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*[[Gusuku]] article needs expansion, from articles, from Kerr, etc. - currently cites only Kitahara
 
*[[Gusuku]] article needs expansion, from articles, from Kerr, etc. - currently cites only Kitahara
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*Publishing: Under the repressive regime of Matsudaira Sadanobu (c. 1787-97), much intellectual production came to be circulated in manuscript form. Anything discussing, let alone criticizing, the shogunate's policies would never pass the publishing guild censors, and could earn the author some serious punishments. So, instead of submitting things for publication, writers would submit them directly to prominent or well-connected samurai officials, in the hopes of influencing policy in that way.
   
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Pigs were raised in a certain area just outside of Nagasaki. Nagasaki was the only place in Edo pd Japan that meat was eaten, with the exceptions of medical purposes, fowl, game animals such as bear, boar, and deer, and of course fish. - Plutschow, Edo Period Travel Reader, p47.
 
Pigs were raised in a certain area just outside of Nagasaki. Nagasaki was the only place in Edo pd Japan that meat was eaten, with the exceptions of medical purposes, fowl, game animals such as bear, boar, and deer, and of course fish. - Plutschow, Edo Period Travel Reader, p47.
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Over 11,000 terakoya were established in the Edo period. - Arts of the Bedchamber exhibition website. Honolulu Museum of Art. (http://shunga.honolulumuseum.org/index.php?page=1)
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