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С
their self-imposed isolation from most of the world
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when The number of Christians had reached about 300,000 when the Tokugawa shogunate prohibited Christianity and expelled all foreigners in 1638. [1] Under Hideyoshi and the succeeding Tokugawa shogunate, Catholic Christianity was repressed and adherents were persecuted. [2]
After wiping out all resistance from its political enemies--the retainers of Toyotomi Hideyoshi--and establishing unshakable control over all of Japan, the Tokugawa Shogunate seized the profits from Portuguese trade and embarked upon a policy of strict suppression of Christianity, which it viewed as a threat to the bakuhan taisei (shogunate-domain system). [3] That said, we can say that the Tokugawa Shogunate generally dealt with Christianity and international trade by making them very difficult, if not impossible. [4] This private custom became a public institution when the Tokugawa shogunate discovered an effective means by which to control the populace and prevent the spread of ideologies potentially dangerous to its power--especially Christianity
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I would like brainliest if I deserve it plz
Answer:
A, B, and D.
Explanation:
Just took this on edgenuity :)
The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although there are no options attached we can say the following.
The significance that the Underground Railroad had besides helping
slaves escape was that it showed that African American slaves could think for themselves, devise options to come with solutions, and showed that they were capable of creating strategies that were creative to solve problems.
Another significant thing was that the Underground Railroad proved that were people in the North -white and black- who had an affinity with abolitionists and that showed sympathy to pronounce themselves against what was happening in the South.
As of August 1941, the United States was a neutral nation and had not yet entered as a belligerent in World War II. Therefore, the bloc known as 'The Allies' were principally (with Poland and France occupied by Germany in 1939 and 1940, respectively) the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union, recently forming their alliance after the German invasion of territories of the Western Soviet Union in June 1941. In August–September 1941, Pahlavi Iran had been jointly invaded and occupied by the Allied powers of the Soviet Red Army in the north and by the British in the centre and south.[3] Iran was used by the Americans and the British as a transportation route to provide vital supplies to the Soviet Union's war efforts