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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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  1. He was obsessively respected by people.'
  2. He was of MINAMOTO no Mitsumasa line of Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  3. He was of Uezuki clan lineage, which was a branch family of the Akamatsu clan in Harima Province, but his parents are uncertain.
  4. He was of Yotsutsujinomiya family.
  5. He was of a branch family of the Akamatsu clan in Harima Province and initially served Shigeaki WATARASE (a son-in-law of his father Noriyori and an older brother-in-law of Toyouji) as the chief retainer.
  6. He was of a branch line of the Kanmu-Heishi (TAIRA clan).
  7. He was of a branch of the Sakagami clan, which descended from toraijin (people from overseas) from China, and it is said that one of his forefathers was Emperor Ling (Han) of the Later Han Dynasty.
  8. He was of a family of the Chichibu clan who descended from the Kanmu-Heishi (Taira clan).
  9. He was of one of the branch families of the ASHIKAGA shogun family.
  10. He was of such strong nerve and had a violent temper on one hand, and on the other hand had coolheadedness to consider that the end justifies the means, as shown by, for example, his attempt to maintain his position by making his daughter marry Yoshitsune.
  11. He was of the Adachi clan, and his father was Yoshikage ADACHI.
  12. He was of the Daigo-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  13. He was of the FUJIWARA no Uona family, the Northern house of the Fujiwara clan.
  14. He was of the Ijuin clan.
  15. He was of the Kanto lineage.
  16. He was of the Murakami-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  17. He was of the Murakami-Genji MINAMOTO no Akifusa lineage.
  18. He was of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan and was the fifth son of FUJIWARA no Nagara.
  19. He was of the family line of the Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan), who were descended from Tsunemoto-o (MINAMOTO no Tsunemoto), the son of the Imperial Prince Sadazumi, himself the sixth son of Emperor Seiwa.
  20. He was of the samurai class but incorporated into the peerage.
  21. He was offended when he was blamed by Nagamasa ASANO and Toshiie MAEDA, who had switched their allegiance to Nobunao NANBU, for overthrowing the Nanbu families of his kin, and the relationships with both families became awkward.
  22. He was officially announced as Imperial Prince at the age of 11 by the Emperor, and four years later, he had a ceremony of attaining manhood and became Sanbon Shinno (the third-ranked Imperial Prince).
  23. He was officially called MINAMOTO no Mitsuyuki.
  24. He was officially called SOGA no SAKAIBE no Omi Marise.
  25. He was officially renamed Sansuke SAIGO, and left Kagoshima to go to Yamagawa port.
  26. He was often bored with her naive words and deeds, but sympathized with her about her poverty, so came to support her life, feeling that the beauty of her nature could not allow him to desert her.
  27. He was often called KOREHARI no Kimi Azamaro or KOREHARU no Kimi Azamaro as written in the historical materials.
  28. He was often called Sento-sama, (Sir Sento) (since he had ruled the cloister government for a long time).
  29. He was often described as an impulsive doer who dislikes Hideyoshi, but it seems that this was largely because of the adaptation in stories created in future ages.
  30. He was often invited to Utakai (waka poetry meeting) by Kugyo (the top court officials) when he was a Kyoto Shoshidai.
  31. He was often invited to serve various lords, but continued working as a town doctor throughout his life except for a contract medical officer of the Kaga clan.
  32. He was often invited to the residences in Edo of the Omura, Torii, and Naito clans as a swordplay instructor.
  33. He was often invited to the uta-awase (poetry contest) held by Emperor Uda and composed poems.
  34. He was often invited to utaawase (poetry contests) in the Dairi (Imperial Palace).
  35. He was often involved in important decision making that exceeded jurisdiction of his official post as seen in the case in which, when FUJIWARA no Tadazane resigned from Kanpaku (chief adviser to the Emperor) in 1120, he rejected the proposal to appoint Tadazane's uncle, FUJIWARA no Ietada as the successor.
  36. He was often on the verge of death when he was very young.
  37. He was old by this time and was prone to illness; consequently, he often requested to be allowed to resign, but each time he was persuaded not to do so.
  38. He was older than Yoshimasa and Yoshimi, but positioned as a younger brother because mother of Yoshimasa and Yoshimi was from the Hino family which seized the reins of power in the bakufu.
  39. He was ommonly known as "Nezumi kozo."
  40. He was on Prince Oama's (Emperor Tenmu) side during the Jinshin War during 672 and became an envoy to receive messages from OTOMO no Fukei.
  41. He was on a good terms with Gotairo (Council of Five Elders) member Ieyasu TOKUGAWA, but fought like cats and dogs with Mitsunari ISHIDA, despite both being Gobugyo members following Hideyoshi's death. (This has been questioned in recent studies.).
  42. He was on bad terms with Hideaki and when Hideaki was transferred from Chikuzen Najima to Echizen Hokusho, he became the independent daimyo of Kaga Daishoji Domain.
  43. He was on board of Cruiser "Kasagi" (the normal cruiser class) during the Battle of Tsushima.
  44. He was on close terms especially with G. R. Bauer and Carl P. Thunberg (Swedish leading disciple of Carl von Linn?), and learned mercury treatment from them to treat syphilis which was epidemic in Japan in those days, and applied it to actual treatments.
  45. He was on especially friendly terms with FUJIWARA no Michitaka and FUJIWARA no Naritoki as drinking companions and brought a free atmosphere to the Imperial Court under the reign of Michitaka.
  46. He was on extremely bad terms with Tadatsune SHIMAZU, and received a letter from Iehisa questioning his actions saying 'family heads that do not treat their vassals with consideration lack the credentials to lead,' but it lacked persuasion because Iehisa himself frequently purged his vassals.
  47. He was on friendly terms with Yoken FUJIMURA and Shoeki HAIYA.
  48. He was on good terms with SEN no Rikyu.
  49. He was on good terms with Shoyo TSUBOUCHI, and issued a critical essay "Shosetsu soron" (General theory of novel) by Shoyo's encouragement.
  50. He was on good terms with noble poets in the middle class such as ONAKATOMI no Yoshinobu, KI no Tokibumi, KIYOHARA no Motosuke, and so on.
  51. He was on the MINAMOTO no Yoshimitsu line of Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  52. He was on the Retired Emperor Gotoba side at the Jokyu War in 1221 and lost.
  53. He was on the TOKUGAWA side in the Siege of Osaka, which started in 1614.
  54. He was on the Tokugawa side as a member of the Kyoto Mimawarigumi (Tokugawa clan sided faction) and is said to have operated behind the scenes of the Omiya Incident.
  55. He was on the peerage as a duke.
  56. He was on the side of Yoshimasa ASHIKAGA, and it appears that he had a certain amount of influence mainly over the ownership issues regarding Zen temples ("Inryoken Nichiroku" [Dietary Life of Zen Priests]).
  57. He was on the side of the Mori clan when Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI attacked Tottori-jo Castle in 1580, and he defended Miyayoshi-jo Castle, one of the important strongpoints of Keta County.
  58. He was once Jurokuinoge (Junior Sixth Rank, Lower Grade).
  59. He was once Shorokuinojo (Senior Sixth Rank, Upper Grade).
  60. He was once adopted as a son of MINAMOTO no Michichika and called himself 'MINAMOTO no Chikahiro,' however, when his father reverted the family names to Oe in June 1216, he followed his father and reverted to his family names of Oe.
  61. He was once an adopted child of Tadayoshi SATO, the Lord of Mino Kajita Castle.
  62. He was once defeated by Emishi, but with his wife's quick thinking, he rolled back the tide of war.
  63. He was once demoted from nobility to subject for a certain period, and named MINAMOTO no Akihira.
  64. He was once even considered for prime minister of the future.
  65. He was once exiled to Dewa Province because of his involvement in the Shie Incident but was later pardoned and subsequently founded Tokai-ji Temple (Shinagawa-ku Ward, Tokyo) in Edo.
  66. He was once nominated for an heir to the Imperial throne.
  67. He was once suspected to have assassinated Ryoma SAKAMOTO in the Omiya Incident.
  68. He was one model for the character of Genji HIKARU in the "Genji Monogatari" (The Tale of Genji).
  69. He was one of 'the four great scholars of Japanese classical literature and culture' together with KADA no Azumamaro, Norinaga MOTOORI and Atsutane HIRATA.
  70. He was one of 24 direct disciples of Shinran.
  71. He was one of Banzan's big four (shitenno) disciples.
  72. He was one of FUJIWARA no Manatsu's descendants (the later Hino line).
  73. He was one of Four Heavily Kings of Heian waka.
  74. He was one of New thirty-six major poets.
  75. He was one of Oura Sanro (three excellent chief retainers of the Tsugaru-Oura family) along with Nobumoto MORIOKA and Nobukiyo OGASAWARA.
  76. He was one of Rokkasen (six best Waka poets) and the only one whose poems were not selected for Ogura Hyakunin Isshu (the Ogura Anthology of One Hundred Tanka-poems by One Hundred Poets) within Rokkasen.
  77. He was one of Sanchuro (arbitration office) of the Toyotomi government.
  78. He was one of Shido-shogun (Generals Dispatched to Four Circuits) who mainly pacified Hokurikudo.
  79. He was one of Waka Rokuninto (Six Waka Poet Group) and was a brother of TACHIBANA no Yoshikiyo, who was also one of Waka Rokuninto.
  80. He was one of Yamato-e (traditional Japanese painting) painters representing the early Edo period, equaling Sotatsu TAWARAYA, but he created his own unique style of painting by absorbing various schools' ways.
  81. He was one of Yoshihira 17 horse soldiers.
  82. He was one of about two dozen of Prince Oama's followers when the Prince left Yoshino for Togoku to take up army.
  83. He was one of about two dozens of the Prince Oama's followers when the Prince departed Yoshino for the east on June 24.
  84. He was one of about two dozens of the Prince Oama's followers when the Prince departed Yoshino to take up arms on July 24.
  85. He was one of among 12 members executed for Kotoku Incident.
  86. He was one of binan goninshu (five men of beauty).
  87. He was one of eight Shoka Sonjuku School students who rushed to the houses of executives such as Masanosuke SUFU in order to inquire the reason for Shoin's criminal charge when Shoin was put in Noyama Prison again.
  88. He was one of eight priests who went to Tang for study (Saicho, Kukai, Jogyo, Engyo, Ennin, Eun, Enchin and Shuei).
  89. He was one of few close advisors who served Emperor Gofukakusa during a period of misfortune which continued after relinquishing of the throne to Emperor Kameyama.
  90. He was one of foremost writers in the history of Nara Buddhism, and he left more than 20 literary works such as "Yuishikigi tozomyoki" (an annotation of Buddhist scriptures) and "Yuishiki bunryo ketsu."
  91. He was one of more than twenty men who followed Prince Oama when he left Yoshino to take arms.
  92. He was one of seven noblemen escaped from Kyoto in the incident called shichikyo ochi.
  93. He was one of the 'Shizugatake-no-shichihon-yari' (the seven excellent military commanders in Hideyoshi's army at the battle of Shizugatake).
  94. He was one of the 'Three bizarre characters of Kansei' including Shihei HAYASHI and Kunpei GAMO.
  95. He was one of the 24 direct disciples of Shinran.
  96. He was one of the 36 Immortal Poets.
  97. He was one of the 36 immortal poets.
  98. He was one of the Bakumatsu Shidai Hitokiri (Four famous assassins of Bakumatsu, end of the Edo period).
  99. He was one of the Chuko Sanjurokkasen (medieval 36 Immortal Poets).
  100. He was one of the Four Most Loyal Retainers of Yoshinaka.
  101. He was one of the Go-Bugyo (Five Major Magistrates) of the TOYOTOMI Administration and his original name was Nagoyoshi.
  102. He was one of the Gobugyo (Five Major Magistrates) of the TOYOTOMI Administration and was the first head of the Tamba Kameyama Domain (or fief).
  103. He was one of the Gotairo (Council of Five Elders) under Toyotomi's government.
  104. He was one of the Hosso Rokuso (Six High Priests of the Hosso Sect).
  105. He was one of the Kagawa clan's 在京家 who had a common name of 'Goro.'
  106. He was one of the Kyoto school.
  107. He was one of the Matsushiro Sanzan (the collective name of confusian scholars in Matsushiro Domain at the end of Edo Period).
  108. He was one of the New thirty-six major poets.
  109. He was one of the Persons of Cultural Merits in 1986.
  110. He was one of the Renga Shichiken (Seven Sages of Renga) selected by Sogi.
  111. He was one of the Rokkasen (Six Immortal Poets).
  112. He was one of the Rokkasen.
  113. He was one of the Sabaku-ha (supporters of the Shogun) at the end of Edo period, and then surrendered under the pressure from the new government in the Boshin Civil War in 1868 to participate in an expeditionary force to the east.
  114. He was one of the Sangi (Royal Advisors).
  115. He was one of the Sanjurokkasen (Thirty-six Immortal Poets), and 31 poems in total were collected in "Gosen Wakashu" and other successive chokusen wakashu (anthology of Japanese poetry compiled by Imperial command).
  116. He was one of the Sanjurokkasen (thirty-six poets chosen by FUJIWARA no Kinto).
  117. He was one of the Shichihonyari (Seven Spears) of Shizugatake during the Battle of Shizugatake.
  118. He was one of the Shichihonyari (Seven Spears) of Shizugatake.
  119. He was one of the Shinagon (the four councilors) for the court of Emperor Ichijo.
  120. He was one of the Teacher of Swordsmanship in Shinchogumi (Tokugawa shogunate guard organization) and famed for the greatest swordcraft in Shinchogumi.
  121. He was one of the Thirty-six Immortal Poets.
  122. He was one of the Thirty-six Master Poets.
  123. He was one of the Toba-in Shitenno (four most loyal retainers of Retired Emperor Toba).
  124. He was one of the Tokugawa-shitenno (four generals serving Tokugawa Ieyasu).
  125. He was one of the Yoshinaka Shitenno (four most loyal retainers of Yoshinaka).
  126. He was one of the anti-shogunate nobilities.
  127. He was one of the best poets in the Emperor Reigen's poetry circle together with Sanenari SHIMIZUDANI and Michimi NAKANOIN.
  128. He was one of the best three vassals of Akechi.
  129. He was one of the big four of the communication business along with Masaru INOUE of the Railway Bureau, Hisoka MAEJIMA of the Postal Bureau, and Yasuyo ISHIMARU of the Communication Bureau.
  130. He was one of the big stars in the Silent Era of Hollywood.
  131. He was one of the binan goninshu, together with Kojuro KUSUNOKI, Aijiro SASAKI, Saburo MAGOSHI, and Ryutaro MAZUME.
  132. He was one of the central characters in the third part, Uji jujo (The Ten Quires of Uji).
  133. He was one of the composers of 'Horikawa Jiro Hyakushu' (the Second Horikawa Hundred-Poem Sequences), which was completed in 1116.
  134. He was one of the editors of 'Nihon Koki' (Later Chronicle of Japan).
  135. He was one of the educators who established the foundation of the modern Japanese education as a disciple of Yukichi FUKUZAWA.
  136. He was one of the eight Nyutohakke priests who travelled to China, the others being Saicho, Kukai, Jogyo, Engyo, Eun, Enchin, and Shuei.
  137. He was one of the eight priests (Saicho, Kukai, Jogyo, Engyo, Ennin, Eun, Enchin and Shuei) who travelled to Tang Dynasty China.
  138. He was one of the eight priests who went to China (Saicho, Kukai, Jogyo, Engyo, Ennin, Eun, Enchin, and Shuei).
  139. He was one of the elite body guard unit members of ATSUJI clan, however, he later resigned from the position to serve Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI around 1582 and he was assigned to escort Hideyoshi's adopted son Hidekatsu HASHIBA with 2,000 koku (360.78 cubic meters) of fuchi (stipend).
  140. He was one of the excellent actors acting as man, who supported the kabuki society in the late Showa period.
  141. He was one of the family heads of the Ogimachisanjo family, however, he died at the age of three.
  142. He was one of the family members of the Adachi clan and an heir to Tokiaki ADACHI.
  143. He was one of the few busho (Japanese military commander) that was able to take up his old position as daimyo.
  144. He was one of the few poets who was not a courtier, and his activities with poetry circles did not enter full swing until his final years.
  145. He was one of the first overseas student under the Ministry of Education (he went to Germany to study the year before Ogai).
  146. He was one of the first to receive the Order of Culture.
  147. He was one of the five chief ministers of the Toyotomi administration.
  148. He was one of the five leaders called 'Nikisansuke,' who were considered as influential in the worlds of military, government, and business in Manchukuo at that time.
  149. He was one of the five major magistrates in Toyotomi's government.
  150. He was one of the five shukuro (consular dignitaries of the samurai class) of Mitsuhide AKECHI.
  151. He was one of the founders of Tokyo Butsurigaku Koshujo (Tokyo Training Institute of Physics) (later, Tokyo Butsuri Gakko (Tokyo School of Physics), current Tokyo University of Science).
  152. He was one of the founders of Yogacaravada, of India, who preached Vijnaptimatra around 300.
  153. He was one of the founders of modern postal system in Japan and has been known for the portrait on one-yen stamp.
  154. He was one of the four major chief vassals at the Kiyosu Conference.
  155. He was one of the greatest strategists in the Sengoku period, using every means, including warfare, tactical manouvering, assassination, bribery and marriage politics, to gain victory.
  156. He was one of the hereditary Imperial family members, the third head of the Fushiminomiya family.
  157. He was one of the husbands of Seishonagon and also was the husband of the mother of Priest Kocho, who was a poet.
  158. He was one of the influential Kenin (retainers) in the Taira clan government.
  159. He was one of the leaders of a rebellion in the Johei-Tengyo Disturbances and a local government officer of Hitachi Province, which position was also personally conferred by Masakado.
  160. He was one of the leaders of the Western Forces in the Onin War.
  161. He was one of the leading Buddhist sculptors, along with Unkei, of the Kamakura period.
  162. He was one of the leading Ukiyo-e artists during the end of the Edo Period.
  163. He was one of the leading novelists of the Shirakaba school.
  164. He was one of the leading quasi-classical writers.
  165. He was one of the main culprits who delivered SUGAWARA no Michizane by colluding with FUJIWARA no Tokihira during the reign of Emperor Daigo, in 901, he was appointed as Udaijin to take the place of Michizane.
  166. He was one of the main translators of "Kaitai Shinsho" (the historic Japanese translation of a Dutch anatomical text).
  167. He was one of the masterminds behind Retired Emperor Gotaba's plot to overthrow the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  168. He was one of the masterminds of the Johei and Tengyo War.
  169. He was one of the masterminds of the assassination of Shogun Yoshiteru ASHIKAGA and of the second destruction by fire of the Great Buddha Hall of Todai-ji Temple.
  170. He was one of the medieval 36 Immortal Poets.
  171. He was one of the members of the Demo of eighty-eight retainers of Imperial Court.
  172. He was one of the missionaries who were active during the first Christian Missionary period, and had many achievements including the establishment of Hongo chuo kaido (Hongo Central Church).
  173. He was one of the most important kabuki actors after IZUMO no Okuni, a founder of Nakamura-za Theater, and also a progenitor of kabuki actors named NAKAMURA.
  174. He was one of the oldest vassals of Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI, and had been a vassal since Hideyoshi served Nobunaga ODA.
  175. He was one of the palace staff in the Mutsu Province.
  176. He was one of the participants in the Teishin hachiju-hachi kyo ressan jiken (Demo of eighty-eight retainers of the Imperial Court), protesting against the U.S.-Japan Treaty of Amity and Commerce.
  177. He was one of the people (including Shigenobu OKUMA) who didn't appreciate Takamori SAIGO at all and likened him to Takauji ASHIKAGA, who rose up in revolt during the Kenmu Restoration.
  178. He was one of the people of five offices in Aso.
  179. He was one of the people who inspired him the most, his name appeared in Saigo's book.
  180. He was one of the pioneers in experimental medicine.
  181. He was one of the poets patronized by the cloistered government of Emperor Gotoba and in 1207 produced a number of poetry anthologies including: 'Shojigodohyakushu,' 'Sengohyaku ban Utaawase' (1500 Poetry Couplets Compilation) and 'Saisho shitennoin shoji waka.'
  182. He was one of the representative poets of the Shirakaba School.
  183. He was one of the retainers of MINAMOTO no Yoshitsune.
  184. He was one of the sanchuros (arbitration office).
  185. He was one of the senja (authors) of "Shin Kokin Wakashu" (New Collection of Japanese Poems of Ancient and Modern Times).
  186. He was one of the seven retainers who followed Yoshitomo who was defeated and escaped to Togoku (the eastern part of Japan, particularly the Kanto region).
  187. He was one of the so called Kesshi-Hachidai (Eight Undocumented Sovereigns), and it is commonly understood that he was a nonexistent Emperor (there is also the theory of his existence).
  188. He was one of the students of Ansai YAMAZAKI, and he made efforts to prevail Suika Shinto which was founded by Ansai in the Imperial court.
  189. He was one of the subordinates of Daemon NIPPON.
  190. He was one of the ten representative pupils under Basho MATSUO.
  191. He was one of the three scholars who drew up the Japanese Civil Code, together with Nobushige HOZUMI and Masaakira TOMII, and he was also a drafting member of the Commercial Code.
  192. He was one of the top executive members like Soji OKITA and Shinpachi NAGAKURA.
  193. He was one of the twelve people who were executed in the Kotoku Incident.
  194. He was one of the twenty-four Generals of Takeda.
  195. He was one of the vassals 'notorious for being unloyal to their lord' because he broke the oath of the revenge although he had been given considerably a large amount of salary.
  196. He was one of the very first students to enroll in the Department of Architecture at the Imperial College of Engineering.
  197. He was one of the wonderful directors who established the base of period films and was called 'a father of period film.'
  198. He was one of those who did distinguish service to the establishment of national finances of modern Japan, and additionally, he has been known as the first 'government economist' (economist who works at a government agency) who greatly contributed to economics education and its popularization.
  199. He was one of those who were raised to the peerage at an early time because of his achievement as the guard of Emperor Meiji.
  200. He was one of three counts of Tosa Province (the others being Taisuke ITAGAKI and Shojiro GOTO).
  201. He was one of three outstanding people of the Kato family.
  202. He was one of twenty-four members of the Mibu masterless warriors group at the time of its formation.
  203. He was one rank above the Daijo daijin Juichii (Junior First Rank), MINAMOTO no Masazane.
  204. He was one who advised "More haste, less speed."
  205. He was one year old.
  206. He was only 14 years old, when he committed the fist crime and imprisoned.
  207. He was only 169 centimeters in height and the fourth shortest Yokozuna in the recorded Sumo history.
  208. He was only 21 years old at that time.
  209. He was only 35.
  210. He was only 54 years old.
  211. He was only Tendai-zasu for one month.
  212. He was only a shidoso (priest having entered Buddhist priesthood without permission) until immediately before going to Tang, and it still remains a riddle about how such a priest could suddenly emerge as a ryugakuso.
  213. He was only six years old when his father passed away, so came under the guardianship of his uncle, Tsunejiro KURODA, and his father's disciple, Teijiro UEDA, succeeding as head of the family in 1926.
  214. He was onnagata (female-role actor).
  215. He was opposed to going back to Edo and stayed in Kyoto and in March of the same year he participated in organizing Mibu-Roshigumi (Mibu masterless warriors group).
  216. He was opposed to the Hosokawa clan over foreign trade (Japan-Ming trade (the tally trade)).
  217. He was opposed to the assault on Suruga (Suruga-zeme).
  218. He was oppressed by being charged for defamation against royalty before the Second World War, but he drew attention after the war, and TSUDA's theory became the center of the study of Japanese mythology for a while.
  219. He was ordained at Enryaku-ji Temple on Mt. Hiei in 1295 where he studied the Endonkai (Precepts for Perfect and Immediate Enlightenment) Mahayana precept.
  220. He was ordained at Seiren-in, and he was adopted by Chunagon (vice-councilor of state) Kanesato HIROHASHI.
  221. He was ordained by Junyu and Kanku, and in the year 968 he became one of the naikubu-juzenshi (the ten selected excellent priests for a Buddhist service in the Imperial Court) and gojiso (personal monk) to the crown prince.
  222. He was ordained in 1561 in Goa, and he served by dealing with the communications from each missionary location thanks to his language and writing skills, which were well recognized.
  223. He was ordained in 1621 and was promoted to jiju in Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) after genpuku (celebrate one's coming of age) in 1633.
  224. He was ordained to nihon (the second court rank for an Imperial Prince) in 1856.
  225. He was ordered by Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI to switch his tactics to land and sea defence and thwarted several of Yi Sun-si attempted invasions.
  226. He was ordered to be demoted from nobility to subject after he came under suspicion of being involved in the TACHIBANA no Naramaro Disturbance.
  227. He was ordered to be stationed in Kyushu by Ieyasu TOKUGAWA, and urged Christians to convert to Buddhism.
  228. He was ordered to carve a seal of the emperor and a seal of state by the Meiji Government when he was in his mid-sixties.
  229. He was ordered to commit seppuku (suicide by disembowelment) on August 20, and he died in the Willow room at Seigan-ji Temple.
  230. He was ordered to depart for the front as leader of Betsudo-Daini-ryodan (the second stand-alone brigade), having received the cooperation of Takayoshi KIDO and others.
  231. He was ordered to depart for the front under Yoshisada's command due to the hopeless circumstance, he fought against the army of Tadayoshi ASHIKAGA in the Battle of Minatogawa (present-day Kobe City, Hyogo Prefecture) to be defeated, so he is said to have stabbed each other with his younger brother Masasue KUSUNOKI.
  232. He was ordered to dispatch 1,500 people during the invasion of Korea and, as a member of the navy, was responsible for transportation between Kyushu and Busan, though he was later transferred to the land forces.
  233. He was ordered to dispatch a 1,200 man navy during the Keicho Invasion and annihilated the invading Korean navy led by Won Gyun during a counterattack in July 1597.
  234. He was ordered to go and collect money, and had the money picked by someone, then he thought he would compensate it with his life.
  235. He was ordered to guard Kyoto in 1859, but fell ill from stress and work due to the poor finances of his domain and died at the young age of 26 on August 21 (August 22).
  236. He was ordered to put a reign on his behavior at Benten Daiba.
  237. He was ordered to return to the secular world in May, 1862, and restored to the government of the court as the new post, Kokuji goyogakari (a general official of the Imperial Household in charge of the State affair) in January 1863 (December in old calendar).
  238. He was ordered to select the doctors for foot-soldier quarters and recommended seven physicians including Ryosen TEZUKA.
  239. He was ordered to send his retainers to patrol the territory of Miyazu Domain, Tango Province, on June 15, 1666, after Miyazu Domain's lord Takakuni KYOGOKU was deprived of his rank and fief.
  240. He was ordered to serve as sandai (a visit to the Imperial Palace) by kinri (Imperial Palace or residence), and was appointed to Shorokui (Senior Sixth Rank) and to Nagato no kami (Governor of Nagato Province).
  241. He was ordered to stop doing his duty and therefore, SAEKI no Imaemishi, Dazai no daini (Senior Assistant Governor General of the Dazai-fu) took Hamanari's duty.
  242. He was ordered to subjugate Southern Court power in the Nansatsu area.
  243. He was ordered to undertake Saiyaku (to gather medicinal herbs in the fields and mountain) research in various regions with Genjo NORO and Masakatsu UEMURA, as well as to manage Shimousa Yakuen (medicinal-herb garden) and cultivate herbs there.
  244. He was ordered to westernize the traditional ikebana (flower arrangement) as an urgent tusk in order to decorate Mitsui family's geihinkan (guest house) with flowers, the second house built for the purpose of the facility to entertain foreigners.
  245. He was ordered transference of his fief to Izumo Province, Hoki Province or Iwami Province which was still enemy territory ("Ehon Taikoki").
  246. He was originally a Shugenso (a Buddhist monk who practices at sacred grounds in order to acquire the power of Buddhism), but he intended to become a calligrapher.
  247. He was originally a chief priest of the Saiju-in Temple in Mt. Hiei, but he returned to secular life after the burning of Mt. Hiei by Nobunaga ODA and became a disciple of Dosan MANASE, then proceeded to master Chinese medicine.
  248. He was originally a disciple of Yoshizane TANAKA, and from an early age he wrote books such as "Shinsenkorekibinran," "Sanseizokukai," "Jujirekizukaihakki," and so on.
  249. He was originally a feudal retainer of Tottori Domain (Inshu Domain), the first governor of Tottori Prefecture (prefectural ordinance), and then became Viscount.
  250. He was originally a feudal retainer of the Mikazuki Domain of Harima Province and later became terazamurai (samurai who performed administrative functions at temples) at Zojo-ji Temple, but was expelled as a result of his bad behavior, and ended up teaching mathematics and calligraphy, as well as practicing fortune-telling.
  251. He was originally a god of paddy fields in Katsuragi and assumed the status of a god of oracles by taking over part of the status of Hitokoto nushi (a Japanese ancient god).
  252. He was originally a government official from lower-ranking nobles that served the Imperial Court, went down to Kamakura to be an official as a close adviser for MINAMOTO no Yoritomo, and contributed to the establishment of the Kamakura bakufu.
  253. He was originally a hikan (low-level bureaucrat) of the Kyogoku clan.
  254. He was originally a huntsman.
  255. He was originally a monk at Komatsubara-dera Temple in Owari no Kuni but later entered Enryaku-ji Temple on Mt. Hiei.
  256. He was originally a monk of Enryaku-ji Temple on Mt. Hiei, loved martial arts and served Yoshitsune.
  257. He was originally a peasant but spent his retirement life at Sada Village.
  258. He was originally a retainer of the Rokkaku clan.
  259. He was originally a teacher at a public elementary school, where he started working after graduation from a teacher's college.
  260. He was originally a vassal to the Ashikaga clan and was called Kojiro Morotsuna ASAYAMA, later taking the name KATSUBE.
  261. He was originally an actor in Kamigata (Kyoto and Osaka area), but the third went down to Edo.
  262. He was originally an umamawari (horse guards) for Nobunaga, but was selected as a member of the Aka horo shu (elite bodyguard unit).
  263. He was originally called "Odamaro".
  264. He was originally called Hidehiko.
  265. He was originally called Wasaburo, then Soon, later Seifukuan Soshuku.
  266. He was originally endowed with talents as a scholar and studied hard, however, under the situation as the successor, he is said to have had no time to write his own book.
  267. He was originally following his father, who was a Kenin (retainer) of TAIRA no Tomomori.
  268. He was originally from Asahi-mura, Higashitagawa-gun, Yamagata Prefecture (present Tsuruoka City).
  269. He was originally from Awa Province.
  270. He was originally from Bingo Province (present Hiroshima Prefecture).
  271. He was originally from Chikugo Province.
  272. He was originally from Chikuzen Province (Fukuoka Prefecture).
  273. He was originally from Fushimi (present-day Fushimi-ku, Kyoto City).
  274. He was originally from Harima Province (Hyogo Prefecture).
  275. He was originally from Hizen Province (Saga Prefecture).
  276. He was originally from Hizen Province.
  277. He was originally from Kyoto Prefecture.
  278. He was originally from Kyoto, and studied mathematics under Yoshizane TANAKA at first, but later became a disciple of Katahiro TAKEBE.
  279. He was originally from Kyoto.
  280. He was originally from Nagato Province.
  281. He was originally from Otomo Village, Shiga County, Omi Province.
  282. He was originally from Shinano Province.
  283. He was originally from Suruga Province.
  284. He was originally from Tokyo Prefecture.
  285. He was originally from Yamashiro Province.
  286. He was originally from Yobu-gun of Tajima Province.
  287. He was originally from the Kumamoto Domain.
  288. He was originally from the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan and the second son of FUJIWARA no Nagara.
  289. He was originally from the Tochigi Prefecture.
  290. He was originally known by the surname of Genji.
  291. He was originally named Riho.
  292. He was originally named Shoan.
  293. He was originally named as Akanbei ICHIKAWA, and he once moved back to Edo (Tokyo) with his father; he later renamed Shinnosuke ICHIKAWA the 4th after 1856, and later he renamed again to Juzo ICHIKAWA, and Saruzo ICHIKAWA the 2nd.
  294. He was originally named 公功.
  295. He was originally of the Oe clan.
  296. He was originally of the Tatara clan.
  297. He was originally popular in amateur manzai with his brother.
  298. He was originally referred to as Kinnosuke.
  299. He was originally the chief priest of Rokuon-ji Temple.
  300. He was originally the head of a government police organization of the Muromachi period.
  301. He was ousted in Koryaku Coup but was later absolved and returned to the shogunate government.
  302. He was out of fame and fortune, hated secular compromise, was strict to others as well while being humble and was obstinate and unconstraint rather than quiet.
  303. He was outraged when he heard that a ronin(masterless samurai), Saburo ADACHI killed Takatoki's favorite dog that had attacked Saburo's mother.
  304. He was outstanding in Waka (a traditional Japanese poem of thirty-one syllables) and Kanshi (Chinese-style poem) and his works of Waka and Kanshi were introduced in the "Manyoshu" (the oldest anthology of tanka) and the "Kaifuso" (Fond Recollections of Poetry).
  305. He was outstanding in poetry, kangen (music instruments) and calligraphy and also authored "Shungyoku Hisho" and "Shugyoku Hisho" in which he compiled ceremonies and ancient practices or customs.
  306. He was outstanding in the Japanese film world for his sense of rhythm created by the images composed of fragmented cuts and his up-tempo tense sequences, and in this sense, he is comparable to his senior associate at TOHO, Kon ICHIKAWA.
  307. He was outstanding not only in terms of his woodcuts but also in his original drawings.
  308. He was pardoned and returned to the capital in 745.
  309. He was pardoned by Yoshimitsu a year later in 1391, and in the Meitoku War when Ujikiyo mobilized an army against Yoshimitsu, he participated in the fight as a member of Yoshimitsu's escort called umamawari (mounted guards of a general).
  310. He was pardoned for his crime, and allowed to regain his court rank, and returned to Kyoto in 1164.
  311. He was pardoned in 1160, became Sangi (councilor) in 1174, and was promoted to Chunagon in 1183.
  312. He was pardoned in 1611, and later reached the rank of Shonii (Senior Second Rank) Gon Dainagon.
  313. He was pardoned in 1868 and served as Jako no ma shiko (entitlement to the meritorious deeds for the Imperial restoration or noble) of the Imperial Household Ministry, official of Kamo-jinja Shrine, and Daikyosei (minister over religions at the beginning of the Meiji era).
  314. He was pardoned in 1872 and was taken by his father to Shizuoka City, where his son was waiting for him.
  315. He was pardoned later on, and after serving as a Shohanji and Shikibu shoyu (Junior Assistant of the Ministry of Ceremonial), he was appointed as the Daigaku betto (head of the imperial university).
  316. He was pardoned on January 9, 1702, and died in 1706 at the age of 51.
  317. He was pardoned seven years later, but he chose to enter priest life as Tsuboyama Nyudo, and lead a peaceful life ever after.
  318. He was pardoned, but was treated as a member of the samurai warrior class.
  319. He was part of one of the three most powerful groups of vassals.
  320. He was part of the Kanin line of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan.
  321. He was part of the Kanin lineage of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan.
  322. He was part of the family of the Mikawa Matsui clan, but since he received the Matsudaira name from his father's generation, Yasushige also used the name, MATSUDAIRA.
  323. He was particular about the borrowing and lending of books as well as the manner of reading books.
  324. He was particularly eager to film this story because he highly regarded Saikaku for his vitality full of emotions.
  325. He was particularly feared that spread of the Copernican theory might destroy Buddhism itself; the theory was directly opposed to the universal order described by Buddhist scriptures, saying that Mt. Sumeru (in Buddhism - said to be the highest mountain rising in the center of the world) was the center of it.
  326. He was particularly known by later generations as an expert kemari player, being praised as 'Saint Kicker,' and legends about him include the following.
  327. He was particularly known for calligraphy, having learned the Sonen school and developed a manner of his own called the Konoe school or the Sanmyakuin school.
  328. He was particularly noted for his contribution in the restoration of Sho (Japanese flute), which had been on the verge of being abolished.
  329. He was particularly noted for his success in organizing the judicial system.
  330. He was particularly tenacious of Yamato Province, the Soshu family's past territory, which became a great threat for the local samurai 'Kokujinshu'.
  331. He was paternal half-brother to Kanezane KUJO: Daijo-daijin (the grand minister of state), and Jien: Tendai-zasu (the head priest of the Tendai sect).
  332. He was patronized by the 11th grand master of Omote Senke, Rokurokusai.
  333. He was patronized by the Ninth Shogun Yoshihisa ASHIKAGA and his birth mother Tomiko HINO.
  334. He was patronized by the Ouchi clan.
  335. He was permitted Naishoden (to visit the special room in the imperial palace) for his donation.
  336. He was permitted access to the Imperial Court in 1077 and soon became jiju (chamberlain).
  337. He was permitted shoden (access to the throne) and to wear kinjiki (forbidden colors).
  338. He was permitted to bathe on June 7, and FUJIWARA no Kunimichi, Suketsune KUDO, and the Senju, who was the Kanjo (court lady), were dispatched to him by the arrangement of Yoritomo at the evening to hold a party to console the idleness.
  339. He was permitted to enter Changan in December 12, 805, but he actually entered Changan on January 31, 805.
  340. He was permitted to enter the Imperial Court in 899, and was appointed Kurodo no to (emperor's personal secretary) in 901 and then Togu Daibu (grand master of the Crown Prince's Household) for Imperial Prince Yasuakira in 917.
  341. He was permitted to enter the mountain, but was later persecuted.
  342. He was permitted to have yakata (an honorific title) and call himself Mogami yakata by the Muromachi bakufu, and called himself the Mogami clan.
  343. He was permitted to return to the Matsumae Domain and was offered protection.
  344. He was permitted to undergo Shoden (visit the imperial court).
  345. He was permitted to use gissha (an ox-drawn carriage) when entering the Imperial Palace.
  346. He was permitted to wear prohibited colors.
  347. He was permitted under Sotan SEN to initiate use of Daisu (a display stand for tea ceremony utensils), and was counted as one of the Sotan shitenno (The big four of the Sotan school).
  348. He was persuaded by his brother out of going to Edo and into studying Rangaku in Osaka.
  349. He was persuaded by other members of the Shinsengumi to bury the body in precincts of a temple nearby.
  350. He was picked up by Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI after the Battle of Yamasaki.
  351. He was placed with Terumoto MORI after the battle and executed by Terumoto's discretion.
  352. He was politically aligned with the sect of Toru HOSHI, and in 1896, Shohei was elected as a member of Tokyo City Council.
  353. He was politically close to Yorinaga at first, and he forfeited his fief because he supported Yorinaga at the Hogen War in 1156.
  354. He was popular and invited everywhere to speak, so it is said that he visited both the temperance group and the sake brewing industry in the same day.
  355. He was popularly called Some-dono or Shirakawa-dono.
  356. He was popularly known as 'Kei chan Fukusuke'.
  357. He was popularly known as Ki no Nagon (Counselor Ki).
  358. He was popularly known as Matasaburo
  359. He was popularly known as Shichiemon
  360. He was popularly known as Shichikuro or Shinzo.
  361. He was popularly known as Shikibu.
  362. He was portrayed as a wall which the main character, Isami KONDO (played by Shingo KATORI) had to overcome, and he was an important character supporting the first half of the drama.
  363. He was portrayed not as a villain but as a man who pretended to be a villain; he was also portrayed as an educated and popular man of consequence in addition to being a good swordsman.
  364. He was posted in the highest rank as a vassal following Daijo-daijin (Grand Minister) and Takechi no Miko/Prince Takechi and was then posted in the highest rank in the vassals due to the death of Takechi no Miko in 696.
  365. He was posted to Jimu (the representative of general affairs of the temple) after the death of Shoshin, and received kanjo (a ceremony similar to baptism) by a bonze Kani, and became kengyo (a post of supervisor of the office work at temples and shrines) of Enso-ji Temple and Hossho-ji Temple in 1098.
  366. He was posted to Samurai-dokoro tonin (Governor of the Board of Retainers) of the Ashikaga Shogunate in 1381 and worked there for three years.
  367. He was posted to a jimu (a post in charge of affairs of the temple) of the Ninna-ji Temple after the death of Kakugyo in 1105.
  368. He was posted to kengyo (temple administrator) of the Ninna-ji temple and the Hossho-ji Temple, etc.
  369. He was posthumously appointed Kokushi (Provincial Governor) in consideration of his distinguished services.
  370. He was posthumously appointed as Dainagon (chief councilor of state).
  371. He was posthumously awarded Jun-daijin (Vice Minister) on Jun. 26, 1600.
  372. He was posthumously awarded Shoichii (Senior First Rank) and the name Kentokuko.
  373. He was posthumously awarded Shoichii (Senior First Rank), the nominal provincial title Lord of Owari Province, and the shigo (a posthumous name) Seishinko.
  374. He was posthumously awarded Shoichii (Senior First Rank).
  375. He was posthumously awarded the First Class Order of the Sacred Treasure.
  376. He was posthumously awarded the Junii (Junior Second Rank).
  377. He was posthumously awarded the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette, Fourth Class.
  378. He was posthumously awarded the court rank of Shoichii, (Senior First Rank).
  379. He was posthumously awarded the court rank of Shoiichi (Senior First Rank) and received the name Mototsune (with different Chinese characters).
  380. He was posthumously awarded the court rank of Shoshii (Senior Fourth Rank).
  381. He was posthumously awarded the marshal Collar of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum.
  382. He was posthumously awarded the post of Dajodaijin (Prime Minister) and the rank of Shoichii (Senior First Rank).
  383. He was posthumously awarded the post of Naidaijin (Minister of the Center).
  384. He was posthumously awarded the rank of Jikikoichi (直広壱; the 10th highest in the vassals' section of the 48 court ranks instituted by the Emperor Tenmu).
  385. He was posthumously awarded the rank of Jusani (Junior Third Rank) for his meritorious deeds during the Jinshin War.
  386. He was posthumously awarded the rank of Jusani (Junior Third Rank).
  387. He was posthumously awarded the rank of Senior First Rank in 1880.
  388. He was posthumously awarded the rank of Shoichii (Senior First Rank) and the post of Daijo-daijin (Grand minister of state).
  389. He was posthumously awarded the rank of Shoichii (Senior First Rank) and the tile, Lord Chugi (loyal lord).
  390. He was posthumously awarded the rank of Shoichii.
  391. He was posthumously awarded the title of Sadaijin (Minister of the Left) and Juichii (Junior First Rank).
  392. He was posthumously awarded the title of Shoichii (Senior First Rank).
  393. He was posthumously awarded the title of Taikinge (the 9th rank out of the 26 hierarchical ranking system).
  394. He was posthumously awarded the title of the Lord of Totomi Province.
  395. He was posthumously awarded the title, Lord Chugi (the Loyal Lord).
  396. He was posthumously bestowed the rank of Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) by the Kunaisho (Ministry of the Sovereign's Household) on November 10, 1928.
  397. He was posthumously conferred Shoichii (Senior First Rank) Dajo Daijin (General Minister of state).
  398. He was posthumously conferred Shoichii (Senior First Rank).
  399. He was posthumously conferred Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank).
  400. He was posthumously conferred as the Grand Minister.
  401. He was posthumously conferred naidaijin (minister of the center).
  402. He was posthumously given Juichii (Junior First Rank).
  403. He was posthumously given Junii (Junior Second Rank).
  404. He was posthumously given the Chinese-style name 'Antoku-Tei.'
  405. He was posthumously given the Order of the Sacred Treasure, Gold Rays with Rosette.
  406. He was posthumously given the first grade Grand Cordon of the Rising Sun (dated October 30, 1931).
  407. He was posthumously given the rank of Juichii (Junior First Rank).
  408. He was posthumously given the title of shosanmi (Senior Third Rank), the 3rd class of the Order of the Sacred Treasure.
  409. He was posthumously granted Shoshii (Senior Fourth Rank).
  410. He was posthumously granted the rank of Shoichii (Senior First Rank) and the position of Daijo-daijin (Grand Minister).
  411. He was posthumously named Enjokosai-zenshi.
  412. He was posthumously named Nizaemon KATAOKA the fourteenth.
  413. He was posthumously named OMIWA no Makamuda no Mukae, and it is considered that Mukae had been pronounced as Mukafe according to the old Japanese syllabary characters.
  414. He was posthumously presented with Shonii (Senior Second Rank) and Hoin (the highest rank among Buddhist priests).
  415. He was posthumously presented with the Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun.
  416. He was posthumously promoted to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  417. He was posthumously promoted to Shoichii (Senior First Rank) and Daijodaijin (Grand Minister).
  418. He was posthumously promoted to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) and Chunagon (vice-councilor of state).
  419. He was posthumously promoted to the minister of the right in 1862, and granted Shoichii (Senior First Rank) in 1899.
  420. He was posthumously raised to Shoichii (Senior First Rank) and was given the name Teishinko.
  421. He was posthumously titled Gedatsu-shonin by Imperial edict.
  422. He was posthumously titled Kishu Zenji.
  423. He was postmortem awarded as Grand Minister of state.
  424. He was practically the founder of the Kikkawa clan.
  425. He was praised as a "respectable lord" because of his wise governance in civil administration.
  426. He was praised as a 'gekisei' (Holy Actor) for his many great achievements.
  427. He was praised as a 'promising talent.'
  428. He was praised as one of 'the big four' as well as his fellow disciples Bunza KATSURA the first (Bunshi KATSURA the second), Bunto KATSURA the second (Bunto TSUKITEI) and Bundanzi KATSURA the first.
  429. He was praised as one of the 'twin jewels of the Renpeikan' alongside Nobori (Noboru) WATANABE from Omura clan who attained 'menkyo-kaiden' around the same time (and who later introduced Ryoma SAKAMOTO to the Choshu clan in Nagasaki).
  430. He was praised as the Master of the masters in the second half of the Meiji period and his transpicuous Igo style is highly evaluated even in the present age.
  431. He was praised by Emperor Gensho for it.
  432. He was praised by Hideyoshi because he was in charge of negotiations when the Mori clan formally entered service as a vassal of the Hideyoshi in January 1585.
  433. He was praised by Nobunaga ODA for his fight in this battle and he was given Nobunaga's Henki (a portion of the name of a person in high rank, which is given to a retainer to show the subordination) '信' (pronounced nobu) and changed his name to 信昌 (Nobumasa).
  434. He was praised for his military service in the war and appointed as a member of Hikitsukeshu (Coadjustor of the High Court) after the war.
  435. He was praised for his skillful brushwork and, together with Koetsu HONAMI and Shojo SHOKADO, was one of the 'Three great calligraphers of Kanei era.'
  436. He was praised, for example, in the following poem: 'Suruga has two great assets that are too good for the province: one Mt.Fuji, the other Hakuin in Hara.'
  437. He was presented to the Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa, and was appointed Ukone no daisho (Major Captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  438. He was presented with the Order of Culture.
  439. He was presented with the first Bunka Kunsho (Order of Culture).
  440. He was president of Naval War College, privy councilor and viscount.
  441. He was presumably aged around 40.
  442. He was presumed to be treated almost same as omote-daka ke.
  443. He was previously known as Koan MATSUKI.
  444. He was pro-Europe and pro-America due to the influence that studying in France had on him, and he was called a 'globalist' and criticized by the military for being against nationalism.
  445. He was probably Toneri of Emperor Tenmu.
  446. He was probably a retainer of Emperor Yuryaku.
  447. He was probably aware of the fact that the principal term derived from the numerically miniscule difference and the derivative of polynomial equation defined by Seki was a same thing.
  448. He was probably behind the lines supporting Prince Oama.
  449. He was proclaimed as the Chieftain of the Toyotomi clan.
  450. He was professionally trained in many aspects of music, including the writing of hymns, and also introduced the Hammond organ into Japan.
  451. He was professor emeritus for both Kyoto and Osaka University.
  452. He was proficient in Chinese.
  453. He was profoundly influenced by Taoism which he learned in his younger days, so he did not seek honor or high ranking positions.
  454. He was prominent in composing poetry: his four poems were selected for "Kinyo Wakashu" (Kinyo Collection of Japanese poems), three poems for "Senzai Wakashu" (Collection of a Thousand Years), and one poem for "Shin Kokin Wakashu" (New Collection of Ancients and Modern Poems).
  455. He was promised to become the next shogun with the kanrei Katsumoto HOSOKAWA (the shogunal deputy of the Kanto region) as his guardian, and he took the younger blood-sister of Yoshimasa's official wife Tomiko HINO as his official wife.
  456. He was promoted Junii (Junior Second Rank).
  457. He was promoted afterwards, and became Naidaijin (minister) in December, 1215.
  458. He was promoted again to Kyoto shoshidai (The Kyoto deputy) and was conferred the title of jiju (Imperial Household Agency staff) and Echizen no kami (Governor of Echizen Province) in 1826, followed by a further promotion in 1828 to roju (member of shogun's council of elders) of Nishinomaru Goten Palace to support Ieyoshi TOKUGAWA, a shogunal heir.
  459. He was promoted and appointed to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) Shikibu shoyu (Junior Assistant of the Ministry of Ceremonial).
  460. He was promoted and transferred to Junii (Junior Second Rank), Gon Dainagon (Provisional Major Counselor).
  461. He was promoted and transferred to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank), Gon Chunagon (Provisional Middle Counselor).
  462. He was promoted as a result of his military success and in 805, he was allowed to serve as a Sangi (councillor).
  463. He was promoted as a scholar of military science by Isami KONDO, and was selected as one of the executive members as a Fukucho-jokin (assistant vice commander) in 1864.
  464. He was promoted as high as Sessho (Regent), Kanpaku (Chief Advisor to the Emperor), and Dajo-daijin (Chancellor of the Realm) at the Juichii rank (Junior First Rank).
  465. He was promoted as high as Shonii (Senior Second Rank).
  466. He was promoted from Daihatsuinojo (Greater Initial Rank, Upper Grade) to Shohachiinojo (Senior Eighth Rank, Upper Grade) and served as shojo (Junior Secretary) of Zushoryo (the Bureau of Drawings and Books) and so on.
  467. He was promoted from Onsashizuyaku Todori 御指図役頭取 (a rank equivalent to a captain or a troop commander) to Hohei Gashira nami (equivalent to a major or a battalion commander).
  468. He was promoted from Sanuki no kuni no kami (Governor of Sanuki Province), Sakone no shosho (Minor Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards), to Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade), Sakone no chujo (Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards), but was dismissed from office following the exile from the capital of the Taira family.
  469. He was promoted from then on, and rose to the rank of Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) in 1631, and became a Court noble.
  470. He was promoted seven ranks and became Jugoiinoge.
  471. He was promoted smoothly and achieved Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) in 1149, the highest position he ever attained.
  472. He was promoted successively since being conferred a peerage in 1489, and became Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) and was raised to Kugyo in 1502 after experience as jiju (chamberlain), Sakone no shosho (minor captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards) and Sakone no chujo (middle captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  473. He was promoted successively since conferring a peerage in 1122, he had experience as Tanba no kami (governor of Tanba Province), jiju (chamberlain), Inaba no kami (governor of Inaba Province), Ukone no shosho (minor captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards), Ukone no chujo (middle captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  474. He was promoted then on, and became Konoefu (a government official at the Headquarters of the Inner Palace Guards) in 1851.
  475. He was promoted through the ranks, successively filling the posts of Sakone no shosho (Minor Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards), Ukone no chujo (Middle Captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards), Tanba no suke (assistant governor of Tanba Province), Harima no Gon no suke (provisional vice governor of Harima Province), Kurodo no to (Head Chamberlain) and so on.
  476. He was promoted to Chunagon (Middle Counselor) in 784.
  477. He was promoted to Chunagon (vice-councilor of state) in 806 and to Dainagon (Major Counselor) in 810.
  478. He was promoted to Chunagon in 783, but Emperor Kanmu moved the capital and established Nagaoka Kyo the following year.
  479. He was promoted to Dainagon (chief councilor of state) in 920.
  480. He was promoted to Dainagon, the highest official post, in 749 when he was near 80 years old.
  481. He was promoted to Daizen no suke (the title of a person who was in charge of meals in the court) from Monjo-tokugosho (distinguished scholars of letters).
  482. He was promoted to Gaimukyo (chief of Foreign Ministry) from Gaikokan chiji (governor of foreign affairs) in 1869, but died of disease at the tender age of 38.
  483. He was promoted to Gon Chunagon (a provisional vice-councilor of state) in 1488.
  484. He was promoted to Gon Chunagon (a provisional vice-councilor of state) of Junii (Junior Second Rank) in 1195, but he died young at the age of 30 in the following year.
  485. He was promoted to Gon Chunagon (provisional vice-councilor of state) in 1184 and to Chunagon (vice-councilor of state) in 1189.
  486. He was promoted to Gon Dainagon (a provisional chief councilor of state), a member of the court nobles; it was the first time for his family line to be advanced to such a high position since FUJIWARA no Kanesuke had been promoted during the early Heian Period.
  487. He was promoted to Gonsojo (the lowest grade that can be held by one who has reached the highest rank in the hierarchy of Buddhist priests) in 1213.
  488. He was promoted to Ippon, which is the first rank of the imperial princes' ranks, and he became the governor of Domestic Affairs Office, but he died that year.
  489. He was promoted to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) from Gejugoinoge (Jugoinoge granted to a local government official) in recognition of his great work for the suppression of the Rebellion of Fujiwara no Nakamaro, which occurred in 764.
  490. He was promoted to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) in 763 and given the title of Shonagon (lesser councilor of state).
  491. He was promoted to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) in Jinju Era (601 - 604) and additionally served as Samanosuke (vice-minister of Left Division of Bureau of Horses), Tajima no kuni no suke (Assistant Governor of Tajima Province), Uhyoe no suke (assistant captain of the Right Division of Middle Palace Guards), and Sanuki no kuni no suke (Assistant Governor of Tajima Province).
  492. He was promoted to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) on January 9, 709, and his promotions up the court ranks can be followed in "The Shoku Nihongi."
  493. He was promoted to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade), and was appointed Samonokami (minister of the Horse Office of the Left).
  494. He was promoted to Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) and retained his position as Suruga no kami on November 22, 1236.
  495. He was promoted to Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) in 732.
  496. He was promoted to Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) in 879.
  497. He was promoted to Juichii (Junior First Rank) after his death.
  498. He was promoted to Juichii (Junior First Rank) in the following year.
  499. He was promoted to Juichii (Junior First Rank) on August 4, 1796 (old calendar).
  500. He was promoted to Juichii (Junior First Rank) on February 3, 1672.
  501. He was promoted to Juichii (Junior First Rank).
  502. He was promoted to Juichii Gon Dainagon (Junior First Rank, Provisional Chief Councilor of State).
  503. He was promoted to Juichii in 1617 and resigned Naidaijin in 1618.
  504. He was promoted to Juichii on February 13, 1614.
  505. He was promoted to Jun-daijin (Vice Minister) in 1862 but died in the same year.
  506. He was promoted to Junii (Junior 2nd Rank) the next year and served as Toka no sechie Naiben (a kugyo who supervised inside Jomei gate at Toka no sechie (Imperial Court ceremonies).
  507. He was promoted to Junii (Junior Second Rank) in 1172 and promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank) in 1176, and was appointed to Dainagon (chief councilor of state) in 1179.
  508. He was promoted to Junior Forth Rank, Lower Grade and became the Senior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Central Affairs on November 7, 1804.
  509. He was promoted to Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade.
  510. He was promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) Sakone gon no chujo (Provisional Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards) for such an achievement.
  511. He was promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) in 1077 and appointed Sangi (Councillor) on December 26th of the same year.
  512. He was promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) in 1851 and then Sangi (Royal Advisors) in 1855.
  513. He was promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) in the same year.
  514. He was promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) on February 26, 713 and then to Chunagon (Middle Counsellor) on July 1, 715.
  515. He was promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) on September 9, 1475.
  516. He was promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank).
  517. He was promoted to Jushiige (Junior Forth Rank, Lower Grade) on November 26, 1470.
  518. He was promoted to Jushiijo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) on June 19, 715 and appointed to Udaiben (Major Controller of the Right) on July 1, 715.
  519. He was promoted to Jushiijo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade), and served as Uma no kami (Captain of the Right Division of Bureau of Horses) and Ukon no shosho (Minor Captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  520. He was promoted to Jushiijo (Upper Grade Junior Fourth Rank) the same year.
  521. He was promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and retained his position as Sagami no kami on Leap July 24, 1244.
  522. He was promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and served concurrently as a jiju (Chamberlain) on March 4, 1640.
  523. He was promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and was transferred to Sahyoe no kami (Captain of the Left Division of Middle Palace Guards) in December, 1382.
  524. He was promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) in 1642.
  525. He was promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) in June 1864 and dispatched his troops when Hamaguri rebellion happened in August.
  526. He was promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) on December 22, 1644.
  527. He was promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) on May 6, 1603 and transferred to Tosa no kami (the governor of Tosa Province) ("Tokugawa jikki" (The True Tokugawa Records)).
  528. He was promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  529. He was promoted to Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) and retained his position as Sagami no kami on June 22, 1244.
  530. He was promoted to Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) and was transferred to Kyoto to be Sakone gon no shosho (Provisional Minor Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  531. He was promoted to Jushiinojo sashosho in January, 1624.
  532. He was promoted to Jushinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) on January 9th, 709, and Jushinoge HAJI no Sukukne Umate died two years later on February 26th, 711.
  533. He was promoted to Jyusenshi no Kami (a director of the Mint) in 699, and to Sadaiben (Controller of the Left) in 705, and to Jingikan (officer of the institution for dedicating to religeous ceremony) and Chunagon (Minor Councillor) in 708.
  534. He was promoted to Kyujichu, but was transferred to shishi (Provincial Governor) in Qingzhou because Rigifu, a influential vassal, was jealous of and hated him.
  535. He was promoted to Major General, to Hohei Sixth Brigade Commander in May, 1895, to Kangunbu Staff Chief in August of the same year, to Hohei Third Brigade Commander in 1898, to Lieutenant General in March, 1899 and finally to Twelfth Brigade Commander.
  536. He was promoted to Nakatsukasa-kyo (Minister of the Ministry of Central Affairs), Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank).
  537. He was promoted to Ozeki (wrestler at the second highest rank) after the November Tournament of 1869.
  538. He was promoted to Sachuben (Middle Controller of the Left) in 1181 and became Zo-Kofuku-ji chokan (the director for the construction of Kofuku-ji Temple).
  539. He was promoted to Sadaijin (minister of the left) in 1497, and remained at that post until 1505.
  540. He was promoted to Sadaijin in 1668 but resigned from the post in the following year.
  541. He was promoted to Sadaijin.
  542. He was promoted to Saemon no jo (third-ranked officer of the Left Division of Outer Palace Guards) at this time.
  543. He was promoted to Sanbon (the third rank of the Imperial Prince's ranks) Hyobukyo (Minister of Hyobusho Ministry of Military).
  544. He was promoted to Sangi (Royal Advisors), Udaiben (Controller of the Right) and Sadaiben (Controller of the Left) in 1824, Chunagon (Middle Counselor) in 1828, and then Shonii Dainagon (Major Counselor with Senior Second Rank) in 1845.
  545. He was promoted to Sangi (councilor) on June 13, 990, and, in that year, his father-in-law, Kaneie, died and after his biological father, Michitaka, succeeded Kaneie, Michiyori was placed in adverse circumstances.
  546. He was promoted to Sangi in 1159 and in the same year, the Heiji War broke out.
  547. He was promoted to Sanmi (Third Rank) also called 'kyo' (minister) on January 3, 1086, when Yoshiie had already begun 'Yoshiie's war' in the Oshu Province.
  548. He was promoted to Senior Executive Secretary.
  549. He was promoted to Shogen (Lieutenant) at the beginning of the Niju era (851-854).
  550. He was promoted to Shogoi (Senior Fifth Rank) Jobenkan (major controller of oversight department) at Kurodo dokoro (the Office of Imperial Household Logistics) in 1455, and then to Uchuben (Middle Controller of the Right) in the following year; since then, he was involved in practical work for the Imperial court.
  551. He was promoted to Shogoi (Senior Fifth Rank) in 1151.
  552. He was promoted to Shogoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) on February 25, 975, when he was 17 years old.
  553. He was promoted to Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) and retained his position as Sagami no kami on July 20, 1239.
  554. He was promoted to Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) in 1158 and assigned as Suruga no kami (Governor of Suruga Province) in 1159, but he was prohibited inshoden (access to the retired emperor in the imperial court) and was dismissed in 1160 together with FUJIWARA no Takanobu.
  555. He was promoted to Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) in 873 and became Uta no kami (Director of the Bureau of Music) in 875.
  556. He was promoted to Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) in December 851.
  557. He was promoted to Shogoinojo (Upper Grade Senior Fifth Rank).
  558. He was promoted to Shohachiinoge (Lower Grade Senior Eighth Rank).
  559. He was promoted to Shohachiinojo (Senior Eighth Rank, Upper Grade) in the end.
  560. He was promoted to Shonii (Senior 2nd Rank) in 1332, but then demoted to Junii (Junior 2nd Rank) and became Gon Chunagon (a provisional middle councilor) again.
  561. He was promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank) and assumed the position of Naidaijin (minister of the center) and established the golden days of Murakami-Genji (Minamoto clan from Murakami).
  562. He was promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank) in 1024.
  563. He was promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank) in 1075, Dainagon in 1083 and established the power base of Kanin line for the future generations.
  564. He was promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank) in 1162, and in 1164, when he was 16, he became Naidaijin (Minister of the Center).
  565. He was promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank) in 1587, Gon Dainagon in 1611 and Juichii (Junior First Rank) in the following year, but died soon after that.
  566. He was promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank) in 1705.
  567. He was promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank) in 887, but died at the age of 58 on October 17, 888.
  568. He was promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank).
  569. He was promoted to Shonii in 1335 again.
  570. He was promoted to Shonii in 1738, but he gradually became afraid of going to the Imperial Court because he became sick in 1740, and he died in the same year.
  571. He was promoted to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) at the age of 13, in 1182.
  572. He was promoted to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) in 1183, but fell ill and entered into priesthood, and died soon thereafter.
  573. He was promoted to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) in the same year and was assigned the additional duties as Gon Chunagon (a provisional vice-councilor of state) and Sakone gonno chujo.
  574. He was promoted to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) later.
  575. He was promoted to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) of Konoe Marshal.
  576. He was promoted to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) on January 5, 1409, Junii (Junior Second Rank) on November 21, 1411, dainagon (Major councilor) on November 25, 1411, and Shonii (Senior Second Rank) on January 5, 1414.
  577. He was promoted to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) on May 20, 1182.
  578. He was promoted to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank).
  579. He was promoted to Shosanmi (senior third rank) of Dainagon.
  580. He was promoted to Shosanmi Sangi (Senior Third Rank, Councilor) and Togu Gon no daibu (Provisional Master of the Crown Prince's Quarters), and he wrote the diary "Shunki" (Spring Tale).
  581. He was promoted to Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) in 1182 and was appointed to Kurodo no to (Head Chamberlain) for Emperor Antoku the next year.
  582. He was promoted to Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) in 1624 and to Shoshiinojo (Senior Fourth Rank Upper Grade) on March 13, 1628.
  583. He was promoted to Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade), and complementarily appointed to Sangi (Councilor) in the name of Toshiie TOYOTMI.
  584. He was promoted to Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade), and served as Tajima no kuni no kami (governor of Tajima Province), Kotaigogu no suke (assistant master of the empress dowager's household), Sama no gon no kami (Provisional Captain of Samaryo, Left Division of Bureau of Horses).
  585. He was promoted to Shoshiinoge Sangi (councillor in the Senior Fourth Rank).
  586. He was promoted to Shoshiinojo (Senior Fourth Rank Upper Grade) in 710.
  587. He was promoted to Shoshiinojo (Senior Fourth Rank Upper Grade), and Kokushi (Provincial Governor) of the Omi Province.
  588. He was promoted to Shoshiinojo Sangi (Senior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade, Councilor) in his lifetime, and posthumously conferred Sadaijin (Minister of the Left).
  589. He was promoted to Udaiben (Major Controller of the Right), while maintaining the position of Kurodo no to on June 15.
  590. He was promoted to Udaijin (Minister of the Right) in 848.
  591. He was promoted to Udaijin (Minister of the Right) in 924 and in 926 ascended to Junii (Junior Second Rank); he died in 932 at the age of 60.
  592. He was promoted to a court noble when he became Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) Sangi (councilor) in 1466.
  593. He was promoted to a lieutenant general (army).
  594. He was promoted to a post at Konoefu in 1539 and to another post at Konoefu in 1542.
  595. He was promoted to a rear admiral in 1876, but died at the young age of 26.
  596. He was promoted to a vassal of the Tokugawa Shogunate in June, 1867.
  597. He was promoted to army general in the army.
  598. He was promoted to become Kogakubo (descendants of one of the Ashikaga families that held the office of the Kanto district administrator) (reign: 1561? - 1562?) and its position was approved by Kanpaku of that time but at the present day he is not included among the successive kubos.
  599. He was promoted to captain in the army cavalry.
  600. He was promoted to colonel in the army cavalry.
  601. He was promoted to count in 1891.
  602. He was promoted to first lieutenant in the army cavalry.
  603. He was promoted to jusani (the Junior Third Rank, Vice-councilor of state) while he was transferred to chunagon (the Vice-councilor of state).
  604. He was promoted to jushii (Junior Fourth Rank) and was transferred to Konoefu (the Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  605. He was promoted to lieutenant colonel in the army cavalry.
  606. He was promoted to lieutenant commander in the army cavalry.
  607. He was promoted to lieutenant general in the army.
  608. He was promoted to major captain in the army cavalry.
  609. He was promoted to ozeki in January sumo tournament in 1886.
  610. He was promoted to professor in 1924.
  611. He was promoted to roju in 1857 as the position had an opening, and he became responsible for foreign matters.
  612. He was promoted to roju shuza.
  613. He was promoted to second lieutenant in the army cavalry.
  614. He was promoted to seven dan the following year.
  615. He was promoted to shoshii (the Senior Fourth Rank) and was appointed as sangi (a Councilor).
  616. He was promoted to the Junior Assistant Minister of the Navy in the following year.
  617. He was promoted to the Shoichii rank as a posthumous honor.
  618. He was promoted to the chief of the bodyguards in Saijo in July 1750.
  619. He was promoted to the court rank Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) on February 25, 1173.
  620. He was promoted to the court rank Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) on July 1.
  621. He was promoted to the court rank Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) on February 18, 1179.
  622. He was promoted to the court rank Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) on January 31, 1180.
  623. He was promoted to the court rank Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) on Feburuary 23, 1176.
  624. He was promoted to the court rank of Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) November 4.
  625. He was promoted to the court rank of Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) March 3.
  626. He was promoted to the court rank of Shoshi (Senior Fourth Rank) after his death.
  627. He was promoted to the court rank of Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) on January 22, 1164.
  628. He was promoted to the rank of Gon no Shosozu in 1054, appointed Chori (chief priest) of Onjo-ji Temple in 1063, and made Daisojo (highest rank of a Buddhist monk) in 1065.
  629. He was promoted to the rank of Jugoinojo and became the Dewa no kuni Gon no kami (Provisional Governor of Dewa Province) in 878.
  630. He was promoted to the rank of Shoichii (Senior First Rank).
  631. He was promoted to the rank of Shonii (Senior Second Rank) in November, 1240.
  632. He was promoted to the rank of Shonii.
  633. He was promoted to the rank of the assistant to the shogun's chosen successor on April 1, 1836, he was also appointed as a chamberlain.
  634. He was promoted to the status of a person responsible for order and patrol in the battlefield called 'Otsukaiban' in February 1697, and allowed to wear the clothing for kuge, which meant that he was equivalent to Sixth Rank.
  635. He was promoted to udaijin (minister of the right) and flaunted his power.
  636. He was promoted to vassal of the Retired Emperor Shirakawa though subsequently he fell out of his favor.
  637. He was promoted up to Juichii (Junior First Rank) Udaijin (Minister of the Right).
  638. He was promoted up to Junii (Junior Second Rank) Gon Dainagon (Provisional Chief Councilor of State); He was given the title Juichii (Junior First Rank) after he died.
  639. He was promoted up to Shonii-Chunagon (Senior Second Rank and Vice-Councilor of State).
  640. He was promoted up to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) Sakone no Gon no Chujo (Provisional Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  641. He was promoted up to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) Ukone no Gon no Chujo (Provisional Middle Captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  642. He was promoted up to the Minister of the Palace ranked Shonii (Senior Second Rank), but as of 1169 he had been ill and in 1175, he passed away at Koga/Kuga (久我) Villa.
  643. He was promted to the court rank of Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) on September 22, (and awarded the Josaimonin).
  644. He was protected by the Hosokawa family of Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) and had activities that showed a strong link with powerful people, for example, he demonstrated Utai (the chanting of a Noh text) with his younger brother, and so on, in the blossom-viewing at Hisamichi KONOE's residence in April 1528.
  645. He was publicly called Shin-Chunagon.
  646. He was puffed up with self-importance, but his stylish kimono turned out to be a cheap imitation.
  647. He was punished by being deprived of his fief after the war.
  648. He was punished by being deprived of his fief by the order of the bakufu, and then the Bessho clan as a daimyo family (feudal lord family) fell.
  649. He was punished severely: Sagara-jo Castle was destroyed, and the money and grain stored in the castle forfeited.
  650. He was put in charge of Domeki-jo Castle in 1588.
  651. He was put in charge of guarding Uji-ji Highway at the very young age of 17 and made a great achievement by arresting MINAMOTO no Chikaharu, who was about to join the forces of Emperor Sutoku, near Hossho-ji Temple at Higashiyama, Kyoto.
  652. He was put in charge of the covers and illustrations of the "Kokumin no tomo"(Companion for Nationals) magazine (he continued to be in charge.)
  653. He was put in the 3rd army (Japanese Army) led by Army General Maresuke NOGI to take part in the attack to Highland 203.
  654. He was put under suspicion of a rebellion by Hideyoshi in 1595.
  655. He was put under the custody of the Shizuoka Domain and then sent to Kyoto for examinations.
  656. He was quiet but warm and was respected by the young Shinsengumi members.
  657. He was quite a heavy drinker and when he was drunk, he fell asleep in the garden even if it was during the day.
  658. He was quite critical of authority; after the Meiji Restoration he was sometimes negative against the Meiji government.
  659. He was quite elderly but still alive in 727, though the year of his death is known.
  660. He was quite familiar with the practice of the Shingon Esoteric Buddhism, and advocated its Ninna-ji school.
  661. He was quite popular among Japanese people due to his naturally cheerful character and attractive personality.
  662. He was quite rational, so he changed the calendar in Japan to the Gregorian calendar that we currently use.
  663. He was quite rough, and when drunk, he would boast the scar on his belly or shout loudly "kill, kill!"
  664. He was raised as an adopted child of his maternal uncle, Kimikatsu SANJO.
  665. He was raised at Genji yakata (residence of the Minamoto clan) in Horikawa, Kyoto.
  666. He was raised by FUJIWARA no Bokushi (also pronounced as FUJIWARA no Atsuko and the wife of Masanobu) after the death of Masanobu ("Eiga Monogatari"(A Tale of Flowering Fortunes), Volume 12).
  667. He was raised by his relatives, the Hatano clan in Sagami Province who had served Kawachi-Genji (Minamoto clan) for many generations.
  668. He was raised by the Cloistered Emperor Shirakawa when he was a child.
  669. He was raised in Katsushika, Shimousa, Edo.
  670. He was raised in an impoverished family who made toothpicks to supplement their income, and though he experienced hardship, he was able to study swordsmanship and Western studies, and was appointed as an instructor at Kobusho.
  671. He was raised to Dainagon Shosanmi (chief councilor of state at senior third rank) (according to "Kugyobunin").
  672. He was raised to Jugoi (Junior Fifth Rank).
  673. He was raised to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) in 946.
  674. He was raised to Jugoinoge Shikibu no jo (Secretary of the Ministry of Rites) and used the title of Shikibu no daibu (Senior Secretary of Rites).
  675. He was raised to Juichii (Junior 1st Rank) Naidaijin (Minister of the Center) in 1857, but he died in the same year.
  676. He was raised to Juichii (Junior First Rank) after his death.
  677. He was raised to Junii (Junior Second Rank) in 1706, and was appointed Chugu Gon no Daibu (provisional master of the Consort's Household) to Princess ('Jo-o' in Japanese) Yukiko who was Chugu (wife and empress consort) to Emperor Higashiyama in 1708.
  678. He was raised to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) in 1646, and served as a Toka no sechie Geben (a Kugyo who supervised the event of toka [ceremonial mass singing and stomp dancing] called Toka no sechie held at the Imperial Court on around the fifteenth day of the first month of the year, outside the Shomeimon gate of the Kyoto imperial palace) in 1649, before his death in 1653.
  679. He was raised to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) in 1823, Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) in 1827, Junii (Junior Second Rank) in 1843, and Shonii (Senior Second Rank) in 1854.
  680. He was raised to Shokosan (senior third rank).
  681. He was raised to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) and presented with the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun for his many years of service in the development of Japanese art.
  682. He was raised to Sojo in Soi (rank of Buddhist priest) after his death.
  683. He was raised to Udaijin (Minister of the Right) after he died and was sadly missed.
  684. He was raised to a viscount and Junii (junior second rank); he served as Genroin-Gikan (councilor of the Chamber of the Elders) and as Kizokuin-Giin (member of the House of Peers).
  685. He was raised to and appointed Shoshiinojo (Senior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) and Sangi (councilor) in 1599.
  686. He was raised to become a Buddhist priest like his father, and he entered the Buddhist priesthood at the age of 11.
  687. He was raised to peerage for one generation in November 1880.
  688. He was raised to permanent peerage in 1889 and given the position of Baron.
  689. He was raised to sainthood.
  690. He was raised to the Kugyo (the top court officials), which was the first time that this had happened in 200 years since SUGAWARA no Sukemasa who had died in 1009.
  691. He was raised to the Makuuchi (top) rank at the New Year tournament in 1858.
  692. He was raised to the peerage in 1167.
  693. He was raised to the peerage in 1517 and appointed Jiju (a chamberlain) in 1528, Sangi (councilor) in 1537, Gon Chunagon (a provisional vice-councilor of state) in 1545, and Gon Dainagon in 1550.
  694. He was raised to the peerage in 1603 when his father Mochizane resigned his post as Gon Dainagon and retired from the imperial court.
  695. He was raised to the peerage in 1658.
  696. He was raised to the peerage in 985 and, after he held various posts including Jiju (chamberlain) and Konoe no chujo (middle captain of the palace guards), he was appointed Kurodo no to (Head Chamberlain) in 988.
  697. He was raised to the peerage, and his final title was a count; he was given a title of a baron in 1906, a viscount in 1922, and a count in 1928.
  698. He was raised to the rank of Count in 1884.
  699. He was raised to the rank of prince of imperial blood in an imperial proclamation dating to 1575.
  700. He was raised to the second highest of priests' rank and also famous as a painter.
  701. He was raised to the second highest of priests' rank.
  702. He was raised under the expectations by those surrounding him, as the legitimate son of Kanezane, and became an adopted child of his aunt, FUJIWARA no Seishi.
  703. He was ranked Jugoi (Junior Fifth Rank) and served in the Kebiishi (police) section of the Emonfu (Headquarters of the Outer Palace Guards).
  704. He was ranked Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) in 1538.
  705. He was ranked Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade), and hold the positions of Kurodo (Chamberlain) and Shimofusa no kuni no Kami (Governor of Shimofusa Province).
  706. He was ranked Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) and appointed to Musashi no kuni no kami (the governor of Musashi Province)
  707. He was ranked Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) and was Gon Chunagon (a provisional vice-councilor of state).
  708. He was ranked Jushiinoge (Junior Forth Rank, Lower Grade), and appointed to Daigaku no Kami (Director of the Bureau of Education), Shikibu Shoyu (Junior Assistant of the Ministry of Ceremonies) and Udaiben (Major Controller of the Right.)
  709. He was ranked Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  710. He was ranked Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) or Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and was Sakyo no daibu (master of the Eastern Capital Offices) and Shonagon (minor councilor).
  711. He was ranked Shogoinojo (Senior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade), and was Gon Sachuben (provisional middle controller of the Left), Saemon no Gon no suke (provisional assistant captain of the Left Division of Outer Palace Guards), and Minbu no Gon no taifu (民部権大輔)
  712. He was ranked Shonii (Senior Second Rank) and was Dainagon (chief councilor of state).
  713. He was ranked Shonii (Senior Second Rank) and was Udaijin (Minister of the Right).
  714. He was ranked Shonii (Senior Second Rank), and held the office of Udaijin (Minister of the right).
  715. He was ranked Shonii (Senior Second Rank), and was Dainagon (chief councilor of state), Sadaisho (major captain, the Left Division of the Inner Palace Guards), and after his death, he was also raised to Udaijin (Minister of the Right).
  716. He was ranked Shorokui (Senior Sixth Rank) and served at Daigaku-ryo (Bureau of Education under the Ritsuryo system).
  717. He was ranked Shosanmi.
  718. He was ranked Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and was Sakone no chujo (middle captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  719. He was ranked Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade), and assumed the posts of Tanba no kuni no kami (the governor of Tanba Province), Sanuki no kuni no kami (the governor of Sanuki Province), and Tajima no kuni no kami (the governor of Tajima Province).
  720. He was ranked as Jikidaisan (equivalent to Senior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade).
  721. He was ranked as Jikikosan.
  722. He was ranked as Jugoi (Junior Fifth Rank).
  723. He was ranked as Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  724. He was ranked as Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade), Konoefu (the Headquarters of the Inner Palace Guards).
  725. He was ranked as Jusani (Junior Third Rank).
  726. He was ranked as Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank).
  727. He was ranked as Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  728. He was ranked as Jushinoge (Junior Fourth Rank Lower Grade), after the Meiji Restoration, and after his death, he was granted Shonii (Senior Second Rank) for his service in life.
  729. He was ranked as Shogoi (Senior Fifth Rank), Hyobusho (War Ministry).
  730. He was ranked as Shokinchu (the 11th Rank out of the 26th hierarchical ranking system).
  731. He was ranked as Shonii (Senior Second Rank).
  732. He was ranked as Shorokui (Senior Sixth Rank), and served in the Jibusho (the Ministry of Civil Administration).
  733. He was ranked as Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank).
  734. He was ranked as Shosanmi Hyobukyo (Senior Third Rank, Minister for Military Affairs).
  735. He was ranked as Shosanmi Hyobukyo (Senior Third Rank, chief of Hyobu.)
  736. He was ranked as Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) in Shinto priesthood of Ise Jingu Shrine.
  737. He was ranked as Shoshiinojo (Senior Fourth Rank Upper Grade).
  738. He was ranked as an earl because of the Noble Family Ordinance in 1884.
  739. He was ranked as the third highest officer in Baekje, later raised to the first rank.
  740. He was ranked at Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) when he was seventeen years old and, soon later, he celebrated his genpuku (the coming-of-age ceremony for a boy in the old days) and assumed the position of a Jiju (chamberlain), Konoefu (the Headquarters of the Inner Palace Guard).
  741. He was ranked at Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade), and was Ukone no shogen (Lieutenant of the Right Division of the Inner Palace Guards), and Saemon no jo (a third-ranked officer of the Left Division of the Outer Palace Guards).
  742. He was ranked at Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) in 1099.
  743. He was ranked at Junii (Junior Second Rank) and named 'Fushimi Minamoto Chunagon.'
  744. He was ranked at Jusani (Junior Third Rank) in 1570, Sangi (councilor) in 1571, Chunagon (vice-councilor of state) in 1577.
  745. He was ranked at Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) Sakone no shosho (Minor Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  746. He was ranked at Shonii (Senior Second Rank), Gon Chunagon (provisional vice-counselor of state).
  747. He was ranked at Uemon Gon no suke (provisional assistant captain of the Right Division of Outer Palace Guards), Chugu taijo (Senior Secretary in the Office of the Consort's Household).
  748. He was ranked in the official court ranking in the end of Edo period but he returned the award after the Meiji Restoration, which he was then promoted to Jushichii (Junior Seventh Rank).
  749. He was ranked to Shonii (Senior Second Rank), and Naidaijin (Minister of the Interior.)
  750. He was ranked with Kugyo earlier than FUJIWARA no Takafusa who was In no Kinshin (the Retired Emperor's courtier) and was said to promote to Kugyo soon; this promotion is said to be backed by his mother-in-law, TAKASHINA no Eishi (Tango no tsubone) favored by the Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa.
  751. He was ranked with yoriai (gathering) in April 1714.
  752. He was rapidly promoted here, and became the principal of the school and concurrently director of the attached hospital at the age of twenty-four, administrating the general management of the school and the hospital.
  753. He was rapidly promoted to Daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) of the Yawata-jo Castle with 120,000 koku and was given preferential treatment, which might have been affected by his connection with Hideyoshi and Hidetsugu and the fact that his mother was a daughter of Nobuhiro ODA.
  754. He was re-permitted to visit the Court and to wear the Prohibited Colors.
  755. He was reappointed and was in office from March in 1272 until September in 1280).
  756. He was reappointed as Gon Dainagon in 1684, however, he resigned in 1685.
  757. He was reappointed as Governor of Wakasa Province on February 21.
  758. He was reappointed as Jingutenso in 1677 and served in this position until 1680.
  759. He was reappointed as roju in 1858.
  760. He was reappointed to Sahyoe no kami.
  761. He was reappointed to the Minister for Foreign Affairs in the Second Katsura Cabinet established in 1908.
  762. He was reappointed to the position of Togu Gon no daibu.
  763. He was reassigned as Ukone no shosho (Minor Captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards) (date not recorded).
  764. He was reassigned to Musashi no kami (Governor of Musashi Province) in 1327.
  765. He was reassigned to be Junior Governor of Ise Province from Sakone no shosho (Minor Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards) from 857 and additionally as shonagon (Lesser counselor) and jiju (Chamberlain) in the same year.
  766. He was reassigned to be Kurodo no to (Head Chamberlain) after given the rank of Jushinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) in 903 and held the additional position of Shikibu gon no taifu (Provisional Senior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Ceremonial) and Togu no suke (Assistant Master in the Crown Prince's Quarters) in the following year.
  767. He was reassigned to be provisional governor of Higo from Ise Province, became Shinano Province's after serving a full term as the provisional governor of Shimotsuke Province from 867.
  768. He was reassigned to the governor of Iyo in 759, and was later assigned to Nankaido Setsudoshi in 761 when the topic of Silla conquest was brought up.
  769. He was recalled the following year, 1160, but he never again held any prominent posts and died in 1167.
  770. He was received in audience by Ieyasu in Sunpu and became a retainer for Masazumi HONDA by his order.
  771. He was recognized as a talented person and favored by the Emperor Shomu, however, the most powerful of his contemporaries was FUJIWARA no Nakamaro (EMI no Oshikatsu) and the most prosperous family was the Southern House of the Fujiwara clan.
  772. He was recognized as a young genius of the Choshu clan.
  773. He was recognized as one of the successive emperors when the Southern Court (Japan) became the official court in 1911.
  774. He was recognized as the holder of Important Intangible Cultural Property (Living National Treasure) in 1955.
  775. He was recognized by Shusuke KONDO (Shusai KONDO) for killing thieves, and this led him to become an adopted son of the Shimazaki family where Shusuke was from, and he then called himself Katsuta SHIMAZAKI.
  776. He was recognized by a member of the shogun's council of elders 'roju', Okitsugu TANUMA, during this period.
  777. He was recommended to be Iemochi's successor but Yoshinobu firmly declined.
  778. He was recommended to be Settsu no kami (Governor of Settsu Province) by Michinaga in 1014, but FUJIWARA no Sanesuke was against it as he already had significant shoryo within the province, so Michinaga's recommendation fell apart ("Shoyuki" (the diary of FUJIWARA no Sanesuke), Article of March 25, 1014).
  779. He was recommended to be the chairman of the Japan lightplane club in 1931.
  780. He was recruited by the new government after the Meiji Restoration and joined the Iwakura Mission as an attach? to the ambassador.
  781. He was recuperating in Nagasaki during Anglo-Satsuma War, but was appointed Gunbuyaku (army commander) and the commander of cannon troops in Kinmon Incident, and also used his influence to help Choshu clan purchase armaments in Nagasaki during the Second Choshu Conquest in 1866.
  782. He was referred as one of ten major lawyers in 'Nichureki' (Dual History).
  783. He was referred to as 'Hitokiri Izo' (Izo the killer).
  784. He was referred to as 'Jiro Hyoe Moritsugu of Ecchu province' in "The Tale of the Heike" and he was a great commander in the Taira family.
  785. He was referred to as 'the founder of many great kabuki actors' and 'an unrivaled maestro.'
  786. He was referred to as '常平太.'
  787. He was referred to as Horikawa Dainagon (chief councilor of state) and regarded as the founder of the Horikawa family of Murakami-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  788. He was referred to as Otonomiya.
  789. He was referred to as Saburo Jiju (chamberlain) Hidenobu Ason (the second highest of the eight hereditary titles) in "Imperial Visit to Jurakudai" (Hideyoshi's residence and office in Kyoto) stating the Jurakudai visit of Emperor Goyozei in April.
  790. He was referred to as Shokoku JODOJI, and made bases for the Sanjo Family to become the Seiga family.
  791. He was referred to as Shuho.
  792. He was referred to as Tarozaemon kenmotsu (an auditor Nakatsukasa sho, the Ministry of Civil Affairs).
  793. He was referred to as Tenkaichi (Japan's No. 1) in Sanjo Kamanza.
  794. He was referred to as the ancestor of Japanese physics.
  795. He was referred to the Nakahara clan.
  796. He was regarded as Hitorigami (a kami which came into being alone) like Kuninotokotachi no kami, and hid himself away just after coming into being.
  797. He was regarded as Hitorigami (god without gender), and hid himself away just after coming into being.
  798. He was regarded as a child prodigy from his infancy and had the mysterious power of predicting people's birth and death and others.
  799. He was regarded as a leading person in the field of seal-engraving of small letters along with Kyoshu MAEKAWA.
  800. He was regarded as a nominal leader of Settsu Province.
  801. He was regarded as a typical example of Miuchibito turned into Utokujin (wealthy person).
  802. He was regarded as an expert of Buddhist Studies at that time, and in 1891, he wrote 'Bukkyo Shoshi' (Brief History of Buddhism), which was the first complete history book on Buddhism in Japan.
  803. He was regarded as having forecast Hideyoshi's future success and having willingly devised the peace plan, so that he gained the confidence of Hideyoshi.
  804. He was regarded as one of the 36 Immortal Poets (the thirty-six major poets selected by FUJIWARA no Kinto).
  805. He was regarded as one of the 36 Immortal Poets.
  806. He was regarded as one of the medieval 36 Immortal Poets.
  807. He was regarded as one of the two top directors in th Japanese film industry together with Kurosawa and his reputation in Japan was actually greater than that of Kurosawa's.
  808. He was regarded as the first son of Zeami, and his younger brother was Motoyoshi KANZE who wrote "Sarugaku dangi" (lecture about Sarugaku (form of theater becoming the basis for Noh)).
  809. He was regarded as the husband of Empress Jingu and the father of Emperor Ojin, but there are doubts over the certainty of his actual achievements as historical facts, including his actual existence.
  810. He was regarded as the leading painter of intaiga (a type of Chinese painting associated with the Imperial Court Academy) at that time.
  811. He was regarded as the only member that was specialized in the Taiho Ritsuryo among the 19 selecting members.
  812. He was regarded to have established Togun-ryu school of Kenjutsu (the art of the sword).
  813. He was registered as 'Goro FUJITA' in Jinshin-koseki (family registries in Jinshin) in 1872.
  814. He was registered as the fourth in the kakocho (a family register of deaths) of current Kataoka family.
  815. He was reinstated as family head due to the retirement of his biological son, Tadakatsu, in February 1875.
  816. He was related to Gozoku (local ruling family) of the FUJIWARA no Hidesato line in the Kanto region.
  817. He was related to Uona line of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan.
  818. He was related to Yoshimitsu ASHIKAGA from whom he received his affection and his daughter later became the wife of Emperor Shoko.
  819. He was related to Yoshishige OTOMO.
  820. He was related to the FUJIWARA no Tamemitsu line of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan.
  821. He was related to the FUJIWARA no Uona line of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan.
  822. He was related to the Uona line of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan.
  823. He was released after Yoshinori was killed in the Kakitsu War in 1441 and was incarcerated again when he was ordered to come to Kyoto by the eighth Shogun, Yoshimasa ASHIKAGA.
  824. He was released and came back to Kyoto later, but his fate after that was unknown.
  825. He was released from jail in July and ordered to confine himself at home.
  826. He was released on bail in 1942, and in February 1946, newly established the religious organization's activities as 'Aizen-en.'
  827. He was released on the New Year's Day in 701, and became sennin.
  828. He was released six months later, however, it is said that his house was burglarized and most of his furniture was stolen.
  829. He was relied on heavily by the Emperor Gosanjo and the next Emperor Shirakawa, and was consulted about various matters in both religious and civil areas.
  830. He was relieved from his disciplinary confinement in 1860.
  831. He was relieved from retirement and disciplinary confinement in September, 1860.
  832. He was relieved of house confinement in December of the same year and called himself Kinezumi okina (the old man of squirrel).
  833. He was relieved of the position of Nakatsukasa no taifu (Senior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Central Affairs).
  834. He was reluctant to take over the position as the head of his family.
  835. He was removed from Kaganosuke.
  836. He was removed from the office due to an attempt to assassinate EMI no Oshikatsu with FUJIWARA no Yoshitsugu, ISONOKAMI no Yakatsugu and OTOMO no Yakamoch in the same year.
  837. He was renamed Mitsunaga after Genpuku (celebrate one's coming of age), and appointed to Jugoinoge, Yamato no kami.
  838. He was renamed to Mitsusada after celebrating his coming of age and was appointed to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) Suruga no kami (the governor of Suruga Province).
  839. He was rendered junii (the Junior Second Rank).
  840. He was renowned as a learned priest but lamented the degeneration of Buddhism in Nanto and secluded himself in Kasagi.
  841. He was renowned as a poet as well as an outstanding calligrapher.
  842. He was renowned as the best statesman and diplomat in the Tokugawa Clan.
  843. He was renowned for decadent and voluptuous Bijinga (a type of Ukiyo-e portraying beautiful women) with strong originality and produced many works of Shunga (erotic arts) and Koshokubon (books on love).
  844. He was renowned for his great swordsmanship during that period.
  845. He was renowned for his superhuman strength.
  846. He was renowned for the three evils he committed.'
  847. He was repatriated to Nagasaki.
  848. He was replaced by Yoshikatsu TODO later and became Kokufujo jodai (the keeper of Kokufu-jo Castle).
  849. He was reported to be originated from merchant class of Kyoto, served Nobunaga ODA and acted as a magistrate, local governor and so on.
  850. He was reported to have been bright.
  851. He was reportedly a founder of Abe and other clans.
  852. He was reportedly engaged in the translation work from the beginning.
  853. He was reputed to be 'one of the three masters of the Meiji period,' along with Kuro Tomoharu HOSHO, the 16th, and Rokuro UMEWAKA (the 52nd).
  854. He was reputedly the most beautiful swordsman in the Shinsengumi.
  855. He was requested to assassinate Hideyoshi by Shigekore KIMURA, a vassal of Hideyoshi's nephew, Hidetsugu TOYOTOMI, but he was arrested when the incense burner made a noise when he sneaked into Hideyoshi's sleeping chamber.
  856. He was requested to build an efficient system where 'everyone follows the orders.'
  857. He was rescued but he died few days later.
  858. He was resigned from the service of Hyogo no kami.
  859. He was respected as a literati daimyo who excelled in literature.
  860. He was respected as the Emperor of the Heian dynasty, and one of his poems is found at the beginning of "One Hundred Waka Poems (the Ogura Anthology of One Hundred Tanka-poems by One Hundred Poets)."
  861. He was respected as the father of the restoration since he devoted himself to modernization of rakugo such as rakugo hikki (taking notes of comic storytelling), modernization of the yose and new and original rakugo stories.
  862. He was respected as the person in charge of raising army by MINAMOTO no Yoshinaka.
  863. He was responsible for drafting Laws for the Military Houses in 1635, and managed the ceremony of visiting Ise-jingu Shrine in 1636.
  864. He was retired from government affairs in 1870.
  865. He was retired in 1684, and his fifth son Yasuteru succeeded to the family head.
  866. He was retired in 1763 and referred to himself as Settsu no kami; however, he died in the same year in Edo.
  867. He was retrained as Sahyoe no kami.
  868. He was revered by Sesshu, an artist-monk of Shokoku-ji Temple, as a founder and was admitted by the Kano School as the founder of Chinese style painting in Japan.
  869. He was revered by emperors, retired emperors and the samurai class alike, and Hideyoshi in particular visited Daigo-ji Temple regularly.
  870. He was revered by people as a high-ranking priest from Sekkan-ke (the families that produced regents) as well as for his virtuous character; FUJIWARA no Tadamichi's son Shinen and FUJIWARA no Yorinaga's son Norinaga were his disciples.
  871. He was rewarded Shoshiinojo (Senior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) in 1144 and also became the Governor of Owari Province.
  872. He was rewarded with Jusanmi Rank (Junior Third Rank) posthumously.
  873. He was rewarded with the jo rank of Juichii (Junior First Rank) and the First Order of Merit in 1889.
  874. He was ridiculed as 'Kaiko shogun' (a general with crab shell), but on the other hand, he was also affectionately called 'Inokaku-san.'
  875. He was romantically involved with Kenreimonin-ukyo-no-daibu, who was an outstanding poet and in the service of his aunt, TAIRA no Tokuko.
  876. He was roto (retainer) of FUJIWARA no Yasuhira of the Oshu-Fujiwara clan.
  877. He was routed in the Battle of Toba and Fushimi, and went along with his father, Juzaemon, from Edo to get to Kasuzaki City.
  878. He was rumored to be 'Colder than cold' ("Sarugaku Dangi" (Talks about Sarugaku)) and was a person who seemed to have a mysterious air around him and performed with the support of Yoshimochi ASHIKAGA around 1413.
  879. He was said 'Get off the horse' by someone but his movement of getting off was slow.
  880. He was said that he was the best to perform Yotaro (a fool) or a hopeless husband.
  881. He was said to be 'the most excellent scroll mounter' of all generations.
  882. He was said to be 140 years old in "Nihonshoki," 153 years old in "Kojiki," and 139 years old in "Dainihonshi" (Great History of Japan).
  883. He was said to be Dosan SAITO's youngest child.
  884. He was said to be Masashige's nephew or small brother.
  885. He was said to be a disciple of Kokei of the Keiha School.
  886. He was said to be a good governor for the inside of the territory; a 'Statue of Justice for the Fight Over Water' remains in Omihachiman City, and his anecdotes have been handed down.
  887. He was said to be a ji-samurai (low-ranking farmer-samurai) from Ishida-mura, Sakata-gun, Omi-no-kuni (Omi Province) (present day Ishida-cho, Nagahama City, Shiga Prefecture), but there is also a theory that he was Hikan (vassal) of the Kyogoku clan.
  888. He was said to be a master of calligraphy.
  889. He was said to be a person of few words and serious mind.
  890. He was said to be a promising brilliant person at around this time.
  891. He was said to be a rakuin of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA in "Tokugawa jikki" (The True Tokugawa Records) and so on.
  892. He was said to be a son of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA and the twin brother of Hideyasu YUKI.
  893. He was said to be a son of KOREMUNE no Munekata, but it is also said that he was a son of KOREMUNE no Kinkata (Munekata's father and KOREMUNE no Naomoto's son).
  894. He was said to be an amicable and graceful person with thick eyebrows.
  895. He was said to be appointed to Nuidono no suke (Assistant Director in the Bureau of the Wardrobe and Court Ladies [equivalent to Shorokuinoge, or Senior Sixth Rank, Lower Grade]) as a government official, but he remained a government worker in a low rank.
  896. He was said to be born in Kazusa Province or in Musashi Province.
  897. He was said to be close to ONO no Komachi and asked her for a company when he left for his assignment in Mikawa Province.
  898. He was said to be executed by Ujiyasu HOJO.
  899. He was said to be killed in the battle.
  900. He was said to be more talented than other directors of the modern school in the same generation such as Kihachi OKAMOTO and Yasuzo MASUMURA.
  901. He was said to be one of the Shido-shogun (Generals Dispatched to Four Circuits), and he was dispatched to Tanba Province.
  902. He was said to be one of the strongest swordsmen in the Shinsen-gumi masterless warrior party, along with Soji OKITA and Shimpachi NAGAKURA.
  903. He was said to be the author of Kagakusho (a book on the study of waka poems) called "Wakasakushiki" (also known as "Kisenshiki"), but it is considered today to be an apocryphal book of the late Heian period.
  904. He was said to be the greatest of all tenkokuka since the founder Zoroku.
  905. He was said to be the master of ABE no Seimei or his senior apprentice.
  906. He was said to be the reincarnation of Kansuke YAMAMOTO, inspired by his impaired eye and leg.
  907. He was said to be the restorer of the Mitsui.
  908. He was said to be the seventh son of FUJIWARA no Nakamaro ("Sonpi Bunmyaku" [a text compiled in the fourteenth century that records the lineages of the aristocracy]).
  909. He was said to be the son of TAIRA no Masakado who established a government that was the origin of the military government in the Kanto region and identified himself as 'new emperor.'
  910. He was said to be the uncle of Musashi no kuni kokushi (the provincial governor of Musashi Province), TAKAKURA no Fukushin.
  911. He was said to die of disease, but recently, a theory claiming that he died of suicide has been widely accepted.
  912. He was said to have been a favorite pageboy of Nobunaga ODA, who was from Owari Province, and to have had a sexual relationship with Nobunaga.
  913. He was said to have been an accommodating person and also have known how to recognize the talents of others.
  914. He was said to have been from Kumasaka, Echigo Province.
  915. He was said to have been very serious and sincere.
  916. He was said to have gained painting techniques from his teacher, Sorai OGYU.
  917. He was said to have gone to Mutsu Province following the governor of Mutsu Province, FUJIWARA no Sanekata, and to have died there.
  918. He was said to have learned inherited secret teachings of art of wielding swords in there, and founded a school.
  919. He was said to have predicted the western rebellion (Seinan War) after the Meiji Restoration.
  920. He was said to have run a dojo of Sekiguchi-ryu Jujutsu in Osaka.
  921. He was said to have stayed in Kyoto to perform his roll as Kebiishi, and to have been in attendance at the visits of Emperor Godaigo.
  922. He was said to have suffered from beriberi.
  923. He was said to have three sons and three daughters or two sons and five daughters besides the children born out of wedlock.
  924. He was said to lead a frugal life, wearing kimono made of cotton for example, and earned tens of thousands of yen (the value at the time).
  925. He was said to love his wife very much, and kept no concubines.
  926. He was said to take part in various important battles such as the Battle of Anegawa, Battle of Nagashino, Battle of Shizugatake, and during his life he was present in 53 battles in total and received 41 letters of commendation for taking part in the battle.
  927. He was said to use 'Mutsutoki' as his secular name (imina) after he returned to secular life.
  928. He was scouted while playing a female role, and became an actor working exclusively for Nikkatsu Mukojima Studios.
  929. He was second cousin to the eighth shogun, Yoshimune TOKUGAWA.
  930. He was seen as Onna Sannomiya's possible bridegroom.
  931. He was seen as the epitome of greedy and corrupted officer being accused by the public of his act of feathering his nest with bribes and interests and dissipate it, actually being involved closely with a businessmen with political ties of Mitsui and Choshu, represented by Osarizawa Copper Mine incident.
  932. He was selected as Myobo tokugyosho (a distinguished law student who won a scholarship) in 815 and became Myobo hakase (Professor of Law) in 830 and daihanji (a higher-rank judge) later.
  933. He was selected as Persons of Cultural Merit in 2008.
  934. He was selected as a "Teishitsu Gigeiin" (selected artist by Imperial Household Ministry) and won the first Order of Culture and became the top of Kyoto painting circles both in name and reality.
  935. He was selected as a Buddhist priest to study overseas at the age of 25, went to Tang Dynasty China and studied both Yuishiki doctrine (theory that all existence is subjective and nothing exists outside of the mind) and Hokke doctrine for 31 years there.
  936. He was selected as a Bunkakorosha (Person of Cultural Merits) in 2000.
  937. He was selected as an editor of 'Sarumino' (The Monkey's Straw Raincoat) along with Boncho NOZAWA.
  938. He was selected as one of the eight members (Seijun SUZUKI, Zenzo MATSUYAMA, Buichi SAITO, Kazuo INOUE, Chisato IKOMA, Yugoro IMAI, and Tadashi ARIMOTO) among 1,500 applicants and entered Shochiku Co., Ltd.
  939. He was selected as one of the scholars sent to China for a short-term stay in order to study the dharma in China.
  940. He was selected as the general holder of Important Intangible Cultural Property in 1957.
  941. He was selected as the individual holder of Important Intangible Cultural Property, received the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette, and performed in the United States in 1968.
  942. He was selected because he looked like Motoyasu, as they shared the same mother.
  943. He was selected for Chokusen wakashu (anthology of Japanese poetry compiled by Imperial command) following after "Shin chokusen wakashu"(new anthology of Japanese poetry compiled by Imperial command).
  944. He was selected in 1997, as a Bunkakorosha (Person of Cultural Merit), and was honored the Bunkakunsho (Order of Cultural Merit) in 2003.
  945. He was selected in 848 as one of Juzenji (ten selected excellent priests) of Enryaku-ji Temple Joshin-in and after being selected as one of Naigubu Juzenji (ten selected excellent priests for a Buddhist service conducted at the Imperial court), he was finally inaugurated as the head priest of the Tendai Sect in 864.
  946. He was selected to direct "Otosan" (lit. Father) which was planned as a picture to mark the reconstruction following the Great Kanto Earthquake and starred popular shinpa-geki (new school theater) actress Yaeko MIZUTANI (I).
  947. He was sent into exile for a while, however, he was permitted later, and assisted the Kamakura kubo (Governor-general of the Kanto region), Ujimitsu ASHIKAGA as a Kanto Kanrei (A shogunal deputy for the Kanto region).
  948. He was sent to Japan after teaching at major seminaries in Loreto and the State of Goa.
  949. He was sent to his uncle's temple, Bodai-ji, before he went to Mt. Hiei, the center of Buddhist study.
  950. He was sentenced to death for his involvement in the Shusui KOTOKU Incident and executed on January 24, 1911.
  951. He was seriously injured in the raid.
  952. He was set to marry Princess Matsu (Niitachi goryonin, Shinshoni), the daughter of Shingen TAKEDA, but the engagement was broken off once his father went to war with Shingen.
  953. He was settled in Hamamatsu.
  954. He was seventeen years old.
  955. He was seventy three years old.
  956. He was seventy years old when he died.
  957. He was seventy-eight years old.
  958. He was seventy-five years old.
  959. He was seventy-one years old.
  960. He was seventy-six years old.
  961. He was severely condemned by Yoritomo.
  962. He was sheltered in a temple at Oi of Hagi (Ajio house).
  963. He was sheltered in the Hirao Sanso Mountain Villa, but returned to Shimonoseki on hearing that the moderate faction had executed a chief retainer of the reformist faction.
  964. He was sheltered in the residence of Satsuma Domain after the Abura-no-koji Incident, and the remnants of the Goryo-eji including Shinohara attacked Kondo on Fushimi-kaido Road on December 18.
  965. He was shocked by the scene and said, "I will not levy taxes in the year when smoke does not rise up from the kitchen chimneys of houses on New Year's Day."
  966. He was shocked to learn that they did not speak Dutch and he could not even read the letters on signboards there because their main language was English.
  967. He was shonii (Senior Second Rank) chunagon (vice-councilor of state).
  968. He was short-tempered, but did not got tired easily.'
  969. He was shortlisted for C thousand yen Bank of Japan note (started to publish in November 1, 1963) but Hirobumi ITO was adopted in the end.
  970. He was shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) and Sangi (councillor).
  971. He was shot and seriously wounded during the battle for capturing Pyongyang on March 4, 1895.
  972. He was shugodai (deputy governor) of four upper districts of Owari Province.
  973. He was shukuro (chief vassal) and saigoku tandai (local commissioner in the western part of Japan) of the Edo shogunate.
  974. He was shy and reserved as a child, whereas his three younger brothers were all outgoing and bright; it is said that some people called them, 'a living showcase of a foolish older brother and a smart younger brothers' behind their backs.
  975. He was simply an extraordinary man.
  976. He was six feet (about 182 cm) high.
  977. He was sixty five years old.
  978. He was sixty six years old.
  979. He was sixty-four years old.
  980. He was sixty-nine years old.
  981. He was sixty-three years old.
  982. He was sixty-two years old.
  983. He was skilled at talking in a humorous manner, inducing laughs even during his sermons, so at the request of Shigemune ITAKURA, Governor-General of Kyoto, he wrote the 'Seisuisho,' a pioneering work in the field of collections of funny stories.
  984. He was skilled in waka and Sonchin school calligraphy.
  985. He was skillful with the brush and in particular and the painting he had drawn were reputed to hold magical powers.
  986. He was slain by Izo when he tried to escape by jumping out of bed, and his son was also killed by TSUTSUMI.
  987. He was slightly hard of hearing yet he studied hard from a young age, learning Sekimon Shingaku, which is the course of study followed by the Tomioka family.
  988. He was slightly-built.
  989. He was small but had a potbelly and was very strong.
  990. He was small in stature and had a fair-skinned lovable face.
  991. He was so absorbed in shogi that he cautioned himself writing 'I am crazy and should be mocked' in 1504 (July 6).
  992. He was so ashamed, however, that his face lost its color and with a trembling voice he was unable to recite properly.
  993. He was so chivalrous that he would mediate people's debt problems, help the poor and save wanderers, while being engaging in farming.
  994. He was so convinced of his theory that he issued an announcement to forbid eating barley rice which was taken as a diet supplement for beriberi in the Navy of the times, and in the Russo-Japanese War also, he refused to supply barley rice to soldiers (as he mentioned in his short story 'Moso' (Delusion).
  995. He was so deeply absorbed in ceramic art, one of his hobbies, that he handed over the family business to his son and retired at the age of 36.
  996. He was so deeply affiliated with the Sohu Association that he accompanied their performance to New York.
  997. He was so devoted to studying and exploring wabicha that he was called 'Sotan the beggar' (living an honorable life of poverty, in the old sense).
  998. He was so eager to gain the benefit from marriage of convenience that he married off his two daughters to two heads of Sekke (line of regents and advisers), Fusasuke TAKATSUKASA and Kaneteru ICHIJO, respectively, but he died young at the age of 34 while he was serving as Sangi (councilor).
  999. He was so fussy about food that the anecdote that 'He eats meat only' was circulated.
  1000. He was so highly praised for his innate talents in literature, it was said that no poet was not a pupil of Atsumoto.


115001 ~ 116000

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