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Thomas Lockley (born 1978) is a British academic who is an associate professor of the College of Law of Nihon University, [1] [2] and a visiting researcher for the SOAS University of London. [2] His research in the humanities and social sciences centers on education and history, with a particular emphasis on Japanese history.
Yasuke is the first known African to appear in Japanese historical records. Much of what is known about him is found in fragmentary accounts in the letters of the Jesuit missionary Luís Fróis, Ōta Gyūichi's Shinchō Kōki (信長公記, Nobunaga Official Chronicle), Matsudaira Ietada's Matsudaira Ietada Nikki (松平家忠日記, Matsudaira Ietada Diary), Jean Crasset's Histoire de l ...
Thomas Lockley, like Alaric Naude, is a language education specialist. They are not specialists in Japanese history. There are differences in whether or not you have a doctorate in education, but this point is the same. And Alaric Naude has a PhD in sociology, which is related to history. Thomas Lockley does not. That should be taken into account.
Yasuke (弥助) Voiced by: Jun Soejima [7] (Japanese); Lakeith Stanfield (English) Once a servant of Jesuits named Eusebio Ibrahimo Baloi and originally of Yao descent, he was named Yasuke upon becoming a samurai under Oda Nobunaga, after which his skill and honor earned much of his Lord's favor, despite the discrimination for his skin and distrust for his foreign origin.
There is a clear consensus that Yasuke should be represented in the article as a Samurai.While there was opposition to the suggestion, the opposition mostly boils down to the argument that Thomas Lockley's book is unreliable, and that the Lopez-Vera source is similarly unreliable on the basis that the Lopez-Vera publication does not use in-text citations.
A driver who plowed a car into the gates of Buckingham Palace has been arrested on suspicion of criminal damage, London police said Sunday. The crash early Saturday wasn't considered terrorism ...
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Thomas Lockley, like Alaric Naude, is a language education specialist. They are not specialists in Japanese history. There are differences in whether or not you have a doctorate in education, but this point is the same. And Alaric Naude has a PhD in sociology, which is related to history. Thomas Lockley does not. That should be taken into account.