; オンラインWikipedia日英京都関連文書対訳コーパス(英和) 見出し単語一覧

オンラインWikipedia日英京都関連文書対訳コーパス(英和) 見出し単語一覧

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データ総見出し数 437939


  1. He studied Japanese antiques together with Tenshin OKAKURA.
  2. He studied Jodaiyo (Japanese calligraphy style during the middle of the Heian period) of ONO no Tofu and FUJIWARA no Yukinari, he then added Cho Sokushi's style to it, and created a new style called the Sonen Style or Sonen Shoren-in style of calligraphy.
  3. He studied Kenmitsu Buddhism (Exoteric Buddhism and Esoteric Buddhism), kai (precept) and siddham (Sanskrit) initially under Dengyo Daishi Ennin and after his death, under Hensho.
  4. He studied Kidendo (the study of the histories) under SUGAWARA no Kiyokimi.
  5. He studied Mokujiki Gyodo and myokonin (pious followers of the Jodo Shinshu sect), who travelled around Japan and built Buddhist statues and left unique 'Mishobutsu' (Smiling Buddha).
  6. He studied Neo-Confucianism under Tozan KAWAKAMI who was a Confucian in Hamamatsu, Japanese classical literature under Yoshiomi NAKAMURA in Itami, Morohira KANO of the Kishu Domain, and Nobutomo BAN in Edo, and waka under Hideo IIDA who was a Shinto priest in Inaba Province, and other scholars.
  7. He studied Onmyodo with Sadahiro KAMO of the Onmyoryo (the Bureau of Divination) under the Gyobusho (the Ministry of Justice).
  8. He studied Rekido (study of almanacs from the use of astronomy) and wrote "Rekirin" (the forest of Almanac).
  9. He studied Sanron Sect under Yakuho of Gango-ji Temple and Gonso of Daian-ji Temple and learned a lot about Hosso sect/esoteric Buddhism.
  10. He studied Shingon Esoteric Buddhism and Kegon Sect at Ninna-ji Temple and Toda-ji Temple and showed great promise as a priest, but he abandoned the connection with secular society and lived in seclusion at Shirakami, Arita-gun in Kii Province and Ikadachi in the same Province.
  11. He studied Shingon Esoteric Buddhism under Gakei and he also studied Hosso sect doctrine.
  12. He studied Shino ware in Tajimi City, Gifu Prefecture in 1956.
  13. He studied Shinology under 孚 OKUMURA in the beginning, then became a part-time worker at the Shizuoka Police Station, and reportedly was always academically oriented and never grew tired of learning.
  14. He studied Shushigaku (Zhu Xi school of neo Confucianism) with Jishu BITO and Seiri KOGA, and opened a private school named "Seizansha" in Edobori-kita, Osaka (Now Edobori, Nishi Ward, Osaka City) and named the residence as "Shunsui Minami ken" (Shunsui's Southern House).
  15. He studied Sinology under Jushin Chikukei MOTODA (died in 1877 at the age of 80) and later studied Japanese classical literature under Naotaka and Naoyoshi SADAMURA.
  16. He studied Tendai doctrine under Myosen, a monk of Mt. Hiei, and received kanjo (ceremony to be the successor) from Gyoyo.
  17. He studied Tendai doctrine under the priests Ryogen and Genshin of the temple on Mt. Hiei, and he studied Esoteric Buddhism under Keien (Tendai sect).
  18. He studied Tendai- sandai-bu (three major works on the Lotus Sutra, or three major writings of the Tendai Sect) in depth.
  19. He studied Western learning in Nagasaki and went to Edo in 1857, following Keizo YATABORI who was a learner of navy.
  20. He studied Western military science, rifle technique, and battery construction technology with Tarozaemon EGAWA, the governor of Edo and a military strategist.
  21. He studied Western studies in Koan OGATA's school in Osaka and also Western tactics under Shozan SAKUMA in Edo.
  22. He studied Zen from Sijian Zitan, a monk from overseas, and he became the chief priest of Choraku-ji Temple in the Kozuke Province.
  23. He studied Zen, Tendai Dharma, astronomy and mathematics.
  24. He studied a type of Confucianism called kobunjigaku, (study of ancient rhetoric school), and he trained in Zen Buddhism under Meika UNO and Daicho Genko up to the end of his twenties while training for Zen under Dokusho Jishu.
  25. He studied about old customs of the Imperial Palace and edited "Kujiburui."
  26. He studied academics under OE no Masafusa, and learned the traditional bureaucratic lessons for practical business.
  27. He studied agriculture with Nobuhiro SATO.
  28. He studied and analyzed the effect of the constituents of plants and animals pharmacologically, and made an effort to obtain truly effective substances.
  29. He studied and became a monk under Myokan of Daigo-ji Temple, and thereafter received kanjo (ceremony to be the successor) from Shinkaku and Ningai.
  30. He studied applied chemistry at Tokyo Vocational School (present-day Tokyo Institute of Technology), and he later invented bokuju.
  31. He studied as a disciple of Sugawara no Koreyoshi and became a Monjo Tokugosho (Distinguished Scholar of Letters) and in 879, he was appointed to Jidoku (Imperial tutor) of Emperor Yozei and gradually added to his laurels as a scholar.
  32. He studied as a pupil under Socho and Soseki and travelled to various places.
  33. He studied at Gakushuin School and graduated from Tokyo University.
  34. He studied at Hanko (Domain school) Shuyukan.
  35. He studied at Hokkaido Prefectural Tomakomai Junior High School (present-day Hokkaido Prefectural HokkaidoTomakomai Higashi High School), took a preliminary course of Keio University, and graduated from the faculty of law at Keio University in 1952.
  36. He studied at Kaisei School in Osaka and graduated from Telegraph School at Kobusho (the Ministry of Industry) later.
  37. He studied at Kangien.
  38. He studied at Meirinkan School of Choshu Domain and later at Keiogijuku.
  39. He studied at Niigata Prefectural Nagaoka High School, and then at Keio University, and moreover, he went to the Department of Philosophy at Tokyo Imperial University for the first time as a in-country exchange student from Nishi Hongan-ji Temple.
  40. He studied at Noguchigo School (Jiyokan) in Mito and a private school lead by Toko FUJITA.
  41. He studied at Ryusho KITAMURA's private school Gakuhando and with teachings of Tadanao YOKOI and Kakuma YAMAMOTO, and is believed to have achieved excellent results in a wide range of areas including Keiseiron (a political and economic theory talking about countermeasures for actual social issues and problems in the Edo Period) and the Confucianism of Edo Period.
  42. He studied at Shoheizaka Gakumonjo (a shogunate school) and other places.
  43. He studied at Terakoya (a private elementary school in the Edo period), and at the age of eleven, he started in business following his father.
  44. He studied at Tetsugakukan (later Toyo University).
  45. He studied at University of Hawaii in 1950.
  46. He studied at Yamaguchi High School (the old system) and graduated from the Department of Mechanics of the University of Tokyo in 1903 (at the age of 23).
  47. He studied at Yamanashi Prefectural Kofu Daiichi High School and Daiichi High School (old-education-system), and graduated from the Faculty of Law at Tokyo University.
  48. He studied at Zoshikan school, and departed to the front of Anglo-Satsuma War as a member of the 5th group of Satsuma Domain.
  49. He studied at a domain school Kodokan (in Saga domain) and participated in a political association named Gisai-domei with Shinpei ETO, Shigenobu OKUMA and Taneomi SOEJIMA.
  50. He studied at a hanko (domain school) called Kojokan, and then he went to Edo to study under Kinichiro KOGA.
  51. He studied at a school of Nakatsu City, Buzen Province and he moved to Tokyo in 1877 to become shosei (a student who is given room and board in exchange for performing domestic duties) of Yukichi FUKUZAWA.
  52. He studied at hanko (a domain school) Meirinkan, and at the arrival of Matthew (Calbraith) PERRY, he was stationed at Omori Fort to stand guard.
  53. He studied at some foreign schools such as the University of Cambridge in England.
  54. He studied at the Daigakuryo (Bureau of Education under the ritsuryo system) and studied under MINAMOTO no Shitago.
  55. He studied at the Gango-ji Temple at the age of 17.
  56. He studied at the Kodokan school, and during this time associated with Shinpei ETO and Takato OKI.
  57. He studied at the National Academy in Shoheizaka and became a tutor for the lord of Saijo Domain in 1861.
  58. He studied at the officer academy and also studied Sinology under Kiyoshi NAKANE.
  59. He studied basic theories of the traditional Japanese music and tuning techniques of gakuso (koto for traditional Japanese music) under Shuraku HAZUKA, a gagakuka (musician of old Japanese court music) (another opinion says it was not Shuraku).
  60. He studied botany as his main subject in natural history and made an herb garden in Dejima.
  61. He studied calligraphic works and paintings and tenkoku under Kakuan OMATA.
  62. He studied calligraphy and seal engraving under Mosho NIIOKI, and medical science under Shuan KAGAWA.
  63. He studied calligraphy and tenkoku under 雪庵 (Donge) who was a disciple of Kotaku HOSOI, and also learned calligraphy from 阮西園.
  64. He studied calligraphy under Fuyo KO at a young age, showing great talent; however, when he found pottery, he opened a studio in Awataguchi, Kyoto at the age of 30 and won fame for his pottery.
  65. He studied composing linked verses 'Renga' under Shukei, and after the death of Shukei, he studied under Shokyu SATOMURA and inherited the Satomura family.
  66. He studied diligently in England while learning English from the basics taught by Masataka KAWASE, and later, he finally came to become an auditing student of the laws of England at the University of Oxford.
  67. He studied exoteric Buddhism and esoteric Buddhism from Benkaku Hoin of Mt. Hiei, and inherited the teachings of Tendai Zasu (head priest of the Tendai Sect) Imperial Prince Saiunho.
  68. He studied for the priesthood under Soen SHUNOKU and entered the Buddhist priesthood.
  69. He studied glaze and technique most eagerly among the successive leaders, and also studied kaden (hereditary learning) of the RAKU family.
  70. He studied hard in the evening while he worked for the purchase department of Chuo Denshin Kyoku (present Central Telegraph Office) Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation, as of now).
  71. He studied hard to attain this goal.
  72. He studied hard under Kangaku Shonin there.
  73. He studied hard under the guidance of Ryuen Honju, Zuikei Shuho and Shunkei Koso.
  74. He studied herbalism under Boyo YAMAMOTO.
  75. He studied in England with other students including Tomoatsu GODAI in 1865 and then went to study in the US.
  76. He studied in France and Germany, and his doctoral thesis written in French "De la transaction" (Japanese title: Wakairon) was highly evaluated even by locals.
  77. He studied in Geneva from 1870 to 1873.
  78. He studied in Goguryeo (kingdom of Korea), and after coming back to Japan, he lived in Gango-ji Temple (Asuka-dera Temple).
  79. He studied in Kaisei Gakko (Kaisei School) and Daiichi High School (the first old-education-system high school), and enrolled in Department of Botany, the University of Tokyo, and he graduated from the university in 1890.
  80. He studied in Kyoto under Takamasa OKUNI, a scholar of Japanese classical literature, but soon confronted with him and returned to Izumi Province to live in seclusion in Mano of Omi Province.
  81. He studied in Osaka and Kyoto, and in 1756 he went to Edo and became a pupil of the herbalism scholar Genyu TAMURA (Ransui), whereupon he studied herbalism.
  82. He studied in Paris afterward.
  83. He studied in the German Empire, which had categories of 'de: Kulturdenkmal' (Cultural Monument) and 'de: Naturdenkmal' (Natural Monument), and he took in the concept of the latter category.
  84. He studied in the Netherlands from 1862 to 1867.
  85. He studied in the Southern Sung Dynasty in 1168 when he became tired of the Nihon Tendai sect, which had lost substance.
  86. He studied in the US around the same time as Tanetaro MEGATA and Nagatane SOMA did.
  87. He studied in the domain school in Saga, Kodokan, and he went to Edo to study under Doan KOGA in 1838.
  88. He studied in the second group of the Science Department (in medicine) at the Daisan Koto Gakko (the "Third Senior High School" under the old system, often abbreviated to "Sanko") before moving on to the Department of Science (in Physics) at Kyoto Imperial University, but then re-enrolled in the Department of Philosophy, graduating in 1926.
  89. He studied infinite series, especially double series for the first time in wasan.
  90. He studied jiuta shamisen under kengyo ICHIZAN and sokyoku (koto music) under kengyo YAEZAKI.
  91. He studied kokugaku (provincial schools) and had the thought that the foreigners should be expelled.
  92. He studied kokugaku and had the thought of expulsion of foreigners.
  93. He studied kyogen under his father Sengoro, grandfather Sensaku SHIGEYAMA, the fourth, and great-grandfatherSensaku SHIGEYAMA, the third, and has trained himself.
  94. He studied learning of religious doctrines under Keishu at the Saito (Western section) of Mt. Hiei.
  95. He studied medicine and Western literature at the domain school, Meirinkan, and in 1856, traveled to the Kyushu region to continue his studies at age 17.
  96. He studied medicine from his father.
  97. He studied methods of using wood as carving material, and developed a delicate technique.
  98. He studied neo-Confucianism in the Teishugaku-ha school.
  99. He studied painting under Chikuto NAKABAYASHI.
  100. He studied philosophy and science in the US, which was in the recovery period from the Civil War, and returned to Japan in 1876.
  101. He studied philosophy during the heyday of the Kyoto School with Kitaro NISHIDA, Seiichi HATANO, Hajime TANABE, and Tetsuro WATSUJI, during which time he was greatly influenced particularly by Tanabe.
  102. He studied renga under Sogi, and participated in Minase Sangin Hyakuin (One Hundred Stanzas by Three Poets at Minase) in 1488, Yuyama Sangin Hyakuin (One Hundred Stanzas by Three Poets at Yuyama) in 1491, amongst others.
  103. He studied renga under Sozei, Senjun and Shinkei, and received instruction in the secret traditions of the Kokinshu (Kokin Denju) by Tsuneyori TO.
  104. He studied sinology under Kyumei TSUCHIYA.
  105. He studied small-sized determinants and resultants.
  106. He studied surveying, gunnery, Western studies, and Mechanical Engineering, etc., directed many disciples, and significantly contributed to modernization of Japan in the end of Edo period.
  107. He studied tenkoku (seal-engraving) under Sakou KANEKO, later he became a disciple of Zoroku HAMAMURA IV.
  108. He studied the "Manyoshu" (the Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves) and compiled the "Gosen Wakashu" (Later Collection of Poetry).
  109. He studied the Esoteric Buddhism under Kenjo of Hochiin school, Daigo-ji Temple.
  110. He studied the Hosso Sect teachings under Ninko of Kofuku-ji Temple and consecrated by Kanku before being appointed betto (administrator) of Daikaku-ji Temple.
  111. He studied the Hosso doctrine under Joto in Saidai-ji Temple in Nara and lived in Ganko-ji Temple.
  112. He studied the Hosso doctrine under a monk Chuzan of Kofukuji Temple, and later he received the sacred teachings of Buddha from a monk Ninga in Yoshino.
  113. He studied the Jodo Sect under Shugyo of Zojo-ji Temple in Edo and Soto (祖洞) of Iinuma Gugyo-ji Temple in Shimosa Province, and later founded Tenji-an Temple in Edo.
  114. He studied the Kamo style of calligraphy and, after learning the styles of Kukai and ONO no Michikaze, which had been passed down in the Konoe and other families, he went on to develop his own style.
  115. He studied the Shingon Esoteric Buddhism under Kukai of Kobo Daishi (posthumous title of the priest Kukai).
  116. He studied the Shingon Esoteric Buddhism under Shoken of Daigo-ji Temple and Ninryu of Ninna-ji Temple, and became the chief priest known as juji of Zenrin-ji Temple in Kyoto (Kyoto City).
  117. He studied the Yuishiki theory (of vijnapti matrata, the theory that everything exists only in the mind) of the Hosso sect with Taiki, a priest of Daian-ji Temple in Nara, and in 807 took Buddhist vows, receiving the succession ritual from Kukai in 810.
  118. He studied the Zen sect from Enpan MUIN of Kennin-ji Temple.
  119. He studied the art of medicine and later wrote a medical book titled ‘Reiran-shu’; additionally, he was a man of culture who was highly talented in drawing and waka reading.
  120. He studied the carving of Tensho-style Chinese characters under Rinkoku HOSOKAWA, and earned his living through selling In (an object on top of which a seal pattern is carved).
  121. He studied the doctrine of the Jodo Sect under Shoku, the founder of the Nishiyama School of the Jodo Sect.
  122. He studied the doctrines of Yuishiki, Inmyo, and Hosso under Enen sozu of the South hall of Kofukuji Temple.
  123. He studied the esoteric teachings under Jinkan at Zenrin-ji Temple at the age of 11, Sanron teachings under Yukyo and Kenshin at Todai-ji Temple living in Tonan-in of the temple after accepting the precepts, and also Dharmalogy of the Hosso Study (The Dharama-Charactersitics Sect of Buddhism).
  124. He studied the literature such as the Tibetan Tripitaka, Mahayana Buddhism scriptures, and others.
  125. He studied the medicine under Philip Franz von Siebold and Koan OGATA.
  126. He studied the method of carving Tensho-style Chinese characters under Shikin KATSU, and was especially good at practicing the carving method.
  127. He studied the secret art of eternal youth and longevity from Tao Hong-jing in Maoshan and obtained 'Sengyo (Taoist bible).'
  128. He studied the style of poetry in "Kokinwakashu" under Taneie KONOE.
  129. He studied the theory of determinants and resultants.
  130. He studied the three treatises under Wenji in Yangzhou, esoteric Buddhism and Daigen Suiho (esoteric Buddhist rituals to pray for the defeat enemies and traitors as well as the security of the nation) under Bunsai before returning to Japan in the year 839.
  131. He studied together with AKIYAMA later when he moved to Tokyo.
  132. He studied under Baigan ISHIDA and learned Chinese-style poem from Soro RYU, kobun (ancient script) from Hakku OKADA, Chinese from Ryu Tonan in Nagasaki and koto (a long Japanese zither with thirteen strings) from 安子貫 in Kyoto.
  133. He studied under Chikkyo ONO, and dropped out of the Japanese-style painting department of Kyoto City University of Arts in 1952.
  134. He studied under Daikakuin Nikkei, who was Kanju (the chief priest) of Honno-ji Temple, and also under Shinkoin Nichiyo, who was not only the Noge (the president) of Okamedani Danrin (Okamedani Academy of Buddhism), but also the chief priest of Awaji Ryusen-ji Temple.
  135. He studied under Ensho and received tsujukai (a religious precept for both Mahayana and Hinayana Buddhism) from Ensho in Kaidan-in at Todai-ji Temple.
  136. He studied under FUJIWARA no Nagato, and had friendships with OE no Yoshitoki, MINAMOTO no Michinari, and so on.
  137. He studied under Fuyo KO in Kyoto and learned Kotai school (one of the seal-engraving schools) tenkoku (seal-engraving).
  138. He studied under Genpo MITSUKURI and Shindo TSUBOI, and studied mining technology in Nagasaki.
  139. He studied under Gien.
  140. He studied under Goun NISHIMURA.
  141. He studied under Hiroshi SOWA (Noh actor of the Ko school of kotsuzumi-kata, Living National Treasure) and Masahiro SOWA (Noh actor of the Ko school of kotsuzumi-kata).
  142. He studied under Honen for 21 years until the demise of Honen.
  143. He studied under Ichiro, and received kago (title as an expert in flower arrangement) Godaibo.
  144. He studied under Ikusaburo, his father and Iwao KONGO familyhead.
  145. He studied under Jien and Genri and resided in Shoren-in Temple.
  146. He studied under Jikun (also known as Jikin) in Todai-ji Temple.
  147. He studied under Jinsai ITO in Kyoto and opened a private school in Edo.
  148. He studied under KOSE no Fumio.
  149. He studied under Kakumyo KOHO and accompanied his visit to Kakushin MUHON in Kii Province.
  150. He studied under Kazuzo KANEYAMA in 1860, and Shoyo MASAKI in 1861.
  151. He studied under Keikai (慶海), Jitsui (実伊) and Ryokan (良寛) of Kofuku-ji Temple.
  152. He studied under Kenji MIZOGUCHI and worked as an assistant director before making his debut as a director in "Bakeneko Goyoda" (Official Business of Monster Cat).
  153. He studied under Kenzo KONDO.
  154. He studied under Kigin KITAMURA, also mastered Haikai (Seventeen-syllable verse) and Japanese studies.
  155. He studied under Kinetaro ITO (later, Kinetaro), the school manager, while also working with Tainoshin SHINOHARA at the Kanagawa Magistrate's office (also where Jibu'uemon KUBOTA worked) on security for Yokohama City's Enclave for foreign residents.
  156. He studied under Kitaro NISHIDA.
  157. He studied under Kokaku, of the Sugyu school in Mt. Hiei, and became a priest, and studied Esoteric Buddhism under Joen.
  158. He studied under Kunisada since he was a child and continued his study under Kunisada the second after Kunisada's death.
  159. He studied under Kuniyoshi UTAGAWA, and Kyosai KAWANABE was one of his fellow pupils.
  160. He studied under Kyokaku of Myoho-in Temple and succeeded to Bukko-ji Temple, and later inclined to Rennyo of Hongan-ji Temple after his father Shozen died.
  161. He studied under Kyujin YAMAMOTO.
  162. He studied under Masazumi KAMOCHI and fraternized with fellow pupil Zuizan TAKECHI under the sonno joi (revere the emperor, expel the barbarians) doctrine.
  163. He studied under Matarokuro ISSO, the twelfth.
  164. He studied under Miki KATO, a scholar of Japanese classics who belonged to the school of KAMO no Mabuchi.
  165. He studied under Mokuo Myokai in Rinsen-ji Temple in Kyoto, and entered into the priesthood.
  166. He studied under Mongaku, cooperated with Mongaku in restoring Jingo-ji Temple and strove for the management of Jingo-ji Temple after Mongaku's death.
  167. He studied under Mugakusogen.
  168. He studied under Muso Soseki.
  169. He studied under Myoun of Keifuku-ji Temple and then Musai Ryoha of Keitoku-ji Temple on Mt. Taihaku, the latter of whom was the master of Eisai.
  170. He studied under Professor Hoffmann and others at Universit?t Leipzig.
  171. He studied under Rankei doryu in Kencho-ji Temple.
  172. He studied under SEN no Rikyu, and as one of Rikyu's favorite pupils, is counted as one of Rikyu's 7 sages.
  173. He studied under Sadamoto NONOMIYA and Yukikazu YOSHIMI.
  174. He studied under Saicho, the founder of the Tendai sect of Japan, and learned 'Makashikan' (Mahayana Practice of Cessation and Contemplation) under Gishin.
  175. He studied under Sanshi KISE and Choryu SHIMOKOBE at first, and then received instruction in "Manyoshu (Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves)" under Keichu.
  176. He studied under Seian TATEBE, a doctor from the same hometown, and showed his talent for medical science and language when he was young.
  177. He studied under Shigen JIKUSAN (hoshi, or a successor of principle to Egyo HAKUUN, the fourth head priest of Tofuku-ji Temple) who founded the Susei-ji Temple in Kanayamura, Neigun, Ecchu Province (Tera machi, Toyama Prefecture).
  178. He studied under Shinbutsu, a disciple of Shinran who was a founder of Jodo Shinshu, and later became Shinran's direct disciple and changed his name to Kenchi.
  179. He studied under Shinga, Kukai's biological brother.
  180. He studied under Shucho HIGASHIYAMA of Butsunichi-an, Engaku-ji Temple, Kamakura, succeeded Shucho HIGASHIYAMA's teachings and became zendo shuso (a leader of Buddhist monks engaged in the ascetic practices of Zen Sect) of Engaku-ji Temple in 1783.
  181. He studied under Shuho Myocho.
  182. He studied under Shune, and became a great poet.
  183. He studied under Shunsui Miyagawa.
  184. He studied under Soban SHUKUEI of Unchoin Temple.
  185. He studied under Sokudo at Daisho-ji Temple in Numazu.
  186. He studied under Somei YUKI.
  187. He studied under Sonkei, the kaisan (founder of a temple and the first chief priest) of Shinkomyo-ji Temple in Mikawa Province and became a priest, then studied religious doctrines from Ryogyo.
  188. He studied under Taigaku Shusu of Tenryu-ji Temple in Kyoto and continued the espousal of his doctrine.
  189. He studied under Takeyuki NISHIDA from 1900 and Sekka KAMISAKA in 1902.
  190. He studied under Tsukuba ISHIJIMA.
  191. He studied under Tsunenobu KANO and gave painting lessons to Tsunenobu's grandson Hisanobu KANO.
  192. He studied under a Chinese Ritsu sect monk Ganjin, came to Japan with him in 754, and was ordained as a Buddhist priest by receiving the commandments of Buddhism at the ordination hall of Todaij Temple.
  193. He studied under a study group of HIRATA.
  194. He studied under famous people such as Kenkichi HARA, Minoru SHIBUYA, Noboru NAKAMURA, and he directed the movie, "Izu no Enkashi" (street performer of pop songs in Izu) (main actor was Keiji SADA) for the first time while his position was still assistant director in 1952.
  195. He studied under his father Kahei SASAKI the third, learned the techniques and acquired the knowledge on his own, and became involved in renovation and preservation of numerous national treasures and important cultural heritages throughout the nation.
  196. He studied under his father Kansai as well as from Jussai HAYASHI and Ritsuzan SHIBANO, and in terms of Japanese calligraphy he traveled to Nagasaki to learn penmanship studying under a Qing master named HU Zhaoxin (Choshin KO in Japanese, written as "胡兆新").
  197. He studied under his father Takashi YAMAMOTO (a Noh actor and Otsuzumi-kata [a knee-drum player] of the Okura school) and Tadao KAMEI (a Noh actor, a knee-drum player of a deputy head of Kadono school, and a living national treasure).
  198. He studied under his father Tameshiro TOMOE and the 14th head family of Kita school Roppeita KITA.
  199. He studied under his father and he played his first role at the age of five as a hanami-koji (a child who go to see the cherry blossoms viewing with the main character, Ushiwakamaru) in the play, "Kurama Tengu."
  200. He studied under his father, Kasetsu KANZE, Roppeita KITA, Minoru KITA and Tokuzo GOTO.
  201. He studied under his father, Minoru KITA, who was the 15th head of Kita-ryu school, and Roppeita Noshin KITA, who was the 14th head.
  202. He studied under his father, Takashi KAWAMURA, Tetsunojo KANZE (the eighth), and Tetsunojo KANZE (the ninth).
  203. He studied under his father, grandfather and great grandfather (Sensaku SHIGEYAMA, the Third), and debuted on the performance of 'I-ro-ha' (ABC) at the age of four.
  204. He studied under his father.
  205. He studied under his grandfather Manzo NOMURA, the sixth and his uncle Man NOMURA, the first (name after retirement of Manzo NOMURA, the seventh).
  206. He studied under his grandfather Sanetaka SANJONISHI and inherited secret teachings of "Tale of Genji" from him.
  207. He studied under kengyo ICHIZAN and became a kengyo in 1806.
  208. He studied under kengyo URASAKI.
  209. He studied under lawyer Oliver Wendell Holmes (later a professor of Harvard university and the Supreme Court justice of Massachusetts State, then the Associate Justice) and also worked for study in a law firm run jointly by Henry Swift and Russell Clay.
  210. He studied under the first Japanese mathematician, Shigeyoshi MORI.
  211. He studied under the guidance of Bakusen TSUCHIDA.
  212. He studied under the guidance of Seiho TAKEUCHI.
  213. He studied vaccination, which was the front line of research at the time, and he forged a friendship with Koan OGATA, a Dutch studies scholar at Osaka Tekijuku.
  214. He studied various painting styles since he thought that it was insufficient to study only the ukiyoe painting.
  215. He studied very hard and graduated 2nd in his class from Cornell Medical School, obtaining a doctoral degree in the medical sciences and a medical license.
  216. He studied volume 4 of "Shakumakaenron" at the age of 17, "Kusharon" (sutra of the Kusha sect) at the age of 19, and "Daijokishinron" (the Awakening of Faith in Mahayana) at the age of 20.
  217. He studied waka (=tanka; a traditional Japanese poem of thirty-one syllables) under Tamehide REIZEI and renga under Yoshimoto NIJO, serving Shogun Yoshimitsu ASHIKAGA as Doboshu (the shogun's attendants in charge of entertainment) as a waka and renga poet and went to Satsuma Province twice as an envoy.
  218. He studied waka poetry under Tamemasa REIZEI and Ryoshun IMAGAWA (Sadayo).
  219. He studied waka poetry with Saneoka MUSHANOKOJI, and thoroughly mastered the esoteric secrets of the Nijo family.
  220. He studied with Kenkado KIMURA there.
  221. He studied with SUGAWARA no Fumitoki, Monjo hakase (professor of literature) and was promoted from monjosho (student of literary studies in the Imperial University) to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  222. He studied with Sekien TORIYAMA, creating the portraits of Kabuki-actors in hosoban (a narrow print size, about 33 cm by 15 cm) and picture books.
  223. He studied with Sekishu under Sosen KUWAYAMA
  224. He studied with Soseki NATSUME, Kumagusu MINAKATA, and Shiki MASAOKA among others at the University Preparatory School (Yobimon).
  225. He studied with TACHIBANA no Masamichi and YOSHISHIGE no Yasutane (later Yasutane built chitei (an arbor by a lake) near the residence of Imperial Prince, Chigusa dono), and closely interacted with OE no Masahira, FUJIWARA no Tameyori, and FUJIWARA no Tametoki brothers (uncle and father of Murasaki shikibu).
  226. He studied with the Hosso sect at Abe-dera Temple in Sakurai (in Nara Prefecture), and later he studied with the Hirosawa Lineage of Tomitsu (Shingon sect's esoteric teaching) under Gyonin in Mt. Yoshino, Yamato Province, and he studied with the Kongooin Lineage as well.
  227. He studies 'Onmyodo' (way of Yin and Yang; occult divination system based on the Taoist theory of the five elements) from the shintohism perspective, and presented a new point at issue by verifying any connection with obvious phenomena in Japanese history successively.
  228. He stumbles as his foot is caught in the mud.
  229. He stylishly dressed wearing a beret and overalls with many pockets in which he put in Nanatsu-dogu (suite of required tools) and ran around the studio.
  230. He subdued the ISHIKAWA family of the KAWACHI-Genji-line along with MINAMOTO no Suesada.
  231. He subdued this incident with help of MINAMOTO no Yoshiie who was assigned to Shimotsuke no kuni no kami (the governor of Shimotsuke Province) by an imperial order.
  232. He submitted 'Ichigo Karakusamon kaki' (Flower vase with strawberries and scrolling arabesque design) to the Paris World Exposition (1925) ('Art Deco Expo') of the same year and won a bronze medal.
  233. He submitted 'Ukechi no Yoru' (Night in Ukechi) (wood-block printing) to the first exhibition of the Japan Print Association.
  234. He submitted 'the Petition for establishment of Hakuaisha (an organization founded in Seinan War and aimed for aids of the wounded, later Japanese Red Cross Society)' based on the knowledge of the Red Cross Society, which aid wounded soldiers regardless of enemies and allies, to the government but this was not permitted.
  235. He submitted Myobo kanmon (reports to the Imperial Court by scholars of the law) concerning how to deal with the persons who surrendered to Retired Emperor Sutoku's side after the Hogen War (according to "Heihanki" (Diary of TAIRA no Nobunori).
  236. He submitted a paper that said Korean political situation was so hard to predict and very complicated that there was no chance to conclude the treaty unless Tsushima Domain took charge of.
  237. He submitted a petition to Katamori MATSUDAIRA, who was the head of the Aizu domain in the Kyoto Shugo Shoku post (the deputy of Kyoto), such that they could call themselves the 'Mibu Roshigumi' and start their own activities under the control of the Kyoto Shugo Shoku.
  238. He submitted a petition together with other members, who had a backlash toward Isami KONDO, such as Shinpachi NAGAKURA and Sanosuke HARADA.
  239. He submitted a proposal for the foundation of the Kaikeikensain (Board of Audit) in 1880.
  240. He submitted a proposal to abolish the use of kanji (Chinese characters) to Yoshinobu TOKUGAWA, the Seitaishogun (commander-in-chief of the expeditionary force against the barbarians, great, unifying leader).
  241. He submitted a thesis "Interaction of the elementary particle", predicting the existence of meson.
  242. He submitted his verses in the court poetry contest in 960.
  243. He submitted his verses on the occasion of Daijoe (the Ceremony of Imperial Accession) for Emperors Reizei and Enyu and his private anthology was asked for by Emperors Enyu and Kazan.
  244. He submitted the change of kabane from Muraji to Ason, and was granted the kabane of Sugano no Ason.
  245. He submitted the government a petition about reclamation of Hokkaido, proposing to engage the prisoners of the Abashiri prison in reclamation and road construction works.
  246. He subsequently appeared in numerous movies including "Munakata kyodai" (Munakata sisters) directed by Yasujiro OZU in 1950, for which Yamamura won the first Blue Ribbon Award as the best actor.
  247. He subsequently appointed Inishiki no Mikoto to protect the sacred treasures of Isonokami-jingu Shrine.
  248. He subsequently approached Katsuie SHIBATA, who stood in opposition to Hideyoshi, and acted as go-between in the wedding of Katsuie and Oichi no Kata, his aunt.
  249. He subsequently assumed the name 'Baijaku,' which was the name his great-grandfather adopted.
  250. He subsequently assumed the position of the Master (sojo) of the Kittenisha Manku group in 1448 and played a leading part in the renga circle.
  251. He subsequently became a genro (elder statesman) before becoming a Privy Councilor, Minister of Communication, and the chairman of Privy Council (Japan).
  252. He subsequently became a pupil of the Ito Hokushin-ittoryu fencing school in Saga-cho, Fukagawa (Koto Ward) where his ability was recognized by school master Seiichi ITO who adopted him and named him Taizo ITO.
  253. He subsequently became the Nakatsukasa-kyo (Minister of the Ministry of Central Affairs), but he died during his term of service.
  254. He subsequently continued to advance his career, with his fuko (a vassal household allotted to courtier, shrines and temples) being increased by 200 households in 704 and 714.
  255. He subsequently fought with Yoshizumi and his supporters for the position of Shogun but since Yoshizumi died from disease immediately before the Battle of Mt. Funaokayama in August 1511, resulting in Yoshitada's victory, Yoshitane (Yoshitada's new name) was able to secure his position as the Shogun.
  256. He subsequently joined Hideyoshi's army in the battles in Kyushu and Odawara, and fought overseas to conquer Korea in the Bunroku War.
  257. He subsequently joined the army of Hideyoshi HASHIBA (later Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI) during the attack on Harima Province and the army of Mitsuhide AKECHI during the attack on Tanba Province, making a successful career as a war leader despite his small stipend of 300 koku.
  258. He subsequently made a name for himself as an actor of female roles in Kyoto, and took the name Kikugoro ONOE (I).
  259. He subsequently served as the governor of Tango Province and Bizen Province.
  260. He subsequently served with distinction in the Battle of Suriagehara, Kasai-Osaki Ikki Uprisings, and the Bunroku-Keicho War.
  261. He subsequently submitted a letter of his opinion to Shungaku MATSUDAIRA (Leader of Political Affairs of the Tokugawa Shogunate) regarding the Three Urgent Measures to be Taken (1. Carrying out joi, 2. Issuing amnesty, 3. Educating talented persons of the nation.)
  262. He subsequently was adopted by Koshiro MATSUMOTO (I) and took the name Koshiro MATSUMOTO (II).
  263. He subsequently went on to use multiple sobriquets and pen names.
  264. He subsequently worked as a local official, which involved moves to several places, among them Kanagawa Prefecture, Toyama City in Toyama Prefecture, and Taketa City in Oita Prefecture; accordingly, soon after his birth, Taki also had to go from place to place.
  265. He succeeded Kajii Monzeki Temple (Sanzen-in Temple) after Cloistered Imperial Prince Shokai.
  266. He succeeded Otomaro as the Seii taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians") and directed the government army, defeating the Ezo army in 801.
  267. He succeeded Takayuki KYOGOKU when Takayuki died in 1723.
  268. He succeeded Yoshinobu as Imperial Prince Takahito's Togu-no-daibu (Master of the Crown Prince's Quarters), and when the Imperial Prince ascended the throne as Emperor Gosanjo, Yoshinaga exercised influence as the Emperor's close advisor.
  269. He succeeded Yoshitsugu MIURA, the previous lord, as the lord of the Katsuyama Domain on December 17, 1848 after Yoshitsugu's retirement.
  270. He succeeded an Office of Waka from his grandfather's generation and kept it.
  271. He succeeded as a painter in Kyoto, while acting as the patriot who interacted with ronin (masterless samurai) of Sonno Joi ha (supporters of the doctrine of restoring the emperor and expelling the barbarians.)
  272. He succeeded as a trusted vassal of imperial palace which served closely to the Cloistered Emperor Shirakawa just like his father, Akisue.
  273. He succeeded as family head and became the lord of Domain after Tadakuni MATSUDAIRA (Musashino Province, Oshi Hanshu) in 1863.
  274. He succeeded as family head in 1858.
  275. He succeeded as family head in 1860.
  276. He succeeded as head of the Kyosen family, which Shoan originated.
  277. He succeeded as the head of family when his father retired.
  278. He succeeded as the head of the family after the passing of his father.
  279. He succeeded as the head of the family because his elder brother was sickly.
  280. He succeeded as the head of the family in times that the popularity of tea ceremony was on the decline.
  281. He succeeded as the head of the family, but died young.
  282. He succeeded by playing 'Yatsushigoto' (a scene with a scion falling), 'Nuregoto' (a love scene) and 'Kudokigoto' (a scene with a man making a pass at a woman).
  283. He succeeded his deceased father as the head of his family in 1583.
  284. He succeeded his father as the 14th head of Watanabe family in 1799 and became a disciple of Jingikan (department of worship), the Shirakawa-hakuo family in 1807.
  285. He succeeded his father at the age of forty-seven.
  286. He succeeded his father due to his father's retirement, on July 29, 1667.
  287. He succeeded his father upon his death in 1806.
  288. He succeeded his father upon his death in 1815.
  289. He succeeded his father when he was thirteen, and became a purveyor to the three Sen Houses, but died young at the age of forty.
  290. He succeeded his father, Tamuramaro, and engaged in the management of Tohoku, but he died young.
  291. He succeeded his father, who had a certain political power, as an aide of FUJIWARA no Michinaga, and successively filled the posts of Governor of Sanuki Province, Governor of Bicchu Province, and Ushosho (Minor Captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards), etc.
  292. He succeeded his grandfather Yoshinobu KIRA on November 8, 1516, because his father Yoshimoto had passed away prior to that year without taking over as the head of the family.
  293. He succeeded his uncle, Sadayori NOMIYA, and changed his name to Sadamoto.
  294. He succeeded in 1729 when his father died, but he also died at age 17 in February 28, 1730.
  295. He succeeded in a coup to dismiss Yoriyuki and get the position of Kanrei.
  296. He succeeded in a variety of fields including big literary works such as "Sasameyuki," "Ohan," "Rokumeikan" (a play), "Kofuku" (Happiness) (the film in 1981) adapted from a foreign mystery, a period drama "Chushingura forty seven assassins," "Doraheita," and "Ka chan" (Mother).
  297. He succeeded in abolishing chigaihoken (exterritoriality), which was an unequal treaty which existed since the end of the Edo period.
  298. He succeeded in deciphering Records of Ancient Matters "Kojiki", which was then undecipherable, and wrote Commentaries on Kojiki "Kojikiden".
  299. He succeeded in entering Satsuma under Shinpachi MURATA's guidance, however, since the domain leader Hisamitsu SHIMAZU disliked ronin and Ichizo OKUBO, a member of Seichugumi Organization, also had a policy against ronin, Kuniomi was eventually forced to leave.
  300. He succeeded in establishing so-called Utamai Noh by introducing the elements of utamai in Dengaku Noh into Sarugaku Noh, which had been performed mainly in a mimicry form.
  301. He succeeded in estranging Motonaga and Rokuro (Harumoto) by conspiring with Masanaga to slander Motonaga against Rokuro (Harumoto).
  302. He succeeded in loading the timbers by stoping the plug at low tide and bailing out water.
  303. He succeeded in maintaining this system by adopting a monetary economy and commodity markets which gradually developed after the mid-Kamakura period; this success also gave rise to many imitators and followers such as Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI and Ujisato GAMO.
  304. He succeeded in making glass, inventing an earthquake prediction device, and furthermore, he planned to introduce vaccination for Cowpox virus.
  305. He succeeded in making many people Buddhists, including the Retired Emperor Gotoba, other emperors, court nobles and warriors.
  306. He succeeded in restructuring bakufu finances through the establishment of the buichisenseido (tax system developed by the Muromachi bakufu), thereby winning the confidence of the Ashikaga shogunate
  307. He succeeded in the foundation of Nitta no sho to make FUJIWARA no Tadamasa of the Taira family group as the ryoke (virtual proprietor of manor) and called himself Nitta shokan (an officer governing shoen [manor]).
  308. He succeeded in the secret teachings of Kagura (a musical dance) and koto (a long Japanese zither with 13 strings) from his father and formed the basis for the Matsunoki family (also known as the Nakamikado family) to blossom as the family of Gakudo (school of Japanese Court Music).
  309. He succeeded late for a Kajin poet, but he participated in "Roppyakuban utaawase" (The Poetry Match in 600 Rounds) and "Shoji Hyakushu" (Hundred-Poem Sequence of the Shoji Era) and gained a reputation as a Kajin poet standing on equal ground with FUJIWARA no Teika (Sadaie).
  310. He succeeded the "Tobei" name from his father at age 9, and at 17, he inherited the position of toshiyoriwaki.
  311. He succeeded the Hayashi family (Igo) the 13th, but returned to the Honinbo family to oppose to Hoensha, succeeded Honinbo the 17th in the 5th dan (qualification of rank) level and extinguished the Hayashi family.
  312. He succeeded the Kanze Kyukokai Party from his adoptive father to act based on Yarai Nohgaku-do Theater.
  313. He succeeded the Miyake after his father died in 1891.
  314. He succeeded the Odani school of swordplay, a school that belonged to Jikishinkage-ryu style swordplay from Nobutomo ODANI.
  315. He succeeded the Ozu family upon the death of his elder brother.
  316. He succeeded the family business at the age of 33.
  317. He succeeded the family estate at the age of 18 and dedicated himself to family business, but he retired to become a priest at the age of 36 and dedicated himself to writing after that.
  318. He succeeded the family estate on July 22, 1880.
  319. He succeeded the family headship after Ujimune's retirement and became the fourth lord of the domain on November 13, 1670.
  320. He succeeded the family headship and became the sixth lord of the Sasayama Domain on March 29, 1862 after his father's retirement due to his illness.
  321. He succeeded the family name of Nomura because Kuichi, his older brother, succeeded the family name of Irie.
  322. He succeeded the heritage of Kansai Kabuki and was capable of covering a wide range of performances as an actor from tachiyaku (a leading male-role actor) to oyama (actor of female roles).
  323. He succeeded the maternal surname of Nakahira because his mother was only daughter of Nakahira family.
  324. He succeeded the name of Chodayu KATAOKA (the fourth) later.
  325. He succeeded the name of Joeki XI subsequent to his father's passing.
  326. He succeeded the name, Kichizaemon SUMITOMO as the fifteenth one.
  327. He succeeded the place of a Confucian Anyo YOKOYAMA to serve for Kagoshima Domain, and later he worked under Hisamitsu SHIMAZU as his close adviser.
  328. He succeeded the policy of Shingen, who broke up Ko So Sun Sangoku Domei (tripartite alliance of Kai, Sagami and Suruga) because of a conflict with Echigo, invaded Suruga and put the strategy to conquer westward into action.
  329. He succeeded the post of shugo of Echizen no kuni (Echizen Province), Owari no kuni (Owari Province) and Totomi no kuni (Totomi Province).
  330. He succeeded the professional name Manzaburo UMEWAKA the third, in 2001.
  331. He succeeded the professional name by being Shikan NAKAMURA's sworn younger brother.
  332. He succeeded the professional name, Mansaku, in 1950.
  333. He succeeded the teachings of Daigihosin, a monk of Shinnyo-ji Temple in Yamashiro Province, and became the chief priest of Tofuku-ji Temple in 1478 after serving at Anyo-ji Temple in Ise Province.
  334. He succeeded the teachings of Soko GESSHU.
  335. He succeeded to Enjito JITSUKAWA the Second and then he became Enjaku JITSUKAWA the Second.
  336. He succeeded to Enjito JITSUKAWA the Third and then he became Enjaku JITSUKAWA the Third.
  337. He succeeded to Kotaro NAKAMURA III in "Sanada Sandaiki" (three generations of the Sanada family) as his debut at the Shintomiza Tokyo in October, 1922.
  338. He succeeded to Manzo (万蔵 in kanji) in 1940.
  339. He succeeded to Manzo (万造 in kanji) NOMURA, the sixth and gave 'Hanago'(Visiting Hanago) in 1923.
  340. He succeeded to Ryoan-ji Temple after Giten died, and served as the chief priest of Myoshin-ji Temple, Kaisei-ji Temple in Settsu Province, Kannon-ji Temple in Kawachi Province, Zuisen-ji Temple in Owari Province and Ryoko-ji Temple in Tanba Province before assuming the position of chief priest of Daitoku-ji Temple in Kyoto in 1462.
  341. He succeeded to Shoren-in Temple. (1555)
  342. He succeeded to Utaemon NAKAMURA VI in the Kabuki-za Theater reconstructed in 1951.
  343. He succeeded to be Kunisada the third in 1889.
  344. He succeeded to his father at the age of twenty-seven.
  345. He succeeded to his father's position and served as a merchant holding the Tokugawa family's warrant.
  346. He succeeded to his father's position due to his father's death in 1808.
  347. He succeeded to jibutsu-do hall (the nobility's private Buddha statue hall) of Jimyo-in Temple (founded by his grandfather, FUJIWARA no Motoyori) from his father, Michimoto.
  348. He succeeded to the Aoyama family.
  349. He succeeded to the Imperial Throne at the age of nine after Emperor Seiwa abdicated and passed the position to him.
  350. He succeeded to the Kichinojo UMEWAKA family.
  351. He succeeded to the Kobayakawa clan.
  352. He succeeded to the Nanbata clan because his mother, the wife of Omori Shikibu no taifu (Senior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Ceremonial) was a daughter of Norishige NANBATA.
  353. He succeeded to the Shimizu Tokugawa family in 1867.
  354. He succeeded to the Shimizu Tokugawa family.
  355. He succeeded to the Takamatsu-no-miya in 1667, and changed the Miyago (reigning name) to Arisugawa-no-miya in 1672.
  356. He succeeded to the Tokugawa Shogun Family on Aug. 20 but he continued to refuse to assume his position as the Shogun.
  357. He succeeded to the chief priest of Ninna-ji Temple and was adopted by Emperor Ninko in 1848.
  358. He succeeded to the estate of the Mori family at the age of 27.
  359. He succeeded to the family after his father Tokiyoshi died in 1389.
  360. He succeeded to the family after the forth family head of the Arisugawanomiya, Imperial Prince Arisugawanomiya Tadahito died without having any children in 1716.
  361. He succeeded to the family and became the head in 1559, when his father Yoshikata retired.
  362. He succeeded to the family head as his father died in 1805.
  363. He succeeded to the family head due to his foster father's death in 1654.
  364. He succeeded to the family head of the line of MINAMOTO no Mitsusue, Seiwa-Genji.
  365. He succeeded to the family name, Kanbe in 1790.
  366. He succeeded to the head of the Owari Tokugawa family again in 1875.
  367. He succeeded to the head of the family after his father Norimitsu's death in 1388, and became Shugo (provincial constable) of both Mikawa no kuni (Mikawa Province) and Wakasa no kuni (Wakasa Province).
  368. He succeeded to the head of the family at the age of 16, and he changed his common name to 'Shinemon.'
  369. He succeeded to the head of the school in 2006.
  370. He succeeded to the name in April 2006 and changed his name from his previous stage name Tamataro NAKAMURA the Fourth to Matsue NAKAMURA.
  371. He succeeded to the name of Kasuke SEKI the Second in June 1882, and then he succeeded to Sanjuro SEKI the Fifth in March 1907.
  372. He succeeded to the name of Kasuke SEKI the Sixth in March 1928, and he succeeded to Sanjuro the Sixth in June 1941.
  373. He succeeded to the name of Kichinojo in 2002.
  374. He succeeded to the name of Manzaburo in 1948 and became the head of the Manzaburo UMEWAKA family.
  375. He succeeded to the name of Yaozo ICHIKAWA the Sixth in January 1864, and then he succeeded to the name of Sanjuro SEKI the Fourth in March 1873.
  376. He succeeded to the name, Jakuemon NAKAMURA (the Fourth) by playing the roles such as Yukihime in "Kinkaku-ji Temple" at the Kabuki-za Theater.
  377. He succeeded to the name, Taganojo ONOE (the third) when playing the role of Iroha Chaya Oroku in "Yakudoshi" at the Shinbashi Enbujo theater in 1927.
  378. He succeeded to the name, Tomoemon OTANI (the Seventh) by playing the roles such as TAIRA no Atsumori in "Ogiya Kumagai " at the Tokyo Theatre.
  379. He succeeded to the position of family head due to his foster father Norimori's retirement in 1781.
  380. He succeeded to the position of family head of the Iwamura domain due to his foster father's retirement in April, 1781.
  381. He succeeded to the post after his father's death in 1722 since his elder brother Yasusada died earlier.
  382. He succeeded to the seventh Kikunojo SEGAWA in May 2001.
  383. He succeeded to the stage name at the age of 26, and also succeeded to his father's position as a town official.
  384. He succeeded to the status of the lord of Otaki Domain in 1862, after marring into the family of former lord of the domain, Masatomo.
  385. He succeeded to the teachings from Gishin of Qinglongsi Temple.
  386. He succeeded to the throne after Emperor Gokashiwabara died on April 29, 1526.
  387. He succeeded to the throne in 1221 for Emperor Juntoku to prepare for the Jokyu Disturbance.
  388. He succeeded to the throne in the second volume of 'Wakana,' and became Kinjo no Mikado.
  389. He succeeded to the throne on May 23, 1770.
  390. He succeeded to the throne on May 30, 823.
  391. He succeeded to the throne when he was five, after the death of his father, the Emperor Horikawa.
  392. He succeeded to this name in 1988.
  393. He succeeded with the first manned balloon flight in Japan in the same year.
  394. He succeeds in cutting off Moronao's head.
  395. He successfully advanced his career to be posted as gon chunagon (Provisional Middle Counselor), Chunagon (vice-councilor of state), and Junii (Junior Second Rank) dainagon (Major Counselor).
  396. He successfully created seika (ceramics with blue patterns on white backgrounds) and white porcelain also.
  397. He successfully had the son of his sister made Crown Prince by taking advantage of the Jowa no Hen (Jowa Conspiracy), and when the Crown Prince became Emperor Montoku, he controlled the Imperial government and attained the position of Daijo-daijin (Grand Minister of State).
  398. He successfully negotiated to invite Sumimoto HOSOKAWA from the Hosokawa family of Awa Province in 1503 under the order of Masamoto.
  399. He successfully produced lacquerware for daily use which does not contain synthetic petroleum material such as polyurethane, using specially refined natural lacquer called 'MR lacquer.'
  400. He successfully took hold of most of the former territory of the Ouchi clan except Kyushu in the Conquest of Bocho.
  401. He successively assumed the governmental and official posts such as Privy Councilor, President of the Japanese Red Cross Society.
  402. He successively filled various local government posts such as Kozuke no kuni Gon no Daijo (Acting Senior Secretary of Kozuke Province) and Kazusa no kuni Gon no Daijo (Acting Senior Secretary of Kazusa Province), and ended as Shorokuinojo (Senior Sixth Rank, Upper Grade), Jibu shojo (Junior Secretary of the Ministry of Civil Administration).
  403. He successively held Danjodai (the Censors) and Konoe-fu (the Palace Guards) posts when he was a young man.
  404. He successively held Omi no kuni Kokushi (Provincial Governor of Omi Province), Konoe no shosho (Minor Captain of the Palace Guards), and Sama no kami (Captain of Samaryo, Left Division of Bureau of Horses), and then served as a close retainer of Emperor Heizei.
  405. He successively held important posts in Kofuku-ji Temple, such as gon-jishu (vice-director of the temple), jishu (director of the temple), and joza (supervisor of the temple), and after the death of Kakujo, Betto (head priest of the temple), he assumed jimu (operation of the temple).
  406. He successively held monjosho (a student of literary studies in the Imperial University) and then served as Kunai shojo (Junior Secretary of the Sovereign's Household), Kurodo (Chamberlain), and Shikibu taijo (Senior Secretary of the Ministry of Ceremonial).
  407. He successively held monjosho (student of literary studies in the Imperial University), naiki (secretary of the Ministry of Central Affairs), Kurodo (Chamberlain), Shikibu no jo (the third officer of personnel department), and kokushi (provincial governors) of various provinces (such as Totomi Province and Mino Province).
  408. He successively held positions as the Minister of Communications, the Minister of Home Affairs (Japan), and the Minister of Foreign Affairs (Japan).
  409. He successively held positions like a government advising officer, President of the Franco-Japanese Society, and President of the association of reservists.
  410. He successively held positions such as Gon-ji and Hayato no sho, and on June 7, 1305, he was appointed to Jushiinoge (Junior Forth Rank, Lower Grade) (according to the "Sanemikyoki").
  411. He successively held positions such as Sessho (Regent) Kanpaku (Imperial Regent), Daijo-daijin (Grand Minister of State) and Toshi choja (head of the Fujiwara clan).
  412. He successively held posts of Zuryo (the head of the provincial governors) of Izumo, Mikawa, Tango, and Tanba Provinces, and was governmental official responsible for practical works after he was appointed to the court rank of Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) in 1108.
  413. He successively held posts such as Minbusho (Ministry of Popular Affairs), Benkan (Secretary), and Daigaku no kami (Director of the Bureau of Education).
  414. He successively held posts such as Reki hakase (master of reki (calendar)), Tenmon hakase (master of tenmon (astronomy)), and Kazue no kami (the head of budget bureau), and one theory has it that he successively held the post of Onmyo no jo (secretary of Onmyoryo (Bureau of Divination)) although this is unlikely.
  415. He successively held the following posts; the commander of the 1st Submarine Squadron and the captain of the No.4 Submarine of this squadron; the staff officer of the Imperial Japanese Naval 1st Fleet; the captain of Destroyer "Harukaze," (the first generation type) the division officer on Cruiser "Tsushima." (the protective cruiser class)
  416. He successively held the position of Assistant governor of Musashi Province.
  417. He successively held the position of Danjo Dai (Minister of justice), Gyobu no taifu (assistant to Minister of court) and Kyoshiki (Minister of the judiciary).
  418. He successively held the position of kokushi (provincial governors) of Musashi Province, Shinano Province, Chikuzen Province, Tsushima Province, Iyo Province, and finally he was promoted to Chinju-fu shogun (Commander-in-Chief of the Defense of the North).
  419. He successively held the position of kokushi (provincial governors) of various Provinces such as Mutsu Province, Echizen Province, Noto Province, or Hitachi no suke (Assistant Governor of Hitachi Province).
  420. He successively held the positions of Zuryo in Tajima, Iyo and Settsu Provinces (970).
  421. He successively held the post of Risshi (the third rank of priest following Sojo and Sozu), Shosozu (junior secondary prelate), and Daisozu (the upper Buddhist priests in the second highest position), then became the first Kai-wajo (the supreme priest to impart precepts) of the Kaidan-in in 763.
  422. He successively held the post of kokushi (provincial governors) of Mutsu and Ise Provinces.
  423. He successively held the posts of Dainaiki (Senior Secretary of the Ministry of Central Affairs), Daigaku no kami (Director of the Bureau of Education), Togu gakushi (Teacher of the Classics to the Crown Prince), and Kunaikyo (Minister of the Sovereign's Household).
  424. He successively held the posts of Sogo (the priestly administrative post) and Gon Daisozu (the provisional highest grade that can be held by one who has reached the second highest rank in the hierarchy of Buddhist priests), then he was appointed as Betto (the head priest) of Todai-ji Temple in 1260.
  425. He successively held the posts of naidaijin (inner minister, 1491 to 1497), udaijin (minister of the right, 1497), and Kanpaku (chief adviser to the Emperor, July to November, 1497).
  426. He successively held the posts such as, Zuryo (the head of the provincial governors) of various countries and Chinju-fu shogun (Commander-in-Chief of the Defense of the North).
  427. He successively held various important posts such as the councilor at the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce (Japan).
  428. He successively held various posts of Bitchu no kami (Governor of Bitchu Province) and Bizen no kuni Gon no kami (Provisional Governor of Bizen Province) and was greatly admired for his achievements.
  429. He successively held various posts of Minbusho shojo (Junior Secretary of the Ministry of Popular Affairs), Hyobusho shojo (Junior Secretary of the Ministry of War), Shikibusho shojo (Junior Secretary of the Ministry of Ceremonial).
  430. He successively held various posts such as Gon Chunagon (a provisional vice-councilor of state), Gon Dainagon (a provisional major counselor), Jingutenso (shrine messenger to Emperor) and Toka no sechie Geben [a kugyo who supervised many matters outside Jomei Gate at Toka no sechie (Imperial Court Ceremony]).
  431. He successively held various posts such as Gon Dainagon (provisional major counselor), Toka no sechie Geben (a kugyo who supervised many matters outside Jomei Gate at Toka no sechie (Imperial Court Ceremony)), and Knoefu (the Headquarters of the Inner Palace Guards).
  432. He successively held various posts such as Konoefu, Toka no sechie Geben (a kugyo who supervised many matters outside Jomei Gate at Toka no sechie [Imperial Court Ceremony]), Chunagon (middle counselor), and Gon Dainagon, and in 1792, he took the posts of Ukone no daisho (Major Captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards) and Meryo (the section taking care of imperial horses).
  433. He successively held various posts such as Sahyoe no gon no suke (Provisional Assistant Master of the Left Military Guard), Sangi (councillor), Toka no sechie Geben (a kugyo who supervised many matters outside Jomei Gate at Toka no sechie [Imperial Court Ceremony]), and Gon Chunagon (a provisional vice-councilor of state), then he served as Gon Dainagon (provisional major counselor) in 1731.
  434. He successively served Hidekatsu HASHIBA, Hidenaga HASHIBA, and Ujisato GAMO, and finally, employed by Nagayoshi MORI, who was an older brother of Naritoshi he killed, in recognition of his bravery.
  435. He successively served as Gaimu taijo (Senior Secretary of the Foreign Ministry), Envoy Extraordinary to the Qing Dynasty, minister-counselor to the Russian Empire, chairman of Japan's Genroin (Chamber of Elders), a member of Japan's Privy Council, and Imperial Court Councilor; subsequently, he was awarded the rank of count.
  436. He successively served as Governor of Eiju (one of government general of Imperial Japanese Army) in Tokyo and Commander of Oryokuko-gun (Japanese Army), and his official rank was Marshal, General of the Army, Ikai (Court rank), Order of the Chrysanthemum, Order of the Golden Kite, Viscount.
  437. He successively served as Governor of Mutsu Province, Chief of the Bureau of Palace Storehouses, Senior Steward in the Office of the Empress's Household, Councilor, and Deputy Governor of Dazaifu in Kyushu.
  438. He successively served as Military Councilor, General Office Director of Education, Chief of Imperial Guard Division and so on, and his official rank was Army General, Ranks and Orders, the Order of the Golden Kite, Viscount.
  439. He successively served as chief of the 1st Battalion of the 50th Infantry Regiment and chief of battalion of the 29th Reserve Infantry Regiment and so on; and although he showed a brave performance in the Russo-Japanese War, he was killed in the battle for the capture of Karafuto.
  440. He successively served at Bizen Province, Konoefu (the Headquarters of the Inner Palace Guards), Bizen Province, Chunagon (vice-councilor of state), and the like, and became Genji choja (chief of the Minamoto clan) in 1556.
  441. He successively served different positions such as Great Secretary, then Shoyu (Junior Assistant Minister) of the Ministry of Home Affairs, Taifu (Vice Minister) of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce, Resident Envoy to Germany, Chief of Imperial Property Office of the Imperial Household Ministry, and Privy Councilor.
  442. He successively took the positions of the Civil Administrative General of the Governor-General of Formosa and the President of the South Manchuria Railway Company to assist Japanese intrusion into the Eurasian continent, and also contributed to developing the national railway system as chief of the Japan Railway Bureau.
  443. He successively worked as Director General of the Cabinet Legislation Bureau, the Minister of Education, and so on.
  444. He successively worked as Sakone no shosho (Minor Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards), Sakyo no gon no daibu (Provisional Master of the Eastern Capital Offices), and Kaga no kami (Governor of Kaga Province), and so on, and then became Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) Kunaikyo (Minister of the Sovereign's Household).
  445. He successively worked in different military positions such as Chosen Chusatsu Gun (former Kankoku Chusatsu Gun, army stationed in Korea from the beginning of Russo-Japanese War), the 3rd Division of Army (Japanese Army), the 6th Division of Army (Japanese Army) and so on.
  446. He successively worked in different positions including sojaban (an official in charge of the ceremonies) and Osaka jodai (the keeper of Osaka Castle).
  447. He successively worked in different positions of Kurodo (Chamberlain), Nagato no kami (deputy minister in charge of regional administration in Nagato), and Kogogushiki (the Queen-consort's Household Agency), but became a priest on July 1, 1143 and lived in Ohara (Kyoto City) in seclusion.
  448. He successively worked in different positions such as Kantototokufu (Japan's Guandong Governor-General Office), military councilor, the 3rd Shidan (division) (Japanese army) and so on.
  449. He successively worked in different positions, such as the Minister of the Navy and the Minister of Home Affairs (Japan), in the Hirobumi ITO cabinet.
  450. He suceeded his father, Shigeaki, as head of the family.
  451. He suddenly attacked the Imagawa army and killed Yoshimoto.
  452. He suddenly decamped from Kyoto in March 1341 and headed for Izumo, but was suspected of treason and chased by bakufu based on a false charge made by KO no Moronao that he committed suicide in Kageyama Mountain, Harima Province (current Himeji City, Hyogo Prefecture).
  453. He suddenly died in Kyoto while he was organizing an army to hunt down Tadafuyu ASHIKAGA, who took sides with Tadayoshi; Tadafuyu was born a son of Takauji by his concubine and was later adopted by Tadayoshi.
  454. He suddenly died on November 28, 1451.
  455. He suddenly went over to the Southern Court side in April 1383, and in 1385 he was appointed as Hizen no shugo (governor of Hizen Province) by Emperor Gokameyama of the Southern Court.
  456. He suffered a crushing defeat in the Battle of Imayama with his younger brother Chikasada being killed by Takanobu RYUZOJI after invading Hizen Province again in 1570 and had to reconcile with Takanobu in unfavorable conditions.
  457. He suffered a crushing defeat in the Battle of Shimanto, which completely ruined the Tosa Ichijo clan as Sengoku daimyo (Japanese territorial lord in the Sengoku period).
  458. He suffered extreme pain in both hands which all medical interventions had failed to cure.
  459. He suffered from 'yo' (boil) in his late years, which deprived him of his life.
  460. He suffered from a lung hemorrhage for about seven years before his death.
  461. He suffered from intra-cranial hemorrhaging and passed away in Kashihara City, Nara Prefecture on December 20, 2007.
  462. He suffered from neurosis caused by poverty and overwork.
  463. He suffered from smallpox at the age of 10.
  464. He suffered from smallpox himself in 1817 at the age of eight.
  465. He suffered from tuberculous pneumonia due to his precociousness, decadent lifestyle and the agonies of frustrated love.
  466. He suffered from typhoid fever when he was studying in France.
  467. He suffered injuries during the raid.
  468. He suffered severe diabetes due to the excess drinking in his later years.
  469. He suffers the misery of exile, being prevented from taking many servants with him and visiting the grave of his father, the Cloistered Emperor Toba.
  470. He suggested that the family books of poetics which Tameyo was so proud of were not authentic and of dubious nature.
  471. He suggests to assassinate Hideyoshi as a means to thwart the dispatching of the troops but Keijiro did not agree, so Goemon acted on his own and failed, then he was boiled to death in a cauldron.
  472. He summoned Harumasa again and advised him to succeed the Goto family after receiving the son of the proxy governor Hachirobe GOTO for adoption.
  473. He supervised Minako NARITA's comic book, 'Hana Yorimo Hana no Gotoku,' in which he himself made a cartoon drawing of a frog on the page 185 of Vol. 2 with his comment saying, 'What a poorly made drawing!'
  474. He supervised Shinsen-en Temple at the Imperial Court from 868 to 872, and in the process he formed friendship with intellectual persons such as SUGAWARA no Michizane and KI no Haseo.
  475. He supervised the compilation of "Nihonshoki" (Chronicles of Japan).
  476. He supplemented "Hongan-ji Shonin Dene" ("Godensho") and made it a book consisting of 15 chapters (Koeibon (a book written in Koei era)).
  477. He supported Emperor Gomurakami after the death of Emperor Godaigo.
  478. He supported Emperor Komei as a general official of the Imperial Household in charge of State affairs, and put his effort into getting rid of people who were supporters of the doctrine of restoring the emperor (to power) and expelling the barbarians from the Imperial Palace.
  479. He supported Gyokukin KIN and others of the Yi dynasty Korea; invented a mixed writing system of Chinese and Hangul; and expended his funds on the establishment of "Kanjo Junpo" (written in Chinese,) which was to develop into the first newspaper partly written in Hangul in Korea "Kanjo Shuho."
  480. He supported Hideyori after Hideyoshi's death and after the Battle of Sekigahara in September 1600, was given the 28,000 koku Tatsuta Domain in Yamato no Kuni by the Gotairo (Council of Five Elders) leader, Ieyasu TOKUGAWA.
  481. He supported Kondo and Hijikata, Head and Deputy Head, who came from the same home and training hall, and there was strong trust among them.
  482. He supported Prince Oama (Emperor Tenmu) during the Jinshin war in 672 and played a role in pro-imperial family politics during the Reign of Emperor Tenmu.
  483. He supported Sakugoro HIRASE's study of ginkgo biloba, and Hirase found the spermatozoid of ginkgo biloba in 1896.
  484. He supported Sumimoto HOSOKAWA as a successor to Masamoto.
  485. He supported and revived the construction project owner Osaka Electric Tramway Co., Ltd. and its contractor Obayashi Gumi that incurred massive debt from the Ikoma tunnel project.
  486. He supported prosperity of Japonism indirectly.
  487. He supported the Imperial army during the Teibi Incident in August, 587, but his name wasn't reported since then, it is assumed he died during Teibi Incident.
  488. He supported the government on a budget issue in the first diet session, and he was expelled from the Liberal Party (during Meiji period).
  489. He supported the operation of the imperial court as an Imperial envoy from Emperor Ogimachi, and as a representative of court nobles in the period when it was hard for them to negotiate with Nobunaga ODA.
  490. He supported the study of Japanese classical literature of Hirata-ha school, and as well as other members of the Aoyama family, he actively advocated the denial of the Confucian education, elimination of the Buddhist temples in the domain (including the family temple of the domain lord), and abandonment of the Buddhist mortuary tablet.
  491. He supposedly became close with Isami KONDO of the newly formed Shinsengumi.
  492. He supposedly came to Japan and drew portraits.
  493. He supposedly died of overwork due to changing territory and working hard to settle the internal troubles.
  494. He supposedly entered the priesthood following Takatoki HOJO who was in the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  495. He supposedly established Ryusen-ji Temple, also known as Meguro Fudo, Risshaku-ji Temple in Yamagata City, and Zuigan-ji Temple in Matsushima.
  496. He supposedly excelled in Chinese poetry as well, but there were only two sections in "Wakankensakushu" (Japanese and Chinese Poetry Collection) that remains until today.
  497. He supposedly had significantly improved English reading in those days, but still might have found some parts difficult to understand and had to refer to Dutch translations.
  498. He supposedly held talks with the governor-general of India concerning Christianity.
  499. He supposedly hit kin, kei, inverted copper or iron bell shaped like a bowl (sounded when reciting sutras) just before his death and Kassatsu, and passed away after Junen joju (ten invocations bringing about completion) ("Shui Ojo-den").
  500. He suppressed Christianity under the Temple and Shrine policy but later showed an understanding of Christianity and secretly sheltered Christians in Kyoto in 1593 after Hideyoshi declared the Bateren (slang for Christianity) expulsion order.
  501. He suppressed Ikko sect's revolt in Echizen Province, and was engaged in the arrest of Zenjubo SUGITANI and other cases.
  502. He suppressed TAIRA no Tadatsune War when he was the kokushu (head of provincial governors) of Kai Province.
  503. He suppressed the Kanto region and headquartered in Kamakura.
  504. He suppressed the Tachikawa School of the Shingon Sect on the grounds that it was a false creed.
  505. He surrendered at Benten Daiba.
  506. He surrendered in Hakodate in 1870.
  507. He surrendered in June 1869.
  508. He surrendered to the Tang Dynasty, however, after realizing that the revival of Baekje would not be achieved, and later he greatly contributed to Tang as a Tang Dynasty general.
  509. He surrounded the castle with a moats, with a natural river flow used in some parts of them.
  510. He surveyed Ezochi and the next year, in 1801, he finished the survey of the east coast of Honshu (the main island of Japan), the west coast of Tohoku region and the coasts of Tokai and Hokuriku regions.
  511. He survived his younger brothers (Kazumasa SOGO, Fuyuyasu ATAGI), and he himself died at the age of 41.
  512. He survived the Nagayao no Hen (Conspiracy of Nagayao) occurred in 729 because he was a sotomago (grandchild from a daughter married into another family) of FUJIWARA no Fuhito.
  513. He survived without fighting.
  514. He survived, but his neck was skewed because of the injury and inappropriate treatment.
  515. He suspected contrivance between the Retired Emperor Kameyama and the Priestly Imperial Prince Enjo, and so requested the Kamakura Bakufu to give the imperial succession to his own children.
  516. He swore by Buddha to publish "Daizokyo" in 1664 and collected alms in 1667 by making a pilgrimage throughout the nation.
  517. He sympathized with Edo radicals from an early stage.
  518. He sympathized with the gradually rising sonno joi movement, engaging in extreme acts such as setting fire to the British legation along with Shinsaku TAKASUGI and Genzui KUSAKA in 1862 while he was travelling to study in Edo.
  519. He sympathizes with the princess, who had lost her mother, and takes her side by secretly bringing wonderful shells.
  520. He takes a short sword, with which his master committed seppuku, out of a purple-colored fukusa (wrapping cloth) and vows to avenge while licking the blood at the tip.
  521. He talked about "Rongo Analects" in the court of Jimyo-in Temple and was recognized by the Emperor Hanazono.
  522. He talked with Ryoma SAKAMOTO, a member of the sonno (reverence for the Emperor) group and proposed Taisei Hokan (transfer of power back to the Emperor) based on Senchu hassaku (the basic outline of the new regime made by Ryoma SAKAMOTO), which was advised to Yoshinobu TOKUGAWA, the seii taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians"), by Yodo.
  523. He taught Bairei KONO the techniques who became the successor of Bunrin.
  524. He taught Bosatsu-kai (Bodhisattva Precepts) to Emperor Shijo as well as other members of the Imperial family and nobles.
  525. He taught Bosatsu-kai (Bodhisattva Precepts) to Emperor Shomu, Empress Komyo, Empress Koken and others in front of Daibutsu-den Hall (the Great Buddha hall) at Todai-ji Temple in the same year.
  526. He taught Christianity as well.
  527. He taught Hangen (rumored to be the biological child of Kokaku) and Koen among others, and authored works such as "Ichidaishinchisho," "Goji Guketsu," "Sanjushikakotogaki," "Sanjujo Kudensho," "Sugiu makurasoshi," and "Honkaisho."
  528. He taught Japanese classical literature and culture.
  529. He taught Sadahiro (later to become Motonori) MORI, who was the heir of the domain there.
  530. He taught Sogi and had a considerable influence on the development of poetry in Japan during the subsequent golden age of renga poetry.
  531. He taught Tokiyori HOJO, a legitimate son of regent Yasutoki HOJO, in yabusame (the art of shooting arrows on horseback) in 1237, showed the art of kisha (to shoot an arrow with riding a horse) in Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gu Shrine and he was admired by spectators as a Soke (grand master) of kyuba (archery and equestrianism).
  532. He taught Yoshimitsu ASHIKAGA who was the third Shogun of the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) about the ancient practices, courtesies and culture of the Imperial Court.
  533. He taught a lot of disciples in Kyoto, and later he bought a restaurant called 円山正阿彌 and retired.
  534. He taught and trained promising young actors including Uzaemon ICHIMURA (the 15th), Ganjiro NAKAMURA (the first), Koshiro MATSUMOTO (the seventh), Kikugoro ONOE (the sixth), Utaemon NAKAMURA (the fifth) and others.
  535. He taught as the assistant professor and professor in the Ceramics Arts Department, Kyoto City University of Fine Arts from 1953, became the professor in 1956, and held the office of chancellor in October 1965.
  536. He taught at Hanazono Junior and Senior High School in the latter half of his life.
  537. He taught at a collegio in Nagasaki, but died of illness on November 13, 1612.
  538. He taught everything there was to know about the art of calendar making to his heir KAMO no Mitsuyoshi and the art of astronomy to his student ABE no Seimei, building the foundation of a succession system for the two-family heredity of the Kamo Family and the ABE Family down the road.
  539. He taught himself how to use a sword; yet he was known to be adept at drawing a sword with only one hand (from the position as low as one knee almost touching the ground, cutting the opponent slashing from bottom to top up to the shoulder).
  540. He taught in the domain of Koromo, etc.
  541. He taught medical science, pharmaceutical science, and botany to translators and rangakusha (persons who studied Western sciences by means of the Dutch language).
  542. He taught medicine to hundreds of disciples, and was famous as a great doctor throughout Japan.
  543. He taught pupils such as Jogen and Jinku, and died on August 2, 1020 at age 75.
  544. He taught seal engraving to Kakuan OMATA who was at the age of 24 then.
  545. He taught tea ceremony to Cloistered Imperial Prince Jiin.
  546. He taught that by repeating 'Namu Amidabutsu' many times, all people regardless of whether they are rich or poor, male or female could attain Saiho Gokuraku Jodo (The West Pure Land (of Amida Buddha)) upon death and this was decided upon at the time of death.
  547. He taught that the mystery of Noh is 'Makoto no hana' (the true Flower), created by kufu (dedication to spiritual improvement) and koan (Zen question for meditation) within yourself.
  548. He taught that with proper religious belief, it is possible for any person so reach the position of those guaranteed to Jodo Ojo while still in this world.
  549. He taught the Japanese language and told of Japan to young officers at the military academy, and helped to arrange visits to Istanbul for high officials in the Japanese government; thus, he dedicated himself to cultivate international civilian and governmental exchanges when there were no established diplomatic relations between Japan and Turkey.
  550. He taught the religious idea to third Muromachi shogun, Yoshimitsu ASHIKAGA.
  551. He taught younger people at his dojo in Kurumazaka.
  552. He taught younger people in his private school, Rankeido while he contributed to the development of internal medicine, mainly translating the medical books of the Western internal medicine.
  553. He taught yusoku kojitsu to Retired Emperor Goyozei, and revised and, in 1608, published "Shokugensho" (History of Government Services).
  554. He teasingly pulled Motsugai into the training hall by force.
  555. He tells Hikoroku how he was scared through the wall.
  556. He tells Maitreyathe that they cannot be freed from the pains and that birth in the Pure Land is the way to be released from them.
  557. He tells her that he has come to kill Iruka on the orders of his lord, but has known that the power of Iruka will diminish if he plays a flute after pouring on it the blood of black-hoofed deer and the vital blood of a woman mad with jealousy, and this is why he has stabbed her while feeling sorry.
  558. He tells them in his song the secret to becoming rich, "Rise early, be kind to others, welcome guests and get along with your wife."
  559. He temporarily became a Christian and therefore had a Christian name.
  560. He temporarily defeated the Imagawa army, which was in confusion, in the Mizushima Incident in 1375, but lost again in a counter attack by Ryoshun, which led to a series of losing battles and finally to giving up his base castle in 1381.
  561. He temporarily lived in Edo, and toured to Echigo with his mother.
  562. He temporarily lived with his son-in-law, Rokushu KATO of Omura Domain in Tsukushi Province, and then went to Edo.
  563. He temporarily lost favor of Yoshimitsu ASHIKAGA, but was pardoned later and received a one character name from the homyo (Buddhist name) of Yoshimitsu and made his 'Inuami' of Amigo into 'Doami.'
  564. He temporarily moved back and stayed in Kansai Region in around 1870, but once again he headed to Tokyo in 1881 in order to succeed the name of Ebizo ICHIKAWA the 8th.
  565. He temporarily retired at Enjo-ji Temple on Mt. Ninniku, Yamato Province, but later established Nakagawa Joshinin Temple and made it a dojo for Shingon Esoteric Buddhism, Tendai and Hoso teachings.
  566. He temporarily returned home to succeed his family business, the doctor for the Matsuyama domain at the death of his father, Kaian when Rinso was 26 years old.
  567. He temporarily returned to Kagoshima and was appointed service officer in February 1869.
  568. He temporarily returned to Tokyo, but again went to Hokkaido.
  569. He temporarily transferred to the Kita-ryu school but later came back to the Kanze-ryu school.
  570. He temporarily used Motosuke for name and Shimei for azana, but changed back to original.
  571. He temporarily used an alias Shunzo NAMIKI.
  572. He temporarily used the family name of Ito.
  573. He tests Kanpei by saying, "I am collecting money for the construction of a stone monument for our deceased master, do you understand ?"
  574. He then advanced his troops toward Isawa, which was regarded as a stronghold of Emishi/Ezo forces.
  575. He then advanced to daigaku daihakase, and later became Daikyosei.
  576. He then also published the trilogies called "Konjaku Gazu Zoku Hyakki" (Continued Illustrations of the Many Demons Past and Present), "Konjaku Hyakki Shui" (Ancient and Modern Gleanings of the Hundred Demons), and "Hyakki Tsurezure Bukuro" (One Hundred Bags in Idleness).
  577. He then amended the bakufu's policy that had been promoting studies since the era of the fourth shogun Ietsuna TOKUGAWA so as to promote martial arts.
  578. He then announced that those who talked about the temple would be punished by decapitation.
  579. He then asked TAKASHINA no Tonari to offer the following to the Emperor; "Shorai Catalogue" (Esshuroku), the list of a huge amount of information on Buddhist scripture books and works of calligraphy, together with a report to the throne.
  580. He then asked their female servant to bring and hang his brother's haori to pretend that he was there and poured sake, and after he finished, he said as follows and he exchanged sake with tears and left.
  581. He then attempted to subjugate Mochiuji ASHIKAGA, the Kamakura Kubo, using the excuses that Ashikaga kept using the era name Shocho even after it had been changed from Shocho to Eikyo, and that Ashikaga appointed at his discretion the head priests for the Five Official Temples of Kamakura.
  582. He then became a disciple of Toyohiro UTAGAWA (c. 1773 - 1828) who gave him the name of Hiroshige UTAGAWA in the following year, 1812.
  583. He then became a leader of Shochiku Nouvelle Vague through big box-office draws, such as "A Cruel Story of Youth" and "The Sun's Burial."
  584. He then became a lord of the Toba Domain in Shima Province and the first lord of the Matsumoto Domain in Shinano Province.
  585. He then became a teacher of Imperial Prince Iratsuko UJINOWAKI and later became naturalized.
  586. He then became a viscount on September 23, 1907.
  587. He then became acting commander-in-chief on behalf of SAEKI no Imaemishi who was sick, and arrived in Changan without the commander-in-chief in 778.
  588. He then became an apprentice of the chief retainer of Ako Domain and was looked after by his grand-uncle Yoshishige OISHI.
  589. He then became guardian to Junkei, chief priest of Daijo-in Temple.
  590. He then became president of the Kokusan Shorei Kai (Currently, Japan Industrial Association).
  591. He then became the lord of the Dewa-Takahata Domain due to his transfer to the fief of Dewa-Takahata, a result of the Meiwa Incident.
  592. He then became the most powerful senior vassal under Harumoto who was given the post of local governor in 17 places in the Kinnai region, including Kawachi Province.
  593. He then became the one hundred fifty-third head priest of the Tendai sect, was called 'the most talented person in the history of the Tendai sect,' and was regarded as having a promising future.
  594. He then began to give instructions in tea ceremony himself in Tokyo.
  595. He then belonged to Kondo's squad and guarded the perimeter of Ikedaya.
  596. He then brought young Yoshimitsu ASHIKAGA to Shirohata-jo Castle in Harima Province to seek refuge.
  597. He then built a Buddhist temple called Dainichi-do in Murayama (present-day Fujinomiya City, Shizuoka Prefecture).
  598. He then called himself Gido-sanshi.
  599. He then called himself Saburo MIKI or Izumi MIKI.
  600. He then called himself the governor-general of Yoshu and raised insurrection under the name of the Tang revival.
  601. He then captured Tsuneyoshi-jo Castle, which was not followed by any achievements and the battle reached a stalemate.
  602. He then captured the Fushiki-jo Castle exploiting Ieyasu's absence from the Kinai region (provinces surrounding Kyoto and Nara), and after that he set out to suppress the Hokuriku region and Ise area in Ise Province.
  603. He then changed his name from Kimiyori to Tametou.
  604. He then changed his name to Ienobu.
  605. He then climbs down the mountain and tells the villagers not to go up to the mountain, and he sets out on his journey to the Ou district.
  606. He then composed a poem, 'Clouds covered the eightfold fence; making the eightfold fence to keep my new wife in the house; great eightfold fence.'
  607. He then concluded that ancient Japanese vowel system had five vowels same as the current system.
  608. He then confronted Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa.
  609. He then constructed a low bank perpendicular to the direction of the flow in which he laid a belt-shaped stone bed while adding an ornamental stone in the west of the site.
  610. He then continued to be a member of Ryuchi kai and the Japan Art Association, a reorganized group of Ryuchi kai, for a while and exhibited oil paintings in art exhibitions that were aimed to promote Japanese-style paintings.
  611. He then crossed Mt. Aikawa, located on the eastern side of Mt. Ibuki, and escaped to Kasuga-mura Village.
  612. He then decides to cut the Komachi-zakura cherry tree in order to use it for the ritual to pray for wishes to come true.
  613. He then dedicated himself to formation of the Kiyoura administration.
  614. He then departed from the castle and participated in the battle by pitching a camp around Kuchikitano, the west wing of Ukita force.
  615. He then died in 1395 and Motomitsu YUKI took over as head of the family.
  616. He then disgraced himself by fleeing to Sanuki.
  617. He then dismissed Kaneie from the post of Commander of the Right Inner Palace Guard Division, deposing him to Jibukyo (Director of the Ministry of Civil Administration).
  618. He then entered Berlin, the capital of Germany, on the 11th of the same month.
  619. He then entered Kyoto-shiritsu Kaiga Senmon Gakko (Kyoto City Specialist School of Painting).
  620. He then entered the business world and actively dedicated himself to reconstructing Kashimaya (present Daido Life Insurance Company), as well as, taking charge of the auditor of Dojima Rice Exchange, Osaka, and the vice president of Asahi Life Insurance Company.
  621. He then entered the graduate school.
  622. He then enthroned the younger brother of the former shogun, Yoriie, as the successor and installed himself as the shogunal regent.
  623. He then established 'Uzumasa Studio' at Uzumasa, Kyoto and began producing films starring Bando on May 2, 1926.
  624. He then established Kunmoin (Training School for the Blind), the predecessor of the Tokyo School for the Blind and the Deaf (present School for the Visually Impaired of the Special Support Education, University of Tsukuba), with Masanao NAKAMURA, Ginko KISHIDA, Yozo YAMAO, Henry Faulds and others.
  625. He then established a collective leadership system utilizing bugyo (magistrates) led by the Mori-Ryosen system.
  626. He then established a school based on the Sekishu-ryu school, adding positive attributes from various schools.
  627. He then established his own painting style filled with chic and emotional atmosphere, which was called the Edo Rinpa school, positively adopting the techniques used by the Maruyama Shijo school, Tosa school, Nanpin school or Jakuchu ITO as well as taking over the decorative style of the Rinpa school.
  628. He then expressed the purpose of the vows and again swore to accomplish them. ('Juseige :Verses reiterating vows (Sanseige sutra)').
  629. He then forced Shigehira to enter into the priesthood.
  630. He then formally joined Shinsengumi.
  631. He then formed the Mitategumi squad with TAKASUGI and others.
  632. He then found that Toi was assumed to have been the Joshin tribe judging from their costume and weapons, and that they had left for Japan after attacking villages near the coast of Goryeo.
  633. He then founded a shrine on the Gassan Mountain.
  634. He then gave Kamakura dono (lord of Kamakura, the shogun) exclusive rights to confer court ranks to the members of the Minamoto clan families and their gokenin (immediate vassal of the shogunate in the Kamakura and Muromachi through Edo periods) members and to appoint them to government posts.
  635. He then governed the whole territory of Tango Province as the Tango clan, which naturally included Kasa-gun (Maizuru) as well.
  636. He then graduated from Daiichi High School (the first old-education-system high school) and then from the Department of Philosophy, Faculty of Letters, Kyoto University.
  637. He then had a dispute with Kakunyo, Kakue's child, about the succession of the Otani-byodo Mausoleum and capitulated, returning to Kamakura in Sagami Province with the head of the founder's statue.
  638. He then instructed Kenzan OGATA to send for 3,500 "early singing bush warblers" with sweet notes from Kyoto and let them free in Negishi no Sato Town.
  639. He then invited Naoya SHIGA and found the opportunity to gather men of literature in Abiko.
  640. He then joined an insurgency, killed Shiro IGU with poisoned arrows, and was captured.
  641. He then joined the navy of the bakufu and became captain of 'Gunkan Takao' (a warship, later used for the second Kaiten [suicide weapon of the imperial Japanese Navy in World War Ⅱ]).
  642. He then left Kyoto and escape to Iwabuchi at the foot of Mt. Fuji.
  643. He then let his eighth son, Yusuke adopted by Kanechika YOSHIDA by changing the name Yusuke to Yoshida saemon no jo in order to make him the head priest of the Ise-jingu Shrine.
  644. He then made an electric shamisen (a three-stringed Japanese banjo) by modifying a shamisen.
  645. He then married Kashi.
  646. He then married Toyotmahime, a daughter of Watatsuminokami (sea god) (Toyotamahiko), obtained the fishing hook, Shiomichinotama (tide flowing jewel) and Shiohinotama (tide restraining jewel), and he subjugated his older brother.
  647. He then married his second wife, Machino ONJI, the daughter of Masumi ONJI from the local ruling family which was a branch family of the Minamoto family in Omi Province (or a descendant of SAKANOUE no Tamuramaro), and they had their son, Tsunenao ODA.
  648. He then married off his daughter TAIRA no Tokuko to Emperor Takakura and established the era in which 'only the members of the Taira clan should be considered legitimate human beings ("Heike Monogatari" ("the Tale of the House of Taira"))'.
  649. He then moved to Edo-jo Castle with only twenty-odd retainers as his attendants, including Hisamichi KANO and Ujinori ARIMA, whom he had chosen from the retainers of the Kishu clan excluding high-ranked retainers.
  650. He then moved to Fujikawa Town, Ihara County, Shizuoka Prefecture, but returned to Kyoto since he decided to refresh his career from scratch.
  651. He then moved to Fushimi-dono Palace in December 1399, however it was burnt down (1401) and the Prince moved to Koonin in Saga (Kyoto City).
  652. He then moved to Kokura in Buzen Province.
  653. He then moved to Kyoto to learn western culture and technology including astronomy and sciences.
  654. He then moved to Nakatsu of Bungo Province ruled by the Buzen-UTSUNOMIYA clan, and later became the founder of the Chikugo-UTSUNOMIYA clan.
  655. He then moved to and lived in Daiun-ji Temple in Iwakura, Otagi District, Yamashiro Province (current Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City) and died there.
  656. He then offered a very low price because the project had a deficit.
  657. He then ordered Goryeo again, and Hanpu, who was a secretary close to King Wonjong of Goryeo, was sent as envoy and reached Dazai-fu (local government office in the Kyushu region) in January 1268.
  658. He then participated in a campaign against the Soga clan, and persuaded the surviving retainers of the Soga clan to withdraw.
  659. He then performed practice-swinging so wonderfully that people couldn't believe that he was already 80 years old.
  660. He then performed the role of liaison when welcoming Emperor Gomizunoo to the Nijo-jo Castle.
  661. He then positioned 1,000 horsemen led by Nagamasa KOZUKURI in Nakano-mura Village and another 1,000 horsemen led by Katamasa SATO as a flying squadron in Shinkano-mura Village to create a defense line along the Kiso-gawa River and fought with the East Army led by Terumasa IKEDA and Masanori FUKUSHIMA (the Battle of Komeno).
  662. He then pulled a yarn from the hands of the nine Amida Nyorai (Amitabha Tathagata) statues to his own hands and, just like Shakyamuni's entry into Nirvana, lied down with his head to north and his eyes facing west.
  663. He then pursued senju-nenbutsu (repeating the name of Buddha without conducting any other religious training) at Isshin-in Temple in Kyoto, and became the founder of the Shasei School of the Jodo Sect.
  664. He then ran to Rinsen-ji Temple where Soseki MUSO was but was captured, and finally in January of the following year, he was beheaded in Rokujo-Gawara in Kyoto.
  665. He then rebuilt the Naniwaza-za Theater in Dotonbori (1946), followed by the Kado-za Theater (1947) and the Naka-za Theater (1948).
  666. He then received an order from the Emperor to prepare the Dazai-fu for the aftermath of the An Shi Rebellion which occurred in Tang, and was again promoted to Dazai no daini (Senior Assistant Governor General of Dazai-fu) in 759.
  667. He then received the Teiten special award with his works titled "Hasuike" and "Koi" at the 7th and the 8th Exhibitions respectively.
  668. He then received the head of Morinobu NISHINA, Lord of Takato-jo Castle, from his legitimate son, Nobutada ODA, and exposed the head to public view along the Nagara-gawa River.
  669. He then recovered and was demoted to the lowest rank in the group.
  670. He then relied on and served his uncle-in-law Toshiie, who later got promoted and was given control of the Province of Noto (around 1580).
  671. He then relinquished Nirakuso and the exploration collections.
  672. He then restarted the tally trade with China that had been suspended since Yoshimochi's time and reviewed financial policy in order to reinforce the government's power.
  673. He then restored Kencho-ji Temple in 1293, which had been in a run-down state due to a fire, and invited Ichinei to be the chief priest of the temple, also becoming a believer of the principles of Ichinei's sect.
  674. He then returned home in July, having been greatly influenced by the journey, according to his diary "Yu-shin Goroku" (Five Accounts of a Voyage to China).
  675. He then returned to Edo.
  676. He then returned to Kyoto in 1189.
  677. He then returned to Kyoto to become a priest in Kamigamo-jinja Shrine and organized a cultural salon named 'Unkintei.'
  678. He then returned to Kyoto under MINAMOTO no Yoritomo's protection in November 1185.
  679. He then returned to Mizusawa to continue studying with Choan BANNO.
  680. He then returned to Tokyo, after spending time at Toho Co.,Ltd. and Kansai Kabuki.
  681. He then returned to secular life and named himself Yoshinobu.
  682. He then said, "I have heard that people of Han say, 'to seize home and country of others, you need to obtain peasants and land. If you kill all the peasants, for what use is the land that is obtained?'"
  683. He then said, 'That's what I have to do to keep from starving to death,' and disappeared into the darkness of the night.
  684. He then saw a monster bird there.
  685. He then sent Chikara OISHI to Edo on November 8.
  686. He then served as Sahyoe no kami (Captain of the Left Division of Middle Palace Guards), Saemon no kami (captain of the Left Division of Outer Palace Guards), was granted Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) in 866, and promoted to Chunagon (vice-councilor of state) in 870.
  687. He then served as officer in charge of regional administration such as Kaga no kuni no kami, Iga no kuni no kami (governer of Kaga and Iga Province) andUeno no kuni no suke (officer in charge of regional administration in Ueno), and in 977, he got promoted to Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  688. He then served the Asano clan.
  689. He then served the Taira clan.
  690. He then slew Yamatano orochi (eight-headed and eight-tailed giant snake), a monster, and married Kushinadahime.
  691. He then spent his life as a middle-rank noble.
  692. He then started to call himself Gengo Sugiyama and lived in seclusion in Fukami village under the protection of the Tsugaru clan.
  693. He then studied the Tendai doctrine from Genshin (monk) and Esoteric Buddhism from Ningai in the Yokawa area of Enryaku-ji Temple.
  694. He then studied under Giten Gensho, who later became the founder of Ryoan-ji Temple in Kyoto, and succeeded to the teachings.
  695. He then succeeded to the position of family head due to his father's death in 1841.
  696. He then successfully recruited new members, including Kashitaro ITO.
  697. He then successively served as a provisional assistant governor of both Harima and Kaga Provinces and as a governor of Tango Province.
  698. He then suggested that all the retainers commit seppuku, and in the end, retainers of the Asano family came to a settlement to surrender the castle on condition that they would kill Kira as an act of revenge for their lord.
  699. He then tied up with Shochiku Co., Ltd., and made some hits, but gradually Bantsuma's image became a stereotype and his popularity started to dwindle.
  700. He then told them to break a bundle of three arrows.
  701. He then took part in Hidetada TOKUGAWA's army in the Siege of Ueda-jo Castle, but Masayuki SANADA who was castle-side, fought well and forced Hidetada's army to a standstill.
  702. He then took part in the movement for Katsura New Party, and established Rikken Doshikai (Constitutional Association of Friends).
  703. He then transferred to Nikkatsu Corporation.
  704. He then translated many books.
  705. He then traveled to Kyoto with his comrades in 1862, and submitted a petition for impeachment of NAGAI to the clan.
  706. He then traveled upstream of the Takatoki-gawa River from a threshold of the valley of Mt. Odani and escaped to Furuhashi.
  707. He then tried to attack further, but meeting a furious counter-attack by the Higo clan in front of Kokura-jo Castle, he temporarily ceased the assault.
  708. He then tried to predict the future trend.
  709. He then waged war against Shogun Yoshitane ASHIKAGA, defeating and exiling him in March of 1521; and subsequently he established Yoshiharu ASHIKAGA as the twelfth shogun.
  710. He then was adopted by Danjuro ICHIKAWA (II) and took the name Danjuro ICHIKAWA (IV).
  711. He then went on to study at the University of Freiburg in Germany, but he found handling microscopes difficult due to his nearsightedness, so he changed his research field to Western world history.
  712. He then went to Edo and Kyoto to complete his Western studies.
  713. He then withdrew so smoothly, without disclosing the death of Iechika, that Naoie is said to have not believed easily the report of successful assassination.
  714. He then won the trust of Masatane Chiba and accepted Chiba's younger sister as his legal wife, strengthened the relationship with Muneie Chiba and the Gohojo clan, fought against Yoshiaki and the Satomi clan, and took the Hojo side and contributed to their victory in both of the two battles of Konodai.
  715. He then worked to control the local ruling families.
  716. He then worked together with Tsugumichi SAIGO and established a political group named Kokumin Kyokai (National Association).
  717. He theorized how Shingon study understood Buddhist invocation thought that suddenly rose in prosperity in the society in the late Heian period.
  718. He thereafter renamed the W.M. Vories Architectural Office the Hitotsuyanagi Architectural Office.
  719. He thereafter served as Sakon e no chujo (Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards) and Kurodo no to (Head Chamberlain), and in 1700 he became a Sangi (Councilor), thus becoming a Kugyo (high court noble).
  720. He thereby accompanied Kazunomiya on the journey down to Edo in the following year, 1861, which angered a section of radical Sonno Joi ha (supporters of the doctrine of restoring the emperor and expelling the barbarians).
  721. He thereby again revived the Ashikaga School with the support of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA
  722. He thereby criticized the dogmatic Seikanron by saying, 'Do not do to the others what you do not want.'
  723. He thereby made sure that his enemies were properly disabled or eliminated.
  724. He thereby obtained control of the clan's pirate organization.
  725. He thereby prevented the Yakuza and other criminal organizations from intervening in the theatrical promotion business.
  726. He thereby secured his position as the leader of the kokujin lords of Aki Province.
  727. He thereby strengthened his ties with Yoshitaka Ouchi who had recommended him.
  728. He therefore adopted his brother's son (Tsunakata TOKUGAWA) to make him his heir.
  729. He therefore could not lead the troop in the Battle of Toba-Fushimi on January 27, 1868, and healed himself in Osaka-jo Castle.
  730. He therefore created the Yamato Calendar by modifying the Chinese Juji Calendar for use in Japan.
  731. He therefore gave Motonari authority to lead the kokujin lords in the Provinces of Aki and Bingo.
  732. He therefore gave orders to execute Hisahide's two sons who had been in his custody in Rokujo-gawara, Kyoto City.
  733. He therefore had to urge the retainers of the former Izuhara domain who were older and more experienced than he (and who were therefore uncooperative) to negotiate with Joseon on practical levels.
  734. He therefore stayed with the Taira clan when MINAMOTO no Yoritomo, Yoshitomo's son, raised an army in 1180.
  735. He therefore surmises that the redactor brought together different notes written at various times to compile the text.
  736. He thinks that it is a pity for him not to know when his wife died, and goes outside, where the sun rises high already, in order to see somebody who knows it.
  737. He thinks that things described in "Shoku Nihongi" are generally accurate except that the author avoided to write clearly that the true ringleader of this Oracle Incident was the Empress Shotoku, who eventually approved Emperor Konin as her successor.
  738. He thoroughly beats and kills his wealthy master, and though the way he does this is similar to the story of Issunboshi, it is malicious.
  739. He thought about this memorandam as follows.
  740. He thought learning English grammar was necessary for the study of Japanese grammar, and started to study English under Makoto KONDO since 1875.
  741. He thought painting was not for other people, but for his own pleasure, and sought painting with shai (to express painter's spirit or target's nature) by thinking that true landscapes saved in his bosom would let his hand correspond naturally.
  742. He thought that Haikai (seventeen-syllable verse) was the introduction to renga and waka and insisted to use haigon such as informal language and kango (words of Chinese origin).
  743. He thought that if he captured Saiga which was the supply base of soldiers and goods he would be able to destroy the roots of the Hongan-ji Temple group in Osaka.
  744. He thought that people were responsible for their ethics and society was a place for people to practice their ethics.
  745. He thought that the kimono should have belonged to a woman servant who had gotten slashed to death by her master of buke (a samurai family), and he therefore offered it to the family temple to mourn for the dead, thus resulting in recovery of his daughter.
  746. He thought the code was established by Tenchi in the imperial edicts, because a series of big institutional reforms was promoted by Emperor Tenchi, although these reforms were initiated during the reign of Emperor Kotoku as the Taika Reforms.
  747. He thought then that if there was a conflict between the ethics of a community to which oneself belonged and the ethics from Heaven, samurai would chose the latter.
  748. He threatened and plundered the people.
  749. He threatened to set fire to all of the mountain if it would not accept conditions such as the return of most of the territories it had expanded, forbidding military force, and hiding rebels on the mountain.
  750. He threw himself into learning and swordsmanship and, in the Morioka domain, he entered a school for Kashima-Shinto-ryu school and distinguished himself.
  751. He threw his certificate of dharma transmission and other valuable texts into a fire.
  752. He threw incense powder at the altar at his funeral.
  753. He throws a pebble into the moat and listens carefully to the sound of water with kiseru (a (tobacco) pipe with metal tipped stem), and this pose is beautiful.
  754. He thus became one of the core members of the bakufu government.
  755. He thus become an in-house playwright of the theater and moved to Osaka to focus on a new joruri play.
  756. He thus brought the Ouchi clan to ruin.
  757. He thus concludes that the "Sunshoan-shikishi" is the best of the San-shikishi.
  758. He thus endeavoured to eliminate as many destabilizing elements in the entertainment business as possible.
  759. He thus fulfilled his duties as the head of Renpeikan for 5 years until he was ordered by the domain to return.
  760. He thus greatly inspired the world of poetry.
  761. He thus incorporated the powers of the two clans: the Kikkawa clan who held sway in the Provinces of Aki and Iwami and the Kobayakawa clan who were influential in the provinces of Aki, and Bingo and the Seto Inland Sea.
  762. He thus meant that politics should be pleasurable for both the ruler and the people.
  763. He thus persuaded the resistant conservatives and inspired Emperor Meiji.
  764. He thus ruled supreme over Kinai.
  765. He thus solidified the Mori-Ryosen system that combined the leadership of Motoharu KIKKAWA and Takakage KOBAYAKAWA.
  766. He ticked off his elder brother, saying with anger, "Here is such a dangerous place among the battlefield where a man like me is posted.
  767. He tirelessly promoted a land-tax reform and abolished the privileges of the samurai class in order to liberate the farmers from unfair and heavy taxation.
  768. He titled himself Seigenin.
  769. He together with Shojiro GOTO negotiated successfully with Harry Parks, a minister of England, and solved the compensation problem when a feudal retainer of Tosa Domain killed a British sailor in Nagasaki City in 1867.
  770. He told Ashinazuchi and Tenazuchi to brew some strong sake (yashio-ori-no-sake a high-quality sake brewed several times), build eight gates with fences, and to put a pail filled with the sake at each gate.
  771. He told Miyasudokoro that Yugiri had been visiting Ochiba no Miya.
  772. He told Saneyuki to walk in bare feet if he had a time to waste fixing a strap of geta (a Japanese wooden sandal).
  773. He told Tadataka to live in Kumamoto, but Tadataka refused, and went back to Kyoto.
  774. He told a lie about his age.
  775. He told about the morality of samurai as follows.
  776. He told her 'put a bell at the end of a rope and ring it to tell the receptionist of your arrival when you come to me.'
  777. He told me to stay here for a few days as he promised to send someone to pick me up, but if nobody came on the promised date, I was suggested to immediately leave the temple.
  778. He told such a lie.
  779. He told that it was a very pleasant ride; however, according to a foreigner who was at the scene, he was clinging onto the train tremblingly.
  780. He told the chief retainer of the Takato Domain, Kikuso OKAMURA that his real name was Katsuzo INOUE and he was born in the Echigo-Nagaoka Domain, but it has not been determined because it was not mentioned in any document of the Nagaoka Domain.
  781. He told the monk that his land in Toyomigo in Sano manor was seized by the Sano family.
  782. He told them "only one drink for each of you, as I do not want you to get drunk and break the rules of the army"; his men laughed and agreed.
  783. He told them to break an arrow.
  784. He told them to grab any part of her body they can touch, like her hair or hand, to get her.'
  785. He told to those close to him that he was not able to write letters and hated reading.
  786. He too, however, had too little ability to revive Kansai Kabuki,, which was already in its period of decline.
  787. He took Hyobu MIKAMI, Sigekuni JUGE and others as his disciples.
  788. He took Kagehime, a woman who had a kinship with Ujihiko (written as 莵道彦 or 宇豆比古), to wife, and had a son, who was TAKENOUCHI no Sukune.
  789. He took Kame-hime (Seitokuin), the first daughter of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA, for his lawful wife and he was given an important position as Ieyasu's son-in-law.
  790. He took Noriyori under his wing and brought him up, although what their connection was is unknown.
  791. He took Oman to Chigusaya and tried to persuade Chigusaya to offer him Oman as his wife as he could no longer bear being single at the age of thirty.
  792. He took Princess Tashiraka, the older (or younger) sister of Emperor Buretsu, as his empress.
  793. He took Raodo as a disciple on October 20, 1526.
  794. He took Rennyo, who later became the eighth chief priest of Hongan-ji Temple, as his disciple, as a result of a connection on his mother's side, maintaining a good relationship with him throughout his life as master and disciple, even though they belonged to different religious schools.
  795. He took Sadako TOYOTOMI, a daughter of Hidekatsu TOYOTOMI (her mother was Sugenin) as his legal wife (she gave birth to Michifusa KUJO, his heir), and maintained good relationships with military families as well.
  796. He took Sanetomo's head and dined at the residence of Bitchu Ajari (a master in esoteric Buddhism; a high priest) of the Hachimangu-ura.
  797. He took Sanyo's sister-in-law as his wife.
  798. He took Shirogane no miko, his younger paternal half-sister, to his wife, and had children such as Onakatsuhime (she became a consort to his nephew, Emperor Chuai).
  799. He took Takenogosho, a daughter of the 2nd Shogun, MINAMOTO no Yoriie, and 15 years older than him, as a wife.
  800. He took Tsuruoka-jo Castle in Shonai on September 27, and ended the battle in this area.
  801. He took Yasakairibine as his wife.
  802. He took a daughter of his grandfather, Tadayoshi SHIMAZU (his aunt) for his legal wife and after mourning her early death, he remarried to a daughter of Tokitaka TANEGASHIMA.
  803. He took a fancy to Saigu (Imperial Princess appointed to serve the deities of the Ise-jingu Shrine) of Isonokami-jingu Shrine which was the shrine of his rival, the Mononobe lineage.
  804. He took a flexible approach, for example, judging the time to fight before reinforcements came.
  805. He took a leading role in government affairs as a main retainer of the Ashikaga clan.
  806. He took a leave of absence from work from May 22, 1888, and returned to service as Chief of the 24th Infantry Regiment on September 13, 1888.
  807. He took a lively role in uta-awase (poetry contests) and byobu-uta (screen poems, poems composed following the pictures on folding screens), and KI no Tsurayuki composed a farewell poem and presented it to him.
  808. He took a long wooden sword (150 centimeters length) away from Denshichiro's hands and struck him down.
  809. He took a neutral stance as giving the priority to the maintenance of the defense system in Dazai-fu when Jinshin War broke out in 672.
  810. He took a new post of officer in the army department of Military Affairs Bureau in Taiwan Governor-General Office.
  811. He took a part in campaigns of Odawara no eki (the Siege of Odawara), and Bunroku Keicho no eki (the Bunroku-Keicho War.)
  812. He took a part in campaigns of the Battle of Komaki and Nagakute and Odawara no eki (the Siege of Odawara) as the captain of the gun unit of Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI.
  813. He took a part in campaigns of the Kyushu Conquest and Odawara no eki (the Siege of Odawara.)
  814. He took a part in the Battle of Nagashino and the Battle of Tenmokuzan with his older maternal half-brother Ieyasu.
  815. He took a part in the campaign of the Boshin War.
  816. He took a position with the Bank of Japan in June the same year.
  817. He took a second name of Ishun.
  818. He took a second name or alias Kurodo TADA (Chamberlain Tada).
  819. He took a second name or alias as Shimizu no Kanja.
  820. He took a second name or alias, Kyokuo, and started the Chikuzen biwa Tachibana-ryu and his name was rapidly known across the country by such as giving a performance in front of the Emperor Meiji.
  821. He took a second name, Sokan.
  822. He took advantage of his background of former Imperial lineage to strengthen his political power and enjoyed good relations with the powerful local clan.
  823. He took after his father and loved to study, he took father's will and established the court nobles learning center, Gakushuin.
  824. He took after his older brother, Tsunetsugu ICHIJO of Gon Dainagon (provisional chief councilor of state), who retired due to his being weak from illness, and took over the family estate when he underwent the Genpuku ceremony (Coming of Age Ceremony) in 1412.
  825. He took after the family estate due to the death of his foster father, Tomishige, in 1693.
  826. He took an active part as a court noble of the Sonno-joi-ha (a group of activists who admired the Emperor and hated foreigners, advocating the need for expelling them from Japan), became Kokuji goyogakari (a general official of the Imperial Household in charge of the State affair) in 1862, and Giso (a Noble Council) in the next year.
  827. He took an active part in policies of the imperial court and religions in the early Edo bakufu as a strategist for Ieyasu TOKUGAWA.
  828. He took an active role at the gain (art institution) in Hangzhou, the capital of Southern Sung, during the era of Neiso (Sung).
  829. He took an active role mainly in Kofuku-ji Temple and belonged to the family record of Nara Busshi (sculptor of Buddhist Statues in Nara).
  830. He took an administrative leave in 1891.
  831. He took an adopted daughter of TAIRA no Shigemori, TAIRA no Kiyomori's eldest son, to his wife; he acted as a representative of the administration of the Taira clan in Dazai-fu in charge of the trade between Japan and the Sung Dynasty in China.
  832. He took an entrance test for Osaka Kyoiku University.
  833. He took as his bride the daughter of TAIRA no Naokata, who had failed to suppress Tadatsune's rebellion, inheriting Naokata's mansion in Kamakura; henceforward, this mansion became the seat of the Kawachi-Genji's power and influence in the east.
  834. He took as his wife one of the ladies-in-waiting for Emperor Gotoba by the name of Shimotsuke, and both his wife and son became poets whose poems were included in Imperial anthologies.
  835. He took as his wife the third daughter of FUJIWARA no Morosuke, who had power in the Imperial Court and also excelled at the ancient customs; after her death, he married Morosuke's fifth daughter, Aimiya, further cementing their alliance and establishing Morosuke as Takaakira's supporter.
  836. He took care of Ennin during his stay in China.
  837. He took care of a child of Kaishu KATSU and his wife in Nagasaki.
  838. He took care of the Kyoto Imperial Palace, Katsura Imperial Villa, Nijo-jo Castle, and trees on the city streets in Ueharu at that time, and also contributed to the shukei (landscape architecture) of places such as Iwasaki tei (the residence of Iwasaki) in Tokyo.
  839. He took care of the affairs of state of the Oda clan, such as the acceptance of hostages during the fall of Mino Sannin-shu (three elite retainers of Mino), protection of the weakened Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA, and the construction of Nijo-jo Castle, and conducted negotiations with temples and shrines.
  840. He took charge of a site in the Imperial Kyoto National Museum.
  841. He took charge of punishing Ako roshi who surrendered after the raid.
  842. He took charge of saving the situation after Boxer Uprising (the Righteous Harmony Society Movement) in 1900 as Peace Conference representative.
  843. He took charge of the construction from Kurihashi Station to Utsunomiya Station.
  844. He took charge of the paintings on the walls and fusuma (sliding door) of Togu Gosho (the Crown Prince's Palace) in 1960 and the Imperial Palace completed in 1968.
  845. He took charge of the postwar process of the Anglo-Satsuma War, together with Michihira IWASHITA and others.
  846. He took charge of wartime diplomacy in Russo-Japanese War.
  847. He took command of gokenin (immediate vassal of the shogunate in the Kamakura and Muromachi through Edo periods) in Kyoto and engaged in guarding and judging activities in Kyoto as well as performing a liaison function between the Imperial Court and the bakufu.
  848. He took control of Aki-Kashirazaki Castle where Takayasu HIRAGA took refuge.
  849. He took control of Ako-jo Castle as shujoshi (inspector in charge of the castle).
  850. He took control of Ako-jo Castle as shujoshi.
  851. He took control of Hamada Castle.
  852. He took grains of rice offered at the household Shinto altar and put them on the daughter's lips.
  853. He took in 'd' and Hane, also three black stones which were pivotal (should not be taken in) by utilizing 'b' and Nozoki (approaching) for receiving 'a.'
  854. He took in charge of classification of artifacts in Shoso-in gyobutsu (Shoso-in's Imperial Property) because he was good at appraising antiquities.
  855. He took in his mother-in-law.
  856. He took in his real older brother Masanobu HOTTA, who was under house arrest by the order of the bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  857. He took initiative in Ansei no Taigoku (the suppression of extremists by the Shogunate) and was assassinated outside the Sakuradamon Gate by a feudal retainer of the Mito Domain (the Sakuradamongai Incident), who then left the domain in opposition of Ansei no Taigoku.
  858. He took interest in Western goods, putting on Dutch socks which were (the earliest) knitted tabi socks (in Japan) and was fond of drinking wine.
  859. He took it along with him when he went to the capital, Kyoto, accompanied by his attendants in June 1582.
  860. He took many comedy films at Shintoho (New Toho), Toei Company, LTD., and the Daiei film company after the war and became known for filming within a short span of time.
  861. He took minutes of the raid, and was entrusted with recording 'Taketsune HORIBE Hikki' (Records of Taketsune HORIBE).
  862. He took mizugori (cold-water ablutions) from January 4, at the very beginning of the year, to January 31 before completion (fulfillment) of a vow, when Tomoji showed the power of see through.
  863. He took note of guns from early on, and sometimes hired Negoroshu (a group of armed priests in Negoro-ji Temple); it is said he had a lot of guns and was aware of how to use a gun and usage for military purpose.
  864. He took office as Junii Gon Chunagon (Junior Second Rank provisional vice-councilor of state) in 1642, and resigned in 1645.
  865. He took office as Mimawariyaku (the role of patrol) of Kanagawa Magistrate's office through Echigoya, and he assumed the name Waichiro.
  866. He took office as the Minister of Justice in 1872 and was appointed to Sangi (councilor) in 1873.
  867. He took office as the chancellor in 1823 and the Grand Minister in 1842.
  868. He took offices as Sangi in 1869, the Minister of Foreign Affairs in 1871, and Minister of Home Affairs (Japan) in 1892.
  869. He took offices as the Governor of Tokyo Prefecture in 1868, the first Minister of Education in 1871, Sangi and Shihokyo (administrator of Ministry of Justice) in 1873, and the chairman of Genroin (the Chamber of Elders) (Japan) in 1880.
  870. He took on a job at hagoita warehouse merchant Meirindo near Sukiya kashi riverbank area; it is said that his portraits of kabuki actors were highly appreciated.
  871. He took one year starting in 1875 to build a wooden Western-style residence in Sannen-cho, Koji-machi Town (it is said that expenses for architecture were covered by Imperial money and a debt from Atsushi SAISHO, his intimate friend)
  872. He took orders under Shuukan SHOUGE at Kyoto's Ankokuji at the age of 6, and was named Shuuken.
  873. He took over KOYASU to assume the second president of the Yomiuri Shimbun in 1889.
  874. He took over Kagaku (Uta Poem Study) from his father, Michishige, and had influence in the poetry circle Reigenin with his father.
  875. He took over Shoren-in Monzeki (head priest of Shoren-in temple) from his blood brother, Cloistered Imperial Prince Jido (1282 - 1342), and resided in Juraku-in.
  876. He took over Tadahiro KONOE as Kanpaku in the following year, 1863.
  877. He took over as a merchant holding the Edo bakufu's warrant, and he also served as an assistant to the local governor of Nagasaki.
  878. He took over as head of the family at a mere 2 years of age in 1550 because his father had died in a war.
  879. He took over as head of the family due to the death of Shigemune in 1591.
  880. He took over as head of the family in 1449, and became the Shugo of Awa and Mikawa Provinces.
  881. He took over as head of the family on August 25, 1842.
  882. He took over as head of the family on July 15, 1666.
  883. He took over as the head of the family and the shoryo (territory) of 2,000 koku.
  884. He took over as the head of the family when his father, Yoshimoto, was killed by Nobunaga ODA at the Battle of Okehazama, but when he was invaded by Shingen TAKEDA and Ieyasu TOKUGAWA he lost, and the Imagawa family was destroyed as a daimyo.
  885. He took over his family business around 1688 and published Kyogen (farce played during a Noh cycle) books with illustration.
  886. He took over his father's work and advanced the study of "The Tale of Genji," completing what is called the 'Kawachibon manuscript.'
  887. He took over power by retaining the Retired Emperor Goshirakawa and Emperor Nijo.
  888. He took over shugoshiki (military governor) of Suruga and Enshu at the same time.
  889. He took over the Mikkyo of Vajradhatu and Garbhadhatu.
  890. He took over the Poetry Contest in Honor of Hitomaro that embodied the Rokujo Toke (the Rokujo Fujiwara family)'s poetic glory.
  891. He took over the Sanmyakuin school of calligraphy established by his adopted father, Nobutada, and was a prominent calligrapher.
  892. He took over the family estate in 1566 as his elder brother Katamochi MIKUMO died in the battle against Nagamasa ASAI.
  893. He took over the family head position due to the death of his father Takemasa in 1374.
  894. He took over the family of 7000 koku in 1714 when his natural father died.
  895. He took over the head of the Nonomiya family.
  896. He took over the head of the Tsuda family in 1593 because his elder brother Nobuto was arrested for the sennin giri (killing one thousand people with a sword).
  897. He took over the head of the family in 1857.
  898. He took over the key state position of the Cloister Government by the Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa.
  899. He took over the project of planting a forest of Besshi originally launched by Teigo IBA, and in 1917 started afforestation business from Kitami in Hokkaido down to Shiiba Village of Miyazaki Prefecture in Kyushu, and further extended afforestation business to the national forest in Korea.
  900. He took over the role and inherited the family estate.
  901. He took over the school and assumed the name Kondo in 1830.
  902. He took over the throne on May 16, 781.
  903. He took over the throne with the backing by SOGA no Umako, Oomi (Japan) (a highest officer in national politics of the Yamato dynasty).
  904. He took part in Anglo-Satsuma War and Boshin War, and in April 1869, assumed office as Hohei Daitai Shotai Shoto (a Shoto head of infantry battalion and platoon) of the Satsuma Domain.
  905. He took part in Boshin Civil War in 1868.
  906. He took part in Boshin War.
  907. He took part in Empress Jingu's invasion of Korea and succeeded in suppressing a rebellion by Prince Oshikuma.
  908. He took part in Insei (cloister government) by the Retired Emperor Goshirakawa and played an important part as an influential court official, but, as he confronted with FUJIWARA no Shinzei, he moved toward FUJIWARA no Nobuyori, who was a political opponent of Shinzei.
  909. He took part in Oei War.
  910. He took part in a campaign to subdue the Nagashima Ikko Ikki (an uprising of Ikko sect followers in Nagashima [present Kuwana City in Mie Prefecture]) in July 1574.
  911. He took part in a lot of uta-awase (poetry contests) both as a composer and as a judge, and also planned and promoted "Horikawain Hyakushu" (Horikawa Hundred-Poem Sequences).
  912. He took part in an uta-awase (poetry contest) in the reign of the Emperor Uda, and in 894, he composed and presented a personal collection "Kudai Waka" (Waka on Themes of Lines) (Oe no Chisato Shu) due to an imperial order from the Emperor Uda.
  913. He took part in building Fushimi-jo Castle, which started in 1594.
  914. He took part in building Tsujun-kyo Bridge in Higo Province and engaged in works such as Mansei-bashi Bridge in Tokyo.
  915. He took part in hunting down and killing MINAMOTO no Yoshinaka in 1184, and in the Battle of Ichinotani that followed, he joined MINAMOTO no Noriyori's army.
  916. He took part in many battles against the Minamoto clan and left an anecdote of a mockery battle against Yoshimori ISE, who was a retainer of MINAMOTO no Yoshitsune, in the Battle of Yashima.
  917. He took part in many battles from that point on as a key figure of the Tadakatsu troop.
  918. He took part in many utaawase (poetry contest) starting with the "meisho utaawase in the house of Imperial Princess Yushi" in 1041.
  919. He took part in the Battle of Komaki and Nagakute in 1584 and showed distinguished service.
  920. He took part in the Battle of Kyoko-ji Temple in which Takamasa HATAKEYAMA fought Nagayoshi MIYOSHI, but Takamasa HATAKEYAMA was defeated and Kiyooki SHIMA fled.
  921. He took part in the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600 accompanying his father.
  922. He took part in the Battle of Shizugatake and was the oldest of the Shichihonyari.
  923. He took part in the Battle of Toba-Fushimi and the Koshu War.
  924. He took part in the Koan War in 1281 commanding Shimazu's army, and performing well on the battlefield he distinguished himself in the war.
  925. He took part in the Kyoto Umazoroe (military parade) in 1581 as a member of Nobunaga's family.
  926. He took part in the Meitoku War (1391) and the Oei War (1399) as a member of bakufu army and performed well.
  927. He took part in the Oshu War in 1189 and fought at the Battle of Atsukashiyama, where he performed well and killed enemy commander Kongo betto.
  928. He took part in the Siege of Nagashima right after that, but he pulled back again.
  929. He took part in the battle of Shilazi Highland and captured Jinzhoucheng; and on November 21, he took part in the battle near to Lushun, and on the next day, captured the gun battery at Mantoushan.
  930. He took part in the major battles by Nobunaga, including the Battle of Nagashino against the Takeda clan from Kai Province.
  931. He took part in the oshirogo, or Castle Games (a series of games played in the Shogun's castle) for the first time when he was 17, beating Doetsu HONINBO by kuroban four moku (four points as a black stone player).
  932. He took part in the shogunate government as the close aide of Sadanobu MATSUDAIRA in the Kansei Reforms.
  933. He took part in the shogunate government in the end of the Edo period, and acted as Kyoto Shoshidai (the Kyoto deputy) from the years 1843 to 1850 and from 1858 to 1862.
  934. He took part in the uprising led by Prince Mochihito, and travelled to strongholds of the Minamoto Clan in different provinces, conveying communiques and orders from Prince Mochihito, and rallied for the subjugation of the Taira Clan.
  935. He took part in the wars for Hideyoshi's campaign to suppress the whole of Japan as a chief vassal of the Toyotomi family, and he was given Kaga and Ecchu Provinces and set the foundation of the so-called Kaga Hyaku-man koku (the Kaga domain with one million koku [about five million bushels] of rice produced annually).
  936. He took particular interest in iai (the instantaneous drawing of a sword), and founded the Shinshin Shin Ryu School from the existing Shinshin Ryu School.
  937. He took passage in a merchant ship and came back to Hakata, Japan in May 1329.
  938. He took possession and buried the corpse of Asano Takumi no Kami.
  939. He took refuge in the Sendai Domain and he was put up as the leader of Ouetsu-reppan alliance (One theory has it that he used 'Mutsutoki' as his secular name (imina)).
  940. He took sanctuary in Omi Province when the Onin War started in 1467.
  941. He took sides with FUJIWARA no Tokihira and Sadakuni in the Shotai Incident that occurred on February 21, 901 and stopped retired Emperor Uda, who was trying to visit the Imperial Palace in order to demote SUGAWARA no Michizane, just before the Imperial Palace.
  942. He took sides with Prince Oama (Emperor Tenmu) in the Jinshin War, achieving great victories.
  943. He took some local daimyo (feudal lord) as his pupils, and as a performer in the Konparu school, he revived an old classic, 'Seki-dera Komachi (Komachi at Seki-dera),' which had ceased to be performed for a long time, and left 'Dobusho' (Comments on Noh Plays).
  944. He took some positions such as "Gon Chunagon" (Provisional Vice-Councilor of State) in 1641 and "Toka no sechie Geben" (Kugyo who supervised many matters outside Jomei Gate at Toka no sechie [Imperial Court Ceremony]) in 1644.
  945. He took strong foreign policies, for example, the punishment of Shihei HAYASHI for his opinion about measures toward Ezo by banning his book, and the flat refusal to Adam Laksman who requested commerce with Russia while brought back a castaway, Kodayu DAIKOKUYA.
  946. He took ten years over the plot and focused thoroughly on authenticity.
  947. He took that much pride in his performance.
  948. He took the conscription exam and passed it for Class A.
  949. He took the daughter of Motohide HATANO as his legal wife but lost her and, later, took the younger sister of Sakihisa KONOE, former chief adviser to the Emperor, as his legal wife.
  950. He took the daughter of Sangi (councillor) FUJIWARA no Genjo as his wife and had children including MINAMOTO no Chikayori and MINAMOTO no Chikashige.
  951. He took the entrance exam and entered the preparatory school Daiichi Daigaku-ku Igakko (present University of Tokyo, Faculty of Medicine) in November 1873 at the age of 11, faking his age to be two years older than he really was.
  952. He took the family name 'Yanagiwara' because he lived in a house called the 'Yanaiwara-dono.'
  953. He took the family name of Matsudaira at that time.
  954. He took the field as taisho (Major Captain) in the battle to capture the Akasaka-jo Castle in 1333.
  955. He took the fort and pushed the enemy back to the castle, and in March when they accepted mediation following a starvation policy, he opened fire and had his soldiers attack them before erecting barricades and burning the remaining 20,000 peasants to death.
  956. He took the initiative from the anti-shogunate group in the plan to overthrown the shogunate government in armed struggles, because they lost their cause to justify their use of force for a while.
  957. He took the initiative in governing the Imperial Court but was struck down by illness in only five years or so; at that time he intended to be succeeded as kanpaku by his legitimate son Korechika, which was not granted by the Emperor, and he died.
  958. He took the lead in establishing the university with Hiroji KINOSHITA, who assumed the post as first president of Kyoto Imperial University.
  959. He took the lead in visiting and inspecting Western countries.
  960. He took the leadership in Northern Kanto region and looked down on the status of Yoritomo, Nitta no sho was the manor of the Taira family side, and he needed to restrain MINAMOTO no Yoshinaka who was an old enemy through the parent-child generations.
  961. He took the leadership in the Tosei (Eastern expedition) of Emperor Jinmu and at the enthronement of Emperor Jinmu, he took charge of the security of the Imperial Palace's gates.
  962. He took the measure of keeping the Ikoma clan alive whichever side would be defeated.
  963. He took the name "Shiki" for the first time.
  964. He took the name 'Doton' after undergoing the tonsure.
  965. He took the name Jiko when he entered into the priesthood.
  966. He took the name Kengyo, which was given to the highest ranking members of the Todo-za, the traditional guild for visually impaired people, in 1837.
  967. He took the name Seiren on entering the priesthood.
  968. He took the name of Gokomyoshoin.
  969. He took the name of Sakutaro NAKAJIMA in the end of Edo period.
  970. He took the names of Nankei and Senshi BAIKA.
  971. He took the official positions of Chinju-fu shogun (Commander-in-Chief of the Defense of the North) (or Non-Shogun), Shinano no kami (Governor of Shinano Province), and Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade).
  972. He took the opportunity of the turmoil in Kyoto that took place after Kakitsu War in 1443 and stole Jingi (sacred treasures) of Yasakani no Magatama (sacred jewel or necklace) and Ama no Murakumo no Tsurugi Sword and hid on Mt. Hiei during the incident of the invasion of Kyoto (Kinketsu Incident) by Sonshuo (self-proclaimed emperor).
  973. He took the passenger boat President Wilson (managed by American President Line, with a speed of 19 knots and a displacement of 15,395 tons).
  974. He took the position of "Jugoi Jiju" (Junior Fifth Rank and Chamberlain); However, he suddenly resigned the position to go into retirement in 1655.
  975. He took the position of Gon Dainagon in 1800; He served as the chief of In no Miumaya (the division which was responsible for looking after oxen and horses) for the retired emperor Gosakuramachi from 1804 to 1811.
  976. He took the position of Uhyoe no suke (assistant captain of the Right Division of Middle Palace Guards) and Uhyoe no kami (Captain of the Right Division of Middle Palace Guards).
  977. He took the position to promote the kana literature, and he was also know as the author of 'Kotoba no sono' (garden of words), which was the first kana-writting dictionary in Japan.
  978. He took the positions of the Secretary of Foreign Affairs, the Director General of Enforcement Office, and a professor at the Tokyo Imperial University.
  979. He took the post of head priest of the Buddhist Tendai sect in 1493, and devoted himself to rebuilding the burned-out Konponchudo (hall temple hall) located on Mt. Hiei.
  980. He took the role of steward for Seitan-kai, an art exhibition, at Kagetsu-ro building in Maruyama, Nagasaki, promoting cultural exchange between Japan and China.
  981. He took the second name Kawabe Minister.
  982. He took the second name of Genei (源英).
  983. He took the second name or alias Kaga Dainagon.
  984. He took the stage by his real name, Chozaburo HAYASHI.
  985. He took the tonsure and entered the priesthood when he was eleven, studying Zen and becoming the disciple of the Zen priest Kerin at Ryushin-ji temple in Hizen province.
  986. He took the tonsure at Tokujoji Temple in his native place Kozuke Province, and studied esoteric Buddhism at Hasedera Temple in Yamato Province.
  987. He took the tonsure at the age of 20, confined himself in the mountain for 12 years and became gakuto (head student).
  988. He took the tonsure at the age of seven, he was ordained as a Buddhist priest by receiving the commandments of Buddhism at Enryakuji Temple on Mt. Hiei, and studied the doctrine of Tendai sect Buddhism.
  989. He took the tonsure in 1760.
  990. He took the tonsure under Jozansozen of Daikoji Temple in Buzen Province at the age of 17, and in the next year he was ordained as a Buddhist priest by receiving the commandments of Buddhism at the ordination hall of Dazaifu.
  991. He took the tonsure under Jujin of Horyuji Temple, and studied the Sanron doctrine under Genyo of Todaiji Temple.
  992. He took the tonsure, entered the priesthood and became a cloistered emperor in 1713.
  993. He took the trouble of preparing and it was tiresome to arrange necessities, but Inoue was not a stickler about the latter.'
  994. He took to bed suffering from tuberculosis.
  995. He took up Kidendo (the study of history, where he started from Monjo tokugosho (Distinguished Scholars of Letters) and successfully passed Horyakushi (a test for recruitment of government clerk) and was assigned to Shikibu-sho (the Ministry of Ceremonies).
  996. He took up arms at Yoda-jo Castle in Maruko, Chiisagata County, Shinano Province in 1180, and then took part in battles in various places following Yoshinaka.
  997. He took up his residence in Edo temporarily.
  998. He took up his residence near the back gate of the Yushima tenjin Shrine in Edo in 1803 (44 years old).
  999. He took various positions such as Jiju (Imperial Household Agency staff), Sakonoe no shosho (Minor Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards) and Sakonoe no chujo (Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards), and in 1712, he rose to the official rank of Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) to rank with kugyo.
  1000. He toured around schools throughout the country in order to promote the kyogen.


107001 ~ 108000

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