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{{Nihongo|'''Fukase Yōshun'''|深瀬 洋春|| |
{{Nihongo|'''Fukase Yōshun'''|深瀬 洋春||1834–1905|lead=yes}} was a Japanese physician. | ||
==Biography== | ==Biography== |
Revision as of 06:50, 16 January 2025
In this Japanese name, the surname is Fukase.Fukase Yōshun | |
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深瀬 洋春 | |
Born | Fukase Sadayuki (深瀬 貞之) 1834 Hakodate, Matsumae Domain, Japan |
Died | December 23, 1905(1905-12-23) (aged 70–71) Hakodate, Hokkaido, Japan |
Fukase Yōshun (Japanese: 深瀬 洋春, 1834–1905) was a Japanese physician.
Biography
Fukase Yōshun was born in Hakodate as the eldest son of Fukase Kōsai Kazumoto (深瀬 鴻斉 一甫), a medical expert originally from the Yonezawa Domain in Dewa Province who moved to Hakodate in order to open a medical practice. His brother, Fukase Kōdō (深瀬 鴻堂), became the second director of the Hakodate Medical Center (箱館医学所, Hakodate igakujo) founded by Kurimoto Jō'un.
Fukase studied Western medicine in Edo under Satō Takanaka [ja].
In 1857, alarmed by an epidemic of smallpox spreading rapidly among the Ainu, the shogunate commanded a small team of physicians including Fukase and Kuwata Ryūsai to enter Ezo and carry out compulsory vaccination of the Ainu populace.
In his later years, Fukase returned to his hometown of Hakodate and served at the local medical outpost of the Kaitakushi. He died in 1905.
References
- "深瀬 洋春 Fukase Yōshun". 函館市文化・スポーツ振興財団 Foundation for Culture and Sport Promotion in Hakodate. Retrieved 15 January 2025.
- ^ "深瀬洋春 Fukase Yōshun". デジタル版 日本人名大辞典+Plus. 講談社 Kōdansha. 2015.
- Walker, Brett L. (February 21, 2006). The Conquest of Ainu Lands: Ecology and Culture in Japanese Expansion,1590-1800 (1st ed.). United States: University of California Press. ISBN 0520248341.