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  2. Japan–United Kingdom relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan–United_Kingdom...

    1905. The Japanese–British alliance was renewed and expanded. Official diplomatic relations were upgraded, with ambassadors being exchanged for the first time. 1907. In July, British thread company J. & P. Coats launched Teikoku Seishi and began to thrive. 1908. The Japan-British Society was founded in order to foster cultural and social ...

  3. Anglo-Japanese style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Japanese_style

    The Anglo-Japanese style developed in the United Kingdom through the Victorian era and early Edwardian era from approximately 1851 to the 1910s, when a new appreciation for Japanese design and culture influenced how designers and craftspeople made British art, especially the decorative arts and architecture of England, covering a vast array of art objects including ceramics, furniture and ...

  4. Japanese in the United Kingdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_in_the_United_Kingdom

    Japanese in the United Kingdom include British citizens of Japanese ancestry (Japanese: 日系イギリス人, Hepburn: Nikkei Igirisujin) or permanent residents of Japanese birth or citizenship, as well as expatriate business professionals and their dependents on limited-term employment visas, students, trainees and young people participating in the UK government-sponsored Youth Mobility Scheme.

  5. Anglo-Japanese Friendship Treaty - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglo-Japanese_Friendship...

    Anglo-Japanese relations began in 1600 at the start of the Tokugawa shogunate with the arrival of William Adams, a seaman from Gillingham, Kent, who became an advisor to Tokugawa Ieyasu. He facilitated the creation of a British trading post at Hirado in 1613, led by English captain John Saris , who obtained a Red Seal permit giving "free ...

  6. Japan–British Exhibition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JapanBritish_Exhibition

    Japanese calligraphy, the word "peace" and the signature of the calligrapher, Baron Ōura Kanetake, 1910 . Hosting an international exhibition around the turn of the 20th century was a means for a rising empire like Japan to demonstrate it was a world power [5], showcasing its industrial might, prestige and hegemony, similarly to the 1850 Great Exhibition in Britain and the United States ...

  7. Category:Japan–United Kingdom relations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Japan–United...

    Japan Society North West; The Japan Society of the UK; Japan–British Exhibition; Japan–British Society; Japanese students in the United Kingdom; Japanese–Meitei cultural relations; Jones Sewing Machine Company

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  9. British Japanese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Japanese

    British Japanese or British-Japanese may be: Britons in Japan; Japanese community in the United Kingdom; As an adjective, anything concerning Japan–United Kingdom ...