; 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

126 / 438ページ
データ総見出し数 437939


  1. His children were Mitsunori KATAGIRI (his first son), Sadanari KATAGIRI (the second son) and a daughter (Katsuchika UESUGI's legal wife).
  2. His children were Mitsusue IGA, Mitsumune IGA, Yoshitoki HOJO's dowager Iga no kata, and the wife of Tomomitsu YUKI.
  3. His children were Mitsutoki YAMANA, Mochihiro YAMANA, and Mochitoyo YAMANA (Sozen).
  4. His children were Morihiro TANI (the first son), Sadatane TAKAGI (the second son), a daughter (wife of Takasada ABURANOKOJI), and a daughter (wife of Morimasa TANI.)
  5. His children were Moritoki HOJO, Toko AKAHASHI, and so on.
  6. His children were Moromitsu HIROHASHI, Takamoto ABURANOKOJI, Takakazu WASHINO, 新遍, 観助, Hirohashi no tsubone, the wife of Nobutaka HIGUCHI, the wife of Muneyasu NAKAMIKADO, and the wife of Suefuku URATSUJI.
  7. His children were Moroyoshi NIJO, Morotsugu NIJO, Doi, Mani, Tsunetsugu ICHIJO (father of Kaneyoshi ICHIJO).
  8. His children were Motomichi KONOE and Tadayoshi AWATAGUCHI.
  9. His children were Nagashige TAKATSUJI (Shonii, Sangi) (1205 - 1281), Takanaga GOJO (Junii (Junior Second Rank), Shikibu no taifu) (1210 -1284) (patriarch of the Gojo family).
  10. His children were Naofusa IMAGAWA, the wife of Yoshimitsu KIRA.
  11. His children were Noritomo MATSUDAIRA (legitimate child of the Iwamura Domain in Mino Province) (the eldest son), Noriyoshi MATSUDAIRA (the second son), and Noritoki MATSUDAIRA (the third son).
  12. His children were Prince Abo, Prince Takaoka, Prince Kose and four other princesses.
  13. His children were Prince Tadamochi, MINAMOTO no Masaakira and Princess Koshi (also pronounced as Yoshiko) who were the ancestors of the Minamoto and the Taira clans.
  14. His children were Sadaharu MAKINO (the eldest son), Tadayoshi NISHIO (the fourth son), Mochinori KONDO (the fifth son), a daughter (Hiromichi INABA'S lawful wife), another daughter (Tadatoshi HONDA's lawful wife and later Tsunetomo AKIMOTO's second wife), as well as another daughter (Akihiro MANABE's lawful wife).
  15. His children were Sadaijin (minister of the left) Saneharu SAIONJI and Sakone gon no chujo (provisional middle captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards) Suemitsu OMIYA (who restored the Omiya family).
  16. His children were Sadamasa KAZANIN and Morotsugu KAZANIN.
  17. His children were Sadanori MATSUDAIRA (first son) and Hatsuko (legal wife of Sadaaki MATSUDAIRA).
  18. His children were Sadatsune YOSHIDA, Tokitsune YOSHIDA, a wife of Kintoki SHIGENOI and a wife of TAIRA no Tokizane.
  19. His children were Sadayasu ADACHI, and a dowager of Akitoki HOJO (Muchaku).
  20. His children were Sadayori OTOMO, Sadatoshi (Sadanori) OTOMO, Munetada TACHIBANA, Norimune OTOMO, Ujiyasu OTOMO, Ujimune OTOMO, Ujitoki OTOMO and others.
  21. His children were Sakitoyo HIROHATA (Naidaijin) and Nobumichi KOGA (the adopted child of the Koga family and Naidaijin), and his daughters were the lawful wife of Yoshisue SAIONJI and the lawful wife of Shigemura DATE.
  22. His children were Sakone no chujo (Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards) Takamichi KOGA, Naidaijin (minister of the center) Hiromichi KOGA, Ariyoshi CHIGUSA's lawful wife.
  23. His children were Sanenatsu TOIN and Saneyo TOIN.
  24. His children were Sangi (a councilor) Saneatsu SAIONJI and Gon Dainagon Sanemitsu SAIONJI.
  25. His children were Sangi (councilor) Kintaka OGIMACHISANJO and Sangi Saneaki SHOGIMACHI-SANJO.
  26. His children were Shigeharu ODA, Torahoshi (虎法師), and a wife of Ujinori NISHIO.
  27. His children were Shigemasa (Kuro) and others.
  28. His children were Shokaku, Ninkan (founder of Shingon Tachikawa School (esoteric Buddhism)), MINAMOTO no Moroyori, MINAMOTO no Morotoki, MINAMOTO no Morotoshi, MINAMOTO no Masako and the wife of FUJIWARA no Munetoshi.
  29. His children were Sokyu and Sobon TSUDA who wrote "Tennojiya-kaiki" and Sogan KOGETSU who was the 156th generation of Daitoku-ji Temple and the founder of Ryuko-in Temple.
  30. His children were Sukezane HINO (the ancestor of the Hino family) and Yorisuke HIROHASHI (the ancestor of the Hirohashi family).
  31. His children were TACHIBANA no Kimisai, TACHIBANA no Kimiyori, and TACHIBANA no Yoshiko (Nyogo (wife) to Emperor Uda).
  32. His children were TAIRA no Chikasuke (an adopted son of TAIRA no Nobumoto) and TAIRA no Nobumune.
  33. His children were Tadahiro SAKAI (count) (the eldest son), and daughters (lawful wife of Tadauji SAKAI), (third wife of Sukeyori ITO), (lawful wife of Tadayoshi SAKAI).
  34. His children were Tadakata, Tadae, and Hisatomo KAWAKAMI.
  35. His children were Tadakatsu MAKINO (fourth son), Tadaatsu MAKINO (fifth son) and daughters (legal wife of Tadakunkuni MAKINO, legal wife of Sadayasu MAKINO, legal wife of Tadahiro MAKINO, second wife of HONJO).
  36. His children were Tadanaga AOYAMA (the forth son), Yukishige AOYAMA (the seventh son), Sukenori HINO, and a daughter (the lawful wife of Tadanori SAKURAI MATSUDAIRA, later the second wife of Terasu MATSURA).
  37. His children were Tadanaka TODA (the oldest son), Tadakiyo TANAKA (the second son) and a daughter (Naosuke NAGAI's legal wife).
  38. His children were Tadanobu BOMON, who served as a captain on the side of the Retired Emperor Gotoba during the Jokyu War, and Nishi-hachijo dono who married MINAMOTO no Sanetomo.
  39. His children were Tadashige HIROHATA, Tadaaki HIROHATA, Tadanari HIROHATA, and Nagatada HIROHATA.
  40. His children were Tadatoshi MATSUDAIRA (the oldest son), Tadaaki MATSUDAIRA (the Fujii-Matsudaira family) (the second son), and Tadachika MATSUDAIRA (the third son).
  41. His children were Tadatsugu SHIMAZU, who became the founder of the Yamada clan (a branch line of the Shimazu family), and Tadatsune SHIMAZU, whose children became the founders of the Machida clan and the Ijuin clan, besides the legitimate son, Hisatsune SHIMAZU.
  42. His children were Tadayoshi DAIJO, Yoshihiro KOKUBUN, Takayoshi SATAKE, Yoshimune SATAKE, Chikayoshi OKADA, Yoshisue KAWASHIMA, Masanari SATAKE, and a daughter (Tsuneyoshi KIKKAWA's wife).
  43. His children were Takahira SHIJO and Ryuben.
  44. His children were Takakazu SHIJO, Takasada SHIJO, Takatoshi SHIJO, Arisuke SHIJO, and a daughter who mothered Kinnaga SAIONJI, and others.
  45. His children were Takatomo AKIMOTO (the eldest son), Tadazane TODA (the second son), Tadaaki TODA (the fifth son), and Tadatsune TODA (the sixth son).
  46. His children were Takatoyo KYOGOKU (the second son), Aguri (Yoshizane SO's lawful wife), and Miyako (Kinnori IMADEGAWA's wife).
  47. His children were Takayoshi ICHIJO, Sanemasa ICHIJO, Nobuyoshi, Soncho, the wife of Michikata NAKANOIN, the wife of Kintsune SAIONJI, and the wife of Yoshitsune KUJO.
  48. His children were Takedanomiya Prince Tsunehisa (the first son), Kitashirakawanomiya Prince Naruhisa (the third son), Teruhisa KOMATSU (the fourth son) and others.
  49. His children were Takemasa KIKUCHI and Ryosei KIKUCHI.
  50. His children were Takio KIYOHARA, Sawao KIYOHARA and Akio KIYOHARA.
  51. His children were Tamehira (Jotaro NAKATSU), Tamesuke (Inataro), Tamekuni (Murakami-gen hogandai [an administrative official of the Retired Emperor's Office]), Tamezane (Rokuro YODA), MINAMOTO no Tamemoto (Gempachi KATAGIRI), and Tameuji (Genzo TSUTSUMI).
  52. His children were Tamekuni REIZEI and Tamemasa REIZEI (there has been a theory that Tamemasa was Tamekuni's son but adopted by Tamehide).
  53. His children were Tamemasu REIZEI and Kanemasa HIROHASHI (adopted son of Kanehide HIROHASHI).
  54. His children were Tamemichi NIJO, Tamefuji NIJO, Tamemune NIJO, Tamemi NIJO (二条為躬), Tamefuyu NIJO, FUJIWARA no Tameko (the Miyabito (the person who served the imperial court) of the Emperor Godaigo), Shokunmonin Kasuga no Tsubone (the official wife of Sanehira SAIONJI), Muromachiin Dainagon no Tsubone, and FUJIWARA no Kanenobu's wife.
  55. His children were Tamemitsu REIZEI and Takamasa SHIJO (adopted son of Takamasu SHIJO).
  56. His children were Tameomi REIZEI and Fumiko REIZEI.
  57. His children were Tameyori REIZEI, Tamekata FUJITANI (founder of the Fujitani family), and two daughters (concubine of Norihira TAKATSUKASA and concubine of Takaari AYANOKOJI).
  58. His children were Tameyuki REZEI and Mochitame REIZEI.
  59. His children were Taneshige AKIZUKI (eldest son) and Tanehide AKIZUKI (second son).
  60. His children were Tanetoki TAKAGI who took over the Takagi clan and Ryogaku SHOYO who became the seventeenth head of Zojo-ji Temple.
  61. His children were Terunao ISSHIKI, Naosumi ISSHIKI (died at an early age), 一色直為室 and Naouji ISSHIKI (Satte-Isshiki clan).
  62. His children were Teruyuki KUZE (fourth son), Hirotoshi KUZE (久世広寿), Hiroju KUZE (久世広躊) (fifth son), Hirohan KUZE (久世広般) (ninth son), a daughter (lawful wife of Yasukazu MATSUDAIRA), and another daughter (lawful wife of Fusayoshi ISHIKAWA).
  63. His children were Tokitsune HIRAMATSU and two daughters: the third and the forth wives of Nobunao MIZOGUCHI.
  64. His children were Tomotsuna KUTSUKI, Yoshitsuna KUTSUKI, Mototsuna KUTSUKI (same name as his father), and his daughters became Yoshitada OSHIMA's wife, Kaikyu OKAMOTO's wife, Soji KAWAGUCHI'S wife, and Dokaku KORAI's wife.
  65. His children were Tomotsuna UTSUNOMIYA, Tomoie HATTA (there is a divergent opinion), a wife of Masamitsu OYAMA (SAMAKAWA no Ama).
  66. His children were Toyotada YAMAUCHI (the eldest son), and two daughters (Imperial Princess Kitashirakawanomiya Yoshihisa and Imperial Princess Komatsunomiya Yorihito, who later became the second wife of Okitomo AKIMOTO).
  67. His children were Tsunekatsu MURAKAMI (the first son), Suketoshi MATSUDAIRA (the second son), Tomosato TOMITA (the forth son), Yasushige MAKINO (the fifth son), a daughter (wife of Hiroharu ROKKAKU), a daughter (wife of Tadasato OKITSU) and a daughter (wife of Motoaki OSAWA).
  68. His children were Tsunemitsu OINOMIKADO, an adopted daughter (the lawful wife of Yoshimasa MOGAMI) from Tadaharu SUWA, the second wife of Tadataka OKUBO, and the lawful wife of Sadanobu KAZANIN.
  69. His children were Tsunemori KIKKAWA, Tsunenaga KIKKAWA and Tsuneyori KIKKAWA.
  70. His children were Tsunenori (経矩) KAMEI (the oldest son), Koremasa KAMEI (the second son), and a daughter (Shigetsune TSUZUKI's wife).
  71. His children were Tsunetaka KIKKAWA, Tsunemori KIKKAWA (the Kikkawa clan in Harima Province), Tsuneshige KIKKAWA, Tsunenobu KIKKAWA (the Kikkawa clan associated with the Sakai clan), and Tsunetoki KIKKAWA.
  72. His children were Tsunetomo IWAKURA, Arinori CHIGUSA, and Takamasa UEMATSU.
  73. His children were Udaijin (minister of the right) Sanemasu SAIONJI and Sadaijin Sadahiro KAZANIN.
  74. His children were Yasuhide WAKIZAKA, Yasumasa WAKIZAKA, Yasunaga WAKIZAKA, and a daughter (wife of Nagazumi IKEDA).
  75. His children were Yasumura WAKISAKA (the eldest son), Yasuteru WAKISAKA (the fifth son), the eldest daughter (the second wife of Kiyozumi ARIMA, the lord of the Maruoka Domain), the second daughter (the lawful wife of Yasutsune KATO, the lord of the Ozu Domain).
  76. His children were Yasutaka MATSUDAIRA (second son), Nagayori MATSUDAIRA (third son), Harumitsu TAKEYA (fourth son), Mochitoki FUJINAMI, a daughter (legal wife of Naonobu Nabeshima), a daughter (legal wife of Yasumichi KATO), and a daughter (legal wife of Yasumochi TODA).
  77. His children were Yoriharu, the Jugoinoge Ukyo no suke (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade, Assistant Master of the Western Capital Offices); Chikami, the Jugoinojo Jibu taifu (unior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade, Senior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of the Civil Administration)
  78. His children were Yorikuni OINOMIKADO and Tsunetaka OINOMIKADO.
  79. His children were Yoriyuki TOKI (the oldest son), Toshisada TAKIGAWA (the second son), Yoritoyo TOKI (土岐頼豊, the third son), Yorichika TOKI (the fourth son), Yorihisa TOKI (the fifth son) and the daughter (the lawful wife of Sukenari MAKINO [牧野尹成]).
  80. His children were Yoshiharu WAKEBE (the third son) and a daughter (Takamasu OZEKI's lawful wife).
  81. His children were Yoshihide ASAHINA, etc.
  82. His children were Yoshimoto MONIWA and Sanemoto MONIWA.
  83. His children were Yoshitaka OUCHI and daughter (the wife of Toshiaki OTOMO and, later, mother of Yoshinaga OUCHI).
  84. His children were Yoshitake WAKEBE (eldest son) and daughter (legal wife of Naoharu HITOTSUYANAGI).
  85. His children were Yoshitatsu SHIBA, Yoshizumi ASHIKAGA's wife, and Akikuni MURAKAMI's wife(村上顕国室).
  86. His children were Yoshitsugu MAEDA, Tomotatsu MAEDA, and Tatsumasa MAEDA.
  87. His children were Yukisada AOYAMA (the third son), 青山幸卓 (the fourth son), Yukikata AOYAMA (the fifth son), Yorikatsu TSUMAKI (妻木頼功) (the sixth son), a daughter (the second wife of Yoshisue AKITA), a daughter (the lawful wife of Yukitada AOYAMA).
  88. His children were Yukitsuna TADA, Tomozane TADA, Takayori NOSE, and Takazane.
  89. His children were a daughter (lawful wife of Nagashige FUJIKAKE), a daughter (wife of YAMANA so-and-so), a daughter (lawful wife of Moritoshi TANI), and a daughter (wife of Naomasa TAKEBE.)
  90. His children were four daughters (the lawful wife of Sadayasu MATSUDAIRA, the lawful wife of Nobumichi MATSUDAIRA, the lawful wife of Suketake OTA [a legitimate child in Kakegawa clan], and the lawful wife of Nobutomo AKIMOTO).
  91. His children were not officially recognized, but the Ikushima clan referred to themselves as his descendants.
  92. His children were the lawful wife of Sadafusa YURA and others.
  93. His children were to become the pillars of support to his clan following his death.
  94. His children were: FUJIWARA no Tadamichi, FUJIWARA no Yorinaga, and FUJIWARA no Taishi (Yasuko).
  95. His children were: Hironao KAWAKATSU, Hirouji KAWAKATSU, Hironori KAWAKATSU, an adopted daughter (daughter of Nishinotojin Tokinao raised by Hirotsuna who became the wife of Shokan Yoshimasa TODO) and a daughter (Nobutoshi SAKUMA's wife).
  96. His children were: Masanari INABA (the second son), Masasugu INABA (the third son), Masamori INABA (the seventh son), and daughter (the lawful wife of Sakihide HIROHATA), daughter (the lawful wife of Yorimochi NAITO and later the lawful wife of Masayohi INABA) and daughter (the lawful wife of Tadataka OOKA).
  97. His children were: Masayoshi INABA (the first son), Masatomi INABA (the second son), Masaakira INABA (the third son), Masana INABA (the fourth son), Masaharu INABA (the fifth son).
  98. His children were: Tadamasa OKUDAIRA (the eldest son) and Bin hime (adopted by Hidetada TOKUGAWA and became the lawful wife of Tadaharu HORIO).
  99. His children were: Tsunataka MATSUDAIRA (the first son), Chikayoshi MATSUDAIRA (the second son), Takamasa MATSUDAIRA (the third son), Naotaka MATSUDAIRA (the fourth son), Komahime (the lawful wife of Naonori ECHIZEN-MATSUDAIRA), Tsuruhime (the lawful wife of Yoshizumi SATAKE).
  100. His children, ARIWARA no Muneyana and ARIWARA no Shigeharu, and his grandchild, Muneyana's son, ARIWARA no Motokata, are well-known as poets.
  101. His children, FUJIWARA no Morotaka and FUJIWARA no Morotsune, caused a conflict with the members of Enryaku-ji Temple and this developed into a large social event in which monks of Hiei-zan Mountain made a petition.
  102. His children, Saburo Kageshige (34 years old), Rokuro Kagekuni, Shichiro Kagemune, Hachiro Kagenori and Kuro Kagetsura were killed, but Kagetoki, the heir Kagesue (39 years old) and the second son Kagetaka (36 years old) lost their lives after retreating to the mountains.
  103. His children, TAIRA no Tsunemasa and TAIRA no Tsunechika were forgiven.
  104. His children, in addition to Michifusa KUJO, were Yasumichi NIJO; Michimoto (Michiaki) MATSUDONO, who restored the Matsudono family; Eigon, the wife of Koen HONGANJI; and the wife of Koju HONGANJI.
  105. His children: Moroyoshi YAMANA, Ujikiyo YAMANA, Yoshimasa YAMANA, Tokiyoshi YAMANA, Ujifuyu YAMANA and others.
  106. His chokushi-go (a name granted by the Imperial Court) was Entsu Daio Kokushi.
  107. His chronic pulmonary tuberculosis is widely accepted to be the cause of death, and was stated in Jii onjuku kenmotsu shojo (literary remains of Warring States period) (Sengoku Ibun (ancient writings in Sengoku period), No.2638), pneumonia, stomach cancer or esophageal cancer (stated in "Koyo Gunkan").
  108. His circle of friends was limited, but composed of highly-cultured people of the first order; these included Saneatsu MUSHANOKOJI, who had been his friend since Gakushuin days, Moritatsu HOSOKAWA, Muneyoshi YANAGI, and others, as well as Ryuzaburo UMEHARA, Yoshishige ABE, Kazuo HIROTSU, Sotaro YASUI, and Tetsuzo TANIKAWA.
  109. His citation is retained in the Honsei-ji Temple as his relic and shows the deep connection between the temple and Hidenobu.
  110. His clan Kifumi (黄書) is also written 黄文.
  111. His clan Wakasakurabe (稚桜部) was also written 若桜部.
  112. His clan name (県犬養) was also written Inukai (犬養) and his given name (大伴) was Otomo (大侶).
  113. His clan name Fumi (書) was also written as 文 and his given name Nemaro (根麻呂) was also written as 尼麻呂, 祢麻呂 and 禰麻呂.
  114. His clan name was Azumi.
  115. His clan name was Hieda, and his name was Are, he was twenty eight years old.
  116. His clan of the same age included IKI no Hakatoko, who engaged in issuing Taiho Ritsuryo (Taiho Code), together with FUJIWARA no Fuhito and so forth, and wrote "Document by IKI no Hatatoko," one of the few ancient documents.
  117. His clan rank title was Ason.
  118. His clan was also known as Omiwa, which could either be written as '大三輪' or '大神'in Chinese characters, and by the modern kana usage (as laid out by the Japanese government in 1946) it becomes 'Omiwa,' and with the old Japanese syllabary charaters, it is read 'Ohomiwa.'
  119. His classmate, Shigeji FUJII later became a playwright of Shochiku Kyoto Studios and a fellow of the 'Kajiwara Kinpachi Narutaki Group,' and in the grade above his was Masahiro MAKINO who was the eldest son of Shozo MAKINO, the 'Father of Japanese film.'
  120. His classmates in the Gakushuin Primary School included Prince Tanehito ARISUGAWANOMIYA, Prince Naruhisa KITASHIRAKAWANOMIYA, Prince Yoshiteru KITASHIRAKAWANOMIYA (later demoted to commoner under the name Marquis Teruhisa KOMATSU) and Prince Yasuhiko ASAKANOMIYA.
  121. His classmates included Shunso HISHIDA, Kanzan SHIMOMURA and Kogetsu SAIGO.
  122. His classmates of Preparatory School of the University of Tokyo (Tokyo Yobimon) included Soseki NATSUME, Shiki MASAOKA, Kumagusu MINAKATA and Saneyuki AKIYAMA.
  123. His close aide asked Hideyoshi, 'But my lord, Esquire Kanbei is a daimyo with only 100,000 koku,' and Hideyoshi said as follows:
  124. His close relationship with Bankei OTSUKI who was a son of Gentaku OTSUKI lasted for life.
  125. His close relationship with FUJIWARA no Tadazane and his son Yorinaga led Shinjitsu to side with the Retired Emperor Sutoku's factions in the Hogen War in 1156.
  126. His close relationship with cars leads him to the official duties related to cars, such as visiting a Tachograph manufacturing plant.
  127. His close relatives were put in charge of successive Mutsu no kami, which seemed to have a significant influence on kokuga (provincial government offices) as well.
  128. His closest elder brother was Nagamasu ODA (also known as Urakusai).
  129. His clothes were washed frequently because he rarely bought new clothes, and when the female servant, who had been forced to wash them, complained that she wanted Ieyasu to buy new clothes, he told her in an admonishing tone that he saved money for the nation.
  130. His co-actors, Hideko TAKAMINE, Chiezo KATAOKA, Isuzu YAMADA, and Machiko KYO were invited to visit this place when it was his villa (refer to the photo album "Okochi Sanso").
  131. His colleagues included Mitsuyoshi KIRA (Saijo-Kira clan) of the same family.
  132. His colleagues referred to him with the nickname 'Saku-san.'
  133. His collection of Waka includes 'Hokuhen Seishokashu' and his collection of poems 'Ginkosha Shiko.'
  134. His collection of books was not just a massive collection of calligraphic works, epigraphs, and compilation of seal marks as he developed expert knowledge.
  135. His collection of poems include 'Sankoinshu.'
  136. His collection of poems is 'Anpo hoshi shu' (A Collection of Poems by Priest Anpo).
  137. His collections of Chinese poetry included thirty volumes of "Collection at Grassy Mountain," and six volumes of "Poetry at 谷口山."
  138. His comings and goings after the unification of the Southern and Northern Courts are unknown.
  139. His comment clearly demonstrates past circumustances of Kabuki, in which if only the outward appearances of characters worked well, the performance would draw a large audience.
  140. His common name (haikomei: name for men that represents the order of his birth) is Kuro, and imina (real name) is Yoshitsune.
  141. His common name is 'TAIRA no Shiro' and he was also called HOJO TAIRA no Shiro Tokihiro/Tokiari or HOJO Shiro TAIRA no Tokihiro/Tokiari.
  142. His common name is Gennosuke and his imina (posthumous name) is Shigeyasu.
  143. His common name is Hikojiro.
  144. His common name is Kanja ANO.
  145. His common name is Kuro KIKUCHI.
  146. His common name is Motoaki, his azana (adult male's nickname) is Wakei, and his go (pen name) is Soken.
  147. His common name is Saburo.
  148. His common name is Shichiro YUKI.
  149. His common name is Taito.
  150. His common name is Tojuro.
  151. His common name is Yahei, Nagato no kami (Governor of Nagato Province).
  152. His common name was 'Ryuemon,' and his go (pseudonym) was 'Ichiryu.'
  153. His common name was 'Sojuro YOHA.'
  154. His common name was 'Utaemon BAIGYOKU.'
  155. His common name was 'Utaemon KANJAKU.'
  156. His common name was 'Yagoro.'
  157. His common name was Atsunojo
  158. His common name was Chibanosuke.
  159. His common name was Chobe.
  160. His common name was Choshiro Nakagawa.
  161. His common name was Chuemon.
  162. His common name was Etsusaburo and his imina (personal name) was Yuzuru.
  163. His common name was Fuhyoe, and his official rank was Iki no kami (governor of Iki Province.)
  164. His common name was Gempachi KATAGIRI.
  165. His common name was Genemon OMIYA.
  166. His common name was Genji.
  167. His common name was Genjiro.
  168. His common name was Genjuro.
  169. His common name was Gongoro.
  170. His common name was Goro.
  171. His common name was Gorozaemon.
  172. His common name was Goshu KANEMATSU.
  173. His common name was Hachinomiya.
  174. His common name was Hachirobei.
  175. His common name was Hanzo.
  176. His common name was Heiemon.
  177. His common name was Heihachi.
  178. His common name was Heihachiro, his name was Hozai, and later he changed it to Shigeki.
  179. His common name was Heiji SAKAI.
  180. His common name was Heikichiro, and he took a name of Tarouemon no jo later.
  181. His common name was Heiuemon.
  182. His common name was Heizaemon.
  183. His common name was Hikojiro.
  184. His common name was Hikosaburo.
  185. His common name was Hikoshiro.
  186. His common name was Hyobu shoyu.
  187. His common name was Hyoejiro SAKAI.
  188. His common name was Hyoemon.
  189. His common name was Hyotoji.
  190. His common name was Ichinojyo, imina (real name of a man of position) was Akitaka later changed to Akiyoshi.
  191. His common name was Ichiro.
  192. His common name was Inakichi.
  193. His common name was Jinemon and his haiku pen name was Kogan (古丸).
  194. His common name was Jinkuro.
  195. His common name was Jinsuke and his family name was sometimes 'IKAINO.'
  196. His common name was Jiro Hyoe Moritsugu of Ecchu province.
  197. His common name was Jiro OKI, and his official rank was Uma no kami (Captain of the Right Division of Bureau of Horses), Daizen no daibu (Master of the Palace Table).
  198. His common name was Jiro.
  199. His common name was Jirosaemon.
  200. His common name was Jirosaku.
  201. His common name was Jiuemon, Jiemon or Jiroshiro.
  202. His common name was Joemon.
  203. His common name was Jugoro.
  204. His common name was Juro TOYOTA.
  205. His common name was Kaemon and Kozaemon.
  206. His common name was Kaja UNO.
  207. His common name was Kajuro.
  208. His common name was Kamaji.
  209. His common name was Kampei.
  210. His common name was Kanbe but he was more well known by the name Kanbe WATANABE.
  211. His common name was Kanemon.
  212. His common name was Kangoro.
  213. His common name was Kanjuro (勘重郎) (also written as 勘十郎).
  214. His common name was Kanroku.
  215. His common name was Katsube.
  216. His common name was Katsuemon SHIMIZU.
  217. His common name was Kazuma.
  218. His common name was Kichijiro or Kichitaro.
  219. His common name was Kihachiro.
  220. His common name was Kizaemon or Chozo.
  221. His common name was Koheita and his childhood name was Koheiji or Shinkuro.
  222. His common name was Koshichiro.
  223. His common name was Kotaro.
  224. His common name was Kozaemon.
  225. His common name was Kunitsugu.
  226. His common name was Kura no suke
  227. His common name was Kura no suke.
  228. His common name was Kurando NAKASHIMA.
  229. His common name was Kuranosuke.
  230. His common name was Kusuzaemon.
  231. His common name was Kyoya Denzo.
  232. His common name was Magobe.
  233. His common name was Magoshichiro.
  234. His common name was Magoshiro, and later on Tatewaki.
  235. His common name was Magoshiro.
  236. His common name was Masanoshin.
  237. His common name was Matarokuro.
  238. His common name was Matashichi.
  239. His common name was Matsui-kaja and the MINAMOTO no Tameyoshi-ryu Matsui clan, his descendent, derives from this name.
  240. His common name was Michitoshi (or Hakubin).
  241. His common name was Nenosuke.
  242. His common name was Nizaemon, Chusuke, and later Kosuke.
  243. His common name was Nobori (or Tadashi) ('Noboru' is also written in some of his works), and his personal name was Sadayasu.
  244. His common name was Norikiyo SATO and his posthumous Buddhist name was Eni.
  245. His common name was Okanosuke, and his Gago (pseudonym) was Yaegaki.
  246. His common name was Okaya no Kanpaku.
  247. His common name was Rokurozaemon
  248. His common name was Rokuzo HAMAMURA.
  249. His common name was Ryokei.
  250. His common name was Saburo FUKUHARA.
  251. His common name was Saburo and Esaburo.
  252. His common name was Saburo, and his official court rank was Hyoe no jo (Lieutenant of the Middle Palace Guards).
  253. His common name was Saburo.
  254. His common name was Sakae.
  255. His common name was Samanosuke, and he also changed his name to Mitsutoshi.
  256. His common name was Samanosuke.
  257. His common name was Sangoro.
  258. His common name was Sanmi no chujo (Middle Captain, Junior Third Rank) or Gifu Chujo (Middle Captain).
  259. His common name was Sasuke.
  260. His common name was Seizaburo and later Shogo and furthermore changed to Yasujiro.
  261. His common name was Senemon.
  262. His common name was Senya.
  263. His common name was Shichisuke, and he was given Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade), Sakone gon no shosho (Provisional Minor Captain of the Left Division of the Inner Palace Guards) and Ukyo no daibu (Master of the Western Capital Offices) by the Imperial Court.
  264. His common name was Shikibu TAKENOUCHI
  265. His common name was Shinjuro.
  266. His common name was Shinpachi.
  267. His common name was Shinsuke CHIBA.
  268. His common name was Shintaro.
  269. His common name was Shiro.
  270. His common name was Shirobe.
  271. His common name was Shirozaemon or Shiro.
  272. His common name was Shirozaemon.
  273. His common name was Shojimaru, Matasaburo, and Tarozaemon-no-jo.
  274. His common name was Shouemon, and later changed to Katsuemon (but Toshikazu TAKAYANAGI is pointing out that 'Katsuemon' was a vocational naming).
  275. His common name was Shozaburo.
  276. His common name was Shume or Harima no suke.
  277. His common name was Sozaemon.
  278. His common name was Sukezaemon.
  279. His common name was Tadanojo, Shirodayu, and Kihei.
  280. His common name was Taichu (太仲・太中) written as 太仲 or 太中.
  281. His common name was Takezo.
  282. His common name was Taro TSUSHIMA.
  283. His common name was Taro.
  284. His common name was Toji and his Gago (pseudonym) was Nanbin.
  285. His common name was Toji.
  286. His common name was Tokujiro.
  287. His common name was Tokusuke, Chujiro, Shoyu Kuro.
  288. His common name was Tonoshin.
  289. His common name was Torao.
  290. His common name was Totomi Samanosuke (vice-minister of Left Division of Bureau of Horses).
  291. His common name was Tsunosuke.
  292. His common name was Ueharu (植治) (yago [the name of the store]).
  293. His common name was Uemon.
  294. His common name was Uemontaro.
  295. His common name was Umon.
  296. His common name was Yajiro and his nyudo-go (name at entering the priesthood) was Genkaku (Kan).
  297. His common name was Yajiro.
  298. His common name was Yakichi.
  299. His common name was Yasaburo.
  300. His common name was Yasubei.
  301. His common name was Yasuke, later he called himself Kyuichiro or Kizaemon.
  302. His common name was Yataro.
  303. His common name was Yoemon.
  304. His common name was Yogoro.
  305. His common name was Yojuro.
  306. His common name was Yosaburo.
  307. His common name was Yugei, Togoro and Abo.
  308. His common name was Yukie HISAKAWA.
  309. His common name was Zenshobo.
  310. His common name was 幡六 or Minpei.
  311. His common names were Kingo, Toemon and Hyosuke (兵助).
  312. His common names were Kuranosuke, Shinshichiro and Gozaemon.
  313. His common names were Kurotoji, Tokurojiro, or Jirobei.
  314. His common names were Noboru, Konoshin, and Hanbei.
  315. His common names were Sakuma and Gonjiro.
  316. His common names were Sataro, Ise, Toyomaro and Sakyo.
  317. His common names were Shinsaku, Toichi and Wasuke.
  318. His common names were Yajiro, Yahei and Heisuke.
  319. His common-law wife contracted tuberculosis, and she died because poverty prevented her from getting sufficient nutrition.
  320. His commonly used name was Daibanboku.
  321. His commonly used name was Goro.
  322. His commonly used name was Jiro, and his official court rank was Owari no kami.
  323. His commonly used name was Shiro JO.
  324. His complete works of 5 total volumes have been published since 1973.
  325. His complete works were published by the Asahi Shimbun Company.
  326. His comrades (the two samurai, Yagoro SENZAKI and Goemon HARA), who are visiting him, also blame him by saying, "We can't take money from someone who eloped, let alone money obtained by doing evil things."
  327. His comrades included his younger brother Mikisaburo SUZUKI, Tainoshin SHINOHARA, Heisuke TODO, Takeo HATTORI, Arinosuke MONAI, Yahei TOYAMA, Juro ABE, Jiro UTSUMI, Washio KANO, Noboru NAKANISHI, Kaisuke HASHIMOTO, Kiyoshi KIYOHARA, Tadao ARAI, Hajime SAITO (SAITO was allegedly a spy for Shinsengumi).
  328. His concise writing is seen as one type of ideal literary style, and is regarded highly.
  329. His concubine Okoto no kata, whom Tadanaka MIZUNO sent up to O-oku (the inner halls of Edo-jo Castle where the wife of the Shogun and her servants resided) to find a clue for his political participation, got affection from Ieyoshi aged over 50 then.
  330. His concubine was Take, the daughter of Hidenari MORI.
  331. His concubine was a daughter of Mitsumasa HAMURO.
  332. His concubine was a woman of the Tamai clan.
  333. His concubine was from the Kato clan.
  334. His concubine was from the Tani clan.
  335. His concubine was from the Yamazaki clan.
  336. His concubine was the daughter of the Imai clan.
  337. His concubine: Kazu (adopted by Takayoshi SUZUKI).
  338. His concubine: Otama no Kata (the Muto clan).
  339. His concubine: Take (the Nasu clan).
  340. His concubine: Yuki (the Akizuki clan).
  341. His concubines included Yoshunin (Oshin) and Enmeiin (Omaru no kata).
  342. His concubines included a daughter of Michiyoshi KOGA, a daughter of Saneyoshi ICHIJO, a daughter of Saneo TOIN, and a daughter (Motohira's half sister) of Kanetsune KONOE.
  343. His concubines included a member of the Hashimoto clan.
  344. His concubines were FUJIWARA no Keishi (Yoshiko) - mother of Yoshimochi ASHIKAGA and Yoshinori ASHIKAGA - and Kasuga no Tsubone (a concubine of Yoshimitsu ASHIKAGA) - mother of Yoshitsugu ASHIKAGA - among others.
  345. His concubines were Zuishunin (who was also known as Otsuta), Jukoin and Seishinin.
  346. His concubines were known to be the mother of Kumoi no Kari (of royal descent) and Yugao (the daughter of Sanmi no Chujo and the mother of Tamakazura).
  347. His concurrent assignment was changed to the Governor of Mino Province and Otsugu returned to Kyoto (in the same month, 'the Kusuko Incident' occurred).
  348. His condition from the illness much improved with the recuperation, and he entered into the business world with the money he made by stock trading as the seed money.
  349. His confession revealed Kawatsugu's plan to gather a group of people to break into the palace from Hokumon (the North gate), and overthrow the Imperial Court in the evening of March 2.
  350. His consistent attitude for avoiding positions of power gained public acceptance and he was trusted by both the right and left wing political community.
  351. His consort and children
  352. His consort was Kamehime, the daughter of Tsunataka SHIMAZU, and his second wife was Man-kimi (the daughter of Yoshitaka SHIMAZU.
  353. His consort was a daughter of Mitsumasa KARASUMARU.
  354. His contacts made it possible for him to later become Mizoguchi's apprentice.
  355. His contemporary writers of yomihon in Edo were Bakin KYOKUTEI and Kyoden SANTO.
  356. His contribution succeeded and attracted students from all over the country from Ou region in the north to Ryukyu in the south.
  357. His contributions to literature
  358. His conversation was strangely compelling with his large physique and unique voice, which was suited to fortune-telling.
  359. His corpse was cremated at Mita Saikai-ji Temple and the ashes were buried at Dairin-ji Temple in Matsuyama City.
  360. His corpse was sent by sea via Anato (present-day Yamaguchi) and was kept temporarily at Toyura no Miya by TAKEUCHI no Sukune.
  361. His corpse was treated with lime before being placed in coffin and buried on the coast.
  362. His correct name was written as '紹?,' but since some Japanese environment in computers cannot display it correctly, his name would be written as '武野紹鴎' (Joo TAKENO) in this article.
  363. His costume is made of kurohabutae (black silk cloth), and he is very handsome.
  364. His court official rank and order were Jushiige and Kungoto (the Fifth Order of Merit), respectively and he died on July 6, 723.
  365. His court official rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) at the age of two in 1798, and he reached the manhood with the rank of Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) in 1802.
  366. His court official rank was Juichii Udaijin (Minister of the Right with Junior First Rank).
  367. His court official rank was Junii (Junior Second Rank).
  368. His court official rank was Shonii (Senior Second Rank).
  369. His court rank and positions were Jushiinoge (Junior Forth Rank, Lower Grade), Ecchu no kuni no kami (Governor of Ecchu Province), Jiju (chamberlain).
  370. His court rank was Ge-jugoinoge (Jugoinoge [Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade] given to persons outside Kyoto).
  371. His court rank was Hyobu shoyu (junior assistant minister of the Hyobusho Ministry of War).
  372. His court rank was Ippon (first rank of Imperial prince) Jusangu (the honorable rank after the three empresses).
  373. His court rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) and he served as Minbu no taifu (Senior Ministerial Assistant of Popular Affairs) in Suo Province.
  374. His court rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) and his official post was Sakyo no suke (Assistant Master of the Eastern Capital Offices).
  375. His court rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) and his official posts were Hayato no Kami (the chief of dance/music performers at the imperial court) and Wakasa no kuni no kami (governor of Wakasa Province).
  376. His court rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) and his official posts were Izumi no kuni no kami (governor of Izumi Province) and Wakasa no kuni no kami (governor of Wakasa Province).
  377. His court rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) and the director of Ise Province.
  378. His court rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade), Governor of Bingo Province and Shuzen no Kami (head of Shuzengen).
  379. His court rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade), Shuzen no Kami (head of Shuzengen).
  380. His court rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade),Ukon no jo (Lieutenant of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  381. His court rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade),the governor of Bicchu Province.
  382. His court rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  383. His court rank was Juichii (Junior First Rank), supreme order count.
  384. His court rank was Junii (Junior Second Rank) and had the title of Sangi (councilor).
  385. His court rank was Junii rank (Junior Second Rank) and Gon Dainagon (Provisional Major Counselor).
  386. His court rank was Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank), Order of Second Class.
  387. His court rank was Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank), and he was appointed as Minister of Zogusho (Ministry of Making and Mending Palaces), Director of Danjodai (Board of Censors), and Musashi no kuni no kami (Governor of Musashi Province).
  388. His court rank was Jushii Shuri no Daibu (Junior Fourth Rank, Master of the Office of Palace Repairs).
  389. His court rank was Jushiijo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) Sangi (councilor) Shuri no daibu (Master of the Office of Palace Repairs).
  390. His court rank was Jushiinoge (Junior Forth Rank, Lower Grade), Shimotsuke no kami (Governer of Shimotsuke Province), later Shimousa no kuni no kami (Governor of Shimousa Province).
  391. His court rank was Shohachiinojo (Senior Eighth Rank, Upper Grade) at that time, and this was the highest rank in historical materials.
  392. His court rank was Shonii (Senior Second Rank) and his last post was Gon Chunagon (provisional vice-councilor of state).
  393. His court rank was Shonii Gon Chunagon (Senior Second Rank, Provisional Vice-Councilor of State).
  394. His court rank was Shonii Gon Dainagon (Senior Second Rank, Provisional Chief Councilor of State).
  395. His court rank was Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) Gon Chunagon (a provisional vice-councilor of state).
  396. His court rank was Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank).
  397. His court rank was Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade), Sakonoe no chujo (Middle Captain of the Left Division of the Inner Palace Guards).
  398. His court ranks were Hyobu Dayu, Jiju, and Nii Hoin.
  399. His court ranks were Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) and Kunai shoyu (Junior Assistant Minister of the Sovereign's Household).
  400. His court ranks were Sadaijin (Minister of the Left), Juichii Rank (Junior First Rank), and Nairan (rank of a court official, who read documents before the emperor).
  401. His court ranks were Saemon no jo (Captain of the Imperial Palace Guards, Left Division), Iki no Kami (Governor of Iki Province), and Omi no Kami (Governor of Omi Province).
  402. His courtesy name was Chofu.
  403. His cousin Nobunaga MOCHIZUKI (Nobushige TAKEDA's third son and Nobutoyo's biological, younger brother) was his only relative killed in the center.
  404. His cousin Yugiri was his close friend.
  405. His cousin was MINAMOTO no Yoritomo and his paternal younger brother, MINAMOTO no Yoshitune.
  406. His cousin was Shunkan.
  407. His cousin was Tsunamune DATE, the lord of the Sendai domain (third generation).
  408. His cousins include Manzo NOMURA (the ninth) and Manroku NOMURA (his real name: Fumitaka YOSHIZUMI) who lives in Fukuoka Prefecture and revived the Manroku family, a branch family of the Manzo family, for the first time in 50 years.
  409. His cousins: the brothers of Takamori SAIGO and Tsugumichi SAIGO
  410. His cousins; the lord of Ogaki Domain in Mino Province, Ujisada TODA, the lord of Ogaki Nitta Domain, Ujinari TODA, the lord of Okabe Domain in Musashi Province, Nobumine ANBE, hatamoto Nobukata ANBE, Nagatsune ASANO, and Nagatake ASANO, were sentenced to enryo (prohibition on coming to Edo-jo Castle).
  411. His creations were not limited to Ikebana; his output extended to sculpture, painting and writing.
  412. His creative activities are varied, including pictures drawn on ceramic ware made by his younger brother, Kenzan OGATA.
  413. His cremains have not been found till now, but his grave is at Ichinomiya Azouno, Kochi City.
  414. His cremains were separated, with a portion also being buried at Sorin-ji Temple in Higashiyama, Kyoto Prefecture.
  415. His cremated body was divided into two portions and entombed separately in Koukotsu-ji Temple in Shinjuku, Tokyo and Daiho-ji Temple in Chikusa-ku (Ward), Nagoya City.
  416. His crest was that of "Daiichi-Daiman-Daikichi."
  417. His criticisms are based on the argument that the teachings of Buddha prior to the Lotus Sutra do not show the true way to attain nirvana because they were given as provisional teachings.
  418. His dance was full of wittiness and sophistication, and delighted kabuki play fans.
  419. His dancing is also seen in the Imperial court, and its high courtiers, as well as Fujitsubo, are filled with admiration for Genji.
  420. His date of birth is unknown, but Yukinaga, who was believed to be his grandfather, and Nagamitsu, who was believed to his father, were killed in war in 1520, so his date of birth would have been earlier than the date of his father's death if he was Nagamitsu's son.
  421. His date of birth is unknown.
  422. His date of death is not clear, but since there is a description of 'late Musashi no kami Yoshinobu Nyudo' on March 27, 1207 in "Azuma Kagami" (The Mirror of the East), it is sure that it was before that.
  423. His date of death is not known, however, it seems that he had already died as of January, 1017 (the article of December 10, 1016 in"Nihon Ryakki" (Summarized chronicle of Japan)).
  424. His daughter
  425. His daughter (Yamanote dono) married Masayuki SANADA and gave birth to Nobuyuki SANADA and Nobushige (Yukimura) SANADA, although this is disputed at the present time (Currently, Yamanote dono is said to be the daughter of Yoritada UDA).
  426. His daughter FUJIWARA no Michiko became a nyogo of Emperor Gosanjo's son, Emperor Shirakawa.
  427. His daughter Haruko married Prime Minister Makoto Saito.
  428. His daughter Ito took a husband as an adopted heir of the Kawatake family, who was Shigetoshi KAWATAKE, known as a professor emeritus of Waseda University and a researcher of drama.
  429. His daughter Jukeini married into Ujichika IMAGAWA, gave birth to Ujiteru IMAGAWA and Yoshimoto IMAGAWA, and served her grandson, Ujizane IMAGAWA, as his conservator; she was highly influential and was given the nickname the female feudal lord of Suruga Province.
  430. His daughter Kitsuhi became the second consort of Emperor Kameyama in March 1261, and became the Minister of the Left in April of the same year.
  431. His daughter MINAMOTO no Akiko became the wife of FUJIWARA no Michinaga.
  432. His daughter Masuko married Zentaro KOSAKA of Kosaka Zaibatsu (a financial group), and his other daughter Takako married Shinichi OKAZAKI of Okazaki Zaibatsu (literally, financial clique).
  433. His daughter Setsuko was the Empress of Emperor Taisho (Empress Teimei).
  434. His daughter Soshi served as a Koi (second rank lady-in-waiting) to Emperor Daigo; Soshi gave birth to Imperial Prince Noriakira.
  435. His daughter Umeko TSUDA was a founder of Tsuda College.
  436. His daughter Yo married Kokusai OZAKI, a netsuke-shi (artisan making netsuke, miniature carving attached to the end of a cord hanging from a pouch), and her first son was a famous novelist Koyo OZAKI.
  437. His daughter Yoshiko NAKAYAMA was Naishi no suke (a court lady of the first rank) of the Emperor Komei and delivered the Emperor Meiji, so that Tadayasu was a maternal relative of the Emperor Meiji.
  438. His daughter became Emperor Gohanazono's wet nurse.
  439. His daughter became Imperial Prince Atsuhira's wife and she gave birth to Princess Keishi.
  440. His daughter became a concubine of FUJIWARA no Tadamichi.
  441. His daughter became a concubine of Hidetsugu TOYOTOMI and gave birth to a baby boy.
  442. His daughter became a concubine of Hidetsugu and gave birth to Hyakumaru, but was executed together with her father due to complicity.
  443. His daughter became a wife of Okifusa SUE.
  444. His daughter became the wife of Makino Kunai Shoyu (junior assistant to the chief of the imperial household) and later became the wife of Narifusa ARAO.
  445. His daughter became wife of Mototsuna USTUNOMIYA.
  446. His daughter got married to Army General Nariyuki HAYASHI.
  447. His daughter is Anna MAKINO (former member of Super Monkeys).
  448. His daughter is Kimiko REISEI.
  449. His daughter is a wife of Sangi (a councilor), Yoshiaki KAJUJI.
  450. His daughter is an actress, Shinobu TERASHIMA, and his son is a kabuki actor, Kikunosuke ONOE (the Fifth).
  451. His daughter married FUJIWARA no Kinto as an adopted daughter of FUJIWARA no Michikane.
  452. His daughter married Jun MONONOBE (according to the "Mononobe Shogun Kotokuki" [Shogun Mononobe's Acts of Merit]).
  453. His daughter married MINAMOTO no Yoshiie and became the mother of MINAMOTO no Yoshikuni and his younger brother MINAMOTO no Yoshitada..
  454. His daughter married Tadatumichi's son, Motofusa MATSUDONO (later regent kanpaku) and his second son Sanekuni SHIGENOI started the Shigenoi family, and his third son, Kinyoshi ANEGAKOJI started the Anegakoji (Anekoji) family.
  455. His daughter married Takauji ASHIKAGA, and therefore, Yoshiakira ASHIKAGA, the second Shogun of the Ashikaga government, was his grandson.
  456. His daughter served as a naishi no jo (a woman officer who carries the Emperor's sword when he goes out) of the Emperor Antoku, and he was actually treated in a similar way to the way to the Taira clan.
  457. His daughter was Chikako OGIMACHISANJO (nyobo [a court lady] of the Empress, the Imperial Princess Yoshiko).
  458. His daughter was FUJIWARA no Akirakeiko (Some-dono no Kisaki), and his adopted son was FUJIWARA no Mototsune.
  459. His daughter was FUJIWARA no Shigeko (Shumeimonin), a nyoin (a consort with the same rank as that of a retired emperor) of Emperor Gotoba and the mother of Emperor Juntoku.
  460. His daughter was Hibasu hime, an empress consort of Emperor Suinin.
  461. His daughter was Karahime who became the wife of Emperor Yuryaku.
  462. His daughter was Kenreimonin Ukyo no daibu.
  463. His daughter was Kibitsuhime Okimi (Empress Kyogoku and Saimei, Emperor Kotoku's mother).
  464. His daughter was Princess Kamitsu.
  465. His daughter was a wife of Saneaki SANJO.
  466. His daughter was lawful wife of Takanaga KYOGOKU.
  467. His daughter was married to FUJIWARA no Munemichi after she entered the kokyu (empress's residence) of the retired Emperor Shirakawa.
  468. His daughter was married to Motonari HATTORI, the Kanze family in Iga Province, and is said to have become the mother of Kanami, however, there is no certain evidence about it, and it remains to be confirmed.
  469. His daughter was the koi (a high-rank lady-in-waiting in the court) serving Imperial Prince Tokiyasu (later, Emperor Koko).
  470. His daughter was the lawful wife of the 15th shogun Yoshinobu TOKUGAWA.
  471. His daughter was the legal wife of Kazutsune AOKI, the feudal lord of Asada Domain in Settsu Province.
  472. His daughter was the second wife of Toshiyoshi YAGYU, and Yoshikane YAGYU who was famous as a kengo (a great swordsman) was his grandchild.
  473. His daughter was the wife of Naidaijin (minister of the center) Sanemi TOKUDAIJI.
  474. His daughter was the wife of Sadahiro KAZANIN, who had the title of Sadaijin (Minister of Left).
  475. His daughter was the wife of Suesuke YOTSUTSUJI (Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank), Sakone gon no chujo (Lower Grade, Provisional Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards)).
  476. His daughter was wife of OE no Hiromoto.
  477. His daughter was 良子 (who was a wife of Saneteru ICHIJO) and adopted son was Tadasada ICHIJO.
  478. His daughter went to the Reizei clan, who was a branch clan of the Ouchi clan (a former Shugo [provincial constable]) and was a vassal of the Mori family, through the intermediation of Terumoto MORI.
  479. His daughter won Yoshitaka's favor and gave birth to Yoshitaka OUCHI, a successor.
  480. His daughter's husband is Mitsugoro BANDO (the 9th).
  481. His daughter, Aya KODA, was also an essayist and a novelist.
  482. His daughter, Aya KODA, was noted for her essays on Rohan while he was alive.
  483. His daughter, Bunshi was a Koi (consort) of the Emperor Seiwa and she was the mother of the Imperial Prince Sadakazu.
  484. His daughter, Eikun, who was the younger sister of Sogan, married Unya NAKARAI, who practiced medicine in Sakai and was a member of Nakarai family known for being the court physicians.
  485. His daughter, Enshi SAIONJI, was the legal wife of Kanpaku (Chief Adviser to the Emperor) Michihira NIJO.
  486. His daughter, FUJIWARA no Bokushi (also known as Atsuko), became the wife of the Minister of the Left, MINAMOTO no Masanobu, giving birth to MINAMOTO no Rinshi who was later married to the Regent, FUJIWARA no Michinaga.
  487. His daughter, Fuku, who later assumed the name of Kasuga no Tsubone, was adopted by Shigemichi INABA, and later served as a wet nurse for Iemitsu TOKUGAWA, who was to become the third shogun of the Edo bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  488. His daughter, Futajinoirihime married YAMATO Takeru no Mikoto and had Inayoriwake no Miko.
  489. His daughter, Futajinoirihime, married YAMATO Takeru no Mikoto and had Inayoriwake no Miko.
  490. His daughter, HARUSUMI no Amaneiko, on the other hand, was appointed to Jusanmi like her father, served as Naishi no jo (a woman officer who carries the Emperor's sword when he goes out) and Naishi no suke (a court lady of the first rank), and served as a close aide to FUJIWARA no Onshi (the Emperor Uda's wife).
  491. His daughter, Haruko, built his grave in Jizoin Temple in September 1924.
  492. His daughter, Hiroko, became a concubine to Emperor Yomei.
  493. His daughter, Katsurahime, married Sotsuhiko of the Shinbetsu Kazuraki clan.
  494. His daughter, MIYAJI no Resshi, married Minister of the Interior FUJIWARA no Takafuji who was a descendant of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan.
  495. His daughter, SAKANOUE no Haruko, later became a wife of Emperor Kanmu and mother of Prince Kadoi.
  496. His daughter, the 16th Ikkan, took over the business and is now running it with her husband.
  497. His daughter, who was following him, was saddened to learn of her father's death at Hozuki Station.
  498. His daughter: (year of birth and death unknown)
  499. His daughters Teruko OKURA and Kazuko MOZUME were novelists.
  500. His daughters include the legitimate wife of Yoritsuna ANEGAKOJI and Nohime (legitimate wife of Nobunaga ODA).
  501. His daughters included Kawakami no irazume (the Queen of Emperor Sushun), Hotei no irazume (the Queen of Prince Tamura) and Tojiko no irazume (Prince Shotoku's wife), and these relationships enabled him to exercise political power as a maternal relative of the imperial family.
  502. His daughters included Tokuko (a wife of Munenobu Tokugawa, the lord of the Kishu Domain) and a wife of Nobusue IMADEGAWA.
  503. His daughters included a wife of Gon Dianagon, Sukeyoshi KARASUMA and a wife of Uhyoe no suke (an assistant captain of the Right Division of Middle Palace Guards),Yorinao TOMINOKOJI.
  504. His daughters married Narimasa SASA, Geni MAEDA, and Takaharu FUKUSHIMA.
  505. His daughters were Mitsuko SONO (Mibuin), who was the consort of Emperor Gomizunoo and the biological mother of Emperor Gokomyo, the wife of Shigemitsu YANAGIHARA, Dainagon, and the wife of Takatsugu KYOGOKU, the lord of Obama domain.
  506. His daughters were Sakone gon no shosho (Provisional Minor Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards) Shigekata HOSOKAWA's (the lord of the Kumamoto Domain) wife, Gon Dainagon (provisional chief councilor of state) Arimasa CHIGUSA's wife, Shuri no daibu (Master of the Office of Palace Repairs) Tadatsura SAKAI's (the lord of the Obama Domain) wife.
  507. His daughters were Shinkogimonin, Naishi no suke (a court lady of the first rank) of Emperor Gomizunoo and the biological mother of Emperor Reigen, and the wife of Tamekiyo REIZEI, Sakone Gon no Chujo (Provisional Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  508. His daughters were Takayuki KYOGOKU's lawful wife and Shigezumi TODA's lawful wife.
  509. His daughters were the wives of Gon Dainagon (provisional chief councilors of state), Naomitsu YANAGIHARA and Naomitsu YANAGIHARA.
  510. His daughters were the wives of Nobusue OGURA (小倉宣季) (Shonii [Senior Second Rank], Dainagon) and the lawful wife of Sanetsura OGIMACHI (Shonii, Dainagon).
  511. His daughters were wives of ARIWARA no Narihira and FUJIWARA no Toshiyuki.
  512. His daughters-in-law are Empress Akikonomu (a child of Lady Rokujo) and Tamakazura (The Tale of Genji) (a child between Naidaijin and Yugao), and he has an ostensible child, Kaoru (a child between Kashiwagi and Onna Sannomiya).
  513. His daugther, Hitachi no Iratsume, became Hin (imperial wife of the lowest rank) of Emperor Tenji and gave birth to Princess Yamanobe.
  514. His days as a Retainer of the Oda Family
  515. His days as a director of the Hokkaido Government Office
  516. His days as a retainer of the Toyotomi family
  517. His days in Kugenuma were, so to speak, the golden age of Ryusei KISHIDA.
  518. His dead body is buried in Hannya-no, Nara.
  519. His dead body was once interred in Arai in Totomi Province but was reinterred later in Gokokuin in Myoshin-ji Temple in Kyoto.
  520. His death
  521. His death described in "Heike Monogatari"
  522. His death developed the conflict between the Soga clan and the Mononobe clan over the imperial succession.
  523. His death haiku (Japanese poem composed immediately before one dies) was: "When I swing around, Shadows of yesterday are not seen, Dark road to go is a mountain pass to death."
  524. His death haiku (Japanese poem) read: "It is hard to leave this world, but I should go to the land beyond my birth."
  525. His death haiku (Japanese poem) was 'I will die before autumn in Kuzuharagaoka. My bitterness will remain forever'.
  526. His death haiku (Japanese poem) was `I do not want to either die or live, my flower falls or not depending on wind'.
  527. His death haiku (Japanese poem) was `大ていは 地に任せて 肌骨好し 紅粉を塗らず 自ら風流.'
  528. His death haiku (Japanese poem) was, 'I wonder to go to summer fields for a pastime as a soul; (人魂で 行く気散じや 夏野原) (I will be able to become a true edakumi [painter]).'
  529. His death haiku (Japanese poem): 'Now I open the teppatsu bag (iron bowl bag) in which I put bad dreams of these days.'
  530. His death haiku read 'My mind that served for you came to nothing, and will only clear up after you've gone.'
  531. His death haiku read: 'Omoukoto Tsukushitemo-hatezu Sasowarete Kaeranu-tabini Kokoro-nokoshite' (Since my thoughts over many matters are unending, I have regrets over my leave for a journey with no return).
  532. His death haiku was
  533. His death poem (composed on the eve of his death) is: "If I don't come back alive, I'll fly in the sky to save the imperial reign for our country".
  534. His death poem implies his ambition and regret.
  535. His death poem is "I, as samurai, was determined not to live a double-hearted life but to dedicate my life toward my only destination."
  536. His death poem is said to have been "I depart on a journey, leaving my brush in the East, to scenic places in the Western country", but some people think that someone else might have made it.
  537. His death poem reads 'Living an exciting life in the not-exciting world.'
  538. His death poem was "I was just going the way I believed the best as if going with the help of the moon light in front of me, in this unpredictable warring world".
  539. His death poem was as follows.
  540. His death poem was: 'My life was like an empty dream in a summer night. Little cuckoo, fly high above the clouds to hand down my name to posterity.'
  541. His death resulted in the extinction of the male line of MINAMOTO no Yoritomo (with the death of Take no Gosho three years later, the female line was also extinguished).
  542. His death waka was composed while looking at a Japanese apricot tree in the garden means that if I leave here, you might be a dwelling without a master, but don't forget spring, a Japanese apricot by the eaves.
  543. His death was announced for the first time on this day, it was decide the date he died was on July 10.
  544. His death was lamented even to the extent of somebody saying, 'there will be no one like him having such wisdom in five hundred years.'
  545. His death was mourned by people, starting with his father, Norifusa ICHIJO, members of his clan, such as grandfather Kaneyoshi ICHIJO and uncle, as well as emperor, aristocrats, and shogun of togun and seigun (western army) who knew him.
  546. His debut as a director was with "Zange no Yaiba" (The Sword of Penitence) in 1927.
  547. His debut in the world of waka poetry was late, but he contributed to uta-awase (poetry contests) not only as a composer, but also often as a judge.
  548. His decedents, who lived in Takashima Village, Takashima Country (Haido, Takashima City, Shiga Prefecture), constructed Mio-jinja Shrine, which is Engishikinaisha (shrine enlisted in Engishiki code) and Kensha (prefectural shrine [of prefectures other than Kyoto and Osaka]), to enshrine Iwatsukuwake no mikoto.
  549. His decision to take MINAMOTO no Yoshinaka's side resulted from the marital relationship with the Nakahara family, which suggests that the blood relation of the maternal line was regarded as relatively important at that time.
  550. His dedication to his duties were so evaluated that he was given 2,000 koku for Awa Province and 1,000 koku for Shimosa Province.
  551. His deeds of valor in Jinshin War indicates that SAKAIBE no Kusuri was pardoned later.
  552. His deep feelings towards Fujitsubo, who resembles his mother, becomes his first love, and he holds sexual relationships with various women throughout his life as he searches for a woman with his mother's features.
  553. His deep knowledge of law was recognized and he entered the Minbusho (the Ministry of Popular Affairs).
  554. His deity name 'Shina' means 'long breath.'
  555. His demonstrations were in the Sogetsu school form in front of an audience and as the displays faced the audience, he made the arrangements from behind the display, so called `backwards Ikebana.`
  556. His descendant clan was Tajihi clan, which flourished from the Asuka period to the early Heian period as a dominantly powerful family and a high-ranked aristocracy.
  557. His descendant is said to have called itself the Serada clan, and thereafter called itself the Mafune clan from the Edo period.
  558. His descendant prospered as the Shijo family, one of the Urin family.
  559. His descendant was Hatamoto (direct retainers of the bakufu, which is a form of Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  560. His descendant was exiled.
  561. His descendant, Hachirobei was awarded a posthumous prize in 1879 and also awarded Shogoi (Senior Fifth Rank) in May 1907.
  562. His descendant, Kinmochi SAIONJI, assumed a key government post.
  563. His descendant, Yoriaki HAMURO was a former guji of Kasugataisha Shrine.
  564. His descendants acceded to hatamoto (a direct vassal of the shogun) and even ranked with koke (privileged family under Tokugawa Shogunate) in a certain period due to its distinguished family line since the Muromachi period.
  565. His descendants adopted the name "Koami" as their family name.
  566. His descendants also handed down the techniques and served the domains of Kaga and Toyama.
  567. His descendants also served in the Owari Domain and possessed a residence (called Kawa Yashiki) in the former castle town of Kawa.
  568. His descendants are said to have worked for Hideyasu YUKI.
  569. His descendants became Shogun's retainers for generations.
  570. His descendants became merchants.
  571. His descendants became prosperous in several families including the Nishinotoin family, the Hiramatsu family, and the Katano family.
  572. His descendants became prosperous in the wide area centering in Hizen Province.
  573. His descendants became the Genji choja (the top of the Minamoto clan).
  574. His descendants became the Hirohata family of the Seiga family.
  575. His descendants became the Shirakawahakuo family.
  576. His descendants branched off in the Chichibu clan (Kawagoe clan and Hatakeyama clan [Taira clan]), the Boso Taira clan (Kazusa clan and Chiba clan), and the Nakamura clan (Sagami Province) (Dohi clan and Tsuchiya clan), and they formed armed groups in the Kanto region, extending their influence.
  577. His descendants called their families the Muromachi family or Hosshoji family, but their lines became extinct during the Muromachi period.
  578. His descendants called themselves Ishikawa-Genji (the Minamoto clan of Ishikawa) and included the Ishikawa clan, Kondo clan, Hiraga clan, Manriki clan, and Kumata clan.
  579. His descendants called themselves Kashiwabara, Hinokizaka, Koto and so on, no record of significant activity is seen that compares to the line of his three elder brothers.
  580. His descendants called themselves the Mikata clan as they were based on Mikata County and became hikan (low-level bureaucrat) of the Isshiki clan who held the post of Wakasa shugo in the early Muromachi period.
  581. His descendants continue living today as the Shijo family of the House of Urin.
  582. His descendants continued as the Nijo family and the Hiramatsu family, but they became terminated during the middle ages.
  583. His descendants continued to be in Noto, and they called themselves the Naga clan, and served the Maeda clan.
  584. His descendants flourished as the Hirohata family of Katsuranomiya family and Seiga family.
  585. His descendants fulfilled their duties as chief retainers for the Honda family.
  586. His descendants have served the imperial court as a musician until today, many of his descendants turned out to be a gagakuka (musician of old Japanese court music).
  587. His descendants include Hisaoki KAMEI, a politician, and his daughter Akiko KAMEI (also politician).
  588. His descendants passed on kyujutsu for generations as Owari feudal retainers, but the 10th-generation descendant, Kanzaemon Hisanori (deceased in 1906), had no legitimate son and so Tsunemasa TOMITA succeeded as the 11th-generation descendant.
  589. His descendants played important roles as prominent figures among hereditary vassals for generations and his direct descendant became an outstanding wealthy hereditary vassal of the Dewa Shonai Clan with 140,000 koku (increased to 170,000 koku at the end of Edo period).
  590. His descendants received a fief yielding 6,000 koku of rice.
  591. His descendants received the surname of Kanmu-Heishi (Taira clan) after that.
  592. His descendants served as Yakuinshi.
  593. His descendants served as middle rank of government officials for some generations, and the descendants who became a priest are such as Yoshiakira TSUINA of Rikusho-ji Temple and Kangyo (観曉) who served as the manager of the temple.
  594. His descendants served as the same role and Shojiro OGASAWARA served as teacher of archery at Kobusho (a military training institute) at the end of Edo period, but the family ended in the period of the Restoration.
  595. His descendants served as the vassals of the Edo Shogunate.
  596. His descendants served the Koriyama Domain.
  597. His descendants served the Sendai Domain and received high salaries for generations.
  598. His descendants served the Todo clan (chief of the Tsu Domain) (his salary was 600 Koku of rice); from generation to generation, they claimed to be Rokuzaemon and handed down their techniques through only one student (Yuiju Ichinin, to succeed everything that the master knows about the art to only one excellent disciple).
  599. His descendants served the Tokugawa Shogunate as daimyo of the top rank, although their stipend was only 5,000 koku, and returned to the original name of Ashikaga after the Meiji Restoration.
  600. His descendants settled in Kyushu and successively inherited the Daizu-fu 'post.'
  601. His descendants spread out around Japan.
  602. His descendants spread to Hizen Province and flourished as the Ogashima (小鹿島) clan named after the place name Ogashima (present-day Oga City, Akita Prefecture) which was temporarily the territory of his second son Kiminari.
  603. His descendants still remain as hatamoto.
  604. His descendants successively inherited the post of chief priest.
  605. His descendants survived as Gokenin (shogunal retainers) and they all called themselves 'Yoshimi'.
  606. His descendants survived as feudal retainers of the same clan.
  607. His descendants survived the Edo period as members of the Yonezawa clan.
  608. His descendants took over Noh for generations.
  609. His descendants took the name TANAKA.
  610. His descendants used the surname of NIKAIDO and the direct descendants of Yukimitsu NIKAIDO assumed the post of Mandokoro for generations almost exclusively.
  611. His descendants were buried in history after Mifune, along with the change of the imperial line from the Tenmu to the Tenji.
  612. His descendants were given the family name of Minamoto and became Juntoku-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  613. His descendants were mainly the Daigo-Genji, including his son, MINAMOTO no Takakuni, and his grandson MINAMOTO no Toshiaki (1044-1114), and formed three generations of Dainagon (chief councilor of state).
  614. His descendants were named the Ariwara clan.
  615. His descendants were stated in the thesis 'The Last Lord of Gifu-jo Castle - Hidenobu IDA's Death and his Descendants' which was written by Hiroyuki KANO and posted in the 13th edition of "The Unification of Japan" in 2000.
  616. His descendants were the prestige clans of Satsuma Province such as Chiran clan and Usuku clan; the clans settled in Echizen Province (Tadanobu SHIMAZU) and Shinano Province (Shinano-Shimazu clan) were also his descendants.
  617. His descendants, especially the Nijo family (main branch of the Mikohidari family), were enthusiastic for not only waka (Japanese poetry) but kemari.
  618. His descendent continued as a hatamoto of 700 koku.
  619. His descendent inherited the family name 'Wakatsuki,' became kokujin (the local lord) in Shinano Province, and later this family became the Murakami clan's subordinate.
  620. His descendent, Soyu KATAGIRI, was known as a master of the tea ceremony; however, there is no pedigree record of a tea school after him.
  621. His descendents became retainers of Tsugaru.
  622. His descendents became vassals of the Hosokawa clan of Kumamoto Domain, Higo Province.
  623. His descendents continued living in Totomi and served the Suruga Imagawa clan after transferring shugoshiki (military governor) to the Shiba clan.
  624. His descendents established their influence in Shinano Province, and enjoyed the prosperity as the Shinshu-Murakami clan.
  625. His descendents had survived the purge by the regent Hojo clan, and during the Sengoku period (period of warring state), they followed the Gohojo clan.
  626. His descendents in Tokyo have been farmers for generations, and the present descendents are also farmers there.
  627. His descendents include famous poets such as Kinsachi TAKAMATSU.
  628. His descendents persisted as a hatamoto with more than 3,010 koku (about 543 cubic meters) crop yield.
  629. His descendents survived for generations as a local ruling family, maintaining the contact with the Ano clan, the descendant of Gien's elder brother Zenjo Ano.
  630. His descendents were named the Hongo clan and continued as gokenin (shogunal retainers) in Kyoto in the Kamakura period.
  631. His descendents were split into two, one in Yamato and the other in Settsu, and formed the Uno clan and the Toshima clan, respectively.
  632. His descendents, in later periods, enjoyed prosperity as the Ota clan, and one of the eminent figures during the early Sengoku Period (period for warring states), Dokan OTA was from this clan.
  633. His descendents, who migrated to Mito, settled there and used the surname 'Tsuda.'
  634. His description in each document is as follows.
  635. His description in fiction
  636. His designs were varied including landscapes, portraits, flowers and birds.
  637. His desire was to follow in the footsteps of his great-grandfather and grandfather by serving at Daigaku-ryo (Bureau of Education under the ritsuryo system) and bringing a scholarly reputation back to his family.
  638. His destiny changed radically because of the Jokyu Disturbance in 1221.
  639. His detailed achievements are unknown, but there is a record saying that he died during his mission as Shimotsuke no kami or near that time (according to Daijokanpu [official documents issued by Daijokan, Grand Council of State] Vol.8 of "Ruiju fusensho" [a collection of official documents dating from the years 737 to 1093]).
  640. His detailed achievements were unknown, but he built Shukuno-jo Castle in Nose-gun, Settsu Province around 987.
  641. His detailed bijinga (portraits of beautiful women) seem to have been highly recognized at that time, and were described as 'Shunsho Ippuku Atai Senkin' (One painting by Shunsho is worth a thousand gold coins).
  642. His detailed genealogy is not known, but it seems that he served Yoshitsune from very early age as the retainer trained from boyhood.
  643. His detailed profile is unknown, but it is said that he was a senior vassal of the Yamana clan.
  644. His devotion was noted by the kuge (court nobles) and buke (samurai families), and in October, 1838, he received 'Sencha Iemoto,' written in calligraphy, from the head of the Ichijo family at the time.
  645. His diary "A Record of Einin Three Years" was handed down in the Ota family, and then inherited by Kaga no zenji, former Governor of Kaga Province, Junko MACHINO in the Muromachi period.
  646. His diary "Chikanaga kyo ki" still exists today and serves as valuable historical material from that age.
  647. His diary "Kichiki," or "Kikki," is still in existence.
  648. His diary "Toin Kinsada nikki" (the diary of Kinsada TOIN)and its fragmentary pieces of 1374 and 1377 written by himself remain.
  649. His diary "Tokinori-ki" exists today, which recorded the situation of Inaba Province when he visited there as its governor in 1099, so the diary is a precious historical source that enables us to know about things at that time, such as the activities of Zuryo (the head of the provincial governors) and the circumstances of Inaba Province.
  650. His diary 'Mitsutoyo koki' is an important historical source for the situations in the early Edo period.
  651. His diary called "A Diary of Lord Motonaga HIGASHIZONO" ("Higashizono Motonaga Kyo-ki" in Japanese) remains today.
  652. His diary called "Heihanki" is famous as the top historical document clearly recording political conditions and rituals of the imperial court in the late Heian period.
  653. His diary covers the period from the time when he became Kurodo no to until the time when he was appointed Udaijin and Kone no Sadaisho (Major Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards), providing descriptions of an enormous number of court rituals.
  654. His diary is called 'Tokiyoshiki,' and it shows that his wide social circle included the Imperial Court and samurai families, as well as entertainment circles.
  655. His diary is known as "Ranen Kiso" (蘭園記草).
  656. His diary that started at the age of around 11 and ran until his death has been handed down as an important historical material on the insei period (during the period of the government by the retired Emperor) in the reprint name of "Choshuki" (The Diary of MINAMOTO no Morotoki).
  657. His diary was called "Angen onga no nikki" (the record of the ceremony celebrating Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa's 50th birthday) and his love story with Kogo in "Heike monogatari" (The Tale of the Heike) was well known.
  658. His diary was called "Koryaku."
  659. His diary, "Gonki," is considered to be an important contribution as an important historical source for the Sekkan period (the period ruled by Seessho regent and chief adviser to the emperor).
  660. His diary, "Shoyuki," provides valuable material for understanding this period.
  661. His died at the age of 25.
  662. His died at the age of 98.
  663. His died at the age of fifty-nine (according to 'Kansei Choshu Shokafu' (Kansei Continued Lineages of the Various Houses)).
  664. His dietary life also seemed to be in disorder, as a matter of course.
  665. His different pseudonym was Aiai koji.
  666. His different pseudonyms were Chodo and Seigyu.
  667. His different pseudonyms were Roeshi (master painter), Kujo (nine Japanese tatami mat), Senshi, and others.
  668. His direct-line descendants were alive in the area until the beginning of the Showa period with the ODA family still existing today.
  669. His directed works
  670. His direction was unique, incorporating unusual sound for kabuki and comical elements characteristic of his works.
  671. His directorial debut was a movie entitled "Tange Sazen: Kokezaru no tsubo"(1954).
  672. His disciple Denjiro SAWAMURA became his son in law who later succeeded to the eighth Tosshi SAWAMURA and carried on the style of performance.
  673. His disciple Hokkai KATAYAMA edited and published literary remains after the death of Meika.
  674. His disciple Kenjo DAITEN edited and published literary remains after the death of Meika.
  675. His disciple Miyakoji Bungo no jo, who had renamed it as Bungo-bushi, introduced it into Edo in 1734.
  676. His disciple was Sodo HORINOUCHI.
  677. His disciple's disciple, Onizaburo DEGUCHI taught that not only the human's mind but also all things in nature were composed of Ichirei shikon and wrote many books about it.
  678. His disciple, Jo Gen (Zheng Xuan) developed a theory centered around Sanreichu and running through the entire Five Classics without contradictions, and compiled the learning of Keisho in the Han Dynasty.
  679. His disciple, Kyoshin (Xu Shen), wrote "Setsumon-kaiji" (Shuowen Jiezi) to deny the legitimacy of character interpretation based on Kinbun, and made a significant contribution to the development of Kobun learning.
  680. His disciple, Shinran, praised his true master Genku or Genku Sho'nin in "Shoshin Nenbutsuge" as well as in "Koso Wasan," and it was the joy if his lifetime to be Genku's disciple.
  681. His disciples became pioneers of 'Nenbutsu-hijiri,' such as Koya-hijiri, who as practitioners of Jodo-kyo caused it to become widespread among the people after the medieval times, and this had a great influence on Ippen during the Kamakura period.
  682. His disciples include Bunnosuke KATSURA the second, Baika KATSURA the third, Tobe KATSURA the third (Denkichi MOTOKAWA), Marumaru UKIYOTEI (later Otojiro KAWAKAMI), Edataro KATSURA the first, Nekomaru KATSURA the second, Ryushi KATSURA and others.
  683. His disciples include Jiro YASUNARI.
  684. His disciples include Kiitsu SUZUKI and Koson IKEDA.
  685. His disciples include Konpei HAYASHIYA and Pe HAYASHIYA.
  686. His disciples include Ryohen (Risshu sect), Shogen and Ensho.
  687. His disciples include Shugetsu, Soen, and Toshun.
  688. His disciples include Ukoku KAWAMURA, Nanchiku TSUDA, and Shonsen IKESHIMA.
  689. His disciples included Choshuku YOSHIDA, Hotei FUJII, Shindo TSUBOI, Nobuhiro SATO, Koan OGATA, Komin KAWAMOTO, Genpo MITSUKURI, Yokusai IINUMA, and Rinso AOCHI.
  690. His disciples included Cloistered Imperial Prince Shukaku of Ninna-ji Temple.
  691. His disciples included Doni NAKAZAWA, Shoo FUSE, Kisui UEKAWA, Gido WAKISAKA and Tokuken SATTA.
  692. His disciples included Genjo NORO, Shohaku NIWA and Joan MATSUOKA.
  693. His disciples included Genkai and Ikkai.
  694. His disciples included Genpaku SUGITA, Kenkado KIMURA, Yokusai IINUMA, Buncho TANI, Kinsai SAKURADA, Toyobumi MIZUTANI, Koki MITANI, Ekisai KARIYA, Rissen YOSHIDA, and Morinae YAMAMOTO (the adoptive great-grandfather of Gombei YAMAMOTO, Prime Minister in the Taisho period).
  695. His disciples included Gyohyo (722-797).
  696. His disciples included Hisayuki MATSUYA who treasured the three special products of Matsuya inherited from Juko.
  697. His disciples included Jokai and Bensei.
  698. His disciples included Kangyo.
  699. His disciples included Kani, Gyozen, and Choshin.
  700. His disciples included Kikaku TAKARAI, Ransetsu HATTORI, Kyoriku MORIKAWA, Kyorai MUKAI, Shiko KAGAMI, Joso NAITO, Sora KAWAI, Sanpu SUGIYAMA, Hokushi TACHIBANA, Yaba SHIDA, and Etsujin OCHI, who were called the ten representative pupils under Basho MATSUO, and Boncho NOZAWA.
  701. His disciples included Ninsho and Shinku.
  702. His disciples included Roben and Gyoki who took part in the foundation of Todai-ji Temple.
  703. His disciples included Shinshichi KAWATAKE III (the 3rd), Kisui TAKESHIBA and Noshin KATSU.
  704. His disciples included Shobo and Ryukai.
  705. His disciples included Shokichi WATANABE Kudan (nine dan), Tadao TOMITA Hachidan (eight dan) and others.
  706. His disciples included Tenyu NAKA, Soteki FUSEYA, Bunken KAGAMI, Hosaku SAITO, Shosai OYA, Kenzo FUJITA, Gengo NAKAGAWA, and Ryohei NAKAGAWA.
  707. His disciples included Todo MIZUNO.
  708. His disciples included Yokusai IINUMA, Keisuke ITO (Doctor of Science), Hobun MIZUTANI, Boyo YAMAMOTO, Tou KOMORI, Fuzan FUJIBAYASHI and Shindo TSUBOI.
  709. His disciples were Choei TAKANO, Kazan WATANABE, Sanei KOSEKI, Chosyun ADACHI, Shutoku KAWAMOTO, Shunzan SUZUKI and Choan MINATO.
  710. His disciples were Joko SEGAWA (the third), Mokuami KAWATAKE and so on.
  711. His disciples were Naokata SATO, Keisai ASAMI, Shosai MIYAKE, Konpai UEDA, Mokusai YUSA, Jinzan TANI, Kinmichi OGIMACHI and Yoshinao IZUMOJI.
  712. His disciples were Naoyoshi KUMAGAI, Takafumi KINOSHITA, Ayao SUGANUMA and so on.
  713. His disciples were Ranzan ONO, Kyokuzan TODA, Sogen HATTORI, Tonan ASAI, Kotosuga TANIGAWA, Totekishi YOKOCHI, and Genshu NAOMI.
  714. His disciples were active as illustrators and Japanese-style painters.
  715. His disciples, Yakushin and Shobo, opened the Hirosawa school and Ono school, respectively, and eventually the Tomitsu (eastern esotericism) was divided into these two schools.
  716. His discourtesy made Masamichi TAKATSUKASA, Kanpaku (chief adviser to the Emperor), furious and Akiteru was dismissed from Kurodo in November 1847 and from other posts including Sashoben (Minor Controller of the Left) in January 1848. (The official record reads that he tendered his letter of resignation voluntarily.)
  717. His disgraceful behavior is described in "Heiji Monogatari" (The Tale of the Heiji) in a totally critical tone.
  718. His disgraceful behavior that Hakozaki-hachimangu Shrine was burned by the enemy drew criticism from the public.
  719. His dislike of Hideyoshi may be adaptation in future ages, but it seems that he actually disliked Hideyoshi, since he was so loyal to the Oda clan (Nobunaga) that he attempted to rise in revolt with Ieyasu after Nobukatsu ODA surrendered.
  720. His distinctive style of calligraphy produced Japanese characters that were said to resemble 'withered branches'.
  721. His dogo (a priest's pseudonym) was Kikuen.
  722. His dogo (a pseudonym as a priest) was Daikyu.
  723. His dogo (a pseudonym as a priest) was Daisetsu.
  724. His dogo (a pseudonym as a priest) was Donei.
  725. His dogo (a pseudonym as a priest) was Guchu.
  726. His dogo (a pseudonym as a priest) was Jiun.
  727. His dogo (a pseudonym as a priest) was Mukyoku.
  728. His dogo (a pseudonym as a priest) was Ryuzan.
  729. His dogo (a pseudonym as a priest) was Taiko.
  730. His dogo (a pseudonym as a priest) was Tensho.
  731. His dogo (a pseudonym as a priest) was Togan.
  732. His dogo (a pseudonym as a priest) was 柏仲.
  733. His dogo (priest name) was Taiyu Soho, and ango (temple name or pen name ending with the character an) was Kohoan.
  734. His dogo (pseudonym as a priest) was Chishin.
  735. His dogo (pseudonym as a priest) was Keijo.
  736. His domain was Matsuda County in Sagami Province, and he also went by the name of Kanja MATSUDA.
  737. His domain was increased by 10,000 koku and moved to Koga Domain in Shimosa Province, with his promotion as roju (member of shogun's council of elders), but this was cut short by his death in the following year.
  738. His draft of the budget for 1913 aimed to reduce spending by 10%, but the Imperial Japan Army demanded the addition of two military divisions, and the Imperial Japan Navy also added construction of three battleships in the budget proposal.
  739. His drawings are free-spirited and eccentric just like what his character is said to have been.
  740. His drawings had a great influence on later generations, and there are many individuals who engage in creative activities, such as Shigeru MIZUKI and Natsuhiko KYOGOKU, who use work by Sekien as motifs.
  741. His drawn sword squad, the best of swordsmen picked up from commissaries, played an active part in defeating the Satsuma Army in a fierce battle at Tabaruzaka and he participated in the battle for capturing Okuchi in May.
  742. His dream must have been Yoshiie being dragged into hell.
  743. His duties entailed being the priest for French people who were residing in the foreign settlement of Oura.
  744. His duty was Shikibu shoyu (Junior Assistant of the Ministry of Ceremonial).
  745. His dying age was 20.
  746. His dying age was 28.
  747. His dying age was 69, which was same as his father Takaakira.
  748. His earlier career was unknown.
  749. His earliest certified Buddhist statue was produced in the Ezochi (southern part of Hokkaido) in 1778 when he was in his sixty-first year.
  750. His earliest known ancestor is Saneyoshi TOKUDAIJI, a son of FUJIWARA no Kinzane.
  751. His early childhood name was Monjumaru.
  752. His early swords are called 'Gojitada-mei' and most of them are believed to be signed as 'Hizen no kuni (Hizen Province) Chukichi'.
  753. His early works after being promoted to film director
  754. His early works are characterized by innovative art and design with a strong secession (an artistic movement in Germany during the 19th century) influence (for example, the Osaka Dojima Rice Exchange and Arisawa Ophthalmic Clinic), but are prone to collapsing.
  755. His early years
  756. His earning base was exceptionally largely increased from a rice crop of 1.5 million koku (approx. 180 liters/koku) to a rice crop of 2.5 million koku.
  757. His easy-to-understand edification through waka (traditional Japanese poems of thirty-one syllables) and wasan (Buddhist verses), and nenbutsu kanjin to all people regardless of his or her belief or disbelief, cleanliness or uncleanliness were a big opportunity for Buddhism to become religion of the common people.
  758. His eboshi-oya (guardian) was MINAMOTO no Yoshitada who was a leader of Kawachi-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  759. His eboshioya (a person who puts an eboshi on a young man's head in the case of genpuku ceremony) was Yoriuji ASHIKAGA.
  760. His educational books include "Yojo kun" (precepts for the preservation of health), "Wazoku Doji kun" (precepts for education), and "Gojo kun" (precepts for five eternal virtues).
  761. His educator was Murasaki Shikibu's daughter, Daini no Sanmi.
  762. His effect on his descendents
  763. His efforts are believed to have contributed immensely to the preservation of the Toyotomi clan for 15 years after Sekigahara.
  764. His efforts to undermine ITAGAKI achieved some of the results; however, attempts to organize the anti- ITAGAKI force failed since they prompted the reinstatement of former Sabaku-ha (supporters of the Shogun) and SASAKI and SAITOU were regarded as ITAGAKI's allies (as betrayers who helped to establish the new government) and accused.
  765. His efforts were wildly successful, with "Narayamabushiko" and his 1997 "Unagi" both winning the Grand Prix (today's Palme d' Or) at the Cannes Film Festival, the first time a Japanese director had ever won twice (only five directors, including Francis Ford Coppola, have ever won the top prize twice).
  766. His eison (descendant), Sadamune MATSUI was given Futamata Castle of Totoumi Province and became a kokujin in Totoumi Province.
  767. His elder brother (Sakon KANZE) was the 24th head of the family.
  768. His elder brother FUJIWARA no Norinaga was exiled to Hitachi Province as an aide of Emperor Sutoku at the Hogen War, and Yorisuke had to stay in his house in Higashiyama (Kyoto Prefecture) although Yorisuke was not willingly involved in the incident.
  769. His elder brother KI no Natsui was a capable official held in high esteem.
  770. His elder brother Shogaku was the founder of the Daigo Sanbo-in School, the largest of the six most prominent schools (Six Schools of Ono) of Shingon Sect Shugendo (mountain asceticism).
  771. His elder brother Tadanao also complimented Naomasa's performance, and granted a shoryo (territory) of 10,000 koku from his own territory.
  772. His elder brother Tsugunobu was killed in the Battle of Yashima.
  773. His elder brother is called Hoderi and his younger brother is called Hoori.
  774. His elder brother was Dainagon (chief councilor of state) Ujitada OINOMIKADO and his younger brother was Gon Dainagon (a provisional major councilor) Iekoto OINOMIKADO.
  775. His elder brother was FUJIWARA no Akimitsu (who served as Sadaijin (minister of the left), his younger sister was FUJIWARA no Koko (Empress of Emperor Enyu), his son was FUJIWARA no Asatsune, and his daughter was FUJIWARA no Choshi (a court lady who served Emperor Kazan).
  776. His elder brother was Juro YAMAUCHI, and his younger brother was Yasutoyo YAMAUCHI..
  777. His elder brother was Kaoru SAKURAI, and his younger brother was Ryozo SAKURAI.
  778. His elder brother was Kinkuni SANJONISHI.
  779. His elder brother was MINAMOTO no Nakakuni who was a close associate of Emperor Takakura and his younger brother was MINAMOTO no Nakanari.
  780. His elder brother was MINAMOTO no Yoshihira, and his younger brothers were: MINAMOTO no Yoritomo, MINAMOTO no Noriyori, and MINAMOTO no Yoshitsune.
  781. His elder brother was Masaharu TAKAYAMA.
  782. His elder brother was Masatsune KAGAWA (香川正経).
  783. His elder brother was Michina KOGA.
  784. His elder brother was Michitomo KOGA (Juichii, Naidaijin), and his younger brother was Hiromasu HORIKAWA (who served the bakufu [Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun] and became Koke-Hatamoto [direct retainers of the bakufu, who were in a privileged family under Tokugawa Shogunate]).
  785. His elder brother was Morimasa KAMATA, commonly known as Tota.
  786. His elder brother was TACHIBANA no Kimitada.
  787. His elder brother was Tomomasa.
  788. His elder brother was Yorikuni OINOMIKADO.
  789. His elder brother was Yoshimasa AZAI.
  790. His elder brother was the twenty-second chief priest, Kozui OTANI (Kyonyo), and his younger sister was Takeko KUJO.
  791. His elder brother, Hisanobu OSHIMA (Colonel of the Army)
  792. His elder brother, Imperial Prince Kitashirakawanomiya Yoshihisa, succeeded the Kitashirakawanomiya family by his testament.
  793. His elder brother-uterine is TAIRA no Korenaka and his sons are TAIRA no Masayasu and TAIRA no Mochiyasu"平以康".
  794. His elder brother-uterine was Imperial Prince Koretada, and younger brother-uterine was Emperor Uda.
  795. His elder brothers by the same mother were FUJIWARA no Koremichi, who became Grand Minister of State, and FUJIWARA no Suemichi, who became Sashosho (Minor Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  796. His elder brothers were Michihira KOGA and Michitada KOGA.
  797. His elder brothers were Morotaka KUJO and Yukinori KUJO, and his elder sister was Princess Suke, who later became the lawful wife of Yoshimichi TOKUGAWA, the load of the Owari Domain.
  798. His elder brothers were Munezane OINOMIKADO and Nobutsune OINOMIKADO.
  799. His elder brothers were Yoshinao KIRA and Yoriuji KIRA.
  800. His elder brothers were saburo (the third son) Tadayuki SHIMAZU and shiro (the fourth son) Tadayasu SHIMAZU.
  801. His elder brothers-uterine included the fifth crown Imperial Prince Tsuneakira.
  802. His elder paternal half-sister was the mother of FUJIWARA no Michitsuna, who is regarded as a female waka poet and one of the Chuko sanjurokkasen (medieval 36 Immortal Poets).
  803. His elder sister Koran and his nephew Shuto were also painters.
  804. His elder sister was Koreko KONOE, nyogo of Emperor Gomomozono.
  805. His elder sister, SAKANOUE no Haruko was a consort of Emperor Kanmu.
  806. His elder sister, Shunkoin, was a concubine of Naotaka II, the lord of Hikone Domain.
  807. His eldest brother Katsuhide KYOGOKU and second eldest brother Masamitsu KYOGOKU predeceased him, and his grandchild, who is also thought to be Katsuhide's legitimate child, succeeded as head of the family but died in 1471.
  808. His eldest brother was Danjuro ICHIKAWA (XI) and his second eldest brother was Hakuo MATSUMOTO (I).
  809. His eldest brother, Hidetsuna SASAKI, and older brother Hidemune SASAKI died in battle in 1353 and 1348, respectively, leaving him heir to the Kyogoku clan, a branch family of the Sasaki clan.
  810. His eldest brother, Nobuyasu MATSUDAIRA died in the year when Hidetada was born and his older brother by a concubine, Hideyasu YUKI was adopted by Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI and later succeeded the Yuki clan.
  811. His eldest brother, Shigetsune, was a businessman and became the president of Sagami-boseki.
  812. His eldest child, Mochitsune, succeeded to the father's position as the Tachibanashi choja.
  813. His eldest daughter married Kunio ODAKA.
  814. His eldest daughter was Akiko KUNI who was born after he renounced membership in the Imperial Family.
  815. His eldest daughter was the wife of Mitsunori TODA.
  816. His eldest daughter, Yoshiko, married Katsumichi OTANI; his second daughter, Setsuko, married Count Yasushi MATSUURA; his third daughter, Shizuko, married Baron Kunie TSUMORI; and his fourth daughter, Fukuko, married Mototate SONO.
  817. His eldest legitimate son, Noritoshi served Ieyasu TOKUGAWA and Hidetada TOKUGAWA from 1592 and died in 1635 at the age of 62.
  818. His eldest sister Junko IZUMI (real name is Junko YAMAWAKI, her family name after marriage is unknown, 1969 -) became a person who was much talked about when she appeared in TV spot advertising as "the first-ever female kyogen performer."
  819. His eldest sister's husband, Bunjo, was adapted to become the heir.
  820. His eldest son (Masanori ABE) took over as heads of the family.
  821. His eldest son FUJIWARA no Hirotsugu caused the Rebellion of FUJIWARA no Hirotsugu three years later.
  822. His eldest son Gunpei and his third son Kohei had moved to Hakodate to engage in fishing in northern Japan.
  823. His eldest son Icchu NAKAMURA who succeeded his father as the head of the family actively fought in Mino region.
  824. His eldest son Masakiyo succeeded to the family estate.
  825. His eldest son Nagataka ODA received the territory of 10,000 koku (Nomura Domain) in Ono County, Mino Province in return for his distinguished military service during the Battle of Sekigahara, but died in 1606, and his son Naganori ODA died without heir (in 1631), which put an end to the Oda family.
  826. His eldest son Ryuan HORI served Hiroshima Domain, and his second son, Bosai HORI and his third son, Dorin HORI served Nagoya Domain.
  827. His eldest son Sukeshige succeeded him.
  828. His eldest son Tadayuki succeeded him.
  829. His eldest son Takatomo was adopted by the Akimoto family (Tadamasa's wife was from the Akimoto family) and his second son Tadazane succeeded as head of the family.
  830. His eldest son Toshio YUKI succeeded Honkitcho, his eldest daughter's husband Shojiro YUKI succeeded Tokyo Kitcho, his second daughter's husband Koji TOKUOKA succeeded Kyoto Kitcho, his third daughter's husband Masanori YUKI succeeded Senba Kitcho, and his fourth daughter's husband Yoshikazu YUKI succeeded Kobe Kitcho.
  831. His eldest son Tsunataka took over as the head of the family.
  832. His eldest son Umejiro succeeded the name of Genzo the second, and also succeeded the company.
  833. His eldest son Yataro MISHIMA became the eighth Governor of the Bank of Japan, his third son Yahiko MISHIMA became a member of the Japan's first Olympic team and his grand son Michiharu MISHIMA became the fourth President of Scout Association of Japan.
  834. His eldest son Yoshimasa married Sumie, who was the second daughter of a historian Taira SHIDEHARA, and his second son Yoshishige KOZAI is known as a Marxian philosopher.
  835. His eldest son is Daisuke TENGAN; he was a playwright and film director.
  836. His eldest son is Fukusuke NAKAMURA IX, his second son is Hashinosuke NAKAMURA III, and Kanzaburo NAKAMURA XVIII is married to his second daughter, Yoshie.
  837. His eldest son is Keisuke SHIOTSU.
  838. His eldest son is Kiyokazu KANZE, the second son is Yaemon YAMASHINA (later changed his name as Yoshihiro KANZE), and the third son is Yoshinobu KANZE.
  839. His eldest son is Norinaga UMEWAKA and the second son is Hisanori UMEWAKA.
  840. His eldest son is Yoshito SEKINE.
  841. His eldest son is a poet, Akifumi SEN.
  842. His eldest son is the current iemoto, Soshitsu SEN (the sixteenth).
  843. His eldest son was Enkichi OKI (Minister of Justice in Hara and Takahashi cabinets and Minister of Railway in Kato cabinet).
  844. His eldest son was Ichiro HATOYAMA (statesman, Prime Minister) and his second son was Hideo HATOYAMA (scholar of law).
  845. His eldest son was Motomasa KANZE.
  846. His eldest son was Takatomi KYOGOKU.
  847. His eldest son was Takatsugu TODO.
  848. His eldest son was Tsuneyori MATSUDAIRA.
  849. His eldest son, FUJIWARA no Tadazane, was born in 1078, but the couple's relationship became distant.
  850. His eldest son, Katsunari HISAMATSU succeeded Katsuyuki.
  851. His eldest son, Kiyomitsu KANZE, became the eighteenth head of the family, and his second son, Kiyooki KANZE, the nineteenth head of the family.
  852. His eldest son, Masamori, is known for entering the political arena under the patronage of Emperor Shirakawa and, succeeded by TAIRA no Tadamori and TAIRA no Kiyomori, established the basis for the prosperity of Taira family.
  853. His eldest son, Masatora MAEDA, served his cousin Toshitsune MAEDA.
  854. His eldest son, Minoru SAITO, was a script writer.
  855. His eldest son, Tatewaki, was bestowed a title of count in consideration of his services in the Restoration, and served as a member of the House of Peers (Japan), but in March 1905, he passed away.
  856. His eldest son, Tsunemichi KOGA, became the head of the family; his second son, Michiyasu KOGA, established a branch family and was given the rank of baron.
  857. His eldest son, Yasutoki HOJO, was a wise and accomplished man who was expected to be a good leader but Yoshitoki's widow, Iga no kata, schemed to hand the regency to her biological son, Masamura HOJO, through an alliance with the powerful Yoshimura MIURA.
  858. His eldest son, Yoshitake succeeded him
  859. His eldest son: Hiromitsu MACHI (1444-1504)
  860. His emotional involvement in the times and aspirations as a political analyst to win independence made Soho to say: "If you shall seek victory, you will be the best in the field of historical analysis."
  861. His end
  862. His enfeoffment was shifted to Omi, Yamashiro, and Kii Provinces in 1625, and he passed away the following year of 1626 at Osaka-jo Castle.
  863. His enrollment in the Shinsengumi is traced up to August 1865.
  864. His entertainment and mystery films include "Kurotokage" (Black Lizard) (1962) - a musical adaptation of the original work of Ranpo EDOGAWA.
  865. His enthronement at the age of 65 is the oldest since Emperor Keitai (the 26th) including the present Emperor.
  866. His enthusiasm towards going to Kyoto can be seen from a poem, 'The time has come to awake the cloud of dragon hidden in a little stream, to be shown to the heavens' that he read when he went to Kyoto.
  867. His entries on the activities of MINAMOTO no Yoshiie, as well as his own evaluations of those activities, are of great value, since they are the impressions of a contemporary of Yoshiie's.
  868. His envoys presented tributes.
  869. His epitaph on the tombstone was written by Fusetsu NAKAMURA, in accordance with his will.
  870. His era was peaceful and tranquil, and he reigned for five years without any incident.
  871. His errors were compounded when Hokumen samurai protecting him aimed to visit the capital and confronted the general public at Kofuku-ji Temple, leading to tragic bloodshed.
  872. His essays on history were regarded on a par with Sorai OGYU's "Seidan" (discussion of law cases) and later with political essays such as Machiavelli's "Discourses on Livy."
  873. His established style was first seen in "Ehonbutaiogi" (Books of Actor Portraits), which he published jointly with Buncho IPPITSUSAI in 1770.
  874. His estate eventually came to be called the 'Little Kyoto of the West,' and the Ouchi clan had its heyday under his leadership.
  875. His estate was transferred to Settsu Nakajima han with the area of 45,700 koku in 1616.
  876. His estate was transferred to Tanba Fukuchiyama han in 1624.
  877. His estranged wife, who became blind, comes to visit him by chance, however, turns her away pretending to be a stranger, although that is not his intention.
  878. His evaluation within the Shodo arena
  879. His ex-wife Toshiko (daughter of Vice Admiral Noriyoshi AKAMATSU).
  880. His exact origin is not known.
  881. His exceptional heroic acts were praised by Nobunaga ODA as 'a hero with both bravery and intelligence.'
  882. His exceptional promotion was peculiar and that deserved special consideration.
  883. His execution date of October 15 was got by referring to Taiheiki (The Record of the Great Peace).
  884. His experience of temporary 'death' in this period would influence his later works.
  885. His experiences as a diplomat while belonging to the judicial circle evolved into the work, "Elements of International Law."
  886. His exploits as one of the Shichihonyari of Shizugatake were told about in "Ehon Taikoki," written in the Edo Period.
  887. His expulsion was resolved in 1898 and in September the following year, he set up a private school, Kokodo, in Hongo-Morikawa, Tokyo, which produced many Shinshu and Buddhist scholars such as Kanae TADA, Gessho SASAKI, and Haya AKEGARASU.
  888. His extraordinary sense of design brought about the term Korin Moyo (Korin Pattern), which significantly influenced Japan's current-day paintings, craftwork and design.
  889. His extremely delicate engraving technique is highly valued.
  890. His eyebrows became camphor trees.
  891. His fame as a legendary master of archery survives to this day; his left arm is described as having been almost five inches (12 cm) longer than his right arm.
  892. His fame as a person of culture spread throughout the country, being asked to correct or put a rating mark beside waka poems and renga, transcribe the classics, and make calligraphy writings on shikishi and tanzaku.
  893. His familiar name was Zenjiro.
  894. His familiar names were Itsuki OSHIMA and Itsuki KONDO.
  895. His families and descendants flourished in the Chikuzen, Chikugo, and Hizen Provinces.
  896. His family and relatives
  897. His family belonged to Fujiwara Shikike (a sub branch of the Fujiwara family) and his father was FUJIWARA no Akihira, a Monjo hakase (professor of literature).
  898. His family belonged to the Matsudaira clan, a local samurai clan in Mikawa Province.
  899. His family belonged to the Shimazu clan of Satsuma Province.
  900. His family came from a line of the Hosokawa clan, a branch family of the Ashikaga clan, which belonged to the Kawachi-Genji (Minamoto clan) as a branch of Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  901. His family came from a line of the Miyoshi clan, a branch family of the Ogasawara clan which was of the school of Kai-Genji as a collateral line of Kawachi-Genji from Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  902. His family came from the Yanagiwara family, Hino line of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan and he was born as the second son of Tadamitsu YANAGIWARA, Gon Dainagon (provisional major counselor).
  903. His family claimed to be originated from the Southern House of the Fujiwara clan.
  904. His family continued as hatamoto (direct retainers of the bakufu).
  905. His family crest consisted of three horizontal lines in a circle.
  906. His family crest featured a sword-shaped Katabami (Creeping Woodsorrel) flower on a circle.
  907. His family crest was Maru ni Umebachi (a plum blossom crest in a circle).
  908. His family crest was Sendai (a geographical name) peony.
  909. His family crest was a 'Maru ni sotmaru' (a circle in a circle).
  910. His family crest was a Chinese bellflower with a circle.
  911. His family crest was a crane and a ginkgo nut, and he was born in Kyoto.
  912. His family crest was kasane ogi (double fans).
  913. His family crest was maru ni mitsukashiwa (Three oak leaves in a circle).
  914. His family crest was maruni futatsu biki (two lines in a circle) and gosan no kiri (literally, "five three paulownia").
  915. His family crest was the Marunimitsubiki (a circle with three straight parallel lines laid horizontally inside).
  916. His family crest was the Migi-Futatsudomoe.
  917. His family crest was three scales within a circle.
  918. His family dealt in oculist for generations.
  919. His family declined the offering of flowers for his funeral with thanks in deference to Yukichi's last wishes, except for the flowers from Shigenobu OKUMA, Yukichi's sworn friend.
  920. His family descended from the Mori clan whose progenitor was Suemitsu MORI, the fourth son of OE no Hiromoto.
  921. His family descended from the Urabe family and was founded as the Yoshida family in Kanetomo's generation.
  922. His family directly descended from the Kawachi- Genji family, one family of Seiwa Genji clan.
  923. His family emblem is
  924. His family estate was succeeded by his oldest son, Yasuori.
  925. His family estate was succeeded by his younger brother Nobunari, after the territory was diminished into 13,000 koku.
  926. His family faithfully believed in Christianity and he was baptized in his childhood ('Joseph' as Christian name.)
  927. His family gained position as the main branch of Zenshoji-ryu (Zenshoji lineage), overcoming the lineage of his brother, FUJIWARA no Nagazane.
  928. His family had been in chashi (tea producer) business for generations, and served as purveyors of tea to Kubo-house (shogun family) and the Imperial household since the days of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA in Edo Period.
  929. His family had been serving as Dutch interpreter for generations.
  930. His family had initially been retainers of the Shiba clan, but his father Munekiyo then began to serve the Oda clan.
  931. His family headship was transferred to his adopted child Kaneka ICHIJO (the real child of Fusasuke TAKATSUKASA).
  932. His family home was a kimono shop.
  933. His family home was an important family which had served as a wariyaku nanushi (representative of village headmen) for the Oshi Domain in the Edo period.
  934. His family included his wife, 2 sons and a daughter.
  935. His family is known for producing many actors/actresses including his nephews Hiroyuki NAGATO and Masahiko TSUGAWA.
  936. His family line at the end of bakufu produced generations of physicians, and his father was a well known physician even in the neighboring towns.
  937. His family line came from the Ashikaga clan, which was a family of pedigree from Kawachi-Genji (Minamoto clan) and a family line of Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan originated from Emperor Seiwa).
  938. His family line can trace back to the Amago clan.
  939. His family line could be traced back to the Oyama clan that was founded by FUJIWARA no Hidesato who was a Chinju-fu shogun (Commander-in-Chief of the Defense of the North); Tomomitsu's father, Masamitsu OYAMA, was the head of local ruling family in Oyama, Shimotuke Province (present day Oyama City, Tochigi Prefecture).
  940. His family line goes back to Imperial Prince Katsurabara, and his ancestor Gyobu no taifu IDA was, in fact, the lord of Sakata Castle in Musha County of Kazusa Province.
  941. His family line is Toki clan, the main line of Mino-Genji (Minamoto clan), a collateral line of Settsu-Genji (Minamoto clan), one of the families of Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  942. His family line is not clear but it is believed that he belonged to the same clan as Saicho.
  943. His family line is the Oda clan, a hikan (low-level bureaucrat) of the Shiba clan of Owari Shugo (Millitary Governor of Owari Province) which derives from the genealogy of Shinto priesthood of Tsurugi-jinja Shrine in Odanosho, Echizen Province.
  944. His family line run through Kwachi-Genji (Minamoto clan) pedigree among one of Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  945. His family line stretched back to the Shiba clan, one of the Ashikaga family which descended from MINAMOTO no Yoshikuni, a son of MINAMOTO no Yoshiie who was the head of the Kawachi-Genji, one of the Seiwa-Genji family and Chinju-fu shogun (Commander-in-Chief of the Defense of the North).
  946. His family line was Fuekata serving for the Kaga domain, and his father was Tagazo FUJITA.
  947. His family line was a branch family of the Ogasawara clandescended from the Kai-Genji (Minamoto clan), collateral line of Kawachi-Genji which was a family of the Seiwa-Genji.
  948. His family line was a branch line of the Ouchi clan.
  949. His family line was from the Hatakeyama clan, which was a family of the Ashikaga clan that followed the Kawachi-Genji (Minamoto clan), a family of Seiwa-Genji.
  950. His family line was one of the Seiwa-Genji lines, called the lineage of Kawauchi-Genji, and the founder was MINAMOTO no Yukiie, who was the tenth son of MINAMOTO no Tameyoshi, the second-generation successor of MINAMOTO no Yoshiie's.
  951. His family line was one of the retainers of the Hosokawa clan, a noble family which filled the post of Kanrei (shogunal deputy) of the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) for generations.
  952. His family line was the Hatayama clan, a branch family of the Ashikaga clan, which had lineage of the Kawachi-Genji (Minamoto clan), a branch of the Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  953. His family line was the Hosokawa clan which was a branch family of the Ashikaga clan with its founder, MINAMOTO no Yoshikuni, a son of MINAMOTO no Yoshiie, the Chinju-fu shogun (Commander-in-Chief of the Defense of the North) who was the head of the Kawachi-Genji (Minamoto clan), a family line of the Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  954. His family line was the Hosokawa clan, a branch family of the Ashikaga clan founded by MINAMOTO no Yoshikuni who had been a son of MINAMOTO no Yoshiie, a Chinju-fu shogun (Commander-in-Chief of the Defense of the North) and the head of the Kawachi-Genji that was derived from a family line of Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  955. His family line was the Kusunoki clan, descendent of the Tachibana clan.
  956. His family line was the Shimo Reizei family, one of the Reizei families.
  957. His family line was the Ueno clan, a branch of the Ashikaga clan following Kawachi-Genji (Minamoto clan), one of the Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  958. His family line was the head of Kawachi-genji, one of the Seiwa-Genji clans.
  959. His family line was the main branch of the Tahara-Toda family of the Toda clan.
  960. His family lineage originated from the Date clan of Tomomune DATE as an ancestor.
  961. His family lineage stemmed from the Uda-Genji (Minamoto clan) and patriarch Emperor Uda, as well as from the Kyogoku clan, a branch family of the Sasaki clan.
  962. His family lineage was a branch of the Sasaki clan (Kyogoku clan) who belonged to the Uda-Genji (Minamoto clan), and was a family of the Amago clan.
  963. His family lineage was the Migita clan, a branch line of the Ouchi clan which was allegedly in the line of the Tatara clan, a clan of the settlers of which ancestor was allegedly King Shomyoo in Baekje.
  964. His family lineage was the Shiba clan, which was a family of the Ashikaga clan that originated from MINAMOTO no Yoshikuni, a son of MINAMOTO no Yoshiie who was the head of the Kawachi-Genji-- one of the families of Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan originated from Emperor Seiwa)--and Chinju-fu shogun (Commander-in-Chief of the Defense of the North).
  965. His family lineage was the Shibukawa clan, that was a branch of the Ashikaga clan whose originator was MINAMOTO no Yoshikuni, a son of Chinju-fu shogun (Commander-in-Chief of the Defense of the North) MINAMOTO no Yoshiie, the head of Kawachi-Genji (the Minamoto clan in Kawachi Province), that was one of the family lineages of Seiwa-Genji (the Minamoto clan originated from Emperor Seiwa).
  966. His family lineage was the Ueno clan, a branch of the Ashikaga clan who were descendants of Kawachi-Genji (the Minamoto clan in Kawachi Province) which was one of the family lineages of Seiwa-Genji (the Minamoto clan originated from Emperor Seiwa).
  967. His family lines were Yamato-Genji (Minamoto clan) and the Mutsu Ishikawa clan.
  968. His family motto was, "Love your wealth, and give to society of its benefits."
  969. His family moved to Edamitsu, Yahata Village, Fukuoka Prefecture (present day Yahata-higashi Ward, Kitakyushu City) since his father closed their family business, a sake brewery, to work at the Yahata Iron Factory that was about to start operating.
  970. His family moved to Nishide-machi, Kobe City due to his father's business-related matters when he was three years old.
  971. His family name "Shimada" can be written in two ways by Chinese characteristics, "島田"and "嶋田".
  972. His family name 'Ogata' is written also as 緒方 or 小形.
  973. His family name Fumi (書) was also written as 文 (the pronunciation was the same).
  974. His family name Ko was after the name of his birth place, Takanashi County, Koshu, which he started to use; his original family name was Oshima.
  975. His family name Owari (尾張) was also written as 尾治 (the pronunciation was the same).
  976. His family name as a common person was Nie.
  977. His family name before entering the priesthood was Yuge.
  978. His family name could be Henmi.
  979. His family name has been said Baaraadovaja.
  980. His family name is Kun or Ko.
  981. His family name is also written as 安宿, 百済安宿, 飛鳥戸 or 安宿戸 instead of 飛鳥部.
  982. His family name is also written as 宮木 in Japanese, but some people write it as 宮本 by mistake.
  983. His family name is said to be IIO, but it is still unclear.
  984. His family name is unknown.
  985. His family name is usually spelled 小久保, and also 小窪.
  986. His family name is usually spelled 粕屋, but there is another theory that it was 糟屋.
  987. His family name is written as 櫻川 in the orthographic style.
  988. His family name kamo鴨 was also written as kamo賀茂.
  989. His family name taima当摩 was also written as taima当麻; his kabane (hereditary title) was Kimi, later given a higher kabane, Mahito.
  990. His family name was Ando, and he was the second or third generation of publisher Hachizaemon HACHIMONJIYA in Kyoto.
  991. His family name was FUJIWARA.
  992. His family name was Genji, and his Azana (alias) was Yusho.
  993. His family name was Kitagawa (written as 北川).
  994. His family name was Ko.
  995. His family name was MASAMOTO later changed to SHIOMI.
  996. His family name was Minamoto clan.
  997. His family name was Muraji.
  998. His family name was Nakae.
  999. His family name was Ochiai and his name was Ikujiro.
  1000. His family name was Shiba, his respectful name given after his death was Tsugumasa or Tsugimasa, and his given name used while he was young was Matashiro and, later, Tsukasa.


125001 ~ 126000

Previous Page    Next page
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 

オンラインWikipedia日英京都関連文書対訳コーパス(英和)
鍋田辞書
オンライン英語辞書