Some advocatedthe appointment of his kinsman, Mochiuji, governor-general of theKwanto, and Mochiuji himself prayed that it should be so. Unless theybe punished, public peace cannot be restored. It is really a religion of despair rather than ofhope. reign intercourse;Ashikaga; Muromachi epoch; foreign learning; Tokugawa; militaryscience; Meiji era, 678; foreigner
Japanese annalists, however, relegate the taxationgrievance to an altogether secondary place, and attribute the revolts Should you be defeated Iwill never see your face again. ith (1873);treaty (1875); Chinese activity in, 699-700; independence recognizedby 1895 treaty; Russian aggression; Japan's interests i 4 koku for a whole year, foundthat when he set aside from three to four koku for food, thereremained li
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