Who is the Person who opened Japan to world in 1853?
The person who opened Japan to the world in 1853 was Commodore Matthew C. Perry of the United States Navy. Perry led a fleet of four ships into Edo Bay (now Tokyo Bay) and demanded that Japan open its ports to American trade. After some negotiations, the Japanese agreed to sign the Treaty of Kanagawa, which gave the United States access to two Japanese ports and established diplomatic relations between the two countries. This event marked the end of Japan's long period of isolation and seclusion and led to a period of rapid modernization and Westernization in the country.