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*[[Xinhai Revolution]]: in 1912, the ROC government promulgated just two "articles of favorable treatment" (優待條件) - one guaranteeing certain privileges of the imperial family, including their continued holding of their private property (until the 1920s, when Imperial property began to be nationalized), and one offering protections for the rights and property of certain designated ethnic minorities. This came as part of a treaty with Mongols, Manchus, Tibetans, and Muslims, to try to protect the new China from antagonisms from newly independent neighboring states. - Crossley, Translucent Mirror, 344.
 
*[[Xinhai Revolution]]: in 1912, the ROC government promulgated just two "articles of favorable treatment" (優待條件) - one guaranteeing certain privileges of the imperial family, including their continued holding of their private property (until the 1920s, when Imperial property began to be nationalized), and one offering protections for the rights and property of certain designated ethnic minorities. This came as part of a treaty with Mongols, Manchus, Tibetans, and Muslims, to try to protect the new China from antagonisms from newly independent neighboring states. - Crossley, Translucent Mirror, 344.
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*Ayutthaya: 1575 sends envoy to Ming to get a new royal seal to replace the one destroyed in fighting with the Burmese; 1592 King Naresuan sends envoy to Ming to offer to send navy to help defeat Japan. - Kang, David C. “Hierarchy in Asian International Relations: 1300-1900.” Asian Security 1, no. 1 (2005): 62.
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*Ayutthaya: At least 41 Siamese ships traveled to Japan to trade between 1689-1723, and were received with no trade quota at all. Some carried goods worth in the millions of silver dollars. - Kang, Hierarchy in Asian IR, 69.
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*[[Hoi An]] - by 1750, there were perhaps as many as 10,000 Chinese resident in Hoi An, and the town's position as a commercial hub had caused considerable impact on the commercial expectations of Vietnamese people living beyond the town. - Kang, 2005, 69.
      
*[[Kyogen]] - Kyogen costumes are based on the clothing of common people of the Muromachi period; unlike Noh costumes, they contain less luxury materials, such as gold and silver thread, and intricate embroidery. This makes Kyogen characters more approachable, more human or realistic. In the Edo period, however, bolder designs did begin to appear in the costumes. - TNM Gallery label, "Kyogen Masks and Costumes" [https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/17283702961/sizes/h/]
 
*[[Kyogen]] - Kyogen costumes are based on the clothing of common people of the Muromachi period; unlike Noh costumes, they contain less luxury materials, such as gold and silver thread, and intricate embroidery. This makes Kyogen characters more approachable, more human or realistic. In the Edo period, however, bolder designs did begin to appear in the costumes. - TNM Gallery label, "Kyogen Masks and Costumes" [https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/17283702961/sizes/h/]
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