; 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

137 / 438ページ
データ総見出し数 437939


  1. Honzon (The Image of Buddha Worshipped)
  2. Honzon (main image) is Amida Nyorai (Funagokoryumida).
  3. Honzon (principal image of Buddha) is Amida Nyorai.
  4. Honzon (principal image of Buddha) is the Eleven-faced kannon (Goddess of Mercy).
  5. Honzon (principal image of Buddha) of Ensho-ji Temple
  6. Honzon (principal image of Buddha), Fudo Myoo (Acala, one of the Five Wisdom Kings), Buddhist scriptures and other materials are currently enshrined at Shiofune Kannonji Temple of Bekkaku-honzan (special head temple) of the Daigo school of the Shingon sect.
  7. Honzon (principal image of Buddha): Aizen Myoo (Ragaraja), Amida Nyorai (Amitabha Tathagata) (Both of them are important cultural properties.)
  8. Honzon (principal image of Buddha): Eleven-faced Kannon, the Goddess of Mercy (an Important Cultural Property)
  9. Honzon (principal image of Buddha): Miroku Bosatsu (Maitreya Bodhisattva)
  10. Honzon (principal image of Buddha): Taima Mandala
  11. Honzon (principal object of worship at a temple)
  12. Honzon (principal object of worship at a temple) is 'Dogyo Shotoku Taishi zo' (Statue of young Prince Shotoku).
  13. Honzon (principal object of worship at a temple): Eleven-faced Kannon (Goddess of Mercy)
  14. Honzon (principal object of worship at a temple): Senju Kannon (the Merciful Buddha with a thousand arms), Eleven-faced Kannon, Sho Kannon (All of them are important cultural properties.)
  15. Honzon (the principal image of Buddha) is Sanbo-son.
  16. Honzon Monju Bosatsu (Manjusri Bodhisattva associated with wisdom, doctrine and awareness) and wakii-zo (statutes of attendants) were enshrined here (although these statutes are said to be Unkei's works, the actual artist remains unclear).
  17. Honzon Yakushi Sanzonzo is enshrined in this hall, which is regarded as one of the most excellent Buddhist sculptures from the Nara period (Yakushi Sanzonzo is described later).
  18. Honzon at the time of its foundation was Miroku-butsu (Miroku Buddha) (Kon-do Hall), but Taima Mandala (Hondo [main hall]) is mainly worshipped at present.
  19. Honzon generally have a gold-colored frame, such as the 'Oza-kawari Honzon' (copied by Nikkyo) enshrined in Taiseki-ji Temple Kyakuden (Taiseki-ji Temple), but some facilities have wooden Honzon while others have paper-drawn Honzon.
  20. Honzon has the following meanings.
  21. Honzon hyogu,' 'hotoke hyogu' and 'shinsei hyogu'・・・outside of the left and right sides of 'chumawashi' (the center part of kakejiku on which a painting or calligraphy is displayed) are covered by the same cloth used for the top and the bottom section.
  22. Honzon is an object to be enshrined but is not called butsugu.
  23. Honzon is enshrined there, which is either butsuzo (a Buddha statue) or a hanging scroll.
  24. Honzon of Oku-no-in
  25. Honzon of Various sects
  26. Honzon of the Hondo main hall
  27. Honzowamyo
  28. Honzowamyo is the oldest Japanese dictionary of medicines still in existence, and was compiled by Sukehito FUKANE.
  29. Hoo Maru Warship
  30. Hoo Monsen (tile patterned with a image of phoenix) (the early Nara period)
  31. Hoo-do Hall (the Phoenix Pavilion) of Byodo-in Temple
  32. Hoo-do Hall (the Phoenix Pavilion) of Byodo-in Temple: Constructed by FUJIWARA no Yorimichi in 1053.
  33. Hoo-do Hall (the Phoenix Pavilion) type is architecture modeled on a heavenly palace drawn in "Amida Jodo henso zu."
  34. Hoo-do Hall (the Phoenix Pavillion) of Byodo-in Temple in Uji is a representative legacy of the Jodo-shinko (the Pure Land faith) of the nobility.
  35. Hoo-do Hall of Byodo-in Temple
  36. Hoo-do of Byodo-in Temple: Uji City, Kyoto Prefecture
  37. Hoo-kyo was a "popular" religious movement that Doken TAKADA promoted in the latter part of the Meiji period and the Taisho period.
  38. Hoodo Hall of Byodoin Temple: Uji City, Kyoto Prefecture
  39. Hoodo hall (Phoenix hall) of Byodoin Temple
  40. Hooji bamboo shoot
  41. Hoon-ji Temple (Chonan-machi, Chiba Prefecture)
  42. Hoon-ko (a memorial services for Shinran)
  43. Hoon-ko is the most important service in the annual events to the priests and believers of Jodo Shinshu.
  44. Hoon-ko refers to a memorial service which was held around the anniversary of the death of Shinran (1173 - 1262), the founder of Jodo Shinshu (True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) for the purpose of Hon shatoku (repayment for indebtedness) to the founder.
  45. Hoonko (Shinran Memorial Day)
  46. Hoonko (memorial services for the founder of the Buddhist sect)
  47. Hoonko Ceremony: Shinran
  48. Hoonko Ofumi
  49. Hoori
  50. Hoori (Hoori no Mikoto) is a god that appears in Japanese mythology.
  51. Hoori (Yamasachihiko) swapped his hunting tools with those of his older brother Hoderi (Umisachihiko) and went fishing, but he lost the fishing hook.
  52. Hoori asked for water, and the female servant poured water in a vessel and gave it to Hoori.
  53. Hoori made 1000 fishing hooks from his own sword, but Hoderi did not accept any of them saying 'it needs to be that particular fishing hook.'
  54. Hoori returned the fishing hook just as the sea god told him, and he made a rice field as he was told.
  55. Hoori returned, after receiving from the sea god magical items and a method of revenge.
  56. Hoori suggested to his older brother Hoderi to swap their tools.
  57. Hoori tried to catch fish using his older brother's fishing hook (umisachi), but not only did he not catch even one single fish, he lost the fishing hook in the sea.
  58. Hoori went to Watatsuminokami's palace as he was told, and when he was waiting there a female servant of the sea god's daughter, Toyotamabime, came out to get some water.
  59. Hopefully with my body pure like a koro (incense burner),
  60. Hopefully with my heart like a flame of wisdom,
  61. Hopefully, I will die under the blossoms in the spring time around the time of a full moon in February and on the anniversary of Buddha's death (Sankashu).
  62. Hopefully, I will die under the blossoms in the spring time around the time of a full moon in February and on the anniversary of Buddha's death (Shokukokin Wakashu (Collection of Ancient and Modern Japanese Poetry, Continued)).
  63. Hopelessly outnumbered by the Toyotomi army of 220,000 soldiers, the Hojo army finally surrendered.
  64. Hoping for her daughter's recovery, Masako prayed frequently at temples and shrines, but Ohime never recovered.
  65. Hoping for some water to invite, I would offer this skinny body as a floating grass.
  66. Hoping to offer education for women, based on the spirit of Buddhism, she established Kyoto Koka Women's University in 1939 and was appointed President.
  67. Hoping to take over the vacant position of Chunagon (vice-councilor of state), he told Tadanobu not to apply for a promotion in advance, but was defeated when FUJIWARA no Michinaga, who doubted Sanenobu's competence, backed up Tadanobu's appointment as Chunagon.
  68. Hora Buraku (a discriminated community in Kashihara City, Nara Prefecture)
  69. Hora Buraku was a discriminated community which used to exist in Kashihara City, Nara Prefecture.
  70. Hora no Miya Palace and Naniwa no Miya Palace were renamed 'Kita no Miya' Palace and 'Nishi no Miya' Palace respectively based on the Tang system of China.
  71. Hora, a conch shell.
  72. Horace CAPRON (American)
  73. Horafuki-shinji (boasting Shinto ritual).
  74. Horaga-toge Pass
  75. Horaga-toge Pass is the pass forming the boundary between Yawata Minamiyama - Yawata City - Kyoto Prefecture and Nagaotoge-cho - Koyamichi - Hirakata City - Osaka Prefecture.
  76. Horagai
  77. Horagai (Conch)
  78. Horagai (conch shell) player Yota HIROSE of Olympos 16 Toshin is among well-known horagai users.
  79. Horagai, with the scientific name Charonia tritonis, is a type of snall that belongs to the Cymatiidae family, formerly classified under Cymatiidae, Mesogastropoda.
  80. Horai (teahouse): This teahouse was favored by Ennosai of the Urasenke tea ceremony school and the stone washbasin in the front garden is said to have been brought back to Japan by Kiyomasa KATO on his return from the Imjin War on the Korean Peninsula and given to Tadaoki (Sansai) HOSOKAWA as a gift.
  81. Horai Senkyo-zu (Enchanted Land, Penglaishan)
  82. Horai-jima is shaped so that when it is viewed together with Tsuru-jima it looks like a turtle, but when viewed with Kame-jima it looks like a crane; this arrangement is intended to always describe a pair of crane and turtle.
  83. Horai-jima, the largest island, is located slightly north of the center of the pond, with Kame-jima to its north and Tsuru-jima to its south.
  84. Horaku Wari (Smashing Plates); this is always performed at the beginning of Dai Nenbutsu-e in April, and at the end of the program, the plates which are dedicated to the temple at Setsubun-e in February are smashed.
  85. Horaku manju
  86. Horaku wari (Smashing Plates)
  87. Horaku wari is always the first piece put on during the April performances of the Dainenbutsu Association, in which the plates donated during the February Setsubun-e are smashed in the finale.
  88. Horaku-ji Temple (the old palace site): A few minutes' walk to west (about 200 meters) from the Kuroda Station
  89. Horaku-ji Temple had 25 buildings such as temple's halls, pagodas and cathedrals, which were all lost in 1207, and only one building (rebuilt in 1222) remains today.
  90. Horanomiya (detached palace)
  91. Horanomiya and Yugenomiya were short lived, but Naniwanomiya Palace maintained its position as secondary capital city until the transfer of the national capital to Nagaoka.
  92. Horanomiya was an Imperial Palace which Emperor Junnin built in Omi Province in Nara period, which was placed as 'Hokukyo' in the system of multi-capital of Heijo-kyo (the ancient capital of Japan in current Nara).
  93. Horei (letting stand to cool) or karashi
  94. Horeki Incident
  95. Horeki katte-zukuri decree => The Great Famine of Tenmei
  96. Horen
  97. Horen (years of birth and death unknown) was a priest during the Asuka period and the Nara period.
  98. Hori
  99. Hori (Sadaka IJICHI) was also assigned Okonando (the attendant in charge of general affaires of the feudal lord).
  100. Hori HORIBE
  101. Hori clan
  102. Hori school
  103. Hori, who was accused for the crime as the principal offender, was extradited in a cage from Edo to Kagoshima on the domain's ship, Tenyumaru, and thus, he retired from the political front in the Satsuma Domain.
  104. Hori-kawa River (Kyoto Prefecture)
  105. Hori-kawa River (kabuki)
  106. Hori-mishima: unlike ko-mishima bowls, these were ordered from Japan from the Edo period onwards and had an embossed or inlayed pattern.
  107. Horibon (the Hori version)
  108. Horieyama-jo Castle was the castle of a daimyo (feudal lord).
  109. Horigoe Kubo
  110. Horigoe Kubo and the Ogigayatsu-Uesugi clan intervened and dispatched forces led by their higher-ranking officers, Masanori UESUGI and Dokan OTA, to the Province of Suruga.
  111. Horigoe Kubo died out because the second Horigoe Kubo, Chachamaru ASHIKAGA, was defeated by Soun HOJO.
  112. Horihachiman-jinja Shrine in Akiota Town, Yamagata District, Hiroshima Prefecture (former Kake Town) performs yabusame for the annual festival in autumn.
  113. Horikawa (name of an area in Kyoto) gobo (burdocks)
  114. Horikawa Dainagon (chief councilor of state) Michitomo (MINAMOTO no Michitomo)
  115. Horikawa Gojo
  116. Horikawa Gojo is the intersection and the surrounding area in Sensui-cho, Shimogyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  117. Horikawa Gosho (The Attack on the Horikawa Palace)
  118. Horikawa Gosho (The Fight at Horikawa Palace)
  119. Horikawa Nami no Tsudumi (Nami no Tsudumi)
  120. Horikawa Police Station
  121. Horikawa Police Station, Kyoto Prefectural Police
  122. Horikawa River runs on the other side of Horikawa-dori Street across from the square in front of Ote-mon Gate; even though it [the river] does not quite constitute Suguruwa [completely surrounding the castle with a moat or a wall], it might have been envisioned to provide the first line of defense.
  123. Horikawa jinin who belonged to Gion-sha Shrine (currently Yasaka-jinja Shrine) who gathered in Gojo Horikawa, operated a lumber business in medieval times, transporting lumber from the mountains in Tanba Province down the Kizu-gawa River in the form of rafts, to be stored in Gojo Horikawa.
  124. Horikawa-Gojo crossing
  125. Horikawa-Nishiiru, Gojo-dori
  126. Horikawa-dori Street
  127. Horikawa-dori Street cuts through the northernmost point of the site (now designated a historical site), on which Odoi Fortress was constructed.
  128. Horikawa-dori Street is one of the major north-south streets in Kyoto City.
  129. Horikawa-higashiiru, Gojo-dori
  130. Horikawashimono-cho (Juraku school district)
  131. Horikemizo: an irrigation channel.
  132. Horikoshi-toge Pass (Nantan City and Oi Town, Oi County, Fukui Prefecture)
  133. Horin
  134. Horin (1693 - November 24, 1741) was a gakuso (scholar monk) of Jodo Shinshu (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) during the middle of the Edo period.
  135. Horin (法輪) (Sanskrit: dharma-chakra, pinyin: falun) is another name for the creed of Buddhism, especially the Four Axioms Noble and the Eightfold Path taught by Buddha.
  136. Horin MATSUHISA
  137. Horin MATSUHISA (1901 - September 1, 1987) was a busshi (sculptor of Buddhist statues).
  138. Horin is also taken into Taoism in China, and used as a term meaning the creed.
  139. Horin, Dharma-wheel (chakra)
  140. Horin, expressed as 'Futai Kinrin' (literally, non-retrogression golden wheel) in the sutras.
  141. Horin-ji Temple
  142. Horin-ji Temple (Ikaruga-cho)
  143. Horin-ji Temple (Kamigyo Ward, Kyoto City)
  144. Horin-ji Temple (Kamigyo-Ward, Kyoto City) (Daruma-dera Temple)
  145. Horin-ji Temple (Nishikyo Ward, Kyoto City)
  146. Horin-ji Temple _(Ikaruga-cho)
  147. Horin-ji Temple in Arashiyama, Kyoto (Nishikyo Ward Kyoto City) has an event called "thirteen visit," where boys and girls who have turned thirteen visit to receive wisdom from Kokuzo Bosatsu.
  148. Horin-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple located at Ikaruga-cho, Ikoma-gun, Nara Prefecture.
  149. Horin-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple located in Nishikyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  150. Horin-ji Temple was founded during the Nara period and is dedicated to the principal image Kokuzo Bosatsu.
  151. Horin-ji Temple, located in Kamigyo Ward, Kyoto City, is a temple of the Myoshin-ji Temple school of the Rinzai sect.
  152. Horinden
  153. Horinden is the abbreviated name for Daito Shoshu Sohonzan Sokokei Horinden, a historical account of Zen Buddhism that was established in 801.
  154. Horinouchi
  155. Horinouchi School: Senkaku HORINOCHI and the disciple of Kakukakusai, the sixth Omotesenke
  156. Horinouchi and Doi existed through the medieval Japan.
  157. Horinouchi family
  158. Horinouchi family history
  159. Horinouchi is historical jargon that indicates a town developed in the vicinity of the residence (called "tachi" or "tate") of samurai (warriors) and landholders in the medieval Japan.
  160. Horiuchi Station was closed.
  161. Horiuchi village, Kii County was integrated into Kyoto City and became a part of Fushimi Ward in 1931.
  162. Horiuchi-chiku Area, Hagi City, Yamaguchi Prefecture, 1976, buke-machi
  163. Horiuchi-chiku Area, Hagi City, Yamaguchi Prefecture, buke-machi
  164. Horizontal lines were the norm as shown in the picture painted by Fantin-Latour.
  165. Horizontal materials called "daiwa" (architraves) are placed on 10 x 4 columns built under a floor.
  166. Horizontally, it covers a distance of several hundred meters to several hundred kilometers, and moves in a big vortex.
  167. Horohoroto yamabukichiruka taki no oto (You hear the roar of the waterfall crashing into rocks and see Japanese roses scattering without the wind.)
  168. Horoku is also called horaku or hojiki (roaster).
  169. Horokudama is a weapon created by putting gun powder in a piece of kitchenware called a Horoku or similar earthenware, lighting its fuse and throwing it at enemies.
  170. Horokuhiya
  171. Horokuhiya also indicate other similar weapons, such as primitive rockets that used black gunpowder for propulsion and were sometimes loaded with burning materials and gun powder to burn down targets or explode on impact.
  172. Horokuhiya is generally recognized today as the weapon called Horokudama (described below).
  173. Horokuhiya was a weapon invented and used in Japan during the Sengoku period (period of warring states) (Japan).
  174. Horse
  175. Horse - Seishi Bosatsu
  176. Horse Racing in the Settlements
  177. Horse doctor (equivalent to Juhachiinojo [Junior Eighth Rank, Upper Grade]): Two each for Samaryo and Umaryo
  178. Horse guards continued to exist during the Edo period as part of the staff organization of various domains and served feudal lords as bodyguards in their daily lives.
  179. Horse guards were called differently by different daimyo families, and among them, those who served the Gohojo clan are particularly well known.
  180. Horse guards were mounted samurai retainers who accompanied commanders' horses as their bodyguards and served as messengers or soldiers in wars.
  181. Horse racing
  182. Horse racing taking place at Shokon-sha Shrine in Kudan, Tokyo Prefecture under the Hyobusho (the ministry of military) in 1870 led to this new way of horse racing.
  183. Horse tail hair is bound to make the hair for the bow.
  184. Horse tramway
  185. Horseradish (western wasabi), wasabi daikon (wasabi radish), Armoracia rusticana
  186. Horses and money to be sent to capital shall be controlled in Kamakura, and deliver to the capital.'
  187. Horses collected from provinces were fed in horse boxes or Maki (ryomaki and kintomaki [pasture where animals were sent to graze]) under the direct control of Meryo, and were also fed in the Kinai region (provinces surrounding Kyoto and Nara) and surrounding provinces by orders given to such provinces.
  188. Horses had been trained at the Kyoto Racecourse until Ritto Training Center was established in 1969.
  189. Horses on the active list
  190. Horses remained as a means of logistic transportation for armies in various nations across the world until World War II.
  191. Horses running the Tenno Sho (spring) and the Kikuka Sho (autumn) surmount this slope twice.
  192. Horseshoe
  193. Horsetail picking, and edible wild plants picking
  194. Horuyoshi
  195. Horyaku (Horeki) (October 27, 1751) - June 2, 1764
  196. Horyaku (Horeki) October 27, 1751 - (June 2, 1764)
  197. Horyaku reki (Horyaku calendar)
  198. Horyakukanki (A History Book of the 14 century in Japan)
  199. Horyakukanki (A History Book of the fourteenth century in Japan)
  200. Horyakureki (Horyaku Calendar)
  201. Horyo: Also called Kakueri
  202. Horyu-ji Kondo Wall Paintings
  203. Horyu-ji Temple
  204. Horyu-ji Temple (Ikaruga-cho, Ikoma County)
  205. Horyu-ji Temple (Ikaruga-cho, Ikoma-gun, Nara Prefecture): The Nara period (the late seventh century to the beginning of the eighth century); Horyu-ji Temple is a World Heritage Site; the oldest Gojunoto in Japan
  206. Horyu-ji Temple (Ikaruga-cho, Nara Prefecture) - the early Heian period (in Omiwa-ji Temple)
  207. Horyu-ji Temple Kondo, Main Hall, mural: Burned down in 1949 (20 mural paintings of Hiten [a flying, music-playing Buddhist angel] escaped the fire), the early Nara period.
  208. Horyu-ji Temple Saiin Garan (the Western Precinct) (rebuilt)
  209. Horyu-ji Temple and the 6 others mentioned above are together called the seven great temples (Seven Great Temples of Nara).
  210. Horyu-ji Temple holds 'Oeshiki' (ceremony for the anniversary of Founder's death) from March 22 to 24, the anniversary of the month of Prince Shotoku's death (in the old calendar) each year, and no Daihoyo.
  211. Horyu-ji Temple, after which the station was named, is located rather far from the station.
  212. Horyuji Bus Center of Nara Kotsu Bus Lines Co. Ltd.
  213. Horyuji Station, the next station, is the central station of Ikaruga-cho, and is located on the overpass and has two platforms and two tracks.
  214. Horyuji Station: Kintetsu Tenri Line (Kinki Nihon Horyuji Station)
  215. Hosai
  216. Hosai Shrine: He was enshrined as a chief god in Imai Shrine in Kawanakajima, Nagano City, and in Imai-jinja Shrine in Imai, Matsumoto City.
  217. Hosai-jinja Shrine (shrine enshrining Mitsukuni)
  218. Hosai-jinja Shrine, dedicated to Kiyomasa, is the Kato-jinja Shrine located in Honmaru, Kumamoto City.
  219. Hosai-jinja Shrine: He is enshrined as the main enshrined deity in Nawa-jinja Shrine located in Nawa, Daisen-cho, Tottori Prefecture.
  220. Hosaku SAITO, Hakumin NANBU, and Sokichi HASHIMOTO numbered among his pupils.
  221. Hosan KATSURAGAWA was a contemporary friend of Genpaku SUGITA.
  222. Hosanna Chorus Club
  223. Hosei NAGATA
  224. Hosei NAGATA (March 26, 1838-August 22, 1911) was an educator in the Meiji period.
  225. Hosei University Specialty Division Higher Normal School Section
  226. Hosen, an arrow.
  227. Hosen-in Temple
  228. Hosen-in Temple is a Buddhist temple belonging to the Tendai Sect located in Ohara, Kyoto.
  229. Hosen-in Temple was founded in 1012 as the monks' living quarters of Taigen-ji Temple (Shorin-in Temple).
  230. Hosen-ji Temple (Kyotanabe City)
  231. Hosen-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple belonging to the Shingon Sect Chisan School located in Kyotanabe City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  232. Hosen-ji Temple: Ninth rank (temple subsequently abandoned)
  233. Hosen-ji Temple: The Buddhist High Priest Daikaku daisojo directly planted a pine tree in the precincts, and the pine tree forming a canopy is today a natural monument of Japan.
  234. Hoshaku Kyoyohon Shihai Tanzaku (Japanese poetry written in a combined form of long and narrow cards with the back side of the paper used for a copy of the Daihoshaku-kyo Sutra)
  235. Hoshaku-ji Temple
  236. Hoshaku-ji Temple (Daikoku Tenpo-ji Temple) (Oyamazaki-cho, Otokuni-gun, Kyoto Prefecture)/Oyamazaki Daikokuten/Kyoto rokudaikokuten
  237. Hoshaku-ji Temple (Daikoku Tenpo-ji Temple) (Oyamazaki-cho, Otokuni-gun, Kyoto Prefecture): Oyamazaki Daikokuten of Kyoto Rokudaikokuten
  238. Hoshaku-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple belonging to the Chizan School of the Shingon Sect located on the side of Mt. Tenno in Oyamazaki-cho, Otokuni-gun, Kyoto Prefecture.
  239. Hoshaku-ji Temple was destroyed by fire in 1232 and the items such as Buddha statues that survive today date from after this year.
  240. Hoshakuin garden
  241. Hoshakuzan-Nofuku-ji Temple in Kita-sakasegawa, Hyogo Ward, Kobe City
  242. Hoshi
  243. Hoshi (Successor)
  244. Hoshi (mugwort arrow) and sokyu (mulberry bow)
  245. Hoshi Matsuri (Buddhist star festival)
  246. Hoshi Matsuri and Hoshiku services are held at different temples nationwide.
  247. Hoshi Matsuri is a Buddhist festival celebrating the tonenjo (also referred to as tonenzokusho, each person's star of the year) and honmyojo (each person's star of the year of birth) to ward off evil.
  248. Hoshi Matsuri is also referred to as Hoshi Kuyo or Hoshiku.
  249. Hoshi Matsuri' is a Buddhist mass praying to the stars to 'repel evil and bring happiness'.
  250. Hoshi University Professor Tetsuya FUKUI is his son.
  251. Hoshi akari
  252. Hoshi had Shigehira change into a white robe to prepare for death, took his old clothes for her keepsake, and exchanged waka poems with him in farewell.
  253. Hoshi had fine features, and she was deeply in favor with the Emperor and had two children; Imperial Prince Masahira, Imperial Prince Nagahira, with him, however, their poor health precluded them from becoming crown princes.
  254. Hoshi had the body of her husband brought back to Hino, and after cremating it and holding a funeral ceremony, she sent his ashes to Mt. Koya.
  255. Hoshi natto (sun-dried natto)
  256. Hoshi no Fururu Mura Zone (Zone of Full-of-stars village)
  257. Hoshi refers to officers of provincial government who administered ho, which was a type of Kokugaryo (the territories governed by a provincial government office) in medieval Japan.
  258. Hoshi, Volume 10 of Myohorengekyo (Lotus Sutra)
  259. Hoshi, who gained his soon-to-be wife, grew into a young man using the kozuchi (small mallet) he just acquired, and he married the daughter.
  260. Hoshi-Udon (dried Udon noodles)
  261. Hoshi-en Garden
  262. Hoshi-imo (dried sweet potatoes)
  263. Hoshi-imo can be preserved at room temperature; however, it easily gets mildewed because of its manufacturing method without using preservatives and other chemical products, in addition to the latest technique for preventing hoshi-imo from being over dehydrated, aiming at better texture.
  264. Hoshi-imo is made from sweet potato through the processing of steaming and then drying.
  265. Hoshi-imo is produced in winter through early spring as a logical consequence of using fresh sweet potato.
  266. Hoshi-imo made from the boiled sweet potato becomes harder than that from steamed sweet potato, because starch contained in the sweet potato is not changed into an adhesive material.
  267. Hoshi-imo sold at stores is usually packed with deoxidizer into a bag made of wrapping material with high shielding properties for long-term storage.
  268. Hoshi-kabuto helmet and Suji-kabuto (muscle) helmet were used with a large armor.
  269. Hoshi-mato
  270. Hoshi-musha or armed priests were called Soshu or Akuso in the era when they were active but since the Edo period, they have been called "Sohei."
  271. Hoshi-no-kuni (containing a Michi no Eki [a roadside rest area with a market of local products for tourists], observatory, planetarium, accommodation facilities and Hoshi-no-yu)
  272. Hoshida Station opened.
  273. Hoshienu Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd., head Office, Gojo Factory (in Techno-park Nara, Sumikawa-cho): Mainly manufacturing non-prescription drugs, such as Pre-call, Pyroace, etc.
  274. Hoshigaki
  275. Hoshigaki is a kind of dried fruit made by drying Japanese persimmons.
  276. Hoshigaoka-saryo (no longer exist) - Originally, it was a ryotei opened in Nagata-cho of Tokyo with the help of Tomomi IWAKURA and others.
  277. Hoshikawa no Wakamiya no miko
  278. Hoshikawa no Wakamiya no miko (year of birth unknown - 479), was a member of the Imperial family (Royal family), who is said to have lived in the Kofun period (tumulus period) according to "Nihonshoki" (Chronicles of Japan).
  279. Hoshikawa no miko followed his mother's words and rose in rebellion, taking over Okura.
  280. Hoshiku (a star festival) (February 3)
  281. Hoshin
  282. Hoshin (or Hosshin, Hasshin) (709-October 23, 778) was a priest who came from Tang (China) in the Nara period.
  283. Hoshin Line: Konuma Station - Tei Station (76.2km)
  284. Hoshin assisted Jianzhen on the occasion when Jianzhen founded Kaidan-in (a temple where a ceremony is held to impart the Buddhist precepts on priests and nuns) of Todai-ji Temple.
  285. Hoshin learned the precepts of Buddhism and Tendai doctrine from Jianzhen at White Stupa Temple in Yangzhou, then came to Japan in 754 accompanying Jianzhen after overcoming terrible hardships.
  286. Hoshinkan (HS)
  287. Hoshinno
  288. Hoshinno was an Imperial Prince who became a priest and renounced the world remaining within the imperial court.
  289. Hoshino's theory was almost ignored after that, however it came back once that theory was supported by Rizo TAKEUCHI, still now there are some researchers who support Hoshino's theory.
  290. Hoshisanshu:
  291. Hosho (document announcing the decision of ruling class to lower-ranking people) written by the zejo was called zejo-sen.
  292. Hosho Nyorai (south)
  293. Hosho Style (Hosho-za)
  294. Hosho school
  295. Hosho yama (decorative float representing Hirai Hosho, grandson of Chief Councilor of State FUJIWARA no Motokata)
  296. Hosho-ji Temple
  297. Hosho-ji Temple (Shinjuku-ku Ward, Tokyo Prefecture)
  298. Hosho-ji Temple: Founded in 1077 by the order of the Emperor Shirakawa.
  299. Hosho-ryu school has its own Kogaki, 'Ranbyoshi', which adopts different costumes and final dance performance from Kanze-ryu school.
  300. Hosho-sen
  301. Hoshoin Ryodenchi Kugen Funshitsujo (July 8, Anna 2)
  302. Hoshosen regulations permitted foreign trade only to ships carrying a hosho countersigned by the roju, in addition to a traditional shuinjo, which was a transitional measure from shuinsen trade to national isolation.
  303. Hoshozuka-kofun Tumulus: A round barrow of about 17 meters in diameter at present.
  304. Hoshu
  305. Hoshu KATSURAGAWA
  306. Hoshu KATSURAGAWA (1751- August 2, 1809) was a doctor and Rangakusha (a person who studied Western sciences by means of the Dutch language).
  307. Hoshu KATSURAGAWA (1826 - September 25, 1881) was a doctor and Dutch scholar.
  308. Hoshu KATSURAGAWA, a son of Hogen Hosan KATSURAGAWA, was later ranked also Hogen.
  309. Hoshu also work as chief abbot of a Buddhist temple (chief priest) of Sohonzan Taiseki-ji Temple.
  310. Hoshu are called by using their respect title such as 'go hoshu Nichi X jonin geika' and 'Nichi X jonin.'
  311. Hoshun-in Temple (Kyoto City)
  312. Hoshun-in Temple (Kyoto City) - Tomb of the Maeda family of Kaga Province.
  313. Hoshun-in Temple is a sub-temple located within the precinct of Rinzai sect Daihonzan (Head Temple) Daitoku-ji Temple in Murasakino, Kita Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  314. Hoshun-in Temple was founded in 1608 by Matsuko (Matsu, Hoshunin), the wife of Toshiie MAEDA who was founder of the Kaga Domain with a value of one million koku, who named Gyokushitsu Sohaku as first chief priest.
  315. Hoso Kami
  316. Hoso Kami (also pronounced as Hoso gami, Hoso shin) is an apotheosis of hoso (smallpox), and is a kind of Yakubyo-gami, a deity for the transmission of epidemics.
  317. Hoso Kami is often worshipped with a stone pagoda erected at the edge of the village like Koshin-to Tower.
  318. Hoso-Udon (thin Udon noodles)
  319. Hoso-e: Charms to avert smallpox.
  320. Hoso-zukuri (making fine slices)
  321. Hosoda House - The oldest farm in Nara Prefecture
  322. Hosoge (arabesque flower patterns)
  323. Hosoge Makie Houjubako - A lacquer ware piece from the early Heian period.
  324. Hosoge-makie-kyo-bako - Lacquerware from the late Heian period
  325. Hosogemon (a flower pattern) (on the ceiling) 1 piece
  326. Hosohake: A small type of Ichomage giving an impression of a stylish guy between a samurai or townsman.
  327. Hosoi-jinja Shrine
  328. Hosokawa
  329. Hosokawa (Nagaoka) Gyobu's family
  330. Hosokawa (Nagaoka) naizen family
  331. Hosokawa Keicho family … The main line of the Hosokawa family which produced many Muromachi bakufu kanrei (A shogunal deputy for the Muromachi bakufu.)
  332. Hosokawa Micron Corporation, Nara Office (in Techno-park Nara, Sumikawa-cho)
  333. Hosokawa clan
  334. Hosokawa clan and the medieval period
  335. Hosokawa clan and the modern times
  336. Hosokawa clan was a samurai family that prospered between the Kamakura period to the Edo period, the original family name was Genji.
  337. Hosokawa paper was an unprocessed paper purely made from paper mulberry trees and called 'namakara' (生唐).
  338. Hosokawa provided 100 gunners and Tsutsui supplied 50.
  339. Hosokawa's Government (Sengoku Period)
  340. Hosokawa's government ended due to Harumoto's loss and Miyoshi's government was newly established.
  341. Hosokawa's government was a Japanese military government in the Sengoku period which existed from 1493 through 1549.
  342. Hosokawa, Miraitei, Sugichiyo, and others belong to this type.
  343. Hosokawa-gami originates from the Hosokawa hosho (heavy Japanese paper of the best quality in Hosokawa village, Kii province) at the foot of Mt. Koya and was actively made in the Chichibu and Hiki-gun in the Musashino in Edo period.
  344. Hosokute-juku Station on Nakasen-do Road, hatago 'Daikokuya' (Mizunami City, Gifu Prefecture)
  345. Hosomaki
  346. Hosomaki (thin sushi roll) is an easy-to-eat sushi roll with a diameter of about three centimeters.
  347. Hosome-koshi
  348. Hosomi Bus Routes
  349. Hosomi Museum
  350. Hosomi Museum is a private art museum mainly devoted to Japanese antiquities, located in Okazaki, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  351. Hosomi Museum was established to exhibit collections of Oriental antiquities collected by the wealthy businessman, Ryoichi HOSOMI (1901-1978: also known by the name of Ryo HOSOMI and the pseudonym Kokoan), who amassed his fortune through the trade of woollen textiles, and his eldest son, Minoru HOSOMI (1922-2006).
  352. Hosonaga
  353. Hosonaga (everyday dress of young noblewoman)
  354. Hosonaga (long divided robe)
  355. Hosonaga are clothes made only for use as gifts and it was not in fact worn.
  356. Hosonaga for Women
  357. Hosonaga is a type of ubugi (swaddling clothes) of the Heian period with a shape similar to kariginu (a type of ancient kimono).
  358. Hosonaga often appeared in Heian literature as a 'garment for ladies of a high rank.'
  359. Hosonaga used as baby clothes are depicted in the 'Murasaki Shikibu Nikki Emaki' (illustrated scroll of the Lady Murasaki's Diary) produced in the early Kamakura period.
  360. Hosono Post Office
  361. Hosono Route: Shuzan - Hosono - Yono, Shuzan - Hosono - Shimonagano
  362. Hosono Station
  363. Hosono Station - Shimokoma Station - JR Miyamaki Station
  364. Hosono Station - Sugai - Hosono Station East (Kintetsu Shin-Housono Station) - Mukunoki Center - Minami-Kyoto High School - Gardening Space in Kyoto - Komada Station/Shimokoma Station - Strawberry Field - Hosono Station
  365. Hosono Station - Town Office/Library - U-Town Keihanna/Kohnan - Kansai-kan of the National Diet Library - Keihanna Plaza - Higashihataguchi - Hikaridai - Seika Town Seikaminami Junior High School - Yamadagawa Station
  366. Hosono Station, located in Koaza-Nagatsuka, Oaza-Hosono, Seika-cho, Sorakugun of Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Katamachi Line of West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
  367. Hosono-jinja Shrine
  368. Hosono-jinja Shrine (Oaza Hosono, Seika-cho, Soraku-gun): it is a grand shrine and celebrates the tsukinami-no-matsuri (monthly festival) and the niiname-sai (harvest festivals).
  369. Hosono-toge Mountain pass
  370. Hososhi wore outer robes and a mask with four golden eyes and held long-handled Chinese spears in their right hand and a large shield in their left hand.
  371. Hososhiyo-sho (a legal book compiled by the Sakanoue clan between the end of Heian period and the early Kamakura period)
  372. Hosozome was used as formal attire when combined with hakama.
  373. Hospital (Kyoto University Hospital)
  374. Hospital and clinics
  375. Hospital route
  376. Hospital service: Ryoun TAKAMATSU
  377. Hospitals
  378. Hosshi hon No.10 (the preacher, the tenth chapter of the Lotus Sutra) 'If an evil man always defames and swears Buddha in front of Buddha with a bad mind actually, for a long time, his sin would be lighter.
  379. Hosshin Wakashu'
  380. Hosshinshu
  381. Hosshinshu (Collected Tales of Awakening)
  382. Hosshinshu (Tales of Awakening) is a collection of Buddhist tales compiled in the early Kamakura period.
  383. Hossho-bo answered 'Because Mt. Hiei is a place for the emperors to pray, I can not refuse their invitation at the third visit of their messenger.'
  384. Hossho-bo answers 'Even when the Imperial Court orders me to come there, I will not go at the second order. However, I live in odo (the land governed by the emperors) and I can not refuse to go at the third visit of the messenger.'
  385. Hossho-bo says 'I hear you died in Chikushi Province. Therefore, I have been holding a memorial service.'
  386. Hossho-bo says to Raijin 'You, Michizane, was a vassal who received the obligation from the Emperor until yesterday, wasn't you? Be calm.'
  387. Hossho-bo was the teacher of Michizane since Michizane was young and they were in a close relation as a teacher and a student and, therefore, the two sincerely converse.
  388. Hossho-bo, a Buddhism priest in Mt. Hiei was the teacher of Michizane SUGAWARA.
  389. Hossho-in Temple
  390. Hossho-ji Temple
  391. Hossho-ji Temple became known as uji-dera, 'The Temple of Kings', and was revered by successive generations of Imperial Household members.
  392. Hossho-ji Temple is part of the Seizanzenrin-ji School, Jodo Sect, in Higashiyama-ku Ward, Kyoto City.
  393. Hossho-ji Temple was erected by Emperor Shirakawa, who appointed Kakuen, Morozane's biological elder brother Betto (the head priest).
  394. Hossho-ji Temple was one of the "Six Victorious Temples" that existed in Shirakawa, the eastern suburb of Heian-kyo (the area of Okazaki Park and Tokyo Municipal Zoo in modern-day Kyoto City) from the Heian Period to the Muromachi Period.
  395. Hossho-ji Temple, which was known as one of the Rokusho-ji Temples (also referred to as Rikusho-ji Temples; six temples built in the area by retired emperors by the mid-twelfth century) later, but was ruined at the end of the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States).
  396. Hossho-ji was the first and the largest of these Six Victorious Temples.
  397. Hosshoji-Oji Street and Fushimi-kaido Road
  398. Hosso sect of Buddhism and Tokuitsu
  399. Hosso sect of Buddhism in Japan is one of Nanto rokushu and was introduced several times by nyutoguhoso (a dharma-seeking priest to Tang).
  400. Hosso sect: founded by 'Dosho' (his name could be written 道昭 or 道照), head temples include Kofuku-ji Temple and Yakushi-ji Temple.
  401. Hosso-shu sect
  402. Hossu, originally a tool to drive away insects such as flies.
  403. Host Rock
  404. Host rock (also known as wall rock) is a rock that is used as a base for something.
  405. Hostages were sent not only from Baekje as in the past, but also from Silla which was on the defensive in the Korean peninsula.
  406. Hosts
  407. Hosts are indicated in ().
  408. Hosuseri and Hoori were his younger brothers.
  409. Hosuseri no Mikoto
  410. Hosuseri no Mikoto appears in his birth scene only and then is not mentioned again.
  411. Hosuseri no Mikoto is a Shinto god in Japanese mythology.
  412. Hosuseri no Mikoto was a child of the god Ninigi and the goddess Konohanasakuyabime.
  413. Hot Spring (Onsen)
  414. Hot Spring Town
  415. Hot Spring: Kinosaki Hot Spring
  416. Hot amazake with ginger juice added is often drunk to warm the body (to prevent colds).
  417. Hot and cold vending machines
  418. Hot or cold vending machines
  419. Hot rice and an accompanying dish must be cooled before it is sealed.
  420. Hot soba
  421. Hot spring
  422. Hot spring areas in Higashiyoshino-mura are dispersed into three areas and are referred to as 'Higashi-yoshino Onsen Hot Spring', 'Takasumi Onsen Hot Spring' and 'Yahata Onsen Hot Spring,' respectively.
  423. Hot spring culture in Hungary, where public baths were constructed during the ancient Roman period, has a history of nearly 2000 years.
  424. Hot spring culture of "soaking," similar to that of Japan, is rooted in the Republic of Korea.
  425. Hot spring excavated at a springwater site named 'Yoronomizu water' by Tsunasada KUTSUKI, domain head of the Fukuchiyama clan.
  426. Hot spring hotels are often chosen for the kanpukai to be held, and it is not always during the day that the event is held.
  427. Hot spring resort
  428. Hot spring resort area
  429. Hot spring spa
  430. Hot spring town
  431. Hot spring water is also used for saunas and showers.
  432. Hot spring water quality
  433. Hot springs
  434. Hot springs and therapy
  435. Hot springs are believed to be good for fatigue, sensitivity to cold temperatures and burn injuries, but not for drinking.
  436. Hot springs are categorized based on their ingredients.
  437. Hot springs are divided into a type of circulating bath, which recycles hot spring water once poured into a bath, and the type of kakenagashi, which uses fresh hot spring water without recycling.
  438. Hot springs around the world
  439. Hot springs in Asian countries
  440. Hot springs in Europe
  441. Hot springs in Japan
  442. Hot springs in Oceania
  443. Hot springs in the U.S.
  444. Hot springs resort area
  445. Hot springs said to have been found by Kobo Daishi
  446. Hot springs within or nearby the area
  447. Hot water and pickled vegetables
  448. Hot water is always used before making the tea so that a tea bowl can be warmed and bristles plunged in hot water can be softened and improved in elasticity.
  449. Hot water sourced from the hot spring flows in the footbath facility, and is available from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
  450. Hot-spring resort
  451. Hot-spring resort area
  452. Hot-spring water quality
  453. Hota Myohon-ji Temple
  454. Hota Myohon-ji Temple (Chiba Prefecture, independent)
  455. Hota Myohon-ji Temple and Koizumi Kuon-ji Temple did not approve Kechimyaku Sojo from Nichimoku to Nichido but instead split off, claiming the legitimacy of Nichigo.
  456. Hota Myohon-ji Temple and its former 4 branch temples joined Nichiren Sho Sect in April 1957.
  457. Hota Myohon-ji Temple, Koizumi Kuon-ji Temple
  458. Hotaiko (January 1909)'Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI' (the two-volume reprinted edition, published by Iwanami Shoten Publishers' Iwanami Bunko brand in 1996)
  459. Hotaiko (a solo piece, lyrics by Masakazu TOYAMA)
  460. Hotaku, a small bell.
  461. Hotakubo
  462. Hotan
  463. Hotan (1654 - April 14, 1738) was a learned monk in the middle of the Edo period.
  464. Hotan-bo insisted that it was alive while Gyobu-bo insisted otherwise, and so the problem was not settled.
  465. Hotaru (The Fireflies)
  466. Hotaru (The Fireflies) is one of the 54 chapters of "The Tale of Genji."
  467. Hotaru (The Tale of Genji)
  468. Hotaru Hyobukyo no Miya
  469. Hotaru Hyobukyo no Miya is a fictitious character in "The Tale of Genji" written by Murasaki Shikibu (note that he is not the same person as Hyobukyo no Miya, an elder brother of Fujitsubo).
  470. Hotaru Hyobukyo no Miya: Emperor Kiritsubo's son and crowned prince.
  471. Hotaru Iwa Rock (a habitat of Genji fireflies, a two-minute walk away)
  472. Hotaru appeared as early as the time of Nihonshoki (Chronicles of Japan), written in a few different characters in the book, but the origin of the word is uncertain.
  473. Hotaru type (one variety of the ikekomi type represented by the one existing in the Katsura Detached Palace)
  474. Hotate-mai (Nagaoka Koyoken)
  475. Hotei
  476. Hotei (pot-bellied god of good fortune) out of Hino Shichifukujin (Seven Deities of Good Luck in Hino).
  477. Hotei NOMURA
  478. Hotei NOMURA (November 13, 1880 - August 23, 1934) was a film director, screenwriter and producer who lived during the Taisho period and early Showa period.
  479. Hotei NOMURA fused the American style of Henry Kotani with his own family dramas to produce the forerunners of modern Shochiku films.
  480. Hotei NOMURA was born in Kyoto City on November 13, 1880.
  481. Hotei is one of the Seven Deities of Good Fortune of Japanese mythology.
  482. Hotei is originally the name of a legendary Buddhist monk who actually lived in Mingzhou (now Zhejiang Province, China) in the late Tang Dynasty period.
  483. Hotei was first described as a Zen monk in the 27th volume of "Keitokudentoroku" compiled in the early 11th century together with other eminent Zen monks such as Hoshi of Ryo (the south dynasty), Chigi, and Kanzan Jittoku.
  484. Hotei was imported as a subject of Zenga (Zen paintings) in the Kamakura period.
  485. Hotei yama (decorative float enshrining Hoteison or pot-bellied god of good fortune): Ubayanagi-cho, Takoyakushi-dori Shinmachi Higashi-iru (to the east of Takoyakushi-dori Street and Shinmachi-dori Street), Nakagyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  486. Hotei's fat appearance has been considered not only to represent his magnanimity and well-rounded personality but also to symbolize richness and prosperity.
  487. Hotel 'L'Hotel de Hiei'
  488. Hotel Arstainn
  489. Hotel Fujita Kyoto
  490. Hotel Keihan Kyoto
  491. Hotel Koyo
  492. Hotel Koyo (see below for further details) was renovated to reopen as Ryotei Koyo.
  493. Hotel Mare Takata
  494. Hotel Mets Nagaoka,' affiliated with JR East, is directly linked to the free passage.
  495. Hotel New Otani Nagaoka
  496. Hotel New Otani Tokyo in Kioi-cho Town stands where a residence used to be.
  497. Hotel Nikko Princess Kyoto
  498. Hotels that Used to be Affiliated with the Kyoto Hotel
  499. Hoto
  500. Hoto (a treasure tower)
  501. Hoto (treasure pagoda) of Anyo-ji Temple [Maruyama-cho, Yasaka Toriimae Higashi-iru, Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City]
  502. Hoto (treasure pagoda) of Chofuku-ji Temple [Umezu Nakamura-cho, Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City]
  503. Hoto Nyorai: The tathagata is depicted in the east (the top of the Taizokai Mandala; in the Kongokai Mandala, the west is the top) as a symbol of 'hosshin' (which means making up one's mind to seek spiritual enlightenment).
  504. Hoto Tower in Shoho-ji Temple (Important cultural asset)
  505. Hoto is a local recipe cooked throughout Yamanashi Prefecture.
  506. Hoto is a pagoda in a form of cylindrical body of pagoda having roof on it.
  507. Hoto is cooked by simmering fresh Udon noodles covered with Uchiko (wide noodles made from inelastic dough that is affordable by kneading without applying salt) in miso soup, the main ingredients being seasonal vegetables such as pumpkin and root crops.
  508. Hoto no Myo
  509. Hoto of this style were often used for the mausoleums of the Tokugawa shogunate.
  510. Hoto with cylinder-shaped bodies and extended roofs are considered to be the archetypes of tahoto.
  511. Hoto-ji Temple
  512. Hoto-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple belonging to the Nichiren Sect located in Fushimi-ku Ward, Kyoto City.
  513. Hotobun (formal response speech to imperial rescript) Incident
  514. Hotoke no Kao (Faces of Buddhist Statues)
  515. Hotoke-gozen
  516. Hotoke-gozen (1160-1180) was a women who danced Shirabyoshi (Japanese traditional dance) and lived in the end of the Heian period.
  517. Hotokebashi
  518. Hotokemai (Buddha Dance) of Itosaki
  519. Hotokemai (Buddha Dance) of Matsun-ji Temple
  520. Hotokemai is a dance performed wearing masks representing Dainichi Nyorai, Shaka Nyorai and Amida Nyorai to Etenraku music that is reputed to have been transmitted from Tang Dynasty China during the Nara period.
  521. Hotokemai, Buddha Dance (May)
  522. Hotokezuka-kofun Tumulus
  523. Hotoku July 28, 1449 - July 25, 1452
  524. Hotokubon (Yomei second printing), owned by the Yomei Library, belongs to this line, and it was a source book for "New Complete Works of Japanese Classic Literature."
  525. Hotosho
  526. Hotosho was a document that his subjects expressed their intention to follow the Emperor, which had the signature of the president and the other subjects.
  527. Hototogisu (literally, Little Cuckoo) (July 1896, 'Bungei Kurabu')
  528. Hototogisu Kojouno Rakugetsu
  529. Hotsumatsutae
  530. Hotsumatsutae (Ago uses kana instead of kanji characters)
  531. Hotta and Katsumi's relationship continued until Katsumi's final years.
  532. Hotta no Ki, beginning of 9th century, end of 10th century, remains of Hotta no Ki, theories of Kawabe fu, Okachi no Ki, josaku unrecorded in documents, and second Ogaki no Ki
  533. Hottate-bashira was used in structures throughout history since prehistoric times when it was used in primitive dwellings.
  534. Hotto Motto: the second largest chain in the industry
  535. Hou-qing copy: This copy was a part of the collection by An-guo who was a epigrapher in the Ming period together with the Xian-feng copy and the Zhong-quan copy, and 497 characters are able to be read from this copy and this copy is often used as fa-shu.
  536. Hougetsu SHIMAMURA
  537. Hougetsu SHIMAMURA (February 28, 1871 - November 5, 1918) was a Japanese literature critique and stage director.
  538. Hougetsu was born in Oguni-mura Village (today Hamada City) in Shimane Prefecture, as the first son of Ippei SASAYAMA and adopted by Bunko SHIMAMURA who was a public prosecutor at the court in Hamada-cho.
  539. Houhan Shu
  540. Houhan Shu (The History of the Late Han Dynasty)
  541. Houjigoe
  542. Houn NARUSE gave rise to a branch named Naruse group of Sekishu school.
  543. Houn-ji Temple (Heguri-cho)
  544. Houn-ji Temple is a Nichiren Sho sect temple located in Heguri-cho, Ikoma-gun, Nara Prefecture.
  545. Hounsai was a chairman at the Junior Chamber International Japan.
  546. Houra Bairin: a plum grove located between Hitome Hakkei and Tenjin Bairin.
  547. Houri are eternal virgins, and devout muslims are said to receive hospitable treatment from them in heaven (Islam) after death.
  548. Hourokaku Mandala single width (Written by Den Koseno Kanaoka)
  549. Hours
  550. Hours may be extended when a special event is held.
  551. Hours of Opening
  552. Hours of Operation
  553. Hours of opening: 9 A.M. - 5 P.M.
  554. Hours of opening: 9:30 to 17:00
  555. Hours of operation
  556. Hours open
  557. Hours: 10 am to 4 pm
  558. Hours: 10: 00 to 16: 00
  559. Hours: 9AM to 4:30 PM, Entrance fee: 400 yen
  560. Housai (years of birth and death unknown) was a priest of Tang (ancient China) in the Nara period.
  561. House A has larger floor space than other three houses.
  562. House A is seemingly a pit dwelling with a door lifted by a column, as well as a balcony and a sunshade which are the same as those of House C.
  563. House B is a one-story house with a half-hipped roof.
  564. House C is a raised-floor house with a half-hipped roof.
  565. House D is a raised-floor house with a gabled roof and a ladder on one side of the house.
  566. House of Genjo
  567. House of Ishida family (Kashiwara, Miyama-cho) - This is the oldest house in Japan, and is designated as one of the national important cultural properties.
  568. House of Sen and shokka
  569. House of the EGAWA family, Nirayama yakusho (government office) (Izunokuni City); part of its construction materials are said to be from medieval times.
  570. House of the FURUI family (FURUI Sennenya, Yasutomi Cho, Himeji City, Hyogo Prefecture)
  571. House of the HAKOGI family (HAKOGI Sennenya, Yamada Cho, Kita Ward, Kobe City, Hyogo Prefecture)
  572. House of the OGAWA family (Nijo-jinya) (Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture): being designated as an Important Cultural Property (former National Treasure) in 1944.
  573. House of the YOSHIMURA family (Habikino City, Osaka Prefecture): being designated as an Important Cultural Property (former National Treasure) in 1937.
  574. House types
  575. House where Empress Kojun was born (the family line of the present emperor's older brother in law)
  576. House-shaped Haniwa
  577. House-shaped haniwa similar to Kaoku Monkyo pattern
  578. House-shaped haniwa similar to Kaoku Monkyo pattern are excavated from different parts of Japan.
  579. House-shaped haniwa similar to this House C was excavated from the surrounding moat of Misono Tumulus in Yao City, Osaka Prefecture.
  580. House-shaped haniwa which looks similar to House A was excavated from the surrounding moat of Misono Tumulus in Yao City, Osaka Prefecture, and eight different types of house-shaped haniwa were excavated from Akabori Chausuyama Tumulus in Akabori-machi, Isesaki City, Gunma Prefecture.
  581. Housed in Homotsukan Museum.
  582. Housed in the right of the main hall.
  583. Housed inside are the memorial tablets and portraits of the three generations of Tokugawa Shoguns (Ieyasu, Hidetada and Iemitsu) who were instrumental in the construction of Chion-in Temple.
  584. Housed inside the main hall.
  585. Housed within are heart sutras hand written by Emperor Saga, Emperor Go-Kogon, Emperor Go-Hanazono, Emperor Go-Nara, Emperor Ogimachi and Emperor Kokaku in addition to a statue of Yakushi Nyorai.
  586. Housed within the Komyo hoden (treasure hall) (not open to the public) at Tofuku-ji Temple.
  587. Housed within the main hall.
  588. Household Shinto altar, and Buddhist altar
  589. Household Succession
  590. Household articles were also looted, but on the other hand, there are many known cases that Uchikowashi was restricted only to destroying residences and looting and setting fire were strictly forbidden to insist it was a justifiable sanction.
  591. Household names died one after another.
  592. Households engaged in forestry is 1,239, a 3.6% share compared to the total number of city households.
  593. Households: 13,553
  594. Houses (private houses and dozo warehouses [warehouses made of soil]) in various building styles, all of which were built in the Edo period and have been used in various places in Nara Prefecture, eleven items and 15 buildings in total, including thatched roof houses, were disassembled and reconstructed there, and are now exhibited there.
  595. Houses a bronze bell that has been designated as an important cultural property.
  596. Houses a sitting statue of Kannon (commonly called Yokihi-Kannon) that was created in China during the Southern Song Dynasty.
  597. Houses are densely located on a slope located north of the station and a concrete works is located south of the station.
  598. Houses for middle or lower ranked samurai are also minka if they were built in the same manner as noka.
  599. Houses for tea ceremony and azuma-ya (small arbors) are placed in various locations in the garden, for resting while walking or for enjoying views of the garden.
  600. Houses images of Kobo Daishi, ONO no Takamura and Enmao
  601. Houses in Japan include detached houses, condominiums (so-called Mansions, apartments, Danchi (apartment complexes) and Kodanjutaku (apartment buildings constructed by a Housing Corporation)), Nagaya (rowhouses), and Bunka-jutaku (new style houses).
  602. Houses located in a small area are called Shuraku (a settlement), buraku (a hamlet), or Chiku (an area).
  603. Houses of the common people
  604. Houses sculptures by Uncho ISHIKAWA
  605. Houses the teeth obtained after the cremation of Shaka Nyorai that are said to have been brought from the Bailian Temple in the Qingyuan Prefecture of Southern Song Dynasty China by Shunjo's student Tankai.
  606. Houses, gardens and arts were his only hobbies, and this helped to keep his ambitions encouraged.
  607. Houses, turrets (citadels) and keeps were also included in the construction.
  608. Housing and architecture
  609. Housing development
  610. Housing estate
  611. Housing includes high rise dwellings, five-story cuboid staircase type of dwellings, two-story terraced houses, and star-shaped star houses.
  612. Housing land development in the suburban areas was promoted to give places to live for the influent labor force in urban areas during an era of high-speed economic growth.
  613. Housing lots for machiyas are sometimes called "Unagi-no-nedoko (bed for eel)," because the width is small and the depth is large.
  614. Housing, food and clothing
  615. Housings have been built using local building materials in various regions in Japan from old times.
  616. Houyou GOYAMA (1824 - 1889) was a prominent Japanese calligrapher and composer of Chinese poems in the Meiji period.
  617. Hovever, the above poems were produced for the grave of Takuminokami ASANO while the following is said to be his actual death haiku.
  618. How Amaterasu omikami is described in myths
  619. How Atsutane write was not something of an ordinary person.
  620. How Fuhonsen coin was found
  621. How I wish that somebody told her that I am in love with her; otherwise I could no longer keep it secret.
  622. How It Is Made
  623. How Japan Dealt with the Incident
  624. How Taneyori came to arrive at the Hoki province as the Gunji, the local magistrate, and the date he arrived is unknown.
  625. How Tankami is shaped in details is commonly unknown.
  626. How Tenshu were treated in castles after the Meiji period has been described in the above Tenshu after the Meiji period.
  627. How To Process Pufferfish
  628. How Tsukuyomi is described in myths
  629. How Tsukuyomi is referred to in myths
  630. How Yukimori YAMANAKA was Treated/Evaluated and What Happened after his Death
  631. How about the influence of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu ?
  632. How about you?'
  633. How and when a shintai is renewed or taken over do not depend on its complexity or size.
  634. How and why it was so titled is unknown.
  635. How auspicious it is.
  636. How can one weigh and consider all this so easily?'
  637. How can they defend themselves against this?'
  638. How can we allow this to be overlooked as suggested by the Education Ministry, because it was just a temporary anomaly?'; 'In Imperial Japan, the true way of determining character is not by knowledge or good deeds but by national emotions, in other words, the cause.
  639. How cool/the chimes/drifting away from the bell
  640. How could an innocent strange word be so widely used!
  641. How could they refrain from making poems when they listen to nightingales in the blossoms or frogs in the water?
  642. How could you survive.
  643. How crazy Takatoki HOJO was about Dengaku is well known, because the situation was depicted in detail in "Taiheiki" (The Record of the great peace), and Icchu who played a principal part in such an era.
  644. How delays on the Osaka Loop Line and other lines have an effect on the Yamatoji Line
  645. How delightful it is To dedicate myselfLeaving this world in place of you
  646. How dust is flung up depends totally on the size of sand grains.
  647. How easily the rain passes over the house of those having a difficult time.'
  648. How far and how long he was involved in the party are unknown.
  649. How fatty your genitalia are!
  650. How hinawaju was operated in Japan
  651. How holy a place green leaves, young leaves, and through them the sunlight now bursts
  652. How is the Ekiben sold?
  653. How is the term "Inari" related to Inari Shrine on Inari-yama Kofun (an ancient mound tomb) in Sakitama Kofun-gun (a group of ancient mound tombs), and when was it built?
  654. How is your body formed?'
  655. How it is made and its shapes differ among Nara Prefecture, Wakayama Prefecture, and Ishikawa Prefecture.
  656. How it was completed
  657. How long the congee is cooked for differs depending on the region.
  658. How many cloud peaks have come tumbling down upon the moon's own mountain
  659. How many layers of cloth are overlapped
  660. How many months are you pregnant? I'm worried that you are on a boat."
  661. How many people like Minobe do you think are there in Japan today.'
  662. How many times did the barrier-keeper at the Suma checking station wake tonight at the sounds of plovers flying from the Awaji-shima Island? ('Kinyo wakashu' Winter, 288)
  663. How meaningless it is to attach to blossomed flowers, and you have no idea that disease is breaking into your body (Shui Wakashu 405).
  664. How might it happen that dewdrops of purest white, all single colored, bring forth a myriad hues in the leaves of autumn trees.
  665. How much less so Yoritomo's wife Masako HOJO or his rear vassal Yoshitoki HOJO, to whom the reins of government fell after Yoritomo's death; truly, to seek to eliminate such as these is an undertaking that is not unreasonable.
  666. How much one is eager to establish a central administration (the kuge, court nobles, government) depended on how the state of affairs were progressing.
  667. How much time passed between the two events is not specifically described.
  668. How regrettable we are to be degraded to tozama (outside feudal lord)!'
  669. How regrettable.
  670. How should I lie down and wait for the person I've been waiting for, and autumn wind blows when she is coming (love in the autumn night, Tadakage KOREMUNE, "Shokukokin Wakashu" Volume 12, Koiuta (Lovers Poetry) 2).
  671. How sinful I am to bring harm to the family I serve just because I was blinded by love.
  672. How sokutai is worn
  673. How the Year of His Enthronement, 660 B.C., Was Determined
  674. How the battle started
  675. How the book came about
  676. How the book was published
  677. How the bus route began
  678. How the ceasing of membership in the Imperial Family started
  679. How the costume was worn
  680. How the emperor passed away
  681. How the law came to be enacted
  682. How the meaning of 'jujutsu' has changed
  683. How the notification caught Russia off-guard is visible in the response of Minister Rosen.
  684. How the sauce covers the soba depends on the thickness and the ingredients of the noodles.
  685. How the tahoto style emerged
  686. How the war broke out
  687. How they are eaten
  688. How this book came into existence
  689. How to Cook
  690. How to Cook Yakizakana
  691. How to Cook in a Common Way
  692. How to Draw
  693. How to Eat
  694. How to Eat Takoyaki
  695. How to Feed
  696. How to Get There
  697. How to Handle Kakejiku
  698. How to Make Sekihan
  699. How to Obtain
  700. How to Play
  701. How to Prepare Weak-flavored Tea
  702. How to Serve
  703. How to Use the Geigi services
  704. How to Watch the Milky Way
  705. How to Wrap
  706. How to Wrap a Bushugibukuro
  707. How to Wrap a Shugibukuro
  708. How to be seated
  709. How to brew the taste and fragrance
  710. How to bring kaishi
  711. How to burn leaves together
  712. How to buy the first card
  713. How to care for long hair
  714. How to chant
  715. How to cook
  716. How to cook (an example)
  717. How to cook Hanpen
  718. How to cook and how to eat
  719. How to cook koikoku
  720. How to cook konnyaku
  721. How to cook ohitashi
  722. How to count Nigiri-zushi
  723. How to count torii
  724. How to decide the outcome of a competition
  725. How to display the Hina-matsuri dolls
  726. How to dissolve and use earth pigments and other colors.
  727. How to distinguish tasty mikan from appearance: (1) Rind is tight
  728. How to divide
  729. How to do Kokei
  730. How to draw
  731. How to drink soups:
  732. How to eat
  733. How to eat Nigiri-zushi
  734. How to eat boiled rice:
  735. How to eat it
  736. How to eat natto
  737. How to eat noodles:
  738. How to find jori remains
  739. How to fold a kojakin and the order of use vary depending on tea ceremony schools.
  740. How to fold kimono
  741. How to form a bite-sized rice ball
  742. How to get
  743. How to give a signal was almost the same as the way of the previous third demonstration.
  744. How to have a sumo match
  745. How to hold
  746. How to make
  747. How to make (one example)
  748. How to make Dashi-maki Tamago: Mix egg yolk and white (beat egg yolk lightly with egg white), add dashi broth soup, and fry in an oily pan.
  749. How to make Hondamage
  750. How to make beni-shoga
  751. How to make ink sticks
  752. How to make it
  753. How to make nigiri-zushi
  754. How to make nori-maki
  755. How to make onigiri is summed up in keeping the status protecting from growth of bacteria as much as possible.
  756. How to make onsen eggs at home
  757. How to make shochu with hot water is; first, pour hot water in a glass, and then gently add shochu, then it is blended naturally by generated convection.
  758. How to make soup with soy sauce
  759. How to make soup with taremiso
  760. How to make tamago kake gohan varies depending on one's taste.
  761. How to make the kohaku-namasu
  762. How to order
  763. How to pay fares
  764. How to perform a hundred-fold visit
  765. How to play
  766. How to play kaioi
  767. How to play the shakuhachi
  768. How to pound mochi
  769. How to prepare
  770. How to prepare bento
  771. How to prepare harakomeshi
  772. How to preserve
  773. How to produce
  774. How to produce konnyaku
  775. How to purchase and recharge
  776. How to read Yamatai in Japanese
  777. How to read the term "sumo"
  778. How to read 伊治 was unwritten in the historical materials, 伊治 was read as 'Iji' by on-yomi (Chinese reading of kanji) for a long time.
  779. How to remember
  780. How to sell and buy
  781. How to sing Saibara depends on the school, but Biwa (Japanese lute), So (a long Japanese zither with thirteen strings), Sho (Japanese flute), etc. are used as the accompaniment and there is no mai (a formal, traditional Japanese dance).
  782. How to sing, tunes and pitches, and rhythm were written in the books, but it was recondite for ordinary people (perhaps even for professionals).
  783. How to tie the men himo string depends on players of Japanese art of fencing and the latter is popular among players in the Kansai and Kyushu areas.
  784. How to treat Kimigayo in the filed of education is a theme which has been discussed very often.
  785. How to treat these warlords remained an issue for Hideyoshi's administration.
  786. How to use
  787. How to use Geta
  788. How to use chopstics:
  789. How to use taxis
  790. How to use:
  791. How to visit a shrine
  792. How to wash Wafuku
  793. How to write a nation's script, that is, the problems pertaining to a nation's script, was discussed as one of the ways to leave from the Eastern civilization, which was regarded undeveloped, and to enter into the Western civilization when civilization and enlightenment was promoted.
  794. How trends in Buddhism spread and Jodo sect
  795. How vivid and hateful he acts making Danshichi standout and audience understand Danshichi's anguish and the process leading up to the murder.
  796. How was Katakamuna civilization advocated
  797. How was Tsunetane CHIBA depicted?
  798. How was our world created?
  799. How well the rice is to be polished differs depending on the grade of sake, and morohaku and other high quality kinds of sake use highly polished rice.
  800. Howaza
  801. However "Kiyotsune" (a Noh piece) is not played as a tradition.
  802. However "Omiwa-Jinja Shi" (The history of Omiwa-Jinja Shrine) denies it, saying that it was founded by Kyoen on the ground that 'a statue of Kyoen was enshrined in Kaisan-do Hall (temple where the statue of founder priest is placed) of the temple.'
  803. However "Sekigahara Gunki Taise" (the grand collection of the war chronicles of Sekigahara) said that he belonged to Western Camp with his younger brothers, Nobuyoshi and Nobusada ODA, and he apologized and obtained absolution after the war.
  804. However Atsutane did not describe detailed punishments that the deceased receives.
  805. However Atsutane was very serious about it.
  806. However Daijokan headed by FUJIWARA no Michinaga became aware that some claims of Gunji and farmers are rather selfish and thus claims that won dismissal of the Kokushu dramatically dropped from about 50% to 20% during the period between the latter half of the 1110's and the 1120's.
  807. However Emperor Godaigo opposed his father, the Retired Emperor Gouda's policy, 'Imperial succession would be succeeded by the descendants of Emperor Gonijo and the descendants of Emperor Godaigo were not allowed to succeed to the throne.'
  808. However Emperor Godaigo, who returned to the city, made a mistake with the Kenmu Restoration, when Takauji ASHIKAGA broke away, the retired Emperor issued a command from an retired emperor order to search out and destroy Yoshisada NITTA.
  809. However Emperor Heizei passed the throne to his younger brother, Emperor Saga in May and June 809.
  810. However Emperor Higashiyama's era was in the Genroku era, there was an overlapped in the period of Tsunayoshi TOKUGAWA's shogunate era, that was called inukubo (he was called the Dog Shogun as he issued an regulation to protect animals).
  811. However Emperor Sanjo loved this youngest Princess very much, Michinaga also treated this grandchild born of his daughter very well, the Princess's aunt, Grand Empress Dowager, FUJIWARA no Shoshi did Koshiyui (a person who tie the ribbon of the Hakama at the ceremony) at the Mogi ceremony for the Princess.
  812. However Emperor Tenmu died suddenly before the establishing a political base, Emperor Tenmu's Empress tried to avoid the sudden solution in terms of Imperial succession, as she was concerned that Prince Kusakabe would have the same experience as Prince Otomo.
  813. However Enryo INOUE of Tetsugakukan (a private university), who aimed to train educators for popularization of philosophy requested continuously from 1890 the Ministry of Education to admit private university students to become a teacher without certification.
  814. However Hakuseki ARAI foresaw the possibility of the discontinuity of the Imperial throne sixty years prior, he had already established the Kaninnomiya family, who were in the Imperial family line and had the right to succeed to the throne, Emperor Kokaku was accepted from the Kaninnomiya family as Emperor Gomomozono's successor.
  815. However Hanshi include all samurai ranging from Joshi (superior warriors) to Kashi (non-commissioned officers), and in a narrow sense, they also include those without samurai status such as ashigaru (common foot soldiers) and chugen (a rank below common soldiers).
  816. However Harumoto HOSOKAWA, fearing the presence of Hongwan-ji Temple--as if it had been a walled town--and strength of its followers, joined hands with the Nichiren sect, who held power over the entire Kyoto City, and attempted to attack the Ikko-shu sect.
  817. However Harunaga says, 'a horse or a cow understands its obligation, and even a dog snuggles up to you and wags its tail if you feed it for three days.'
  818. However Hidehisa did achieve establishing Kasatori-toge Mountain pass, Komoro-jo Castle and its castle towns.
  819. However I will not restrict you with regard to various matters.'
  820. However Iemochi died of illness in the Osaka-jo Castle while suppressing the Choshu Domain.
  821. However Iemochi, who was smart and considerate to others, helped to solve the conflict with the Ooku side.
  822. However Ike no zenni, stepmother of Kiyomori, asked Kiyomori for clemency as she saw a resemblance between Yoritomo and her child TAIRA no Iemori who died young.
  823. However Imperial Prince Kanenaga who did not have the financial abilities to host the tribute trade nor the force of the navy to crack down on wako left the status without meeting the Ming expectations.
  824. However Imperial Prince Kuniyoshi (Kuninaga) died of an illness in that year, Imperial Prince Kazuhito was decided, in haste, to become the Crown Prince.
  825. However Imperial Prince Sawara was under suspicion of treason (the plot to assassinate FUJIWARA no Tanetsugu) and he was not allowed to succeed to the throne, he was furious about this and he ended up fasting until he died of starvation.
  826. However Imperial Princess Asahara resigned her position as Empress without having any children, she died on May 18, 817 when she was thirty nine years old.
  827. However Imperial Princess Kenshi, who acted without much consideration of her position as Princess, was called Kyosaiin (mad Saiin).
  828. However Ito felt obliged and paid three million yen in token of his gratitude to receive the statue at his home.
  829. However Iwakura stiffened his attitude when he heard of Okuma's secret report to Imperial Prince Arisugawanomiya Taruhito, Minister of the Left, concerning the introduction of constitutional monarchy and of Okuma's proposal for the introduction of parliamentary cabinet system.
  830. However Kanezane KUJO, Yoritomo's sworn ally, already had his daughter, Ninshi KUJO, enter the court, and Yoritomo feared if Kanezane would raise an objection.
  831. However Katsumoto criticized him for his shallow thinking and grieved to know that an internal conflict in the Toyotomi family had given an opportunity to the Tokugawa family of taking advantage of the conflict and that his plan had been bedeviled by inadvertent behavior of Izu no kami.
  832. However Katsumoto does nothing, but endures it.
  833. However Kunitake KUME, a professor of Tokyo Imperial University, wrote the essay titled; ' Shintoism is to Enshrine God in the Old Way,' which was criticized as being rude to the Imperial family, he was removed from his position in 1891 and political pressure started to mount against the freedom to study.
  834. However MAEZAWA did not give any reasons as to why the provincial school of Ashikaga was not abolished and remained when kokufu and the provincial school were relocated to the Tsuga District (toward present-day Tochigi City).
  835. However Masamoto did not marry anyone and adopted three sons, Sumiyuki HOSOKAWA, Sumimoto HOSOKAWA and Takakuni HOSOKAWA, which caused a succession dispute.
  836. However Masamoto remained single all his life and did not have a single biological child.
  837. However Masanori was been ill around this time.
  838. However Michitaka died and Korechika's position of Nairan was cancelled.
  839. However Mikado orders to burn them at the highest mountain in Japan, which is in Suruga Province.
  840. However Mitsuhide kills him without saying anything, and says 'Joha tempted me into a useless wrong.'
  841. However Myoseki name of players were not inherited in full: each player retained their own individual Gago (pseudonym) as their first name.
  842. However Nakatsune stated that the land of dead is the moon and the world is ruled by Susanoo no mikoto (same as Tsukuyomi no mikoto)
  843. However Nihonshoki has it that the Emperor Tenmu died from a curse of Ama no Murakumo no Tsurugi Sword, and Nihon Koki' (Later Chronicle of Japan) describes that the Emperor Kanmu died from a curse of Totsuka-no-tsurugi Sword (a sacred sword with which Yamata no Orochi was exterminated.)
  844. However Nishi believed that the book was lost and he was not aware of the publication.
  845. However Ohime deepened emaciation even after that, and later she would pass away at the age of twenty years old.
  846. However Otsu-jo Castle was not suitable for battles, because the castle was originally used for safely preserving materials transported from Mino Province or Echizen Province by the waters of Lake Biwa.
  847. However Prince Oama had already departed and Makuta followed the prince with KIFUMI no Otomo and caught up with him on the same day at Aki in Toda (Uda-gun, Yamato Province).
  848. However Ryoshun was removed from the position of Kyushu Tandai and Mitsuyori SHIBUKAWA became the successor of the position.
  849. However SHINDEN no Unosuke returns to the village with the air of a dandy.
  850. However Saiko was arrested on June 1 and the Conspiracy to defeat the Taira clan by the In close aides became apparent (the Shishigatani Conspiracy).
  851. However Shinjo himself did not made a final appeal and his conviction was decided and said, "I want to spend more time to save people than keeping my mind on the trial."
  852. However Shinsaku HOSHO, the eighth familyhead, did not leave Tokyo and continued En-noh (performing a Noh play) activity.
  853. However Shinsaku TAKASUGI and Hirobumi ITO and others took up arms, which changed the opinion of the clan again, resulting in Hanzo being pardoned.
  854. However Shogoin Kyuri no longer exists.
  855. However Sumimoto and Yukinaga MIYOSHI who escaped to Omi Province made in roads into Kyoto on September 17, 1507, with samurai of Omi Province.
  856. However Tarokaja remonstrates saying 'I do not think the sake shop owner will give sake this time, as the last payment is not yet finished.'
  857. However Toshimichi OKUBO, acting with the authority of the Satsuma clan, got Montblanc and Hiroyasu MATSUKI (a.k.a Munenori TERASHIMA) to write a declaration from the new regime to foreign countries to gain the approval of the new regime and declare the continuation of diplomacy.
  858. However Ukifune refuses everything and thinks about nothing but Buddhist training, and doesn't even reply to him.
  859. However Yorimichi and Norimichi kept on putting pressure on Prince Takahito directly or indirectly, to send their daughters to Emperor Gosuzaku's Palace and take control of political power as maternal grandfather.
  860. However Yoritomo could not be appointed to Seii taishogun, the position he desired earnestly as a symbol of a Togoku ruler, instead, he was requested to be appointed to Dainagon (chief councilor of state), to which he declined, and returned to Rokuhara after having an audience with Emperor Gotoba.
  861. However Yoritomo got out of condition on the way back from Buddhist ceremony for bridging the Sagami-gawa River, on February 1, 1199 (December 27, 1198 under the old lunar calendar).
  862. However Yoritomo infuriated Sukechika, as he fathered a child, Sentsurumaru, with Sukechika's third daughter Yaehime when Sukechika was in Kyoto.
  863. However Yoritomo strayed from the party on the way, and was captured by TAIRA no Munekiyo, who later became a retainer of TAIRA no Yorimori.
  864. However Yoshiie's second son Shiro UKITA who was in the advance force was killed in battle when he fell for a ruse by 村国.
  865. However Yoshinaga himself was encircled by the Mori army after he had entered the Chofuku-in Temple (the present Kozan-ji Temple) and was forced to commit suicide and died on May 11.
  866. However Yukiie took sides with Yoshitsune who fought back, and the attack ended in a failure.
  867. However Zensho Co., Ltd. announced that it would not absorb or merge it but maintain the brand of Nakau in parallel with Sukiya, because it highly appreciated its name recognition in Kansai and its uniqueness of the menus.
  868. However a moat was often dug in an upland settlement during the end of the Yayoi period and Sakamogi (fence made of thorny or steeple branches to prevent entry of an enemy) were placed at the moat in some cases (Asahi site at Aichi Prefecture).
  869. However a son born to a concubine three years earlier was selected to the heir of shogun, Atsunosuke was adopted by one of gosankyo (three privileged branches of Tokugawa family), Shimizu-Tokugawa family.
  870. However a very similar event was held during the first Kyoto Intercollegiate Festa under a different name, so it could be said that it has in fact been held every year (except for the second Kyoto Intercollegiate Festa.)
  871. However after Emperor Gokomatsu's Prince, Emperor Shoko succeeded to the throne in 1412, the agreement on sharing the succession to the throne was cancelled.
  872. However after Emperor Shoko succeeded to the throne in 1412, the agreement to restart sharing the Imperial throne was cancelled, there was a declaration for Emperor Gokomatsu's direct descendants to succeed to the throne.
  873. However after Prince Kusakabe, too, died suddenly, the Empress temporarily succeeded to the throne to prevent any dispute due to Imperial succession (Emperor Jito), she let Prince Kusakabe's child, Prince Karu (later called Emperor Monmu) become Crown Prince.
  874. However after Tsunayoshi's death in 1709, when Hakuseki ARAI took the office of Shogun Ienobu's assistant, he abolished this law before even holding a funeral ceremony for Tsunayoshi.
  875. However after gaining the appointment in such a forceful way, Shungyo could not gain the confidence of the priests of Mt. Hiei and he was chased from Mt Hiei immediately upon the death of Yoshinaka in February, 1184.
  876. However after his father, though a close aide to Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa, failed to become a minister and died at the age of 50.
  877. However after his older brother, Emperor Gokomyo died in 1654, Imperial Prince Nagahito succeeded to the throne as Emperor Gosai.
  878. However after she retired as an actress, Sadayakko and Momosuke, with whom she ended a tragic love once before, were united.
  879. However after strict rules about modern style poetry were consolidated in the Tang dynasty, gafu were mainly produced with only the title borrowed from kogafu in the period of Rikucho, and those gafu were almost the same as the old style poetry in their format.
  880. However after the destruction of the Hashiba clan in 1615, the Edo bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) revoked this name and confiscated the shrine's land, after which the shrine buildings fell into decay and the sacred object within the shrine was secretly relocated to Ima Hie-jinja Shrine.
  881. However after the war, since his father had the connection with the Imperial Court, he was approved the lanownership.
  882. However after the warrior monks of Enjo-ji Temple destroyed the pass under the jurisdiction of Nanzen-ji Temple in 1367, Osaka no seki and Shugu-kawara no seki (both in Yamashina Ward, Kyoto) were burned down by Sadayo IMAGAWA, the Samurai-dokoro tonin (Governor of the Board of Retainers).
  883. However against all odds, because Yoshiaki's close aids Yusai HOSOKAWA and Mitsuhide AKECHI fought a good fight, and Katsumasa IKEDA and Yoshitsugu MIYOSHI arrived to rescue them the next day, Miyoshi sanninshu took escaped the pincer movement.
  884. However against this, there were researchers who assumed that the editor was of the Fujiwara clan, and they advocated other theories, including the one that FUJIWARA no Ietada, who also once served as 'Kogogu-daibu' should be the editor of the enlargement.
  885. However all of these opinions are only speculative.
  886. However also in the field of physics, "the issue of observation" started being discussed more deeply even at the level of substance since quantum mechanics has been developed, and the concept of "the objective observation" has become unstable from this point of view as well.
  887. However although it means that the contents written in the record are reliable, it doesn't necessarily mean that everything of the political situation in those days was written honestly.
  888. However an imperial decree for the appointment of Gon Dainagon (provisional chief councilor of state) was delivered to Rokuhara, stating 'Now, there shall not be any objection.'
  889. However army of Yoshinaka was not well disciplined, as it was a medley army, that worsened the food situation of capital that was suffering from famine.
  890. However as Kiyoko TAKEDA advocated, Nitobe's comparison of different culture as a tolerant educator was not strict enough when compared to Kanzo UCHIMURA and Masahisa UEMURA.
  891. However as Udanji grew older he failed to show any interest in the trade, and as he failed to do much except copy the stage actors he was sent back to his home and turned to his beloved acting.
  892. However as a result of the Tenmei Famine, the amount was down by half in 1786, and it was reduced to its one third by 1787.
  893. However as almost all records are now lost, many questions still remain hidden and unclear.
  894. However as housing land development moves ahead, the existence of this Layer is threatened, and is listed in the Red Data Book of Kyoto Prefecture.
  895. However as it was announced in an official gazette in 1884 that they didn't limit the use of Kiri-mon, people could use them without any restrictions.
  896. However as soon as the priests left the mountain, the situation and the attitude changed dramatically, Goshirakawa ordered Tokitada and TAIRA no Nobunori to be banished.
  897. However as the road is private and fenced off it is not possible to reach the Jizo statue.
  898. However as time went by, new clans including the Minamoto clan, the Tachibana clan, the Kiyohara clan, the Sugawara clan as well as the Fujiwara clan who established a deep matrimonial relation with the Emperor, started to rapidly occupy the upper noble class.
  899. However at that time there was a secret agreement to promote Genbi to eighth-dan and also it is said that he requested Nariaki TOKUGAWA of Mito domain for an approach to Yoshinao TSUCHIYA, the jisha-bugyo (magistrate of temples and shrines) of the time, who was adopted from Mito Tokugawa family.
  900. However at that time, "Samushiro" by koto ARIHARA, "Haru no akebono" by kengyo KIKUYAMA and so on were also composed in Osaka.
  901. However at that time, Yoshimune died of sickness, and the inside of the shogunate became impossible to do the calendar amendment.
  902. However at that time, as the Japanese government did not know about the usurpation of Tang Dynasty by Busokuten (Empress Sokuten) and the fact that it had been succeeded by Bushu Dynasty, AWATA no Mahito and others led to a slight confusion when they got there.
  903. However at the beginning of February 1181 (beginning of 1181 under the old lunar calendar), the activity of the anti-Taira clan had become more aggressive, as Takanao KIKUCHI of Higo Province, MINAMOTO no Yukiie of Owari Province and Mino Genji (the Minamoto clan) of Mino Province, also raised an army against the Taira clan.
  904. However at the peak in the Bunka and Bunsei era, it was allowed to be distributed widely and in 1826 the bakufu permitted it in other areas out of Sampu, the Three Urban Prefectures, and 4 times a year and increased the number of items to 15 items a month, total 45 items.
  905. However because Kundo-no-kami of Hirano-jinja Shrine had been enshrined in the Naizenshi (Imperial Table Office) of Heijo-kyo, it is thought that Kundo-no-kami was transferred from Kudo-jinja Shrine in Oji-cho to Heijo-kyu Palace before being subsequently transferred to Hirano-jinja Shrine.
  906. However because the need to be in Europe for direct negotiations arose, at the end of the year Montblanc returned to France with students, Masana MAEDA and Kosuke OHORI (a.k.a Ichinoshin OTA).
  907. However both Shugo families were soundly defeated and obeyed Masamoto, therefore they were invaded by Hisanobu HATAKEYAMA.
  908. However considering that this was a conflict in relation to religious creed, the Nishihongan-ji Temple only faced minor punishment which involved closing the temple for one hundred days.
  909. However construction of roads became the excuse of oppression of Liberal Party.
  910. However currently only enough are produced by an association for their preservation and the volume of production is not enough for shipment to other cities.
  911. However delicious the food is, it is not good for eating with too much salt in it.'
  912. However directly after this, his work "Vita Sexualis" ("Subaru" vol. July) was banned form publishing.
  913. However domestically produced Bofura is thicker and heavier because of the soil type, and is cheaper than imports.
  914. However don't put a weight on it.
  915. However due his favor with Hideyoshi he had never undergone hardship, and because of this he had a na?ve side.
  916. However due to Wu Zong's policy of suppressing Buddhism (the anti-Buddhist movement during the Kaisho era) in Tang at the time, Buddhism was on the edge of a decline, the Imperial Prince was not able to find his great teacher in Changan.
  917. However due to loss of classic culture at the public level, the passing away of famous rakugo storytellers, degrading level of successors, and diversification of entertainment, it is getting less popular.
  918. However due to opposition by Hung Chang LI, senior vassal in the Qing dynasty, the agreement was not sealed and Tamaki broke off the negotiations and returned to Japan in January 1881.
  919. However due to the coup on September 18, when the radical party advocating reverence for the Emperor in Kyoto were wiped out, he was abandoned by the imperial court, and was suppressed by Hikone Domain, and Kishu Domain warriors who were ordered by Edo government to track down and kill.
  920. However earthenware with its original shape, especially as a burial container, came into being by the end of early period and the shape shifted to maiyou earthenware from a jar-shaped vessel.
  921. However eight years later, in 1221, there was no one to rule the government as Chiten no kimi after the Retired Emperor Gotoba lost the battle of the Jokyu Disturbance and he was banished.
  922. However even during the famine the Shogunate accommodated 80,000 wild dogs in the kennels in Nakano and gave them 3 go (0.18L) of polished rice, 50 moon (187g) of bean paste and 1 go of sardines daily.
  923. However even today, in sushi restaurants where raw food materials are purchased in the market and cooked, the food materials change day by day, or season by season and thus they do not indicate menus or price tags in particular and the courses such as 'market value' or 'whatever' are seen.
  924. However falconry, which involved the destruction of life, was not revived until Yoshimune TOKUGAWA became the eighth shogun.
  925. However flat-land dwellings loses most of the evidence of living when living surface is scraped and it is very difficult to recognize it as a dwelling therefore very few clear examples of flat-land dwellings have been discovered.
  926. However from around 1348, he entered into a dispute with Ashikaga family steward KO no Moronao, developing into the Kanno Disturbance which split the bakufu into the Tadayoshi faction and anti-Tadayoshi faction and saw the Southern Court (Japan) entering the conflict in order to strengthen its power.
  927. However hard I may try to hide it, my face cannot help but show that I am in love, so people continue to ask me about it.
  928. However he and his troops were defeated in the battle.
  929. However he arranged the army again and overwhelmed the army led by TAIRA no Koremori in the subsequent Battle of Fujigawa.
  930. However he cannot restrain his anger, so douses tea over the head (this scene is the parody of "Godairiki" by Gohei NAMIKI).
  931. However he clearly announced that he regarded the Toyo Jiyuto as a branch of the Jiyuto and that it was not a completely new party.
  932. However he did not agree saying that doings so is not appropriate for Shigakukai, an academic society.
  933. However he did not get along with Zenshu UESUGI (Ujinori UESUGI), the Kanto kanrei (a shogunal deputy for the Kanto region) and Mitsutaka ASHIKAGA, his uncle and became opposed to them.
  934. However he died in a battle when Hisanobu invaded.
  935. However he disguises himself as a tedai because he is being chased by a cruel bailiff.
  936. However he escaped and returned to Kyushu, after that he went back to Kyoto.
  937. However he fails.
  938. However he fell sick during the campaign and, after returning to Japan, passed away in 1595 at the Gamo residence in Fushimi, Kyoto.
  939. However he got over such difficulties and became Ozeki again in the January Tournament of 1890.
  940. However he is also said to come from Nakamura clan of Hirose County, Yamato Province, and his pedigree record is uncertain.
  941. However he is still concerned about Yohei so he goes to Teshimaya, which Yohei frequents, and gives them money to give to Yohei.
  942. However he later made a compromise with Kido and Okuma line; Okuma concurrently filled post of a councilor in 1870 and succeed to the post of Minister of Treasury from Okubo in 1873.
  943. However he liked military arts and returned to secular life to be called Boan SHIMOZU.
  944. However he lost Masanari MIYOSHI and Yoshikata MIYOSHI, who were both influential among his family, in this battle, so the Miyoshi's government had difficulties lying ahead..
  945. However he opposed Nagayoshi's younger brother Yoshikata MIYOSHI, who did not wish for the full-scale confrontation against Yoshiteru, and he was assassinated in 1553 by Yoshikata.
  946. However he opposed Sozen on the issues in succession of the Shogun and Shugo family headship and he sipported Yoshimi ASHIKAGA as a commander of the eastern army.
  947. However he returned as Nakatsukasakyo (equivalent to Shoshiinojo) (Senior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) after he was forced to return to the Imperial Family by Imperial order in 977.
  948. However he starts to reconsider when he sees that the first wife is grieving.
  949. However he still felt attached to smoking and planned to 'suspend it.'
  950. However he turned back halfway saying the human world was too dangerous.
  951. However he was a man of great pride, Tomomitsu once had friction with the Ashikaga clan who were a gomonyo (a family with a honorary status) of the shogun family as well as a relative of Hojo clan; indeed he was a busho (samurai commander) of backbone.
  952. However he was a toxophilite, and she wrote about the episode of Michitsuna's as a boy who lead his team to draw in the archery competition at the royal court when the Migikata (right team) were losing until Michitsuna's turn.
  953. However he was able to obtain a 42 volume copy circa 1501 and employed several writers to transcribe the text and he hid them.
  954. However he was also deemed to be the laziest fool that ever lived.
  955. However he was completely ignored by Emperor Goshirakawa and Emperor Takakura's son Shinomiya ascended to the throne under the name Emperor Gotoba.
  956. However he was fine and felt very good.
  957. However he was just a puppet of Nagayoshi and didn't have any real power.
  958. However he was no longer a politically influential person in anyway.
  959. However he was no more than a puppet.
  960. However he was overthrown by a slander of Doyo SASAKI (the Koan Coup), and was eliminated after sided with the Southern Court.
  961. However he was soon captured in Takao (Kyoto City) by Mitsunari TOGASHI, a close attendant to Yoshimochi.
  962. However he was, fundamentally speaking, weak, he died when he was twenty three years old in 1234, just two years after the cloistered government started.
  963. However her enormous manors all over Japan practically divulged 'Prince Mochihito's address,' and it caused civil wars like the Jisho and Juei Wars started by the local Samurai groups.
  964. However his condition became worse and he died on June 4, 1920 8 a.m. at age sixty-five.
  965. However his death was kept quiet due to various reasons, on July 10 his body was carried on a train while he was said to be in the serious condition, and transferred to the Imperial Palace which used to be located at 2-banchi, San nen-cho, Kojimachi Ward (near the current Cabinet Office).
  966. However his document is a manuscript that said that the document was proofread on the back of the Imperial instruction, some people say the document lacks credibility.
  967. However his evaluation is divided as regards his act of rejecting a proposal from HARRIMAN, the railway magnate who offered the joint management of railway in Manchuria, despite opposition of Prime Minister and Genro (elder statesman).
  968. However his intent failed.
  969. However his passion for study did not die and he did not stop reading.
  970. However homecoming wasn't the real reason for their journey.
  971. However hope of intellectuals in Korea turned suddenly to disappointment.
  972. However hyohoka was not generally valued high.
  973. However if the successor is not officially announced, the position of Gakuto is kept vacant.
  974. However in "Kojiki" (The Records of Ancient Matters), after the demise of Emperor Seinei, there was no Crown Prince and thus Iitoyo no himemiko addressed affairs of state, but later (that is, during her administration period) Oke no mikoto's brothers were found and she welcomed the brothers from Harima Province.
  975. However in "Nihonshoki," it was described as '陵' not as '墓, ' which means that she was regarded as Emperor, which is worth of noticing.
  976. However in 1177, he was arrested on suspicion of being involved in the Shishigatani Plot, and again banished to Sado Island.
  977. However in 1333 the shogunate was successfully overthrown as outlaws and powerful shogunal retainers took up arms against it one after another.
  978. However in 1358, Takauji ASHIKAGA died just before the expedition because of illness.
  979. However in 1365, he got ill in Kyoto, and on his way home in Mino Province, he was in critical condition, and on September 28 of the same year, he died in the age of 29.
  980. However in 1365, his father died and subsequently his elder brother died, so he was told by his grandfather to return to secular life and take over as head of the family.
  981. However in 1457, surviving retainers of Akamatsu clan, which was ruined in Kakitsu War, attacked the force of Southern Court that was hiding in mountains of Yoshino, trying to restore impaired reputation of Akamatsu clan.
  982. However in 1532, Harumoto believed the false charge made by Masanaga MIYOSHi and killed Motonaga, broke away from the Sakai bakufu and reconciled with shogun Yoshiharu ASHIKAGA, and the kanrei (shogunate deputy) Harumoto HOSOKAWA conducted the administration with Yoshiharu as puppet.
  983. However in 1549, the legitimate child of Motonaga MIYOSHI, Nagayoshi MIYOSHI expelled Harumoto to Omi Province, and the government was collapsed.
  984. However in 1602, her husband Hisanobu, who was her advocate died suddenly while staying in Kyoto.
  985. However in 1608, he was deprived of his status as the lord of Ueno Domain by the Shogunate's order, and the Ueno Domain with 200,000 koku was demolished.
  986. However in 1630, the Edo bakufu ordered Takanobu to have his wife and relatives reside in Edo.
  987. However in 1656, his life had changed ever since meeting Ingen Ryuki (Yinyuan Longqi), the Zenji (Master of Zen Buddhism) who came over from China, at Fumon-ji Temple (Takatsuki City) in Settsu Province.
  988. However in 1725, Hayato no kami Tadatsune, the sixth generation of this family, had a sword fight in the Edo-jo Castle, and was given the 'kaieki' sanction (sudden dismissal and deprivation of position, privileges and properties).
  989. However in 1738, he, then 20 years old, was expelled from the Hirosaki house because of the love affair with his elder sister-in-law.
  990. However in 1785, 7 people including Kusuke MONJU, the ex-machi-doshiyori (ward head) of Fushimi, appealed directly about Masamichi's villainy.
  991. However in 1789 Toshiko died and the Miyake (families allowed to have the status of Imperial family) lost its head.
  992. However in 1796, he was confined to his house and tonsured next year.
  993. However in 1822 (the late Edo period) Seiki INAGAWA, a feudal retainer of the Usuki clan, was instructed in the new style of swimming from Kyuma Katsushige YAMAUCHI, a feudal retainer of the Iyo-Matsuyama clan, Iyo Province, who studied Shinden school.
  994. However in 1857, 3 years later, Toyo was appointed again and Toyo used Shojiro GOTO and Takachika FUKUOKA, both of whom later became councilors of the domain.
  995. However in 1857, as Suketaka died unexpectedly soon after having succeeded to Tenmonkata, Yoshinori hurriedly assumed the position next year.
  996. However in 1872, the Noh farce "Imitating the Emperor, Insulting a Superior" was prohibited and "Encourage goodwill and punish evil" was also banned by law.
  997. However in 1878, Emperor Mutsuhito of Meiji set up a Noh stage in Aoyama Imperial Palace (Aoyama-gosyo), and enjoyed watching a lot of Noh dramas.
  998. However in 1900, Taiseki-ji Temple and its eighty-seven branch temples separated as Fuji School of Nichiren Sect, and in June 1912, changed its name to Nichiren Sho Sect and has kept its form until the present day.
  999. However in 1925, the Maintenance of Public Order Law was proclaimed along with the Universal Manhood Suffrage Act, and speeches and activities containing changes of national polity were prohibited.
  1000. However in 1945, he came down with bladder cancer and detained by the Soviet Army during his hospitalization.


136001 ~ 137000

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