↑Sarah Thal. "A Religion That Was Not a Religion: The Creation of Modern Shinto in Nineteenth-Century Japan". In The Invention of Religion., eds. Peterson and Walhof (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2002). pp. 100–114.
↑Hitoshi Nitta. "Shintō as a 'Non-Religion': The Origins and Development of an Idea". In Shintō in History: Ways of the Kami, eds. Breen and Teeuwen (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i, 2000).
↑John Breen, "Ideologues, Bureaucrats and Priests", in Shintō in History: Ways of the Kami.
↑Hitoshi Nitta. The Illusion of "Arahitogami" "Kokkashintou". Tokyo: PHP Kenkyūjo, 2003.
↑
Duus, Peter (1995). The Abacus and the Sword: The Japanese Penetration of Korea, 1895-1910. Volume 4 of Twentieth Century Japan: The Emergence of a World Power (reprint ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press (published 1998). p. 23. ISBN9780520213616. සම්ප්රවේශය 13 ජනවාරි 2021. Meiji imperialism, and more specifically expansion into Korea, was the product of a complex coalition uniting the Meiji leaders, backed and prodded by a chorus of domestic politicians, journalists, businessmen, and military leaders, with a sub-imperialist Japanese community in Korea.
↑"Treaty of Annexation". USC-UCLA Joint East Asian Studies Center. 11 පෙබරවාරි 2007 දින මුල් පිටපත වෙතින් සංරක්ෂණය කරන ලදී. සම්ප්රවේශය 19 පෙබරවාරි 2007.
↑Korea Focus on Current Topics. Korea Foundation. 1995. p. 34. සම්ප්රවේශය 13 ජනවාරි 2021. Sunjong's 'royal decree' promulgating the 1910 Annexation Treaty lacked the king's signature .
Stucke, Walter (2011). The Direct and Indirect Contributions of Western Missionaries to Korean Nationalism During the Late Choson and Early Japanese Annexation Periods, 1884–1920.
Uchida, Jun (2011). Brokers of Empire: Japanese Settler Colonialism in Korea, 1876–1945. Harvard East Asian Monographs. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN978-0-674-06253-5.