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A Few Words that Changed the World
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table of contents
  1. Table Of Contents
  2. Welcome to a Few Words that Changed the World
  3. Introduction - Treaty of Tordesillas
    1. Text
  4. Introduction - Mbemba to King of Portugal
    1. Text
  5. Introduction - Edicts Against Christianity
    1. Text
  6. Introduction - Royal Proclamation
    1. Text
  7. Introduction - Treaty of Allahabad
    1. Text
  8. Introduction - Rights of Man and Citizen
    1. Text
  9. Introduction - Haiti's Constitution
    1. Text
  10. Introduction - Unequal Treaties
    1. Text
  11. Introduction - Declaration of Sentiments
    1. Text
  12. Introduction - Origin of Species
    1. Text Introduction
    2. Text Conclusion
  13. Introduction - Scramble for Africa
    1. Text
      1. Ch. 1: Declaration relative to the liberty of commerce in the basin of the Congo
      2. Ch. 2: Declaration concerning the slave trade
      3. Ch. 3: Declaration relative to the neutrality of the territories
      4. Ch. 4: Act of navigation to the Congo
      5. Ch. 5: Act of navigation to the Niger
      6. Ch. 6: Declaration relative to the conditions essential to be fulfilled
      7. Ch. 7: General dispositions
  14. Appendix: Syllabi

Edict expelling Jesuit Missionaries (1587)

Source: Edict Expelling Jesuit Missionaries, https://www.japanese-wiki-corpus.org/history/Edict%20expelling%20Jesuit%20missionaries.html. Generated from the Japanese-English Bilingual Corpus of Wikipedia’s Kyoto Articles which is translated by the National Institute of Information and Communications Technology (NICT) from Japanese sentences on Wikipedia, used under CC BY-SA.


  1. Japan is the land of gods, and thereby it is not possible to accept the evil belief from the Christian countries.
  2. It is unprecedented that they made the domain people their believers, destroyed shrines and temples, and places of living, enfeoffment, and other things that have been done only for the time being. Obey Acts by the realm, making anything possible and doing ad arbitrium are vile for people of low ranks.
  3. The missionaries held temples’ supporters with their wits as they desired and destroyed the Buddhist law, therefore, they should not be allowed in the land of Japan, and should prepare to leave and return to their country within twenty days from this day, and also those who harm the missionaries during this period shall be punished.
  4. The black ships are for commerce, and thereby they shall be treated differently and we shall buy and purchase various items over the years.
  5. For those who do not try to prevent Buddhist law, such foreign merchants shall be allowed to come to or leave Japan any time after this.

The end of the text.
June 19, 1587 Red seal

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Copyright © 2022

                                by Thomas Peace

            A Few Words that Changed the World by Thomas Peace is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.
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