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*[[Segawa Joko|Segawa Jokô]] was elder brother of the onnagata [[Segawa Kikunojo III|Segawa Kikunojô III]] -  
 
*[[Segawa Joko|Segawa Jokô]] was elder brother of the onnagata [[Segawa Kikunojo III|Segawa Kikunojô III]] -  
 
Timothy Clark, "Edo Kabuki in the 1780s," ''The Actor's Image'', Art Institute of Chicago (1994), 36.
 
Timothy Clark, "Edo Kabuki in the 1780s," ''The Actor's Image'', Art Institute of Chicago (1994), 36.
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*[[Samurai]] class was converted to ''[[shizoku]]'' and ''[[sotsu]]'' in [[1869]]. In [[1872]], many lower-ranking sotsu were reduced to regular citizens (heimin). - Andrew Gordon, ''A Modern History of Japan'', Oxford University Press (2013), 65.
    
*Generally speaking in the [[Bakumatsu period]], the British were nominally neutral but actually worked to aid the rebelling provinces, while the French supported the shogunate. This can be seen, for example, in how Satsuma and the shogunate both, separately, ended up working with the British and French, respectively, to get Pavilions at the Paris World's Fair in 1867.
 
*Generally speaking in the [[Bakumatsu period]], the British were nominally neutral but actually worked to aid the rebelling provinces, while the French supported the shogunate. This can be seen, for example, in how Satsuma and the shogunate both, separately, ended up working with the British and French, respectively, to get Pavilions at the Paris World's Fair in 1867.
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