32) Zheng He was more like Genghis Khan than Christopher Columbus, Luo Guanzhong, or Rashid al-Din. Although Zheng He was like Christopher Columbus because they both sailed and went on voyages, like Luo Guanzhong because they both wrote, and Rashid al-Din because they both exchanged viewpoints, but Zheng He was most like Genghis Khan because his expeditions added more than fifty new tributary statues to the Ming Empire.
33) The consequences for Japan of the failure of the Mongol conquest were that the Mongol threat continued to influence Japanese development. The Japanese suffered financially in trying to pay for the roads and defense systems. …show more content…
Kamakura practice by a powerful family that believed in the balancing of power among regional warlords. Ashikaga Shogunates took control of the imperial center of Kyoto after Kamakura's fall, and when Kyoto was left destroyed, the Ashikaga Shogunates became a central government.
35) Ashikaga Shogunate brought stability to Japan by taking control of the imperial center of Kyoto. They established the unified aesthetic code of Zen, and became a central government by the name only.
36) Mongol conquest improved Korea by encouraging cotton growth, use of gunpowder, and calendar making. Also, the development of ideas that the Koreas adopted from the Mongols helped with the rise of new and educated classes. The Yi supported the positives of Mongol rule by continuing to support Mongol-style land surveys, taxation, and military garrison techniques.
37) Religion impact the Mongol khanates, because in their religion, the Ming empire reintroduced the study of Confucian classics, and showed their dedication to the civil service