Around the end of the twentieth century, legal documents usually wrote them in the order: Land District, Location, number.
These documents purported to be contemporary accounts written around the 17th century, which had been "discovered" in the mid-20th century.
However, surviving financial documents and letters written by the king while he resided elsewhere offer some hints.
Letter and documents written by Fryer after the mutiny.
Mainly official documents and letters written in ink, they are the oldest historical documents known from Britain.
Beside the scroll was another, smaller, document marked for his eyes only and written in a personalised code by the Emperor himself.
As well as numerous smaller documents written in other indigenous languages throughout the colonial period.
He demanded various legal documents, found an audit critical of the financial operation of the office, wrote about it.
On the other hand, documents received or written by in-house counsel for the enterprise for which he works are not protected.
At the time, documents were written in kanji and hiragana, derived from Japan.