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  1. Hotta Masayoshi (堀田 正睦, August 30, 1810 – April 26, 1864) was the 5th Hotta daimyō of the Sakura Domain in the Japanese Edo period, who served as chief rōjū in the Bakumatsu period Tokugawa shogunate, where he played an important role in the negotiations of the Ansei Treaties with various foreign powers.

  2. Hotta Masayoshi (born 1810, Edo [now Tokyo], Japan—died April 26, 1864, Sakura) was a Japanese statesman who negotiated the commercial treaty that established trade between the United States and Japan, thus opening that country to commerce with the outside world for the first time in two centuries.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Hotta Masayoshi was the 5th Hotta daimyō of the Sakura Domain in the Japanese Edo period, who served as chief rōjū in the Bakumatsu period Tokugawa shogunate, where he played an important role in the negotiations of the Ansei Treaties with various foreign powers.

  4. Hotta Masayoshi was a daimyô of Sakura han (Shimousa province), and head of the rôjû, famous as the chief Japanese official involved in negotiating the 1858 Harris Treaty (US-Japan Treaty of Amity and Commerce), which opened four Japanese ports to foreign commerce, and granted a degree of extraterritoriality to foreigners in Japan.

  5. Hotta Masayoshi was a high official in the shogunate in the late Edo period and an advocate of the policy of opening the country to foreign trade.

  6. Hotta Masatoshi (born 1634, Edo [now Tokyo], Japan—died Oct. 7, 1684, Edo) was a statesman who began his career as an adviser to the fourth Tokugawa shogun of Japan, Ietsuna (shogun 1651–80), when he was still heir apparent.

  7. Aug 19, 2020 · When the senior councillor (老中 rōjū) Hotta Masayoshi (堀田正睦, 1810-1864) travelled to Kyōto to seek imperial sanction for the Harris Treaty between Japan and the United States Iwakura and other nobles convinced the emperor to withhold his approval.