Hugh Cortazzi
Sir Arthur Henry Hugh Cortazzi, was a British diplomat. He was also a distinguished international businessman, academic, author and prominent Japanologist. He was Ambassador from the United Kingdom to Japan, President of the Asiatic Society of Japan and Chairman of the Japan Society of London.
Early life
In 1998 Cortazzi published his autobiography, Japan and Back, and Places Elsewhere. Cortazzi was educated at Sedbergh School, St Andrews University and University of London. He served in the Royal Air Force from 1943 to 1947, serving in Britain and India, and later elsewhere in Asia.. He began in the RAF as an Aircraftman 2nd Class and took a six-month crash course in Japanese, taught by the School of Oriental and African Studies, at that time based at Dulwich College. Cortazzi was granted a wartime commission in the rank of Pilot Officer in June 1945. He was promoted to Flying Officer in December 1945, and left the service in 1947, after which he joined the Foreign Office.Diplomatic career
After the War, the British Foreign Office posted Cortazzi to Singapore and to Tokyo. After returning to Whitehall, he was posted to Bonn. Another stint in Tokyo preceded his return to London. Another posting in Tokyo was followed by a different kind of opportunity at the Royal College of Defence Studies, after which he was posted to Washington, D.C..In 1975, Cortazzi was appointed Deputy Under-Secretary of State. The next few years in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office preceded his appointment as Her Majesty's Ambassador to Japan in 1980. In 1980, Sir Hugh was elevated to the rank of Knight Commander the Most Distinguished Order of St Michael and St George. He spent the next four years in Tokyo.
Businessman
Sir Hugh retired from public service after his years as British ambassador to Japan, but in private life, he has continued to work promoting better Anglo-Japanese relations. In addition to the books he has since written or edited, he has regularly carved out time to write reviews and a in the Japan Times.In 2006, Sir Hugh's translation of the Japanese Crown Prince Naruhito's account of his time at Oxford was published as The Thames and I.
Sir Hugh diversified his experiences with time spent as a Director of Hill Samuel & Co., later Hill Samuel Bank. He has been a Director of Director: Foreign and Colonial Pacific Trust since 1984; a Director of GT Japan Investment Trust since 1984; and a Director of Thornton Pacific Investment Trust since 1986. Since 1992 he has served as Senior Adviser to a number of Japanese multi-national businesses with significant interests in the United Kingdom—such as, NEC Corporation, Dai-ichi Kangyo Bank, Bank of Kyoto.
Sir Hugh was a member of the Economic and Social Research Council ; a member of the Council and Court, University of Sussex ; and Honorary Fellow of Robinson College, University of Cambridge,.
He died on 14 August 2018 at the age of 94.
Honours
- University of Stirling, Honorary doctorate, 1988.
- Order of the Sacred Treasure, Grand Cordon, 1995.
- :Category:Companions of the Order of St Michael and St George|Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George, 1969.
- :Category:Knights Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George|Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George, 1980.
- :Category:Knights Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George|Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George, 1984.
Selected works
In a statistical overview derived from writings by and about Hugh Cortazzi, OCLC/WorldCat encompasses roughly 60+ works in 100+ publications in 4 languages and 4,000+ library holdings.
- 2009 – Japan in Late Victorian London: The Japanese Native Village in Knightsbridge and 'The Mikado', 1885, Sainsbury Institute, 2009
- 2009 – Introduction to ', lulu.com
- 2007 – Britain & Japan: Biographical Portraits, vol. VI. Folkestone, Kent: Global Oriental.
- 2005 – Britain & Japan: Biographical Portraits, vol. V. Folkestone, Kent: Global Oriental.
- 2003 – London: Curzon.
- 2001 – British Envoys in Japan, 1859–1972. Folkestone, Kent: Japan Library..
- 2001 – , Folkestone Kent: Japan Library.
- 2000 – , vol. II; London: Routledge.
- 1998 –
- 1995 – . Boston: Weatherhill;
- 1994 – New York: Paul & Co. Publishers Consortium;
- 1993 –
- 1992 – . London: Routledge;
- 1990 – The Japanese Achievement: a short history of Japan and Japanese culture. London: Sidgwick & Jackson;
- 1988 – , ; London: Continuum International;
- 1987 – , London: Continuum International;
- 1987 – , Tokyo: Eichosha Shinsha
- 1987 – Zoku, Higashi no Shimaguni, Nishi no Shimaguni
- 1986 – . Tokyo: Eichosha Shinsha
- 1985 – , London: Athlone Press/ Continuum International;
- 1984 – Higashi No Shimaguni, Nishi No Shimaguni
- 1984 – , Tokyo: Eichosha Shinsha
- 1983 – Boston: Weatherhill;
- 1980 – The Lucky One and Other Humorous Stories
- 1972 – The Guardian God of Golf and other humorous stories
- 2004 – Hiro no Miya Naruhito. . Folkestone, Kent: Global Oriental.
- 2000 – Shillony, Ben-Ami. . London: Routledge;
- 1991 – East, Sir Alfred. - reprinted by Weatherhill, Boston, 1997. ]
- 1991 – Brunton, Richard Henry. . Folkestone Kent: Japan Library;
- 1985 – Algernon Bertram Freeman-Mitford. . London: Athlone Press/Continuum International; )
- 1982 – Fraser, Mary Crawford Fraser. . Boston: Weatherhill;
- 1972 – Keita Genji. . Tokyo: Japan Times.