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

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

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  1. Higashi Maizuru Park is located in Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  2. Higashi Nihon Ferry Co., Ltd. (sailing between Muroran and Hakata with a stop at Naoetsu in between) * Operation is currently suspended
  3. Higashi Ote-mon Gate
  4. Higashi Sanjo-dono Residence
  5. Higashi Sanjoden and Kayain mentioned above, and also Horikawain are well known for their magnificent buildings and elaborately designed gardens, because they are depicted in records, such as 'Shouki,' FUJIWARA no Sanesuke's diary.
  6. Higashi Shiokoji-cho
  7. Higashi Shiokoji-cho, in which Kyoto Tower is located, was established before the Municipal Government Act was enforced, in 1879 when a part of Shiokoji village at that time was incorporated into Shimogyo Ward.
  8. Higashi and Nishi Hongwan-ji temples
  9. Higashi shiokoji Renge-ji monjo (documents of Renge-ji Temple of Higashi Shiokoji)
  10. Higashi'
  11. Higashi' features the performance which is played considerably uptempo from the beginning.
  12. Higashi-Hagi Station commenced operation.
  13. Higashi-Hongu Romon (two-storied gate of East Shrine)
  14. Higashi-Ichijo-dori Street
  15. Higashi-Ichijo-dori Street, which forms an extended line of Ichijo-dori Street across the Kamo-gawa River (Yodo-gawa River system), runs from Kawabata-dori Street in the west to the gate (Torii) of Yoshida-jinja Shrine in the east.
  16. Higashi-Kuramaguchi-dori Street is divided between Shimogamo Higashi-dori Street west of Tadekurabashi over Takano-gawa River (Kyoto City) and the western gate of Shimogamo-jnja Shrine.
  17. Higashi-Maizuru
  18. Higashi-Maizuru City
  19. Higashi-Maizuru City accepted these conditions and, given the situation prevailing at that time and the request to build a large naval port, both cities left the decision to the governor of Kyoto Prefecture.
  20. Higashi-Maizuru Ekimae Store of Yutaka Pharmacy Co., Ltd.
  21. Higashi-Maizuru Office, Hitachi Zosen Corporation
  22. Higashi-Maizuru Station
  23. Higashi-Maizuru Station (0.0 km) -- Higashi-Maizuruko Station (freight depot) (1.3 km)
  24. Higashi-Maizuru Station (0.0 km) -- Kitasui Station (1.6 km) -- Naka-Maizuru Station (3.4 km)
  25. Higashi-Maizuru Station - Matsunoodera Station
  26. Higashi-Maizuru Station - Obama Station: 85 km/h
  27. Higashi-Maizuru Station is the last stop on the Maizuru and Obama Lines and, as of October 2007, all trains double back here, except one that starts at Nishi-Maizuru Station and arrives at Tsuruga Station and the Limited Express 'Maizuru,' which occasionally goes on to other stations.
  28. Higashi-Maizuru generally refers to the eastern half areas of Maizuru City including Yohoro, Yashima and Kitasui, where the City Hall is located.
  29. Higashi-Maizuru is the eastern half of Maizuru City.
  30. Higashi-Maizuru was a former munitions city, but today flourishes in heavy industries centered around ship building and an old military port.
  31. Higashi-Matsue - Matsue section
  32. Higashi-Matsue Station (0.0 km) - Makatako Station (1.0 km)
  33. Higashi-Suminodo temporary Station was abolished.
  34. Higashi-dono had Anrakuju-in (built by Retired Emperor Toba).
  35. Higashi-hongu Haiden (the Hall of worship of East Shrine)
  36. Higashi-horikawa-dori Street, the Hori-kawa River and Nishi-horikawa-dori Street were once of nearly identical width.
  37. Higashi-imoarai, Kumiyama Town Kuze-gun: 37,812
  38. Higashi-jinja Shrine (enshrining Amenokoyane-no-Mikoto, Amaterasu Omikami and Sumiyoshi-no-Omikami)
  39. Higashi-machi Matsuri yatai tenjo-e consists of the two pictures of 'Hoo-zu' (the painting of a phoenix) (Hokusai Gallery 8) and "Ryu-zu" (the painting of a dragon).
  40. Higashi-maizuru Post Office: 625-00xx, 625-85xx, 625-86xx, 625-87xx, 625-01xx
  41. Higashi-muko Station, of the Hankyu Kyoto Line, is located approximately 500 meters from this station (about a ten-minute walk).
  42. Higashi-no-Korokan was renamed Oyakuen in 839, which was controlled by the Tenyakuryo (the Bureau of Medicine).
  43. Higashi-no-ma - Kushinada Hime (Kushi(i)nadahime-no-mikoto)
  44. Higashi-no-za - Sagara-ryuo
  45. Higashi-yagura 3-chome, Kusatsu City: 41,137
  46. Higashi-yamate, Nagasaki City, Nagasaki Prefecture, 1991, port town
  47. Higashi-yamate, Nagasaki City, Nagasaki Prefecture, port town
  48. Higashi-yoshino Onsen Hot Spring
  49. Higashi-yoshino Onsen Hot Spring (Kizu district) is located along National Route 166.
  50. Higashi-yoshino Onsen Hot Spring is a hot spring which is located in Higashiyoshino-mura, Yoshino gun, Nara Prefecture (old province, Yamato province).
  51. Higashi-yoshino Onsen Hot Spring: sodium hydrocarbonate springs, and senon (hot spring temperature) is 38 degrees Celsius.
  52. Higashibojo wrote two scripts for talking pictures, directed by Sotoji KIMURA and Osamu FUSHIMI, starring Takako IRIE.
  53. Higashida Otsuka Tumulus
  54. Higashidaimon (literally, eastern large gate) of Kyoogokoku-ji Temple
  55. Higashidonozuka-kofun Tumulus (a large keyhole-shaped mound in Tenri City, Nara Prefecture)
  56. Higashidonozuka-kofun Tumulus is located in Tenri City, Nara Prefecture.
  57. Higashifushiminomiya (the mistress of Higashifushiminomiya Imperial Prince Yorihito, (the wife of Imperial Prince Yorihito) Kaneko
  58. Higashifushiminomiya Palace: This place still exists in Shibuya.
  59. Higashifushiminomiya's parenting of Prince Kunihide was not authorized by the Imperial Household Agency with regard to adoption or the like.
  60. Higashigawa-cho to Kyoto Station
  61. Higashigoza mikoshi: called Shiwaka mikoshi
  62. Higashiguchi (East Exit)
  63. Higashiguchi Bus Terminal
  64. Higashiguchi is located at the east side of the free passage.
  65. Higashihiroshima City: Mitsujo Tumulus
  66. Higashihongu (Ninomiya (Kohiei)) Ooyamakuinokami
  67. Higashiiyaasa, Miyoshi City, Tokushima Prefecture (former Asa, Higashiiyayama-son, Miyoshi County)
  68. Higashiiyayama-son, Miyoshi County
  69. Higashikujo village had no Oaza and was reorganized into 17 towns prefixed by 'Higashikujo.'
  70. Higashikuninomiya (the descendants of Higashikuninomiya Prince Naruhiko)
  71. Higashikuninomiya Palace: It was burnt down in a terrorist attack on the day when the War ended.
  72. Higashikuninomiya Prince Naruhiko (Naruhiko HIGASHIKUNI)
  73. Higashikuninomiya Prince Naruhiko (the 43rd Prime Minister
  74. Higashikuninomiya Prince Naruhiko's Empress
  75. Higashikura (literally, eastern storehouse)
  76. Higashikurumazuka tomb (an ancient tomb)
  77. Higashikuze Family
  78. Higashimachi-suji Road
  79. Higashimaru Shoyu Co., Ltd. and Marukin Chuyu Co., Ltd. are leading soy-sauce manufacturers in this region.
  80. Higashimatsuyama City (Saitama Prefecture)
  81. Higashimukai Kannon-ji Temple
  82. Higashimukai Kannon-ji Temple is a Shingon Sect Sennyu-ji School temple in Kamigyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  83. Higashimuko Station
  84. Higashimuko Station - Rakusaiguchi Station - Katsura Station
  85. Higashimuko Station is an aboveground station having two separate platforms serving two tracks.
  86. Higashimuko Station, located in Muko City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Hankyu Kyoto Line, which is operated by the Hankyu Railway.
  87. Higashimurayama City; Shofuku-ji Temple; National Treasure; Jizo-do hall; (restoration)
  88. Higashinakasuji-dori Street
  89. Higashino
  90. Higashino Katasagaricho
  91. Higashino Station (Kyoto Prefecture)
  92. Higashino Station (Kyoto Prefecture) (T06) - Yamashina Station (T07) - Misasagi Station (T08)
  93. Higashino Station, located in Yamashina Ward, Kyoto City, is a railroad facility on the Kyoto Municipal Subway Tozai Line.
  94. Higashinoichinotsukasa/Nishinoichinotsukasa (Sakyoshiki, Ukyoshiki)
  95. Higashinomiya-kofun Tumulus (Aichi Prefecture)
  96. Higashinorikura-kofun Tumulus: A keyhole-shaped mound, which is thought that was constructed in the late Kofun period (the mid-sixth century).
  97. Higashinotoin-dori Sanjo-dori Agaru, Nakagyo Ward, Kyoto City
  98. Higashinotoin-dori Street
  99. Higashiodai district is exempt from the restriction.
  100. Higashioji-dori Street
  101. Higashioji-dori Street is also known as Higashiyama-dori Street, so its crossings and bus stops were given names starting with 'Higashiyama,' following the practice of the days when Kyoto City trams ran on the street.
  102. Higashioji-dori Street is one of the major north-south streets in Kyoto City.
  103. Higashioji-dori Street is specially recognized as an "intersection."
  104. Higashioji-dori Street runs across the track of the Eizan Main Line.
  105. Higashiomi City
  106. Higashiosaka Branch Office
  107. Higashiumezu Maeko-cho
  108. Higashiwakagoza mikoshi: Higashigoza mikoshi carried by children
  109. Higashiyama (Kyoto Prefecture)
  110. Higashiyama Driveway
  111. Higashiyama Go-bunko refers to the imperial family library located in northeast corner of Kyoto Imperial Palace.
  112. Higashiyama Gobunko (the imperial library)
  113. Higashiyama Higashi
  114. Higashiyama Higashi, Kanazawa City, Ishikawa Prefecture, 2001, chaya-machi (traditional caf? town)
  115. Higashiyama High School
  116. Higashiyama High School (Kyoto city): former Jodo Shu Kyoto branch school
  117. Higashiyama Joshi Gigei Gakko
  118. Higashiyama Junior High School/High School
  119. Higashiyama Kamikazan Hongan-ji Temple
  120. Higashiyama Post Office
  121. Higashiyama Post Office (Kyoto Prefecture)
  122. Higashiyama Sanju-Roppo mountain range
  123. Higashiyama School: Noami
  124. Higashiyama Station (Kyoto Prefecture)
  125. Higashiyama Station (station number: T10), owned and controlled by Kyoto Prefecture---Sanjyo-Keihan Station (station number: T11)---Kyoto Shiyakusyo-mae Station (station number: T12)
  126. Higashiyama Station was built by a third-sector company called Kyoto Kosoku Railway Co., Ltd.
  127. Higashiyama Station, located in Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City, is a stop on the Kyoto Municipal Subway Tozai Line.
  128. Higashiyama Station, the Tozai Line of Kyoto City Subway (Kyoto Prefecture): Furukawa-cho
  129. Higashiyama Takeda Hospital (formerly Kyoto Monopoly Corporation Hospital)
  130. Higashiyama Tunnel
  131. Higashiyama Tunnel on National Route 1 was established on the south side of Kazando.
  132. Higashiyama Ward
  133. Higashiyama Ward Aged People's Welfare Center, Higashiyama Ward Youth Activity Center, Regional Gymnasium
  134. Higashiyama Ward Office
  135. Higashiyama Ward Office, Higashiyama Health Center, Higashiyama Ward Social Welfare Office, Higashiyama Ward Library
  136. Higashiyama Ward consolidated office facilities
  137. Higashiyama Ward is located on the east coast of the Kamo-gawa River, which is in the east of urban area of Kyoto.
  138. Higashiyama Ward is long in north and south direction, and there is Sakyo Ward in the north, Yamashina Ward is in the east which is on the other side of the mountains of Higashiyama, Fushimi Ward is in the south, and there are Minami Ward (Kyoto City), Shimogyo Ward, and Nakagyo Ward in the west.
  139. Higashiyama Ward is one of the eleven wards that constitute Kyoto City.
  140. Higashiyama Ward was originally a part of Shimogyo Ward, and it was established in 1929 when an area east of the Kamo-gawa River split off from Shimogyo Ward.
  141. Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City
  142. Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City - A monument inscribed with Sei Shonagon's famous poem collected in Hyakunin Isshu: 'Even if you are going to cheat by emulating a crow fowl late at night, you wouldn't be allowed to pass Ose's checkpoint (you wouldn't be allowed to see me).'
  143. Higashiyama Ward, Ukyo Ward, Minami Ward (Kyoto City), and Nakagyo Ward are located in the east, west, south, and north respectively.
  144. Higashiyama Zenrin-ji Temple (Kyoto city) (Eikando) (Zenrinji-ha)
  145. Higashiyama area (Kyoto Prefecture)
  146. Higashiyama culture
  147. Higashiyama culture is a term which refers to the culture in the middle of the Muromachi Period.
  148. Higashiyama gyomotsu
  149. Higashiyama gyomotsu (Higashiyama gomotsu) refers to the paintings, chaki (tea utensils), kaki (flower vase), stationery and other items collected by Yoshimasa ASHIKAGA, the eighth seii taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the eastern barbarians") of the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  150. Higashiyama is a collective name referring to the mountains on the east side of Kyoto Basin.
  151. Higashiyama mountains had been formed by upheavals due to activities of some faults including Hanaori Fault, Shishigatani Fault, and Momoyama Fault.
  152. Higashiyama onbunkobon
  153. Higashiyama post office: 605-00, 605-08, and 605-09
  154. Higashiyama type: Tohoku region
  155. Higashiyama-Sanjo Station - Heianjingu-mae Station - (Okazaki-michi Station) - Keage Station (Keihan)
  156. Higashiyama-Sanjo Station and Keage Station were located at the same place with the current Higashiyama Station (Kyoto Prefecture) and Keage Station of the subway, respectively.
  157. Higashiyama-bashi Bridge (Kamo-gawa River (Yodo-gawa River System))
  158. Higashiyama-kodate
  159. Higashiyama-sanjo Station
  160. Higashiyama-sanjo Station - (Heianjingu-mae Station - Okazaki-michi Station) - Keage Station - Kujoyama Station
  161. Higashiyama-sanjo Station was a stop provided on Sanjo-dori Street (the old National Route 1).
  162. Higashiyama-sanjo Station, located in Furukawa-cho, Sanjoyamato-oji Kudaru, Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City, was a stop on the Keihan Keishin Line operated by the Keihan Electric Railway Co., Ltd.
  163. Higashiyama-tenno (Takanaga) kensho-no-kanro
  164. Higashiyama: Japanese cuisine
  165. Higatani route
  166. Hige
  167. Hige danshaku
  168. Hige no Ikyu (literally, 'Mustache Ikyu'), a male villain in the play is said to have been modeled after Danzaemon Shusei (集誓) who died in 1709 (it is said that the first performance clearly portrayed Ikyu as a personality from the discriminated community called Buraku).
  169. Higechaya-oiwake
  170. Higechaya-oiwake was a point in the Yamashina Basin, where Otsukaido Road diverges from Tokaido (it was also called Yamashina-oiwake).
  171. Higekiri
  172. Higekiri is a sword which MINAMOTO no Mitsunaka is said to have had made in the Heian period, handed down, together with another sword, Hizamaru, through successive generations of the Minamoto clan.
  173. Higekiri, having regained its power, was handed down to MINAMOTO no Yoritomo, who led the Minamoto clan to victory.
  174. Higekuro was totally disgusted with the way his wife behaved, and stayed on at Tamakazura's.
  175. Higekuro's wife: Hyobukyo no MIYA's daughter.
  176. Higekuro, however, got upset about it, and urged Tamakazura to leave, and took her home.
  177. Higekuro, the Commander of the Right: Uncle of the emperor regnant.
  178. Higekuro, who is deeply in love with Tamakazura, pays no attention to his wife and children, so his father-in-law Shikibukyo no Miya (the Highness of Ceremonial) gets angry and decides to take care of his daughter and grandchildren himself.
  179. Higekuro, who thought that it looked bad, tried to hold her back, but when he was about to leave for Tamakazura's, she suddenly got mad at him, and threw ashes from the incense burner at him.
  180. Higeyagura
  181. Higeyagura is a title of kyogen (farce played during a Noh play cycle).
  182. High Priest: Hogan HATTORI
  183. High School
  184. High Taxpayer Councilors
  185. High and low' at the beginning was 'shimin' in the Yuri draft, however according to retrospect of Fukuoka 'shimin was changed to high and low to broaden the meaning.'
  186. High brewing technology, brewing control, hygiene control, and maintenance management are required to produce high-quality soy-sauce.
  187. High buildings are not permitted in the Koriyama Ruins Zone.
  188. High clarity is a sign of high carbon filtration fraction, in which case the flavor is often bland.
  189. High courtier Shunzei's wife
  190. High lineage
  191. High officials such as MINAMOTO no Masasada and FUJIWARA no Saneyoshi announce that they will reduce the punishments on the warriors who had sided with Sutoku because no death sentence has been carried out for a long time and they are still in mourning for the Cloistered Emperor Toba.
  192. High passenger share
  193. High pitched sound, but the sound is little.
  194. High points of parades mostly include 'sashiage,' lifting the taikodai up above the head of carriers, before the gods and at other sites (for instance, at the center of intersections) for audience.
  195. High positions are often used in the jiuta numbers of tegotomono, and this design enables high notes to be played more clearly.
  196. High quality hojicha has a unique sweet and soothing aroma, and leaf roasting requires considerable skill.
  197. High quality seishu was brewed by techniques such as using a yeast mash named bodaimoto which brewed a well-known brand sake "Bodaisen" at the Shoryaku-ji Temple on Mt. Bodai in Nara, and nimoto (a manufacturing process of yeast mash) what is now called a kind of high-temperature saccharification method.
  198. High school
  199. High school and university students:
  200. High school students numbered approximately 60,000 players despite the recent decline in the birthrate, and thus shared the highest number of players in martial arts, surpassing the number of Kendo (Japanese art of fencing) players.
  201. High school, and technical collage
  202. High schools
  203. High speed freight trains that are made up of only freight cars of the JR Freight Car Series Taki 1000 are in service between Yokkaichi Station/Shiohama Station and the Inazawa Station (- Minami-Matsumoto Station).
  204. High spot and comments
  205. High tonicity springs
  206. High transport density
  207. High-Tech Research Center
  208. High-Tech Research Center Project
  209. High-alcohol sake with almost 20 percent alcohol content can be produced only in the multiple parallel fermentation process.
  210. High-class Japanese-style restaurants and yukaku (red-light districts) in which maiko (apprentice geisha) dance in time to songs by geisha, shamisen and ohayashi became popular among the common people.
  211. High-class rattan is occasionally used instead of wooden flooring.
  212. High-definition
  213. High-end or tradition-minded ryokan have woman staff called "nakai" who wait on the guests in each room.
  214. High-five of Japan, Inc.; engaged in software development and manufacture of application service providers.
  215. High-grade (koikuchi 1.35% or higher, usukuchi 1.05%)
  216. High-pressure gas (except carbon dioxide gas filled in a fire extinguisher and oxygen gas filled in a medical oxygen equipment)
  217. High-quality Yamada nishiki, of which the yield is 4.5 bags per tan, costs around 40,000 yen per bag, but the price fluctuates depending on the harvest in any particular year.
  218. High-quality beni has been expensive as the phrase "one monme of gold, one monme of beni" describes.
  219. High-quality beni is extremely expensive and it was said to be valued as the same amount of gold, as the familiar expression "one monme (3.75 grams) of gold, one monme of beni" described.
  220. High-quality binders use deer, but cows, pigs and rabbits are normally used, and fish is used for the inexpensive product.
  221. High-quality tea produced in Uji.
  222. High-quality water drawn from wells excavated by sake breweries is used for the brewing of ordinary sake instead of tap water used in homes.
  223. High-quality zori worn with formal attire had thick soles made by putting several soles together and were called 'nanmai zori.'
  224. High-ranking court nobles like Otodo (minister) or Dainagon (chief councilor of state) were appointed to its head called Betto etc. and Sangi (councilor) class persons were appointed to executive officer.
  225. High-ranking nobility wore okuchi bakama of reddish yellow (color of a dead and fallen leaf) from age 40 onwards, as the aged.
  226. High-ranking warriors in this period also belonged to this class as officials for practical works in charge of military art, and supervised general samurai in samurai class by making them Kenin (retainers).
  227. High-rise buildings (skyscraper): Kasumigaseki Building, Sunshine 60 Building, and Yokohama Landmark Tower
  228. High-speed freight train
  229. High-speed operation
  230. High-speed railway systems in the prewar era
  231. High-standard arterial road running outside the town near the border with Maizuru City
  232. High-temperature hot springs
  233. High-temperature saccharification
  234. High-value added tanada
  235. Higher Normal School (1886-), from 1902 Tokyo Higher Normal School.
  236. Higher Normal Schools/Women's Higher Normal Schools
  237. Higher education
  238. Higher education institution
  239. Higher education institutions
  240. Higher fare for late hours
  241. Higher fare for winter time
  242. Higher normal schools accepted middle school graduates, and Women's higher normal schools accepted women's higher school graduates.
  243. Higher ones are transmitted to spirits on the same wavelength of each person's mind and expressed through the sympathies of those spirits.
  244. Higher ranking samurai of several thousand koku class became a samurai daisho.
  245. Higher schools other than national schools
  246. Higher-category trains
  247. Higher-grade instruments have a minute pattern carved all over the inner surface of the do.
  248. Higher-grade spirits have a good attitude.
  249. Higher-ranking daimyos with greater than the required number of personnel, on the other hand, would be split, as in Ieyasu TOKUGAWA's troops mentioned above, and used as multiple te units.
  250. Higher-ranking samurai of 1000-koku class served as kumigashira (captain of a group) (also called bangashira or monogashira), but they could also be dually assigned as samurai daisho.
  251. Highest position in charge of the kitchen.
  252. Highland: Tanba Highland
  253. Highlands, basins and mountainous regions exist together.
  254. Highlight
  255. Highlights
  256. Highlights of prizes
  257. Highlights:
  258. Highly esteemed by Nariakira SHIMAZU, the lord of Satsuma Domain, he was transferred to Satsuma Domain.
  259. Highly formalized patterns such as yusoku-moyo (patterns used by scholars in Heian Period) and rinpa-moyo (patterns created by a group of Korin OGATA) are popular.
  260. Highly raised timbered floors
  261. Highly skilled in the art of calligraphy, he revised eight volumes of 'Shogyo Mokuroku' (Catalog of sacred texts).
  262. Highly unpleasant odor caused by contamination of moronic with fuzokin, a type of unfavorable bacterium and resulting generated acetic acid, etc.
  263. Highly valued archaeological resources or historical resources (hereinafter referred to as 'tangible cultural properties')
  264. Hightouch Research Park
  265. Highway
  266. Highway Buses
  267. Highway Operator
  268. Highway Service Section
  269. Highway bus
  270. Highway buses bound for Kyoto/Nanba/Sakai (depending on the day, the service is provided by Nankai Bus Co., Ltd., which is a joint operator).
  271. Highways
  272. Higiri Jizo (Jizo who grants a wish of a specific date)
  273. Higisho (the taking of a religious oath with red-hot iron)
  274. Higisho is a kind of ordeal believed as God's judgment conducted in Japan during the medieval period and modern times, also being referred to as Tekka (red-hot iron) or Kasei (oath of fire).
  275. Higisho was mostly conducted during disputes over the boundaries of territories from the Sengoku (civil war) period to the early Edo period, for the purpose of seeking God's judgment when such disputes cannot be settled.
  276. Higo Goshi (the Kumamoto clan)
  277. Higo Hosokawa family (the Kokura Domain, Buzen Province, the master's house of the Kumamoto Domain in Higo)
  278. Higo Kikuchi clan
  279. Higo Ko School: Passed down in the Kumamoto clan, and is said to continue to teach the school of Rikyu as it was.
  280. Higo Province
  281. Higo Province: Domains of Kumamoto and Hitoyoshi
  282. Higo betto Jokei
  283. Higo betto Jokei (1184? - unknown but after 1256) was a Busshi (sculptor of Buddhist Statues) during the Kamakura period.
  284. Higo-Chikurin school was temporarily discontinued after the Imperial restoration, however, it was later inherited by the family of karo (chief retainer of daimyo - Japanese territorial lord) of the former Kumamoto Domain by the Matsui clan, which was the eighth owner of the castle, and it has succeeded from generation to generation up to the present time.
  285. Higo-koryu Old School (a school of tea ceremony)
  286. Higoshi Shinmei-gu Shrine's Harukuwa-matsuri spring hoe festival (February 12, 2002; Tamamura-machi, Sawa County [Gunma Prefecture]; Shinmei-gu Harukuwa Matsuri Hozonkai [Shinmei-gu Shrine Harukuwa-matsuri Festival Preservation Association])
  287. Higoyumi (Bow of the bow womb) (弓胎弓) in the Edo Period: 17th Century-
  288. Higuma KATO
  289. Higuma KATO (year of birth unknown - June 23, 1867) was a common member (regimental soldier) of the Shinsengumi (literally, the newly selected corps, referring to a special police force for the Tokugawa regime) and was a 側越人 of Kanryusai TAKEDA.
  290. Higuma participated in the Sanjo-ohashi Bridge Noticeboard Incident (which is called 'Sanjo Seisatsu Jiken' in Japanese) taking place on September 12, 1866.
  291. Higuma received a reward of 7 ryo 2 bu (the terms ryo and bu were the unit of gold currency in Edo; 1 ryo being equal to 4 bu equal to 16 shu, where the ryo, bu and shu are denominational units), which was the same amount of money as that given to Kensuke YAGUCHI.
  292. Higurashi Goten - Tsukubusuma-jinja Shrine (Chikubu Island, Nagahama City, Shiga Prefecture): Main Hall (National Treasure)
  293. Higyo hiza Zanmai (Zuijii Zanmai) (meditation on reality in an unspecified posture for an unspecified period of times)
  294. Higyosha (Fujitsubo)
  295. Higyosha no nyogo (Genji no nyogo) --- a princess of the preceding Emperor, and also a younger sister of Fujitsubo by a different mother.
  296. Higyosha no nyogo --- a daughter of Sadaijin (Minister of the Left).
  297. Hihaku-tai (splash pattern of writing)
  298. Hihaku-tai, one of the calligraphy styles, uses a large brush, and that style is decorative with various faded lines.
  299. Hihanachi
  300. Hihayahi no Kami
  301. Hihire shiki (lightening ceremony)
  302. Hiiragi (holly)
  303. Hiiragi Daimyojin (god of longevity and protection from evil; annual festival held on Setsubun in February)
  304. Hiiragi-iwashi
  305. Hiiragi-iwashi is a holly sprig with a baked sardine's head, and Japanese people have a time-honored custom of putting Hiiragi-iwashi at their door on Setsubun (the traditional end of winter) to ward off evil spirits.
  306. Hiire
  307. Hiire is a process that cause sake to lose it's youth.
  308. Hiire means to heat brewed sake for the purpose of pasteurization.
  309. Hiizu MIYAKE
  310. Hiizu MIYAKE (November 1848 - March 16, 1938) is a doctor, Dutch scholar, medical scientist, members of the Diet (the House of Peers [Japan]) in Japan.
  311. Hiizu was born at Edo honjo as the eldest son of the doctor Gonsai MIYAKE who was engaged in establishing shutosho (vaccination institute) (the origin of current Tokyo University, the faculty of Medicine).
  312. Hiizurutokoro no Tenshi (the title of the king of Wa)
  313. Hiji Domain: Hiji-jo Castle
  314. Hijikane (an "L" hook) is hammered into the point about 30 cm below the top of each of the two pillars on the closer side as one faces the chodai.
  315. Hijikata followed 'Shichikyo-ochi' (the exile of the Seven nobles from Kyoto), and went down to Choshu with Sanjo, Nobuyoshi SAWA, and so on.
  316. Hijikata is said to have been already dead when Sawa ran up to him to raise Hijikata in his arms.
  317. Hijikata's actions in the period from Shichikyo-ochi to the first year of the Meiji era (1868) were recorded in detail in his own diary "Kaiten Jikki" (true chronicle of the revolution).
  318. Hijiki
  319. Hijiki (edible brown algae)
  320. Hijiki (scientific name: Sargassum fusiforme, synonym: Hizikia fusiformis) is a kind of seaweed of the Class Phaeophyceae Family Sargassaceae Genus Sargassum.
  321. Hijiki grows near intertidal zones in rocky areas close to the choppy seashore.
  322. Hijiki hada (dark sea-wead shap pattern)
  323. Hijiki has a length of 50-100 cm.
  324. Hijiki is distributed in zones from lower areas of intertidal zones onto rocks on low-tide lines.
  325. Hijiki is generally collected with a sickle in rocky shores by fishermen and woman shell divers during low tide in the spring tide from March to May.
  326. Hijiki is mainly used as a foodstuff.
  327. Hijiki no Gomoku ni' (stewed hijiki mixture) prepared by dehydrating hoshi hijiki and then boiled with soy sauce, sugar, and the like is a popular way of eating hoshi hijiki.
  328. Hijiki used to be included in the Genus Hizikia, but is currently included in Genus Sargassum as a result of the Molecular Phylogeny conducted by Yoshida (2001).
  329. Hijiki, in particular, was also used as a glue for pieces of paper because of its viscosity.
  330. Hijiki: a crosspiece to support the weight from above.
  331. Hijimaro KURITA
  332. Hijiri no kami
  333. Hijiri originated from "hishiri," which was the celebrant or the shaman of the sun.
  334. Hijiri-jinja Shrine
  335. Hikae yagura
  336. Hikae, ichinokoshi
  337. Hikagecho Matsuzo scene
  338. Hikaitai (withdrawal from school)
  339. Hikakushi: eaves.
  340. Hikami County, in the western end of Tanba Province, was located in the upper reaches of the Kako-gawa River (whose upper reach portion was called the Saji-gawa River as well) that flew to the Sea of Harima in Seto Inland Sea through Harima Province.
  341. Hikami District (Tanba city)
  342. Hikami sendo no torihakama: "hikami" is a name of place, Hikami, Hikami district, Tanba Province (the present Tanba City, Hyogo Prefecture), and "sendo" means a functionary of a temple.
  343. Hikami-Anego-jinja Shrine
  344. Hikami-cho, Kaibara-cho, Aogaki-cho, Kasuga-cho, Sannan-cho and Ichijima-cho in Hyogo Prefecture were consolidated, and Tanba City was the result.
  345. Hikan (low ranking clerks)
  346. Hikan of Keicho family, including Motonaga and Nagatada, took lead in the disturbance, as they wanted to rid of Yukinaga MIYOSHI, the powers of Awa Province, by placing Sumiyuki as new head of Keicho family.
  347. Hikan were also initially called Hihan-nin.
  348. Hikanzakura group
  349. Hikari (trains)': trains for complementing Nozomi operation
  350. Hikari Supermarket Yamashina Store
  351. Hikari-beni (red pigment made from safflowers)
  352. Hikari-beni, also referred to as tsuya-beni (which literally means "shiny red") is pigment made by separating the coloring matter of safflowers with plum vinegar.
  353. Hikaru Genji
  354. Hikaru Genji acts as regent to his child from his Crown Prince years, and when the child becomes Emperor Reizei and plans to abdicate the throne to Genji after learning the facts, Genji strongly refuses.
  355. Hikaru Genji greets death with a woman whom he once loved attending his deathbed.
  356. Hikaru Genji invited them and had them give a performance.
  357. Hikaru Genji is a main character in "Genji Monogatari" (The Tale of Genji), written by Murasaki Shikibu.
  358. Hikaru Genji senses that he is being punished, so takes the initiative, secluding himself from society to Suma.
  359. Hikaru Genji' is a nickname that means 'A beautiful and shining Genji,' hence his actual name is not 'Hikaru' (shining).
  360. Hikaru Genji's brothers
  361. Hikaru Genji's children
  362. Hikaru Genji's parents
  363. Hikaru Genji's wives and ladies
  364. Hikaru Genji, Hotaru Hyobukyo no Miya (Genji's younger brother), and Kashiwagi (Genji's older brother by a different mother) propose to her, but the most inelegant man Higekuro (The Commander of the Right) forces her to get married with him in the end.
  365. Hikaru Genji, Lady Murasaki and young Princess Akashi lived in the spring quarter.
  366. Hikaru Genji, a main character in the first and second parts
  367. Hikaru Genji, age 32, from autumn to winter.
  368. Hikaru Genji, age 35, from March to December.
  369. Hikaru Genji, age 37 to 38, from winter to the early spring.
  370. Hikaru Genji, age 37, in autumn.
  371. Hikaru Genji, age 39, spring.
  372. Hikaru Genji, age 39.
  373. Hikaru Genji, age 52, stories from the New Year to the last day of December.
  374. Hikaru Genji, age fifty and Yugiri, age twenty-nine, from mid-August to winter.
  375. Hikaru Genji, age fifty, from summer to the middle of the August.
  376. Hikaru Genji, from age forty-one in March to age forty-seven in December.
  377. Hikaru Genji, from age thirty-nine in December to age forty-one in March.
  378. Hikaru Genji, from the winter of his 36th year to February of his 37th.
  379. Hikaru Genji, on his way, wrote a poem to a woman of Nakagawa whom he once met, but who gently rejected him, perhaps because she had already changed her mind.
  380. Hikaru Genji: The second prince of Emperor Kiritsubo.
  381. Hikaru INOUE
  382. Hikaru INOUE (November 30, 1851-December 17, 1908) was a military man in the Imperial Japanese Army and a peer.
  383. Hikaru NAKAMURA
  384. Hikaru's grandson, MINAMOTO no Atsushi is known to have become MINAMOTO no Mitsunaka's son-in-law and adopted MINAMOTO no Tsuna (WATANABE no Tsuna) of Saga-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  385. Hikawa (氷川)-jinja Shrine (avoid ambiguity), Hikawa (簸川)-jinja Shrine
  386. Hikawa-jinja Shrine (Omiya Ward, Saitama City, Saitama Prefecture)
  387. Hikawa-jinja Shrine (Omiya Ward, Saitama City, Saitama Prefecture): Bags containing things bought from the shrine give the name 'Hikawa Taisha.'
  388. Hikawa-jinja Shrine (Saitama City, Saitama Prefecture)
  389. Hikawa-jinja Shrine mentioned earlier for enshrining Arahabaki as a guest god is of the Izumo branch (transferred from Kitsuki-jinja Shrine located at Hi-kawa River of Izumo).
  390. Hikawa-jinja Shrine: 1.87 million
  391. Hike Jingu Shrine
  392. Hikeshi tsubo (fire extinguishing pot)
  393. Hikeshi tsubo is a pot to extinguish fire.
  394. Hiketa (Kagawa Prefecture)
  395. Hiki Yamakasa
  396. Hiki no ama
  397. Hiki no ama (years of birth and death unknown) was a woman who lived in the last years of Heian period.
  398. Hiki no ama and Kamonnojo's second daughter became the wife of Shigeyori KAWAGOE who was a powerful local clan of Musashi Province, whereas their third daughter married Sukekiyo ITO who was a powerful local clan of Izu Province, and after her husband's death she remarried Yoshinobu HIRAGA who belonged to the Minamoto clan.
  399. Hiki no ama and her husband Kamonnojo, who was the local governor of Hiki County in Musashi Province, moved from the capital (Kyo) to the Hiki County, where she continued sending money to Yoritomo for two decades until the fall in 1180 (according to a passage, November 14, 1182, in "Azuma Kagami" [Mirror of the East].)
  400. Hiki no ama is called so because her real name is unknown.
  401. Hiki no ama kept sending rice from the Hiki County to Yoritomo and made her three sons-in-law serve Yoritomo.
  402. Hiki no ama was a wet nurse ('menoto' in Japanese) of MINAMOTO no Yoritomo.
  403. Hiki no ama was a wife of Kamonnojo HIKI who was a daikan (local governor) of Hiki County in Musashi Province and whose family lineage stretched back to FUJIWARA no Hidesato.
  404. Hiki no ama's husband Kamonnojo had died before Yoritomo raised his army.
  405. Hikiame
  406. Hikicha
  407. Hikichigiri
  408. Hikichigiri is a type of Japanese sweet made from mochi (Japanese rice cake made of glutinous rice pounded into paste and molded into shape) and sweet bean paste.
  409. Hikifunemichi (Towpath) was provided along the river so that Hikiko (boat pullers) could walk and manually pull a Takasebune boat along the river.
  410. Hikigoshi and Kogoshi
  411. Hikigoshi used to be a decorative mosuo obi (hem belt), however, it is thought it became more fancy, kogoshi was added separately to make it easier to tie mo.
  412. Hikihitomai
  413. Hikihitomai is a dancing art performed by people of short stature, belonging to comical acts.
  414. Hikihitomai was recorded in "Shinsarugoki" (a kind of textbook about manners and cultures of Kyoto in the Heian era) and categorized into sarugaku in the Heian period.
  415. Hikikomi (withdrawn) shinzo
  416. Hikikomi kaburo
  417. Hikimado (skylight)
  418. Hikimayu (painted eyebrows)
  419. Hikimayu is a makeup technique applied from the Nara period to the Edo period, meaning to shave or pull out eyebrows.
  420. Hikime no gi (Hikime ceremony)
  421. Hikime no kayu (literally rice porridge with toads' eyes): unknown.
  422. Hikime-Kagibana
  423. Hikime-kagibana is a typological and stylized description technique for the eyes and nose of a person's face, used in the Yamato-e paintings (traditional Japanese style painting of the late Heian and Kamakura periods dealing with Japanese themes) and fuzokuga (pictures of manners and customs) during the Heian and Kamakura periods.
  424. Hikimekaburaya
  425. Hikimeya
  426. Hiking course in Kamakura
  427. Hiking is popular, and a famous trail begins at Shugakuin in Sakyo Ward of Kyoto City and goes up Kirarazaka hill; another one on the Shiga Prefecture side begins in Monzenmachi, Sakamoto (Otsu City), and goes up through Mudojidani valley.
  428. Hikinoama's second daughter (the wife of Shigeyori KAWAGOE) was chosen as menoto for Yoriie during the ceremony of first breast-feeding.
  429. Hikiroku and Kamezasa ordered Gakuzo (Sosuke INUKAWA), a houseboy working for the Otsuka family, to watch Shino, but by mere accident Shino and Gakuzo discovered that they had the same beads and bruise, and secretly decided to associate with each other as brothers (Gikyodai).
  430. Hikita clan, Kamata clan, and Hirano clan, which were all hatamoto (direct retainers of the bakufu, which is a form of Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) of the Tokugawa Shogunate, were known to have used the gotokumon.
  431. Hikita further invited Juro KOGA, known accusing Shonan YOKOI during an investigation into assassination of Yokoi in danjodai (Board of Censors), and his friend, Josuke NAKAMURA from the Akita clan.
  432. Hikitsuke (judicial board) under Hyojoshu (a member of Council of State) was responsible for general lawsuits.
  433. Hikitsuke were effectively made obsolete and Yuhitsu (amanuensis, secretary) were stationed at places such as the Mandokoro (Administrative Board), the Samuraidokoro (Board of Retainers), Monchujo (Board of Inquiry) and Onshokata (department that handled reward duties).
  434. Hikitsukeshu
  435. Hikiuta (Index), one book
  436. Hikiutomai (dwarf dance): a dance performed by dwarfs.
  437. Hikiwari natto (crushed natto)
  438. Hikiya worker
  439. Hikiya worker separates a structural building from its foundation, and moves or relocates the upper portion of the building to another place without demolishing or dismantling it.
  440. Hikiyama (pulling-type float)
  441. Hikiyama Museum
  442. Hikiyama-gata (the style of shouldering and carrying Japanese drum): Kokura Gion Japanese Drum (Fukuoka Prefecture), Chichibu-yomatsuri Night Festival (Saitama Prefecture)
  443. Hikiyama-gata (the style of shouldering and carrying a Japanese drum)
  444. Hikiyama-gata (the style of shouldering and carrying a Japanese drum): Tsugaru Joppari-daiko (Aomori Prefecture), Omihachiman odaiko (Shiga Prefecture), Nakanojo Torioi-daiko (Gunma Prefecture)
  445. Hikiyama-kabuki (Kabuki drama on a Hikiyama festival float) (Maibara Festival, Maibara City)
  446. Hikiyama-kabuki (Kabuki drama on a Hikiyama festival float) (Nagahama Hikiyama Matsuri (Nagahama Parade Float Festival), Nagahama City)
  447. Hikiyama-matsuri Festival
  448. Hiko (public recitation of a poem) of Waka
  449. Hiko Hoakari no Mikoto
  450. Hiko Shrine
  451. Hiko is to recite Waka to a tune, and there are some schools of reciting such as the AYANOKOJI School and the REIZEI School.
  452. Hiko starts with the left, or the poem from the left group will be read first.
  453. Hiko-jinja Shrine
  454. Hiko-jinja Shrine:
  455. Hiko-jinja is a shrine located in Yawata City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  456. Hikoemon YASUI
  457. Hikofutsuoshinomakoto no Mikoto
  458. Hikofutsuoshinomakoto no mikoto (彦太忍信命: year of birth and death unknown) was a member of Imperial family (Royal family), who appears in the "Kojiki" (The Records of Ancient Matters) and the "Nihonshoki" (Chronicles of Japan).
  459. Hikogoro once was nearly killed during a major fire; after this incident, and on the advice of Matsugoro INOUE, an older brother of Genzaburo INOUE, Hikogoro became a disciple of Tennen Rishin-ryu and started a Dojo in a corner of his house.
  460. Hikohahatsu no mikoto.
  461. Hikohito had a brother Prince Hikotoyo. Hikohito and his wife (the daughter of Yoshizane NIJO) had some children: Imperial Prince Tadafusa, Cloistered Imperial Prince Shochin and Imperial Princess Moriko.
  462. Hikohito was also called Ishikura Saburo no miya.
  463. Hikohito's Court rank rose to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank).
  464. Hikohitooe no mikoto
  465. Hikohitooe no mikoto or Oeo was a member of the Imperial family who lived during the Kofun period (tumulus period).
  466. Hikohohodemi no mikoto
  467. Hikoichi ORITA
  468. Hikoichi ORITA (January 27, 1849-January 26, 1920) was an educator in Japan.
  469. Hikoichi ORITA was its first president.
  470. Hikoichi YAMAMOTO, who built Mainichi Shinbun into a national newspaper, was also headhunted from Jiji Shinpo by Fujita Gumi.
  471. Hikojiro
  472. Hikojiro UCHIYAMA
  473. Hikojiro UCHIYAMA (1797 - June 23, 1864) was a yoriki (a police sergeant) of Osaka Nishimachi magistrate in the end of the Edo period.
  474. Hikojiro UCHIYAMA was the seventh head of the family who successively served as yoriki of the magistrates of Osaka town.
  475. Hikojoyaku consists of dokuji, koji, hassei and kosho: Dokuji is a chairman; firstly, koji reads out all the poems without a tune; then hassei chants them with a tune; kosho (four people) chant the second poem and the followings with hassei.
  476. Hikokuro TAKAYAMA
  477. Hikokuro TAKAYAMA (June 15, 1747 - August 4, 1793) was a thinker who had fostered a theory of reverence for the Emperor at the end of Edo period.
  478. Hikokuro encountered the incident Songo Ikken and was treated well by the court noble Naruchika NAKAYAMA; however, this caused the roju (member of shogun's council of elders), Sadanobu MATSUDAIRA, and the bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun), to grow wary of Hikokuro.
  479. Hikokuro was born as the second son of country samurai Yoshizaemon TAKAYAMA in Hosoya Village, Nitta District, Kozuke Province (now now Ota City, Gunma Prefecture).
  480. Hikone Castle
  481. Hikone City
  482. Hikone City and Mito City overcame their historical tensions and formed 'a sister city' relationship in 1968, on the 100th's anniversary of the start of the Meiji era.
  483. Hikone City, Shiga Prefecture
  484. Hikone Domain
  485. Hikone Domain refers to a domain which possessed the northern part of Omi Province.
  486. Hikone Domain: Hikone-jo Castle
  487. Hikone Folding Screen (Hikone City)
  488. Hikone Port
  489. Hikone Shinden domain of Hikone Domain, Omi Province - the Ii clan
  490. Hikone, located in a narrow plain area stretching about five kilometers between a lake and a mountain, is the point where Eastern and Western Japan meet and two roads Nakasen-do Road and Hokuriku-do (commonly called Hokkoku-kaido Road) join together, and from this point the roads to Kyoto by land or water begins.
  491. Hikone-Shinden Domain
  492. Hikone-Shinden Domain refers to a domain which existed from 1714 to 1734 in the middle of the Edo period.
  493. Hikone-jinja Shrine (Hikone City, Shiga Prefecture)
  494. Hikone-jo Castle
  495. Hikone-jo Castle in the popular culture
  496. Hikone-jo Castle is a castle that existed in Konki-cho, Hikone City, Shiga Prefecture.
  497. Hikone-jo Castle keep
  498. Hikono KASAI
  499. Hikono KASAI (March 29, 1896 to January 16, 1920; born in Nishijima-mura, Minami-koma-gun, Yamanashi Prefecture [present day, Nishijima, Minobu-cho]; her real name was Hikono. She was also known as Shino YAMAJI).
  500. Hikono died of illness at the age of 25.
  501. Hikono was admitted to a hospital and taken back to Tokyo.
  502. Hikono was admitted to the Ochanomizu Juntendo-iin Hospital and her short life ended there.
  503. Hikonosuke FUJIMOTO: Deserted the group by June 1864?
  504. Hikoosu no Miko
  505. Hikosaburo IBUKA
  506. Hikosaburo IBUKA (1868 - 1916) was an army agent in the Meiji Period and a member of the House of Representatives later.
  507. Hikosaburo called this 'Hakata ori' (覇家台織).
  508. Hikosaburo was deeply involved in China all his life and did not care for his family.
  509. Hikosashima no Mikoto
  510. Hikosashima no Mikoto (Hikosashima [written as Hikosamema in Kojiki (The Records of Ancient Matters)] no mikoto) was a member of the Imperial family who lived during the Kofun period (tumulus period).
  511. Hikoshichi Morinaga OMORI lived in Kume County.
  512. Hikoshichi OMORI
  513. Hikoshichi OMORI (kabuki)
  514. Hikoshichi OMORI happened to passed by the man and came to know that the sword had a soul, and he ordered his retainer to obtain the sword, ended up possessing the sword.
  515. Hikoshichi OMORI in Iyo Province was the sixth generation of the Uno clan line.
  516. Hikoshichi OMORI was grabbed by a specter and was held up into the sky, seeing the view upside down, calling the mountain Mt. Sakatsura-yama; however, as there already existed Mt. Raigo-yama, this mountain was erroneously called Mt. Shakatsura-yama.
  517. Hikoshichi was given a few territories in Daisho, which were called Tobesho Matsumae.
  518. Hikoshima, Shimonoseki City, Yamaguchi Prefecture
  519. Hikotaro FUJIOKAYA/Keijiro FUJIOKAYA
  520. Hikotaro SASAMOTO (the founder of the Utazawa melody for shamisen [a three-stringed Japanese banjo], the first head of the school of this type of melodies, commonly called Sasamaru UTAZAWA)
  521. Hikotaro.
  522. Hikoto, a main attraction of the park, was located on the west of Atagoyama Hotel.
  523. Hikoushio
  524. Hikoushio (also pronounced Hikousi no Okimi; date of birth and death unknown) was a member of an Imperial family (royal family) in fifth century.
  525. Hikoushio married Furihime no Mikoto (her father was Ohachigimi), a descendent and a grand child of the Emperor Suinin (seventh generation descended from him) and as his princess, she bore him a son, 'Odo no Okimi' (Later, he became the Emperor Keitai.).
  526. Hikoushio was a great-great-grandchild of the Emperor Ojin.
  527. Hikoushio, a fourth generation descendant of Hayabusawake no Miko, took Furihime, the fifth generation descendant of Iwakiwake no mikoto, as an empress from Echizen Province.
  528. Hikoyai no Mikoto
  529. Hikoyai no mikoto (日子八井命, year of birth and death unknown) was a member of the Imperial family, who appears in the Japanese Myth.
  530. Hikozaburo (VI)
  531. Hikozaburo SHIBATA
  532. Hikozaburo SHIBATA (1840 - August 3, 1866), was a lowly member of the Shinsengumi (a special force that guarded Kyoto during the end of Tokugawa Shogunate).
  533. Hikozaemon IWASAKI, Heisuke TAKUSHOKU, Koazaburo MIZUNO, Uchizo HAIGO, Monzaemon TSUDA, Tenbei AKIMOTO
  534. Hikozaemon Toyoji KANZE (1525-1585), who was a grandchild of Nobumitsu KANZE, was apprenticed to Yazaemon Chikakata (1482-1556) and established his school.
  535. Hikozo HAMADA
  536. Hikurodo (trainee in the Kurododokoro)
  537. Hikyoshi (非教師, non-instructor)
  538. Hills: Minakuchi Hills, Aebano tableland
  539. Himatsuri-shinji Ritual
  540. Himawari, S-ken (one-legged jumping following a S-shaped line), Hanaichi monme (Japanese ancient game for children), and horseback riding
  541. Hime (Princess) Daruma doll
  542. Hime Daruma is a doll shaped like a daruma doll, derived from the Empress Jingu.
  543. Hime as "日女" (literally "sun woman") is akin to the later hime as "姫" or "媛" (literally, "princess"), which is not a personal name, but a common noun.
  544. Hime no Kami enshrined at Kasuga-taisha Shrine is the wife of Amenokoyane (Amenokoyane no Mikoto), Amenomitsutamateruhime no Mikoto.
  545. Hime no Mae
  546. Hime no Mae (year of birth and death unknown) was a woman who lived in the early Kamakura period.
  547. Hime no kami
  548. Hime no kami (in the fourth hall): Thought to be TAKANO no Niigasa, the Empress of the Emperor Konin
  549. Hime no kami is a Shinto god (Shinto).
  550. Hime no kami was enshrined at Hirano-jinja Shrine during the Jowa era (834-848).
  551. Hime-gami
  552. Hime-gami is often described as the wife of Hachiman, but this relationship is not well understood.
  553. Hime-gamisha Shrine (Nara City)
  554. Hime-gamisha Shrine is a Shinto shrine in Nara City, Nara Prefecture.
  555. Hime-jinja Shrine
  556. Hime-jinja Shrine (Izumisano City):
  557. Hime-jinja Shrine (Nara City)' was built in 1981 at Himezuka where Tochi no Himemiko is said to have been buried and she is still enshrined there.
  558. Hime-jinja Shrine (Nara City):
  559. Himegoso-sha Shrine in Toyo-no-kuni' is the Himekoso-sha Shrine in Himeshima-mura, Oita Prefecture.
  560. Himeii Method
  561. Himeii method is one of modern Japanese sake production methods and a kind of high-temperature saccharification method.
  562. Himeii zukuri (brewing with deeply steamed soft rice)
  563. Himeji Castle (Himeji City, Hyogo Prefecture)
  564. Himeji City established April 6 'Shiro no hi' (Day of Castle).
  565. Himeji City, Hyogo Prefecture
  566. Himeji City: A work owned by the Hyogo Prefectural Museum of History
  567. Himeji Domain
  568. Himeji Domain of Harima Province owned a typical ryokoku (daimyos' own territory)-style land in the core area of the Province, having a major influence even on the economy of the surrounding area which was a labyrinthian mixture of the territories of the shogunate, small domains and hatamoto.
  569. Himeji Domain: Himeji-ji Castle
  570. Himeji Metropolitan Area: 741,759 people
  571. Himeji Shinden domain, Harima Himeji Domain - the Matsudaira clan
  572. Himeji-jo Castle
  573. Himeji-jo Castle and Okayama-jo Castle also include similar nishinomarus.
  574. Himeji-jo Castle is often used as the Edo Castle for shooting.
  575. Himeji-jo Castle is said to be the representative castle that passes along the construction techniques of the period between the late Momoyama Period and early Edo Period to the present day.
  576. Himeji-jo Castle large keep
  577. Himeji-jo Castle: the keep
  578. Himejima-jinja Shrine, which has the same name as Himejima Island in the unknown or lost writings of "Settsu-no-kuni-fudoki," exists in Himeshima, Nishiyodogawa Ward, Osaka City, and Akaruhime-no-mikoto (according to tradition of the shrine) is enshrined along with Sumiyoshi Okami (the great gods of Sumiyoshi).
  579. Himejima: Himejima Village
  580. Himeko (日女子)
  581. Himekoso-jinja Shrine (Nanba Higashi-obase, Higashinari Ward, Osaka City): Main enshrined deity: Shitateruhime no mikoto (up to the Edo period, it was Gozu Tenno (deity said to be the Indian god Gavagriva))
  582. Himemiko (Imperial Princess)
  583. Himemiko (also referred to as Ojo or Kojo) is the naming of daughters of Tennoo (emperor).
  584. Himemiko (姫御子)
  585. Himemiko-jinja Shrine was originally located further back (to the north: Kamiza (upper seat, seat of honor)) of O-jinja Shrine.
  586. Himemikonomikoto-jinja Shrine (enshrining Himemiko-no-mikoto) the small shikinaisha referred to by the name Himemikonomikoto-jinja Shrine (ronja)
  587. Himetataraisuzuhime
  588. Himetataraisuzuhime was the empress of Emperor Jinmu.
  589. Himetataraisuzuhime was written as '媛蹈鞴五十鈴媛命' in "Nihon Shoki" (Chronicles of Japan).
  590. Himetataraisuzuhime was written as '比売多多良伊須気余理比売' (pronounced Himetataraisukeyorihime) and '富登多多良伊須岐比売' (pronounced Hototataraisukihime) as another name in "Kojiki" (The Records of Ancient Matters).
  591. Himewata
  592. Himi City, Toyama Prefecture
  593. Himi Udon
  594. Himi Udon boasts more than 250 years history since the Kaga Domain designated it as Udon noodles for presentation in the period of domain duties.
  595. Himi Udon is also called 'Ito Udon' (literally meaning, thread Udon) because of it's thinness.
  596. Himi Udon refers to the hand-stretched thin Udon noodles made in Himi City, Toyama Prefecture.
  597. Himika NATSUME (singer, a great-grandchild of Shinroku), a female singer songwriter composing songs based on rhythm and blues and soul music.
  598. Himika or Himuka (日向国)
  599. Himika refers to Mikayorihime (Princess Mikayori), who is the ancestor of Tsukushi no kimi.
  600. Himiko
  601. Himiko (Yamataikoku)
  602. Himiko (ca. 175- ca. 248) is said to have been a queen of Wa (Japan) who lived during the later Yayoi period.
  603. Himiko (日巫女)
  604. Himiko (日御子)
  605. Himiko established relationships with the Wei Dynasty (during the three States Period of China) to stabilize the union of Wa nations.
  606. Himiko first sent Nashime and others to Wei (the Three Kingdoms) in China.
  607. Himiko in "Sanguo Zhi" (The History of the Three Kingdoms)
  608. Himiko in the 'Gishiwajinden'
  609. Himiko in the Wei-shu Imperial Records
  610. Himiko of Yamatai-koku
  611. Himiko passed away, and a tomb was constructed.
  612. Himiko was installed as ruler and began to govern Wa.
  613. Himiko's Historical Identity
  614. Himiko's name may have been an honorific title for a woman--the counterpart to 'Hiko,' an honorific title for a man.
  615. Himiko: bei1 mi2 hu1
  616. Himitsu-kyo (Its correct name is Himitsu Fujo-kyo and it is the teaching which Shaka preached in order to give indefinite benefits separately (individually) to people whose patience is different while keeping the difference in teachings a secret (confidentially))
  617. Himitsushogonshin
  618. Himo, o
  619. Himokyumaki: Hosomaki using the mantle of the ark shell and cucumber as fillings
  620. Himono (dried fish) is a generic term for processed foods made by drying various sea foods such as fish.
  621. Himorogi
  622. Himorogi in Koshinto considered shiniki as a place for a god to stay, or a border to the other world and this world, and was feared and respected.
  623. Himorogi is an object that is designated as yorishiro (representative of a divine spirit) to enshrine a divine spirit temporarily when a festival is held in a place other than a shrine or a household Shinto altar.
  624. Himorogi is formed by placing a frame on an eight-legged table and a sakaki branch at the center of the frame.
  625. Himorogi were placed above the worship site at the time of the ritual.
  626. Himotogarashi pepper (Fushimi sweet pepper, Capsicum annuum)
  627. Himuka was called Himuka, and there is no record of it being Hyuga Province.
  628. Himukai-daijingu Shrine
  629. Himukai-daijingu is a shrine located along the Sanjo-dori Street in Yamashina Ward, Kyoto City.
  630. Himukai-jinja Shrine (current Himukai-daijingu Shrine (Hinooka Ebisudani-cho, Yamashina Ward, Kyoto City)).
  631. Himure Hachimangu Shrine
  632. Himure-hachimangu Shrine
  633. Himuro
  634. Himuro (ice chamber)
  635. Himuro and the position of managing it existed in every period (it belonged to Shusuishi (Water Office) of the Imperial Household Ministry when Japan was governed by the Ritsuryo system (a system of centralized government based on the corresponding code) until it was abolished in the Meiji period.
  636. Himuro were put around Kinai region (provinces surrounding Kyoto and Nara) and azukari (an additional post to the chief of Naizenshi) was put in each himuro.
  637. Himuro with earthen-walls came to be built even in the urban areas of Edo, making it possible to supply ice to the general public during the summer.
  638. Himuro-jinja Shrine
  639. Himuro.
  640. Hin (also pronounced, Mime; a mistress): No more than four ladies; and a lady in this position should be the daughter of noble who was a Gomi (a fifth court rank) or higher court ranking.
  641. Hina
  642. Hina Arare
  643. Hina arare is a kind of Japanese confectionery that is offered at the Dolls' Festival (March 3rd).
  644. Hina doll (a doll displayed at the Girls' Festival)
  645. Hina no Tsurushikazari (Hanging Decorations for Doll's Festival)
  646. Hina no Tsurushikazari is a custom of hanging decorations in the Izuinatori area going back to the Edo period.
  647. Hina no Yoi (Evening of the Girls' Festival) (nagauta)
  648. Hina no tsurushi kazari
  649. Hina no tsurushi kazari is an ornament used on the occasion of the Dolls' Festival in Inatori district in Izu.
  650. Hina-matsuri (Doll's Festival)
  651. Hina-matsuri in Japan is assumed to have originated in Kyoto since there is a record to show that the original festival was held as a courtly 'entertainment' by daughters of the nobles during the Heian period.
  652. Hina-matsuri is a seasonal festival to display dolls centering around the doll representing the emperor called obina and the doll representing the empress called mebina with peach flowers, enjoying eating and drinking shirozake (sweet white sake), for example.
  653. Hina-matsuri is an annual event of the seasonal festival to pray for the healthy growth of girls.
  654. Hina-matsuri was also named Momo no (peach's) sekku because the festival by the old calendar was held during the time when peach trees blossomed.
  655. Hinadan is set up in various stores in community facilities and local shopping areas such as city hall and Katsuura Station of the East Japan Railway Company (JR East) during the period; approximately 1,200 hina dolls are displayed on the 60 stone steps of sando (an approach) of Tomisaki-jinja Shrine.
  656. Hinaga Signal Station was established between Yokkaichi and Kawarada, and Kida Signal Station was established between Kawarada and Kasado.
  657. Hinaga Signal station was upgraded to Minami-yokkaichi Station.
  658. Hinakko before erigae is also called "akaeri" (red collar).
  659. Hinamiki Zanketsu, Jokyu Years 3-4
  660. Hinata-yakushi Temple - A Shingon sect temple with the honorific mountain prefix Hinatasan located in Isehara City, Kanagawa Prefecture.
  661. Hinawaju (English: matchlock gun) is one form of gun in early times.
  662. Hinawaju (matchlock gun)
  663. Hinawaju came to be increasingly used as one of the major firearms for ashigaru (common foot soldier) after the middle of the Sengoku period.
  664. Hinayana Buddhism and Mahayana Buddhism were transmitted concurrently and simultaneously.
  665. Hindu religion
  666. Hinduism
  667. Hinduism (Brahmanism)
  668. Hinduism in Bali
  669. Hinduism is a varied and complex religion with a long history seeking enlightenment since the age of Veda.
  670. Hine (Hineno) sho, where there is Jigen-in Temple, was Shoen (manor in medieval Japan) of the Kujo family who was one of the Gosekke Gosekke (five top Fujiwara families whose members were eligible for the positions of Sessho and Kanpaku).
  671. Hine-jinja Shrine
  672. Hineka
  673. Hineno-sho: estate of Kujo family.
  674. Hinin
  675. Hinin also had to undertake the role of prison administration.
  676. Hinin and Eta (Chori, Kawata, etc.) worked in animal slaughter and leather-making separately depending on the period or regions; however, Hinin mostly engaged these tasks exclusively.
  677. Hinin belonged to Koya and was identified to be formalized as Hinin.
  678. Hinin did not belong to the four-tiered class system of samurai or warrior administrators, farmers, artisans and merchants; however, in terms of social status on the class system like kuge (court noble), doctor, jinin (shrine associates), they clearly differed from Sanka (nomads) who were outcastes.
  679. Hinin refers to
  680. Hinin was put in charge of important public functions such as a subordinate of implementing punishment and police.
  681. Hinin was regarded as being of lower status than Eta in Edo region while there was no dominance relationship between Hinin and Eta in Kyoto, Osaka and other regions.
  682. Hinji-in Temple
  683. Hinkai did not have a great deal of meaning here, and only the government post had hierarchy function in the bureaucrats system.
  684. Hino Castle
  685. Hino Castle was a Japanese castle located in Hino Town, Gamo County, Shiga Prefecture.
  686. Hino City Manzoindai Kofungun Burial Mounds
  687. Hino Hadaka-odori (naked dance) (January 14th): A Kyoto City registered intangible ethnocultural asset
  688. Hino Incident
  689. Hino S'elega
  690. Hino S'elega and S'elega R
  691. Hino S'elega and second-generation S'elega
  692. Hino Tanjo-in Temple
  693. Hino Tanjoin Temple
  694. Hino Tanjoin Temple is a Buddhist temple belonging to the Hongan-ji branch of the Pure Land Sect.
  695. Hino incident is an incident involving public safety, which took place in Hino-cho, Gamo-gun, Shiga Prefecture on October 18, 1951.
  696. Hino shozoku (literally day dress): traditional formal court dress, and accessories for ceremonial court dress.
  697. Hino tsutsu (a gun made in Hino)
  698. Hino-gawa River (Shiga Prefecture; Gamo-gun, Omihachiman City)
  699. Hino-tanjoin Temple
  700. Hinoemata soba (Hinoemata-mura)
  701. Hinoemata-mura, Minamiaizu County, Fukushima Prefecture
  702. Hinoeuma in May' means the midsummer, which is considered the best day to make fire from the sun when metal utensils such as swords and mirrors are made.
  703. Hinogawa signal station: Hoki-Daisen - Higashiyamakoen section (320.2 km)
  704. Hinohakama
  705. Hinohakama (scarlet hakama (divided trouser-like skirt)) (also known as 'hibakama') is also called 'Kutenai no hakama' (Red hakama) because of its deep scarlet color and to indicate the red thread used in the hakama.
  706. Hinoka-asadacho, Yamashina Ward: 34,576
  707. Hinokagutsuchi no Kami
  708. Hinokakabiko no Kami
  709. Hinoki cypress, sandalwood, chinaberry, Japanese bigleaf magnolia, etc. are used.
  710. Hinoki-zu Byobu (national treasure) - Tokyo National Museum
  711. Hinokiyama-mura, Umeda-mura, Sannomiya-mura and Shitsumi-mura were merged to form Mizuho-mura.
  712. Hinokuma Station on Kishigawa Line of WAKAYAMA ELECTRIC RAILWAY Co., Ltd.
  713. Hinokuma no Ihori no miya was located in Takaichi-gun Nara Prefecture.
  714. Hinokuma no Ouchi no Misasagi (where Emperor Tenmu who governed this country in Asuka no Kiyomihara no Miya Palace rests.
  715. Hinokuma-dera Temple Ruins
  716. Hinokuma-jingu Shrine and Kunikakasu-jingu Shrine
  717. Hinokuma-jingu Shrine, Kunikakasu-jingu Shrine, Kamayama-jinja Shrine were formerly designated as Kanpei-taisha (large-scale state shrines), and Itakiso-jinja Shrine a Kanpei Chusha shrine (middle-scale state shrines).
  718. Hinokuma-jingu Shrine/Kunikakasu-jingu Shrine
  719. Hinokumatoneri Takemaro: A government official during the Nara period.
  720. Hinomaru-bento
  721. Hinomi yaguras, which may be seen in a town even nowadays, are also categorized into this type.
  722. Hinomi-yagura (fire watchtower)
  723. Hinomisaki-jinja Shrine
  724. Hinonishi Family
  725. Hinooka - Kitakazan - Kawata - Kurisuno - Oyake
  726. Hinooka - Kujoyama - Sanjo Keihan - Shijo Kawaramachi
  727. Hinooka - Misasagi - Yamashina Station
  728. Hinooka Station - Misasagi Station - Keihan Yamashina Station
  729. Hinooka bus stop
  730. Hinooka-kofun Tumulus: The precincts of Wakamiya Hachiman-gu Shrine, Oaza Wakamiya, Yoshii Town, Ukiha County, Fukuoka Prefecture
  731. Hinookagoe
  732. Hinowan (Hino Lacquered Bowl)
  733. Hinowan refers to lacquered bowls produced in and around Hino-cho, Gamo-gun, Shiga Prefecture.
  734. Hinowan whose production ceased a long time ago has been recently reproduced in Hino-cho by Koji KITAGAWA, a wood craft artist of 'The Association for the Restoration of Hinowan.'
  735. Hinoyagihayao no Kami
  736. Hinpu (Coastal Wind) Period
  737. Hinting the possibility of nationalization in the future, in fact, the act allowed the construction of planned lines by private sectors.
  738. Hiochi (putrefaction of sake by bacteria called "hiochikin")
  739. Hiochi (putrefaction)
  740. Hiochi bacteria
  741. Hiochi bacteria are a species of lactobacillus, when they get into sake, sake becomes cloudy, oxidized and has offensive odor.
  742. Hiochi happened frequently in the old days, because it was difficult to completely pasteurize sake in the wooden barrels of that time as their insides were insanitary.
  743. Hiochi is one of the terms on manufacturing sake (rice wine), and it means that sake in the manufacturing process has become cloudy and spoiled, while being stored.
  744. Hiochishu
  745. Hiogi for female in particular is also called Akome-ogi.
  746. Hiogi for girls
  747. Hiogi in early-modern times
  748. Hiogi in modern age
  749. Hiogi is a fan made of slats of cypress wood tied together at the pivot and top of the slates are enforced with strings so that the slates can be folded.
  750. Hiogi is a fan made of wood that was used in the Imperial court.
  751. Hiogi was indispensable in the Imperial court, so there were many manners of handling.
  752. Hiogi wooden fan
  753. Hiogiayama came from the idea that its leaves resembled a Hiogi.
  754. Hioke
  755. Hioke' are wooden hibachi.
  756. Hioki - Kongoshinin Temple - Miyamae - Shimoseya - Kamiseya - Seya-kogen - Taiken-Jisshukan-mae - Kazoku-ryoko-mura
  757. Hioki-jinja Shrine (in Takashima City)
  758. Hippari Udon
  759. Hippari Udon is a local dish in Yamagata Prefecture.
  760. Hippari Udon is served with a dipping broth containing fermented soybeans, canned mackerel, etc.
  761. Hippopotamus ('Tsugumi')
  762. Hira Genki-mura
  763. Hira Ishiyama ya haserashitemi (hey, Hira Ishiyama, can you run the train?)
  764. Hira Makie
  765. Hira Station of Kosei Line (Shiga Prefecture)
  766. Hira hatago
  767. Hira iri (concerns an entrance) and Tsuma iri (concerns an entrance)
  768. Hira makie differs from togidashi makie in that in the former lacquer is applied only partially while in the latter the entire surface of the piece is covered with lacquer.
  769. Hira no bosetsu (The Snow in December of Mt. Hira)
  770. Hira-Hakata (obi woven by using dyed or scoured silk yarn)
  771. Hira-jiro castle
  772. Hira-koshi
  773. Hira-shofuku onsen (a hot spring in Otsu City, Shiga Prefecture)
  774. Hira-shofuku onsen exists as indoor hot spring of the general base for hot spring and leisure activities (lodgment, bakery and tea parlor, tennis, futsal, dog run, darts and so on can be enjoyed) of Omi-Maiko.
  775. Hira-shofuku onsen has been drilled up to 1,060 meters and hot spring water is taken from the border of base rock layers.
  776. Hira-shofuku onsen is a comparatively new hot spring for which drilling was begun in February 2007 and succeeded in November of the same year.
  777. Hira-shofuku onsen is a hot spring located at 948-10, Kitahira, Otsu City, Shiga Prefecture.
  778. Hira-shofuku onsen is located between Omi-Maiko in Kosei district of Lake Biwa and Hira Station in a place which takes five minutes on foot from Lake Biwa and from which Hira mountain range can be seen.
  779. Hira-shofuku onsen was drilled at the location 500 meters from the outlet of Hira-gawa River on the north riverside.
  780. Hira-zukuri (No ridge style)
  781. Hira-zukuri (sashimi prepared by cutting in large rectangular slices)
  782. Hiradama (flat-bead) - It is sometimes used in the Tendai sect but not in the Nichiren sect.
  783. Hirado Domain: Hirado-jo Castle
  784. Hirado Shinden domain of Hirado Domain, Hizen Province - the Matsuura clan
  785. Hirado Toji
  786. Hirado family changed their name to KOZONE during Michiyoshi's days.
  787. Hirado kagura dance (January 8, 1987)
  788. Hirado's Jangara dance (December 15, 1997)
  789. Hirado, Sasebo and Saikai extended-stay sightseeing area: 'Journey in the West, starting from the sea'
  790. Hirafu ABE
  791. Hirafu chased the Mishihase to Okushiri Island and fought and defeated his adversaries.
  792. Hirafu was asked for help by some Ezo people from Watari Island (current Hokkaido) who had been attacked by the Mishihase at the side of Okawa River.
  793. Hirafuku on the old Inaba-kaido Road (Sayo-cho, Sayo-gun, Hyogo Prefecture)
  794. Hirafuku was a next shuku-eki along the Inaba-kaido road, and Nagatani was located slightly in the south of Hirafuku.
  795. Hirafuku-juku (Hirafuku staging post) (Sayo Town, Hyogo Prefecture)
  796. Hiragana
  797. Hiragana (Japanese syllabary characters), and katakana (one of the Japanese syllabaries)
  798. Hiragana was designed from the sosho (cursive) style writing of kanji characters (for example あ from 安) and it was mainly women who started to use Hiragana.
  799. Hiragino (name of an area in Kyoto City) sasage (black-eyed pea)
  800. Hirai Co. Inc. (food manufacture)
  801. Hirai was appointed as the manager of Dai Nippon Butoku-kai, and was placed in charge of operating the aikido-bu.
  802. Hiraimaru
  803. Hiraiwa school
  804. Hiraizumi
  805. Hiraizumi Hakusan-jinja Shrine
  806. Hiraizumi Province
  807. Hiraizumi continued to develop in contrary to Kyoto, where battles incessantly went on.
  808. Hiraizumi culture
  809. Hiraizumi in Oshu is said to have possibly been the model of the country of gold referred to by Marco Polo in his book, Il milione (The Million).
  810. Hiraka
  811. Hiraka clay vessel
  812. Hirakana Seisuiki (Seisuiki, 逆櫨, Genta Kando) (The Rise and Decline of the Hirakana letters)
  813. Hirakata 100 yen Bus
  814. Hirakata City
  815. Hirakata City ? (under construction from here) ? Katano City ? Neyagawa City - Shijonawate City ? Kadoma City
  816. Hirakata City ? (under construction from here) ? Katano City ? Neyagawa City - Shijonawate City ? Neyagawa City - Kadoma City
  817. Hirakata City, Osaka Prefecture
  818. Hirakawa Dilapidated Temple Ruin
  819. Hirakawa Temple Site
  820. Hirakawa Temple Site is the site of an ancient temple that has been nationally designated a historic site that is located in Hirakawa Furumiya, Joyo City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  821. Hirakawa-haiji (dilapidated) Temple Ruins (平川廃寺跡): ruins designated as a national historical relic site
  822. Hiraki
  823. Hiraki (first performance for a Noh actor, acting an important role)
  824. Hiraki is what a Nohgakushi (Noh actor) performs for the first time as a shite (a main actor of a Noh play) or a quasi shite role for a certain music, Kyogen (farce played during a Noh play cycle), or hayashi (musical accompaniment played on traditional Japanese instruments).
  825. Hirakiboshi (dried butterflied-fish)
  826. Hirama and Itozato slept in a room by the entrance.
  827. Hirama, who was in a separate room, fled.
  828. Hirama, who was in another room, escaped.
  829. Hiramai Dance
  830. Hiramai dance is also called Bunnomai dance, which is a gentle dance that doesn't incorporate the arms.
  831. Hirami
  832. Hirano - Kudara 1.4 km
  833. Hirano Station has two platforms and four tracks, and trains can wait for other trains' passing.
  834. Hirano Toriimae-cho, Kita-ku Ward
  835. Hirano Toshiro, short sword, Yoshimitsu with an inscription, owned by the Imperial House
  836. Hirano Ward (Hirano Ward, Osaka City) - Nishikire-mura Village (Hirano Ward) - Miyake-mura Village (Matsubara City) - Kuroyama-mura (Sakai City) - Sayama-shinjuku (Osaka Sayama City) - Ichi-mura Village (Kawachinagano City) - Merge with Nishi Koya-kaido Road
  837. Hirano and his colleagues thought on their own that Hisamitsu's visit to Kyoto was for the purpose of raising an army to overthrow the bakufu, but Hisamitsu's real intention was completely different, that is, kobu-gattai (integration of the Imperial Court and the shogunate).
  838. Hirano arrived in Gojo on 19, not knowing about the calamity, he met the leader of the Tenchugumi and found him as kindred spirit, but soon he heard about the sudden political change in Kyoto.
  839. Hirano clan rule lasted for nine generations, but it was only three years that the clan had the official status of domain lord.
  840. Hirano dissolved the army and headed to Tottori, but he was caught and sent to Rokkaku prison house in Kyoto.
  841. Hirano furthermore asked the domain to go along with their undertaking, but the leaders of the domain were reluctant.
  842. Hirano left Yamato to try to recover from this setback.
  843. Hirano rescued them quickly, but Gesshu had already died; luckily Saigo survived but it took him a month to recover.
  844. Hirano, Kitagaki and others issued an official notice by Nobuyoshi SAWA under the name 'this public office,' calling for recruits all over the shogunate's land and because Kitagaki had already been advocating the 'farmers to arms doctrine,' around two thousand farmers gathered in Ikuno town at noon on that day.
  845. Hirano, who just arrived in Gojo, hastened back to Kyoto in order to take countermeasures.
  846. Hirano-dono
  847. Hirano-jinja Shrine
  848. Hirano-jinja Shrine (Kita Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture): The sign on the torii previously read 'Hirano Taisha.'
  849. Hirano-jinja Shrine enshrines the following four deities:
  850. Hirano-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located in Kita Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  851. Hirano-jinja Shrine was founded in the year 794 when the capital city was relocated to Heian-kyo by Emperor Kanmu and the deities Imaki, Kudo and Fukuraki were separated and transferred from the city of Heijo-kyo.
  852. Hirano-jinja Shrine, recorded to have been visited on 21 occasions by 17 successive emperors from Emperor Enyu to Emperor Godaigo, was highly revered by the Imperial Family and the enshrined deities also became patron gods of court nobles including the Minamoto clan, Taira clan, Oe clan and Sugawara clan.
  853. Hirano-matsuri Festival
  854. Hirano-ya - a tea house with thatched roof standing in front of Ichi no Torii
  855. Hiranobosetsu' view at Hira-sakei mountain range
  856. Hiranosawa-ike Pond: called "three 'sawa' in Kyoto," together with Osawa-no-ike Pond and Hirosawa-no-ike Pond
  857. Hiranoshin IKEDA, age 21
  858. Hiranoya Shiryokan (平野屋資料館, Hiranoya Resource Center)
  859. Hiraoka Park (Kiyota Ward, Sapporo City, Hokkaido)
  860. Hirasan kei (Hira mountain range)
  861. Hirashima Kubo
  862. Hirashima Kubo (Hirashima Gosho, Awa Kubo)
  863. Hirashu are as follows:
  864. Hirata Boseki penetrated into the spinning industry in addition to the net manufacturing business.
  865. Hirata City, Shimane Prefecture
  866. Hirata attempted to form Sawakai, a party consisting of selected members within the House of Peers, and established the stronghold of the bureaucrat faction of the House of Peers that was under direct control of Yamagata.
  867. Hirata no Sho
  868. Hirata no sho was a manor located in old Yamato Province.
  869. Hirate-jinja Shrine was all destroyed in 2006 for the reasons such as aging, and the gravestones of Hirohide and vassals were left untouched, however, the descendants of the Hirate clan moved his gravestones to the family temple, Chofuku-ji Temple, upon permission from Hamamatsu City.
  870. Hirate-kanzashi: flat circular-shaped ornament with one or two sticks.
  871. Hiraten (flat-shaped fried fish cake)
  872. Hiratoji kindly agreed to the request and Kogetsu transferred all characters to the notebook he carried for research.
  873. Hiratsuka City, Kanagawa Prefecture (Shonan Hiratsuka Tanabata Matsuri)
  874. Hiratsutsumi remains as a term meaning one of the ways to wrap using Furoshiki.
  875. Hirauchi-Udon: Thin and wide (about 10 to 30mm wide) Udon noodles
  876. Hiraya (平屋)
  877. Hirayama 6-chome, Hino City, Tokyo Prefecture.
  878. Hirayama assumed the position of assistant deputy leader--a leadership role.
  879. Hirayama belonged to the former and collaborated with Serizawa.
  880. Hirayama fell asleep with Kichiei, a geisha who belonged to a geisha house named Kikyoya and had been a long-time intimate partner with Hirayama, in a ten-mat room located in the inner part of the residence.
  881. Hirayama was 35 years old.
  882. Hirayama was injured.
  883. Hirayama was killed instantly.
  884. Hirayama was too drunk to standup at the entrance.
  885. Hirezake
  886. Hirezake (hot sake [Japanese liquor] flavored with fish fins) is a way of drinking sake.
  887. Hiro (a unit of length defined by old Japanese system of weights and measures)
  888. Hiro (尋) is a unit of length defined by old Japanese system of weights and measures.
  889. Hiro SAGA, the oldest daughter of the twenty-nineth head of the Saga family Saneto SAGA, married Fuketsu AISHINKAKURA who was the brother of Emperor Fugi AISHINKAKURA of the Qing Dynasty for the good of Japan.
  890. Hiro and other units defined by old Japanese system of weights and measures have been still used as a technical term for fishing or in classical rites and festivals, while the Measurement Act prohibits people from using those units for commercial transactions and other purposes at present.
  891. Hiroaki AOKI
  892. Hiroaki MIGITA
  893. Hiroaki MIGITA (Hiroaki SUE) was also known as a man of literature and had a close friendship with the leading men of culture of the time such as Sogi and Kensai INAWASHIRO.
  894. Hiroaki MIGITA (year of birth unknown - December 1, 1523) was a military commander in the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  895. Hiroaki MIGITA could get 42 volumes of the copied manuscript around 1501, and hired a few amanuenses to make copies which he treasured.
  896. Hiroaki died at Hakozaki in Chikuzen Province due to illness in December 1, 1523.
  897. Hiroaki finally managed to collate 5 volumes out of the missing parts later.
  898. Hiroaki had heard from these men of culture that 'there is a record of the Kanto region entitled "Azumakagami"' which was 'a paragon of the literary and military arts' but it is said that he was unable to see it for himself.
  899. Hiroaki had these volumes transcribed in the same format as the previously transcribed volumes to create a complete 47-volume set plus an additional contents and chronology volume to make 48 volumes.
  900. Hiroaki served as Bandai (deputy and guardian of the family head) until Okifusa SUE, the third son of Hiromori, his older brother, attained manhood and also as Shugodai in Suo and Chikuzen Provinces, while holding a fort and attending to government affairs in the domain when Yoshioki OUCHI, his lord, visited Kyoto.
  901. Hiroaki served the two generations of Masahiro OUCHI and Yoshioki OUCHI.
  902. Hiroaki was a younger maternal half-brother of Hiromori SUE.
  903. Hiroaki was also called himself Hiroaki SUE or Hiroaki ASAKURA.
  904. Hiroaki was from the Sue clan, a branch line of the Migita clan, but inherited the Migita clan which was the head family.
  905. Hiroaki's "Azumakagami" was also presented to the Mori clan at that time, and consequently handed down to the descendants of Motoharu KIKKAWA, the second son of Motonari.
  906. Hiroakira KUZE (1777-1781)
  907. Hirobumi ITO (1906-1909)
  908. Hirobumi ITO and Kowashi INOUE
  909. Hirobumi ITO and his colleagues realized that risk, and tried to deify the emperor when they legislate the Constitution of the Empire of Japan, to "enshrine the emperor in the Shinto altar" makes third party incapable of participating easily, and legally suppressed the authority of the emperor.
  910. Hirobumi ITO insisted that if some people were opposed to the death penalty, the government should declare a state of martial law to enforce the death sentence.
  911. Hirobumi ITO opposed it saying that 50 million yen corresponded to the 80% of the financial revenue at the time and 1.3 times the land tax income, and Matsukata too, who had made transition to the Minister of Interior, opposed it by calling it inappropriate as a measure to consolidate paper money.
  912. Hirobumi ITO realized that there was a need for heredity of the nobility (peerage) supporting the Emperor to keep the monarchy focused on the Emperor.
  913. Hirobumi ITO realized that, in Europe, there was a religion (Christianity) at the base of the unified nation supporting the political system including the parliamentary system, so he expected the Imperial Family to become the 'axis' (mental support) to replace religion.
  914. Hirobumi ITO was appointed as the first Resident-General of Korea but resigned later on.
  915. Hirobumi ITO was murdered in Harbin.
  916. Hirobumi ITO who used to be involved in British Legination Attack in Tozenji Temple had thought through study in Britain that anti-foreigner was unrealistic way and that it was wrong to cling to the unfeasible way.
  917. Hirobumi ITO who was Chairman of the Privy Council when YAMAZA was the director of government affairs of Ministry of Foreign Affairs looked through all diplomatic documents drafted by YAMAZA.
  918. Hirobumi ITO, Inspector General of Korea, and his group were opposed to it, because 'the annexation was too early.'
  919. Hirobumi ITO, a former Councillor, was appointed as the first Prime Minister.
  920. Hirobumi ITO, the person in charge of governing South Korea, was initially against carrying out the annexation of Korea in the early stage.
  921. Hirobumi ITO, working with Kowashi INOUE, Miyoji ITO, Kentaro KANEKO, Roesler and the other concerned parties, began preparations to establish the constitution and installed Sumitsu-in (Privy Council) (Japan).
  922. Hirobumi ITO: vice-envoy
  923. Hirofumi YAMAMOTO conjectures that the heavy pressure on his spirit might have brought on neurosis anxiety.
  924. Hirofumi YAMAMOTO considers Yoshihisa and his retainers to have been opposed to the administration of Toyotomi, and they would therefore have had little interest in contributing troops for this plan.
  925. Hirofusa MADENOKOJI
  926. Hirofusa MADENOKOJI (July 21, 1824 - February 22, 1884) was a Kugyo (court noble) from the late Edo Period to the Meiji Period.
  927. Hirofusa SEIKANJI
  928. Hirofusa SEIKANJI (May 7, 1633 - November 25, 1686) was a Kugyo (a Court noble) and a retainer of the Imperial Court during the early Edo period.
  929. Hirofusa SUE
  930. Hirofusa SUE (year of birth unknown - December 27, 1468) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the late Muromachi period.
  931. Hirofusa SUE, his father, had succeeded Hiroatsu MIGITA of the same clan but returned to the original family name of Sue because Hiromasa SUE, his older brother, was killed in battle, and transferred the Migita family to his son Hiroaki in 1465.
  932. Hirofusa died at the age of 61 in 1884.
  933. Hirofusa was a senior vassal of the Ouchi clan.
  934. Hirofusa was born as the second son of Morimasa SUE of the Sue clan which was a relative of the Ouchi clan.
  935. Hirofusa was under Kanezane KUJO's government and was appointed to Kirokujo yoryudo (officials who served at the Land Record Office) with Takamoto, but when the Retired Emperor Goshirakawa regained to appoint Takamoto for his previous position 1191, Hirofusa was demoted to Kawachi no kuni no kami (Governor of Kawachi Province).
  936. Hirofusa's children were Hiromori SUE and Hiroaki MIGITA.
  937. Hirofusa's common name was Saburogoro.
  938. Hirofusa's father was Morimasa SUE and his older brother was Hiromasa SUE.
  939. Hirofusa's official court rank was nakatsukasa no shoyu (Junior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Central Affairs).
  940. Hirofusa's wife was a daughter of Morisato NIHO.
  941. Hirofusa, too, was killed in the Battle of Shokoku-ji Temple in Kyoto, where the fiercest battle of the Onin War was fought, in 1468.
  942. Hirogawara Ski Resort is a small-scale site consisting of two courses and one lift.
  943. Hirogawara can be reached in about 90 minutes by car from the Kyoto urban area, and despite within Kyoto City it has heavy snowfall because it is in the Tanba uplands.
  944. Hiroharu KATO, the President of the Naval General Staff then, criticized the interference and violation of the Supreme Command, and he submitted his resignation to the Emperor.
  945. Hirohashi family were kuge (court nobles) with kakaku (family status) of meike (the fourth highest status for court nobles).
  946. Hirohashi no Tsubone in Shindai naishi no tsukasa (new and superior officer of the Imperial guard department) to be banished to Nii-jima Island of Izu
  947. Hirohata Family
  948. Hirohata no Kiyotsugu
  949. Hirohide FUSHIMI of the Fushiminomiya family (Hirohide FUSHIMI, April 1, 1936)
  950. Hirohide HIRATE
  951. Hirohide HIRATE (1553 - February 4, 1573) was a busho (Japanese military commander) during the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  952. Hirohide was one of the busho favored by Nobunaga; when Nobunaga expelled Nobumori, the reason was that 'together with Hidesada and Nobumoto, Nobumori retreated from the battle leaving Hirohide alone.'
  953. Hirohide, who was a general of the same reinforcement troops, was killed in the battle while fighting with Ieyasu's army.
  954. Hirohime became the Empress of the Emperor Bidatsu and bore Prince Oshisaka no Hikohito no Oe (Oshisaka no Hikohito no Oenomiko), Princess Sakanobori (Sakanobori no Hime Miko), and Princess Uji no Shitsukai.
  955. Hirohiro (Tohiro) ODA
  956. Hirohito Shinno (Emperor Showa): November 3, 1916
  957. Hiroi practiced asceticism in Kyoto to become Soke SHONAN Osho, and at the same time became a chief priest of Gyuko-ji Temple in Tosa Province given by his parents-in-law.
  958. Hiroie KIKKAWA
  959. Hiroji KINOSHITA (the first principal of Kyoto Imperial University)
  960. Hiroji KINOSHITA assumed the first president, who was the chief of the Special Office of Educational Affairs in the Ministry of Education.
  961. Hirokage KOBAYAKAWA
  962. Hirokata SHO
  963. Hirokata SHO (the year of birth and death unknown) was a warrior of the Kodama party of Musashi Province (present Kurisaki, Kodama-cho, Honjo City, Saitama Prefecture), who lived from end of the Heian period to the Kamakura period.
  964. Hirokawa, Imazu-cho, Takashima City, Shiga Prefecture
  965. Hirokazu KAZUSANOSUKE
  966. Hirokazu KOREEDA was the guest at the second festival.
  967. Hiroki KAWAKAMI who made the claim in the Meiji period said the school was established with kokufu (provincial office) of Tsuga District but was relocated to a place in connection with the Ashikaga family when it became the Shogun family.
  968. Hiroko (広子) was still unmarried at the age of 20, she became a concubine of Hideyoshi who came to Nagoya-jo Castle for the Bunroku-Keicho War in April, 1592.
  969. Hiroko KONOE
  970. Hiroko KONOE (April 30, 1666-April 13, 1741) was the lawful wife of Ienobu TOKUGAWA, the sixth Shogun of the Edo bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  971. Hiroko KONOE - Midaidokoro of Ienobu TOKUGAWA
  972. Hiroko KONOE, the sixth Shogun Ienobu TOKUGAWA's lawful wife (Juichii [Junior First Rank]).
  973. Hiroko KONOE, the sixth shogun midaidokoro (wife of a shogun or a highest-ranking nobleman), was a member of the Oishi clan and served as a Tayu (geisha of the highest rank) of the Konoe family to the Oyama clan.
  974. Hiroko TAKATSUKASA
  975. Hiroko TAKATSUKASA (January 15, 1814 - September 28, 1892) was a woman in the Edo period.
  976. Hiroko TSUMAKI
  977. Hiroko TSUMAKI (c. 1530 - November 27, 1576) was the second wife of Mitsuhide AKECHI, a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States) (Japan) and Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  978. Hiroko helped Mitsuhide in his days of difficulties--the surrender of the castle of the home ground, the masterless life, serving for the Asakura clan, Ashikaga clan, and Oda clan--by selling her black hair.
  979. Hiroko was buried at Zojo-ji Temple like her husband.
  980. Hiroko was the person in paramount authority in Edo Castle in those days, but the cabinet officials of the Shogunate and fudai were very surprised at her appointment of Yoshimune.
  981. Hiroko's father, ashamed of this, sent Hiroko's younger sister to him without informing him, but Mitsuhide learned of the situation and said " I have decided that Hiroko will be my wife not other women," and held a wedding with Hiroko.
  982. Hirokoji Campus (School of Nursing)
  983. Hirokoji-dori Street (Kyoto City)
  984. Hirokoji-dori Street is a street running east-west in Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  985. Hirokoto was also monjosho, and after serving as Dazai-fu shokan (Minor Judge at Dazai-fu offices), he received the investiture of Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank) and Chikugo no kuni no kami (the governor of Chikugo Province).
  986. Hirokunioshitakekanahi no Sumeramikoto, the Emperor Ankan
  987. Hirokunioshitakekanahi no mikoto settled in the palace of Kanahashi at Magari, and governed the country (Takaichi-gun, Nara Prefecture).
  988. Hiromasa IWAKURA
  989. Hiromasa IWAKURA (1746 - October 31, 1769) was a retainer of Imperial Court during the middle of the Edo period.
  990. Hiromasa SUGIMURA (the older brother of Bunichi SUGIMURA) also requested to take part in a campaign due to the Seikanron.
  991. Hiromasa is portrayed by the well-known Japanese actor Tetta SUGIMOTO in the NHK television drama "Onmyoji" (The Sorcerer), and played by Hideaki ITO in the films "Onmyoji" (The Sorcerer) and "Onmyoji II" (The Sorcerer II) directed by Yojiro TAKITA.
  992. Hiromasa's mistake
  993. Hiromi AKIYAMA
  994. Hiromi IWAI
  995. Hiromi SHIMADA 'What is Soka Gakkai?' (After being retouched and corrected, it was published as books such as "Soka Gakkai" by Shincho New Book, "Ability of Soka Gakkai" by Asahi Shimbun, and "Soka Gakkai that becomes a race" by Kodansha).
  996. Hiromi had some scholars examine what the official duties of the Ako were, and protested that Mototsune was reproaching him without grounds; however, the scholars all sided with Mototsune.
  997. Hiromi passed away on June 10, 890.
  998. Hiromi refuted their view.
  999. Hiromichi KATAYAMA
  1000. Hiromichi KATAYAMA (Dec 22, 1907 ? Mar 10, 1963) was a leading Japanese traditional Noh play actor (shite-kata) of the Kanze school.


122001 ~ 123000

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