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Joam Yama : ウィキペディア英語版
Joam Yama
Joam Yama(1566? – 29 September 1633) was a Japanese Jesuit monk born in Tsu Province, at the center of Japan’s main island.〔(Schutter (1975) P.1327 )〕〔(Pagès (1869) P.699 )〕 He served as the monk of the Church of Yanagawa in Chikugo Province in Kyusyu. He was deported to Macau in 1614, but six years later returned to Japan. He engaged in missionary work primarily in Oshu with Joam Mattheus Adami, a priest. However, he was captured in Aizu and sent to Edo (now Tokyo) in 1629, and was then martyred at the gallows and the pit (''anatsurushi'') in Edo on 29 September 1633.
==Biography==
In August 1586, Yama joined the Society of Jesus and became the monk of the Church of Yanagawa, which was ruled by the vassals of Don Francisco Sorin Otomo, a Christian feudal lord.〔 There, Yama came to know Adami, who had come to Yanagawa as a priest in 1607. Since the Edo government had proclaimed anti-Christian Edicts in 1612, Yama and Adami were exiled to Macau with many other priests in November 1614.〔Mizobe (2002) P.1-22〕〔(Schutter (1975) p.1122 )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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