; 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 966, he became a Tanba no kuni no suke (officer in charge of regional administration in Tanba).
  2. In 966, he was admitted to Daigakuryo (training institution for bureaucrats under the personnel and educational ministry) at the age of 15.
  3. In 967, Emperor Murakami died, and Imperial Prince Norihira inherited the throne as Emperor Reizei.
  4. In 967, Emperor Murakami passed away, and thereafter she lived together with her only daughter, Imperial Princess Kishi, in a palace outside the Imperial enclosure.
  5. In 967, as Emperor Reizei ascended the throne after the death of Emperor Murakami, FUJIWARA no Kanemichi succeeded his younger brother, Kaneie, as the Chief Imperial Secretary.
  6. In 967, as Emperor Reizei took over the throne, Kaneie became Kurodo no to (chief of secretaries to the emperor) instead of FUJIWARA no Kanemichi, who was an older brother of Kaneie born from the same mother, and additionally served as Sa-konoe no chujo (lieutenant general of the Left Office of the Imperial Guards).
  7. In 967, he became Kurodo no to (Chief Imperial Secretary).
  8. In 967, he became a low-level functionary in the Crown Prince's Quarters and continued to serve Imperial Crown Prince Norihiro (later Emperor Reizei) even after his abdication.
  9. In 967, he reached the age of maturity and was appointed Ji-ju (Chamberlain).
  10. In 967, he served as Ise kogenshi (guard of the three checking stations of Osaka, Suzuka, and Fuwa surrounding the capital) upon the Emperor Murakami's death.
  11. In 967, he succeeded to the throne at age 18, following the death of Emperor Murakami.
  12. In 967, he was appointed Sa-Chujo (lieutenant general of the Left Office of the Imperial Guards) and also Bizen no kami (the Governor of Bizen Province).
  13. In 967, in the Sung Period in China, Ekin organized the text and divided it into two volumes, of which both have been read widely.
  14. In 967, she became a Koi (court lady) when Emperor Reizei ascended the throne, and later the same year, she was made a nyogo and granted Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  15. In 968, Kaishi gave birth to Reizei's first prince, Morosada.
  16. In 968, he passed Kanemichi and was appointed to the Jusanmi rank (Junior Third Rank).
  17. In 968, he rose to the position of sadaijin (Minister of the Left) with the accession of Imperial Prince Norihira (later Emperor Reizei).
  18. In 968, she gave birth to her first child, Prince Morosada (Emperor Kazan), who became an imperial prince after the abdication of his father, Emperor Reizei in 969.
  19. In 969 he was allowed Taiken (wearing a sword.)
  20. In 969, Reizei abdicated the throne to Crown Prince Morihira (Emperor Enyu) and Morosada became the next Crown Prince.
  21. In 969, both MINAMOTO no Mitsunaka and FUJIWARA no Yoshitoki informed the treachery of Tachibana no Shigenobu and MINAMOTO no Tsuranu.
  22. In 969, he became Chu-nagon (Middle Counselor) without first becoming Sangi (Director of palace affairs).
  23. In 969, he held "Shoshikai" (Arihira's party of "kanshi" [Chinese poetry]) in his own Awata-sanso Villa, and the Chinese poems composed at that time are seen in "Awata Safu Shoshikai shi" (Poems Composed at Shoshikai of Awata no Safu), which are included in "Gunsho ruiju" (A Classified Collection of the Japanese Classics).
  24. In 969, he was appointed as an imperial councilor and was awarded the rank of Jusani (Junior Third Rank).
  25. In 969, the discouraged Takaakira was suddenly charged for insurrection, was deprived of all official power, and expelled to Dazaifu (Anna Incident).
  26. In 970 he was initiated by Gyoyo on the three divisions of the great pantheon.
  27. In 970 she entered Murasakino saiin.
  28. In 970, he died at the age of 61.
  29. In 970, he enacted 'Nijurokkajo Kisho' (26 Points sworn oath) which stipulated disciplinary regulations in the temple and strived to suppress armed priests' violence.
  30. In 970, he was promoted to Dainagon (chief councilor of state) and appointed to Sakone no daisho (Major Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards) concurrently.
  31. In 970, when Saneyori, who was Regent and Dajo-Daijin, passed away, Morosuke's eldest son, FUJIWARA no Koretaka, became Regent, but he died suddenly two years later.
  32. In 970,the next year of his father Morotada's death, he was appointed to Sangi (councilor), and since then he was promoted smoothly, taking charge of political affaires.
  33. In 971, Takaakira was forgiven and allowed to return to Kyoto, although he was unable to return to the political arena and lived in seclusion in his residence at Kadono.
  34. In 971, he was appointed to Hyobukyo (Minister of Hyobusho, the Ministry of the Military).
  35. In 971, he was appointed to the udaijin (minister of the right).
  36. In 971, he was posted to the Sadaijin (Minister of the Left).
  37. In 971, his elder brother, Koretada, was appointed as the Imperial Regent and Prime Minister.
  38. In 972, after Koremasa died after about a year in his position, there was a fierce battle between his brothers, Kanemichi and Kaneie, to take over the position of regent.
  39. In 972, he entered nirvana at the age of 89.
  40. In 972, her father, Kanemichi, took the post of Chancellor.
  41. In 972, her father, Koretada, died.
  42. In 972, when his elder brother, Koretada fell seriously ill, Kanemichi visited the Imperial Palace in order to take advantage of the opportunity.
  43. In 974 was Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) and Kotaigogu gon no daibu (Provisional Master of the Empress Dowager's Household).
  44. In 974, Kanemichi succeed FUJIWARA no Yoritada as the head of the Fuji clan, was awarded the rank of Shonii (Senior Second Rank) and was appointed as Dajo Daijin (Prime Minister).
  45. In 974, he became Isshin-ajari (a special class of teaching priest) for the first time among the monks of Tendai Sect and in 981, he was conferred the title of Gon no Sojo (a title of high-ranking priest).
  46. In 974, she was awarded Junii (Junior Second Rank), and in 975, she died at the age of thirty-one.
  47. In 974, when Kanemichi became Daijodaijin, the Toshi choja was assigned to Kanemichi.
  48. In 974, when her father was appointed Governor of Suo Province, she accompanied him and spent four years in the 'countryside' (the description of a sea trip in "The Pillow Book" is so realistic that it can't be a figment of her imagination, so she seems to have traveled to the west by sea).
  49. In 975 she left her position of Saiin since her mother Kaishi died.
  50. In 975, he was awarded the rank of Juichii (Junior First Rank).
  51. In 975, he was given the title of Chunagon (vice-councilor of state), and in the next year, he received the investiture of Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank).
  52. In 976 he became a Dazai no sochi (Governor-General of the Dazai-fu offices, local government in the Kyushu region).
  53. In 976, FUJIWARA no Choshi, a daughter of Kaneie and the mistress of the Emperor Reizei, gave birth here to Imperial Prince Okisada (later Emperor Sanjo).
  54. In 976, due to a fire that broke out in the Imperial Palace, Emperor Enyu moved to Kanemichi's residence, Horikawa-tei, as it was called by people at the time "Imadairi (real imperial palace)."
  55. In 977, Kanemichi became seriously ill.
  56. In 977, Kokugen-ji Temple was erected in this area where is associated with Emperor Jimmu, however the location of Mausoleum of Emperor Jimmu came to be unknown in the medieval period.
  57. In 977, he returned as an Imperial Prince with the Imperial edict after 57 years with Imperial Prince Akihira who referred to himself as MINAMOTO no Akihira.
  58. In 977, he rose to Shonii (Senior Second Rank) and Dainagon (chief councilor of state), and rose to the top of Daingon, overtaking his elder half brother FUJIWARA no Kaneie who was treated coldly by Kanemichi.
  59. In 977, he smoothly moved up to the position of Gon Chunagon (a provisional vice-councilor of state).
  60. In 977, he was awarded the rank of Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank), and the following year he became Kami (Governor) of Iwami Province, then Kokushu (Lord) of Echigo Province in 984.
  61. In 977, her father, Kanemichi, died.
  62. In 977, just before Kanemichi died of an illness, he even downgraded Kaneie's rank.
  63. In 978, Emperor Taizong announced the bestowal of inscriptions such as 'Taiping Xingguo' and 'Qian Ming' to temples throughout the country that did not already have inscriptions.
  64. In 978, she entered Emperor Enyu's court and was proclaimed his nyogo.
  65. In 978, she was appointed Shihon (the fourth rank for an Imperial Princess).
  66. In 979, Masahira took Taisaku and passed it.
  67. In 979, by the order of the heir to the throne then (later Emperor Kazan), Seimei, at the age of 59, conducted a ritual to suppress the tengu (long-nosed goblins) of Mt. Nachi-san.
  68. In 979, she died at the age of thirty-three.
  69. In 980 it was appointed as the place for imperial prayer, which had many temple buildings, but the temple's fortune declined because of an internal conflict within Tendai Sect and later several fires caused by war.
  70. In 980, Rajo-mon Gate (Rasho-mon Gate), located to the southern end of Suzaku-oji Avenue, was blown down, and was never re-built.
  71. In 980, along with Zoga, Shoku attended the rakkei hoyo (a memorial service to celebrate the construction of a temple) of Konpon-chudo Hall of Mt. Hiei.
  72. In 981, Fumitoki received the investiture of Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank).
  73. In 981, he entered into the priesthood, following the advice of the monk Yokei and studied Buddhism under monk Chiben
  74. In 981, he was appointed to the Jusanmi rank (Junior Third Rank).
  75. In 981, she married TACHIBANA no Norimitsu (965 - 1028), the Governor of Mutsu Province, and a year later she bore him a child, TACHIBANA no Norinaga (982 - 1034); however, she couldn't get along with her rough husband, and before long she divorced him.
  76. In 982, Junshi was chugu (empress), but she did not give birth to any imperial prince and was ridiculed by the general public as 'empty womb empress' (Eiga Monogatari).
  77. In 982, he died at the age of 69.
  78. In 982, she officially became Chugu at the order of the Emperor.
  79. In 983, Emperor Enyu handed his throne to Emperor Kazan (Emperor Reizei's prince), and Prince Kanehito, whom Senshi/Akiko bore, was assigned as the Togu (Crown Prince).
  80. In 983, he prepared a draft of the imperial rescript at the time the name of the era was changed to 'Eikan.'
  81. In 983, he was appointed Sangi (Director of Palace Affairs).
  82. In 983, the Emperor Enyu abdicated the throne in favor of Emperor Kazan (Imperial Prince of the Emperor Reizei).
  83. In 984, Emperor Enyu abdicated the throne, which prompted Imperial Princess Kishi to resign her position as high priestess of Ise.
  84. In 984, Emperor Enyu passed his power to Imperial Prince Morosada (Emperor Kazan), who ascended to the throne.
  85. In 984, he was granted Shojo (the first investiture) as Ugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  86. In 984, she was designated as Saigu (Imperial Princess appointed to serve the deities of the Ise-jingu Shrine) of Emperor Kazan by bokujo (decided by fortunetelling).
  87. In 984, when Kaneie's grandson Imperial Prince Yasuhito became the Crown Prince, Masamitsu was allowed into the Crown Prince's palace.
  88. In 984, when the Crown Prince ascended the throne as the Emperor Kazan, he was selected for the kurodo no to (chief official of the emperor's secretaries).
  89. In 985 he inflicted bodily injury on FUJIWARA no Suetaka at the grand banquet held at the Tsuchimikado-dono Palace of MINAMOTO no Masanobu.
  90. In 985 the Princess Enshi (Tsuyako, Imperial Prince Tamehira's daughter) made Emperor Kazan's Imperial consort's bridal entry into the court when she was fourteen years old, and she became Nyogo (a high ranking lady in the court), however the Emperor entered into the priesthood just after six months.
  91. In 985, he entered the Buddhist priesthood and continued to reside at Enyu-ji Temple.
  92. In 985, she was given the title of Empress Dowager when Emperor Kazan ascended the throne.
  93. In 985, while Chonen was in Song China, he commissioned the piece at Kaiyuansi Temple in Taizhou and it is known from the inscriptions and writings on the objects inside that the names of its makers are Yanjiao ZHANG and Yanxi ZHANG.
  94. In 986 he became a Monjosho (student of literature and history) and later took office as Director of the Jingikan (Council of Shinto rituals), and further promoted to the Saishu (Officer) of Ise.
  95. In 986, Emperor Kazan was tricked into abdicating and entering the priesthood by FUJIWARA no Kaneie and his son FUJIWARA no Michikane, and Imperial Prince Kanehito (Emperor Ichijo), Kaneie's grandchild from a daughter who married into another family, acceded to the Imperial throne.
  96. In 986, Kaneie schemed to have his second son, Michikane, lead Emperor Kazan, who was grief-stricken over his beloved lady's death, out of dairi (the Imperial Palace precincts) into a temple and induce the Emperor to take the tonsure.
  97. In 986, Nyogo (a consort of an emperor) FUJIWARA no Shishi (daughter of FUJIWARA no Tamemitsu), who had all of Kazan's attention at that time, died of disease.
  98. In 986, he resigned nakatsukasakyo, and retired to Saga.
  99. In 986, he was appointed Gon-chu-nagon (Deputy Middle Counselor).
  100. In 986, he was appointed to a Tenmon hakase taking over the post from Seimei, and then he was appointed to an Onmyo no kami while Seimei was still alive, in 1004.
  101. In 987, after her grandchild Emperor Ichijo ascended to the throne, she was posthumously raised to Shoichii (Senior First Rank).
  102. In 987, he was chosen as Ushoben (Minor Controller of the Right), and then Uchuben (Middle Controller of the Right), both the staff of Benkan (Oversight Department: division of the daijokan responsible for controlling central and provincial government offices), thereby working with his colleague FUJIWARA no Arikuni as Kaneie's eyes and ears.
  103. In 987, he was promoted to Dainagon (chief councilor of state), and though he had a bright future ahead of him, he died in a smallpox epidemic at almost the same time as Michitaka and Naritoki.
  104. In 987, the shingo 'Kitano-tenmangu daijin,' was given (literally, "shrine name"), which is the title given to a Shinto shrine.
  105. In 989, Michitaka was appointed to the office of naidaijin.
  106. In 989, he became Gon-Risshi (the 13th ranking Buddhist priest in the Tendai sect), and in the next year, he was promoted to Shosozu (the 8th ranking Buddhist priest in the Tendai sect).
  107. In 989, he became Udaiben (Major Controller of the Right) with the rank of Shoshiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and also took the additional position of Kageyu no Kami (Chief Investigator of the record of outgoing officials).
  108. In 989, he resigned and confined himself at Iimuro.
  109. In 989, he was appointed Togu-daifu (Lord Steward to the Imperial Prince).
  110. In 989, he was appointed during the Emperor Ichijo's reign and assumed a high court official position.
  111. In 990, he became Hisangi and then worked for Hyoe-fu (Headquarters of the Middle Palace Guards) and so on.
  112. In 990, she was made Empress.
  113. In 990, when Emperor Ichijo reached the age of maturity, Kaneie played the role of kakan-yaku (the role to place a crown on the head of the emperor at the coming-of-age ceremony).
  114. In 990, when Kaneie fell ill and died, Michitaka, the eldest brother of Michikane, was appointed successor to the office of kanpaku.
  115. In 991, Tamemitsu was appointed to Daijo-daijin (Grand minister of state) on Michitaka's recommendation, but Tamemitsu died the next year.
  116. In 991, he handed over the office of naidaijin to Michikane, setting a precedent for having the two posts of sekkan (considering sessho and kanpaku to be the same post) and minister fall to different persons.
  117. In 991, he was appointed Chu-nagon at the Shosanmi rank.
  118. In 991, his younger brother, Shigenobu, was appointed to Udaijin and brothers, Masanobu and Shigenobu, worked as ministers of the right and left, until the year in which Masanobu died.
  119. In 991, she made a judai (an Imperial Consort's bridal entry into the court) to the Crown Prince, Imperial Prince Okisada (later Emperor Sanjo).
  120. In 992, he became monjosho (a student of literary studies in the Imperial University) and then Danshoshochu (judge of inspection and police ministry).
  121. In 992, he was assigned as the local governor of Bizen Province but as he stayed in the capital, it is believed that he was a yonin (absentee lord).
  122. In 993, Masanobu died being mourned by many persons and without having a firm belief that his wife's judgment was really correct ("Gonki" (the diary of FUJIWARA no Yukinari)), he was buried in Ninna-ji Temple that had a close connection to Emperor Uda (who was his grandfather) and Imperial Prince Atsuzane.
  123. In 993, about 1000 monks of the Enchin faction left the mountain and held up in Onjo-ji Temple (Mii-dera Temple).
  124. In 993, about a century after Enchin died, there was a commotion that priests of Ennin school had demolished the temple's quarters of Enchin school located in the area of Mt. Hiei, which cemented the conflict between the two, and Enchin school descended Mt. Hiei and moved to Mii-dera Temple.
  125. In 993, as a result of the Myogyo hakase NAKAHARA no Munetoki applying to put eight to ten students in the position of Myogyo Monjasho (students in a secondary position to Tokugyosho), these students were able to receive qualification as government officials like Tokugyosho if they passed the examination.
  126. In 993, resigned Kogogu gon no daibu (Minister of Empress household agency)
  127. In 994, Korenaka additionally assumed Sadaiben (Major Controller of the Left), the top position of Benkan.
  128. In 994, he worked on capturing robbers as a 'Buyujin' (brave man) with his uncle MINAMOTO no Mitsumasa, his brother Yorinobu, and TAIRA no Koremasa ("Honcho seiki" (Chronicle of Imperial Reigns)).
  129. In 995, 'an imperial decree to make a calendar' with Rekido (scholars of calendar) was given to Ninso (a priest) of the Kofuku-ji Temple (although the Kofuku-ji Temple was a temple of the Hosso sect, it was regarded to have a strong relationship with the Shingon sect).
  130. In 995, Michinaga won the struggle for power with his nephew FUJIWARA no Korechika (Michitaka's heir) and took the post of Private Inspector.
  131. In 995, an epidemic spread through the court and Asamitsu fell victim to it.
  132. In 995, he was appointed Dai-nagon (Major Counselor).
  133. In 995, her father Naritoki died.
  134. In 995, when Kanpaku (chief adviser to the Emperor) FUJIWARA no Michitaka handed his Johyo three times on February 5, 16th and April 3, due to illness, his resignation was accepted.
  135. In 995, when Michikane's elder brother, kanpaku Michitaka, fell seriously ill, Michitaka wanted his legitimate son naidaijin FUJIWARA no Korechika to succeed him as kanpaku, but this was not allowed and he died on May 17.
  136. In 996 when, FUJIWARA no Korechika was transferred to Dazai Gon no Sochi (deputy administrator of Dazaifu) after his downfall (Chotoku Incident), he secretly returned from Harima Province to enter Kyoto, however Narimasa informed FUJIWARA no Michinaga about Korechika.
  137. In 996, FUJIWARA no Korechika and his younger brother, FUJIWARA no Tokaie, attempted to assassinate Emperor Kazan and lost their power.
  138. In 996, he was appointed Sa-konoe-daisho (General of the Left Office of the Imperial Guards).
  139. In 997, he took the post of Bicchu no kami (the governor of Bicchu Province) (on January 28).
  140. In 997, he was appointed Nai-daijin (Minister of the Center).
  141. In 997, he was conferred Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) at the age of 12, and the next year he was appointed jiju (chamberlain), and afterwards he continued his advancement to higher official rank, and in 998 he took the post of Kurodo no to (head chamberlain), the second position after Kugyo (the top court officials).
  142. In 997, she became a nun.
  143. In 997, together with his teacher Jitsuin, he criticized a book on the Tendai sect which was sent from Baisong, China.
  144. In 997, upon the order of the Imperial Court, Keiso criticized 'Ryujo jobutsugi' (Principle of Attaining Buddhahood for Ryujo) sent from Sung Dynasty.
  145. In 998, Korehira was in the post of Governor of Shimotsuke Province as Kokushi of Yonin (a provincial governor residing in the capital); however, he fought at Kamikori (the precincts of a Shinto shrine) in Ise Province against TAIRA no Muneyori, who belonged to the same clan as Korehira and was also Korehira's second cousin.
  146. In 998, Michinaga suffered from a severe illness, which was serious enough that he begged the Emperor to let him become an ordained monk.
  147. In 999, Eleven articles of the first year of the Choho era was issued under the system of Emperor Ichijo and FUJIWARA no Michinaga and it became the fixed form of shinsei afterward.
  148. In 999, Michinaga sent his eldest daughter FUJIWARA no Shoshi [Akiko] to the court as Nyogo.
  149. In 999, Munetada was exiled to Sado Province after being charged with the murder of Koreyori TACHIBANA and his followers.
  150. In A.D. 1180, Todai-ji Temple and Kofuku-ji Temple (the two Buddhist powerhouses in Nanto (the southern capital, which refers to Nara)), were burned down in Nanto Yakiuchi (Burning of Nanto) by TAIRA no Shigehira, and this was a symbolic incident in Japanese art history.
  151. In A.D. 97, TAKENOUCHI no Sukune made a tour of inspection in Togoku (the eastern part of Japan, particularly Kanto region) and reported, "There is Hitakami no kuni in the east where Emishi live and it is a vast and fertile land, so we should conquer there."
  152. In A.D.1639, it was founded as Gakuryo of Nishi Hongan-ji Temple.
  153. In A.D.1650, Seijo (school rules) of Gakuryo was established.
  154. In A.D.1655, Gakuryo was ordered to dissolve by the Tokugawa shogunate because of the dispute in Syo'o over the Jodo Shinshu teachings.
  155. In A.D.1788, Gakurin burned down in the big fire that broke out in Kyoto City.
  156. In A.D.1792, the Hall of Gakurin was rebuilt.
  157. In A.D.1867, the reform of Gakurin started.
  158. In A.D.1868 (Keio 4), the Meiji Government decided to open "School of Science and Chemistry" in Osaka in the name of "Seimikyoku" (later, School of Science), and did so in 1869.
  159. In A.D.1869, the course of Hajagaku (Christianity) was started.
  160. In A.D.1871, the site of Gakurin was transferred to Shichijyo-dori Omiya in Shimogyo Ward.
  161. In A.D.1872, the Western learning of "the German language course"was started.
  162. In A.D.1875, the European system of school was adopted.
  163. In A.D.1876, Gakurin was renamed Daikyoko.
  164. In A.D.1879, some buildings in Omiya campus were completed, such as Central, South and North Hall, and Main Gate, which are all still in use, and Former Station of Custodian.
  165. In A.D.1880, the Emperor Meiji visited Daikyoko.
  166. In A.D.1887, some students in the General School voluntarily launched the "Hanseikai Magazine"(the precedent of "Chuokoron" today).
  167. In A.D.1888, Daikyoko was renamed Daigakurin.
  168. In A.D.1900, Daigakurin was renamed Bukkyo Daigaku (Buddhist University).
  169. In A.D.1902, Bukkyo Daigaku was divided into two, one was Bukkyo Senmon Daigaku (Buddhist Special University) in Kyoto and the other was Takanawa Bukkyo Daigaku (Takanawa Buddhist University) in Tokyo.
  170. In A.D.1904, Takanawa Bukkyo Daigaku was closed and integrated with Bukkyo Senmon Daigaku.
  171. In A.D.1905, Bukkyo Daigaku was approved by the Imperial Order of Vocational College.
  172. In A.D.1922, Bukkyo Daigaku was approved as the university (under the old system) by the Imperial Order of University and was retitled Ryukoku University.
  173. In A.D.1928, female students' entrance was permitted for the first time.
  174. In A.D.1949, Ryukoku University restarted after the postwar reform of the school education system, and established the Faculty of Literature.
  175. In A.D.1953, Nishi Hongan-ji Temple donated Otani Expedition Party's collections to Omiya Library.
  176. In A.D.1960, Fukakusa Campus opened in Fushimi Ward of Kyoto City.
  177. In A.D.1961, Faculty of Economics opened.
  178. In A.D.1962, Department of Social Welfare in Junior College opened.
  179. In A.D.1964, a group of Western-style buildings (Central, South and North Hall, Main Gate, Former Station of Custodian, and others in Omiya Campus), set up inMeiji 12, were designated as national important cultural assets.
  180. In A.D.1966, Faculty of Business Administration opened.
  181. In A.D.1968, Faculty of Law opened.
  182. In A.D.1969, campus unrest broke out, causing Fukakusa Campus to be blockaded for 50 days.
  183. In A.D.1983, "Nagao Library", collecting records of Japanese companies' history, was purchased.
  184. In A.D.1985, Japanese Culture and Language Program opened.
  185. In A.D.1987, Japan-U.S. International Symposium was held in commemoration of 350th anniversary from the foundation of both Ryukoku and Harvard University.
  186. In A.D.1988, the curriculum reform was implemented, and the semester and grade system was adopted.
  187. In A.D.1989, Seta Campus was set up in Otsu City of Shiga Prefecture, as a commemorative project of the 350th anniversary.
  188. In A.D.1991, Ryukoku Extension Center (REC) opened.
  189. In A.D.1996, Faculty of Intercultural Communication opened.
  190. In A.D.1997, Faculties of Letters, Economics, and Business Administration started to hold classes mainly in the evening and the building of High-Tech Research Center was completed (in Seta).
  191. In A.D.2001, Digital Archives Research Center for Classical Documents as well as Shikokan opened.
  192. In A.D.2005, Legal Affairs Research Course of Graduate School of Law (Law School) opened and Tokyo Office was set up.
  193. In A.D.2006, Ryukoku University Berkeley Center (RUBeC) opened in the State of California, U.S.A.
  194. In AD 642, when his minister father SOGA no Emishi was in his late years, he took charge of national administration in place of father, when Emperor Kogyoku ascended the throne.
  195. In AD 660, news reached that said the Allied Forces of Tang Dynasty and Silla Kingdom suddenly destroyed Paekche.
  196. In AD 717, he entered China.
  197. In AD 757 when Funado no Okimi deposed Crown Prince, he, together with FUJIWARA no Toyonari, recommended Prince Shioyaki as the Crown Prince of Emperor Koken.
  198. In Aichi Prefecture, some Liberal Party members had been incited by Taisuke ITAGAKI's speeches and Toru HOSHI's canvasses and were running around madly with a plot to overthrow the government.
  199. In Aichi Prefecture, there are schools such as Hoshino group of Bishu-Chikurin group, and Okabe group, and in Kumamoto Prefecture, Higo-Chikurin school is being succeeded.
  200. In Aichi and Hiroshima Prefectures, deep fried fish paste in general is called 'Hanpen.'
  201. In Aichi and Nagano Prefectures, there are 'Vitamin Chikuwa' for sale, which contain fish oil with vitamin A E added.
  202. In Aikikai-affiliated dojo, at the start of training it is customary to perform a method of discipline called 'aiki taiso,' as invented by Morihei.
  203. In Aizu region, it was known as "Sai no Kami"
  204. In Aizu, he spent 3 months in recuperation, and it is said that during this time he built Isami KONDO's tomb in Tennei-ji Temple.
  205. In Aizu, the town of Kurokawa had its name changed to 'Wakamatsu' and a castle was measured out built in the Koshu style.
  206. In Aizuwakamatsu City, Fukushima Prefecture, restaurants have formed the Aizu Society for the Traditional Sauce Katsudon to revitalize the town by advertising it as 'where cabbage was first included in the sauce katsudon.'
  207. In Akama, there stands 'Gokyo Seisen no Hi,' a monument commemorating the month long stay of five court nobles in the Akama inn town located along the Karatsu-kaido Road in Munakata City.
  208. In Akamagaseki (Shimonoseki), I (Koshoken) heard a tale about the fight from the local people, and it was different from most descriptions in books I had read.
  209. In Akasaka, Takefusa KIKUCHI already had beaten Mongolian soldiers.
  210. In Akashi (present Akashi City, Hyogo Prefecture), he was involved in a project of dividing the land of the city ('machiwari') for land development, and several projects that was concerned with making gardens ('sakutei') for Himeji-jo Castle, Akashi-jo Castle, and other castles and temples.
  211. In Akashi City, Hyogo Prefecture, there is "Tadanori-zuka Mound" that is said to be Tadanori's grave, and its neighborhood used to be called Tadanori-cho in ancient times (present Tenmon-cho).
  212. In Akashi City, they are called 'tamago-yaki' (omelet) instead of 'Akashi-yaki.'
  213. In Akechi Kaho it says, "I was promoted by Mr. Nobunaga from a status like a stone and given too much benefit.
  214. In Akita City it is common to have the tsuya and funeral after the cremation.
  215. In Akita City, there is also a grave attributed to that of Fujifusa MADENOKOJI, and in addition, this region was certainly under the influence of the Southern Court.
  216. In Akita Prefecture, shottsuru-nabe of whale meat called "kujirakayaki," a rare nabemono in the summer season, has been eaten since the Edo period, and it is recorded that a group of around five ships went to sea to hunt whales.
  217. In Akita, Dashi-shoyu (soy-sauce broth) is preferably used.
  218. In Ako City, home of the Gishi Festival, the group is known as Ako Gishi, and pre-war, the name Ako Gishi used to be known nationwide in relation to loyalty and filial piety, but post-war, since Jiro OSARAGI's novel was adapted for TV, the name of Ako Roshi has been more widely known.
  219. In Ako Domain, he was Chugosho (the lowest rank of samurai), Kurabugyo (manager at storehouse) with salary of 2 koku 10 ryo 3nin.
  220. In Ako Domain, the Ono family was given 20 koku of rice in addition to Karoku (hereditary stipend) to the family although Gunemon was still heyazumi (an adult-age eldest son who has yet to come into his inheritance).
  221. In Amagi, Omuta City, there is a stone which is said to be the tomb of Tenta MIIKE.
  222. In Amanohashidate, Amanohashidate hot spring was opened on December 20, 1999.
  223. In America, some hot springs are scattered along the volcanic belt, though the number is less than in Japan.
  224. In American food, Napolitan suggests a type of ice cream called Neapolitan ice cream.
  225. In Amino-cho, Kaya-cho, Iwataki-cho and Mineyama-cho, where the damage was particularly severe, the ratio of collapsed buildings reached 70%~90%.
  226. In Ancient Japan
  227. In Ansei era, there was a female and those around her told her how ugly she was, but after death, she came out and walked around town in skeleton form as she had good skeletal figure.
  228. In Ansei no Taigoku (suppression of extremists by the Shogunate) in 1858, she was harshly interrogated at a town magistrate's office in Kyoto, then was sent to Kanto, and was confined for 30 days.
  229. In Aobayama in Sendai-jo Castle (in Sendai City) there is a huge monumental stone tablet in almost two-meter height, which was built in March 1287, two years after the Shimotuski Incident.
  230. In Aomori, 40 people including Lieutenant Kozeki, waited for them, making rice gruel with a rice cooker they had brought with them, thinking the troop would return that day because the weather was better than the previous day.
  231. In Aoyama Cemetery, a graveyard for foreign residents in Tokyo, some of the graves are of foreigners who no longer have any known relatives, as a consequence of which the maintenance fee (590 yen yearly as of 2005) has not been paid for many years.
  232. In April (in the old calendar) of 1614, the Toyotomi family reconstructed Hoko-ji Temple according to Ieyasu's recommendation, and it was scheduled to hold a ceremony to consecrate a newly made Buddhist statue by inserting the eyes (thereby investing it with soul) in the Daibutsu-den (the Great Buddha hall) on August 3.
  233. In April 1017, Michinaga resigned the post of sadaijin and Akimitsu became sadaijin.
  234. In April 1018, she entered into court to marry Emperor Goichijo, her nephew.
  235. In April 1046, she was selected to be a Saigu of Emperor Goreizei by divination, and entered Nonomiya (temporary palace for Saigu to be purified) in September 1047.
  236. In April 1106, he was appointed Kurodo no to (Head Chamberlain) Sachujo (Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards); he became Sangi (Councillor) in January of the next year.
  237. In April 1145, which was the year after 'the disturbance in the Obamikuriya estate,' Yoshitomo donated this Soma-go village to the Inner Shrine and the Outer Shrine of the Ise-jingu Shrine.
  238. In April 1146, he was appointed the position of hikurodo (trainee in the Kurodo-dokoro, or the Imperial Secretariat) at the age of 17 years old and in February the next year, he was appointed the position of rokui kurodo (kurodo (Chamberlain) of the Sixth Rank).
  239. In April 1160 Yoshitomo's eldest son and heir, Yoritomo (aged 14) was sent into exile to Izu Province.
  240. In April 1164, after the marriage of Motozane KONOE, chief adviser to the Emperor, and Moriko, Munemori's younger maternal sister, Munemori, together with Shigehira, were appointed to the position of attendant of the Sekkan-ke Mandokoro government office.
  241. In April 1168, as an Imperial letter permitting Teishi to use the word "In" in her title was issued, and she became Kujoin, whereupon Yorimori resigned as Kotaigogu gon no daibu.
  242. In April 1170, he was awarded the rank of Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) and appointed as Jiju (chamberlain) and Ukone no shosho (Minor Captain of the Right Palace Guards).
  243. In April 1173, when there was a fire at the Kaya gosho palace in Hojyu-ji Temple, Shigemori quickly came to the scene to put out the fire and was then praised by Goshirakawa ("Kenshomonin Chunagon's Diary").
  244. In April 1176, a large-scale ceremony to celebrate Goshirakawa's age of 50 years old was held in Hojuji-dono Palace (Hoju-ji Palace); Tokitada attended the ceremony together with other nobles and family members of the Taira clan.
  245. In April 1177, a great fire (called 'the Great Fire of the Angen era' or 'Taro (a common name for a first son) Fire') broke out and completely burned the Daidairi (Heian Imperial Palace), Daigokuden (Council Hall in the Imperial Palace) and Kancho (government offices).
  246. In April 1180, a big tornado (a "whirlwind," according to Chomei) occurred near the crossroads of Nakamikado-oji Street and Higashikyogoku-oji Street (near the present Matsukagecho, Kamigyo Ward, Kyoto City and the Kyoto City Museum of Historical Materials).
  247. In April 1180, he issued an order in conspiracy with MINAMOTO no Yorimasa, called 'Ryoji' and sent a message to the Minamoto clan who bide their time all over Japan, to encourage the raising of an army or an armed uprising to overthrow the Taira family.
  248. In April 1180, with the anti-Kiyomori movement, Prince Mochihito (Goshirakawa's second son) issued a call for attacking the Taira clan and collaborated with MINAMOTO no Yorimasa to raise forces.
  249. In April 1181, an army to subjugate Yukiie, commanded by TAIRA no Shigehira, was dispatched, and Michimori joined this army.
  250. In April 1183, an army to subjugate Yoshinaka (according to the "Tale of the Heike" it consisted of a hundred thousand mounted warriors) was organized with TAIRA no Koremori as the commander-in-chief; Michimori also joined the army as a commander.
  251. In April 1185, Taira clan was defeated in the Battle of Dannoura, and fell into ruin.
  252. In April 1185, the Battle of Dan no ura took place, at which the Taira clan, having exhausted itself, suffered a final defeat and was vanquished.
  253. In April 1185, the Taira family perished in the Battle of Dannoura and while Hoshi attempted to commit suicide by drowning along with other women, she was rescued and captured by the enemy.
  254. In April 1186 (March 1186 under the old lunar calendar), Yoritomo made FUJIWARA no Motomichi, a Sessho (a regent) as the Cloistered Emperor deeply favored, resign as the person responsible for issuing the imperial decree to search for and kill MINAMOTO no Yoritomo, instead Yoritomo had Kanezane appointed to Sessho.
  255. In April 1186, the Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa secretly visited the quiet house in Ohara accompanied by Sanesada TOKUDAIJI, Kazan in Kanemasa, Michichika TSUCHIMIKADO and other Hokumen samurai (the Imperial Palace guards).
  256. In April 1190, it was formally decided for her to become the second consort.
  257. In April 1205, she entered into the court of Emperor Tsuchimikado who was ten years younger than her at the age of 21, and was given the title of nyogo; she was formally installed as chugu in July during the same year.
  258. In April 1207, it was from this chamber that he set out for Shikoku after being exiled from Kyoto.
  259. In April 1284, Tokimune died in a situation plagued by various issues such as a pile of applications for reward grants and lawsuits after the Mongol invasion as well as the possible return of the Mongolians.
  260. In April 1306, Neishi entered the inner palace of Emperor Gofushimi on the Jimyo-in Imperial line as nyogo (a high-ranking lady in the court; a consort of the emperor).
  261. In April 1333, he was attacked by Taketoki KIKUCHI receiving a secret order from the Emperor Godaigo and he with Hidetoki, Sadatsune SHONI and others put him to rout and death.
  262. In April 1360, all of a sudden, he burnt down Ano angu, the base of the Southern Court, together with Ujinori AKAMATSU and others.
  263. In April 1390, Yasuyuki raised an army in Kojima-jo Castle, Ikeda District, Mino Province (Ibigawa-cho, Gifu Prefecture), but he was defeated and eventually lost his power.
  264. In April 14, 1581, 300 years after the death of Nichiren, vessels of Katsuyori TAKEDA raided Omosu, and robbed Nika Sojo (Fujishu Gaku Yoshu (Teachings of Nichiren sects), volume 9 - 17 and 20).
  265. In April 14, 1875, the Imperial Rescript for the constitutional system of the government (Imperial Rescript for gradual shift to the constitutional system of government) was issued.
  266. In April 1469, he invaded Tango Province and threatened Yoshinao ISSHIKI, but died from a disease on June 29, 1471 at the age of 51.
  267. In April 1474, when Katsumoto HOSOKAWA and Masatoyo YAMANA concluded a peace agreement with each other, Yoshinao returned to his former allegience, retired and made his heir, Yoshiharu, serve the bakufu.
  268. In April 1481 when the reconcilliation with the 'Oda Isenokami family' collapsed, he again fought with Toshihiro of the 'Oda Isenokami family' and defeated him ("Baika Mujinzo").
  269. In April 1485, Jushiinoge, Sahyoe no suke.
  270. In April 1493, Masatomo HOSOKAWA organized the Meio Coup and exiled Shogun Yoshitane ASHIKAGA.
  271. In April 1508, Sumimoto was attacked by an army led by Yoshioki from the west and by an army of Iga and other provinces, which was led by Takakuni from the east, and Sumimoto abandoned Kyoto and ran away to Omi Province.
  272. In April 1525, Takakuni let his son, Tanekuni HOSOKAWA, take over as the head of the family and retired.
  273. In April 1526, two months before his death, he established the "Imagawa Kana Mokuroku" (Imagawa House Laws), typical provincial laws that warlords enforced in their territories in the Sengoku period.
  274. In April 1548, Takakage died suddenly on his way back from a temple visit.
  275. In April 1557 Mori's troops invaded Yamaguchi City as part of Motonari MORI's conquest of Suo and Nagato Provinces.
  276. In April 1560, Kagetora departed for the front in Ecchu Province, and helped Yasutane SHIINA by defeating Nagamoto JINBO.
  277. In April 1573 he allied himself with Shogun Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA and rebelled against Nobunaga,
  278. In April 1574, he was given joi (investiture of a Court rank) of Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  279. In April 1575, Masashige led the firearms troop together with Toshiie MAEDA, Narimasa SASSA, and Hidekatsu FUKUTOMI in the Battle of Nagashino.
  280. In April 1580, the five remnants of Murashige ARAKI escaped into Sannai (precincts of the temple) and Nobunaga who knew it sent Toshiie MAEDA and Mitsuharu FUWA to Koyasan as messengers in August.
  281. In April 1582, the Takeda clan fell due to subjugation of Takeda done by Nobunaga ODA.
  282. In April 1584, Nobukatsu killed his three key retainers, i.e., Yoshifuyu TSUGAWA, Shigetaka OKADA, and Nagatoki AZAI, based on the reason that they were in secret communication with Hideyoshi, and asked Ieyasu TOKUGAWA for help, which resulted in the Battles of Komaki and Nagakute.
  283. In April 1584, through the mediation of Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI, who had gained hegemony after Nobunaga's death, Tadaoki brought Tama back to the Hosokawa's Osaka residence.
  284. In April 1590 he led an army of some 1,200 men to the Siege of Odawara.
  285. In April 1596 he resigned from the Honkoku-ji Temple and made a pilgrimage to the sacred site on the Sado Island associated with Nichiren the founder of the sect.
  286. In April 1598 she took part in a hanami party (cherry blossom viewing party) hosted by Hideyoshi along with his legal wife and other concubines.
  287. In April 16, 1017, an incident occurred where the roto (retainer) and one party of HADA no Ujimoto killed KIYAHARA no Munenobu (Sei Shonagon's elder brother) in the capital, however, it was later found that the incident was ordered by Yorichika.
  288. In April 1601, for a series of his exploits after the Battle of Sekigahara, he was ordered to change the territory with additional properties, from Obata Domain of Kozuke Province with 30,000 koku to Kano Domain of Mino Province with 100,000 koku.
  289. In April 1611, he exercised his good offices by mediating a meeting between Ieyasu and Hideyori TOYOTOMI in Nijo-jo Castle, however, he became ill on the ship on his way back home and died on August 2, 1611 in Kumamoto.
  290. In April 1611, he participated in the meeting between Ieyasu and Hideyori Toyotomi at Nijo-jo Castle.
  291. In April 1614, Bunei Seikan, who excelled at making Chinese poems, was ordered by Katsumoto KATAGIRI to make a poem to be carved on the temple bell of Hoko-ji Temple in Kyoto, whose Great Buddha Hall was to be reconstructed.
  292. In April 1615, on the occasion of the Summer Battle of Osaka, he left Osaka-jo Castle.
  293. In April 1627, he moved to Munesawa-dera Temple in Omi Province.
  294. In April 1632, Nagayoshi became ill.
  295. In April 1642, he accompanied Shogun Iemitsu on his pilgrimage to Mt. Nikko-san.
  296. In April 1644, he was transferred to Kakegawa in Enshu (Totomi Province) and blessed with his second illegitimate son Sentaro.
  297. In April 1651, Tsunayoshi and his elder brother, Nagamatsu (Tsunashige TOKUGAWA), were presented with 150,000 koku (a unit of measurement for rice volume, used to asses wealth, 1 koku is 180.39 liter) from the provinces of Omi, Mino, Shinano, Suruga and Kozuke, and were also given some retainers.
  298. In April 1658 during the memorial ceremony to commemorate the 27th anniversary of the death of Hidetada TOKUGAWA, Cloistered Imperial Prince Shucho petitioned a grand pardon.
  299. In April 1660, he went to the capital (Kyoto) and pleaded with the imperial court to allow him to restore the past glory of the Matsudono family and to become a court noble.
  300. In April 1661, his third son Yojuro was born in the Kameyama Domain of Tanba Province.
  301. In April 1668, he was invited by the Cloistered Emperor Gomizunoo to Naiin (the innermost shrine of Shomo-ji Temple) and gave him bosatsu-kai (bosatsu (bodhisattva)'s commandments) there.
  302. In April 1669, he officially took over Ingen's teachings and became the first Japanese who mastered Ingen's esoteric techniques.
  303. In April 1697, the bakufu ordered that the use of keicho-gin be stopped by March 1698; however, many people hoarded them instead of exchanging them, so in January 1698, the bakufu ordered that its use be stopped by March 1699, but to no avail.
  304. In April 1701, Masachika received a diploma for the kato of the Kyushu region.
  305. In April 1702, Kuranosuke OISHI let his wife Riku OISHI and other family members go back to her parent home in Toyooka Domain in Tajima Province and then, in Kyoto, he began to be so involved in amusing himself that he forgot every thing else.
  306. In April 1707, he was offered 300 koku from Koonin, and in September 1712, he changed his family name to Ueno.
  307. In April 1760, she moved to the main ward of Edo-jo castle, and then she was called Midaidokoro (the wife of Shogun or a highest-ranking nobleman).
  308. In April 1801 when he was 23 years old, he visited Ise-jingu Shrine in order to ward off a bad spirit.
  309. In April 1826, on his way back to Saga after completion of a substantial role for the marriage, Shigeyoshi forcibly closed a villa in Shinagawa, a place for pleasure for Narinao NABESHIMA (the lord of the domain), insisting that it was one of the causes of the financial collapse.
  310. In April 1829, he had his house burned by a spreading fire and further underwent as a guarantor a relative's default, but he was a dissolute and unruly man with eccentric behavior, who got hooked on wine and women.
  311. In April 1840, he was born as a son of a feudal retainer of Tanabe Domain of Tango Province in the town of Tedai (current Miyazuguchi, Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture).
  312. In April 1847, Yasuko became an empress dowager because she was the biological mother of the new emperor, but on November 20, 1847 she entered priesthood and received senge for Nyoingo, and then died on that day.
  313. In April 1848, for the first time, the name Yoshijiro HANAYAGI appeared on the banzuke (literally, ranking lists, referring to kabuki playbills) at the performance in Nakamura-za Theater, said to be the beginning of the Hanayagi school.
  314. In April 1857, he met Sanzaburo TSUDA who had the position of Nagaoka Kanbutsu in the domain of Kumamoto on the way home from Sankin-kotai (the daimyo's alternate-year residence in Edo), and they talked about national affairs.
  315. In April 1858, Naosuke II, the lord of the Hikone clan, assumed the position of Tairo (Chief Minister) and tried to decisively settle the disputes over the treaties and the struggle for succession.
  316. In April 1861, he undertook naval training on the clan's warship Heishinmaru, and travelled to Edo.
  317. In April 1863, when favourable conditions for Imperial loyalists returned, Kuniomi was released.
  318. In April 1866, Gonrokuro became Goyogakari (a general affairs official) of the miliary affairs of Okayama Domain.
  319. In April 1866, he made a tour around Kyoto, Osaka and Edo, and boarded a British ship, Kokuryu-go, heading for Nagasaki at Yokohama in August, but died in a shipwreck off Genkai-nada Sea.
  320. In April 1867, he separated from the group with Kashitaro ITO and others to form Goryo-Eji.
  321. In April 1867, he was appointed to Nikko Sairei Bugyo (festival magistrate).
  322. In April 1867, when Kinetaro ITO left the Shinsen-gumi masterless warrior party to form the Goryo-eji (guardians of Imperial mausoleums), party, he left the party with ITO, but eventually he rejoined the Shinsen-gumi masterless warrior party.
  323. In April 1868, he lost his father Seizo and succeeded his father as the head of the family.
  324. In April 1868, since the Edo bakufu (Japanese Feudal government headed by a shogun) surrendered Edo Castle and Ooku to the government army, Kazunomiya moved to the Tayasu family residence with Jitsujoin.
  325. In April 1868, the Constitution of the New Meiji Government regime declared 'to define Charter Oath as the objectives, establish new national policy, systems and regulations' and consequently quoted whole texts of Five Articles.
  326. In April 1869, Nariyuki was appointed as Omiya gosho Goyogakari (a general affairs official of the Imperial Household working at Empress Dowager's palace) during Emperor Meiji's gyoko (Imperial visit) to Tokyo and was subsequently appointed as Jako no ma shiko (emperor's personal attendant in Jako room) during August of that year.
  327. In April 1870, he became a student of Osaka Seinen Gakusya (Boys' military school in Osaka), and in August 1871, he was appointed as Shojo Kokoroe (Acting Second Lieutenant) of Japanese Army for the 4th Infantry Regiment.
  328. In April 1871, he was dismissed from his post following Haihan-chiken (abolition of feudal domains and establishment of prefectures).
  329. In April 1871, he went up to Tokyo, and in July, began to serve the New Meiji Government as Sergeant of Army for Goshimpei (army to convoy the Emperor).
  330. In April 1871, however, he had to return to Japan as the mission made little headway in negotiating with Korea.
  331. In April 1872 it submitted 'Rikkoku-Kengi' to propose a plan for establishing a national constitution.
  332. In April 1872, he entered the service of a seventh grade official of Bureau of Taxation by the recommendation of Okura no taifu (a senior assistant minister of the Ministry of Treasury) Kaoru INOUE and worked at Yokohama Customs.
  333. In April 1872, he succeeded as the head of the Kitashirakawanomiya family in accordance with the will of his younger brother Imperial Prince Kitashirakawanomiya Satonari.
  334. In April 1872, he was appointed commander in chief of the Kumamoto garrison (Chinzei Chindai) and moved to Kumamoto to take his new post.
  335. In April 1872, his father Tsunenao died.
  336. In April 1873, he was transferred to the chief of the court of the army.
  337. In April 1873, the shrine was designated a gosha (village shrine).
  338. In April 1874, Banchi Office (Taiwan Expedition Office) was established and Shigenobu OKUMA was appointed as director general and Lieutenant General Tsugumichi SAIGO as commander of the Taiwan expeditionary force, giving them full authority.
  339. In April 1875 he joined the Tokyo Akebono Shinbun and became the chief editor.
  340. In April 1875, TAMANO happened to come across Gustave Emile BOISSONADE when he was caught off balance after witnessing a torture, and negotiated with Shihokyo (administrator of Ministry of Justice) Takato OKI, along with Taizo NAMURA and BOISSONADE.
  341. In April 1875, he became Genroin gikan (Councilor of the Chamber of Elders).
  342. In April 1877, he assumed the post of Chief of the First Battalion of Ex-legionaries and participated in Seinan War under the command of Colonel Motoi HORI.
  343. In April 1878, since there were no children between Imperial Prince Taruhito and the Empress, when he was over forty years old, he asked Emperor Meiji to adopt Sawanomiya as an actual successor to the Arisugawa no Miya family.
  344. In April 1879, Japan abolished the Ryukyu Kingdom and established Okinawa Prefecture.
  345. In April 1879, he married his cousin Riku.
  346. In April 1879, he was transferred again to Yosei Elementary School of Tsu City, Mie Prefecture due to his father's transfer.
  347. In April 1880, the Japanese government decided that the Japanese minister be permanently stationed in Hanseong and appointed Hanabusa as the first minister.
  348. In April 1882 (24 years after the death of Hiroshige), his disciples established a monument at Akiba Shrine in Susaki Village, Suminoe, but it was destroyed in Great Tokyo Air Raids in the Second World War and nothing remains now.
  349. In April 1882, Itagaki was attacked by a thug named Naobumi AIHARA and was injured while he was campaigning in Gifu City (the Gifu Incident).
  350. In April 1882, when the Constitutional Progressive Party was established, he joined it with a party of Omeisha.
  351. In April 1883, a party of 27 people of 13 households got together to sail out from Yokohama Port.
  352. In April 1883, he ordered the improvement of sewer systems also in Tokyo to Yoshimasa AKIKAWA, the Governor of Tokyo Prefecture, for the reason of hygiene.
  353. In April 1884 Juntaro transferred from Berlin University to the University of Strasbourg and he studied pharmacognosy and forensic science very diligently under Oswald Schmiedeberg, who was the pioneer of experimental pharmacology,
  354. In April 1884, he assumed concurrently Daijokan (Grand Council of State), Senior Executive Secretary of Genroin (the Chamber of Elders), and Goyo-gakari (a general affairs official) of Bureau of Institutional Investigation.
  355. In April 1887, worked part time as a teacher of Chinese classics at Tokyo Girls Vocational School.
  356. In April 1888, he assumed the position as Minister of Justice in the Kuroda Cabinet.
  357. In April 1888, he became the Executive Secretary and concurrently served as a secretary of the Chairman in the Privy Council
  358. In April 1889, he died at the age of fifty-five and his last performance was the role of Danjo NIKKI in the drama "Meibokusendaihagi" at the Naniwaza Theater.
  359. In April 1891, the following year, he was assigned by the Minister of Agriculture and Commerce, Munemitsu MUTSU, to create an organization for the preparation of the World's Columbian Exposition (1893) which was going to be held two years later, and became the vice-director, who was practically in charge.
  360. In April 1893, Ko no Maki was renamed to Hyoron, whereas, Otsu no Maki, under the new name of Jogaku Zasshi, was published on the biweekly basis.
  361. In April 1893, he succeeded as the fifteenth head of the Sumitomo family and changed his name from Takamaro to Kichizaemon-Tomoito SUMITOMO.
  362. In April 1895, he took part in the Sino-Japan war campaign as a war correspondent and suffered a lung hemorrhage on his way home.
  363. In April 1897, Tomoito departed for his travel to Europe and America.
  364. In April 1898, he assumed the position of the Minister of Agriculture and Commerce of the third Hirobumi ITO' Cabinet.
  365. In April 1899, two clean copies of the former 70 volumes were completed, and one copy was dedicated to Kishu Tokugawa family while the other was dedicated to Kishu Tosho-gu Shrine.
  366. In April 1900, the bureau was divided into Bureau of Shinto Shrines and Bureau of Religions.
  367. In April 1901, Taki entered the European University of Music and Theatre "Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy" Leipzig (established by Felix Mendelssohn) in Germany, becoming the second Japanese composer to attend this school.
  368. In April 1902, Soichiro MURAOKA presented the Ieyasu TOKUGAWA Imposter Theory in a book entitled "Questioning the History of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA", published by Minyu Company and managed by Soho TOKUTOMI, a historian from the Meiji Period to the Taisho Period.
  369. In April 1906, he appeared as Kengoro in "Mekuranagaya Umega Kagatobi" ("Kagatobi") at the Kabuki-za Theater under the name Mitsugoro BANDO VII.
  370. In April 1906, he was conferred the Order of the Sacred Treasure, Gold and Silver Star.
  371. In April 1907, Shuzo TOYAMA retired as president just prior to the shareholder's meeting of Hanshin Electric Railway Co., Ltd. which left the president's position vacant.
  372. In April 1912, his post of Governor General in Kanto was succeeded by Yasumasa FUKUSHIMA, and he was newly appointed as Military Councilor.
  373. In April 1913 he received the honorary title of gensui (Naval Marshall-General) and was permitted to stand before the Emperor while holding a cane.
  374. In April 1915: The women's course was closed down.
  375. In April 1916, partly because of how young he had been on appointment, he retired from the post of Director (the highest post) of the Medical Office of the Department of War, a service of eight and a half years and was incorporated into the reserve.
  376. In April 1919the first entrance ceremony of the school was held in the auditorium of Muko Middle School.
  377. In April 1923: Saga so-en (Saga mulberry field) was created in Saga-village, Kadono-Province (present-day, Saga ippongi-cho, Ukyo Ward).
  378. In April 1929, the moving of Gendai geki bu into Nikkatsu Studio was completed, and he took the posts of the general manager of the planning, director, and scenario departments.
  379. In April 1933, the school moved to a new campus built at the site donated by Shinkeihan Railway in Katsura Ichinomae-cho, Ukyo Ward.
  380. In April 1937: It was built.
  381. In April 1942: Seni Kagaku-ka (the textile and chemistry course) was added to the regular course.
  382. In April 1945, WAKATSUKI, OKADA, HIROTA, KONOE, HIRANUMA, TOJO, Kantaro SUZUKI(Chairman of the Privy Council), and KIDO (naidaijin)
  383. In April 1946: The faculty of Silk was divided into the faculty of Sericulture and the faculty of Silk Reeling.
  384. In April 1955, Minosuke brought accusations against the management of Shochiku at the Regional Legal Affairs Bureau, alleging that the problems with respect to Tsurunosuke constituted human right violations.
  385. In April 1956, it was established as an orchestra directly operated by a municipality and gave its first public performance on June 18 in the Pontocho Kaburenjo Theater.
  386. In April 1956, it was founded as the only orchestra in Japan which was directly managed by a municipality.
  387. In April 1964, he succeeded to the name, Takenojo ICHIMURA VI, performing as Shigeyasu HATAKEYAMA and others of "Yoritomo no shi" (The Death of Yoritomo) at Kabukiza theater.
  388. In April 1967, "Fukuzawa Yukichi - Ikitsuzukeru Shisoka" (Yukichi FUKUZAWA - Living Theorist) (published by Kodansha) by a scholar of Western History of Ideas Kenji KONO was published.
  389. In April 1970, Daiei agreed to merge its film distribution network with Nikkatsu, also suffering from financial problems, and established Dainichi Eihai K.K.
  390. In April 1984 the Shimanouchi Theater moved to a Japanese restaurant called 'Shibaraku' in Tatamiya-machi, Minami Ward, thus returning to 'Shimanouchi.'
  391. In April 1994, he won the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold and Silver Star.
  392. In April 1998, he won the Legion d'Honneur, Officier of France.
  393. In April 2, 587, Emperor Yomei began having a desire to practice Sanpo (three treasures of Buddhism) when he became sick, and thus he issued the Imperial edict to discuss this matter among vassals.
  394. In April 2000, television and magazines reported news on many households rejecting sewer work in Yamagata City, resulting in delay.
  395. In April 2004, the section between Shijo-dori Street and Sanjo-dori Street opened, and in March 2005, the section between Sanjo-dori Street and Oike-dori Street section opened.
  396. In April 2005, he performed "Sonezaki-shinju" and "Boshibari" in Korea (Seoul and Pusan).
  397. In April 2007, Abemonju-in Temple introduced electronic payment systems such as Edy, iD, PiTaPa and QUICPay, makint it the first of its kind in Japan.
  398. In April 2007, Michelin's practical guidebook for travelling (MICHELIN Voyager Pratique Japon) was published for foreign sightseers who visit Japan.
  399. In April 2007, a warning display board showing the approach of a Kyoto City bus was installed in front of the ticket vending machine at the ticket gates.
  400. In April 2008, the launch ceremony for the Japanese Maritime Defense Forces' Ice Breaker Shirase, built at Universal Shipbuilding Corporation, took place.
  401. In April 22, 940, hieki (communication envoy) of Kai Province reported that Masatake was killed to the Imperial Court.
  402. In April 28, 866, an incident occurred in which Otenmon gate was set alight and destroyed.
  403. In April 465, He put down Silla with KI no Oyumi on orders of the Emperor, but he was killed by their counterattack.
  404. In April 479, when the Emperor learned the death of Samgeun of Baekje, he let the hostage Mata O (the second son of Konki O) go home with 500 warriors of Chikushi region, and had him succeed to the throne as Dongseong of Baekje.
  405. In April 5 B.C., he appointed Princess Yamatohime to perform rituals to worship the great sun goddess Amaterasu Omikami.
  406. In April 502 when Lian dynasty (Nanchao) was established, king of Baekje Yodai, who had been appointed to Chinto taishogun by the former dynasty (Qiguo (Nanchao)), and Waobu were appointed to Seito taishogun.
  407. In April 587, Emperor Yomei fell very ill.
  408. In April 587, Emperor Yomei was taken ill and wished to worship the three divine treasures of Buddhism (the Buddhist law among others), thus he consulted his retainers.
  409. In April 666, Tang was requested to dispatch their troops for conquest of Goguryeo, and attacks to Goguryeo were started after Tang appointed Li Ji to the supreme commander of the army to advance to Liaodong Province.
  410. In April 7, 1601, Imperial Prince Ryonin studied at the Shinko-in sub-temple of Ninna-ji Temple where he took the tonsure and entered the Buddhist priesthood.
  411. In April 710, 16 months after the commencement of construction work, transfer of the capital to Heijokyo was conducted.
  412. In April 717, peasants were prohibited from unlawfully becoming a priests, and Gyoki's activities were suppressed.
  413. In April 724, he was appointed to Jisetsu Taishogun (general) in Shikibukyo (the Highness of Ceremonial) and sent out troops.
  414. In April 729, he rose to the official rank of Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  415. In April 746, Kyofuku was reassigned from the governor of Mutsu to the governor of Kazusa for unknown reasons, and in September he was promoted to Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) and reassigned to the governor of Mutsu once again.
  416. In April 749, she was promoted from Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) to Junii (Junior Second Rank).
  417. In April 753, he attended Ninno-e (a ceremony to pray for the peace of the country by lecturing Ninno scriptures) held at Daian-ji Temple as a lecturer.
  418. In April 8, 1600, Nagaharu MIZOE inherited his father's property inheritance, Echizen Province and Kanazu-jo Castle with 17713 koku (crop yields.)
  419. In April 809, the Emperor abdicated and Prince Kamino (Emperor Saga) succeeded to the Imperial Throne, whereupon Emperor Saga appointed Prince Takaoka (Emperor Heizei's son) as the crown prince.
  420. In April 811, she was given a 2-cho (19,834 square meters) rice field in Kii County, Yamashiro Province (that covered part of present-day Fushimi Ward, Minami Ward, and Higashiyama Ward in Kyoto City) as the Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  421. In April 823, her father, Emperor Saga abdicated from the throne.
  422. In April 877, her younger sister Imperial Princess Chinshi (Yoshiko) died.
  423. In April 884 the next year, the Emperor ordered Sadaijin (minister of the left) MINAMOTO no Toru to get hakase etc. to study whether or not Ako was a position with no jobs.
  424. In April 977, Kanemichi made MINAMOTO no Kaneakira return as an Imperial Prince and appointed Yoritada to sadaijin.
  425. In April Yoshiaki made an alliance with Hisahide MATSUNAGA and mustered an army at Makishima Castle in Yamashiro Province,
  426. In April and May 1566, the Court appointed Yoshiaki Samanokami (the head of the section taking care of imperial horses) with a court rank of Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) at the recommendation of Kanemigi YOSHIDA.
  427. In April and May of 1694, Shogun Tsunayoshi TOKUGAWA and his real mother Keishoin visited the residence of Munemoto HONJO, Osawa also visited there and had the honor of being conferred jifuku (clothes given from the shogun).
  428. In April battle commenced, but they encountered guerrilla attacks from the Amago army and suffered from a shortage of military supplies.
  429. In April in the same year, a small-scale newspaper 'Hiragana-e-iri Shinbun' (a newspaper in hiragana with pictures therein) started to be published with Aisen TAKAHATA as its editor in chief.
  430. In April in the same year, leading the army, he reached Tsukushi Province and stationed in Shima County (Chikuzen Province), but had to postpone his military advance to Shiragi after falling ill in June.
  431. In April in the same year, the Fukuoka College of Medicine, Kyoto Imperial University, was transferred to College of Medicine, Kyushu Imperial University.
  432. In April of 1238, he was awarded the honorary rank of Jusango (reserved for the Great Empress Dowager, Empress Dowager, Empress and high ranking nobles).
  433. In April of 1293, regent Sadatoki HOJO himself killed TAIRA no Yoritsuna (known as the Taira no Zenmon Disturbance).
  434. In April of 1521, Takakuni banished shogun Yoshitane who had turned against him, and put up Yoshiharu ASHIKAGA as the twelfth shogun.
  435. In April of 1805 (46 years old), Unzen went to Shinetsu with Shibutsu OKUBO.
  436. In April of 1897, the school district system was abolished, and it became possible to take entrance examinations for higher schools unrestricted by the school districts.
  437. In April of 1937, Chiezo Productions produced "Asano Takuminokami," a film to commemorate their 100th film, then liquidated after filming was completed for "Matsugoro Midareboshi."
  438. In April of 1937, he married with Kishi, the oldest daughter of Saneatsu TOKUDAIJI.
  439. In April of 1951, brush-using calligraphy was restored as a formal learning item in the fourth and higher grades of elementary schools.
  440. In April of 1969, he announced that he would 'hand down to my eldest son, Kosho OTANI Shinmon, only the position of Kancho (head priest) among the positions of Hoshu, Hongan-ji Temple Jushoku (chief priest) and Kancho I jointly hold' (Kaishin Incident).
  441. In April of 1996, services under the control of the Hirakata Office of Keihan Bus were transferred again to get control of its Rakunan Office.
  442. In April of 2002, Miyako Hotel started a business partnership with Starwood Hotels & Resorts, participating in the Westin brand, and the hotel name was changed to the present one.
  443. In April of 757, Funado no Okimi was dethroned due to Empress Koken's displeasure and, instead, Emperor Junnin who was recommended by Nakamaro became Crowned Prince.
  444. In April of that year, Masamitsu was appointed to Kurodo no to (head chamberlain), the second-tier position after Kugyo, and two year later, in 998, he was entrusted to be Okura-kyo (Minister of Treasury), as well.
  445. In April of the following year, 1615, jizamurai in Hidaka, Arida and Nagusa Counties rose to riot, targeting the Wakayama-jo Castle from which Nagaakira ASANO left, in accordance with the outbreak of Osaka Natsu no Jin (Summer Siege of Osaka), but they were suppressed again.
  446. In April of the following year, 1949, he bought a shop that was concurrently being used as a main residence from Kasuke KOJIMA and opened the present-day Koraibashi shop (Osaka City).
  447. In April of the following year, MINAMOTO no Sukekata, a member of the sect supporting direct Imperial rule by Emperor Nijo who had been deported as a result of the Heiji Disturbance, was allowed to return to the capital, and in July, Tokitada and MINAMOTO no Sukekata were deported for cursing Nijo at Kamo-sha Shrine.
  448. In April of the following year, Oigimi gave birth to an onna miya (Japanese imperial princess).
  449. In April of the following year, he married Sago no kata (the Akamatsu clan), Nobunaga ODA's adopted daughter.
  450. In April of the following year, he was back to the post of Principal of Rikugun Daigakko, then in October,1898 it was succeeded by Arisawa UEDA.
  451. In April of the following year, i.e., 1896, it opened a branch school in the Nishiyama branch temple of Jodo Shinshu sect (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) Honpa Hongwan-ji school located in Aza Kawashima, Kawaoka Village, Kadono District (present-day Nishikyo Ward, Kyoto City).
  452. In April of the next month (the old calendar), Ieyasu gathered in Nijo-jo Castle 22 daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) staying in Kyoto and made them submit written vows that they would not disobey orders from the bakufu.
  453. In April of the next year, 1585, Hideyoshi suppressed Saiga-shu (Ikko groups).
  454. In April of the same year at Katsukiyo KUBOMATSU's reception party announcing his promotion to 5 dan, he played against Shusai with the match ending in an uchikake at 33rd move.
  455. In April of the same year, Negoro, Saiga shu and monk-soldiers of the Kokawa-dera Temple made a sortie to Izumi Province, gaining the reinforcements of the Yukawa and Tamaki clans of Hidaka County.
  456. In April of the same year, Shigemori once again became Gon Dainagon, and Narichika also came back as Kebiishi betto.
  457. In April of the same year, Sukemori's older brother, Koremori, who had left the battlefront around the time of the Battle of Ichinotani, drowned himself off the coast of Nachi.
  458. In April of the same year, Takauji defeated Masashige KUSUNOKI and Yoshisada NITTA in the Battle of Minato-gawa River and entered the capital in June.
  459. In April of the same year, before he could write one single script, he was drafted into the Kure City Kaiheidan (Sailor Corps) as a nitohei (second rank officer).
  460. In April of the same year, he put the following statement in 'Bungei no Shugi' (Principle of Literature) (original title : Literary Fragments).
  461. In April of the same year, he took over Miyake (house of an imperial prince) due to the death of his father, Imperial Prince Toshihito.
  462. In April of the same year, he was appointed to Chinju-fu shogun (commander-in-chief of the defense of the north), replacing FUJIWARA no Hidehira, and moved to Mutsu.
  463. In April of the same year, she became Chugu.
  464. In April of the same year, she entered Gakushuin Girls' Senior High School.
  465. In April of the same year, she was proclaimed a Nyogo (consort) of Emperor Enyu, and in July, she officially became Chugu.
  466. In April or May (March in old lunar calendar) in the same year, Katsuyori set fire on the unfinished Shinpu-jo Castle and ran away.
  467. In April the Dajokandai was transferred to the Imperial Court.
  468. In April the Imperial Court, which had received an emergency messenger from Dewa no Kami, ordered Shimotsuke and Kozuke provinces to each deploy 1,000 soldiers.
  469. In April the next year he was awarded a Golden Pheasant Medal and was ordered to accompany Fushiminomiya Imperial Prince Sadanaru on his trip to Europe.
  470. In April the same year, he joined Toei Company, Ltd.
  471. In April the same year, he retired from the university following the advice by Tetsujiro INOUE of the Tokyo Teikoku Daigaku Bunka Daigaku (Tokyo Imperial University, Faculty of Letters University).
  472. In April the same year, the Mori army attacked Gassan Toda-jo Castle from three sides, but was defeated, and finally withdrew.
  473. In April there is a series of performances that spans nine days from the 21st through the 29th, called the Dainenbutsu-e.
  474. In April to May 878, Governor of Dewa Province FUJIWARA no Okiyo (Shigezane's father) reported to the throne that Akita-jo Castle (its ruins are located at Terauchi, Akita City, Akita Prefecture) was burnt down by Emishi (Gangyo War).
  475. In April, 1072 he entered the priesthood and cloistered himself in Uji City.
  476. In April, 1165, Emperor Nijo was taken ill.
  477. In April, 1284, Yasumori entered into priesthood with the regent Tokimune HOJO's death, so at that time, Munekage was considered to have inherited the family, and he also took over the position of the chief of Hikitsukeshu which Yasumori served for years.
  478. In April, 1294, the following year, for 'a precaution against foreign countries,' Kanetoki conducted signal fire training with gokenin of Kyushu in the Provinces of Chikuzen and Hizen, and made a report of the force and increased procurement, strengthening the security guard against foreign countries.
  479. In April, 1333, he defended the attack on Rokuhara by Takauji ASHIKAGA and Enshin AKAMATSU, who went over to Emperor Godaigo's side at Shinomuranosho in Tanba Province; however, Rokuhara Tandai (the office of shogunal deputy in Kyoto placed by the Kamakura bakufu) fell to the enemy.
  480. In April, 1400, the Kanto kubo Mitsukane ASHIKAGA presented a prayer-petition to the Grand Shrine at Mishima in Izu Province in which he apologized for double-crossing the shogunate 'in my narrow-mindedness.'
  481. In April, 1441, Yuki-jo Castle fell (Yuki War), where Ujitomo YUKI who helped An'omaru and Shun'omaru brothers, the bereaved children of Mochiuji, and raised the army in Kanto and held up in the castle more than a year.
  482. In April, 1474, Kuninobu, serving as a mediator, reconciled Masatoyo YAMANA with Masamoto HOSOKAWA.
  483. In April, 1536, Kinyori was sent as an imperial messenger to the coming of age ceremony of Harunobu (later to be Shingen), who was a legitimate son of Nobutora TAKEDA, the head of Kai Province.
  484. In April, 1540, he played second Kanjin Noh in the Nishijin of Kyoto with the support of Shugodai (the acting Military Governor) of Tanba Province, the Hatano clan.
  485. In April, 1587, Sadakatsu's father Toshikatsu died in Okazaki-jo Castle in Mikawa Province (aged 62, his posthumous Buddhist name was Yokoinden) and was buried in Anraku-ji Temple in Mikawa Province.
  486. In April, 1601, Masamune DATE made peasants spy on the Kagekatsu territory in Oshu (Mutsu Province) to capture the land.
  487. In April, 1602, the 10th son of Ieyasu (the future Yorinobu TOKUGAWA) was born in Fushimi-jo Castle.
  488. In April, 1717, he moved to Muromachi-dori Street, Imadegawa-dori Street.
  489. In April, 1825, he returned to the original family, Shimazu and assumed a new name, Matajiro, in May.
  490. In April, 1854, his home was completely destructed by fire at the Kyoto Imperial Palace.
  491. In April, 1858, Ii from the Nanki group became Tairo (chief minister).
  492. In April, 1858, he traveled to study in Edo, and became a disciple of Sokken YASUI.
  493. In April, 1863, Iemochi traveled to Osaka by a Jundo Maru Warship in preparation for carrying out an order of the Imperial Court to expel foreigners.
  494. In April, 1863, Shogun Iemochi visited Kyoto.
  495. In April, 1869, following results of investigations by the parliament system interrogation office, Kogisyo (the lower house) was newly established.
  496. In April, 1869, he became a supernumerary government official at Taishokyoku (organization of the Meiji Government which dealt with proposals from civilians).
  497. In April, 1872, he and his family moved from Kyoto to Tokyo.
  498. In April, 1873, First Junior High School of Third University Section was transformed into Kaimei School.
  499. In April, 1873, the University Section was changed, and First Junior High School of Fourth University Section was renamed First Junior High School of Third University Section.
  500. In April, 1874, Kaimei School was transformed into Osaka Foreign Language School.
  501. In April, 1877, he retired from the work.
  502. In April, 1879, Osaka English School was transformed into Osaka Vocational School.
  503. In April, 1885, he joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
  504. In April, 1886, the Ordinance of Advanced Junior High School was proclaimed, and University Branch was transformed into Third Advanced Junior High School.
  505. In April, 1890, Jinbe NISHIMURA, an oil merchant, opened 'Yoshimizuen,' a recreational amusement park, at the foot of Kacho-zan Mountain.
  506. In April, 1895, the ryodo (temple hall) of Higashi Hongan-ji Temple was completed.
  507. In April, 1896 he assumed office as Principal of Rikugun Daigakko (the Army War College) in succession to Naobumi TATSUMI, and in June of the same year, moved to Chief of the 12th Infantry Brigade.
  508. In April, 1898, he became president of Kyushu Railway.
  509. In April, 1903, the College of Medicine was divided into two, Kyoto College of Medicine, and Fukuoka College of Medicine.
  510. In April, 1906 he received the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun and the Order of the Golden Kite in the 2nd class for his achievements in the war.
  511. In April, 1906, he became member of the establishment committee of South Manchuria Railway.
  512. In April, 1911, Fukuoka College of Medicine was separated from Kyoto University as Kyusyu Imperial University was established, and Kyoto College of Medicine was renamed the College of Medicine, again.
  513. In April, 1911, he was promoted to the prince in view of his many years of distinguished services and achievements.
  514. In April, 1914, he became president of the Railway Bureau.
  515. In April, 1918, Kinuyo was admitted to the third grade in Tennoji Jinjo Elementary School.
  516. In April, 1918, the 'Foreign Rice Regulations Ordinance' was issued and mass of foreign rice was imported by the seven designated companies including Mitsui & Co., Ltd. and Suzuki & Co., however, the rice price did not drop.
  517. In April, 1921, Ashiu Experimental Forest Station was established in Ashiu, Chii Village, Kita Kuwata-gun, Kyoto Prefecture.
  518. In April, 1923, the Seventh College of Provisional Teachers was established.
  519. In April, 1940, the goal that 'training faithful and promising Japanese people' was laid out.
  520. In April, 1942, he died at his home in Kyoto.
  521. In April, 1944, the Provisional Special Division of Medicine was reorganized into the Special Division of Medicine.
  522. In April, 1951, the Disaster Prevention Research Institute was established.
  523. In April, 1953, the Graduate Schools under the new educational system were established (Graduate School of Letters, Education, Law, Economics, Science, Pharmaceutical Sciences, Engineering, and Agriculture).
  524. In April, 1954, the Midwife School in the Faculty of Medicine was established.
  525. In April, 1955, the Graduate School of Medicine was established.
  526. In April, 1956, the Institute for Virus Research was established.
  527. In April, 1959, the Health Technologist School of the Faculty of Medicine was established.
  528. In April, 1960, the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences was established.
  529. In April, 1962, the Institute of Economic Research was established.
  530. In April, 1963, the Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences, and Research Reactor Institute were established.
  531. In April, 1965, the Center for Southeast Asian Studies was established.
  532. In April, 1966, the Center for Student Health was established.
  533. In April, 1971, the Radioisotope Research Center was established.
  534. In April, 1972, the Health Technologist School of the Faculty of Medicine was renamed the School of Clinical Technologist of the Faculty of Medicine.
  535. In April, 1975, the College of Medical Technology was established, and the Midwife School and the School of Nursing, both in the Faculty of Medicine, were closed.
  536. In April, 1977, the Environment Preservation Center was established.
  537. In April, 1978, the Educational Center for Information Processing was established.
  538. In April, 1980, the Research Center for Medical Polymers and Biomaterials was established.
  539. In April, 1981, the Ionosphere Research Laboratory was reorganized into the Radio Atmospheric Science Center.
  540. In April, 1986, the Center for African Area Studies was established.
  541. In April, 1988, the Tuberculosis Chest Disease Research Institute was renamed the Chest Disease Research Institute.
  542. In April, 1991, the Graduate School of Human and Environmental Studies, and the Center for Ecological Research were established.
  543. In April, 1996, the Graduate School of Energy Science, and the Intramural Institution of African Area Studies were established.
  544. In April, 1997, the Kyoto University Museum was established.
  545. In April, 1998, the Graduate School of Asian and African Area Studies, and the Graduate School of Informatics were established.
  546. In April, 1999, the Graduate School of Biostudies was established.
  547. In April, 2000, Route 73 that operated in a loop-route within Yawata City (Uchizato - Nishi Iwata loop-routed bus, counterclockwise bound) and Route 73A that ran to Uchizato Minami, the bus stop on the way to Route 73, were established.
  548. In April, 2000, the Radio Atmospheric Science Center was reorganized into the Radio Science Center for Space and Atmosphere.
  549. In April, 2001, the Research Institute for Food Science was annexed to the Graduate School of Agriculture.
  550. In April, 2002, he succeeded the name of Kaishun, and then in 2008 he received Shiju-hosho (Medal of Honor with the Purple Ribbon).
  551. In April, 2002, the Graduate School of Global Environmental Studies (the Hall of Global Environmental Research, and the Hall of Global Environmental Education), the Research Center for Low Temperature and Materials Science, the Fukui Institute for Fundamental Chemistry were established.
  552. In April, 2002, the worst kosa in history of 2,070 ?g per cubic meter fell.
  553. In April, 2003, 19th CENTURY HALL opened in front of Saga Torokko Station.
  554. In April, 2003, Seto Marine Biological Laboratory (attached to the Graduate School of Science), the University Forest, the Subtropical Plant Institute, and the Fisheries Research Station (these three were attached to the Faculty of Agriculture) were integrated into the Field Science Education and Research Center.
  555. In April, 2004, the Ligneous Science Research Institute, and the Radio Science Center for Space and Atmosphere were integrated into the Research Institute for Sustainable Humanosphere.
  556. In April, 2005, a regional largest-scale shopping mall (Oh-Street-Hashimoto-Ayanodai) opened in the neighboring Hashimoto City in Wakayama Prefecture.
  557. In April, 2005, the Center for Student Exchange was reorganized into the International Center.
  558. In April, 2006, Associate Professor Yuichi SAWADA proposed the project, and it started as a cooperative one between students and teachers.
  559. In April, 2006, a kosa of 2,015 ?g per cubic meter was observed, causing six domestic flights to be canceled in South Korea.
  560. In April, 2006, the education of Pharmaceutical Sciences was transformed into the six-year system, so the Pharmaceutical Sciences Department of the Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences was reorganized into the six-year system (Department of General Pharmacology was closed) and the Department of Pharmacy (four-year system) was established.
  561. In April, 2007, the Kokoro Research Center, the Advanced Medical Engineering Research Unit, the Career-Path Promotion Unit for Young Life Scientist were established.
  562. In April, 27 B.C., Amenohihoko, the Prince of Silla, visited Japan in order to present sacred treasures.
  563. In April, 739, she was deported to Shimousa no kuni (Shimousa Province) for an adultery she committed with ISONOKAMI no Otomaro.
  564. In April, 777, he received Setto (a sword given from the Emperor to the chief envoy) and departed (he only made it to Dazaifu last year); however, he became very sick near Rajo-mon Gate and gave up the mission and stayed in Settu.
  565. In April, 882, she was decided as Ise Saigu by fortunetelling to replace Imperial Princess Satoko (the princess of Emperor Seiwa) who resigned from Ise Saigu upon the demise of Emperor Seiwa.
  566. In April, 995, Kyoto was plagued by 'akamogasa' (presently know as measles), and court nobles also died one after another.
  567. In April, Empress Koken raised another proposal to select a new Crown Prince.
  568. In April, Ganjin established an ordination platform at Daibutsu-den Hall (the Great Buddha hall) in the Todai-ji Temple, and conferred Bosatsu-kai (Bodhisattva Precepts) on 400 people, including from the retired emperor to priests and nuns.
  569. In April, HIRAMA went to Osaka city with SERIZAWA and KONDO, robbed a merchant house and used the money to order pale yellow striped uniforms.
  570. In April, Hanachirusato sends him a poem and some clothes for seasonal change.
  571. In April, Hisamitsu, was surprised to find out about the radicals movement and ordered them to be killed if they did not settle down or obey Hisamitsu.
  572. In April, Ieyasu issued a recall order so that Kagekatsu would go up to Kyoto to give an explanation for the repair of the castles in his fief, but Kagekatsu refused this order.
  573. In April, Kagetora led his forces to the northern area of Zenkojidaira to take back Zenko-ji Temple.
  574. In April, Masamoto, who was staying in Kyoto, started a coup d'etat and backed Kogen-In Seiko as the 11th shogun (the Meio Coup).
  575. In April, Saigo was appointed to be O-konando-todori (chief of konandoshu, aside of Shogun)/ personal-to-a-person Koban, post (not inherited).
  576. In April, Tsuguji was also arrested and imprisoned on the grounds of forcing contributions in the region around Sahara.
  577. In April, YAMAGATA resigned as vice-minister of Army due to the ongoing internal investigation of the Yamashiroya Incident by Ministry of Justice.
  578. In April, Yoshihisa SHIMAZU visited Taihei-ji Temple to surrender.
  579. In April, Yoshimi ASHIKAGA attempted arbitration.
  580. In April, Yoshimori WADA was heard to prepare for a rebellion.
  581. In April, Yoshimori returned to Kamakura and asked Sanetomo for pardon for his sons and nephew, and although his sons were pardoned, his nephew Tanenaga was not because they maintained that he was the main culprit.
  582. In April, Yoshitsune formed a navy to wipe out the Taira clan who were isolated on Hikoshima Island, Nagato Province, thus starting the Battle of Dannoura.
  583. In April, a war began and the Hojo army counterattacked the Toyotomi army invading from all the directions.
  584. In April, he accompanied Nobunaga on the Koshu Expedition.
  585. In April, he became Gaikokukan Hanji (a magistrate of Foreign Office) and concurrently Tokyo-fu Hanji (a magistrate of Tokyo Prefecture), and was appointed Tsushoshi Sokatsu (the head of Trade Agency).
  586. In April, he became Niwakata-yaku gardener, and he studied under Saiakira, who was the greatest Daimyo of Kaimei Group living, and also he met the great scholar Toko, who was the person that he most wished to meet, and took a lecture about national affairs from him.
  587. In April, he became a general affairs officer at the clan headquarters in Kyoto and intrigued an imperial visit to pray for the expulsion of foreigners.
  588. In April, he became an instructor at Kumamoto prefectural daigo kotogakko.
  589. In April, he died in his summer house in Zushi.
  590. In April, he entered the Meirinkan Domain school, learning swordplay (Yagyu Shinkage-ryu) under grand master Shohei UMAKI, and received a license to teach it.
  591. In April, he graduated from Ichigaya gakko jotoshogakko eighth grade.
  592. In April, he left Russia.
  593. In April, he left Ujina Port in Hiroshima City as the Military Medicine Department Director of the Second Army of the Russo-Japanese War.
  594. In April, he left for the new post in Ehime prefectural Jinjo Matsuyama chugaku through the good offices of Torao SUGA.
  595. In April, he made a fifth trip to Nara, fitting his schedule around the Prince of England's visit to Shosoin.
  596. In April, he moved his registered address to Fukiagecho, Iwanaigun, in Shiribeshi Province, Hokkaido to become a commoner in Hokkaido.
  597. In April, he passed away during his service as Chairman.
  598. In April, he published 'Shosetsu soron' (General theory of the novel).
  599. In April, he published another serial publication called "Senso ni Okeru Seinenkun" (Guidances for the youth at war).
  600. In April, he received an official appointment as Daitaicho Kokoroe (Acting Battalion Chief) of the 11th Infantry Regiment, and departed for the front of Hagi-no-ran War (turmoil of dissatisfied warriors at Hagi).
  601. In April, he released 'Jidai ni ikiyo, Jidai wo koeyo' (Keep up with the times, Be ahead of the times) (essay) and 'Shirahige Bashi' (Shirahige Bridge) (wood-block printing).
  602. In April, he stayed at the Ikaho hot springs in Gunma Prefecture for one month, where he developed the idea for the Mt. Haruna Institute of Industrial Art.
  603. In April, he was appointed to Shosozu (a junior prelate), entering Sogo (Office of Monastic Affairs) (was appointed to Daisozu (the upper Buddhist priests in the second highest position) in 827).
  604. In April, he was concurrently appointed the governor of the inner Court.
  605. In April, he was counseled about increasing the reformation of the domain duties and the military and navy, and after these suggestions were approved, he worked for reformation of domain duties with Komatsu and Katsura.
  606. In April, he was ordered to work at chindai (garrison in Meiji era) in Hiroshima Prefecture as Taijyo (Captain) of Army.
  607. In April, he was raised to lieutenant of the army engineers and appointed staff officer of the First Brigade; however in October, he returned to Tokyo.
  608. In April, his father Shizuo passed away.
  609. In April, his grandfather Kanzan died.
  610. In April, published "Ninin bikuni irozange."
  611. In April, the Iroha was sunk and Ryoma obtained damages from Kishu clan, one of the three top Tokugawa-related families.
  612. In April, the Minister of the Palace held a flower festival at his residence, and approved a marriage between his daughter, Kumoi no Kari, and Yugiri, who had been in love with each other for a long time.
  613. In April, the Taira clan government permitted the Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa to dispatch envoys (Inshi Kurodo, FUJIWARA no Yukitaka) to check the extent of the damage in Nanto.
  614. In April, the forces of Hidenaga TOYOTOMI, who was Hideyoshi's younger brother, joined the Chugoku forces of Terumoto MORI, Hideie UKITA, and Keijun MIYABE who had already arrived at Buzen Kokura, making a 100,000-strong Toyotomi army.
  615. In April, the older prince Oke no miko ("億計王") became the crown prince.
  616. In April, the status of freed slaves was ascertained in Koin no Nenjaku.
  617. In April, the younger students of the same Goju (Satsuma's educational organization) that he had attended arrived on the island as Tsume-yaku, so Saigo's treatment further improved.
  618. In April, they invited Seiko to their residence in Kyoto, and supported him to become the 11th shogun Yoshitaka ASHIKAGA.
  619. In April, three provinces (Tango, Mimasaka and Osumi) were established.
  620. In April, when Fujitsubo (23 years old) took a short leave because of her illness, Genji met her again through the introduction of O no Myobu, a maid of Fujitsubo.
  621. In April, when Iesato TOKUGAWA inherited the head of the Tokugawa family, all of his servants had to stay away from the word 'Suke (助)' and so decided to change his name to 'Munizo'.
  622. In April, when a murder occurred in Kyoto and a disturbance followed, he sent an express messenger to Kamakura to convey a detailed account on May 28.
  623. In April,1887 he was appointed as Infantry Army Major to be Chief of the 5th division in the 2nd office of Ministry of Army, and in January, 1879 moved to the Chief of the 1st division in the 2nd office, and in October, to the Chief of the infantry division in the Personnel Office due to the modification in his position name.
  624. In April,1889 he assumed office as Chief of the 3rd Infantry Regiment for Imperial Guard, in June, Principal of Rikugun Daigakko (the Army War College), then was promoted to Army Major General to be appointed as Chief of the 5th Infantry Brigade.
  625. In Arima-Onsen Hot Springs, which are the oldest in Japan, full-fledged geigi continue to pass on their traditions to young geigi even today.
  626. In Article 20 of "Koshuhatto no shidai" (bunkokuho (the law individual sengoku-daimyo enforced in their own territory) for the Koshu area) enforced by Shingen TAKEDA, it is set forth as "Since the world is in the warring state, give priority to preparation of arms and armors to other matters."
  627. In Article 278 of "Kaiteiritsurei", a criminal code in the beginning Meiji Period, a charge named 'Ichokuzai' was established as an illegal act, but in line with the subsequent constitutional monarch of Emperors, accusing a person of Ichoku itself as a crime ceased.
  628. In Article September 15 of 1190 which describes the MINAMOTO no Yoritomo's visit to Kyoto, Yukinari was listed as the head of bugyonin (magistrates) who supervised various matters including routes to take, money and other miscellaneous things.
  629. In Arufumi (supplement volumes of explanatory notes in Nihonshoki) Vol. 8, all of Hoderi's achievements mentioned in the Kojiki are written as Honosusori no Mikoto's (Hosuseri) accomplishments.
  630. In Arufumi (supplement volumes of explanatory notes in Nihonshoki) of Nihonshoki it is written that he, along with Amenokoyane, was ordered to become a protector of the shrine that enshrines Amaterasu (Ise-jingu Shrine).
  631. In Arufumi Vol. 2 (supplement volumes of explanatory notes in Nihonshoki), just before Izanami's death after giving birth to Kagutsuchi, she produced Haniyama-hime, the god of soil; Wakumusubi was born between Haniyama-hime and Kagutsuchi.
  632. In Asa Village lives the Asa clan, which is said to be descended from the Taira family, and there are a Heike mansion and an akahata (battle flag) that are said to have been used by the Taira family and are several hundred years old.
  633. In Asakuchi City Okayama Prefecture, there is okonomiyaki of bachi (called 'bachioko' following kakioko), where a large amount of bachi (the by-product of hand-stretched fine white noodles of Bicchu) is added to the dough.
  634. In Ashihara no Nakatsukuni heitei, the god worked with Torinoiwakusufune no Kami to gain control of Araburu Kami (malignant gods) in Ashihara no Nakatsukuni (literally, "Central Land of Reed Plains," which refers to the human world), and won a fight with Takeminakata no Kami to conquer Ashihara no Nakatsukuni.
  635. In Ashikaga Shogun Family, doboshu (the shogun's attendants in charge of entertainment) such as the parent and child of Noami, Geiami, and Soami selected the excellent items as connoisseurs of karamono.
  636. In Asia, Buddhist wall paintings were created in stone caves in India and Central Asia, which influenced Buddhist art in China, Korea, and Japan.
  637. In Asia, however, there is still a lot of merchants who sell goods in such manner.
  638. In Atago, Iwata County (present-day Tenryu Ward, Hamamatsu City), Shizuoka Prefecture, such sounds are called 'yamabayashi'.(festival music played by flute, drums and bells in the mountain).
  639. In August (in the old calendar) of 1587, Ieyasu came to Kyoto again, and was conferred to Junii (Junior Second Rank) and Dainagon (chief councilor of state) on August 8, coming to be called Musashi-Dainagon.
  640. In August (or September) 1293, he was designated as senja (compiler) of Chokusenshu (anthology of poems collected by Imperial command) with three others, Tameyo NIJO, Tamekage KYOGOKU, and Takahiro KUJO.
  641. In August (the old calendar), 1614 the Toyotomi family dispatched Katsumoto KATAGIRI to Sunpu for the explanation of a matter of the shomei (inscription on a bell) of Hoko-ji Temple Bell, but Ieyasu did not meet him.
  642. In August 1, the Government army occupied Miyazaki because Satsu-gun lost at Sadowara.
  643. In August 10, 1369, he gave calligraphy to Nichiji.
  644. In August 1023, he was appointed to Chinju-fu shogun (Commander-in-Chief of the Defense of the North).
  645. In August 1025, an Onmyoji (a master of Yin Yang) Tsunemori NAKAHARA almost received punishment for performing Shokon no matsuri on the deceased FUJIWARA no Kishi.
  646. In August 1057, he encountered a surprise raid near Nitoroshi by Tomitada's army; he was seriously wounded by a stray arrow.
  647. In August 1079, he was ordered by the Imperial Court to hunt down and kill Uhyoe no jo (officer of the Right Division of Middle Palace Guards), MINAMOTO no Shigemune (the fourth generation of the Mansei line of the Seiwa branch of the Minamoto clan) for causing the feud with MINAMOTO no Kunifusa in Mino Province.
  648. In August 1155, Yoshikata's nephew MINAMOTO no Yoshihira, who had come down to the Kanto region replacing Yoshitomo, attacked the Okura-yakata and, along with his father-in-law Shigetaka, Yoshikata was killed in the battle of Okura.
  649. In August 1155, she resigned because of the death of Emperor Konoe.
  650. In August 1155, the Emperor Konoe passed away and, because of this, the turning point of Tsunemune's life arrived.
  651. In August 1158, Emperor Goshirakawa passed the throne to Morihito (Emperor Nijo).
  652. In August 1165, when Nijo died, Tokitada was called back (October 27).
  653. In August 1174, he was given the rank of Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank), and after having the genpuku ceremony (a ceremony of attaining manhood), he made Sadako, the sixth daughter of Kiyomori, his lawful wife.
  654. In August 1180 (the old calendar), MINAMOTO no Yoritomo raised his army and killed the governor of Izu Province, Kanetaka YAMAKI.
  655. In August 1180, the Heike clan issued an order to track down and kill Mareyoshi because they felt doubts that Mareyoshi might support his brother, Yoritomo, in response to Yoritomo's uprising against the Heike clan.
  656. In August 1188, assumed the position of Junna Shogaku Ryoin Betto (the betto, or a senior bureaucrat moved from outside, for Junna Shogaku Ryoin school).
  657. In August 1189, Kagetoki and his sons fought in the Battle of Oshu.
  658. In August 1194, he fell ill and entered priesthood, giving himself the Buddhist name, Horen.
  659. In August 1201, Asatsune was appointed as Tosa no kuni no kami (governor) in Tosa Province.
  660. In August 1264, following the 6th Regent Nagatoki HOJO's entrance into the priesthood, Masamura HOJO became the 7th regent, and in August of that year, Tokimune, at the age of 14, assumed the position of rensho (assistant to the regent).
  661. In August 1266, at the age of 3, he became Seii taishogun when Imperial Prince Munetaka was dismissed and sent back to Kyoto.
  662. In August 1284, Sadatoki HOJO, the 14-year-old heir of the family, became the 9th regent while the Hojo clan was making a threatening move in association with TAIRA no Yoritsuna.
  663. In August 1291, he was granted an audience with the shogun Prince Hisaaki by regent Sadatoki HOJO.
  664. In August 1308, he assumed the post of seii taishogun at the age of merely eight.
  665. In August 1331, Emperor Godaigo raised an army on Mt. Kasagi (in the present Kyoto Prefecture), and Masashige KUSUNOKI collaterally raised his army in Kawachi Province, which was the start of the Genko War.
  666. In August 1331, Godaigo's close adviser Sadafusa YOSHIDA informed Rokuhara Tandai of the plan to overthrow the bakufu.
  667. In August 1338, Takatsune finally scored a big success, killing Yoshisada at Tomyoji Nawate (a footpath between rice fields of Tomyo-ji Temple) in Fujishima, Echizen Province.
  668. In August 1338, he departed for Fujishima-jo Castle, in which the monk soldiers of Hiraizumi-dera Temple, that sided with the side of the samurai, were contained themselves, in order to encourage his troops.
  669. In August 1351, Prince Iyahito became Emperor Gokogon after the ceremony of senso (accession to the throne).
  670. In August 1366, suddenly he was ordered to go back to his territory by Shogun Yoshiakira and was toppled (the Joji incident).
  671. In August 1367, Takatsune died of illness inside the castle.
  672. In August 1372, he entered into Nirvana.
  673. In August 1429, Toyota 中坊 and a certain Ido started a duel.
  674. In August 1459, he inherited the Shiba family and assumed shugo of Echizen, Owari, and Totomi.
  675. In August 1466 - dismissed as the head of the three provinces.
  676. In August 1466, Yoshimasa gave him the position as the head of the SHIBA clan and appointed him as the shugo (military governor) of the three provinces: Owari, Totomi and Echizen.
  677. In August 1468 Kaneyoshi went to reside with his son, Jinson, who was a monzeki (head priest of temple formerly led by founder of sect) in Nara Kofuku-ji Temple.
  678. In August 1469, he was appointed to Gon Dainagon (a provisional chief councilor of state).
  679. In August 1478, Hiroaki moved to Kyusyu with Hiromori, his older brother, to fight with the Shoni clan and destroyed them.
  680. In August 1486, his father Yoshinao lost his fief of Obama in Wakasa Province due to the Imperial Court's intervention, and this place was given to Kuninobu TAKEDA, who was the shugo of this province.
  681. In August 1487 Seii Taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians") Yoshihisa ASHIKAGA made up his mind to join with Takayori ROKKAKU's army of conquest but, 2 years later he fell ill and died while on campaign and the conquests were halted.
  682. In August 15, 1255 he passed away in Kita-dono Palace of Dazaifu.
  683. In August 1519, Takakage departed for the front line in Mino Province, where he gave his younger brother Kagetaka control of 3,000 soldiers.
  684. In August 1558, he held out against the assault of Nobuyasu ODA, the deputy governor of four upper districts of Iwari and lord of Iwakura-jo Castle, and in the Battle of Ukino he led the vanguard of Nobunaga's army.
  685. In August 1563, he died suddenly in his residence, Akutagawa-yama Castle.
  686. In August 1563, the heir of Nagayoshi, Yoshioki MIYOSHI died.
  687. In August 1568, Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA, still staying with the Asakura family, gave up on Yoshikage who showed little intention of going to the capital at all, and stayed with Nobunaga.
  688. In August 1568, two years later, the Wakasa-Takeda clan eventually lost its territory due to the invasion by the Asakura clan of Echizen.
  689. In August 1570, the Takeda army carried out a long-waited invasion to Suruga Province yet again.
  690. In August 1571, Terutora shifted his focus to the northern province, battled with the power uprising from the Ikko sect followers of Ecchu Province and usurped Toyama-jo Castle.
  691. In August 1572 Nobunaga attacked Kitaomi leading a large force of 50,000 soldiers.
  692. In August 1587, however, while Ukon TAKAYAMA and the other Christians defied the Anti-Christian Decree issued by Hideyoshi and were subsequently banished as punishment, Yoshitaka led the way in renouncing the faith.
  693. In August 1590, Ieyasu TOKUGAWA who was transferred to Kanto, entered the Edo-jo Castle.
  694. In August 1609, when adulteries of Kugeshu (court nobles) such as Sangi (Councilor) Mitsuhiro KARASUMARU were discovered (the Inokuma Incident), Noritoshi, who had been helping their promiscuities, was afraid of being prosecuted by Kyoto Shoshidai (The Kyoto deputy) and ran away to Kyushu region.
  695. In August 1621, Nagamori OKABE came to the domain from the Kameyama Domain in Tanba Province with 50,000 koku, but he was transferred to the Ogaki Domain in Mino Province in September 1624.
  696. In August 1636, he was allowed the use of the family name "Tokugawa."
  697. In August 1636, the Edo bakufu issued a shipwreck control ordinance in order to prevent crew members of the wrecked ship from stealing the ship's cargo, because they often conspired with the port workers, lying that they had to throw the cargo into the sea because of the shipwreck.
  698. In August 1642, he became a daimyo of 25,000 koku in the Tanaka Domain, Suruga Province.
  699. In August 1650, his father Yoshikatsu passed away whereupon he inherited the 1,500 koku family estate and Karo (chief retainers) role.
  700. In August 1661, he became a "shiromochi" (literally, a castle holder) when he was made Lord of Tatebayashi Domain in Kozuke Province.
  701. In August 1662, his foster father Imperial Prince Toshitada passed away and he succeeded to the Miyake (house of the imperial prince).
  702. In August 1670, he went over to Osaka to attend a saie (a Buddhist mass where meals are served to priests) held at Kyuto-in Temple, but on August 23, a storm hit the area.
  703. In August 1681, he received an additional 10,000 koku in Kawachi Province.
  704. In August 1693, he assumed the position of Udaijin (Minister of the Right), then Sadaijin (Minister of the Left) in February 1704.
  705. In August 1724 and April 1739, the system was improved through revisions of tashidaka.
  706. In August 1760, she was promoted to the title "Jusani" (the Junior Third Rank); In September of the same year, her husband, Ieharu was appointed as Seii Taishogun (literally, "great General who subdues the barbarians").
  707. In August 1832, Shigeyori NABESHIMA, the lord of Takeo, retired and Shigeyoshi became the 28th lord of Takeo.
  708. In August 1848, he became a disciple of Shorenin-no-miya.
  709. In August 1856, han bills guaranteed by Tawaraya and Okawaya, and by Handaya and Sakaeya were also issued.
  710. In August 1862, he bacame head of the family when his father, Sutejiro, retired.
  711. In August 1864, he returned to the group and participated in Kinmon Incident.
  712. In August 1866 he returned to Edo as Iemochi passed away at Osaka-jo Castle.
  713. In August 1866, when four fleets including the Dingyuan of the Qing North Sea Fleet arrived in port in Nagasaki, sailors that landed entered into conflict with the Japanese police force, resulting in deaths on both sides (two deaths on the Japanese side and six deaths on the Qing side) (Nagasaki incident)
  714. In August 1869, the post of Gijo was abolished and Sanetomi SANJO was transferred to Udaijin (Minister of the right) and Sanetsune, together with Tomomi IWAKURA, was transferred from Gijo to Dainagon (Chief councilor of state).
  715. In August 1870, YAMAGATA returned home.
  716. In August 1870, YOKOYAMA directly appealed at the gate of Shugiin (a legislative body in the early Meiji period) building with a list of 10 items describing the corrupt practices of those days; after this incident, he committed seppuku (suicide by disembowelment) and died in front of the residence of Tsugaru Domain.
  717. In August 1870, the former head of the Shonai Clan Tadazumi SAKAI sent Moritaka INUZUKA and Korekazu NAGASAWA to Kagoshima to deliver letters to the former head of the Satsuma Clan Tadayoshi SHIMAZU and Saigo.
  718. In August 1871
  719. In August 1872, he enrolled Shihosho Hogakko (a law school later absorbed into Tokyo University) as its inaugural student and studied under Gustave Emile BOISSONADE.
  720. In August 1872, he suggested to Saigo that Shigenobu OKUMA from Hizen should become sangi to help Saigo, who was not an expert politician.
  721. In August 1875, Sakata Prefecture became Tsuruoka Prefecture and in the next year Tsuruoka Prefecture merged with Yamagata Prefecture and Okitama Prefecture to become Yamagata Prefecture.
  722. In August 1882 he published an article entitled 'Rebuttal against Mr. Fukuzawa's Thesis on Christianity' in the journal "Rikugo-zasshi" (Cosmos).
  723. In August 1882, Daewongun was taken to Qing, and was confined in Tianjin City after a hearing by Li Hongzhang.
  724. In August 1883, he went on to Tsu Junior High School in Mie Prefecture (present Tsu High School of Mie Prefecture).
  725. In August 1886 he published the political novel 'Setchubai.'
  726. In August 1886, he get baptized by Hiromichi KOZAKI.
  727. In August 1891, Juntaro was awarded the degree of Doctor of Medicine.
  728. In August 1891, he was conferred Juichii with a special consideration because his disease became worse.
  729. In August 1895, he received Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun, the 2nd grade Order of the Golden Pheasant, and was given Viscount.
  730. In August 1896, he left the position of the Japanese minister in Russia.
  731. In August 1900, Tekkan, on a trip to the Kansai area, met Akiko and found that they had much in common.
  732. In August 1900, he suffered a massive lung hemorrhage.
  733. In August 1901, he became ill and he was ordered to take sick leave by Tadaaki HIOKI, (Karo [chief retainer]) and Takenori TAKEDA (Bangashira)
  734. In August 1902 as a part of the activities of the religious organization, he went to India to explore Central Asia and excavate Buddhist remains.
  735. In August 1905, the Dai Nippon Butoku Kai set up the Bujutsu Kyoin Yoseisho (Training Institute for Martial Arts' Teachers) in Kyoto.
  736. In August 1911, Soseki relapsed into gastric ulcer immediately after a lecture in Kansai, and was hospitalized at the Osaka Gastrointestinal Hospital in Osaka (in 1932, Hideki YUKAWA was adopted as husband for the daughter of the family running the hospital, and in 1950, the hospital was renamed Yukawa Gastrointestinal Hospital.)
  737. In August 1911, Sumitomo Densen Seizogyo (Sumitomo cable manufacturing business) was separated and Sumitomo Densen Seizosho (Sumitomo cable manufacturing company) was established.
  738. In August 1912, he published "Chihiro HATORI" which was the first novel written in his original style to describe the real life of a real person based on historical resources.
  739. In August 1915, he was incorporated in Yakushu (different roles), and in April 1920, retired.
  740. In August 1917, at the time of 50th Ceremony of Boshin War martyrs, it started raining in the middle of the ceremony.
  741. In August 1921, 'Shochiku Cinema Laboratory' was dissolved and Murata took the responsibility for weighing on Shochiku's financial position because he spared no expense for production costs, and resigned from the company.
  742. In August 1923, he established the Kabushiki kaisha Sumitomo Building.
  743. In August 1929, "Inpu (collection of impressions of seals) of Prince Taruhito" was edited and published by the Takamatsu no Miya Family.
  744. In August 1932, an internal battle was caused by Director Sadayori NAKATANI, who attempted to get rid of Tsunehisa IKENAGA known as a popular manager and his group of people to grab the power in the company.
  745. In August 1945, there were 42 municipalities (1 city, 12 towns, 29 villages) and 10 counties in Karafuto-Cho.
  746. In August 1953, 'Textbook of Archery, Volume 1' was published to alleviate the confusion in shooting forms that had occurred after the war, as well as to clarify the fundamental principles of Kyudo.
  747. In August 1954, both of them went on a Hokkaido tour with a troupe of actors.
  748. In August 1958, Nizaemon KATAOKA XIII held a "Shichinin no Kai" in Osaka Mainichi Hall.
  749. In August 1963, Takeuchi contained the full text of 'Datsu-A Ron' in 'Asia Shugi no Tenbo' (Foresight of Asianism), a commentary in "Asia Shugi" (Asianism) (Gendai-Nihon Shiso Taikei Vol.9 [The survey of current Japanese ideas], published by Chikuma Shobo).
  750. In August 1971, Nikkatsu split from Dainichi Eihai.
  751. In August 2, 1594, she was born in the Jurakudai mansion in Kyoto.
  752. In August 2005, the Communist government of West Bengal announced a plan to completely bar jinrikisha, resulting in protests and strikes by the rickshaw wallahs.
  753. In August 2007 it was cancelled due to equine influenza.
  754. In August 2007, he gave a kabuki-style speech at the opening ceremony of the IAAF World Championship of Athletics.
  755. In August 2007, its total area was 191,940,000 square meters.
  756. In August 2007, she held a one-person kamikiri exhibition titled 'Toga' (Cutting Works' Elegance) under the name of Chiaki (in Chinese characters, written as "千亜紀").
  757. In August 23, 1766, he became omemie (a vassal with the privilege of having an audience with the shogun).
  758. In August 24, Prince Otomo committed a suicide, and in August 25, Akae was arrested.
  759. In August 25, 1886, he entered the Military Academy (Japan) as a preparatory student, and in September of the following year, he was appointed official in charge of clothing and provision for his excellent results in academic subjects.
  760. In August 26, Akae was exiled with his descendants.
  761. In August 285 in old calendar, the Emperor said to Hegurinotsuku no sukune and Ikuhanotoda no sukune, 'Go to Kaya and rescue Sotsuhiko because I'm sure that Silla disturbs his return,' and dispatched soldiers to Kaya.
  762. In August 30, 704, a quarter of the 40 fuko was handed over to his son Mui no Obitona.
  763. In August 587, Umako sent large forces composed of Princes and clans and killed Moriya.
  764. In August 6, 1317 (June 21, 1317 in the old lunar calendar), he was raised to juichii (Junior First Rank).
  765. In August 632, So MIN returned to Japan accompanying the first Kentoshi INUGAMI no Mitasuki.
  766. In August 660, when King Uija of Baekje surrendered to the Tang Dynasty and thus the Baekje kingdom fell, Kokushi and his troops surrendered to the Tang General of the Left Military Guard, So Teiho.
  767. In August 695, he was appointed a Japanese envoy to Shilla and sailed for Shilla.
  768. In August 716, he was Senior Sixth Rank, Lower Grade and was appointed as an assistant of Japanese envoy to Tang Dynasty China.
  769. In August 752, he became Shokyoshi for Hossho sect section of Todai-ji Temple, and then Ina (priest in charge of personnel affairs in a temple) and finally Daihoshi (the highest rank of priest).
  770. In August 754, he served as Shojishu (assistant manager of a temple).
  771. In August 760, Roben, together with Jikun and Hoshin, presented to the Emperor a petition for reforms of bonze ranks to clean up the Buddhism realm.
  772. In August 762, Kusumaro served in Chuguin Palace (the residence of Emperor Junnin) and issued an imperial order.
  773. In August 8, 1892, he was appointed Ministry of Communication of the second ITO Cabinet.
  774. In August 804, when Emperor Kanmu went to Izumi no kuni (Izumi Province), Kunimaro accompanied as the Deputy-Director of the imperial procession.
  775. In August 815 she attained the position of Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and was promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) in January 850 in the era of Emperor Ninmyo.
  776. In August 850, Imperial Princess Anshi was selected by divination as Saigu in the reign of her father.
  777. In August 903 when SUGAWARA no Michizane died, it was recorded that "Kotaifujin (the title for the wife of a retired emperor) FUJIWARA no Onshi moved to Higashi shichijo no Miya.
  778. In August 985 he was given the orders of the priesthood by Kancho Dai-sojo (the head priest of a Buddhist sect), and became a priest, whereupon he lived at Enyu-ji Temple.
  779. In August Noriyori was ordered to march to the Kyushu region.
  780. In August Yoshiaki was expelled and the shogunate collapsed.
  781. In August and October 1562, Terutora departed for the front in Ecchu Province, and forced Nagamoto JINBO who was oppressing Yasutane SHIINA to surrender.
  782. In August and September 1008, his mother, Princess Soshi, died, and Imperial Prince Tomohira died next year as if he followed his mother.
  783. In August and September of 1597, there was an attack by the Korean army led by Won Gyun; the Japanese army responded it by devastating the Korean army in the naval Battle of Chilcheollyang, and beginning to attack mainly the area between Jeolla-do and Chungchong-do from September.
  784. In August and September, Zu Chengxun of Ming, the Vice Commander of Liaodong, who had answered Korea's request for help, dispatched reinforcements without waiting for orders from Beijing.
  785. In August he reassumed the post of Director of the Administrative Board of the Kamakura bakufu.
  786. In August in 1561, she married Tokichiro KINOSHITA (Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI), a vassal of Nobunaga ODA over the opposition of her birth mother, Asahi (a different person from Hideyoshi's sister, Asahi-hime with the same name) at the age of 14 (according to generally-accepted belief).
  787. In August in fall, a Buddhist memorial service for the first anniversary of Uji Hachi no miya (the Eighth Prince) was performed, and Kaoru took care of various things.
  788. In August in the next year (2004), the word "emergency" was changed into "long-term" and a long-term conservation committee for the mural paintings of Takamatsuzuka tumulus was founded.
  789. In August in the same year, Tokimasa and Maki no kata attempted to uncrown Sanetomo, and back up Tomomasa HIRAGA as a new shogun.
  790. In August in the same year, they founded a warship school within Tsukiji kobusho, together with `kanko maru.'
  791. In August of 1516, Tomooki OGIGAYATSU-UESUGI attacked Tamanawa-jo Castle in support of the Miura clan but Soun crushed the assault and attacked Misaki-jo Castle, where Yoshiatsu and Yoshioki were hiding.
  792. In August of 1526, Takakuni murdered Motomori KOZAI due to false charges made by the shugo of Tanba Province, Tadakata HOSOKAWA.
  793. In August of 1615 he parceled out 10,000 koku each to his 4th son Nagamasa and his 5th son Naonaga, and kept 10,000 koku for his own retirement.
  794. In August of 1774 (in old lunar calendar), they finally published "Kaitai Shinsho", and Junan's name was written as a proofreader as well.
  795. In August of 1862 rotating Nijo Zaiban assignment was abolished and a regular guard (Nijo Teiban) was established in its place.
  796. In August of 1914, Tsubono once again resigned from his post as the headmaster due to his illness.
  797. In August of 1924, in two years after it, Shunkai BUNDO, who was a high-caliber disciple of Shundo NISHIKAWA (who died in 1915), achieved an accomplishment of establishing "the Nihon Shodo Sakushin-kai association," organizing almost all of the calligraphers at that time.
  798. In August of 1981, the problem of road usage licensing was reignited; Fukuoka City decided to resume the discussion on the basic 'recognition problem' of street stalls.
  799. In August of autumn, Rensho visits Sumanoura Bay in Settsu Province for the purpose of offering prayers to the Buddha of TAIRA no Atsumori whom he had killed in the Battle of Ichinotani.
  800. In August of that same year, Yoshikane gathered an army again and rushed to Kokai no Watashi on the border of Shimousa and Hitachi Provinces.
  801. In August of that same year, an imperial decree was given to promote Nobunaga in official rank, but he firmly declined, and instead, asked for investiture of his group of servants, which was accepted by the Imperial Court.
  802. In August of that year, Go-Toba-in started making poems for Shoji Godo Hyakushu Waka.
  803. In August of that year, under Katsumoto HOSOKAWA, he engaged in mortal combat with Yoshinari HATAKEYAMA near Shokoku-ji Temple in Kyoto.
  804. In August of the following year, he played the role of Musashibo Benkei in "Kanjincho" at Tokyo-gekijo Theatre as well as the role Kanemitsu HIGUCHI in the Sakaro scene of "Hirakana Seisuiki," and inherited the name Koshiro MATSUMOTO VIII.
  805. In August of the following year, he was promoted to the Kampaku (chief adviser to the Emperor) of Emperor Nijo, and Toshi choja (chieftain of the Fujiwara family) as young as at the age of sixteen.
  806. In August of the next year, 1205, Makishi Incident occurred from the quarrel between Tomomasa and Shigeyasu HATAKEYAMA, and Tokimasa HOJO, Tomomasa's father-in-law, was expelled from the bakufu.
  807. In August of the old lunar calendar (around July in the modern calendar), old rice from the previous year's harvest was brewed.
  808. In August of the same year (697), his grandmother, Empress Jito, decided to pass the emperorship to him, and Karu thus became Emperor Monmu.
  809. In August of the same year the Retired Emperor Gouda died.
  810. In August of the same year, Amida-do was built first, and the following August 御影堂 of about 18 square meters was built.
  811. In August of the same year, Daigaku ASANO was set free and became a hatamoto once again after receiving 500 koku and joined a council.
  812. In August of the same year, Kennyo moved from the Sagimori Annex of the Hongan-ji Temple to the Gansen-ji Temple (Kaizuka City).
  813. In August of the same year, Mibu Roshi-gumi was dispatched to subdue the Political Turmoil of August 18th, and was recognized for their efforts.
  814. In August of the same year, Saiga shu consisting of warriors of Saigaso and Jikkago rose an army and began to retaliate against the three groups who previously sided with Nobunaga.
  815. In August of the same year, Umako allowed Prince Hatsusebe to succeed to the throne as Emperor Sushun.
  816. In August of the same year, Yoshinori ordered the reconstruction of the burned Konponchudo Hall, and completed it within a few years with contributions from all over the country.
  817. In August of the same year, a coalition force of the Nichiren sect and Sadayori ROKKAKU of Omi burned down Yamashina Hongwan-ji Temple.
  818. In August of the same year, accompanied by Katsumoto, he went over to Sunpu (where Ieyasu's castle was located) to make excuses only to be blamed by priests of the (Kyoto) Five Zen Monasteries for having been there.
  819. In August of the same year, during the funeral for Cloistered Emperor Toba, Narichika was chosen along with FUJIWARA no Shinzei to place the emperor's body in his coffin.
  820. In August of the same year, four sets of train series 205, marked with a sky-blue band on each car body, were deployed at Akashi Depot.
  821. In August of the same year, grieving over his wife's death of illness, Shigenari entered into priesthood and gave himself homyo (a posthumous Buddhist name used in the Shin sect) of Dozen.
  822. In August of the same year, he moved from place to place to fight, heading to Geishukuchi as a commander of the Mitate party, winning many battles.
  823. In August of the same year, he was assigned to the assistant director of Hokkaido Development Commission and was continuously in charge of the governance of Ezo.
  824. In August of the same year, he was assigned to the first Daitaicho (Battalion Chief) of the 34th Infantry Regiment, and led the attack on Shuzanpo.
  825. In August of the same year, he was assigned to 宮内権大丞, but he retired in November 1869 and passed over the family estate to Nobuyoshi.
  826. In August of the same year, he was conferred a peerage of viscount.
  827. In August of the same year, he was promoted to Shogoinojo (Senior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade).
  828. In August of the same year, he was raised to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, lower grade), and in September he again reported twenty-nine issues of disease spread among common people.
  829. In August of the same year, he was sentenced to imprisonment and fine for criticizing the Shinbunshi Jorei (Press Ordinance) and 'Zamboritsu' (Libel Law), designed to oppress 'Jiyu Minken Undo' (Movement for Liberty and People's Rights).
  830. In August of the same year, in response to a recommendation of his disciple Toyojo MATSUNE, Soseki moved to Shuzenji in Izu Province to recuperate.
  831. In August of the same year, the Emperor Keitai appointed MONONOBE no Arakahi as a shogun and sent him to Chikushi.
  832. In August of the same year, the Southern Court including Tadakuni invaded Izaku to fight against the Northern Court let by Hisanaga SHIMAZU of the Izaku family, but it was indecisive.
  833. In August of the same year, the bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) opened Nagasaki Kaigun Denshu-sho (Japanese Naval School in Edo) and 48 feudal retainers of the Saga clan including Tsunetami attended as members of the inaugural class.
  834. In August of the same year, when Kyonyo of Hongan-ji Temple retreated, Nobutaka greeted Nobunaga in the capital to make a vow with him.
  835. In August of the same year, while Akisada was in Echigo, Soun attacked Tomoyoshi OGIGAYATSU-UESUGI's base, Edo-jo Castle.
  836. In August of the year, Yoritomo raised an army to kill the Oshu-Fujiwara clan (The Battle of Oshu).
  837. In August of the year, a couple of Tomoko MAKINO and Kunitaro SAWAMURA and director Eisuke TAKIZAWA (Ken TAKIZAWA) etc. resigned from the company and joined Tokatsu Eiga-sha Flim Company.
  838. In August or September of that year, Murata went to Yamaguchi together with Kiyotaka KURODA and saw Takachika MORI, a feudal lord of the Choshu clan, and on September 7, after seeing Kuroda off, Murata left Nagasaki on a ship to Shanghai City with Hirobumi ITO and went back to his domain after his return home.
  839. In August the alliance installed to its head Cloistered Imperial Prince Rinojinomiya Kogen, (later Imperial Prince Kitashirakawanomiya Yoshihisa) who had escaped from the Ueno War.
  840. In August the next year, Kuninao's old retainers made a request to the Ministry of Home Affairs to found Aso-jinja Shrine (the future Tobetsu-jinja Shrine), thereby enshrining Kuninao.
  841. In August the same year, Yoritomo started off Kamakura with a large army to subjugate the Oshu-Fujiwara clan.
  842. In August, 1158, Kiyomori's chigyokoku (provincial fiefdom) changed from Aki Province to Totomi Province.
  843. In August, 1180, Hirotsune raised an army to defeat the Heike and wiped out the Heike's party in Kazusa Province when MINAMOTO no Yoritomo had attempted to re-raise an army in Awa Province after losing the Battle of Ishibashiyama and joined forces with Yoritomo's force and his 20,000 horse soldiers.
  844. In August, 1180, MINAMOTO no Yoritomo who had raised an army against the Taira clan was defeated by the Taira side, including Kagechika OBA, in the Battle of Ishibashiyama and fled to Awa Province.
  845. In August, 1184, he took part in a campaign to hunt down and kill the Heike family.
  846. In August, 1189, he took part in the Battle of Oshu.
  847. In August, 1504 (the next year), Kagefusa led his army to Tsuboe in Echizen Province and challenged Sadakage to fight the decisive battle, however he lost and ran away to Noto Province.
  848. In August, 1531, Yoshinobu started to suppress KIZAWA, which was joined even by Motonaga MIYOSHI.
  849. In August, 1550, Harunobu invaded the territory of Ogasawara.
  850. In August, 1573, the vassals of the Oda family received a reprimand from Nobunaga since they did not follow the army of Yosikage ASAKURA escaping from the battlefield.
  851. In August, 1580, he received a letter of chastisement from Nobunaga consisting of 19 articles, and was banished to Mt. Koya along with his legitimate son Nobuhide SAKUMA.
  852. In August, 1599, Kagekatsu UESUGI returned to the Aizu Wakamatsu-jo Castle in his territory.
  853. In August, 1626, he went to Kyoto with Iemitsu TOKUGAWA, the third shogun, and on October 9, he was appointed Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and Jiju (chamberlain).
  854. In August, 1859, the government gave a secret Imperial decree to Mito Domain (who had been carrying out covert action against the Imperial Court), and at roughly the same time the chief adviser to the Emperor, Hisataka KUJO who was a government sympathizer was forced to resign his position.
  855. In August, 1860, he became an adopted child of Emperor Komei and in November of the same year, he was given the title of Imperial Prince.
  856. In August, 1862, a plan on the expansion of kaigun (Navy) to increase the number of warship to 370 and to increase the number of crewman to 61,205 was suggested, however, it was never adopted.
  857. In August, 1864, a fire which had started at the time of the Kinmon incident (known as don-don-yake) rapidly spread all around Kyoto.
  858. In August, 1869, Kyobusho (the Ministry of Religion) issued an ordinance for Jingu Shrine and other Kankoku Heisha (a general term for high-ranked shrines under direct control of the central government) to designate places to dismount a horse or to alight from a palanquin in their precincts when Imperial families would visit there.
  859. In August, 1871, he was dismissed from office due to Haihan-chiken (abolition of feudal domains and establishment of prefectures).
  860. In August, 1872, the ordinance of the school educational system was proclaimed, and Kaiseijo was transformed into First Junior High School of Fourth University Section.
  861. In August, 1878, construction of the Osakayama Tunnel between Kyoto and Otsu started with Toshinori IIDA as the general director.
  862. In August, 1878, he proposed a foundation of Kyoto Prefectural School of Painting to Masanao MAKIMURA, the governor of Kyoto Prefecture, with Bairei KONO and others.
  863. In August, 1892, entertainment shows under the name of "Karukuchi" performed by a duo of Umedanji KATSURA (the first generation) and Gantoku KATSURAYA gained stories of rakugo repertoire.
  864. In August, 1894
  865. In August, 1895 he received the title of baron to rank with peerage for his achievement, and received the Order of the Golden Kite in the 3rd class.
  866. In August, 1908 he was raised to Army General, but died in December of the same year.
  867. In August, 1915, he studied Japanese style painting under the Japanese painter Gyokuho NIWA (a disciple of the Gyokudo KAWAI).
  868. In August, 1924, before his death, Senzaburo wrote his last work, "Koheiji, who is alive," on "Engeki-shincho" (Bungeishunju Ltd.), which is recognized as his defining work, and also as a masterpiece in the history of modern plays.
  869. In August, 1939, the Institute for Research of Humanities was established.
  870. In August, 1945, the Japanese government accepted the Potsdam Declaration, and World War II was over.
  871. In August, 1948, due to the foundation of the government of the Republic of Korea, the building of the former Sotoku-fu was used as a government building and called the Central office.
  872. In August, 1977, Emperor Showa made the following speech during the press conference held at the Imperial villa in Nasu:
  873. In August, 1998, 'Nara Kaido Machizukuri Kenkyukai' (Nara-kaido Road Community-Planning Society) was established, and its members have operated under the catchphrase of 'the town full of joy', 'the nostalgic town', and 'the town that people wish to come again' (Kitamachi).
  874. In August, 23 B.C., NOMI no Sukune kicked TAIMA no Kehaya to death in a sumo wrestling match (this match is regarded as the origin of Sumai no sechie (the imperial ceremony of sumo wrestling)).
  875. In August, 416, Tamada no sukune (grandson of KATSURAGI no Sotsuhiko) turned out to be rebellious, and the Emperor punished him by death.
  876. In August, 676 (in old lunar calendar), OMIWA no Makamuda no Kobito no Kimi died.
  877. In August, 686, he and his mother were entrusted with the sovereign right from Emperor Temmu who were seriously ill, after that Emperor Temmu demised in September.
  878. In August, 71, he ascended the throne and appointed Harima no inabi no ooiratsume to the Empress the next year.
  879. In August, 770, he was appointed to Ise-no-kuni no Kami (Governor of Ise Province) and raised to Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) in October.
  880. In August, 97, Kumaso disobeyed the Emperor again.
  881. In August, Emperor Enyu kept his promise and let Imperial Prince Morosada ascend the throne (Emperor Kazan), and then, he appointed Imperial Prince Yasuhito Crown Prince.
  882. In August, Emperor Godaigo plotted overthrowing the Shogunate again and hid in Mt. Kasagi.
  883. In August, Iwarehikono Mikoto called Eukashi and Otokashi who ruled the land of Uda.
  884. In August, MINAMOTO no Yoritomo raised an army in Izu Province and defeated TAIRA no Koremori's army by search-and-destroy tactics in the Battle of Fujigawa and brought Kanto under his control.
  885. In August, Munemori was appointed to the position of councillor, getting ahead of Yorimori, Munemori's uncle with higher orders, and secured a position next to Shigemori in the family.
  886. In August, Murashige ARAKI who joined the Battle of Miki belonging to the troops of Hideyoshi HASHIBA, suddenly left the front line and returned to his residential castle, Arioka-jo Castle (also called Itami-jo Castle).
  887. In August, Nobunaga issued an order to ban Ikko sect to his vassals which strained the relationship, but peace was made at the mediation of Shingen TAKEDA.
  888. In August, Nobunaga, issuing a large-scale mobilization order, besieged Nagashima by land and by sea and blockaded their supply lines to starve the enemy out while making sporadic attacks.
  889. In August, Noriyori lead a great army to proceed toward Kyushu over the Sanyodo Road.
  890. In August, Norizane left Kamakura to go back to his territory in Kozuke Province.
  891. In August, Norizane vanished from Kamakura and went down to Hirai-jo Castle in his territory, Kozuke Province.
  892. In August, Ogasawara was informed that the Shogun Iemochi TOKUGAWA had died, and taking this opportunity, he withdrew from the battle.
  893. In August, Shigemori died at the age of 42.
  894. In August, Sumitomo organized some troops and headed towards the Iyo and Sanuki Provinces with 400 boats.
  895. In August, Tadakata HOSOKAWA was killed by Nagamasa KIZAWA.
  896. In August, Tadamitsu NAKAYAMA returned to Kyoto; however, he was ordered to be confined to his own house and also the position of chamberlain was forfeited.
  897. In August, Terutora led his forces to Kawanakajima to prevent Shingen's forces from invading Hida Province.
  898. In August, Yorinaga had his aides; Confucian scholars, suggest the first name of his adopted daughter; the name containing kanji character `多' was agreed to by many aides ("Taiki Bekki").
  899. In August, Yoshikage attacked Yokoyama-jo Castle and Minoura-jo Castle in the territory of the Oda clan in cooperation with Nagamasa AZAI; however, on the contrary, their military depot was threatened by Nobunaga and they retreated.
  900. In August, Yoshikiyo MURAKAMI abandoned the castle and fled to Echigo Province.
  901. In August, a general INUKAI no Ikimi, who was supporting Otomo no Miko (Prince Otomo who has been called Emperor Kobun since the Meiji era), gave IOI no Kujira two hundreds selected soldiers to attack Fukei's main camp at Naka-tsu-michi Road (Naka-no-michi Road), one of the old roads of Yamato Province.
  902. In August, as soon as Empress Kogyoku prayed for rain by bowing to all directions along the river in Minamibuchi, thunder started rumbling and it kept raining for five days.
  903. In August, family registers were created and vagrants were regulated.
  904. In August, he also was put in charge of compilation of "Engi Kyakushiki."
  905. In August, he and Katsumasa IKEDA dealt Tomomichi IWANARI a crushing defeat at the Battle of Yodo Castle in Yamashiro, and went on to fight a number of battles in the Kinai area as a general under Nobunaga.
  906. In August, he became the Military Medicine Department Director of the Military Bureau in Taiwan Sotoku-fu.
  907. In August, he built a home (Kanchoro House) to take refuge from his dispute on medical science and literature.
  908. In August, he defeated Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA who was barricaded at Nijo-jo Castle or Makishima-jo Castle and exiled him from Kyoto.
  909. In August, he entered the Nagoya domain school.
  910. In August, he fought to quell the Tokusei Ikki (riot) of Kakitsu at Kiyomizu-zaka Slope.
  911. In August, he left Yokohama Port.
  912. In August, he lost his second wife, Yoshiko (33 years old).
  913. In August, he married for the second time to 志野りう.
  914. In August, he published 'Foam on the Waves' in "Shigarami Soshi" (Constraint Brochure).
  915. In August, he published 'Omokage' (Vestiges), a book of songs, in "Kokumin no tomo" (The Nation's Friend).
  916. In August, he relapsed into gastric ulcer after a lecture in Kansai, and was hospitalized in Osaka.
  917. In August, he reported in the Tokyo Yokohama Mainichi Shinbun that a bill for the sale of property belonging to the Hokkaido Development Agency was approved.
  918. In August, he returned to Kyoto City and reported the situation of Edo to Kuranosuke OISHI.
  919. In August, he started to serve at the Cabinet Official Gazette Bureau.
  920. In August, he tried to form the Dainihon Party centered on the Shakai-taishu Party with Hisashi ASO as the chief clerk, but abandoned the plan, judging that it was premature.
  921. In August, he was appointed as Rokuhara Tandai Kitakata (Northern Chief of Rokuhara Tandai).
  922. In August, he was assigned as Army Major General attending Hyobusho (ministry of the military), dismissed from Hyobu taijo (Senior Secretary of the Ministry of War), for reasons unclear.
  923. In August, he was awarded the degree of Doctor (medical science).
  924. In August, he went to Edo to bring a secret Imperial command of Emperor Komei to the domain of Mito and the domain of Owari, which was entrusted to the Konoe Family, but he was unable to do so and returned to Kyoto.
  925. In August, his second son, Fritz, was born.
  926. In August, on receiving the news of Hideyori's birth, Hideyoshi went back to Osaka.
  927. In August, one after another band of the Ifu came to the castle town of Akita-jo Castle and surrendered.
  928. In August, selection of Ritsuryo was completed.
  929. In August, she was invited to in a garden party held by the President of the time Emile Loubet in his official residence and danced 'Dojo-ji.'
  930. In August, somebody informed that the fire of the Otenmon Gate was caused by Yoshio and his son Nakatsune, and Yoshio denied his involvement in the case despite being tortured.
  931. In August, the Choshu clan lost a battle in the Kinmon Incident and became an enemy of the Emperor.
  932. In August, the Incident of gunfire at Shimonoseki of the four countries' combined fleet occurred.
  933. In August, the Kokushikan (Kobun-in) was built in the Hayashi's premise as the editorial office funded by the shogunate to proceed the full-scale project.
  934. In August, the Sino-Japanese War broke out.
  935. In August, the army of Ming from Liaodong headed by Zu Chengxun, sent as reinforcements made an assault on Pyongyang at the forefront.
  936. In August, the first Japan-Korea Treaty was concluded, recommending Tanetaro MEGATA for the financial advisor, and Durham Stevens for the foreign affairs advisor.
  937. In August, the roto (retainer) of Tadatsune who infiltrated Kyoto was captured.
  938. In August, the same year, Masatora started moving his forces in Echigo Province.
  939. In August, the student center of Kyoto University made a proposal to the executives of Yoshida dormitory saying 'as we will be able to secure the budget for the improvement of students' facilities, why don't you request the budget for reconstructing Yoshida dormitory?'
  940. In August,1906 she disbanded Hanako Troupe.
  941. In Australia that especially focuses on epidemic prevention, Australian Quarantine and Inspection Service prohibits bringing eggs and egg products into the country.
  942. In Australia there is a restaurant chain Sushi Train.
  943. In Australia, green tea has been highlighted as well because of a fitness boom.
  944. In Australia, occasionally onigiri is treated as a fast-food menu.
  945. In Autumn 2007, she appeared as a Tayu instructor in a TV drama called "Wachigaiya Itosato," broadcast on the TBS network.
  946. In Autumn, 2005, "Grandelfino" was founded as a team for producing a student formula car by like-minded people in KIT, gathered by its car club members,
  947. In Autumn, Genji's fortieth birthday ceremony is carried out with great splendor.
  948. In Autumn, he began to show the first signs of renal disease such as swollen feet.
  949. In Ayukawahama, Oshika Town, (present Ishinomaki City), Miyagi prefecture, used as a modern whaling base from the Meiji period, Geihi production flourished as a local industry.
  950. In Ayukawahama, sperm whales not fit for eating were caught mostly.
  951. In Azores in Portugal there is alfenim, which is considered to be the word origin of aruheito and has a common production technique.
  952. In Azuchi-Momoyama Period, Nobunaga ODA is known as a devotee of falconry.
  953. In Azuchi-Momoyama period and Edo period, the control of local areas was divided by daimyos of various sizes, feudal lords equivalent to daimyos and direct control of Edo shogunate.
  954. In B.C 92, the Emperor Suinin ordered Princess Numakiiribe to worship 'Yamato no Ookuni Tamanokami (a Japanese God appearing in Japanese Mythology).'
  955. In B.C. 45, Julius Caesar introduced the Julian calendar (which had no intercalary year) and, similar to the Gregorian calendar, January 1st became New Year's Day (the first day of the new year).
  956. In Babylonia, the forward, backward, left, right, and upward directions were assigned to each side of the figure, representing Jupiter, Mercury, Mars, Saturn, and Venus for the upward, which was believed to represent the appearance of the mother goddess, Ishtar.
  957. In Baekje, prohibition of killing animals in 599 (prohibiting hunting and hawk-breeding, ordering fishermen to burn up fishing nets).
  958. In Baekje, which became an ally of Wa, the King Chinryu invited a high priest Marananta from the Eastern Jin in 384, which was a little later than the spread to Koguryo.
  959. In Bakumatsu, Genzui KUSAKA, Takamori SAIGO and other royalist political reformers called "Kino no Shishi" used Sumiya to hold secret meetings or entertain wealthy merchants for the purpose of fundraising.
  960. In Bali Island, 1st of Kadasa in the local language (October in Saka calendar) which falls on the next day of the new moon around the vernal equinox is Nyepi in the local language.
  961. In Banreki era, Jutoku KO, supported by Ojo RA, reprinted seals and finally collected nearly 4000 impressions of them.
  962. In Banshu district of Hyogo Prefecture, it is called 'bachi' because it looks like bachi (plectrum) of shamisen.
  963. In Beppu where he spent his final years, he agreed with the mayor Tetsuichi WAKI who, in those days, aimed for the construction of a city of international tourism and pleaded the government to enact special legislation ("Act on Construction of Beppu as City of International Tourism and Hot Springs Culture" was enacted in 1950).
  964. In Bingo Province, samurai from the Wachi clan, the Miya clan, the Yamauchi clan and others attacked Koretoyo YAMANA of the eastern army.
  965. In Bizen City area Okayama Prefecture (especially Hinase-cho), there is okonomiyaki called Hinasefu, Hinaseyaki and so on which is uniquely grilled and in particular okonomiyaki called 'kakioko' (Japanese pancake), in which Okayama Prefecture's local product oyster is included is a specialty.
  966. In Bizen Province, he was based in areas around Hamano (Hamano, Minami Ward, Okayama City) and Amihama, Amihama, Naka Ward, Okayama City) regaining his influence by getting on his side Gozoku (local ruling family) of neighboring areas.
  967. In Book 11 to Book 14, it wrote about how to sing.
  968. In Boshin Civil War he was engaged in the financial transactions of New government including army's military expenditure.
  969. In Boshin Civil War, he went to the front of the Ou district as a member of Kanjo-tai.
  970. In Boshin War that broke out in 1868, he successively took part in the battle in Edo and Aizu, after the Battle of Toba-Fushimi.
  971. In Boshin War, Shinchogumi fought together with samurai of the Shonai clan, however, after defeat in the war, members of Shinchogumi including TAMAKI were recruited for cultivation under poor condition.
  972. In Boshin War, he moved from place to place in the Tohoku region to fight.
  973. In Britain, operation of the steam locomotive railway for freight transport was started between Stockton and Darlington in 1825, and in 1830, passenger railway service was also started between Liverpool and Manchester.
  974. In Britain, said to be the country from which curry and rice was imported into Japan, there is 'curry and rice' which is very similar to Japanese curry and rice in appearance and taste.
  975. In Britain, which was in alliance with Japan, journalists coined the name "Nelson of the East" after national hero Vice Admiral Horatio Lord NELSON.
  976. In Buddhism in India where it originated, they used to give the memorial service every seven days for seven weeks, counting the date of death (anniversary of death) as the first day.
  977. In Buddhism it is explained, with difference in each kyoron (sutra), that there are nine kinds or causes in oshi (横死).
  978. In Buddhism it is said that it is Taishakuten's Kenzoku as well as Kendatsuba, and descants.
  979. In Buddhism there are many various sects, the Jodo Shinshu sect (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) had with 48 the most temples, followed by the Sotoshu sect with 20 temples.
  980. In Buddhism's early days, Buddhist doctrine was valued so statues were not created based on the Indian customs and religious observances.
  981. In Buddhism, Daikokuten is a deity that has its origins in the Daikokuten of Mikkyo and is one of the Tenbu (deities who reside in the heavenly realms).
  982. In Buddhism, Jichin-sai is called Jichin-ho, Chintaku-ho, Anchin-ho which is an abbreviation of Anchin-kokka-fudo-ho, and Jitenku, or popularly Ji-matsuri, Jigatame no ho, and so on.
  983. In Buddhism, Joruri means shojo (purity) or transparent lapis lazuli.
  984. In Buddhism, Varga in Sanskrit was translated into 'hon'.
  985. In Buddhism, after Shaka's death, three periods have been defined as follows; Shobo (Age of the Right Dharma), Zobo (Age of the Semblance Dharma) and Mappo (Age of the Final Dharma).
  986. In Buddhism, all the philosophical thoughts other than Buddhism, i.e., the non-Buddhist doctrines, are based on the secular wisdom that does not transcend attachments to things.
  987. In Buddhism, ascetic practices have to be done to become a Buddha.
  988. In Buddhism, death represents the Rinne (the wheel of life) world in reincarnation takes place, and there is no concept to deny this.
  989. In Buddhism, it is preached that the virtues of Eko (Buddhist memorial service, prayers for the repose of the soul) are divided into seven; six of them are given to the living and the one is given to the deceased.
  990. In Buddhism, it is primarily called mizugori (purification by cold water).
  991. In Buddhism, it is seen a music god of kenzoku (disciples or followers of Taishakuten).
  992. In Buddhism, it was believed that there is a high mountain called Mt. Sumeru at the center of the world, and awe for mountains deepened further as Kukai founded a temple on Mt. Koya and Saicho on Mt. Hiei.
  993. In Buddhism, or Naido, it is further distinguished into Mahayana and Hinayana.
  994. In Buddhism, priests were prohibited from having any private possessions that could have value; clothing were no exception.
  995. In Buddhism, religious precepts, Zenjo and wisdom are referred to collectively with the common phrase 'kai (precepts), jo (zenjo) and kei (wisdom).'
  996. In Buddhism, she is considered to be the same god as Myon-bosatsu (Bodhisattva of music).
  997. In Buddhism, teachers who properly preach Buddhism are called kalyaana-mitra.
  998. In Buddhism, the idea of national defense was strengthened, and the Todai-ji and Kokubun-ji Temples were constructed due to the wishes of Emperor Shomu on the pretext of kokka goji (defending and maintaining the nation).
  999. In Buddhism, those who newly ordain as priests and nuns must take a vow to observe the Vinaya precepts.
  1000. In Buddhism, to attain enlightenment is to attain the state of perfect self-effacement.


163001 ~ 164000

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