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In response, the Japanese merchants and residents of these ports rebelled, supported by over 200 warships sent by the [[So clan|Sô clan]] of [[Tsushima]]. The Korean navy met that from Tsushima, and put an end to the uprising. Relations were officially, and completely, severed, and the Japanese merchants & residents were expelled from Korea.
 
In response, the Japanese merchants and residents of these ports rebelled, supported by over 200 warships sent by the [[So clan|Sô clan]] of [[Tsushima]]. The Korean navy met that from Tsushima, and put an end to the uprising. Relations were officially, and completely, severed, and the Japanese merchants & residents were expelled from Korea.
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After appeals from Tsushima, trade resumed in Naei in [[1512]], but in an extremely limited manner; only 25 ships were permitted to make port there each year. Pusan reopened to Japanese trade in [[1521]] and remained the primary site of Japanese merchant activity in Korea through the remainder of the [[Sengoku period|Sengoku]] and all of the [[Edo period]], until after the [[1876]] [[Treaty of Kanghwa]].
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After appeals from Tsushima, trade resumed in Naei in [[1512]], but in an extremely limited manner; only 25 ships were permitted to make port there each year. Pusan reopened to Japanese trade in [[1521]] and remained the primary site of Japanese merchant activity in Korea through the remainder of the [[Sengoku period|Sengoku]] and all of the [[Edo period]], until after the [[1876]] [[Treaty of Ganghwa]].
    
==References==
 
==References==
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