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9 March, 15:03

During the 1630s the shoguns of Japan forbade Japanese from going abroad, expelled Europeans, and prohibited foreign merchants trading in Japan. True False

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  1. 9 March, 18:05
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    True

    Explanation:

    The isolation period in Japan, known in Japanese as Sakoku, meaning "closed country", started in 1639 by Tokugawa lemitsu, the third Shōgun (military dictator) of the Tokugawa Shogunate.

    The period of Sakoku lasted until 1853, when American Navy Official Mathew Perry use military force to compel Japan to open its ports to trade.

    During this period, the only contact that Japan had with the world was through with China through the port of Nagasaki, and with the Dutch, who had a small factory in the town of Dejima.
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