengasche sea of Martavan to seven degrees where it borders upon the Kingdoms of Pay tany and Queda Southward from the Bengasche to the Patanys Ocean this Coast turns Northward to thirteen degrees making with its bowing the Gulf of Siam thence the Coast runs again Southward to twelve degrees and leaving the Sea terminates Eastward upon the Desart of Cambodia and the Kingdoms of Iangonia Tangou and Langjang to eighteen degrees even to Ava and Pegu so that the form of this Land is like an halfe Moon and containeth in its circuit four hundred and fifty Dutch miles one Dutch mile makes six English This Country which is in many places mountainous woody and moorish especially towards the Sea although for the most part even and clay and is likewise full of all sorts of Beasts and Fowls and Rivers replenished with abundance of Fish hath where it bordereth upon the Benga and Siams Seas many Islands Bays Havens and Rivers most commodious for the receipt of great and small Vessels I shall not particularize all only mention the chief River as the most frequented Haven of the whole Kingdom This River called by the name of Menam or the Mother of Waters is great wide and very long its course being not known unto them It passeth from the North Southward very swiftly through the Land of Ava and Pegu and several Provinces of Siam until that it discharge it self by three mouthes into the Sea of Siam it partaketh of the nature of those famous Rivers Ganges and Nilus flowing once a year so high that it covereth most part of the Countrey making it incredibly fruitful and destroying by this innundation which continueth four or five moneths all obnoxious vermin and creatures The greatest mouth of this River is that which lies most Eastward thirteen degrees and a half Northern latitude and in the middle of the inlet there is a great flat or sand a mile long that crosses the entry of the River five or six foot deep at low water but at heighth is fifteen or sixteen and in the Winter moneths when the the floods are great there is ordinarily seventeen or eighteen foot and more great Ships that go deep are forced to anker at four five or six fathoms water without this banck the ground being clay and good but those that pass this flat at high water enter the River without any more danger of runing on ground till they come to the Town of Banckock six Dutch miles upwards then the River grows narrower and more shallow Ships drawing eleven or twelve foot water being scarceable to mount to the City of India where they are sometimes forced to stay till the moneths of September October and November for water to return The Country is generally well peopled especially the lower part of it being full of Villages and Towns the principal whereof are Iudica Picelouck Sourckelouk Capheng Soutcethay Kephinpet Conseywan Pytsyay Pitsidi Lydure Tenou Mormelon Martenayo Lygor Bordelong Tannassary Banckock Pypry Rapry Mergy and several other all which are governments and heads of Provinces besides these there are many Cities and Burroughs full
fear of shame or punishment A man may keep as many Concubins as he pleases besides his Wife though they are in some subordinacy to her whose Children onely inherit the other being contented with small portions for their subsistence Great mens goods are divided after their deaths into three parts one part for the King the second for the Priests and their Funerals and the third for their Children The common People have other Customs the Bridgroom buyeth his Bride for a sum of monies of her Father or Friends whereupon the marriage is made and concluded with a little feasting but they may divorce like the great Ones at pleasure and marry again with the same liberty The Children deal their deceased parents goods equally except some little advantages for the eldest Son They have many other Customs in marriage and succession too long and tedious to write As for their Children they send them to school at five or six years old where they are taught to write and read and rendered fit for Trades and other employments some are continued in their studies by the Priests their Masters until they are called to Offices and advancements in the State and then they cast off the yellow frock others continue there out of hopes of being one day Heads of Temples and Schools or sharing in the Priesthood The Siammers who live in Towns and populous places are either Courtiers Officers Merchants Watermen Fishermen Tradesmen or Artificers each one containing himself in his vocation The Country people brew till plant and bring up fwarms of Cattel as Horses Kine Swine Deer and domestick Fowl as Geefe Peacocks Ducks Hens Pigeons and other tame creatures insomuch that provision is very cheap notwithstanding the abundance of at which is sent into the neighbouring Provinces for their supply and use They have Brick Lime Wood and all materials for building of Churches Forts Houses Ships Prawes Jonks and other vessels in great quantities The divers Towns of this Countrey have their several Trafficks and Commerce in the chief City the trading is very good and free in its course the principal commodities are Choromandes and Sura vestments all manner of China wares Jewels Gold Benjamin Gumlack Wax Sappang Agerwood Tin and Lead c. as also vast numbers of Harts-skins one hundred and fifty thousand of these creatures being caught yearly in this Countrey and fold with much profit to the Japanners They drive a great trade with all eating provisions especially Rice many thousand Tuns being transported yearly by forraigners This City by reason of its great traffick is frequented by several Nations as the Indians the more Western Asiaticks European Moors and Christian Merchants The King himself is also a Merchant and hath his own Ships and Factours trading to Choromandel and China being for that cause more favoured and priviledged then any other Prince he likewise trafficks to Pegu Ava Jongoma Langs-jang and other places besides his negotiations at home all which bring him incredible profit and no small disturbance to private Merchants all which do certainly manifest the great trade that is carried on in this Countrey The Monies currant is of very fine silver of a round figure and impressed with the Kings picture the kindes are a Ticlas a Mase and a Fong worth thirty pence seven pence half penny and four pence English or near upon They reckon ordinarily by Cattys each being twenty Tayls or forty eight Royals of eight and it is with this and no other coyn that they handle and trade with save that there is a lesser called Schulpkens or little Sheels wherof eight or nine thousand go to a Fong being brought out of Manilha Borneo and Lequeo very useful for poor people Before the coming of the Netherlanders into the Indiaes the Portugals had great correspondence and amity with this Kingdom being in such esteem and honour by the King that the Embassadours sent from their Vice-Roys Governours and Bishops of Malacca in India were not only well received by his Majesty but richly presented by him and many of the residing Portugals in this Country advanced to great Offices and preferments they had not only the free exercise of their Religion but their chief Priest had also a monethly pension allowed him for his more splendid subsistence thus they prospered here for many years until the Dutch Company got footing amongst them and gained upon them from time to time by taking their Ships and interrupting their trade with Santhome and Nevagatain insomuch that they are at present very low and out of credit occasioned more particularly by their taking of a Dutch Yacht by a Spanish Gally in the River of Siam which the King took so highly that he revenged it with his Arms which produced a war between him and Manilha and however the Portugals seemed unconcerned in this quarrel yet they wholly lost their credit at Court insomuch that the Bishop of Malaccas Vicar their chief Resident there is debarred of his usual access to his Majesty and his Ministers whereas in former times they were esteemed the onely and chief Merchants of the whole Kingdom This breach and difference between these two Nations was fomented by the Dutch and increased by several acts of hostility on the Portugals side who took many of his Majesties Ships and Vassals at Sea in revenge whereof the Portugal Vessels were seized on in India and all the present Portugals natives clapt up in prison who were after two years restraint upon a fictitious embassie restored to their liberty but this practice coming to light occasioned the seisure of a Castilian and a Portugal Vessel in the Havens of Ligoor and Tanaslary the men whereof were not released till after a two years restraint but then indeed returned with his Majesties Letters to the Governours of Manilha and Malacca with invitations of their former peace and traffick where it is probable they may return but questionable whether they shall ever recover their former credit and authority It is more then thirty years since the Netherlanders came first to Siam and were admitted of by his Majesty so that the Company have judged it necessary for the cherishing their traffick and alliance with so mighty a Prince to settle there to which end they builded a house or lodge of wood in the City of India where they trade in in land commodities and selling of clothes as also buying of Harts-skins Sappang c. which are sent yearly to Japan the Company indeed hath not profited much by reason of several misfortunes by this traffick but they have gained more reputation then any Europians besides by the great friendship and correspondence which is betwixt them and the King and also have had the benefit of transporting great quantities of all sorts of provisions in Batamia which friendship notwithstanding the several successions of the Princes disturbing the Companies Cantore and Servants is yet sufficiently conserved and continued and ought in my opinion to be cherished as absolutely necessary for the good and welfare of our Company as also in regard of the Kings civil usage of us and his aversion to the Spaniards our common enemy finally our factory established there in the year 1633. and trading during my four years direction are so much corrected and increased that the Company hath remarkably gained by them with probability with good mannagement of more signal advantages To which end the General and Councel of India caused in Anno 1634. a stone lodge with fit pack-houses pleasant apartements and a commodious landing place to be builded on the borders of the River Menam being one of the convenientest and best scituated of any that is unfortified in all the Indiaes And thus much we found good to discover of the customes and manners of the Kingdom of Siam being my observations during my eight years residence in the chief City of the Country I have followed the exact rules of truth according to my best knowledge and diligence in this short relation remitting the curious to the more large and more particular discourses of better and more exact judgements FINIS
or seven Years to give the Deyro which is the true Heir of the Kingdom and lives there a visit the preparations are making an whole year before the orders are given on what day and with what train every great Man shall go to the end that the ways may not be pestered with their numbers Half of the great Lords according to their turns set out some days before then follows his Maiesty with his Councellers who are followed some days after by the remaining Kings and Lords The concourse of people at such a time is incredible the whole City though containing above One hundred thousand Houses not being big enough to lodge them all so that tents and huts are raised round about the same for the Souldiers and common People The distance betwixt Jedo and Miako is reckoned to be one hundred twenty five Dutch miles At every two or three miles there is a City or open Town and the whole is divided into twenty and eight Gists or Lodgings whereof twenty are strong Castles there is in every quarter from the first to the last a train of Gentlemen Souldiers Horse Provisions and all necessaries befitting so great a Prince ordered there for his reception and entertainment Those that set out with him from Jedo stay in the first lodging those that were there remove with him to the second those of the second to the third and so to the last so that each train and their dependants follow his Majesty but half a day until all of them according to their instructions marching in order do at length arrive at Miako leaving the aforesaid Castles and Lodgings to their usual Governors and Guards In the return from Miako to Jedo the same method is observed all things being prepared as formerly without trouble or confusion This year 1636 there is an extraordinary great Edifice and Building at Niko four days journey from Jedo which is to be the Burial place of the Emperors Father in whose Temple the great Copper Crown which the East-India-Company gave his Majesty last year is hung up There is likewise in this territory of Niako a very great Castle with double moats and stone walls strong and sumptuous there are several Palaces in it as also a great number of Artificers as Painters Masons Statue-Cutters Gold Silver and Iron-Smiths Cloathiers and all sorts of Handy-Crafts-Men who have their tasks set them but are well paid This Castle which seemed to require three years for its building was finished in five moneths though it lies far in the Country and out of all ways being only made to receive his Majesty in his ceremonious visits of his Fathers Sepulchre His Majesties Treasure consists in Silver and Gold packd in Chests each weighing one thousand Teyls that is about fourscore ordinary pounds weight these are placed in the several Towers of his Castle together with other legacies with their writings which are kept for their Antiquity This vast Treasure increases dayly for the Revenue of two moneths is sufficient to defray the Emperors expences how great soever for one whole year This Emperors Father being the Son of Ongoschio who possessed himself of the Government after the late troubles died about the fiftieth year of his age in the year of our Saviour 1631 being sensible of his end he called his Son to him and amongst many other good counsels concluded to this purpose My Kingdom and all my Treasures are yours but vvhat I recommend to you I likevvise deliver you The old Lavvs and Chronicles of the Countrey our vvritten Sentences and VVisdom are inclosed in this Cabinet the principal Ievvels of my Crovvn are likevvise in it receive them all as they deserve for they are mine and vvere highly valued by your fore-Fathers The Jewels which were accounted inestimable are these following whereof he gave to his eldest Son Emperor of Japan A crooked Sable called Jeiuky Massamme Another Sable called Samoys Another less called Bungo Doyssero A Pot called Naraissiba A great t'Siapol called Stengo A Manuscript called Anckocky kindo To his Brother King of Ouvvay and Atstanomia A Picture called Darme to be vievved backvvards A Sable called Massamme To his second Brother King of Kinokouny A Sable called Jees Messamme A Picture of Frogs To his third Brother King of Mito A Sable called Sandamme A Manuscript called Seuche These six pieces bestowed on the three Brothers are but of little worth in comparison of the six other given the Emperor and yet they are valued at a thousand gold Oebans that is forty seven Teylens a piece The Silver and Gold which his Majesty gave to the Princes of his blood to several of his favorite Kings their Wives his companion Lords his Soldiers and Gentlemen amounted upon account to above Thirty Millions sterling The present Emperor being after his Fathers decease in full and peaceable possession of the Government had as then no lawful Wife being much given to Sodomy which moved the Deyro to send him two beautiful Ladies of his own kindred and every way accomplished with a desire that he would be pleased to chuse one of them that best pleased him for his Midia or Empress He did indeed consent to the Deyros request but followed his old way of living so that the young Lady being destitute of the conversation she might reasonably expect was extreamly afflicted although she durst not let it appear for fear of her Husband's displeasure At length her Foster-Mother a Lady of great credit both in respect of her age and in that she had bred up so great a Princess finding the Emperor one day in a good humor adventured though very submissively to speak to him in behalf of her Mistris which she did as followeth Hovv is it possible that your Majesties affections should be carried avvay vvith such unnatural pleasures and that so beautiful a Creature as your ovvn Handmaid vvho vvould rejoice you in bearing another like to your Self should be forgotten certainly she ought to be preferred The Tyrant though till now in his frolicks grew angry yet said nothing but rising up retired immediatly and sending for all the Overseers of his Buildings commanded them forthwith to begin and build him a Castle with high Walls Moats Bridges and strong Gates as also to adorn it within with all manner of necessary and sumptuous appertainments and Lodgings The work being finished with more then ordinary haste the beautiful Queen her Foster-Mother and all that train of young Ladies which she brought with her from Miako were put into it where she is kept without the sight of men and intirely forsaken of her Husband The Emperor 's own Foster-Mother who was likewise in great esteem and respect as his own Mother being much troubled at this action of his Majesty and seeing he had no Children neither was like to have any whilst he lived thus sent into the several Countries in his Dominions to search out the most charming beauties that could be found which done she disposes of them