Hello.
The event is known in Japan as the Akō incident <span> sometimes also referred to as the </span>Akō vendetta<span>. The participants in the revenge are called the Akō-rōshi </span><span> in Japanese, and are usually referred to as the "Forty-seven Rōnin" or "Forty-seven leaderless samurai" in English. Literary accounts of the events are known as the </span>Chūshingura.
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Answer:
the answer is D
Explanation:
I think I'm not sure but it could be B
Back then samurais were needed for protection and/or war, the imperial palace would have them serve as guards, and some Lords or higher ups would have them go into battle, but now Higher ups and the emperor’s have highly trained body guards so there is no need for samurais.
"Differences in regional economic development during the 19th century produced the condition that "<span>A The North was the nation's main industrial area" which strained the South." -HistoryGuy
I took this off of another post with the same question and a positively right answer.</span>