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Japan: Portrait of Pope Paul V presented by Hasekura Tsunenaga, leader of the Keicho Embassy (1613-1620) to his liege lord, Daimyo Date Masumane. Oil on canvas, Apparently after Caravaggio 1606, now in Sendai Museum

Japan: Portrait of Pope Paul V presented by Hasekura Tsunenaga, leader of the Keicho Embassy  (1613-1620) to his liege lord, Daimyo Date Masumane. Oil on canvas, Apparently after Caravaggio 1606, now in Sendai Museum

Pope Paul V (Latin: Paulus V; 17 September 1552 – 28 January 1621), born Camillo Borghese, was Pope from 16 May 1605 to his death in 1621.

Hasekura Rokuemon Tsunenaga was a Japanese samurai and retainer of Date Masamune, the daimyo of Sendai.

In the years 1613 - 1620, Hasekura headed a diplomatic mission to the Vatican in Rome, traveling through New Spain (arriving in Acapulco and departing from Veracruz) and visiting various ports-of-call in Europe. This historic mission is called the Keicho Embassy, and follows the Tensho embassy of 1582. On the return trip, Hasekura and his companions re-traced their route across Mexico in 1619, sailing from Acapulco for Manila, and then sailing north to Japan in 1620. He is conventionally considered the first Japanese ambassador in the Americas and in Europe.

Although Hasekura's embassy was cordially received in Europe, it happened at a time when Japan was moving toward the suppression of Christianity. European monarchs such as the King of Spain thus refused the trade agreements Hasekura had been seeking. Hasekura returned to Japan in 1620 and died of illness a year later, his embassy seemingly ending with few results in an increasingly isolationist Japan.

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