The Japanese envoy to first bring these tallies back to Japan in 1474, a Zen monk named Shôkyû<!--正球-->, was held by the [[So clan|Sô clan]] of [[Tsushima]], who attempted to gain the tallies from him, and to gain information about how the system worked, presumably so that they could continue to collaborate with imposter envoys. However, they somehow failed to obtain the tallies, and Shôkyû successfully delivered all ten to the shogunate. | The Japanese envoy to first bring these tallies back to Japan in 1474, a Zen monk named Shôkyû<!--正球-->, was held by the [[So clan|Sô clan]] of [[Tsushima]], who attempted to gain the tallies from him, and to gain information about how the system worked, presumably so that they could continue to collaborate with imposter envoys. However, they somehow failed to obtain the tallies, and Shôkyû successfully delivered all ten to the shogunate. |