Answer: Kublai essentially demanded that Japan become a vassal and send tribute under a threat of conflict. However, the emissaries returned empty-handed. A second set of emissaries were sent in 1268, returning empty-handed like the first. Both sets of emissaries met with the Chinzei Bugyō, or Defense Commissioner for the West, who passed on the message to Shikken, Hōjō Tokimune, Japan's ruler in Kamakura and to the Emperor of Japan in Kyoto.
After discussing the letters with his inner circle, there was much debate, but the Shikken had his mind made up; he had the emissaries sent back with no answer. The Mongols continued to send demands, some through Korean emissaries and some through Mongol ambassadors on March 7, 1269; September 17, 1269; September 1271; and May 1272. However, each time, the bearers were not permitted to land in Kyushu.
The Imperial Court suggested compromise,[9] but really had little effect in the matter, due to political marginalization after the Jōkyū War. The uncompromising shogunate ordered all those who held fiefs in Kyūshū, the area closest to the Korean Peninsula and thus most likely to be attacked, to return to their lands and forces in Kyūshū moved west, further securing the most likely landing points.
After acknowledging its importance, the Imperial Court led great prayer services to calm local residents, and much government business was put off to deal with this crisis.
Explanation:
No drinks for the working men (??)
Assuming that the time period is the mid-17th century, this is essentially the Slave Trade, where many Africans were brought into America to work on Plantations
What kind of question is this lol but anyways id want to say (D)
The two ideas that best capture debates in the Iconoclast Controversy were Art and idolatry.
<h3>What was the Iconoclast Controversy ?</h3>
This was a movement by the Iconoclasts who believed that painting God in paintings should be criminalized.
They believed that God was invisible and a spirit and so should not be painted because it could lead to idolatry. This therefore was a conflict between art and idolatry.
Find out more on the Iconoclast Controversy at brainly.com/question/23429865
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