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

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

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  1. In 1871, it was renamed Kasuga-jinja Shrine and listed as a Kanpeitaisha.
  2. In 1871, she was born to Kyujiro and Taka KOYAMA.
  3. In 1871, she went up to Kyoto where Kakuma YAMAMOTO, her real elder brother, whom she relied upon, served as an advisor to Kyoto Prefecture.
  4. In 1871, the Department of State of the Meiji administration issued ordinances which abolished the Fuke Sect which had been a close cohort of the Shogunate.
  5. In 1871, the Empire of Japan and the Kingdom of Hawaii signed the treaty of amity with each other.
  6. In 1871, the Grand Council of State declared that Shinto shrines should be enshrined by the nation, and the Koshitsu Saishi Rei (the Ordinance of the Imperial Household Religious Rites), which defined Court rituals, was enacted as one of the Imperial Household Orders in 1908.
  7. In 1871, the Meiji Government abolished the terauke system and the ban was removed.
  8. In 1871, the Meiji government issued a 'Dajokan tasshi' (Grand Council of State proclamation) abolishing the Fuke sect to which the mendicant 'komuso' monks belonged.
  9. In 1871, the Ministry of Divinities set up the post of mikannagi (the post of a woman who administrated religious affairs) and designated it as the post of a woman who used to work for the Ministry of the Imperial Household as a toji (a role of taking care of the meals for the Imperial Family).
  10. In 1871, the Ohara administrative office was made the priest's quarters and named 'Sanzen-in Temple.'
  11. In 1871, the determination was subsequently changed again whereby it was decided that Noguchino Ono-haka not to be the Tenmu-Jito Mausoleum.
  12. In 1871, the government concluded the equal treaty with Qing called the "Japan-Qing Treaty of Friendship."
  13. In 1871, the new government checked the Han-satsu and the like that had been issued, to establish a new currency system.
  14. In 1871, the next year, the bills which they had ordered in December started to arrive, however, these bills were found not to be perfect upon safety measures.
  15. In 1871, the opera "La princesse jaune" (The Yellow Princess)" composed by Camille Saint-Sa?ns and written by Louis Gallet opened to the public.
  16. In 1871, the rule to deal with the Imperial family and kazoku was established, and according to it, kazoku was requested to be role models for all people.
  17. In 1871, the shrine was classified as a Kanpei Taisha under the former modern shrine classification system before becoming a Beppyo Jinja (Shrines on the Special List) after the Second World War.
  18. In 1871, the shrine was raised to the rank of Kanpei Chusha, and with this, its name was forced to be changed to 'Kitano-jinja.'
  19. In 1871, the use of the Monzeki ranking (ranking of a temple served by a head priest from the imperial family or nobility) was prohibited as a result of the anti-Buddhist movement at the beginning of the Meiji period but was restored 14 years later.
  20. In 1871, the warrior class became able to engage in not only public services, but also farming, industrial jobs or commercial business, and commoners could engage in public services.
  21. In 1871, through the Haihan-chiken (the abolition of the domain system and establishment of prefecture system), Kameoka Prefecture was established.
  22. In 1871, traditional feudal domains were abolished and prefectures were introduced by the Meiji government, ending the feudal system both in name and reality (Article of the Meiji Restoration).
  23. In 1871, when bills were exchanged for new currency, 1 monme and 100 mon bills were exchanged for 8 ri, and 3 bu and 2 bu bills for 2 ri.
  24. In 1871, when bills were exchanged for the new currency, 10 monme of ginsatsu was exchanged for 1 sen, 10 monme of zenisatsu for 9 ri, and both 1 monme of ginsatsu and 1 monme of zenisatsu for 1 ri.
  25. In 1871, when bills were exchanged for the new currency, a five monme bill was exchanged for one sen three ri, a one monme bill for three ri, and a two bu bill for two ri.
  26. In 1871, when the army under the command of Takamori SAIGO went up to Tokyo to prepare against contingencies after the enforcement of the abolition of feudal domains and establishment of prefectures (haihan chiken), he followed him leading his battalion, and when his battalion was incorporated into the imperial convoy, he was appointed colonel.
  27. In 1871, with the Haihan-chiken (abolition of feudal domains and establishment of prefectures), martial arts education at hanko (a domain school) disappeared and its practicality was lost not only in Kyujutsu but in martial arts in general, further accelerating the decline of martial arts.
  28. In 1871, with the abolition of domains and establishment of prefectures, the domain became Omura Prefecture
  29. In 1871: Kunai-taijo (official below shoyu of the Department of the Imperial Household [present-day Imperial Household Agency]), Kunai-shoyu (Junior Assistant Minister of the Department of the Imperial Household).
  30. In 1872
  31. In 1872 after Meiji Restoration, the Meiji government abolished Ommyodo as superstition.
  32. In 1872 after the Meiji Restoration, kabunakama were ordered to dissolve again and it has never had a resurgence since then.
  33. In 1872 anyone who belonged to the samurai class or upward was forbidden to wear a sword in public, so that the private dojos for swordsmen were pushed out of business.
  34. In 1872 at the age of 10, prompted by the abolition of feudal domains and establishment of prefectures, he moved to Tokyo with his father, and the following year, the rest of his family also sold their residence and left their hometown to join them.
  35. In 1872 he became "monbu-taifu" (a high post in the Ministry of Education).
  36. In 1872 he became the representative of the overseas students in North Germany and aroused much controversy by intervening in the decision of the major subjects of the students in Germany.
  37. In 1872 he died at the age of 17.
  38. In 1872 he inherited Kitashirakawanomiya, and returned to Japan in 1877.
  39. In 1872 he was eleven.
  40. In 1872 he went to Europe to learn the police systems in countries, and after returning to Japan, he made Joseph Fouche his model and endeavored to establish the Keishi-cho with reference to the French police system.
  41. In 1872 he, together with Honinbo Shuei, traveled Mino, Owari and Ise Provinces and Osaka.
  42. In 1872 sake was exhibited in the World Exposition in Vienna.
  43. In 1872 she was adopted by the Sakai family.
  44. In 1872 the Mar?a Luz Incident occurred.
  45. In 1872 the Meiji government gathered the calendar distributors in the Edo period to form the exclusive organization under the leadership of the Ministry of Education.
  46. In 1872 the Ryukyu Kingdom was abolished and Ryukyu Domain was established.
  47. In 1872 the present name was determined and in the following year it was decided that the Empress would attend and that Shinko on Western books also would be given.
  48. In 1872 this clock had an inscription showing it was the first clock produced in Kanazawa Prefecture.
  49. In 1872, 'bangumi' was changed to 'ward,' resulting in Kamigyo ward Nos. 1-33 and Shimogyo ward Nos. 1-32.
  50. In 1872, 15 neighboring villages applied for governmentalization (nationalization) of Naganuma to Inba Prefecture, and it was confirmed at the prefecture's own discretion, without asking the opinions of Naganuma village.
  51. In 1872, Akitsune heard that Akiyoshi had been taken into custody at the Tsuyama Domain because of his participation in the Boshin War.
  52. In 1872, Dajokan Seiin issued an edict to each prefecture, saying "The name of Ikko Shu can be changed to Shinshu," and finally here in the modern ages, describing it as "(Jodo) Shinshu" was allowed.
  53. In 1872, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru moved to Tokyo and became the successor of Fushimi no Miya (The twenty fourth).
  54. In 1872, Joe met with the Iwakura Mission during their tour of the United States.
  55. In 1872, Kabuki representatives were summoned to the prefectural office of Tokyo and required to revise Kabuki scenarios so they could become morally acceptable for aristocratic audiences or audiences from overseas and to stop offering bombast (wild words and decorative phrases).
  56. In 1872, Kamigyo bangumi Nos. 1 to 33 were reorganized into to Kamigyo ward Nos. 1 to 33, and although it remains unchanged in terms of dividing the ward into 33, the order in which the wards are being numbered are changed, such as the former bangumi No.1 being numbered to ward No. 3.
  57. In 1872, Kenshin was enshrined with Yozan UESUGI in Uesugi-jinja Shrine (Bekkaku Kanpeisha (a special government shrine)) which was founded on the remains of Honmaru (the keep of a castle) of Yonezawa-jo Castle, and after Uesugi -jinja Shrine was promoted to Bekkaku-Kanpeisha in 1902, only Kenshin came was enshrined there as shintai (sacred object).
  58. In 1872, Koyo lost his mother at the age of four and was brought up by his maternal grandparents, Shunan and Sen ARAKI.
  59. In 1872, Nichiryumon School merged with other schools of Nichiren Sect under a system in which each sect was allowed only one chief abbot.
  60. In 1872, Nissonmon School was associated with other schools that inherit Nichiren's Teaching in accordance with the system of one superintendent priest for one sect.
  61. In 1872, Shimogyo bangumi Nos. 1 to 32 were reorganized into to Shimogyo ward Nos. 1 to 32.
  62. In 1872, Tensha kinshirei (Ban on Tensha) was issued and dissemination of Onmyodo was also prohibited among the common people based on the grounds that it was superstition.
  63. In 1872, Yoshimoto HANABUSA, Minister for Foreign Affairs, arrived in Busan and confiscated Choryang-dong Wakan to rename it as the Japanese diplomatic mission.
  64. In 1872, a government order to cut and remove topknots (a Japanese tradition for men) was issued.
  65. In 1872, a year after the Satsuma Domain, the practical ruler of Ryukyu, became Ken by the Haihan-chiken, Ryukyu was changed from an independent kingdom to the Ryukyu Domain which belonged to Japan.
  66. In 1872, after her father Ryokei's passing, she was estranged with the adopted son Noritada WAKAE (4th son of Jimon HIRAMATSU) she was finally dismissed from the family.
  67. In 1872, artisans Ihei INOUE and Tsuneshichi SAKURA were sent to Lyons, France, and introduced Jacquard weaving machines to Japan, and three years later a Japan-made Jacquard weaving machine was produced by Kohei ARAKI.
  68. In 1872, as rituals of the Jingisho were moved to the Imperial Court, the Hasshinden was also transferred to the Imperial Court to enshrine the eight gods with Amatsukami and Kunitsukami, and this shrine's name was changed to Shinden.
  69. In 1872, books that described recipes of curry and rice, 'Seiyo Ryori Shinan' (Proposed western-style menus) by Keigakudo shujin and 'Seiyo Ryori-tsu' (an authority on western cuisine) by Robun KANAGAKI, were published.
  70. In 1872, debt investigation official
  71. In 1872, he became Army Major General, and from the following year, he served as General of the Kumamoto Chindai Army for some time.
  72. In 1872, he became a lower-rank government official and was promoted steadily within the Ministry of Home Affairs.
  73. In 1872, he began to serve Kyobusho (Ministry of Religion) (churoku jutto).
  74. In 1872, he entered Gyuko school in affiliation with hospital of the Kochi Domain to study English.
  75. In 1872, he had a cerebral hemorrhage due to too much drinking over the years, and died at the age of 46.
  76. In 1872, he joined the Minister of the Navy and was assigned to a major.
  77. In 1872, he left the domain school and went back to Tokyo.
  78. In 1872, he moved to Tokyo.
  79. In 1872, he participated in Iwakura Mission, and visited Europe and America for inspection.
  80. In 1872, he performed 'Dojoji' (Dojo-ji Temple) at the Umewaka theater for the first time in several decades as a Kanze-ryu school.
  81. In 1872, he sent a letter to William Dwight Whitney, a professor of linguistics of Yale University to ask if English except its irregular verbs should be adopted to Japan as a national language.
  82. In 1872, he served concurrently as Kyobukyo (Minister of Religion).
  83. In 1872, he submitted "The proposal for the preservation of Nagoya-jo Castle and others."
  84. In 1872, he used official army funds to make illegal loans to Wasuke of Yamashiroya, a merchant who was doing business with the army, and allowed the loans to be unrecoverable.
  85. In 1872, he was a secretary to assist the Foreign Minister, Taneomi FUKUSHIMA, for the issue of the mistreatment of Qing indentured laborers on board the ship with Peruvian nationality (the Maria Luz Incident) and delegated to St. Petersburg, Russia as an acting minister for the arbitration trial.
  86. In 1872, he was appointed a member of the Iwakura mission at the request of Nishi Hongan-ji Temple and made an inspection tour of Europe and so on.
  87. In 1872, he was appointed to a Goyogakari (a general affairs official of the Imperial Household) for exhibition and he held Japan's first exhibition in Yushima Seido (Sacred Hall at Yushima) in March 1872 to modernize Japanese industry.
  88. In 1872, he was pardoned and lived in a place called 'Kuramae' in Tokyo with his wife Matsu.
  89. In 1872, he was sent to England and the United States of America for the floatation of government bonds, and two years later, he was assigned as minister plenipotentiary for the U.S. while he was still staying there.
  90. In 1872, in accordance with the one head per religious sect rule, the Nichijin school merged with all other schools under the Nichiren sect.
  91. In 1872, in accordance with the one head per religious sect rule, the Nichishin school merged with all other schools under the Nichiren sect.
  92. In 1872, it was reorganized into 16 wards and each ward came to be called 'Fushimi Ward No. X.'
  93. In 1872, rice curry was served as a meal for Horace CAPRON at the Hokkaido Development Commissioner Tokyo office.
  94. In 1872, the Japanese Consulate General was opened in New York.
  95. In 1872, the Meiji Government designated taireifuku (court dress, full-dress uniform), and ruled that imperial appointees had to have 'Goshichinokiri' on their taireifuku jackets.
  96. In 1872, the Nichijumon School became associated with other schools in the Nichiren Sect according to the system of one superintendent priest for one sect.
  97. In 1872, the government was working for new policies of agriculture and private law and the Finance Ministry announced the law including the prohibition of the name, Mizunomi that had existed conventionally and the emancipation of Mizunomi from the position.
  98. In 1872, the newly inaugurated Meiji government issued the Emancipation Decree for Female Performers and Prostitutes, but it had little effect on the real situation.
  99. In 1872, the series "Ikkai zuihitsu", which he thought was good, was not favorably accepted, and he was shocked and suffered a serious mental breakdown.
  100. In 1872, the train line between Shinbashi Station (later it became Shinbashi Historic Station, and later in 1986, it was discontinued from the actual usage) and Yokohama Station (later it was renamed to Sakuragi-cho Station) was established and and the operation of steam locomotives started.
  101. In 1872, under the direction of Tamaki, he escaped from there with 80 members of Shinchogumi.
  102. In 1872, under the leadership of Edmund Morel of England, Japan's first railway line was opened, running between Shinbashi and Yokohama.
  103. In 1872, with 'the Education Order,' the Japanese Government launched the modern school system, but the enrollment rate didn't rise as they expected.
  104. In 1873
  105. In 1873 (or 1875), he succeeded as the family head and changed his name to Harunobu SUGIMURA (later to Yoshie SUGIMURA).
  106. In 1873 Kenkichi organized 'Gekkenkai' (Sword-fighting Society) to help these masters of martial arts.
  107. In 1873 Shuwa died and Shuetsu succeed the 15th Honinbo.
  108. In 1873 Takanaka gained kudos for years of his involvement in the kagura (ceremonial Shinto music and dances) service and went into retirement.
  109. In 1873 he acted as the Governor-general for suppressing the Saga rebellion, also acted as the brigade commander to suppress a revolt during the Seinan War in 1876.
  110. In 1873 he died young at the age of 36 before his father's death.
  111. In 1873 he established the Ministry of Home Affairs, took charge by assuming the post of Secretary of Interior for himself and executed land-tax reform and a conscription ordinance.
  112. In 1873 he returned to the Saga prefectural governmentin which he was appointed as Gontenj (middle-class clerk), and soon was promoted to Daisakan (senior clerk) and to dominate the government.
  113. In 1873 he was twelve.
  114. In 1873 he went back to Japan at the request of KIDO and served at the Council of State, being responsible for the formation of legislation.
  115. In 1873 it was designated to be celebrated on February 11.
  116. In 1873 reign of the Korean government transferred to the family of Empress Myeongseong (1851 ? 1895), the empress of Gao Zong.
  117. In 1873 when the solar calendar was adopted, tencho setsu was changed to November 3.
  118. In 1873, Emperor Junnin was enshrined in Shiramine Jingu shrine sacred to the memory of Emperor Sutoku who died in the place of exile like Emperor Junnin.
  119. In 1873, Harry PARKES, the British Minister Plenipotentiary in Japan, visited Kagenori concerning the issue of territorial right in the Ogasawara Islands.
  120. In 1873, Hisashige moved to Tokyo.
  121. In 1873, Igakuso was opened within the Keio Gijuku campus.
  122. In 1873, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru entered the Army Cadet School.
  123. In 1873, Itagaki advocated Seikanron (debate on subjugation of Korea), but eventually gave in to Tomomi IWAKURA and other returnees from visitation to the West who took a prudent stance considering international relationships with Europe and America, resulting in the split of the new government.
  124. In 1873, Japanese swords were exhibited at the Expo held in Vienna.
  125. In 1873, Omocha KIRAKUTEI, a buffoon, showed his performance of kamikiri on koza (the stage on which a comic storyteller sits) in a vaudeville theater.
  126. In 1873, SAIGO left the government after the political coup, and in 1874, founded Shigakko (private schools) and the branches throughout Kagoshima Prefecture.
  127. In 1873, Shoden-in was merged with Eigen-in, on which occasion it was disposed of to supporters in Gion-cho.
  128. In 1873, a Karo (chief retainer) of Maizuru clan, Shinroku KAWAMURA founded Maizuru City Meirin Elementary School based on the Han school (clan school) of Maizuru, Meirinkan, which produced many scholars.
  129. In 1873, a stone coffin with side entrance was found in the large keyhole-shaped tomb mound, which has overall length of 61 meters, from the Eta Funayama Tumulus in Nagomimachi, Tamana County, Kumamoto Prefecture.
  130. In 1873, an elementary school was set up in the Inoue family's estate as the first one in the district, and Inoue, at the age of 14, became a teacher at the school by the request of the villagers.
  131. In 1873, angry with Enjaku who became the leader of the troupe ahead of him, he went to the east capital, Tokyo.
  132. In 1873, following the relocation of the legation to Kojimachi, he moved to Motozono-cho, Kojimachi and grew up there, learning Chinese poetry from his father and English from his uncle and British students at the legation.
  133. In 1873, he became Sangi (councilor) and Shihokyo (Minister of Justice).
  134. In 1873, he became the Minister of the Army and was engaged in the establishment of the General Staff Office and the Imperial Rescript on the Military.
  135. In 1873, he died at the age of 61.
  136. In 1873, he enrolled in his maternal grandfather Kanzan OHARA's private school and learned to read the Four Books of Confucianism.
  137. In 1873, he founded the Meirokusha with Yukichi FUKUZAWA, Arinori MORI, Amane NISHI (illuminator), Masanao NAKAMURA, Hiroyuki KATO and others.
  138. In 1873, he joined the Ministry of the Navy.
  139. In 1873, he once more returned to Kagoshima with Shimpei ETO and Taisuke ITAGAKI for the Meiji roku-nen no Seihen (Coups of 1873), and concentrated on the education at Shigakko (a school mainly for warriors).
  140. In 1873, he started a fish shop but since the business did not go well, he closed the shop.
  141. In 1873, he was appointed to Sangi (Councilor) and Gaimukyo.
  142. In 1873, he was appointed to a vice-president of administration for the Vienna International Exhibition, and sent to the exhibition.
  143. In 1873, he was forced to resign, being accused of his involvement with the corruption in the scandal of Osarizawa copper mine by Shinpei ETOU.
  144. In 1873, he was promoted to Army Major, that moved him to Kumamoto Chinjufu (Pacification and Defense Headquarters in Kumamoto Prefecture), and in the following year, he showed great performance in the suppression of Saga War.
  145. In 1873, he was sent to Vienna where the Vienna International Exhibition was held.
  146. In 1873, he was transferred to the navy, and as Lieutenant Commander he worked at the branch section of Admiral Office.
  147. In 1873, he went to England and studied; after coming home, he became Kazoku-kaikan Fukukanji (assistant secretary of the Nobility Hall).
  148. In 1873, he went to Kyoto and served for the government as Cabinet Adviser and he assigned Sadaijin (minister of the left) and made a petition for the restoration of old customs in the following year, 1874, but he was practically excluded from political decisions.
  149. In 1873, his brother, Takamori, resigned from his government positions in the dispute over invading Korea (Seikanron).
  150. In 1873, it turned out that the manuscript of "Uetsufumi" was secretly stored in the old family of Usuki, Otomo (Otomo-bon), and Kimatsu SHUNTO, a scholar of Japanese classical literature of the old Usuki clan completed writing a copy of Otomo-bon in 1875 (Shunto-bon).
  151. In 1873, it was listed as a village shrine and belonged to the Association of Shinto Shrines after the war.
  152. In 1873, it was ranked as a township shrine.
  153. In 1873, losing the Seikan debate, Saigo resigned from his public post and returned to Kagoshima on November 10 of that year.
  154. In 1873, she went to Tomioka Seishi-jo (Tomioka Silk Mill) with other sixteen factory girls.
  155. In 1873, the Emperor Meiji turned to bobbed hair, and men who tied traditional topknots for men decreased in numbers drastically and the western hair style and the shortcut hair style became widespread instead.
  156. In 1873, the Meiji Government established the policy to reorganize prefectures.
  157. In 1873, the Ministry of Army decided to abolish this castle, and disposed of some of its buildings.
  158. In 1873, the Ministry of Religious Education banned all acts requesting oracles through the invocation conducted by miko outside the shrine.
  159. In 1873, the Ordinance abolishing castles was promulgated and many structures in castles were lost.
  160. In 1873, the day the Kannamesai was made a public holiday as a festival day.
  161. In 1873, the emancipation of prostitute act was issued, but it was only claimed in theory that prostitutes worked by their free will, and the actual condition that they were in the circumstances of being over head and ears in debt was not changed.
  162. In 1873, the government started a farmer-soldiersystem in which a farmer-soldier doubled the tasks of northern-territory security and land reclamation.
  163. In 1873, the political change occurred and, as a result, it was decided to 'postpone' (not 'stop') the Seikanron dispute.
  164. In 1873, the prewar Ministry of Home Affairs was established in order to supervise national projects.
  165. In 1873, the shrine was listed as a sonsha, before being designated a Shinsenheihakuryokyoshin-sha (Sonsha or Gosha [village shrine] which could receive a sinsenheihakuryo fee [fee for offerings to a god] from a prefecture by an imperial edict) in 1907.
  166. In 1873, when Inoue was the Deputy Minister of Finance, he was temporarily driven from the political world because of an accusation that he colluded with Goichi NAKANO, the Governor of Yamaguchi Prefecture at the time, in fraud related to the Osarizawa Copper Mine (Akita Prefecture).
  167. In 1873, when he was Seikanron, he was treated by a German doctor Theodor Hoffmann for his obesity.
  168. In 1873, when the Department of War put Tsuruga-jo Castle on sale, Mondo won a bid for 862 Japanese yen.
  169. In 1873, when the government divided over the Seikan-ron, the debate over whether to send troops to Korea or not, he was torn between the people who supported it, like Takamori SAIGO, and those who opposed to it, like Tomomi IWAKURA and Toshimichi OKUBO, finally choosing Iwakura as his representative.
  170. In 1874
  171. In 1874 Taisuke ITAGAKI and Shojiro GOTO submitted "the Petition for Establishment of Minsen Giin (An Elected Assembly)" to the government.
  172. In 1874 Taisuke ITAGAKI submitted the political statement for democratic representatives to the government, which was also discussed among the members of Meirokusha.
  173. In 1874 at the age of 27, he married Natsuko IWATA who lived in Kitsuki.
  174. In 1874 he also carried out an expedition to Taiwan and on September 14th went to Qing (China) as the general commander-in-chief to solve problems after the war.
  175. In 1874 he drew the two volumes of 'Tosa Nikki Emaki' (picture scroll of The Tosa Diary).
  176. In 1874 he studied at the department of mining in Tokyo Kaisei School and in July of the following year, 1875, he transferred to Daigakuto-ko School (Tokyo Medical School) due to the abolition of every department in Tokyo Kaisei School, and become a regular course student.
  177. In 1874 this Nichiren sect was split into Nichirenshu Icchi-ha (Icchi school of the Nichiren sect) and Nichirenshu Shoretsu-ha (Shoretsu school of the Nichiren sect) because of the difference of the dharma.
  178. In 1874, '醗酷' accompanied by its readings 'hakko' and 'yasuto,' which means yeast, appeared in "Kagaku Shokei Shusui Seizo-sho Zen" (scientific expedient of sake brewing) written by H. Caliberd and translated by Harue Koizumi.
  179. In 1874, 300 feudal retainers of the Aizu clan including Kanbei got a job as patrol officer of Keishi-cho (Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department).
  180. In 1874, Eto raised a rebellion in Saga Prefecture, his hometown, being backed up by fuhei shizoku (Saga War) and Shimpuren-no-ran War (turmoil of Shimpuren, dissatisfied warrior group) followed in Kumamoto Prefecture in 1876.
  181. In 1874, Goozenjin-do Hall was converted into a Goo-jinja Shrine and classified as a bekkaku kanpeisha.
  182. In 1874, Hamagawa town was integrated into Gofuku town, and Furoya town disappeared to be integrated into Kamikoya town and Shimoitabashi town, resulting in number of towns at that time of 267.
  183. In 1874, Honoikazuchi-jinja shrine, which had been the auxiliary shrine of Fuefuki-jinja Shrine, was enshrined along with Fuefuki-jinja Shrine, and the name of the shrine was changed to Katsuraki Imasu Honoikazuchi-jinja Shrine, becoming ranked as a Gosha.
  184. In 1874, Itagaki organized Aikokukoto Party with Shojiro GOTO and others, submitting the "Tosa Memorial" (the petition of 1874 calling for the establishment of a representative parliament) to the government, only to be rejected.
  185. In 1874, Joe graduated from Andover Seminary.
  186. In 1874, Nara Exhibition Company, which was operated jointly by public and private sectors, was established by the Kenrei (governor) of Nara Prefecture at that time, Chihiro FUJII and the people around him.
  187. In 1874, Nichiryumon School became affiliated with the Shoretsu School of Nichiren Sect.
  188. In 1874, Nissonmon School became affiliated with the Shoretsu School of Nichiren Sect, which was an integrated religious order of the Shoretsu School.
  189. In 1874, SUGI became Kunai shoyu (Junior Assistant Minister of the Sovereign's Household), Kunai-taifu (post of Imperial Household Ministry) in 1877, assigned additional post of jiho (an aide) and became kotaigo gu no daibu (Master of the Empress Dowager's Household) later.
  190. In 1874, Shimada and Cho met in Tokyo, finding a congenial spirit in one another.
  191. In 1874, Taisuke ITAGAKI, together with Shojiro GOTO, Shinpei ETO, Taneomi SOEJIMA and others, who left the government when it refused to allow an invasion of Korea in the preceding year, founded the Aikokuto Party and submitted a petition to the Council of the Left of the government calling for the establishment of an elected national assembly.
  192. In 1874, Taneomi SOEJIMA, Taisuke ITAGAKI, Shojiro GOTO and Shinpei ETO who resigned from their post due to the political upheaval in 1873 (the dispute of Seikanron [debate on subjugation of Korea]) submitted a political statement for democratic representatives in their joint names.
  193. In 1874, by order of Kyobusho (Ministry of Religion), his remains were removed from the Kanda Myojin Shrine and transferred to Masakado-jinja Shrine.
  194. In 1874, he became a secretary for the French legation and then worked as the great secretary of the Grand Council of State after he returned to Japan.
  195. In 1874, he became an army lieutenant general and commanded the troops as a Buntijimu totoku (governor) in the Taiwan expedition of that year.
  196. In 1874, he bought Takashima coal mine in Nagasaki Prefecture from the government for about 550,000 yens and established a company called Horaisha.
  197. In 1874, he collaborated with Gyokusai HASHIZUME coming from Misuzu-mura (present-day Ina City) on haiku and paintings.
  198. In 1874, he conflicted with Kindle, the leader of foreigners hired to teach new techniques to the Mint Bureau and Endo lef the Mint Bureau.
  199. In 1874, he designed for the woodblock prints "Sakurada mongai ni okeru Ii tairo shugeki" consisting of six continuous views.
  200. In 1874, he entered Public Toda gakko katoshogakko eighth grade.
  201. In 1874, he entered Takakura Gakuryo (the Higashi Hongan-ji seminary) of Higashi Hongan-ji Temple in Kyoto, but soon left there.
  202. In 1874, he entered the Ministry of Interior (Japan) and successfuly achieved the post of naimu daijo (the third highest post in the Ministry of Interor) for the National Industrial Exhibition in 1877 and Kangyoryo gon no kami (an officer of the agency for promotion of industry).
  203. In 1874, he lost in Saga War and was executed.
  204. In 1874, he published a book called "Monowari no hashigo," a translated British science book; he also left his writing, "Wagayo no ki" (the writing about my life) all written in kana alphabet.
  205. In 1874, he was appointed to Kenrei of Sakata Prefecture.
  206. In 1874, he was promoted to the 14th rank attendant and worked in the judicial branch.
  207. In 1874, head of National Debt Section
  208. In 1874, his relationship with Takeshiro MATSUURA took him to Hokkaido, where he created his masterpiece, Kyu-Ezo Fuzoku-zu, a painting depicting customs of the old Ezo region and expressing the life of the Ainu people.
  209. In 1874, it became a sonsha (a village shrine).
  210. In 1874, near the Kuichigaizaka Hill in Tokyo, he was attacked by Kumakichi TAKECHI, a samurai descendent in Kochi Prefecture, and others who were not satisfied with the result of the Seikan-ron debate and was injured (the Kuichigai Incident).
  211. In 1874, she retired from Tomioka Seishi-jo with the opening of Rokko-sha in Nishijo Village, Hanishina-gun, Nagano Prefecture (present Matsushiromachi Nishijyo, Nagano City).
  212. In 1874, the Kasumi-kaikan Building was constructed for solidifying relationships and promoting interactions among members in the kazoku class.
  213. In 1874, the Matsubara-jinja Shrine (Tsuruga City) was founded in Matsushima-cho, Tsuruga City to mourn the soul of Tenguto members including Kounsai TAKEDA, and reisai (regular festival) is held on October 10 every year.
  214. In 1874, the Meiji government designated the foot of Kirishima mountain range in Kirishima City, Kagoshima Prefecture as Takayanoyamanoe no misasagi tomb.
  215. In 1874, the Meiji government determined that his tomb is located in Kanoya City Kagoshima Prefecture (formerly Aira-cho, Kimotsuki-gun), based on the opinions of the scholars of the defunct Satsuma Domain.
  216. In 1874, the Nichijin school became affiliated with the Nichiren sect Shoretsu-ha.
  217. In 1874, the Nichijumon School became affiliated with the Shoretsu School of the Nichiren Sect.
  218. In 1874, the Nichishin school became a member of the Nichiren sect Shoretsu school.
  219. In 1874, the division between Tsukubusuma-jinja Shrine and Hogon-ji Temple was determined and in 1883, the properties of them were distinguished.
  220. In 1874, the following year, to carry out the wish of his foster father who died an unnatural death, he rebuilt Kawarazaki-za Theater in Shiba (Minato Ward, Tokyo) that had been discontinued for 20 years after it was burned down by the fire in 1855.
  221. In 1874, the government dispatched the army to Taiwan after a Japanese person from Miyakojima Island was murdered in Taiwan, and then Japan and Qing decided the ownership of Taiwan and Okinawa.
  222. In 1874, the public was permitted to present their poems.
  223. In 1874, when Murata returned from the European and American tour and heard that Takamori SAIGO went back to his hometown after retiring from his post, he resigned his job and went back to Kagoshima.
  224. In 1875
  225. In 1875 he came back to Japan.
  226. In 1875, "Yubin-hochi Shinbun Nishiki-e prints" started to be published.
  227. In 1875, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru entered The Imperial Japanese Army Academy; it was at this time his first prince (son) was born, named Prince Hiroyasu.
  228. In 1875, Joseph Hardy Neesima (Jo NIIJIMA), one of the six great educators during the Meiji period, established Doshisha English School, that grew to become the present day Doshisha University.
  229. In 1875, Joseph Hardy Neesima, one of the six great educators of the Meiji era, established the Doshisha English School, which ultimately became the present Doshisha.
  230. In 1875, KONO who turned to be the ward mayor of Ishikawa (later Ishikawa-machi, Fukushima Prefecture) went to Tokyo for hearing local administrative assemblies.
  231. In 1875, although both councils of Right and Left were abolished, the Seiin was continued.
  232. In 1875, he became a councilor of the Genroin (the Chamber of Elders), and in 1878, he became a deputy chairman of Genroin.
  233. In 1875, he became a drawing teacher and moved from place to place.
  234. In 1875, he began drawing for the newspaper article "Yubin hochi shinbun nishikie."
  235. In 1875, he established a private school, Shoho Koshujo (the Commercial Law Institute) (the predecessor of Hitotsubashi University) in Owari-cho, Ginza, Tokyo.
  236. In 1875, he focused on education for people with visual and hearing difficulties and established a support group called Rakuzensha, with Sen TSUDA and others
  237. In 1875, he graduated from Kaisei Shool (present day the University of Tokyo).
  238. In 1875, he resigned Sadaijin.
  239. In 1875, he resigned as Governor of Kyoto Prefecture.
  240. In 1875, he started 'TANAKA Seizo sho' (the TANAKA manufacturing factory), a telegraph machine maker, in Ginza, Tokyo.
  241. In 1875, he took office as a councilor in Genroin (the Chamber of Elders).
  242. In 1875, he was appointed as Aichi Kenrei (Governor of Aichi Prefecture).
  243. In 1875, he was appointed as Gonchuzoku (middle-level official) at Shizuoka Prefecture.
  244. In 1875, it was declared in Rikkenseitai no Shosho (An imperial edict for the establishment of the constitutional system of government) issued on the initiative of Takayoshi KIDO, 'expand the main idea of Charter Oath…gradually establish constitutional state.'
  245. In 1875, it was succeeded as a shrine to enshrine Emperor Godaigo with a new name of Yoshimizu-jinja Shrine, and was listed as a sonsha.
  246. In 1875, nishiki-e-version 'Yubin-hochi Shinbun' and 'Osaka-nishiki-ga (nishiki-e picture) Shinbun' started to be published.
  247. In 1875, on the other hand, he co-founded the Yoyosha, a group of scholars of the Chinese classics, with Bankei OTSUKI, Gakkai YODA, Shigehisa HIRANO and others.
  248. In 1875, the Meiji government designated the new kyomasu as the official masu.
  249. In 1875, the Secretariat of Land-Tax Reform was established with officials from the Ministry of Finance and the prewar Ministry of Home Affairs.
  250. In 1875, the government and Minken-ha (advocates of freedom and popular rights) compromised, and Mutsu became the councilor of the senate which was established as a part of the negotiation.
  251. In 1875, the government ordered him to study western music, and thereafter, he aimed to fuse gagaku with western music theory.
  252. In 1875, the negotiation was held between the Torai Government and Shigeru MORIYAMA in Pusan Metropolitan City for the first time.
  253. In 1875, the year following the submission of the petition just mentioned, Yoshioka converted to Christianity, baptized by D. Tamson of Presbyterian Church, part of Protestantism.
  254. In 1875: Genroin-gikan (councilor of the Senate).
  255. In 1876
  256. In 1876 Ashigara Prefecture was abolished and incorporated into Shizuoka Prefecture.
  257. In 1876 during the Fukuoka tournament, he faced Akizuki-no-ran War (turmoil of Akizuki) where sumo wrestlers fought against rebellious clans, and he played an active role in the suppression of the war.
  258. In 1876 he became the Chairman of the Chamber of Elders, chairman of senior statesman.
  259. In 1876 he concluded the Treaty of Ganghwa (Japan-Korea Treaty of Amity), and in the Seinan War in 1877 he contributed to the release of Kumamoto-jo Castle that was surrounded by the enemy.
  260. In 1876 he married Chiyo, the daughter of a former retainer of the shogun.
  261. In 1876 it was decided that they should be incorporated into Shimane Prefecture (and they still belong there).
  262. In 1876 the Haitorei (decrees abolishing the wearing of swords in public) was issued.
  263. In 1876, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru married Imperial Princess Arisugawa Toshiko, a sister of Imperial Prince Arisugawanomiya Taruhito.
  264. In 1876, Join entered the priesthood and became a monk as a disciple of Teicho CHIHAYA, the kannushi of the Horyu-ji Temple, when he was 10 years old.
  265. In 1876, Michitoshi became head of Yamaguchi District Court and in 1877, when the Seinan War occurred, he was transferred to Kagoshima Prefecture to serve as the prefectural governor there.
  266. In 1876, Mondo assumed a position of Goyogakari (general affairs official) of Civil Engineering Division, Kashima Prefecture (current Saga Prefecture).
  267. In 1876, Nichijumon School officially named itself Myoman-ji School while nominating its own superintendent priest and the Shoretsu School of the Nichiren Sect was dissolved.
  268. In 1876, Nichiryumon School officially called itself Happon School and appointing its own superintendent priest and the Shoretsu School of Nichiren Sect was dissolved.
  269. In 1876, Sozoku System (the system of the paternal family group) was enacted for the integration and solidarity of kazoku, and according to it, all kazoku were classified into 76 groups based on the family lines regardless of the differences of their original statuses as buke (samurai families) and kugyo (court nobles).
  270. In 1876, William Smith CLARK, who had been visiting Japan as an assistant principal of Sapporo Agricultural School, stipulated a dormitory regulation that 'students must not eat rice; however, rice curry is an exception to this rule.'
  271. In 1876, Yugoro married Tama and opened a new hall for practicing swordplay, the Hatsuunkan.
  272. In 1876, a new numbering system was introduced under which odd numbers were used for locomotives used in Eastern Japan (between Tokyo and Yokohama) and even numbers were used for locomotives used in Western Japan (between Osaka and Kobe).
  273. In 1876, a written report "Matters related to the revision of the musical score for celebrating the reign of the emperor" was submitted by Suketsune NAKAMURA, who was the Kapellmeister of the Imperial Japanese Navy.
  274. In 1876, about a half year after opening, the land of the current Imadegawa-kochi was donated by Yamamoto and the school moved there and constructed buildings.
  275. In 1876, as the Shoretsu School of Nichiren Sect was dissolved into each school, Nissonmon School organized an integrated religious order together with other head temples and their branch temples of Fujimon School, nominated its own superintendent priest and officially named itself the Komon School of Nichiren Sect (Komon School).
  276. In 1876, at the age of 26, he released 'Study of Ancient Japanese Characters' in the "Yoyo-sha Journal."
  277. In 1876, at the beginning of the Meiji period, in order to promote the study of Western Art, the Meiji government established an art school and invited Antonio Fontanesi from Italy.
  278. In 1876, at the invitation of teachers of Kogakuryo (The Imperial College of Engineering) in Kobusho (the Ministry of Industry), he came to Japan.
  279. In 1876, cholera was brought to Japan from the U.S. Navy ship which came from Amoy, and spread all over Japan.
  280. In 1876, government bonds of monetary salary caused the premium to be abolished.
  281. In 1876, he became Goyogakari (a general affairs official of the Imperial Household) for Philadelphia Exposition held in Philadelphia, USA.
  282. In 1876, he came back to Japan and was appointed to Goyo-gakari of Ministry of Interior, and in the next year, he established Mita Institute of Breeding Plants.
  283. In 1876, he displayed his work at the Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia, USA, and won the bronze medal.
  284. In 1876, he enrolled in Technology Arts School to learn Western-style painting, where he was influenced particularly by the teacher Antonio Fontanesi.
  285. In 1876, he finished Miyazaki Junior High School under the old system of education and enrolled to Keimei School in Kanazawa.
  286. In 1876, he founded Gakunosha (an institution for publishing agricultural magazines and managing schools) as well an agricultural school in Azabu, Tokyo.
  287. In 1876, he played 10 matches against Kamesaburo NAKAGAWA, 20 matches against Tetsujiro KOBAYASHI, and 10 matches against Hosaku FUJITA, in which he performed Josen (the same as sen above) to Kobayashi.
  288. In 1876, he renamed the Kansatsu to Sapporo Betsuin (Sapporo Branch) of Otani school of Shinshu.
  289. In 1876, he transferred to Public Ichigaya gakko katoshogakko fourth grade.
  290. In 1876, he was conferred court rank posthumously of Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) for his sincere loyalty, pure dutifulness and justice which were regarded as the model of the thought of reverence for the emperor in the Meiji Restoration.
  291. In 1876, he was recommended by Toshimichi Okubo for serving for Kangyoryo (Industrial Agency) and played an active role in producing Japanese tea.
  292. In 1876, he was selected as a student overseas of the second dispatch by the Ministry of Education, and went to Europe.
  293. In 1876, he went to England to study Sanskrit along with his colleague, Kenju KASAHARA.
  294. In 1876, national bank system was amended.
  295. In 1876, the Aoyama's residence was set on fire by the people who felt frustrated by Haibutsu-kishaku (the anti-Buddhist movement at the beginning of the Meiji era).
  296. In 1876, the Department of the Legislation proposed the plan of classifying kazoku into these three ranks, "Ko" "Haku" and "Shi," and this three-rank plan was mostly supported before Seinan War.
  297. In 1876, the Icchi school changed the name into the Nichiren sect and was reorganized as an integrated religious community of 'the Icchi school which regards Shakya-muni as honbutsu' including the Niko school and the Nichijo school.
  298. In 1876, the Kyobusho (Ministry of Religion) changed this policy and started to reorganize the modern Shrine Ranking System and butsu-do (Buddha statue halls).
  299. In 1876, the Meiji Government permitted the restoration of the Fujufuse School of Nichiren Sect.
  300. In 1876, the line between Kyoto Station (Omiya-dori temporary station at the time) and Osaka Station were opened in which Kyoto, Osaka, and Kobe were connected.
  301. In 1876, the policy of opening the country was implemented, then the ban on travelling abroad and trade with foreign merchants were lifted.
  302. In 1876, with installation of the head, the Nichijin school publicly referred to itself as the Honjo-ji school whereby the Nichiren sect Shoretsu-ha broke up.
  303. In 1876, with installation of the head, the Nichishin school publicly referred to itself as the Honryu-ji school whereby the Nichiren sect Shoretsu school broke up.
  304. In 1876-1877, he made a living by cultivating the mountain of Taishaku-ji Temple with a farmhand.
  305. In 1877
  306. In 1877 Imperial Prince Taruhito, the Governor-General for the Suppression of the Seinan War called Sawanomiya, went to Kagoshima by ship and inspected the place where the War was taking place, together with the Prince.
  307. In 1877 after Kyobusho (Ministry of Religion) was discontinued, the bureau came under the jurisdiction of the prewar Ministry of Home Affairs (Japan).
  308. In 1877 at the outbreak of Seinan War he joined the army of the former Satsuma Domain and fought with them, and after the war he hid himself in a mountain in Kumamoto Prefecture but was captured.
  309. In 1877 he became a councilor of the Senate.
  310. In 1877 he began self-publishing with his publication "Nihon Kaika Shoshi" (Short History of Japanese Civilization).
  311. In 1877 he fought in Seinan War and was recognised for his great achievements with an Order of Merit.
  312. In 1877 he was sixteen.
  313. In 1877 it ceased to be used.
  314. In 1877 leader of the National Debt Bureau
  315. In 1877 she toured various places as a child actress of a traveling entertainer group.
  316. In 1877 she was conferred Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) for her long-term services.
  317. In 1877, 48 towns in total were integrated into the surrounding villages, i.e., Horiuchi village (8 towns), Fukakusa village (5), Okamedani village (16), Rokujizo village (15) and Kagekatsu village (4), resulting in the number of towns of 219.
  318. In 1877, Gakushuin School opened for promoting education of children in the kazoku class.
  319. In 1877, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru went to the war front during The Satsuma Rebellion (Seinan War).
  320. In 1877, Jonan-gu Shrine was determined to be the 'Mahataki-jinja Shrine' listed in the Jinmyocho (Register of Deities) of the Engishiki (procedures of the Engi era) and its name was changed to 'Mahataki-jinja Shrine.'
  321. In 1877, Jujiro MARUO in Hyogo Prefecture established Shinriki from a native variety, Hodoyoshi.
  322. In 1877, Seinan War, the largest one, broke out in Kagoshima Prefecture raised by shizoku from Satsuma including students of Shigakko (school mainly for warriors), backing up Saigo, but again shizoku side was defeated.
  323. In 1877, a comic magazine representing the Meiji period "Marumaru Chinbun" was first launched.
  324. In 1877, at the age of 55, he had been sick for some time since May.
  325. In 1877, based on his experiences in agricultural experiments, he issued the first edition of "Kanno Shinsho".
  326. In 1877, he became a Higashi Hongan-ji Temple office staff for propagation in China, and he took students along with him and set off to Shanghai in Qing.
  327. In 1877, he became komusubi (a sumo wrestler of the fourth highest rank) in the June tournament and then became sekiwake (a sumo wrestler of the third highest rank) in the December tournament where he won all his bouts.
  328. In 1877, he became the captain of "Nisshin (a cruise)."
  329. In 1877, he departed to the front of Seinan War, and in April in the war time, was promoted to Army Major and Staff Officer of Chindai (garrison) in Kumamoto Prefecture.
  330. In 1877, he fought in the Seinan War, leading the old feudal retainers of the Kuwana Domain.
  331. In 1877, he founded Hakuaisha (an organization founded during Seinan War and aimed for aids of the wounded, later Japanese Red Cross Society) with Yuzuru OGYU.
  332. In 1877, he held 'a speech meeting for recruiting volunteer soldiers' for the Seinan War.
  333. In 1877, he lived in Kobe with Tsuru HATA, a female sewing instructor who was older than he by 10 years, and married her in 1880, becoming a member of her family and bearing the name of Hata.
  334. In 1877, he opened up a company handling sugar and also gained an enormous profit by transporting Ryukyu fabrics which enabled him to start his long-desired business, a shipbuilding company.
  335. In 1877, he researched in Hakodate and published a report paper titled 'A Visit to the Volcano of Oshima' in a journal of The Asiatic Society of Japan.
  336. In 1877, he showed great performance in the rescue of Tateki TANI who was also one of his sworn allies in Seinan War, and he was promoted to Colonel for this achievement in 1880.
  337. In 1877, his father Takamori was killed in the war.
  338. In 1877, his foster mother died and a relative succeeded the family name, and thereby, Shuei began to bear the continuance of the Hayashi family as an Igo family.
  339. In 1877, his honor was restored, and, in 1881, he was posthumously conferred Shoshii (Senior Forth Rank) together with Hanpeita TAKECHI, Ryoma SAKAMOTO and Shintaro NAKAOKA.
  340. In 1877, it was ranked as a township shrine.
  341. In 1877, she entered Hongo Shogakko (Hongo Elementary School), but could not continue because she was too young, so she enrolled in Yoshikawa Gakko (Yoshikawa School), which had been established privately by Tomikichi YOSHIKAWA.
  342. In 1877, the 'Fugetsu Do,' a Western food restaurant in Tokyo, put rice curry on the menu for the first time in Japan.
  343. In 1877, the Department of the Imperial Household transferred the divine spirit of the Emperor Chukyo from Tsukamoto-sha Shrine in Honmachi juroku chome and enshrined at Wakamiya Hachiman-gu Shrine.
  344. In 1877, the Seiin was abolished.
  345. In 1877, the Seinan War broke out and a large number of woodblock prints illustrating the war started to be made.
  346. In 1877, the Seinan War broke out and nishiki-e-shinbun featuring the war as their subject matter were published in March to May.
  347. In 1877, the government decided to do away with the castle.
  348. In 1877, when the Seinan War broke out, he visited Taisuke ITAGAKI in Kochi Prefecture, and talked about re-forming Aikokusha (Society of Patriots) as the base of the movement for establishing the National Diet.
  349. In 1877: Itto-jiho (first-class attendant advisor to the emperor).
  350. In 1877: The Diary of the Department of War: ''大日記 省内各局参謀近衛病院 教師軍馬局 2月水 陸軍省第1局'
  351. In 1877: The Diary of the Department of War: '大日記 省内各局参謀近衛病院 教師軍馬局 1月水 陸軍省第1局'
  352. In 1877: The Diary of the Department of War: '大日記 砲兵本支廠工兵各方面 1月木 陸軍省第1局'
  353. In 1878
  354. In 1878 Emperor Meiji paid a royal visit to Ueno where imperial matches were held in his honour.
  355. In 1878 he became a first class imperial tutor at the Imperial Household Department.
  356. In 1878 he became medical officer of the navy and was sent to Korea on the warship (gunboat) 'Hosho'; he did an excellent job in treating Koreans.
  357. In 1878 he died.
  358. In 1878 it was transferred to Tokyo Prefecture.
  359. In 1878 the spirits of the Empresses and the Imperial family were enshrine together.
  360. In 1878, "Kazoku Ruibetsu-roku" (Record of the Groups of Kazoku) which recorded that classification was published.
  361. In 1878, 1 yen silver coins were approved for circulation in Japan, so that the system became bimetallism virtually.
  362. In 1878, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru received the promotion to captain in the Imperial Army, and then attended The Imperial Japanese Army Academy.
  363. In 1878, Tsunetami took office as a vice-president of Hakuaisha with Yuzuru OGYU.
  364. In 1878, he assumed the position of a councilor of Genroin (the Chamber of Elders).
  365. In 1878, he changed the name of Horitsu Koshukai to Omeisha.
  366. In 1878, he depicted the emperor's waiting women for "Bita shichi yosei", which caused trouble.
  367. In 1878, he established the Thirty-fourth Shikoku National Bank (The former Sanwa Bank) and assumed Todori (chief).
  368. In 1878, he excavated shell mounds in Hakodate along with Edward S. MORSE, Thomas BLAKISTON, and others.
  369. In 1878, he received a certification of enlightenment by visiting Kosen IMAKITA at the Engaku-ji Temple, Kamakura.
  370. In 1878, he resigned from the post.
  371. In 1878, he tendered his resignation to Fukushima Prefectural Office, and devoted himself to the movement for civil rights in Tohoku Region.
  372. In 1878, he took up the position of the captain of a new ship 'Kongo (corvette),' which had just been navigated.
  373. In 1878, he was appointed as Head of Official Center of the Paris World Exposition, and in 1881, he was appointed as Great Secretary of Ministry of Finance and Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce, and was promoted to Resident.
  374. In 1878, her husband Munemitsu received a sentence of five years' imprisonment for suspicion of taking part in the movement to overthrow the government, and he was imprisoned in the Yamagata prison (later moved to the Miyagi prison).
  375. In 1878, his eldest son, Reiichiro YUKI was born in the home of Taishaku-ji Temple.
  376. In 1878, she became an adopted daughter of Kamekichi HAMADAYA
  377. In 1878, the company was merged with Mitsubishi Steamship Company.
  378. In 1878, the inauguration ceremony of the recreated Shintomi-za Kabuki theatre, which featured a Western architectural style, was held spectacularly.
  379. In 1878, the use of 1 yen silver coins without limitation was permitted not only in the ports open to foreign countries but also any places in Japan.
  380. In 1878: Graduated from the University of Tokyo as a member of the inaugural class of Department of Physics called "Department of French Physics", in which the lectures were given in French by a French instructor.
  381. In 1878: concurrently serving as Genroin-gikan (councilor of the Senate).
  382. In 1879
  383. In 1879 Imperial Prince Takehito was ordered by the General Council of State to go aboard the British Navy China sea fleet flagship, 'Iron Duke,' he worked under hard conditions the same as other young navy officers, on the warship, for a whole year.
  384. In 1879 Kamesaburo NAKAGAWA planned to launch a study group named Hoensha, together with Honinbo Shuetsu, Sanei YASUI, Inseki INOUE and Shuei HAYASHI among others, so Shuho accepted their request and returned from Echigo to join them and he became the president.
  385. In 1879 Ryukyu Domain was abolished and Okinawa Prefecture was established.
  386. In 1879 at the age of 33, Takami was appointed by the Ministry of Interior as a Guji (chief of those who serves shrine, controls festivals and general affairs) of Gassan-jinja Shrine and a Guji of Haguroyama-jinja Shrine and Yudonosan-jinja Shrine.
  387. In 1879 during the Meiji period, it was subordinated to the To-ji Temple and selected as a Jogaku-ji temple.
  388. In 1879 he criticised the Hokkaido Development Commissioner, and after resigning from his post, spent the remainder of his life as a writer, travelling the country up to the year before he died.
  389. In 1879 he entered a preparatory school of university, but he had to leave the school because he got a disease.
  390. In 1879 he left the Ministry of Finance and wrote editorials and articles for newspapers while working as a translator, eventually launching his own magazine, the liberally aligned "Tokyo Keizai Zasshi" (Tokyo Economics Magazine) modelled on the British "Economist" magazine in the same year.
  391. In 1879 he was engaged in the compilation of "Kojiruien" (an encyclopedia of ancient literatures), in 1882 he became a professor at the Tokyo University as well as a member of the Tokyo gakushiin (Tokyo Academy), and in addition, he was appointed to be the chairperson of the editorial committee of "Kojiruien."
  392. In 1879, 'Kamigyo Ward' and 'Shimogyo Ward' were created in Kyoto Prefecture, which was before the Municipal Government Act of Kyoto City came into effect.
  393. In 1879, (After relocation to the Nisi Ogawa-Machi in Kanda Ward and then Fujimi in Kojimachi Ward) Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru moved into this house address, at Kioi-cho 4, Kojimachi, Tokyo.
  394. In 1879, Hoensha was inaugurated as an Igo study group mainly by Shuho MURASE the seventh dan level and Kamesaburo NAKAGAWA, who were the leading authority of the Igo world at that time.
  395. In 1879, Kagenori's five-month-old third son died due to illness on the way home and was buried in Aden (a city in the present Republic of Yemen).
  396. In 1879, Meiji Emperor criticized the Enlightenment and promulgated "Kyogaku Taishi (The Imperial Will Education)", which was actually written by MOTODA, that public education should be based on Confucianism laying stress on the virtue of humanity, justice, loyalty and filial piety.
  397. In 1879, New Imperial Palace was decided to be built at Nishi-no-maru, and in 1888 Meiji Kyuden Imperial Palace was completed.
  398. In 1879, Shigenobu OKUMA, who served as Okura-kyo (minister of the treasury), proposed that a large amount of government bonds be issued and used for readjusting paper money all at once.
  399. In 1879, Tadaatsu MATSUDAIRA (the younger brother of Tadanari MATSUDAIRA, the last lord of Ueda Domain) immigrated to Colorado as an engineer after having studied in New Jersey.
  400. In 1879, for his service during the restoration, the Hirosawa family was raised to the peerage, along with the bereaved families of Kido and Okubo, both of whom died sometime before.
  401. In 1879, he became a great secretary in Ibaraki Prefecture and in 1880, he became a governor of Ibaraki Prefecture.
  402. In 1879, he became a member of the Imperial Academy
  403. In 1879, he died at the age of seventy-six in Taneyama-mura.
  404. In 1879, he entered Tokyofuritsu daiichi chugaku seisokuka (predecessor of Tokyo toritsu Hibiya senior high school.)
  405. In 1879, he established Mikawa Koshin-sha company in Aichi Prefecture and in the next year he expanded and reorganized it to establish the Aichi Prefecture Koshin-sha company.
  406. In 1879, he established an artwork organization called Ryuchi kai (Nihon Bijutsu Kyokai [Japan Art Association]) to stop outflow of Japan Art, and took office as a president.
  407. In 1879, he finished his researches on the Imperial House system and others.
  408. In 1879, he founded a private school, Kosansha.
  409. In 1879, he graduated from the Imperial College of Engineering.
  410. In 1879, he invited Masaru WATANABE for the position of vice principal of a Yogakko (School of Western Studies) advocated by his older brother Sajibei, then opened the school under the name of Shiritsu Toyo Gakko (Toyo Private School) on January 15.
  411. In 1879, he left Daishin-in and became Shiho-taifu (a post of Ministry of Justice), and was simultaneously appointed as Genroin gikan (councilor of Chamber of Senate).
  412. In 1879, he moved to Miyanaga-machi and met Tai SAKAMAKI, a daughter of his maid Mrs. Sakamaki.
  413. In 1879, he organized an imperial visit as the chief of Tsuruoka police station.
  414. In 1879, he participated in the third Aikokusha meeting which was held in Osaka.
  415. In 1879, he requested that the Ryodou in Higashi Hongan-ji Temple that burned down in 1823 be restored and announced the start of construction for restoration.
  416. In 1879, he submitted his resignation to the Chamber of Elders and worked on alternate days basis; however, he quit his post because government officials were prohibited to make a speech on politics in August.
  417. In 1879, he was appointed as Gon no Shokyosei and in May the same year, he became the local chief priest of Wakamiya Hachiman-gu Shrine.
  418. In 1879, he was elected to be a member of the Tokyo Academy.
  419. In 1879, he was newly promoted to ozeki (a sumo wrestler of the second highest rank) in the January tournament.
  420. In 1879, he wrote his first Chinese poetry which was evaluated by Kyumei.
  421. In 1879, the Meiji Government carried out the so-called Ryukyu annexation to abolish the Ryukyu domain and set up Okinawa prefecture and ordered the Ryukyu King Sho Tai to live in Tokyo.
  422. In 1879, the Ministry of Education of the Meiji government started to compile and the project was later passed to the Tokyo gakushiin (later became the Japan Academy), Koten Kokyusho (research institute for Shinto sect) and the Jingu Shicho (administration office for Jingu).
  423. In 1879, the Soma family reported to the Imperial Household Ministry to take Tomotane under custody, and did so for awhile, but eventually Tomotane was hospitalized to the Tenkyoin, a mental clinic of the time.
  424. In 1879, the county was divided into Kita Kuwada-gun and Minami Kuwada-gun.
  425. In 1879, the first Japanese engineer was born.
  426. In 1879, the grave was moved again from the temporary burial grave to the Nanshu-bochi cemetery, where it now lies in almost the same place.
  427. In 1879, the mausoleum was renamed its current name.
  428. In 1879, the two wards of Kamigyo and Shimogyo were established in Kyoto under the Gun-ku-cho-son Henseiho (an act for the organization of the administrative divisions), and in 1889, Kamigyo Ward and Shimogyo Ward became 'Kyoto City' under the jurisdiction of the prefecture.
  429. In 1879, when Shimogyo Ward was established, parts of Hachijo village, Nishikujo village, and Higashi Shiokoji village in Kadono County were incorporated into Shimogyo Ward.
  430. In 1879, with the enforcement of Gunkuchoson henseiho, Amami Islands, as Oshima County, were incorporated in Osumi Province and named Oshima County, Osumi Province, Kagoshima Prefecture, with its county office established in Kaneku Village.
  431. In 1879: concurrently serving as Takumibe-shoyu (Junior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Industry)
  432. In 1880
  433. In 1880 (at the age of 0), he was born to the eldest daughter of the real sister of Kaoru INOUE, Genkun (the statesmen who contributed in the Meiji Period), and Yahachi AYUKAWA, a former samurai of Choshu Domain (the 10th family head), in Ouchi Village, Hikawa County, Yamaguchi Prefecture (present day Ouchi area, Yamaguchi City).
  434. In 1880 and before
  435. In 1880 he became a Tokyo Prefectural councilor, often giving speeches on political issues such as the constitution and the revision of treaties.
  436. In 1880 he received Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun.
  437. In 1880 he was nineteen.
  438. In 1880 when he was 64 years old, he became a professor of nanga (a school of painting originating in China) at Kyoto-fu Gagakko (Kyoto Prefectural School of Painting) (later, Kyoto City University of Arts).
  439. In 1880, "Aoki no Sanryoki" was found in Kozan-ji Temple in Togano, Kyoto.
  440. In 1880, Asano Shinbun published an editorial titled "The kazoku class should be abolished."
  441. In 1880, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru was employed by the Philanthropic Society (in Japanese, Hakuaisha; Later, it became the Japanese Red Cross Society).
  442. In 1880, Jutaro became the president.
  443. In 1880, Kimigayo was adopted as Japan's National Anthem.
  444. In 1880, Kimigayo was adopted as Japan's national anthem.
  445. In 1880, Korai TAKEDA published "Kamuri no Matsu Mado no Yoarashi."
  446. In 1880, Tokyo, Hokkaido and all the prefectures were ordered to establish baby-sitter schools in order to solve the problem, and in 1883, Kaju WATANABE opened the first baby-sitter school in Koyama-mura, Sashima-gun, Ibaraki Prefecture.
  447. In 1880, Tsuneyoshi MURATA of theJapanese Army succeeded in developing the first Japanese-made rifle.
  448. In 1880, Yang Shoujing came to Japan and introduced Hokuhi (epitaphs from the Northern Wei dynasty), by which people were enlightened and books of the Hokuhi school became popular.
  449. In 1880, Yukichi cooperated in founding Senshugakko (present Senshu University) by providing his bookkeeping school in Kyobashi Ward and Meiji Kaido in Kobikicho for the four founders of Senshugakko.
  450. In 1880, after returning to Japan, he played a huge role in the foundation of Senshu School (Senshu University), as a person of great merit.
  451. In 1880, he also won all his bouts in the May tournament.
  452. In 1880, he assumed the position as a Minister of Education.
  453. In 1880, he became Genroin Kanji (Secretary of the Chamber of Elders) and Kaisha narabini Kumiai Jorei Shinsa Sosai (a chairman of examination committee for company and union regulations).
  454. In 1880, he became Shoyu of the Ministry of Education, and in November of the same year, he became the vice chief of audition and the councilor of the National Industrial Exhibition.
  455. In 1880, he became a member of the national anthem committee, as a representative of gagaku musicians, and the committee submitting the score for the present day 'Kimigayo' in October of the same year and he played it for the first time on November 3 of the same year, on the Emperor's birthday.
  456. In 1880, he came out to Kyoto again, and entered the school for teachers at the Higashi Hongan-ji seminary, after two years, he took charge of lectures in Shinshu sect Daigaku-ryo (Bureau of Education under the ritsuryo system) and acquired an academic rank within the temple.
  457. In 1880, he carved the seal of state to present to the Meiji Government.
  458. In 1880, he collaborated in the founding of Meiji Law School (now Meiji University).
  459. In 1880, he founded Seismological Society of Japan (which dissolved in 1892).
  460. In 1880, he founded Shungai-gakusha School in order to devote himself to education again, but in 1881, he died of illness at his home in Koishikawa.
  461. In 1880, he founded the Osaka Commercial Training Institute together with Tomoatsu GODAI and Tatsuo YAMAMOTO.
  462. In 1880, he took office as Okura-kyo (Minister of the Treasury).
  463. In 1880, he was appointed to Gaimu-taifu (post of Foreign Ministry).
  464. In 1880, he was appointed to Genroin gikan (councilor of Chamber of Elders) and received Jushii (Junior Fourth Rank).
  465. In 1880, he was appointed to Okura-kyo (Minister of the Treasury) but he resigned in Meiji juyonen no seihen (the failed Meiji-14 coup of 1881) in 1881.
  466. In 1880, he went to Saint Petersburg as the first secretary at the resident office in Russia together with Sakimitsu YANAGIWARA, who was an envoy.
  467. In 1880, however, the Ministry of Education of the time disqualified the translation.
  468. In 1880, national projects were sold to private companies including the Mitsui combine and the Mitsubishi combine, and the Ministry of Industry was abolished in 1885.
  469. In 1880, negotiations were held in Beijing through the arbitration of ex-US President Ulysses Grant, who had a meeting with Emperor Meiji during his world tour and advised that both Japan and Qing compromise to prevent the intervention of western powers.
  470. In 1880, the Camber of Elders submitted 'Japan's national constitution draft' as a final draft, and the Minister of the Treasury, Shigenobu OKUMA also submitted 'My opinion on a constitution.'
  471. In 1880, the construction of a shrine building was completed at the site on which the Great Buddha of Hoko-ji Temple once stood and the shrine was relocated.
  472. In 1880: concurrently serving as Kobu-taifu (Senior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Industry).
  473. In 1881
  474. In 1881 Takatomi dissolved the adoptive heir arrangement with Takanobu and reassumed the role of domain lord.
  475. In 1881 and later
  476. In 1881 guidelines of rules for teaching for normal schools were set up under Education Order, which led to the first unification of the level of normal schools.
  477. In 1881 he was honored with the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun.
  478. In 1881 he was transferred to the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce as a chief of commerce agency and industrial agency from the Ministry of Interior, but resigned after triggering a conflict with Yajiro SHINAGAWA, who was Noshomushoho (Junior Assistant Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce).
  479. In 1881 he was twenty.
  480. In 1881 he went up to Tokyo and after working at Dojinsha school founded by Keiu NAKAMURA, he entered Keio University founded by Yukichi FUKUZAWA then dropped out the following year.
  481. In 1881 when the expiration date of the ten-year project was close, the policy to abolish the Hokkaido Development Agency was settled.
  482. In 1881, 'Nishiki-ga Shinbun' started to be published in Kyoto.
  483. In 1881, Goto set up the Liberal Party (Meiji Period) with Itagaki, a leader of the party, but he changed his mind to cooperate with the government.
  484. In 1881, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru was promoted the rank of major in the infantry of the Imperial Army; he then became the president of The Dai Nihon Sanrinkai (The Japan Forestry Association).
  485. In 1881, King Kalakaua of the Kingdom of Hawaii was the first head of a foreign country to visit Japan, where he met the Meiji Emperor and agreed to accept more Japanese immigrants to Hawaii.
  486. In 1881, Mainichi Shinbun reported on Meao Fudo in Noge Shinden, Yokohama, which followed the 3 Fudo and Meki Fudo in Tokyo, but there has been no record to indicate that the name (Meao) was used after that, and thus it is considered that the reported Meao Fudo is not the same as the existing one.
  487. In 1881, Robert Koch developed the technology of culturing eubacterium using agar medium, and since then the demand for kanten has increased throughout the world.
  488. In 1881, Tadayoshi SHIMAZU held an Inuoumono event with the Emperor Meiji in attendance and this was the last Inuoumono event in Inuoumono history.
  489. In 1881, Toranosuke, her second older brother, set up a branch family and apprenticed himself to an earthenware painter.
  490. In 1881, a political turmoil broke out and the imperial edict to establish the Imperial Diet was issued.
  491. In 1881, as people began to view the Buddhism abolition policy as excessive, the reconstruction of Kofuku-ji Temple was finally permitted.
  492. In 1881, at Yusei-ji Temple, Seifu held a memorial service on the 600th anniversary of Nichiren's death.
  493. In 1881, by chance he developed a new breed of the aspidistra (Aspidistra elatior) from those he was cultivating.
  494. In 1881, he assumed the position as the first Minister of Agriculture and Commerce, as the establishment of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce.
  495. In 1881, he assumed the post of the captain of 'Nisshin.'
  496. In 1881, he became Shiho-taifu (a post of Ministry of Justice).
  497. In 1881, he disagreed with Shigenobu OKUMA who was a radical.
  498. In 1881, he graduated from the Tokyo School of Foreign Languages and in August married Sada OKUBO.
  499. In 1881, he joined the members of Hokkaido Development Commission and migrated to Hokkaido, where he worked as a teacher at Hakodate Merchant Ship College and Hakodate Normal School (school for teachers).
  500. In 1881, he married Tone HORIKAWA, the oldest daughter of Jokyo HORIKAWA, who was the chief priest of Ganjo-ji Temple (Hakodate Betsuin of Nishi Hongan-ji Temple).
  501. In 1881, he participated in the compilation of "Dainihon hennenshi" (Great Japanese Chronological History).
  502. In 1881, he participated in the establishment of the Tohoku Railway Corporation.
  503. In 1881, he participated in the second National Industrial Exhibition and attended the first Zenkoku Nodan-kai (national agricultural meeting), and published the reprint edition of "Kanno Shinsho".
  504. In 1881, he received the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold and Silver Star.
  505. In 1881, he retired.
  506. In 1881, he submitted nearly 740 different kinds of rice species at the Second National Industrial Exhibition, and he was recognized and known as the most prominent producer of new varieties of rice throughout Japan; unfortunately he died of an illness in the next year of his participation in this exhibition, on August 13, 1882.
  507. In 1881, he succeeded to the name of the forth Fukusuke NAKAMURA by playing the role of Katsurako in "Ogiya Kumagai."
  508. In 1881, he went to Hokkaido alone.
  509. In 1881, his real mother died.
  510. In 1881, the abolishment of the Hokkaido Development Commission was decided, and Kuroda, in order to continue the commission's project, planned to make its officials resign, set up a business with them, and sell the commission's properties to the business.
  511. In 1881, the company was founded and in 1891, the line reached Aomori.
  512. In 1881, the family died out with the death of Imperial Princess Sumiko, the twelfth head of the family.
  513. In 1881, together with Kozo MIYAGI and Misao YASHIRO, KISHIMOTO founded Meiji Law School, the predecessor of Meiji University, and became the first president of the school.
  514. In 1881, under the Religious Corporations Ordinance, the name of the religious sect was changed to Shinshu sect Otani school.
  515. In 1881, upon his older brother Denbei's death, he went back to Kusuriya-cho in Kyoto, where he lived the rest of his life.
  516. In 1881, upon the issuance of the Imperial Decree that the Imperial Diet be inaugurated ten years later, Itagaki formed the Liberal Party (Japan, 1881-1884), one of Japan's first political parties, to become prime minister (party leader).
  517. In 1881, when the ten-year project was drawing to an end, KURODA decided to sell the facilities and equipment owned by the government to junior officials in order to continue the operation of the Development Commission.
  518. In 1881: Became one of the founders of the Tokyo Academy of Physics.
  519. In 1882
  520. In 1882 Okura no shofu kokoroe (Preliminary Junior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of the Treasury)
  521. In 1882 concubines were forbidden at least legally.
  522. In 1882 he died.
  523. In 1882 he established the Constitutional Imperialism Party (立憲帝政党) with Sakura MARUYAMA and Torajiro MIZUNO, holding the principles of policy such as sovereignty of the Emperor, enforcement of Constitution established by the Emperor and election among limited people.
  524. In 1882 he was involved in the foundation of Osaka Shosen Kaisha (OSK Lines) and became the CEO but resigned in 1886.
  525. In 1882 he was twenty-one.
  526. In 1882 the Osaka trading company was founded to establish spinning industry and then industrial revolution in Japan was proceeded after the Sino-Japanese War and the Russo-Japanese War.
  527. In 1882, "Sumitomo Kaho" (Precepts of Sumitomo) consisting of 19 parts and 196 articles was established, and the third article of the first part, Family Precepts, says as follows.
  528. In 1882, Gochiku NAKABAYASHI visited Qing together with YO Genbi (an officer at Qing's Office of Director in Nagasaki), and, visiting Hanson, the mentor of YO Genbi (the mentor of Yang Shoujing as well), was engaged in study of calligraphy there.
  529. In 1882, Yukichi launched the daily newspaper "Jiji Shinpo" and led public opinion based on the idea of being impartial and independent of any political party.
  530. In 1882, anyone who made home-brewed liquors was required to apply for a license for sake brewing and pay 80 sen (one sen is 1/100 of one yen) as a license fee.
  531. In 1882, he added Ganjiro to his own troupe and when he performed Yashichi in "Uekiya," he performed first himself saying 'Please pay attention to what I do carefully.'
  532. In 1882, he became the first head of faculty of literature at the Koten kokyusho (the Institution for the study of Shinto).
  533. In 1882, he came up to Tokyo and enrolled at Daigakuyobimon (Daiichi Koto Chugakko (First High School), The present University of Tokyo, Faculty of Liberal Arts) before advancing to the law school of Tokyo University (The present faculty of law at Tokyo University).
  534. In 1882, he formed the Constitutional Progressive Party with Shigenobu OKUMA and others.
  535. In 1882, he founded a company named Banseisha in his hometown Shizuoka along with Sajibei YODA, Sono YODA and Zengo YODA, who all, including Benzo himself, became the co-founders of the company, with a capital of fifty thousand yen.
  536. In 1882, he got remarried with Yone, the first daughter of a fish merchant, Hanbei SAWAKI.
  537. In 1882, he inherited the family estate and engaged in the family business, which was a sake brewing industry.
  538. In 1882, he joined the Hirobumi ITO Commission to help with preparation for the establishment of the Constitution of the Empire of Japan.
  539. In 1882, he participated in the enthronement ceremony of Alexander Ⅲ held at the capital city of the Russian Empire, Sankt-Peterburg; Saint Petersburg representing the Emperor, on his way back to Japan, he made a round of visits to European countries and the United States.
  540. In 1882, he published "Shintaishisho" (A Collection of Poems in the New Style) in cooperation with his coworkers Ryokichi Watabe and Tetsujiro INOUE.
  541. In 1882, he received the Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum.
  542. In 1882, he took part in the investigations on the European constitutions, and after he came back, he was involved in making drafts of the Constitution of the Empire of Japan as secretary to ITO, along with Kowashi INOUE and Kentaro KANEKO.
  543. In 1882, he took up the position of the president of Kyodo Unyu Kaisha (literary, a joint transportation company) while he was a rear admiral.
  544. In 1882, he travelled around Nagasaki Prefecture to provide agricultural trainings.
  545. In 1882, he unexpectedly passed away while giving a lecture at Takada (Joetsu City of today), Niigata Prefecture.
  546. In 1882, he was allowed to get out of prison under an amnesty, and in the next year, 1883, he went to Europe to study abroad partly because he was advised to do so by Hirobumi ITO.
  547. In 1882, he was appointed as Gaimu-taifu (a post of Foreign Ministry), and worked under Gaimukyo (chief of Foreign Ministry) Kaoru INOUE on the revision of treaties.
  548. In 1882, he was appointed the Vice President of Genroin (Chamber of Elders)
  549. In 1882, he was appointed to Kenrei of Fukushima Prefecture where power of Liberal Party, which promoted Jiyu Minken Undo (Movement for Liberty and People's Right), was enormous and he started oppression.
  550. In 1882, he was appointed to a chairman of Genroin.
  551. In 1882, he was employed by the Eiri Jiyu Shinbun newspaper at a large salary of a hundred yen, but in 1884, he drew for another newspaper Jiyu no tomoshibi, which made trouble with the Eiri Jiyu Shinbun.
  552. In 1882, he was given an additional posthumous honorific title of 'Eto Daishi' (The Great Teacher Eto) by Emperor Meiji.
  553. In 1882, he was invited by Kiyoshi TSUKIGATA, who was known as the demon prison head because of his strictness, to become an instructor of swordsmanship at the Kabato Shujikan, or 'outland prison' (the predecessor of modern prisons).
  554. In 1882, he was promoted to makuuchi in June sumo tournament.
  555. In 1882, his position was changed into the Ministry of Army, and in May, 1885, he became a second ex-legionary lieutenant in the army.
  556. In 1882, in order to confront the Omeikai, he joined BABA, Masami OISHI, and Gendo NISHIMURA to organize the Kokuyukai.
  557. In 1882, it was established in order to defend the nation against attacks from outside and to maintain the system in the nation.
  558. In 1882, it was performed at Osaka Kadoza theater for the first time.
  559. In 1882, over 30 bronze mirrors were excavated from this tumulus.
  560. In 1882, prior to construction of the Arisugawa-tei House, he and Imperial Prince Arisugawa Taruhito went on an inspection tour of Europe.
  561. In 1882, some woodblock books were published, but it is not clear whether all the books were published.
  562. In 1882, the Emperor issued an the Imperial Rescript to Samurai and Sailors to declare the army as the 'Emperor's army,' he commanded the army as commander in chief to strengthen military power.
  563. In 1882, the Japan's first horse-drawn stagecoach on a railway, Tokyo Stagecoach Railway, was established.
  564. In 1882, the Meiji Government permitted the restoration of Fujufuse Nichiren Komon Sect.
  565. In 1882, the Osaka prefectural police banned the conference of sake breweries because of the growing opposition movement against a tax increase by the Meiji government.
  566. In 1882, the office of Kazoku President was closed, and after that, the Department of Kazoku under the direct control of Kunaisho (Imperial Household Ministry) dealt with the control kazoku.
  567. In 1882, with an increase in pufferfish poisoning, the government released Ikeizai sokketsurei (the law concerning offence against police regulations) including a clause which stated that 'anyone who eats pufferfish will be sentenced to a prison term or a fine.'
  568. In 1882-1883, he was dispatched to Shizuoka Church (currently the United Church of Christ in Japan Shizuoka Church) located on Sixth Street, Shizuoka City at that time.
  569. In 1882: president of the Nippon Railway
  570. In 1883 Koyo entered Daiichi High School; by that time, however, he was absorbed in writing poems under the penname of Enzan and after entering high school he participated in literary groups such as Bunyukai and Totsutostukai to deepen his interest in literature.
  571. In 1883 Mansai moved to Tokyo.
  572. In 1883 he died at the age of 63.
  573. In 1883 he established Ninna kai to restore the Ninna-ji Temple and became president.
  574. In 1883 he was assigned to Goyogakari (a general affairs official of the Imperial Household) of Imperial Princess Shigenomiya Akiko and Emperor Taisho.
  575. In 1883 he was released, and, on the way to Kagoshima Prefecture when he stopped by Nagoya City, he got involved in the Nagoya Incident.
  576. In 1883, Fujita Gumi moved into the construction industry by contracting to build a railroad, the 5 bridges in Osaka and Biwa Lake Canal; additionally, Denzaburo established Osaka Boseki (predecessor of Toyobo) and entered the spinning industry.
  577. In 1883, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru was appointed to the position of honorary memberships in the Asia Kyokai (Asian Association) and Tokyo Chigaku Kyokai (Tokyo Geographical Society).
  578. In 1883, Mushanokoji Senke Isshisai wrote a legend to the incomplete drawing called 'a pair of scales' among the 'triad of collaboration of three Houses of Sen,' and the triad was completed sixty years after the project was commenced.
  579. In 1883, Robert Koch identified the bacterium that caused cholera, so the ways of prevention and treatment for cholera were gradually established and doctors and nurses were adequately provided by modern education system in the middle of the Meiji period.
  580. In 1883, Tama gave birth to her first son, Hisataro KONDO.
  581. In 1883, after he was discharged from prison, "Principles of Moral and Legislation" by Bentham was published under the name "Seiso RIGAKU."
  582. In 1883, despite having rough passage due to many dangerous spots, the construction of a line connecting Takasaki Station and Ohgaki Station began after the "Ordinance of a public bond for the Nakasendo Railroad" was issued.
  583. In 1883, he became the Lord of Internal Affairs to successive ministers of Internal Affairs and established the system of cities, towns, villages and counties.
  584. In 1883, he became the adopted son of his uncle Tohei TAKEKOSHI of Kashiwazaki City, Niigata Prefecture.
  585. In 1883, he built Rokumeikan to negotiate the revision of an unequal treaty as Gaimukyo (chief of Foreign Ministry).
  586. In 1883, he died at the age of 64.
  587. In 1883, he entered Seiritsugakusha in Surugadai in Kanda.
  588. In 1883, he had an affair with Maboroshi dayu depicted in 'Nezu hanayashiki Omatsu-ro' but broke up with her, and in 1884, formally married Tai SAKAMAKI..
  589. In 1883, he moved to Tokyo when he was in his 60's, with a new determination of dedicating himself to the development of agriculture.
  590. In 1883, he was appointed chief priest of Saimyo-ji Temple (Nigishima-cho, Kumano-City), but in 1886, he resigned the position and went to Osaka.
  591. In 1883, he went to Shanghai to inspect the Telephone Exchange Office.
  592. In 1883, he wrote "Hokkai Small Dictionary," an Ainu language grammar book.
  593. In 1883, since the Ministry of Education established the approval system for textbooks, Saigoku Risshihen became discontinued as a textbook.
  594. In 1883, the national hygiene association, Dainihon Shiritsu Eiseikai, was launched and he was appointed to a president.
  595. In 1883, their first son, named Hisataro KONDO, was born.
  596. In 1883, when he was 59 years old, he died of throat cancer.
  597. In 1883, when he was the Dean of the Department of Literature of the University Tokyo, he interviewed a new student.
  598. In 1883, when she was invited to an evening party held in the house of Foreign Minister Kaoru INOUE and met Hirobumi ITO, he introduced her to Utako SHIMODA who had established a private school, the Toyo Girls' School, which offered education to the daughters of the peerage.
  599. In 1883, when times were chaotic, he held a position as a substitute teacher in the village elementary school at age of 13, but resigned and returned to farming after about two years when a formal elementary school teacher was assigned.
  600. In 1884
  601. In 1884 Okura no shofu and Director-General of the Tax Bureau
  602. In 1884 a facility which used bricks or earthenware was built in Kanda in Edo (currently, Tokyo prefecture), but was lost in the devastation of The Great Kanto Earthquake in 1923.
  603. In 1884 he became a hakushaku (count).
  604. In 1884 he was promoted to Army Major General and in 1892 he was promoted to Lieutenant General.
  605. In 1884 he was twenty-three.
  606. In 1884 it was relocated from top of the mountain to the mountainside making it easier to worship.
  607. In 1884 she became a geisha in Nagoya.
  608. In 1884 the family of lord of Sanda Domain was raised to the peerage as viscount.
  609. In 1884 the medicine certification examination became accessible even for women, but as she was already 57 years old, she thought that there would be little hope of her passing the examination and went into practice of midwifery.
  610. In 1884 when a title was introduced to the peerage, Tomomi IWAKURA and others considered establishing a title for the warrior class.
  611. In 1884 while studying at the University of Strasbourg, Juntaro married a German, Luise Heinrich, from Strasbourg.
  612. In 1884 基哲 JIMYOIN was bestowed the title of Viscount.
  613. In 1884, "the authorization of certification of female doctors" was decided, and Ginko was finally allowed to take the examinations.
  614. In 1884, 'Tokyo Club' which was based on a membership system was created in the Rokumei-kan Pavilion to foster a harmonious association with foreigners.
  615. In 1884, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru was assigned to the Liaodong Peninsula, commanding the battle for Kinshujo castle, during Japanese-Sino War.
  616. In 1884, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru was promoted to the rank of lieutenant colonel in the infantry of the Imperial Army.
  617. In 1884, Kari-mido (hall) of Hokuzen-ji Temple among others were constructed.
  618. In 1884, Michiaki KUZE, the child of Michihiro, was given the title of viscount.
  619. In 1884, Mitsukuni YANAGISAWA became a viscount.
  620. In 1884, Nagayasu NAWA, the descendant of Nagatoshi and a chief priest of Nawa-jinja Shrine in Fukuoka Prefecture, was awarded baron.
  621. In 1884, Noritada YANAGISAWA became a viscount.
  622. In 1884, Sadayoshi NONOMIYA was given the title viscount.
  623. In 1884, Shuei abolished the Hayashi family and forced Honinbo Shugen retire, then returned to the Honinbo family and called himself Honinbo Shuei the 17th.
  624. In 1884, aged twenty-one, he went to Germany to study under Gabriel von Max, who was a painter and a friend of his brother Toyokichi HARADA, and registered himself as an auditing student at the Munich Academy (art school).
  625. In 1884, as a result of the successful appeal of Tomozane YOSHII, Kaishu KATSU and others to the government, Emperor Meiji ordered Torataro to study in Potsdam Army War College, and while he was studying in Germany for thirteen years, he became a Prussian army lieutenant.
  626. In 1884, due to the Peerage Law he was ordained as Prince.
  627. In 1884, early in the Meiji period, he was given Juichii (Junior First Rank).
  628. In 1884, he became a councilor of the Senate.
  629. In 1884, he became a count.
  630. In 1884, he entered Tokyo Senmon Gakko (College) in Tokyo, where he concurrently enrolled in the Department of Law and Department of English, and after completion of the Department of Law in 1886 and the Department of English in the following year, he qualified as a notary public.
  631. In 1884, he entered a preparatory course of Daigaku Yobimon, which was renamed daiichi kotochugakko (later daiichi kotogakko) in 1886.
  632. In 1884, he graduated from Shihosho Hogakko (a low school affiliated to the Ministry of Justice, which was later absorbed into The University of Tokyo) at the top of the class (the second year of graduation from it).
  633. In 1884, he made lectures traveling around Ishikawa Prefecture and Toyama Prefecture.
  634. In 1884, he moved out of Yusei-ji Temple because of the internal conflict of the Butsuryu association.
  635. In 1884, he moved to Kanda Nishikicho in Tokyo and lived in the mansion of Tokudaiji and entered Gakushuin (school).
  636. In 1884, he successfully entered the preparatory course of Daigaku Yobimon.
  637. In 1884, he visited western countries with Iwao OYAMA, army minister, and inspected their military systems.
  638. In 1884, he was appointed to a viscount based on the Peerage Law.
  639. In 1884, he was born as the oldest son of Tetsunojo KANZE, the fifth (later Kosetsu KANZE).
  640. In 1884, he was conferred Countship for his contribution in the Restoration.
  641. In 1884, he was created viscount for his contribution during the Restoration.
  642. In 1884, he was given the title of Viscount.
  643. In 1884, he was given the title of count.
  644. In 1884, he was honored as viscount in accordance with the Peerage Law.
  645. In 1884, he was licensed as a "gun and gunpowder trader."
  646. In 1884, he was raised to the peerage of a viscount.
  647. In 1884, he worked at Railway Bureau of the Ministry of Industry and took charge of constructions of Nippon Railway and Kobu Railway.
  648. In 1884, his legitimate son, Kinjiro HIROSAWA was conferred the title of count.
  649. In 1884, in accordance with the Peerage Law, he was listed among the Marquises.
  650. In 1884, she was invited to Japan by Sutematsu OYAMA and Umeko TSUDA as an English teacher at Kazoku Jogakko (Peeresses' School, present Gakushuin School).
  651. In 1884, the Ii Family became hakushaku (a count), and was raised to the peerage.
  652. In 1884, the Ii family was appointed to Counts' status, and was elevated to the peerage.
  653. In 1884, the Imperial Household Ministry assumed the administration of Shosoin after it had previously been administered by the Ministry of Interior (Japan) and then the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce.
  654. In 1884, the Inaba clan given the rank of Viscount under the Peerage Law.
  655. In 1884, the Meiji Government officially permitted Japanese to go abroad.
  656. In 1884, the Yamana clan received the title of baron.
  657. In 1884, the following year, he published the book "Komori Kyoiku Ho"-Methods for Educating Little baby-sitters (from Fukyu-sha Publishing, reprinted edition in 1977).
  658. In 1884, the full-scale transition to western mathematics took place when Tokyo Sugaku Gaisha was incorporated into the Japan Mathematics and Physics Society.
  659. In 1884, the names of rengo were changed such as the above 'Rengo of Yamamura town and other 34 towns' being renamed to 'Rengo of Sujikaibashi 3-chome and other 34 towns.'
  660. In 1884, the party got complicated over an issue of restructuring, and an idea of resolving the party emerged.
  661. In 1884, the peerage of count was conferred on Toshiaya BOJO.
  662. In 1884, the peerage of count was conferred on him.
  663. In 1884, when the Peerage Law was enacted, he was elevated to the title of hakushaku (a count).
  664. In 1884, while he was the Kenrei of Tochigi Prefecture, MISHIMA developed Shiobara-kaido Road and built a villa in Shiobara at the same time.
  665. In 1884: Kunai Taifu (Senior Assistant Minister of the Department of the Imperial Household)
  666. In 1885
  667. In 1885 after the Matsukata deflation, conversion of silver by first Bank of Japan notes (100 yen, 10 yean and 1 yen of silver conversion notes with a picture of Daikoku [the god of wealth]) was started.
  668. In 1885 he was twenty-four.
  669. In 1885 the county office was abolished and the Kaneku local office was established.
  670. In 1885 the government created a new system to manage the nation: a Cabinet as a collegiate body (as stipulated in the 1885 Daijokan tasshi no. 69).
  671. In 1885 when the Dajo-kan System of Departments of State was abolished and the cabinet system was put in place, he took the post of Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal of Japan.
  672. In 1885, Daijokan (Grand Council of State) was abolished and the first cabinet was established, and Hirobumi ITO became the first Prime Minister.
  673. In 1885, Jacquard machines and Dobby machines were introduced, and full-scale machine production started.
  674. In 1885, Japan issued Bank of Japan notes, a convertible currency based on the silver standard system, and temporarily adopted the silver standard system.
  675. In 1885, Kinmochi SAIONJI resided in Austria and Germany as an envoy extraordinary.
  676. In 1885, Kitaro SHIRAYAMADANI from Ishikawa Prefecture
  677. In 1885, Kiyoshi had trouble with his lungs, and took a rest cure in his hometown Fukuoka Prefecture.
  678. In 1885, Mondo was recruited as the head of Onuma District.
  679. In 1885, about a half of the precincts of the Rinkyu-ji temple which included Rakushiken and a guest hall were returned to the Department of the Imperial Household and became a part of the Shugakuin Imperial Villa.
  680. In 1885, construction of First Canal or Dai-ichi Sosui started, and a part of the waterway that connected Otsu and the Kamogawa River confluence point, and another part Sosuibunsen Canal, which branches out at Keage, were completed in 1890.
  681. In 1885, he assumed the post of the first chief abbot of Shinto Jimukyoku (secretariat of Shinto).
  682. In 1885, he attended the World Telegraph Conference in Germany as a delegate from the Japanese government.
  683. In 1885, he became a vice admiral.
  684. In 1885, he became the Minister of Education under the first Hirofumi ITO cabinet and since then, he engaged in Japanese education policies.
  685. In 1885, he died cholera at the age of 61.
  686. In 1885, he established Hankai Railway with Jutaro MATSUMOTO, and also participated in the establishment of the following railway companies: Sanyo Railway, Kyushu Railway, Buzen Railway, Hankaku Railway, Kyoto Railway, Nankai Electric Railway, and Hanshin Electric Railway.
  687. In 1885, he founded 'Ito Sotoumi Gumi' in the form of associative organization along with his nephew Tetsujiro SOTOUMI; they set the office in Kobe and began a direct trade.
  688. In 1885, he founded Kenyusha with Bimyo YAMADA and others and published 'Garakuta Bunko' (Library of Mixtures).
  689. In 1885, he founded Kenyusha with Bimyo YAMADA, Shian ISHIBASHI, Kyuka MARUOKA and others, and published a magazine for circulating "Garakuta Bunko" (Library of Mixtures).
  690. In 1885, he graduated from Tokyo Shogyo Gakko (Tokyo Commercial College) (currentry Hitotsubashi University).
  691. In 1885, he introduced horses to his farm, then raised sheep and pigs to produce hams.
  692. In 1885, he made lectures traveling around Ishikawa Prefecture, Tottori Prefecture and Niigata Prefecture.
  693. In 1885, he retired from sumo in the May tournament and succeeded to the name of toshiyori (a retired wrestler who is a trustee of the Japan Sumo Association), Ikazuchi.
  694. In 1885, he returned to Kofu as the first Japanese 'Fukuin shi.'
  695. In 1885, he visited Hokkaido and proposed a petition about its reclamation.
  696. In 1885, he was adopted by the Komatsunomiya family.
  697. In 1885, he was appointed as principal of Tokyo Higher Normal School and Women's Higher Normal School, remaining in the army on instructions of Arinori MORI.
  698. In 1885, he was assigned to be both a head of the Yokosuka shipyard and an assistant manager of Yokosuka Chinju-fu (a naval base).
  699. In 1885, he was the top in the popularity ranking of artists in 'Tokyo ryuko saikenki' for his works including his best known 'Oshu adachigahara hitotsuya no zu.'
  700. In 1885, he went to Germany and France and studied at Bonn University and Leipzig University.
  701. In 1885, no comments were found about 'Datsu-A Ron.'
  702. In 1885, the Cabinet was established, and accordingly, Dajokan was abolished.
  703. In 1885, the cabinet system was established, and even in this system, the tradition of Tang name was taken over, so that the prime minister was called 'shusho' and the foreign minister was called 'gaisho.'
  704. In 1885, there he moved on to Lieutenant Colonel, and on July 24, he was appointed as Chief of Compilation Division of Staff Headquarters and Chief of the 3rd division in the 2nd office of Staff Headquarters concurrently.
  705. In 1885, when Yasuhisa was 11, he entered the Hoensha (a study group formed by top professional go players during the Meiji period).
  706. In 1885, when the cabinet system was inaugurated, he joined the Cabinet as Minister of Agriculture and Commerce of the First Ito Cabinet.
  707. In 1885, with a recomenadtion from Ito, she began teaching English at Kazoku (the peerage) Girls' School which was diverged from Gakushuin School for Girls.
  708. In 1885: Became a member of the association of preservation of the Tokyo Academy of Physics.
  709. In 1885: concurrently serving as Genroin-gikan (councilor of the Senate).
  710. In 1886
  711. In 1886 Vice-Minister of Finance
  712. In 1886 after a personnel decision by Tokyo University regarding soninkan goyogakari (higher rank officers selected on the recommendation of the Prime Minister), Juntaro assumed the post of full-time lecturer at Tokyo Imperial University Medical School,
  713. In 1886 he became the Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs in the first Ito cabinet.
  714. In 1886 he succeeded to Shinzaemon SORORI the second on the advice of his painting master Beisen KUBOTA and others.
  715. In 1886 he was promoted to Military General and successively held the position of Konoe divisional commander, in the General Staff Office, and he was appointed as Seisei Governor General and went to the front in Luchun in the Shino-Japanese War.
  716. In 1886 he was twenty-five.
  717. In 1886 he worked for Kokyo gozoei kyoku and took part in the construction of the Meiji-kyuden Palace, and then he went on an official trip to the German Empire through the following year.
  718. In 1886 it was decided that no textbooks for elementary schools should be adopted without the authorization of the Minister of Education, and for the time being privately-provided textbooks came to be adopted according to this regulation.
  719. In 1886 the Kaneku local office was renamed the Oshima island government, and the governor of the local office was made into Toshi.
  720. In 1886 when the Rokumeikan was in its heyday, the Engeki Kairyo Kai was organized by people from the political, business, and literature arenas such as Kencho SUEMATSU, Eichi SHIBUSAWA, and Masakazu TOYAMA, bowing to a request by the First Ito Cabinet.
  721. In 1886, Daigaku Yobimon changed its name to Daiichi kotochugakko (First High School).
  722. In 1886, Harry Parks (1828-1885), English envoy to Japan, arranged for English Admiral King to visit Choshu domain.
  723. In 1886, Hereditary Property Law for Kazoku was established for protecting kazoku's property from being seized by a third party, and consequently, it obliged kazoku to "set" their hereditary property.
  724. In 1886, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru was elevated to the position of Grand Cordon in the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum (In Japanese, Daikuni Kikkasho; the highest Cordon and Honor in Japanese citizenry).
  725. In 1886, Kaoru INOUE, Minister of Foreign Affairs (Japan) in The First Ito Cabinet, held a meeting for revision of a treaty with delegation from foreign countries, and the proposal in the meeting included some compromises such as raising tax and employment of foreign judges.
  726. In 1886, Manju-ji Temple became and remains a sub-temple of Tofuku-ji Temple.
  727. In 1886, Munemitsu came back to Japan, and he was employed by the government.
  728. In 1886, Negoro-ji Temple was selected as the main Dojo of the Shingi school.
  729. In 1886, Preparatory School of the University of Tokyo, its extension campus in Osaka (later moved to Kyoto) and Yamaguchi Junior Highs School were renamed the First Higher Middle School, the Third Higher Middle School and Yamaguchi Higher Middle School, respectively.
  730. In 1886, Shinto Jimukyoku was reorganized into Shinto Honkyoku (home office) and he continued to serve as the chief abbot.
  731. In 1886, Shuei officially approved Shuho being 8-dan at the same time he stepped aside to make him to the Honinbo, thus Shuho became the 18th Honinbo Shuho.
  732. In 1886, Soryu called his way of tea ceremony as Tamagawa Enshu school and completed the Tamagawa Enshu school of sencha-ho (green tea method) based on the method handed from their ancestors.
  733. In 1886, after Shinshichi KAWATAKE changed his name into Mokuami, he wrote "Shisenryo Koban no Umenoha," a documentary dramatization of the Edo-jo Castle Gokinzo Yaburi.
  734. In 1886, during the period of Rokumeikan, Kencho initiated movement for improving theatrical performance in order to modernize Kabuki according to ITO's wish.
  735. In 1886, he died of esophageal cancer in Osaka.
  736. In 1886, he graduated from Komaba Nogakko (Komaba Agricultural School, which is the predecessor of the Faculty of Agriculture at Tokyo University).
  737. In 1886, he made lectures traveling around Ishikawa Prefecture, Tottori Prefecture, Hiroshima Prefecture, Yamaguchi Prefecture and Kyoto Prefecture.
  738. In 1886, he promulgated the Academic Degree Order to set up two academic ranks of great doctor and doctor in Japan.
  739. In 1886, he returned to his hometown and took care of his mother, however on December 14th, she died.
  740. In 1886, he was appointed as Fukuoka Kenrei (Governor of Fukuoka Prefecture).
  741. In 1886, he was transferred to Noshomu-taifu (a post of Agricultural Ministry) and became the first vice minister.
  742. In 1886, he wrote "Chuajiakiji" (The History of Asia).
  743. In 1886, his second son was born this year.
  744. In 1886, regulations for Ministry of the Imperial Household were established and the organization of two sections, five offices (shiki), six bureaus, and four departments was set up.
  745. In 1886, she entered the waka school 'Haginoya,' run by Utako NAKAJIMA, through an introduction by Choan TODA, an acquaintance of her father from the days of the Tokugawa shogunate.
  746. In 1886, upon establishment of the University of Tokyo, he taught mining engineering and geology in the Faculty of Engineering.
  747. In 1886: Kunai-jikan (Undersecretary of the Department of the Imperial Household).
  748. In 1887
  749. In 1887 Juntaro started researching puffer fish poison together with assistant professor Yoshito INOKO,
  750. In 1887 he abandoned his job and returned to Tokyo.
  751. In 1887 he graduated from Tokyo University at the age of 27 and joined the Ministry of Home Affairs, and in 1889 he was transferred to Ehime Prefecture as secretary.
  752. In 1887 he had an honor of holding Tenran Kabuki (Kabuki, the royal family attend to watch) in front of the Emperor Meij, acting Benkei in "Kanjincho" and so on.
  753. In 1887 he served as an advisor to the Imperial Court, in 1888 he served as an advisor for state secrets, in 1891 became the vice-chairman of the Privy Council, and in 1892 served as Home Minister in the first Matsukata Cabinet.
  754. In 1887 he was twenty-six.
  755. In 1887 he worked at the Tokyo Stock Exchange and in railway administration, becoming the president of the Ryomo Railway Company, and in 1888 served as director of the Odawara Tramway Company (now the Hakone Tozon Railway Company).
  756. In 1887, 'Historic Monuments Act' was enacted in French Republic (The French Third Republic).
  757. In 1887, European and modern religious conceptions were imported in Japan, and the religious term 'Shinto' began to be settled.
  758. In 1887, Hanzaburo MURAKAMI, who was an ice trader obtained a patent and became publicly known.
  759. In 1887, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru became a member of the Joshi Kyoiku Shorei Kai (Institution for Women Education in Japan; Later, Tokyo Jogakkan Schools for Women).
  760. In 1887, Ludwig Riess, a disciple of Leopold von Ranke, the founder of positivism-based history, was invited to Imperial University.
  761. In 1887, NISHIGORI sneaked into the mental clinic of the Tokyo-fu (Tokyo Prefecture) where Tomotane was hospitalized.
  762. In 1887, Professor Juntaro TAKAHASHI together with Associate Professor Yoshito INOKO started research on pufferfish poison.
  763. In 1887, SUGI was conferred as viscount, and in 1906, became privy councilor.
  764. In 1887, Soho TOKUTOMI, who came to Tokyo from Kumamoto City, and those related to the former Oe Gijuku established the group.
  765. In 1887, at this time, regulations were established, conflict between different fractions occurred, and Priest Eby, whom he trusted, returned to Canada, so Munizo left the central region and built the lecture hall at Shioyama City and started the 'Rural Missionary.'
  766. In 1887, he assumed the position as the head of the Dai-Nihon Shiritsu Eisei-Kai (Japan private hygiene society).
  767. In 1887, he became Commandant of the Naval Academy, and introduced Judo (Japanese art of self-defense) into the educational curriculum.
  768. In 1887, he became the first president of Osaka Mercantile Exchange.
  769. In 1887, he bought out a newpaper company called 'Osaka Nippo' and next year he renamed it as 'Osaka Mainichi Shimbun.'
  770. In 1887, he changed the name Hakuaisha to the Japanese Red Cross Society and he took office as the first president.
  771. In 1887, he changed the name of Hakuaisha to Japanese Red Cross Society.
  772. In 1887, he established Tennma Boseki and became a president and trailblazer in the world of Osaka cotton spinning industry serving a development and growth of Nippon Menka, Nippon Boseki.
  773. In 1887, he founded a private school, Kannosha, and made lectures traveling around Yamaguchi Prefecture, Hiroshima Prefecture, Shimane Prefecture, Kochi Prefecture, Kyoto Prefecture, Ishikawa Prefecture and Fukui Prefecture.
  774. In 1887, he got married for the third time to Matsu, the eldest daughter of Heizaburo UMEMIYA.
  775. In 1887, he graduated from the Keio Gijuku and at the age of 29, on the recommendation of Yukichi FUKUZAWA and Tesshu YAMAOKA, he went to Ceylon and India to study.
  776. In 1887, he met Fenollosa and Tenshin OKAKURA again for the first time in years, when they had completed the inspection in Europe and stopped in America.
  777. In 1887, he received rank of viscount for his service during the Restoration.
  778. In 1887, he was appointed a member of the Chamber of the Elders by the commissioner of the Telegraph Bureau of the former Ministry of Communication.
  779. In 1887, he was conferred as viscount, appointed as Genroin gikan (councilor of Chamber of Senate), and became a privy councilor next year.
  780. In 1887, he was invited by Sotoshu Daigakurin; Sotoshu University (present-day Komazawa University) and assumed the post as a lecturer.
  781. In 1887, it became a prefectural road and the name of Nishioumi-ji Road was established.
  782. In 1887, it was dedicated to the inner palace.
  783. In 1887, the "Joijorei" (Regulations concerning the Conferment of Court Rank: Imperial Ordinance No.10 1887) was enacted, and the court rank system was restored.
  784. In 1887, the Tani family were bestowed the title of viscount and was raised to peerage.
  785. In 1888
  786. In 1888 Mochitsugu TOKUGAWA, the family head of Kishu Tokugawa family, started to compile and completed it in 1901.
  787. In 1888 he died at the age of 80.
  788. In 1888 he entered the Imperial University School of Law the department of Politics; in 1889 he transferred to the department of Japanese literature; in the following year, he dropped out of the school.
  789. In 1888 he incorporated in the reserve duty, after holding the final post of lieutenant general at the Army, due to a conflict with the mainstream of the domain clique, such as Aritomo YAMAGATA.
  790. In 1888 he resigned Tokyo Nichinichi Newspaper company because of the slumping business.
  791. In 1888 he retired.
  792. In 1888 he was twenty-seven.
  793. In 1888 he went to the United States, and after working as an apprentice at Pennsylvania Railway, he returned to Japan.
  794. In 1888 she got married for the first time.
  795. In 1888 the Meiji government ordered Kasei UKITA, a painter of Choshu Domain, to draw the Imperial standards.
  796. In 1888, "Garakuta Bunko" went on the market and Koyo ran a serialized novel 'Furyu Kyo ningyo' (The Elegant Kyoto Doll) that attracted much attention.
  797. In 1888, Kamigyo kumi No. 34 was created in the area of the former Otagi County which had been integrated into the Kamigyo Ward in the same year.
  798. In 1888, Privy Councilor.
  799. In 1888, Sentaro, the first son and head of the family, died; Ichiyo inherited the family and became its head, with her father as guardian.
  800. In 1888, Yaemon KANMURI returned home.
  801. In 1888, after graduating from Japanese classics studies, the University of Tokyo, Faculty of Letters University, he sympathized with Tenshin OKAKURA and made efforts to establish Tokyo Fine Arts School.
  802. In 1888, he assumed the post of professor at Imperial University (later Faculty of Literature, The University of Tokyo), and the following year he became the first president of 'Shigakukai' (The Historical Society of Japan).
  803. In 1888, he became Resident Envoy to the United States; in the same year, he succeeded in concluding the Japan-Mexico Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Navigation, Japan's first equal treaty, with Mexico as Resident Envoy to the United States and Resident Envoy to Mexico.
  804. In 1888, he became a member of Seikyo-sha, which published a Magazine "Nihonjin" (Japanese).
  805. In 1888, he became a privy councilor and was reappointed as Chairman of the Privy Council in 1892.
  806. In 1888, he became a privy councilor, and involved in the deliberation of the Constitution.
  807. In 1888, he became a special member of 'Toyogakai' (oriental painting group) and introduced Western-style paintings in its house organs.
  808. In 1888, he established a publishing company Seikyosha together with Shigetaka SHIGA and Jugo SUGIURA, and started a new magazine named "Nipponjin" (Japanese, later changed to "Nippon oyobi Nipponjin" Japan and Japanese) to advocate nationalism.
  809. In 1888, he made lectures traveling around Kyoto Prefecture, Tottori Prefecture, Hiroshima Prefecture, Osaka Prefecture, Aichi Prefecture and Gifu Prefecture.
  810. In 1888, he returned to his original family register of the Natsume family.
  811. In 1888, he succeeded to Sengoro Masashige, the 10th and in 1906, he started up Otogi kurabu (Fairy club) with Sazanami IWAYA, Takehiko KURUSHIMA, and so on, by which he worked to promote Kyogen among children.
  812. In 1888, he succeeded to the head of the school; since he was very young, Kosetsu KANZE became a guardian for him.
  813. In 1888, he succeeded to the name Sengoro Masashige SHIGEYAMA, the 10th and in 1946, Sensaku SHIGEYAMA, the Second.
  814. In 1888, he took office as the Minister of Foreign Affairs and was appointed the Prime Minister in 1898 (the first Okuma Cabinet).
  815. In 1888, he was appointed to a privy councilor.
  816. In 1888, he was appointed vice chief of the Music Department, and he was promoted to Jushichii (Junior Seventh Rank) in 1892.
  817. In 1888, he was employed by the College of Science, Imperial University of Tokyo, and in 1890 became a research assistant there.
  818. In 1888, she went to the United States with Munemitsu who held the post of Minister to the U.S.
  819. In 1888, the Bureau for Provisional Inspection of National Treasures was established within the Imperial Household Ministry.
  820. In 1888, the Order of the Sacred Treasure and the Orders of the Precious Crown were established.
  821. In 1888, the conventional garrison --the system effective for claiming domestic conflicts-- was reorganized with the creation of six divisions and Guard Divisions to increase the ability to fight abroad.
  822. In 1888, the shrine was re-enshrined at present location.
  823. In 1888, villages which had been a part of Otagi County were integrated into Kamigyo Ward.
  824. In 1888, when he performed Genzo TAKEBE in the drama "Terakoya," he was asked how to play Tonami by his junior who played Genzo's wife Tonami and he asked him, 'Tonami is whose wife and what her husband Genzo's position?
  825. In 1888, when her friend, Alice BACON, came to Japan from the United States to visit her, Alice helped her make a decision to go back to the United States and study once again.
  826. In 1888, when the post of the director of the Hokkaido Agency was succeeded by Takeshiro NAGAYAMA, Michitoshi became a councilor of the Genroin.
  827. In 1888: Sumitsu-komonkan (privy councilor).
  828. In 1889
  829. In 1889 Katata-mura Village, Shiga County was established and in 1901 it was changed into Katata-cho Town.
  830. In 1889 TAKAHASHI proved that because puffer fish poison was inside of the fish body and was easy to dissolve in water it couldn't be proteinic (enzyme-like), and he produced a chart of toxicity strength.
  831. In 1889 four counties in Oki Islands were abolished and the Oki island government was established.
  832. In 1889 fourteen villages were established in the area of today's Tsushima City.
  833. In 1889 he was twenty-eight.
  834. In 1889 the Kabuki Za was opened.
  835. In 1889 the Yoshino Shrine dedicated to the Emperor Go-Daigo was constructed in Yoshino Town.
  836. In 1889 the day was chosen to proclaim the Constitution of the Empire of Japan and since then it has become the day to commemorate the promulgation of the constitution.
  837. In 1889, Asai played a leading role in the foundation of the Meiji Art Society.
  838. In 1889, Former Imperial House Act was established when the Constitution of the Empire of Japan was proclaimed, and the principle of autonomy of the Imperial Household was established.
  839. In 1889, Hokkaido Coal Railway was founded by accepting a concession of then financially ailing state-owned Horonai Railway's lines and laid the lines that later became a part of the Hakodate Main Line, Muroran Main Line, and Ishikatsu Line.
  840. In 1889, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru was promoted to the rank of major general of Imperial Army, that same year he became a president of The Third National Industrial Exhibitions.
  841. In 1889, Noriyoshi's attempt to establish an association of draying contractors failed, and he died in July of the same year.
  842. In 1889, Otoichi ITO in Yamaguchi Prefecture established Kokuryomiyako from a native variety of miyako in Hyogo Prefecture.
  843. In 1889, Otoichi ITO, who lived in Yamaguchi Prefecture, gave birth to this variety by improving the Miyako breed, a local variety grown in Hyogo Prefecture.
  844. In 1889, Soseki had a new classmate Shiki MASAOKA, who was to significantly influence him in literature and personality.
  845. In 1889, Tokyo-shi (Tokyo City) was established in accordance to municipal organization.
  846. In 1889, a request to establish a shrine to enshrine the KUSUNOKI clan including Masatsura by the supporters living in the place where the clan and others had died out of loyalty was approved, and an imperial proclamation for the name of the shrine and sanction to place it as Bekkaku-Kanpeisha (a special government shrine) were given.
  847. In 1889, after retiring from the bureaucracy, he was commissioned by Sukezaburo HIROSE the management of Nippon Life Insurance Corporation.
  848. In 1889, based on the Imperial Constitution and Former Imperial House Act, a system was laid out to put an imperial regent in the emperor's place when the emperor had not reached the age of maturity or could not wield sovereign power.
  849. In 1889, he became a professor at Tokyo Noringakko (Tokyo Agricultural and Forestry School, which is also the predecessor of the Faculty of Agriculture at Tokyo University).
  850. In 1889, he became the governor of Yamanashi Prefecture.
  851. In 1889, he finished a doctorate at University of Lyon, France, and he was awarded Vermeil Medal (Medaille de Vermail) from Lyon City.
  852. In 1889, he formally joined Minyu-sha, and from February 1, 1890 when Kokumin Shinbun was first published, he took charge of the section of political criticism.
  853. In 1889, he handed over the administration of 'Osaka Mainichi Shimbun' to Hikochi MOTOYAMA, and established Kanematsu Shoten (later known as Kanamatsu Esho, currently known as Kanematsu) and worked in the trading between Japan and Australia.
  854. In 1889, he ran for the first Lower House elections from Tottori Prefecture, his constituency, but withdrew from elections soon afterwards.
  855. In 1889, he served as acting Prime Minister (while serving as Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal) for two months after Kiyotaka KURODA resigned as prime minister.
  856. In 1889, he started working as an official of the Cabinet Official Gazette Bureau, and gave up writing.
  857. In 1889, he succeeded Hoshu to Gennyo and retired.
  858. In 1889, he travelled to Western countries, as he was assigned by the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce (Japan) to an exhibition attendant at Hamburg Industrial Exhibition in Germany, as well as to have an agricultural study tour to Germany, France, the United States of America, India and Vietnam.
  859. In 1889, he was acquainted with Shiki MASAOKA.
  860. In 1889, he was assigned to the Uchi no takumi ryo (Bureau of Skilled Artisans) of the Imperial Household Department.
  861. In 1889, he was awarded the title of Doctor (of Literature) by Ministry of Education for the first time in Japan.
  862. In 1889, he was discharged from prison under the amnesty at the promulgation of the Constitution of the Empire of Japan.
  863. In 1889, he was involved in the establishment of Nihon Law School (present-day Nihon University) together with Akiyoshi YAMADA, Michisaburo MIYAZAKI, and Kentaro KANEKO.
  864. In 1889, he was pardoned by an amnesty that accompanied the proclamation of the Meiji Constitution
  865. In 1889, he went to Kofuku-ji Temple in Nara where he entered the Buddhist priesthood under Teicho CHIHAYA.
  866. In 1889, in cooperation with Yujiro MOTORA (former professor at the University of Tokyo) and Naibu KANDA (former professor at the Tokyo College of Commerce [of the old system school]), he established Seisoku Yobiko (a prep school) in Shiba.
  867. In 1889, she became a part-time employee due to the reorganization of the office.
  868. In 1889, the Constitution of the Empire of Japan was enacted as the constitution of the modern state.
  869. In 1889, the Constitution of the Empire of Japan was finally enacted.
  870. In 1889, the Constitution of the Empire of Japan was promulgated.
  871. In 1889, the Imperial House Law (Former Imperial House Law) was established as a household law in the imperial court and the order of succession to the Imperial Throne was specified clearly.
  872. In 1889, the exemption clause was completely abolished.
  873. In 1889, the government sold it to local governments.
  874. In 1889, the publisher of 'Garakuta Bunko' Yoshioka Shoten started a new series of newly-written novels.
  875. In 1889, they proved that pufferfish poison is not protein (enzyme)-like by the fact that it exists in the fish's body and is easy to dissolve in water, and made a chart showing the degrees of virulence.
  876. In 1889, when Imperial Edict No.11, Kizokuin (the House of Peers) Law was established, Article 1-1 of the edict entitled Dukes to be members of the House of Peers.
  877. In 1889, when Imperial Edict No.11, Kizokuin (the House of Peers) Law was established, Article 1-2 of the edict entitled a marquis to be a member of the House of Peers.
  878. In 1889, when the nephew of Toshizo HIJIKATA, Toshinobu SATO was excused from lese majesty, Sutesuke also went to meet him.
  879. In 1889, with Mokurai SHIMAJI and Enryo INOUE, he established an organization of Buddhist political activity, 'Sonno hobutsu daido-dan' (great union of dedicators of reverence for the emperor and devotion to Buddhism) advocating worship of the emperor.
  880. In 1889: Became a committee member to investigate the Department of Elementary School Manual Production Training of Normal School in the Educational Society of Japan.
  881. In 1890 Taguchi became deputy chairman of the Tokyo assembly, and in 1894 formed a council for reform of imperial financial affairs (the Teikoku Zaisei Kakushin Kai) with Saburo OZAKI, and was also elected a member of the House of Representatives the same year.
  882. In 1890 he was elected a member of the House of Representatives, becoming its chairman in 1893.
  883. In 1890 he was elected for the first time in the first general election of the members of the House of Representatives during the first Yamagata administration.
  884. In 1890 he was twenty-nine.
  885. In 1890 the Rokumei-kan Pavilion was sold to the Imperial Household Ministry.
  886. In 1890, Deputy Chairman of the House of Peers.
  887. In 1890, Fenollosa, after returning to United States from Japan, was installed as the first head of the Japanese Art Division of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and in 1910 Okakura succeeded him as head of the Oriental Division.
  888. In 1890, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru presented to at The House of Peers of Japan (In Japanese, Kizokuin).
  889. In 1890, Seppo died peacefully from illness as if he was relieved by watching that in the previous year Saigo's name as the leader of the rebels had been cleared and his honor as a meritorious retainer of the Restoration had been recovered.
  890. In 1890, Soseki entered the English Literature Department of Teikoku University (later Tokyo University,) which had just been founded.
  891. In 1890, Yonosuke who had resigned the post of Guncho ran in the first general election of the members of the House of Representatives from the then third constituency (Katori County, etc.) of Chiba Prefecture, and elected as a member of the House of Representatives for the first time.
  892. In 1890, a total of about 2.67 km of Nagara-gawa River, located in Furutsu, Nagara-mura, Inaba-gun, Mugi-gun and Gunjo-gun, was incorporated into the goryoba of Imperial Household Ministry.
  893. In 1890, at the inauguration of the Imperial Diet, he was appointed a member of the House of Peers and became "kinkeinoma-shiko" (a title in the Imperial court).
  894. In 1890, dropped out of Tokyo Imperial University.
  895. In 1890, following an unsuccessful bid by SASAKI, Tomozane YOSHII and Takatomi SENGE to revive the Jingiin (Institute of Divinities), SASAKI worked with Shigeki NISHIMURA to promote piety, reverence for the emperor, and patriotism.
  896. In 1890, group immigration to the State of California started.
  897. In 1890, he became a member of Kizokuin (the House of Peers), but he was so severe that everybody was afraid of him, and two others; Tateki TANI and Sukenori SOGA who started a parliamentary group called Konwa-kai all together, calling them 'Three generals of Kizokuin'.
  898. In 1890, he became a professor at Imperial University School of Law (present Faculty of Law at The University of Tokyo).
  899. In 1890, he became an associate professor at the College of Agriculture, Tokyo University.
  900. In 1890, he became the Minister of Railways and a member of the House of Peers.
  901. In 1890, he became the chief priest of Kojoin of the Mii-dera Temple.
  902. In 1890, he became the first president of Kokugakuin University by an appeal of Akiyoshi YAMADA, the director of Koten Kokyusho (a research institute for Shinto sect) (through 1893).
  903. In 1890, he concurrently served as a professor at Gakushuin University (the old system).
  904. In 1890, he died in his home in Koishikawa at the age of 64.
  905. In 1890, he died in the present Moriguchi City, Osaka Prefecture.
  906. In 1890, he died.
  907. In 1890, he dropped out of the law school, and became a teacher at Obuse branch school of Kamitakai Higher Elementary School.
  908. In 1890, he entered the English Literature Department of Tokyo Imperial University (later Tokyo University) Bunka daigaku (Faculty of Letters University).
  909. In 1890, he established the incorporated educational institution Kokugakuin University (now Kokugakuin University) in Koten Kokyusho.
  910. In 1890, he exhibited historical paintings 'Kiryu Kannon' (Kannon Bodhisattva Riding the Dragon) and 'Portrait of Takachika MORI' in the only government-sponsored exhibition that accepted Western-style paintings, the Third Exhibition - History of Japanese Exhibitions.
  911. In 1890, he made lectures traveling around Aichi Prefecture, Miyagi Prefecture, Fukushima prefecture and Ehime Prefecture.
  912. In 1890, he moved to Hokkaido at the same time after the graduation, and studied sericulture at Sapporo Agricultural School, then returned to his home town.
  913. In 1890, he moved to Nirasaki City, Kitakoma District and established a lecture hall.
  914. In 1890, he opposed the 'Education Ordinance' crafted by lawmakers including Tsuyoshi INOUE, and as soon as he obtained Emperor Meiji's permission to revise the Education Ordinance he worked on drafting 'The Second Education Ordinance.'
  915. In 1890, he ran for the first general election of the members of the House of Representatives and won the election as a fill-in member.
  916. In 1890, he ran for the first general election of the members of the House of Representatives, and was elected for the first time.
  917. In 1890, he returned to Japan and became Kizokuin (the House of Peers in Japan).
  918. In 1890, he studied the yuishiki (consciousness-only theory) under Join SAEKI of Horyu-ji Temple.
  919. In 1890, he was appointed Director General.
  920. In 1890, he was assigned to a judge of Daishin-in.
  921. In 1890, he was elected a member of the House of Peers.
  922. In 1890, he was elected to the House of Representatives from the Shiga third district.
  923. In 1890, he was offered a post as an agricultural advisory from Hanadate Village, Senboku District, Akita Prefecture (currently Daisen City).
  924. In 1890, he was promoted to viscount.
  925. In 1890, he went abroad to study in Germany.
  926. In 1890, he wrote "Kokushigan" (a vision on the national history), together with Hisashi HOSHINO and Kunitake KUME.
  927. In 1890, her husband suddenly died of illness.
  928. In 1890, in Maebashi in Gunma Prefecture, Joe collapsed while working to found Doshisha, and passed away while recuperating at the Mukade-ya, a Japanese-style inn in Oiso, Kanagawa Prefecture; he entrusted his ten-item will to Soho TOKUTOMI and Hiromichi KOZAKI.
  929. In 1890, in Niigata City, Atsutomi AKAZAWA and his wife, Nakako opened a nursery institution in affiliate with Niigata Seishu School.
  930. In 1890, in addition to the above-mentioned Nagayama-mura Village, Asahikawa-mura Village and Kamui-mura Village opened, and in 1892, the Nagayama-jinja Shrine was built.
  931. In 1890, next year, the shrine building was completed, and Shijonawate-jinja Shrine of which shusaijin (main enshrined deities) was Masatsura was founded.
  932. In 1890, the Ottoman battleship Ertugrul Firkateyni foundered off the Kii Peninsula and was shipwrecked whilst returning to home from a visit to Japan.
  933. In 1890, the decoration only for military personnel, Kinshi kunsho (the Order of the Golden Kite) was established.
  934. In 1890, which was the "okage year," a newspaper published an article saying 'no signs of okage mairi.'
  935. In 1890, while serving as the minister, he ran in the first election for a seat in the House of Representatives from the first electoral district in Wakayama Prefecture, was elected, and served the first term.
  936. In 1891 after Japan signed the treaty of the meter, 1.2 kilometers was defined as 11 cho based on meters.
  937. In 1891 after Japan signed the treaty of the meter, 120 hectares was defined as 121 cho.
  938. In 1891 at five years of age his father died and he was adopted by the family soke (family head), the House of Viscount KINOSHITA which, as the family heir, required him to move to Tokyo.
  939. In 1891 he became a councilor of the House of Peers that was selected by Imperial command, changing his career into politics.
  940. In 1891 he graduated from Yaroslavl Seminary and then entered Moscow Theological Academy.
  941. In 1891 he was thirty.
  942. In 1891, Aizo advocated Higashihotaka Temperance Society following the spirit of Christianity, and talked about Christianity to the young people in the village who would yearn for large cities and intend to search for new knowledge, and recommended them not to drink alcohol.
  943. In 1891, Eby missionary came back to Japan again and rebuilt Chuo kaido in Hongo.
  944. In 1891, Japan and Mexico exchanged their ministers after the conclusion of the treaty.
  945. In 1891, Munee DATE was promoted to marquis.
  946. In 1891, Shinpei WATANABE (渡邊信平) in Tottori Prefecture established Goriki from a native variety.
  947. In 1891, a year after his death, the sprit of Shungaku was enshrined together in the Sakaeno-yashiro Shrine (Echizen Tosho-gu Shrine).
  948. In 1891, after the First Yamagata cabinet resigned, he was appointed as prime minister (the First Matsukata cabinet).
  949. In 1891, as the first Matsukata Cabinet was formed, he became the secretary to the prime minister, his father.
  950. In 1891, he became Minister of the Interior and the grand chamberlain concurrently, serving beside Emperor Meiji until the Emperor passed away.
  951. In 1891, he became the vice-president of Tohokyokai (a study group of studies on foreign countries).
  952. In 1891, he died.
  953. In 1891, he earned PhD in law (Docteur en Droit).
  954. In 1891, he founded Koiwai Farm (Koiwai Farm,Ltd.) by cultivating fields of volcanic ash soil with Gishin ONO and Yanosuke IWASAKI.
  955. In 1891, he gained a doctorate of engineering.
  956. In 1891, he inherited the style from the 13th Tendo school Ikkaku SHIMOGAWARA.
  957. In 1891, he made lectures traveling around Tottori Prefecture, Tochigi Prefecture, Fukushima prefecture, Okayama Prefecture, Kyoto Prefecture, Shiga Prefecture and Kagawa Prefecture.
  958. In 1891, he regained his honor and was additionally conferred Shonii.
  959. In 1891, he resigned to become a genro (an oligarch).
  960. In 1891, he retired from Keishi-cho and then worked as a security guard at Tokyo Higher Normal School, etc.
  961. In 1891, he served as Minister of Home Affairs, Minister of Justice, and Minister of Agriculture and Commerce in the First Masayoshi MATSUKATA Cabinet, and Minister of Education in the Second Hirobumi ITO Cabinet.
  962. In 1891, he started to produce silkworm eggs as a family business, and attracted early attention from sericulturists across the country as the author of a "theory of producing silkworm eggs."
  963. In 1891, he was assigned a new post at Kosaka Mine.
  964. In 1891, he was awarded the court rank of Shoshii (Senior Fourth Rank) after his death.
  965. In 1891, he was born in Ginza, Tokyo as a child of Ginko KISHIDA, a pioneer in the Meiji period.
  966. In 1891, he was posthumously awarded Jushii (Junior Fourth Rank).
  967. In 1891, he, as the Minister of Railways, submitted to the government a written statement titled 'Opinion about Governmental Project on Railways'.
  968. In 1891, over the Ashio Copper Mine Mineral Pollution Incident, he received questions from Shozo TANAKA in the Imperial Diet but responded that he did not understand the purport of the questions (Mutsu's second son, Junkichi, had been adopted by Ichibei FURUKAWA, the manager of Ashio Copper Mine).
  969. In 1891, she got married to Otojiro KAWAKAMI
  970. In 1891, the Crown Prince of the Russian Empire, Nicholas (later Tsar Nicholas II) was attacked by a guarding patrol officer, Sanzo TSUDA in Otsu City, Shiga Prefecture during his visit to Japan.
  971. In 1891, the Union Pacific Railroad started hiring Japanese as laborers for the construction of railroads.
  972. In 1891, those who assaulted Inoue were ordered to leave the Diet Chamber during the Imperial Diet session under the public security regulations.
  973. In 1891: Kunaisho goyogakari (a general affairs official of the Imperial Household).
  974. In 1892
  975. In 1892 Kojima and others were suspected of entertaining themselves with "flower cards" gambling (Hokan-Roka Incident).
  976. In 1892 he entered the first grade at Gakushuin, a school for peers.
  977. In 1892 he was thirty-one.
  978. In 1892, 'kumi' was reorganized into 'school district.'
  979. In 1892, Eby missionary invited Munizo once the Hongo chuo kaido was completed, but he decided to stay in Nirasaki according to the will of the church.
  980. In 1892, Imperial Prince Fushimi Sadanaru was received appointment as the President of Kyoto Art Association; becoming an honorary member of the Japanese Physical Education Association.
  981. In 1892, Tomotane SOMA died of disease.
  982. In 1892, Vice President of the Privy Council.
  983. In 1892, although he managed to draw sign boards of the Shintomi-za theater with Toshihide as his assistant, his health was deteriorated and was admitted to Sugamo hospital.
  984. In 1892, he became a main character of the election interference as Governor of Fukuoka Prefecture in the second general election of the members of the House of Representatives, and this was pointed out later as a problem, so he was dismissed from office together with Vice-Minister of the Interior Senichi SHIRANE.
  985. In 1892, he became a member of the Central Negotiation Society, a political party in favor of the government, and he joined the board of Hokkaido Colliery and Railway Company.
  986. In 1892, he became the 25th resident priest of Kitayama Gankyo-ji Temple in Morioka City.
  987. In 1892, he compiled "Teikoku Shogyoshi Kogiroku" (Lectures on Japanese commercial history) and used it as a textbook, which received recognition and led him to become a professor in 1895.
  988. In 1892, he established a branch family to evade conscription, and moved his registered address to Hokkaido as he was a scholarship student.
  989. In 1892, he got married to Mizue, the first daughter of Jakuei INOUE in Iiyama.
  990. In 1892, he made lectures traveling around Kagawa Prefecture, Aichi Prefecture and Gifu Prefecture.
  991. In 1892, he published a co-authored photo collection titled 'The Great Earthquake of Japan' (a photo collection on the damage from Nobi Earthquake) with William K. BURTON.
  992. In 1892, he was appointed a member of the Sumitsu-in (Privy Council of Japan) as a Genro (elder statesman).
  993. In 1892, he was appointed a vice admiral of the Navy and a director of the Yokosuka Chinju-fu (naval base) after serving as a director of the Military Affairs Bureau at the Naval Ministry and principal of the Naval War College.
  994. In 1892, he was appointed to the Minister of Agriculture, Commerce and Industry in the first Matsukata cabinet.
  995. In 1892, he was appointed to the chief abbot of Engaku-ji School at the age of 34.
  996. In 1892, he was assigned to Minister of the Navy by the Second Ito Cabinet.
  997. In 1892, his second son Takesada was appointed to viscount and founded the Matsudo Tokugawa family.
  998. In 1892, it was included in Shimogyo school district No. 32.
  999. In 1892, it was reprinted in "Shikai".
  1000. In 1892, the Railway Construction Act, in which great amendment was added to the bill of acquisition, was enacted.


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