Dinner at the Regents Lew Chew
Tinted lithograph print depicting Commodore Matthew Perry and his men having dinner in Shuri Castle on Okinawa. Men from Perry’s expedition are gathered in a panelled hall with pillars and high ceilings. The Okinawans are serving food on platters. At the back of the room, some of Perry’s men have their glasses raised in a toast. Inscribed: ‘Dinner at the Regents Lew Chew / T. Sinclair’s lith. Philad[elphi]a.’
Okinawa is the largest island in the Ryukyu Islands. Shuri was the capital city of the Ryukyu Kingdom (known historically in English as Lew Chew), which was formally annexed by Japan in 1872. Today, Shuri is a district in the city of Naha.
The print is based on a drawing by Peter Bernhard Wilhelm Heine, better known as William Heine (1827–1885). A German-American world traveller, writer and artist, Heine was the official artist on Commodore Matthew Perry’s expedition to Japan in 1852. This print was published as an illustration in the official voyage publication, Narrative of the Expedition of an American Squadron to the China Seas and Japan (Washington: Beverley Tucker, 1856), opposite page 191.
Perry’s expedition embarked for Japan with the intention of securing a trade treaty through threats and displays of US naval power. They stopped in Naha on Okinawa in May 1853 and forced entry into Shuri Castle, where they met with the royal regent, then ruling on behalf of the ten-year-old king Shō Tai. This print shows a dinner hosted by the royal regent. Perry eventually signed a trade agreement with the Ryukyu Kingdom on 11 July 1854.
Okinawa is the largest island in the Ryukyu Islands. Shuri was the capital city of the Ryukyu Kingdom (known historically in English as Lew Chew), which was formally annexed by Japan in 1872. Today, Shuri is a district in the city of Naha.
The print is based on a drawing by Peter Bernhard Wilhelm Heine, better known as William Heine (1827–1885). A German-American world traveller, writer and artist, Heine was the official artist on Commodore Matthew Perry’s expedition to Japan in 1852. This print was published as an illustration in the official voyage publication, Narrative of the Expedition of an American Squadron to the China Seas and Japan (Washington: Beverley Tucker, 1856), opposite page 191.
Perry’s expedition embarked for Japan with the intention of securing a trade treaty through threats and displays of US naval power. They stopped in Naha on Okinawa in May 1853 and forced entry into Shuri Castle, where they met with the royal regent, then ruling on behalf of the ten-year-old king Shō Tai. This print shows a dinner hosted by the royal regent. Perry eventually signed a trade agreement with the Ryukyu Kingdom on 11 July 1854.
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Object Details
ID: | PAD1881 |
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Type: | |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Sinclair, T.; Heine, Peter Bernhard Wilhelm |
Places: | Unlinked place |
Date made: | 1856 |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London |
Measurements: | Mount: 210 mm x 275 mm |