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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. January 17, 1995: The Great Hanshin Awaji Earthquake caused damage to various lines.
  2. January 17, 1995: The Great Hanshin Awaji Earthquake occurred, and as a result the entire operation was temporarily suspended (limited express trains suspended their operations for the entire day).
  3. January 17. Fuyu no Doyo (18 days before Risshun)
  4. January 1712: He was granted with additional estate of 10,000 goku crop yields (land estimated to produce 1,803,900 liters of rice crop annually).
  5. January 17: Goo Festival (a festival to distribute Goo talismans)
  6. January 17: The ceremony of announcing the dates to Kashikodokoro (a palace sanctuary), the ceremony of announcing the dates to a shrine/ Korei den (Ancestral Spirits Sanctuary)
  7. January 18
  8. January 18, 1203, assigned to serve as Nairan by the Emperor.
  9. January 18, 1271 died.
  10. January 18, 1428, died.
  11. January 18, 1707: He reached the position ranked directly below that of the Roju (Shogun's Council of Elders).
  12. January 18, 1778: He was adopted by Toshimi DOI and succeeded to the whole Koga Domain.
  13. January 18, 1872: Court ranks returned
  14. January 18, 1901: The section between Shin-Kizu and Kizu operations were suspended.
  15. January 18, 895 (December 15, 894 in old lunar calendar): He was additionally appointed to Jiju (Chamberlain).
  16. January 18, Jusanmi
  17. January 1868 - Sanyo (Councilor) for new Meiji government.
  18. January 1868: He followed the army of Kinmochi SAIONJI, the repression delegate to the Sanin region.
  19. January 1868: The army of Bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun), which had been defeated in the Battle of Toba-Fushimi, ran away to the Yodo clan for help but was rejected.
  20. January 1887: Onchisha was dissolved due to the deaths of influential leaders and the increase of unpaid membership fees due to inactive petition activity.
  21. January 1889, inaugural issue was published.
  22. January 1898: Secretary of the Ministry of Education and the executive secretary to the Minister of Education, as well as the director of Kashima Bank,
  23. January 18:
  24. January 18: Assumed the position of Tango no Kami (Provisional Governor of Tango Province).
  25. January 19, 1049: He was appointed to Gon Chunagon (a provisional vice-councilor of state).
  26. January 19, 1173: He stopped being the Sessho and was declared by imperial proclamation as Kanpaku.
  27. January 19, 1659: He was given the jo (investiture) rank of Jugoinoge and was appointed as Nato no kami (the governor of Noto Province).
  28. January 19, 1861, inherited his properties.
  29. January 19, 1997: The station office was moved to the elevated station house.
  30. January 19, 2008: The section from the union with the Hanshin Expressway Route No. 8 Kyoto Line to the Oguraike Interchange opened.
  31. January 19, conferred jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) (given through Kenshunmonin)
  32. January 1910: The 'Harada Sensei Kinencho' (Memorial Book of Naojiro HARADA) was published.
  33. January 1927, renamed to Kuroshio
  34. January 1927:
  35. January 1933: The 30th head priest of Ryochu-ji Temple on Mt. Heian, Giten Osho proposed to build it.
  36. January 1954: Kaminaka-cho was established through a merging of Nogi-mura, Miyake-mura, Kumagawa-mura, Uryu-mura, and Toba-mura.
  37. January 1957: The Sanjo-bound platform was relocated from the southern side to the northern side of Gojo-dori Street due to the project of reconstructing (widening) Gojo Ohashi Bridge.
  38. January 1965 ? Professor at Kyoto University, School of Engineering Fuel Chemistry Department (High Pressure Chemistry Course ? reorganized as Physical Chemistry of Hydrocarbons Course in 1966)
  39. January 1983: The ordinance for the Old Capital Tax was approved in an extraordinary city assembly in spite of the request from the Communist Party to carry the bill over to the next session.
  40. January 1985: The Kyoto City Buddhism Organization declared that twenty-four temples and shrines would take the step of refusing visitors in the event that Kyoto City enforced the Old Capital Tax.
  41. January 1987: A recording of the settlement talks between Masahiko NISHIYAMA and Masahiko IMAGAWA was made public by the Buddhist organization.
  42. January 1989: Kansai Research Institute completed the "Survey of the Embodiment of a Cultural and Research Interaction Facility."
  43. January 1998 - Junior Second Rank
  44. January 19: He became Togu Gon no daibu (Provisional Master of the Crown Prince's Quarters).
  45. January 19: He was assigned the position of Sakone gon no chujo.
  46. January 19: Proclaimed Kanpaku (Chancellor).
  47. January 19th, 697: Umate was dispatched to Oyamauchi no Misasagi to offer the mitsugimono from Shiragi.
  48. January 1:
  49. January 1: Gantan-sai (New Year's Day Festival)
  50. January 1: Joya no Kane (bell ringing out the old year) (Shoro Bell Tower).
  51. January 1: Jugoinoge
  52. January 1: New Year's Festival held at Fujisan Hongu Sengen-taisha Shrine, Fujinomiya City
  53. January 1: New Year's Festival held at Heian-jingu Shrine, Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City
  54. January 1: One town and fifteen villages in Minami-kuwada-gun, including Kameoka-cho but excluding Shino-mura and Kashida-mura, were combined to form Kameoka City.
  55. January 1: Religious service on New Year's day
  56. January 1: Saitansai (Saitansai is a Shinto ritual to mark the beginning of the New Year, followed by a special sharing of sake (rice wine) in a barrel and mochi (rice cake) pounding ceremony)
  57. January 1: Saitansai Festival (Saitansai is a Shinto ritual to mark the beginning of New Year, followed by a special sharing of sake in the barrel and a rice cake pounding ceremony)
  58. January 1: Shihohai (a Shinto ceremony held on New Year's Day in which the Emperor pays respect to the deities in all quarters); Saitan-sai Festival (a Shinto ritual to celebrate the New Year held after Shihohai)
  59. January 1: Shuni-e (Second-Month Service) [New Year event]
  60. January 1: Shusho-e (New Year's service)
  61. January 1: The area codes are unified into 0774.
  62. January 1st (in the old calendar) {which is around the start of spring in the calendar and which is around February in the Gregorian calendar (the new calendar)} according to the old calendar (in Japan, the Tempo calendar) is called kyu-shogatsu (old new year).
  63. January 1st is called ganjitsu, and the morning of ganjitsu is called gantan.
  64. January 1st: the first day of the Gregorian calendar is set to be this day in most countries.
  65. January 2, 1176 (November 12, 1175 in old lunar calendar): Appointed Kebiishi no betto (second time) and Uemon no kami, concurrently
  66. January 2, 1322: He was promoted to Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade).
  67. January 2, 1379 - promoted to Junii
  68. January 2, 1447: He was promoted to Ushoben (Minor Controller of the Right).
  69. January 2, 1843: Kyoto Shoshidai
  70. January 2, 1868 (December 8, 1867 in old lunar calendar): He was again granted Jusanmi.
  71. January 2, 1872: Due to the elimination and consolidation of prefectures after Haihan-chiken (abolition of feudal domains and establishment of prefectures), the four prefectures of Kishiwada, Hakuta, Yoshimi, and Tannan as well as a part of Gojo Prefecture were incorporated and merged in Sakai.
  72. January 2, 690 (in old lunar calendar; February 18, 690) at age 55.
  73. January 2, 694 (old lunar calendar; February 4, 694) at age 59.
  74. January 2, 878: He rose to the rank of Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade).
  75. January 2, 878: He was promoted to the Jushiinojo rank (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) while remaining Ukone no Gon no chujo.
  76. January 20
  77. January 20, 1267 (December 17, 1266 in old lunar calendar):
  78. January 20, 1335: assumed the additional position of Minbukyo (Minister of Popular Affairs).
  79. January 20, 1530: He was promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) and transferred to the title of Gon Dainagon (provisional major counselor).
  80. January 20, 1530: Promoted to Shoshiinojo (Senior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade), appointed Kurodo no to (Head Chamberlain) and retained his position as Ukone no chujo.
  81. January 20, 1579: Transferred to the post of Naidaijin.
  82. January 20, 1898: Marshal
  83. January 20, 1930: Excavation for the construction of the Kyoto subway line section running beneath roads was started.
  84. January 20, 1943: Undojo-mae Station's name was changed to Toyono Station.
  85. January 20, 1944: Takano signal station established between Nishi-Maizuru and Shisho.
  86. January 20, 1959: Power collectors of electric cars (power collector trolley) were changed from the wheel type to the slider type.
  87. January 20, 747: He was promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  88. January 20, 875: He was appointed to Kurodo (Chamberlain).
  89. January 20, Dai kan (lit. big coldness, the coldest period in the year)
  90. January 20, appointed Echizen-no-kami
  91. January 2001: official name decided as 'Watashi no Shigoto Kan' (Vocational Museum) selected from suggestions by the public
  92. January 2002: Model 600 electric cars used for the special chartered train ODEN-DENSHA entered into the Keishin Line.
  93. January 2003 - Fushimi Momoyama-jo Castle Land was closed as part of the restructuring of its parent company, Kintetsu Corporation.
  94. January 2009: The eldest son was born.
  95. January 20:
  96. January 20: Assumed the position of Mimasaka no Suke (Assistant Governor of Mimasaka Province).
  97. January 20: Promoted to Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and retained his positions Sangi, Udaiben and Saemon no kami.
  98. January 20: The area code changed from 077484 to 07749-4 (the area code for Yamada, Zakuro, and Inuidani remained the same: 07747).
  99. January 21 Requested to be removed from the office of naikoku jimu sosai.
  100. January 21, 1137: Kogo no miya gon no daibu (Provisional Master of the Empress's Household) (Empress FUJIWARA no Yasuko)
  101. January 21, 1148 (December 21, 1147 in old lunar calendar): Appointed Emon-fu (Ministry of Outer Palace Guards)
  102. January 21, 1192: Promoted to Jusani (Junior Third Rank), retained his position as Ukone no chujo.
  103. January 21, 1688: Gon Chunagon
  104. January 21, 1693: Kamo-denso (Kamo shrine messenger to Emperor)
  105. January 21, 1780: Increased crop yields by 10,000 koku (1803.9 cubic meters).
  106. January 21, 1785 - A fief of 10,000 koku was added.
  107. January 21, 1797: He was again appointed to jisha-bugyo.
  108. January 21, 1832, promoted to Jusanmi (Senior Third Rank) and Sansanmi (Third Rank without official post).
  109. January 21, 1868 (December 27, 1867 in old lunar calendar): He took the post of Gijo in the Meiji government.
  110. January 21, 1868 (December 27, 1867 in old lunar calendar): He was reassigned as Gijo while still being Sanyo of the Meiji government.
  111. January 21, 1919
  112. January 21, 1964: Ii Station commenced operation.
  113. January 21, 1984: Freight service discontinued.
  114. January 21, 1984: Freight services discontinued.
  115. January 21, 1997: The installation of four up/down escalators between the elevated station house and the platforms was completed.
  116. January 21, 2006: ICOCA and PiTaPa became interoperable.
  117. January 21, 2006: ICOCA, a transportation card of West Japan Railway, became accepted on the Hankyu lines.
  118. January 21, 2007: A "limited express," which had three ad-wrapped wagons featuring the illustration of 'Thomas & Friends,' was operated from Uji to Tenmabashi.
  119. January 21, 2007: An extraordinary operation of the KERS 10000, the cars of which were painted with the design of "Thomas the Tank Engine," was done to commemorate its last operation.
  120. January 21, 738: danjoin
  121. January 21, Hyobusho
  122. January 21: (departure) Murotsu to (arrival)
  123. January 21: Awaji no kami (chief of Awaji Province)
  124. January 21: He also held the position of Mutsu-Dewa-Azechi (local inspector of Mutsu and Dewa Provinces).
  125. January 21: He was granted the rank of Jugoinoge.
  126. January 21: Jointly assigned to be the Vice President of I\Investigation Committee of Codes (President was Hirofumi ITO).
  127. January 21: Juichii (Junior First Rank)
  128. January 21: Kenmaiku (rice offering)
  129. January 21: Promoted to Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)
  130. January 21: Returned to Shonii.
  131. January 22, 1171 (December 8 in old lunar calendar): Returned to Shosanmi
  132. January 22, 1303: Promoted to Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade); retained the post of Gonno Uchuben
  133. January 22, 1318: He was appointed Chamberlain.
  134. January 22, 1675 (Twenty-five years old): Given the rank of Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade).
  135. January 22, 1682: Uchuben
  136. January 22, 1763-July 19, 1764: He was appointed as Osaka jodai.
  137. January 22, 1854: He was promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and remained as a chamberlain.
  138. January 22, 1855: Promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) and remained as a chamberlain.
  139. January 22, Chugushiku (Office of Imperial Wives) (Empress: FUJIWARA no Seishi)
  140. January 22, Emonfu
  141. January 22: (departure) to (arrival)
  142. January 22: Appointed to the position of Kurodo no to (reigning emperor's personal secretary).
  143. January 22: Completed term as Echizen no kami.
  144. January 22: Governor of Tanba Province.
  145. January 22: He assumed the position of Bitchu no Suke (Assistant Governor of Bitchu Province).
  146. January 22: He was reappointed as governor of Mikawa Province for a second term.
  147. January 22: Resigned from the post of Naidaijin and joined priesthood.
  148. January 22: Served as an additional post of Uhyoe no kami (Captain of the Right Division of Middle Palace Guards) and Harima gon no kami (Provisional Governor of Harima Province).
  149. January 23
  150. January 23 (lunar calendar): Appointed to the post of Gon Chunagon (Provisional Middle Counselor), retained the post of Ukone no chujo.
  151. January 23, 1170 (December 28, 1169 in old lunar calendar): Dismissed.
  152. January 23, 1249: He was promoted to the rank of Shoshii (Senior Fourth Rank).
  153. January 23, 1279: Promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank).
  154. January 23, 1306: reassigned to position of Gon Chunagon (provisional vice-councilor of state).
  155. January 23, 1886: Kyoto Prefectural Oki High School's teachers course was transferred to the Normal School of Kyoto Prefecture, and became the Normal School Girls' Division of Kyoto Prefecture.
  156. January 23, 1886: Teacher's course of Kyoto Prefectural Oki High School became the Normal School Girls' Division of Kyoto Prefecture
  157. January 23, 1972
  158. January 23, 1972: As the Kyoto City Trams Shijo Line (Gion - Shijo Omiya) was discontinued, the crossing-at-grade disappeared.
  159. January 23, 1972: The use of the Nijo-ekimae stop ceased when the operation of the Senbon Line run by Kyoto City Trams was discontinued.
  160. January 23, Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank)
  161. January 23, appointed Nakatsukasa-no-taifu (head of Nakatsukasasho (office responsible for all affairs in the imperial court))
  162. January 23, given Dajo daijin as posthumous title.
  163. January 23, served concurrently as Bingo Province
  164. January 23: Assumed the position of Bizen no Gon no Suke (Provisional Assistant Governor of Bizen Province).
  165. January 23: Genpuku (coming of age ceremony), conferred court rank of Jugoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  166. January 23: Governor of Bingo Province.
  167. January 23: Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank)
  168. January 24 - Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) (Built Kongo shinin)
  169. January 24, 1174
  170. January 24, 1307: Assigned the additional post of Sadaiben (Major Controller of the Left)
  171. January 24, 1349: Entered the Buddhist priesthood.
  172. January 24, 1907: Based on the Track Act, the approval and work order were delivered to Keishin Electric Tramway concerning the construction of the track between the area around 117 Ohashi-cho Sanjo-dori, Shimogyo Ward, Kyoto City and Okura-cho, Otsu City.
  173. January 24, 2004: ATMs installed on Sanjo Station concourse.
  174. January 24, Kai Province
  175. January 24: Appointed to the rank of Jugoinoge.
  176. January 24: Assumed the position of Sahyoe no suke (Assistant Captain of the Left Division of Middle Palace Guards).
  177. January 24: He was assigned the position of Governor of Owari Province (as successor to Yorimori).
  178. January 24: He was granted the rank of Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank).
  179. January 24: He was reappointed to supernumerary chief councillor of state.
  180. January 24: Jugoinojo (for his performance in the Hogen War)
  181. January 24: Kunaikyo (Minister of the Sovereign's Household).
  182. January 24: Sakone no daisho
  183. January 24: Served as an additional post of Dazai gon no sochi.
  184. January 25, 1170: Reappointed to the post of Sangi.
  185. January 25, 1540: Promoted to Junii (Junior Second Rank) and retained his position as Gon Chunagon.
  186. January 25, 1662 (Twelve years old): After having genpuku (ceremony of attaining manhood), admitted to the court.
  187. January 25, 1698 (Forty-eight years old): Resigned from Sangi.
  188. January 25, 1750: Sojaban (an official in charge of the ceremonies).
  189. January 25, 1839 (December 11, 1838 in old lunar calendar): He came to the age of maturity and was permitted to enter the Tenjo no ma room in Seiryo-den.
  190. January 25, 1896: A line 12 miles and 46 chains long began operations between Momoyama Station and Tamamizu Station.
  191. January 25, 1896: The extension work from this station to Tamamizu Station was completed.
  192. January 25, 1896: The line between Momoyama Station and Tamamizu Station (12M46C ≒ 20.24 km) was extended and opened.
  193. January 25, 1896: The station was inaugurated as a station of the Nara Railway.
  194. January 25, 1896: The station was inaugurated as the terminal station of the Nara Line when it was extended from Momoyama Station to this station.
  195. January 25, 1896: The station was inaugurated simultaneously with the Nara Line's extension from Momoyama Station to Tamamizu Station.
  196. January 25, 1896: The station was inaugurated when the extended section of the Nara Railway between Momoyama Station and Tamamizu Station became operational.
  197. January 25, 1899: The section between Arimaguchi and Sanda (9M68C≒15.85km) was extended to begin operating.
  198. January 25, 1901
  199. January 25, 1901: The entire line was shortened by 6 chains (≒ 0.12 km).
  200. January 25, 1945: Direct trains from Tenmabashi Station to 'Omijingu Station' of the Sakamoto Line, via the Keihan Main Line and the Keishin Line, were operated in order to transport people who attended the 'Festival commemorating the thirteen-hundredth anniversary of the Taika Reform (Taika-no-kaishin)' (train No. 63).
  201. January 25, 1954: Express trains started running between Sanjo and Ishiyamadera via Hamaotsu.
  202. January 26, 1191: Awarded Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade), and permitted to use kinjiki (literally, "forbidden colors," seven colors traditionally reserved for the imperial family and nobility).
  203. January 26, 1234 - Promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade)
  204. January 26, 1243: Died.
  205. January 26, 1303: Assumed the additional post of Okurakyo (Minister of the Ministry of the Treasury)
  206. January 26, 1406, he died at the age of 53.
  207. January 26, 1517: He was raised to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  208. January 26, 1517: Promoted to Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) and retained the post of Jiju.
  209. January 26, 1575: He resigned as Gon Dainagon.
  210. January 26, 2007: The services of the JR Ticket Office "Midori-no-madoguchi" started.
  211. January 26, 892: He was simultaneously appointed the Suke (high-ranking officer) of Owari Province.
  212. January 26, 902: He was appointed a Sangi (Director of Palace Affairs).
  213. January 26: (departure) to (arrival)
  214. January 26: Also assumed the position of Chugu Gon no taijo (Provisional Senior Secretary in the Office of the Consort's Household) (Chugu was FUJIWARA no Shoshi (Tamako)).
  215. January 26: Battle of Byeokjegwan
  216. January 27 1902: Appointed as adjutant of the 46th Infantry Regiment
  217. January 27, 1012: He was assigned an additional duty as Omi gon no kami (Provisional Governor of Omi Province).
  218. January 27, 1159: Appointed to the post of Yamato no kami (Governor of Yamato Province)
  219. January 27, 1226, admitted to Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) and made Konoe no shosho (Minor Captain of the Palace Guards).
  220. January 27, 1229: He declared by imperial proclamation as the Kanpaku.
  221. January 27, 1229: Resigned as Jun-Sessho and Kanpaku.
  222. January 27, 1473 - awarded Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  223. January 27, 1699: Junii (Junior Second Rank)
  224. January 27, 1852: Promoted to Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade)
  225. January 27, 1932
  226. January 27, 1993: At six stations located in between Noe Station and Doi Station, the platform extension work to cope with the eight-car trains was finished.
  227. January 27, Aki Province
  228. January 27, additionally appointed to Sanuki gon no kami (provisional governor of Sanuki Province)
  229. January 27: Appointed Governor of Higo Province.
  230. January 27: Futotamabashira-sai Festival (Gokoku-jinja Shrine, Naka Ward, Nagoya City, Aichi Prefecture)
  231. January 27: He was awarded the rank of Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  232. January 27: Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade)
  233. January 27: Junii (Junior Second Rank) (the Cloistered Emperor Toba received Gokyu)
  234. January 27: Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank)
  235. January 27: Sahyoe no suke (vice minister of Sahyoe-fu)
  236. January 27: Sama no kami
  237. January 27: Transferred to the post of Sadaiben.
  238. January 27: resigned from Kura no kami
  239. January 28 (lunar calendar): Resigned as Sesho, appointed to the posit of Kanpaku.
  240. January 28 - Echigo no kami (Built Toba Mido)
  241. January 28 - jiju (chamberlain)
  242. January 28 and 29, 2006: The last event titled 'Thanks for the lights of Kawaramachi' was held in cooperation with Kyogoku Toho, an event that brought the curtain down on its 70 years of history.
  243. January 28 and 29, 2006: The last show, titled 'Machi (Kawaramachi) no hi yo, arigato (Thank you, and Goodbye to Our City Lights),' was performed at Kyogoku Toho together with Kyoto Takarazuka Theater before they closed.
  244. January 28, 1007: He was reassigned to be the Uhyoe no Suke (assistant captain of the Right Division of Headquarters of the Middle Palace Guard).
  245. January 28, 1171: He was declared by imperial proclamation as Daijo daijin and retained as Sessho.
  246. January 28, 1186: He was removed from office
  247. January 28, 1233, made Acting Gon Chunagon (Provisional Middle Counselor).
  248. January 28, 1244: Named Prince by the Emperor.
  249. January 28, 1322: Promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank); resigned from the post of Dazai gon no sochi
  250. January 28, 1363 - Switched to post of Gon dainagon
  251. January 28, 1369 - declared Seii Taishogun.
  252. January 28, 1396, concurrently served also as Mimasaka no Kuni Gonnokami.
  253. January 28, 1725: He was assigned to be the Kyoto Shoshidai.
  254. January 28, 1863, assumed the post of Kokuji goyogakari (a general official of the Imperial Household in charge of the State affair), which was newly established in the Imperial Court.
  255. January 28, 1927: The construction of the line between Shojaku and Ibaraki-cho was started.
  256. January 28, 1967: The usage of an underground passage in the station premises started, while that of the pedestrian crossing in the premises was discontinued.
  257. January 28, 2006: Mobile Suica Service started.
  258. January 28, 890: He was transferred to the post of zusho no kami (head of the documents office).
  259. January 28, Junii (Junior Second Rank)
  260. January 28, Noto Province
  261. January 28, Tosa no kami (the governor of Tosa Province)
  262. January 28: Appointed to the post of Sangi (Royal Advisors).
  263. January 28: Assumed the position of Harima no Suke (Assistant Governor of Harima Province).
  264. January 28: Assumed the position of Kurodo of New Emperor (Emperor Sutoku) (a secretary to the new Emperor)
  265. January 28: Assumed the position of Sanuki no Gon no Kami (Provisional Governor of Sanuki Province).
  266. January 28: Gonuchuben (Provisional Middle controller of the Right)
  267. January 28: Hatsu Fudo (Takahata Fudoson, Hino City)
  268. January 28: He became the Kurodo no to (Head Chamberlain).
  269. January 28: He served concurrently as Provisional Governor of Tanba Province.
  270. January 28: He was assigned to be the Ukone no chujo (Middle Captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards) and gain the additional position as Omi no Suke (assistant governor of Omi Province).
  271. January 28: Junii (Junior Second Rank)
  272. January 29 (lunar calendar): Appointed to the post of Gon Dainagon (provisional major counselor).
  273. January 29 is the date on the Gregorian calendar in 1873 which corresponds to January 1 of the old lunar calendar.
  274. January 29, 1159: He gained the rank of Shonii (Senior Second Rank) and retained his position as Gon chunagon and Sakonoe gon chujo.
  275. January 29, 1191: Appointed to Ukone no shosho (Minor Captain of the Right Division of the Inner Palace Guards).
  276. January 29, 1276: ranked Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)
  277. January 29, 1856 (December 22, 1855 in old lunar calendar): He received a higher rank, Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) while retaining his position as Ukone no Gon no shosho.
  278. January 29, 1891: Noguchi Village became separated from Takagamine Village
  279. January 29, 1894
  280. January 29, 1903
  281. January 29, 1905: Transferred to supplemental battalion of the 2nd Infantry Regiment
  282. January 29, 1954: The tentative use of wheel lubricators for the cars of the Otsu Line commenced.
  283. January 29, 1968: ATS started being used.
  284. January 29, 2005: The new station house came into use.
  285. January 29, 953: Promoted to Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade), remained in the post of Sangi
  286. January 29, the Shinsengumi fought in a fierce engagement with government troops at Yodo-Senryomatsu (Battle of Yodo-Senryomatsu).
  287. January 29: (departure) to (arrival) Tosadomari
  288. January 29: Assumed the position of Bitchu no Gon no Kami (Provisional Governor of Bitchu Province).
  289. January 29: He was promoted to Junii (Junior Second Grade) and remained in the same position of Sessho, Naidaijin and Toshi choja.
  290. January 2: Given the rank of Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  291. January 2: Promoted to the court rank of Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) by Josaimonin.
  292. January 3 - Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) (Received from FUJIWARA no Nobuyori)
  293. January 3 1868, in the Battle of Toba Fushimi 2 members died in action.
  294. January 3, 1309: Promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank); retained the post of Izumo Gonno Kami
  295. January 3, 1315: Investiture to Jugoinnoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) and appointed Kurodo (Chamberlain)
  296. January 3, 1319: Appointed Gon Chunagon (provisional vice-councilor of state)
  297. January 3, 1868 (December 9, 1867 in old lunar calendar): He was also appointed to Sanyo of the Meiji government.
  298. January 3, 1868, the former shogunate army of Osaka set out to Kyoto, the spearhead convoy of the shogunate and garrison of Saccho had an encounter each other, and the Battles of Toba and Fushimi started.
  299. January 30
  300. January 30 - concurrently held the post of Echizen gonno kami (Senior provincial governor of Echizen)
  301. January 30, 1185, promoted to the rank of Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and retained his position as Sakonoe no chujo.
  302. January 30, 1185: He resigned as Gon dainagon
  303. January 30, 1204: He was promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and retained his position as Sakone no chujo.
  304. January 30, 1232, made Governor (Kokushi) of Bingo Province.
  305. January 30, 1666: He was transferred to the Sagami no kami (governor of Sagami Province) position.
  306. January 30, 1788: He became jisha-bugyo.
  307. January 30, 1934: Otsu Area Sightseeing Bus starts as a business (the first regular tour bus in Lake Biwa area)
  308. January 30, 1946:
  309. January 30, 1950: Out of 22 passenger cars of the Otsu Line that were destroyed by the fire at Shinomiya Shako-depot, 15 passenger cars that were deemed impossible to repair were abolished in addition to an aging electric passenger car and a freight car (a model 20 car and a sprinkler car).
  310. January 30, 1993: According to the change in the train schedule, six of the limited express trains bound for Yodoyabashi during the weekday morning rush hours began making stops at this station.
  311. January 30, 1993: The timetable was revised.
  312. January 30, 1995: The basic agreement on the direct operation of the trains of the Keishin Line into the Kyoto Municipal Subway Tozai Line was concluded between Kyoto City and Keihan Electric Railway Co., Ltd.
  313. January 30, 2005
  314. January 30, 2008:
  315. January 30, Sama no kami (Captain of Samaryo, Left Division of Bureau of Horses)
  316. January 30, benkan
  317. January 30: (departure) Tosadomari to (arrival) Izumi no Nada
  318. January 30: He declared by imperial proclamation as the Toshi choja.
  319. January 30: Komei Tenno-reisai Festival (an annual festival for Emperor Komei)
  320. January 30: Koto (an officer) of Ritsubunsho (storage)
  321. January 30: Promoted to the court rank of Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade)
  322. January 31 (Saturday) and February 1 (Sunday): Sagemon Exhibition and Spot Sale Fair
  323. January 31, 1322: Promoted to Shoshiinojo (Senior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade), retained the posts of Sangi, Sahyoe no Kami, and Monjo hakase
  324. January 31, 1679 (Twenty-nine years old): Given the rank of Shoshiinoge, (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  325. January 31, 1705: He was appointed as a manager of the West Wing with an annual income of 3,000 koku.
  326. January 31, 1709 (Fifty-nine years old): Gon Dainagon.
  327. January 31, 1850 (December 19, 1849 in old lunar calendar): He was granted Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  328. January 31, 1879: She was executed in the Ichigaya prison.
  329. January 31, 1912: Nawa kari-jokojo was upgraded to a temporary station and commenced operation as the Nawa temporary station.
  330. January 31, 1956: The improvement work to straighten the curved section near the JNR over-line bridge was completed.
  331. January 31, 1997: The process was completed.
  332. January 31: Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) (Imperial visit to Iwashimizu and Kamo and related events)
  333. January 3: Appointed to the rank of Shonii (Senior Second Rank).
  334. January 3: Became a Buddhist priest.
  335. January 3: Genshisai (shinto festival of origins)
  336. January 3: He was transferred to Sakone no chujo (Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  337. January 3: Karuta hajime shiki (Ceremony of the First Karuta Play of the New Year) (Yasaka-jinja Shrine [Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City])
  338. January 3: Prayer festival for the prosperity of family fortunes and business
  339. January 3: Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  340. January 4 - Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade)
  341. January 4, 1705: He was promoted to Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade, and appointed the Viceroy of Echizen Province.
  342. January 4, 1859, he entrusted Masaharu IJICHI, Toshimichi OKUBO and Sadaka IJICHI with future affairs, and left Yamagawa port, then rode out to the Shichito-nada ocean area through Naze and arrived at the place of refuge called Atansaki, Tatsugo-mura, Amamioshima on January, 12.
  343. January 4, 1954: A safety zone was established at Hinooka Station.
  344. January 4, 1969: dismissed.
  345. January 4, 2006: The problem of rolling stock caused the disruption of the train schedule, so one train of KERS 10000 was exceptionally used as the K-Limited Express 'Orihime'; it was the first time that a K-Limited Express made up of four cars was used.
  346. January 4, Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade, conferred by Cloistered Emperor Toba)
  347. January 4: Meiji Government (pertaining to this year, the term "Government" is used as an abbreviation for "Meiji Government".) jointly assigned to the post of Sanin-do Governor of Riot Control in the Government.
  348. January 4: Shonii (Senior Second Rank) (Chokin no Gyoko (New Year's visit to the Imperial Palace. Retired Emperor monk Goshirakawa given)
  349. January 4: Sojihajime (a ceremony in which the chief ritualist reports on rituals at Ise-jingu Shrine and the Court rituals to the Emperor)
  350. January 4: Toyohashi Flower Festival (Toyohashi City)
  351. January 5
  352. January 5 - Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)
  353. January 5 - Uhyoe no kami (Captain of the right)
  354. January 5 1868, Battle of Yodo Senryo Matsu, 14 members including Genzaburo INOUE died in action.
  355. January 5, 1205, became the top rank due to the resignation of FUJIWARA no Yorizane who was in the rank of Juichii and position of Daijo daijin.
  356. January 5, 1237 - Promoted to Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade)
  357. January 5, 1272: Promoted to Junii (Junior Second Rank).
  358. January 5, 1317: He was promoted to Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  359. January 5, 1321, assuming the Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  360. January 5, 1322, promoted to the Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade).
  361. January 5, 1326, promoted to the Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) with Palace staff position unchanged.
  362. January 5, 1328, promoted to the Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) with Ukon e no Shosho and Musashi no suke unchanged.
  363. January 5, 1331, promoted to the Shoshiinojo (Senior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade).
  364. January 5, 1367 - Advanced to Sho-Nii (Senior 2nd Class).
  365. January 5, 1397, promoted to Ju Sanmi.
  366. January 5, 1398, promoted to Sho Sanmi.
  367. January 5, 1400, promoted to Ju Nii.
  368. January 5, 1407, concurrently served as Umeryo Gogen.
  369. January 5, 1456: Also assumed the position of Umeryo-gogen.
  370. January 5, 1465: He was promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Forth Rank, Lower Grade).
  371. January 5, 1467: He was promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank).
  372. January 5, 1474: Nichiu made a replica of honzon and gave it to Rokurozaemon OMURA of Shimoyama, Kai Province (Yamanashi Prefecture).
  373. January 5, 1479: He was promoted to Junii (Junior Second Rank).
  374. January 5, 1539: He was promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) and retained his positions as Sangi, Sakone no chujo, and Tosa no Gon no kami.
  375. January 5, 1545: He was promoted to Junii (Junior Second Rank) and retained his position as Gon Chunagon.
  376. January 5, 1549: He was promoted to Shonii and retained his position as Gon Chunagon.
  377. January 5, 1686: He was excepted from the position of Kyoto shoshidai, and was ordered transference to the Takada Domain.
  378. January 5, 1763: Born
  379. January 5, 1862: Promoted to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank), and remained the Ukone no Gon no chujo.
  380. January 5, 1903: In Tennoji, the fifth Naikoku kangyo hakurankai (National Expo) opened and started freight operation, and on March 1the passenger service also started, but the facility was removed in August and September.
  381. January 5, Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)
  382. January 5, Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) (Kayanoin Gokyu (a kind of pension paid to members of the Imperial family))
  383. January 5, Kan no iri (the beginning of the coldest period)
  384. January 5, Sho kan (lit. small coldness)
  385. January 5: Appointed to the rank of Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade).
  386. January 5: Appointed to the rank of Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank).
  387. January 5: Appointed to the rank of Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  388. January 5: Appointed to the rank of Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank).
  389. January 5: Given the rank of Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  390. January 5: Given the rank of Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) (given through the Retired Emperor Toba).
  391. January 5: Given the rank of Shogoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade).
  392. January 5: Hatsu Genjo Sanzo-e and Heiwa Kigan Festival (at the Genjo Sanzo-in Temple)
  393. January 5: He was granted the rank of Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade).
  394. January 5: Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade)
  395. January 5: Jusanmi
  396. January 5: Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  397. January 5: Promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and retained his position as Ukone no chujo.
  398. January 5: Promoted to the court rank of Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) by TAIRA no Shigeko, the Empress Dowager.
  399. January 5: Resigned from the Governorship of Niigata Prefecture.
  400. January 5: Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  401. January 5: Shonii
  402. January 5: Shoshiinoge
  403. January 5: The New Year's ceremony and the first goma kuyo (holy fire memorial service) of the year
  404. January 6
  405. January 6 (Sunday): Taiko-matsuri in Saitama Super Arena (Japanese Drum Festival in Saitama Super Arena) (Chuo Ward, Saitama City), sponsored by Japan Taiko Association
  406. January 6 - Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank. Lower Grade)
  407. January 6 1868, Battle of Hashimoto, 4 members died in action.
  408. January 6, 1402, promoted to Sho Nii.
  409. January 6, 1430: He was also given the additional post of Umaryo gogen (Inspector of the Right Division of Bureau of Horses).
  410. January 6, 1466: He promoted to Junii (Junior Second Rank).
  411. January 6, 1476: He was promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank).
  412. January 6, 1477: He was promoted to Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank).
  413. January 6, 1532: Promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) and retained the posts of Sangi and Ukone no chujo.
  414. January 6, 1572: Resigned from the post of Gon Dainagon.
  415. January 6, 1602: Shonii (Senior Second Rank)
  416. January 6, 757: Died (74)
  417. January 6, Shonii (Senior Second Rank)
  418. January 6, Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade)
  419. January 6: (Second) Battle of Pyeongyang Castle
  420. January 6: Appointed to the rank of Joshiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade).
  421. January 6: Appointed to the rank of Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  422. January 6: Hatsu Shobo-e
  423. January 6: He was granted the rank of Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) (Kenshunmonin, to be given).
  424. January 6: He was granted the rank of Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) (TAIRA no Seishi, to be given).
  425. January 6: He was granted the rank of Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) (Nyogo court lady, TAIRA no Shigeko, to be given).
  426. January 6: Jushiinoge
  427. January 6: New Year's flower arrangement by the Omuro-ryu School
  428. January 7
  429. January 7, 1008: He went under Shojo (promotion in rank) to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  430. January 7, 1017: He resigned from the position of Sadaijin.
  431. January 7, 1057: He underwent Shojo to receive the Juichii rank (Junior First Rank) and stayed as Udaijin, Sakone no daisho, and Togu no Fu.
  432. January 7, 1215: He was reassigned to be Udaijin and retained his position as Sakonoe no daisho, Samaryogogen, and Tachibanashi choja.
  433. January 7, 1242: Entered priesthood, taking the name Enshin.
  434. January 7, 1367 - conferred Jugoi no ge.
  435. January 7, 1374 - promoted to Jushii no ge and given secondary post of Sangi.
  436. January 7, 1490: Passed away.
  437. January 7, 1491: He passed away.
  438. January 7, 1869: they, together with Prince Arisugawanomiya, have a triumphal entry into Kyoto.
  439. January 7, 1950: A safety zone was established at the inbound-train track of Furukawacho Station.
  440. January 7, 1950: A safety zone was provided on the inbound platform.
  441. January 7, 2006: As a result of the fare revision, Kyoto Municipal Subway, together with Saitama Railway Corporation, became the most expensive subway in terms of base fare among subways in the ordinance-designated cities.
  442. January 7, 2006: It was revised
  443. January 7, 2008: The timetable was revised prior to the opening of the line after being extended up to Uzumasa-tenjingawa.
  444. January 7, 710: Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) (27)
  445. January 7, 732: Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) (49)
  446. January 7, 814: Promoted to Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) and retained his positions as Sashoben and Governor of Tajima Province.
  447. January 7, 820: Promoted to Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) and retained his positions as Sangi, Udaiben and Saemon no kami.
  448. January 7, 821: Promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) and retained his positions as Sangi, Sadaiben and Saemon no kami.
  449. January 7, 854: He rose to the rank of Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) and retained his positions as Minbu shoyu, Togu gakushi, and Dainaiki.
  450. January 7, 866: He rose to the rank of Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade) and retained his positions as Sangi, Udaiben, and Harima gon no kami.
  451. January 7, 874: He rose to the rank of Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) and retained his positions as Sangi, Sadaiben, and Omi no gon no kami.
  452. January 7, 894: He was promoted to Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade), while his appointments as Shikubu shosuke, monjo hakase, and Sanuki no suke were unchanged.
  453. January 7, 903: He was promoted to Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade), while his appointments as sangi and sadaiben remained unchanged.
  454. January 7, 908: He was promoted to Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade), while his appointments as sangi, sadaiben, and Sanuki no kami remained unchanged.
  455. January 7, 917: He was granted the rank of Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  456. January 7, 941: Promoted to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  457. January 7, 943: He was promoted to the rank of Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade).
  458. January 7, 945: Promoted to Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade).
  459. January 7, 949: He was advanced to Jugoinojo.
  460. January 7, 951: Promoted to Jushiinoge.
  461. January 7: Assumed the position of Kurodo no To.
  462. January 7: Became Prime Minister (the First Saionji Cabinet) and was jointly appointed as Acting Minister of Finance.
  463. January 7: Emperor Showa Festival
  464. January 7: Given the rank of Juichii (Junior First Rank).
  465. January 7: He became a Kurodo (staff of Kurodo-dokoro).
  466. January 7: He was granted the rank of Shosanmi (Kenreimonin, to be given).
  467. January 7: He was invested into Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  468. January 7: Nanakusa-gayu Shinji (rice porridge with seven herbs eaten on the 7th day of the New Year)
  469. January 7: New Year's prayer
  470. January 7: Raised to a court rank of jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade), remaining in the position of Ushoben.
  471. January 7: Shusho-e (New Year's Service) (Great Buddha Hall): Keka Hoyo (the Buddhist memorial service for keka [a confession of one's sins]) is held.
  472. January 7: Ukone no Chujo (lieutenant general of Ukone- fu)
  473. January 8
  474. January 8 1865, Zenzai-ya Incident.
  475. January 8, 1182 (November 25 in old lunar calendar): Resigned as Chugu daibu.
  476. January 8, 1252: Coming-of-age Ceremony.
  477. January 8, 1395 - resigned as Seii Taishogun.
  478. January 8, 1761: He was appointed to roju.
  479. January 8, 1931
  480. January 8, 1932: The station was transferred.
  481. January 8, 1934: In the JNR Station yard, a person who had come to see off a passenger of the special train provided for the people joining the Kure Marine Corps was crushed to death.
  482. January 8, 2009: Succeeded to Gensho UMEWAKA, the second.
  483. January 8-12: Hatsu Ebisu at Ebisu-jinja Shrine (Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City)
  484. January 808: Appointed to the post of Saeji no daijo (Senior Lieutenant of the Left Guards).
  485. January 813: Concurrently held the post of Governor of Tajima Province.
  486. January 852: He was appointed as Kurodo (Chamberlain) (and seemed to became the foster son of Yoshifusa around this time).
  487. January 8: Hatsu Yakushi Ennichi and Dai-hannyakyo Sutra Tendoku Hoyo (at Kon-do Hall)
  488. January 8th (January 13th in the Kansai Region) is called 'shogatsu-kotohajime' (start of things for shogatsu) and people start preparation for shogatsu.
  489. January 9 to 16: the Jodo Shinshu Hongan-ji school (O-nishi) and Shinshu Takada sect
  490. January 9, 1226, went through genpuku (ceremony of attaining manhood) and given the rank of Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  491. January 9, 1863: Chikkyo kinshin (house arrest)
  492. January 9, 1944: All the lines (except for part of the station) became single due to the need to supply materials.
  493. January 9, 1944: All the railway lines became single due to the need to supply materials.
  494. January 9, 1944: Owing to the compulsory delivery of materials, the entire line became one-track.
  495. January 9, 1981: The track linking the Keishin Line to the Ishiyama-Sakamoto Line, which was located in front of Hamaotsu Station, was removed, and direct operation between Sanjo and Ishiyamadera via Hamaotsu was terminated.
  496. January 9, 1982: Trains began to be run with a single operator and no on-board conductors.
  497. January 9, 1987: Ramps for wheelchairs were installed on the platform for Uji.
  498. January 9, 709: TSUKI no Muraji Omi was promoted to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) from Shorokui (Senior Sixth Rank, Upper Grade).
  499. January 918.
  500. January 930: He was appointed Governor of Tosa Province.
  501. January 943: Concurrently held the post of Bizen Gonno Kami (Provisioanl Governor of Bizen Province)
  502. January 9: (departure) Ominato to (arrival) Naha
  503. January 9: Kinjiki Chokkyo (Emperor's authorization to put higher color)
  504. January 9: Reassigned to post of Uemon no suke (Assistant Captain of the Right Division of Outer Palace Guards).
  505. January 9: Transferred to the post of Chunagon.
  506. January, 1608
  507. January, 1875, the eighth year of Meiji, Toshimichi OKUBO and Hirobumi ITO, who were Sangi, asked Takayoshi KIDO and Taisuke ITAGAKI, who had resigned after a debate about conquering Korea, to return to the government as Sangi at a meeting in Osaka.
  508. January, 1908: School regulations was established. (Notification No.156 of Kyoto Prefecture).
  509. January, 1931: Term of regular course secondary department was extended to two years.
  510. January, 1940:
  511. January, 1946:
  512. January, 2001: Corresponding to the reorganization of the ministries and agencies of the central governments, the affiliation of 'the office for promoting the construction of Kansai Science City' changed from National Land Agency to Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism.
  513. January, 2005: It was decided that the official name of the new Keihanna line of Kintetsu would be Keihanna Line.
  514. January, 2005: The new line was officially called the Keihanna Line,' and the official names of the three new stations were decided as well.
  515. January, 2006: The main garden was designated as National Scenic Beauty.
  516. January, 2008: Two new elevators were installed, and the process of making the premises barrier-free, such as with the installation of a multipurpose lavatory, was completed.
  517. January, 5, 1450: Promoted to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank).
  518. January, 640:
  519. January, 927: Transferred to serve as Jingi gon no taijo (Judge of the institution dedicated to religious ceremony).
  520. January, 933: Transferred to serve as Jingi gon no shofu (Provisional Junior Assistant Director of Divinities).
  521. January, 934: He was appointed as Kii no gon no suke (Provisional Assistant Governor of Kii Province).
  522. January, 948: He was appointed to Kurodo no to.
  523. January, 956: He was transferred to Kii no kami.
  524. January, February and December: 8:00 - 16:30
  525. January:
  526. January: "Kenshindo Dosokai" (Kenshindo Alumni) was established (by Shunkei MOROI, Shunkai BUNDO, and others).
  527. January: "Shodan Kakushin Kyogikai" (literally, a council to innovate calligraphic society in Japan) was established (refer to the item of "Alignment and realignment of calligraphic bodies - before the war").
  528. January: "Shodan Kyogikai" (the Council of the Calligraphic Society) was established.
  529. January: "The Daitoa Shodo-kai association" (literally, a calligraphic association in Great East Asia) was established (refer to; "Alignment and realignment of calligraphic bodies - before the war").
  530. January: "The Taisho exposition" was held.
  531. January: "The exhibition of twenty great modern calligraphers" was held (sponsored by The Asahi Newspapers).
  532. January: "Toho Shodo-in" (a calligraphic organization) was established (by Joryu MATSUI and others).
  533. January: "Zenkoku Shodo Taikai" (the national calligraphic competition) was held (by Shunkei MOROI at the Teikoku-Gekijo theatre)
  534. January: 'Shochikubai' (pine, bamboo, and plum trees) or 'kangiku.'
  535. January: Appointed as Harima gon no kami (provisional governor of Harima Province), concurrently held with his other post.
  536. January: Hatsugama (the first tea ceremony of New Year) held by the Hayami-ryu School.
  537. January: He resigned as Togu no daibu.
  538. January: Kyozan YAMAMOTO died.
  539. January: Meikaku KUSAKABE died.
  540. January: New Year's meetings
  541. January: Sekku (seasonal festival) of the New Year and Jinjitsu (the seventh day of the new year in the lunar calendar), held from January 1 to 7
  542. January: Tenrai HIDAI died.
  543. January: The Committee for the Thousandth Anniversary of the Tale of Genji was established.
  544. January: The first exhibition of "Kansai Shodo-kai" was held (at Mitsukoshi in Osaka).
  545. January: The name of "Ryuchi kai" was changed to "Nihon Bijutsu Kyokai" (Japan Art Association).
  546. January: Yang Shoujing died.
  547. Janurary 5, 1324: resigned as Gon Dainagon.
  548. Janyuary 31, 1179 (December 15, 1178 in old lunar calendar): He was designated Togu Gon no suke (Provisional Assistant Master of the Crown Prince's Quarters) to assist Crown Prince Tokihito.
  549. Japan
  550. Japan (Decorated Ancient Tombs)
  551. Japan (Wa in those days) abolished the survey of Mimana which had become a mere fa?ade.
  552. Japan (in Japanese)
  553. Japan - Spread to neighboring countries 1 -
  554. Japan >Kinki Region > Kitakinki
  555. Japan Academy Prize
  556. Japan Agricultural Cooperatives 'JA Asahina' in Yamato-cho
  557. Japan Aikido Association ('Shodokan aikido,' 'Tomiki ryu'): 1974, Kenji TOMIKI
  558. Japan Air Commuter Co., Ltd., operates two round-trip flights a day between Osaka International Airport and Konotori-Tajima Airport.
  559. Japan Air Self-Defense Force, Kyogamisaki Sub Base
  560. Japan Airlines began to provide international passengers with an oshibori service before landing in 1959.
  561. Japan Alps is about 10,000 shaku in height' is a good example.
  562. Japan Association of Athletic Federation' s first level authorization.
  563. Japan Association of Athletic Federation's third level authorization
  564. Japan Atomic Energy Agency Kansai Photon Science Institute (the Kids' Science Museum of Photons)
  565. Japan Autumn International Girls' (JAIG)
  566. Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK)
  567. Japan Broadcasting Corporation (NHK) Toyohara Broadcasting Station
  568. Japan Deaf People's Performing Art Troupe performs Shuwa kyogen played by deaf people.
  569. Japan Freight Railway Company
  570. Japan Freight Railway Company (railway business operator)
  571. Japan Freight Railway Company (railway operator) :
  572. Japan Freight Railway Company became a second class railway operator of some sections.
  573. Japan Freight Railway Company became the railway enterprise for the whole Line.
  574. Japan Freight Railway Company's second class railway business (4.9km of the Hirano-Shinimamiya section) was abolished.
  575. Japan Freight Railway Company's second class railway business (40.6km of the Kizu-Hirano section, 10.5km of the former Ryuge Signal Station-Sugimotocho section) was abolished.
  576. Japan Ground Self-Defense Force (JGSDF), JGSDF Camp Katsura
  577. Japan Ground Self-Defense Force Okubo Base
  578. Japan International Birdman Rally (aired by Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation every year, usually at the end of August.) has been held at the swimming beach every year in the end of July, since 1980.
  579. Japan Meteorological Agency does not acknowledge this as a baiu.
  580. Japan Meteorological Agency, which is a specialist for weather, determined to call fine weather in May as "satsukibare" and sunny spells during baiu season as "tsuyuno aimano hare" (sunny spells during baiu).
  581. Japan Movie Critics Award
  582. Japan Movie Production Federation
  583. Japan Movie Production Federation (May 1928 - February 1929) was an association in Kyoto made up of film companies focused on independent films.
  584. Japan Movie Production Federation' was organized by those who established their own productions after leaving Makino, including Chie Productions.
  585. Japan National Railways (JNR) era
  586. Japan Ogre Exchange Museum
  587. Japan Open-Air Folk House Museum (Kawasaki City, Kanagawa Prefecture)
  588. Japan Pearl Museum
  589. Japan Post Holdings Co., Ltd sells Summer Greetings Postcards for shochumimai.
  590. Japan Post Office in Korea
  591. Japan Post Office was post offices in Korea, which were placed in Korean Peninsula by Japan in Meiji Period.
  592. Japan Professional Football League Kyoto Sanga F.C. uses it as their home stadium.
  593. Japan Sea ferry service (Maizuru - Otaru) - daily
  594. Japan Sea ferry service (Maizuru - Tomakomai) - irregular
  595. Japan Self-Defense Forces
  596. Japan Shokubutsu Hen vol.1 published by Dainihontosho; December, 1900
  597. Japan Shokubutsu Zukan vol.1 part 1-3 published by Maruzen Company Ltd.; 1891-1893
  598. Japan Socialist Party (1906, Nihon Shakaito)
  599. Japan Society for Studies in Cartoon and Comics was established in 2001 and it is working to build a foundation of criticism including the improvement of database.
  600. Japan Student Services Organization (JASSO)
  601. Japan Sumo Federation adopts a grading system.
  602. Japan Tobacco Kyoto Kaikan Hall
  603. Japan Traditional Art Crafts Exhibition was exhibited from 1954, and he was assigned to be the judge from the third exhibition.
  604. Japan Women's University
  605. Japan Women's University Normal School Course
  606. Japan accepted it through the broadcast of Emperor Hirohito.
  607. Japan accepted it, and it was opened in May, 1880.
  608. Japan accounts for about 60 percent of the world's octopus consumption.
  609. Japan acted as if it had represented Britain.
  610. Japan adopted the gold standard system according to the New Currency Act enacted on June 17, 1871 and following the movement in Europe.
  611. Japan advised Korea to carry out a reform to keep the country independent, and Korea accepted it.'
  612. Japan advised to do so, and the real purpose of the dispatch was to inspect the present state of Japan on the way to civilization.
  613. Japan also concluded the Japanese-Russian Treaty in the same year and joined the Triple Entente.
  614. Japan also has the oldest wooden temple in the world, Horyu-ji Temple, as well as the oldest Buddhist scriptures.
  615. Japan also introduced Shitokan-sei when it established the Ritsuryo system.
  616. Japan also operated its 80-90% of foreign exchange settlements in London until the disruption of the transportation of exchange bills in August 1914 (Trans-Siberian Railway transported bills at the time).
  617. Japan also sent its army there to deal with the incident.
  618. Japan also sent its troops to Syberia and issued the military currency (notes) such as 10 yen, 5 yen, one yen, 50 sen, 20 sen, and 10 sen to be used in Syberia and northern Manchuria, which were guaranteed convertible to gold, in August, 1919.
  619. Japan also spent the indemnity to increase its national strengths and external expansions, such as the construction of Yahata Iron Factory, expansion of the railways, and communication industries, and colonial management of Taiwan.
  620. Japan and Canada, who thought it difficult to achieve the goal of obligation and whose green coverage ratio is relatively high, insisted the adoption and eventually approved.
  621. Japan and Korea have different interpretations of this view.
  622. Japan and South Korea, where no kosa is produced, are concerned with kosa as well because the factories of companies in these nations generate air pollutants that stick to kosa and because they import wood, agricultural products and livestock products that may cause desertification, and therefore, they are also responsible.
  623. Japan and Wakoku are different countries.'
  624. Japan and the Pacific and the Japanese View of the Eastern Question, 1890 (London T. Fisher Unwin)
  625. Japan annexed Korea.
  626. Japan at that time enforced the national isolation policy and therefore, the visit of Tsushinshi gave people a rare opportunity to know Chinese culture, though indirectly.
  627. Japan at that time used the Senmyo Calendar, which had been imported from Tang China in 862 and had acquired significant errors.
  628. Japan became a unified nation in the Heian period after the disputes with China/Korea were settled and the war against Hayato (ancient tribe in Kyushu) and Ezo (ancient tribe in Tohoku) ended.
  629. Japan began the takeover of communication institution on May 18 and completed on July 1.
  630. Japan began to foster many internationally renowned architects such as Kenzo TANGE, Fumihiko MAKI and Tadao ANDO, and the standard of modern architecture in Japan improved.
  631. Japan bestowed several honors on Togo including the Collar of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum, the Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum, the Order of the Golden Kite (first class), the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun with Paulownia Flower, and the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Sacred Treasure.
  632. Japan built the bases of a society, steadily cementing its grip while dealing with various levels of conflicts with local residents or sometimes being rebelled against.
  633. Japan carried out rigorous diplomatic missions to Balhae, which had been established in 713 mainly by the Makkatsu tribe and people from former Goguryeo(狛族) in the north-eastern area of China.
  634. Japan concluded Japanese-Korea Treaty of Amity with Korea in 1876; as a result, Japan acquired an enclave in Busan.
  635. Japan concluded the Japan-Korea Protocol on February 23, 1904 immediately after the start of the war to eliminate restrictions in its military actions in the Korean Peninsula.
  636. Japan concluded the Jemulpo Treaty with Korea, and Korea promised in it to let the Japanese military guard the Japanese legation, leading to the stationing of Japanese troops in Korea.
  637. Japan confronted the Tang and Silla allied forces and suffered a huge defeat in the Battle of Hakusukinoe in 663.
  638. Japan considered the arrival of the treaty system a chance to overwhelm Kaichitsujo (Kawashima 1999).
  639. Japan continued to pay interest to Kuhn Loeb & Co. of Jacob Schiff, because it did not receive reparations from Russia.
  640. Japan decided to use a part of the reparation in the Eastern Cultural Project in 1922 and reported to the Chinese side.
  641. Japan declared that it had no aggressive plans for the Philippines which had been the colony of the United States.
  642. Japan did not just continue sending sovereign's messages to Korea.
  643. Japan dispatched the Fifth Division of the Imperial Japanese Army (around 8000 members) led by Yasumasa FUKUSHIMA, under the order of Minister of the Army Taro KATSURA.
  644. Japan during the Meiji period ignored strong protests of China and conducted the Ryukyu annexation, then the relationship between Japan and the Qing dynasty which considered Ryukyu an important chokokoku became worse (Motegi 1997).
  645. Japan employed the following tactics and measures in Koan no Eki.
  646. Japan ended its national isolation at the end of the Edo period, but not many foreigners visited this Far Eastern country, Japan.
  647. Japan entered the First World War based on the Anglo-Japanese Alliance and won the war, becoming counted as one of the great world powers.
  648. Japan established a settlement covering 330,000m?, and constructed a consular office there.
  649. Japan expended 1.7 billion Yen during the 19 months of hostilities.
  650. Japan experienced an all-out war in the Second World War in which its army and navy suffered disastrous damages, and Japan proper was occupied by the U.S. army.
  651. Japan experienced the Meiji Restoration and opening of the country, and enhanced its national strength thanks to the favorable economic situation triggered by its victory in two wars (Japanese-Sino War and Japanese-Russo War).
  652. Japan exported primarily raw silk thread and tea while mainly importing wool, cotton fabric, warships, and weapons.
  653. Japan faced with more casualties than any other country (349 dead and 933 injured).
  654. Japan folk crafts association
  655. Japan from the foreign viewpoint
  656. Japan gained the victory barely through difficult diplomatic dealings.
  657. Japan had a diplomatic and commercial relationship by accepting envoys to Japan from the Korean Peninsula, and sending Kenshiragi-shi (Japanese envoy to Shilla) and Ken-Bokkaishi (Japanese envoy to Balhae).
  658. Japan had a larger population than European countries and was being urbanized.
  659. Japan had also exhausted what little national resources it had.
  660. Japan had been divided into small states, but around this period, a powerful royal authority was established.
  661. Japan had taken the rights in Indochina from Vichy France, who had already surrendered to Germany, on July 23, advanced to south French Indochina on July 28, and entered the capital, Saigon, on July 30.
  662. Japan had two concepts of Aramitama and Nigitama.
  663. Japan has 241 kinds of Kamon, with 5,116 individual Kamon variations in total.
  664. Japan has a Japanese guardian god, China has a Chinese guardian god, other countries have each country's guardian gods.
  665. Japan has a long history of bento, and its development has been unparalleled in the world's history of bento.
  666. Japan has a mission to save the world.
  667. Japan has a similar dish called "Tarako spaghetti" (spaghetti mixed with cod roe).
  668. Japan has abundant tourist resources with beautiful scenery, majestic nature, and a variety of culture.
  669. Japan has adopted a stance that the annexation of Korea is "no longer valid" today, which implies the conclusion that the Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty itself was legal.
  670. Japan has approximately 300 shrines and temples that enshrine Kojin.
  671. Japan has two State Guest Houses belonging to the national facilities under the Cabinet Office: the State Guest House, Akasaka Palace, Tokyo (Akasaka Geihinkan): and Kyoto State Guest House in Kyoto Gyoen, Kamigyo-ku, Kyoto City.
  672. Japan immediately sought to fill the vacuum after the disintegration of the Russian Empire in 1917, and finally established the puppet state of Manchukuo in 1932.
  673. Japan implemented universal suffrage in 1925.
  674. Japan imported and assimilated some aspects of the Chinese and Korea cultures such as: written Chinese characters ("kanji" in Japanese), Buddhism, and Confucianism.
  675. Japan imposed a 914% tariff on imported konnyaku imo in 2005, and 1705% in 2008.
  676. Japan in Those Days
  677. Japan in political regression after the incident made Shinichiro TAKEZOE return to his post as minister to Korea in Hanseong on October 30 and he proposed to give up an unpaid 400,000 yen required in the Jemulpo Treaty.
  678. Japan in those days did not have the technology for extracting silver from copper the Ming had.
  679. Japan initially suffered from a massive outflow of gold and silver due to a drastic trade deficit.
  680. Japan insisted that Songjon Village in Munchon City should be one of the possible sites, but Korea were reluctant because there was a royal tomb.
  681. Japan intends to terminate the war as soon as possible to recover peace.'
  682. Japan introduced the Imperial Family autonomy system, and important rules related to the Imperial Family such as the Imperial House Law were independent from the constitution, and the cabinet could not handle issues of the Imperial Family.
  683. Japan introduced the sho of the Tang Dynasty, and established both the unit of daisho (larger sho) that had the volume of about 0.71 liters (about 0.4 size of the new kyomasu [masu mainly used in Kyoto]) and the unit of shomasu (smaller sho) that had the volume of about 0.24 liters (a third of daisho, and about a 10th size of the new kyomasu), a theory says.
  684. Japan is considered to have moved into the Medieval Ages in the latter half of the 11th century.
  685. Japan is one of the countries that has the best thought-out railway network in the world, if not as good as some countries like Switzerland.
  686. Japan is one of the countries where railways have the best-maintained public peace and highest standards of cleanliness in the world.
  687. Japan is one of the largest Buddhist countries with about 96 million adherents (Agency for Cultural Affairs, 'Shukyo Nenkan' [Annual Statistics of Religion]).
  688. Japan is the only country that has a large number of schools to teach people to dress themselves in its own national costume across the country and qualifies dressing instructors.
  689. Japan is the top country in terms of consumption and production.
  690. Japan itself could not bring them to court for trial at that time because certain foreigners were enjoying extraterritorial rights in Japan (what is formally known as consular jurisdiction).
  691. Japan judged that the Russian proposal would effectively place Korea under the control of the Russians, and would inevitably pose a threat to the Japanese sovereignty.
  692. Japan lost all the regions regarded as Gaichi after her defeat in the World War II, and the regions referred to as Gaichi does not exist today.
  693. Japan lost its foothold on Korean Peninsula and Japan came to face the threat of a great power, Tang (in 668, Goguryeo also went to ruin).
  694. Japan lost the effective control due to the end of the Second World War in 1945, and its rule of Korea officially ended upon signing the Instrument of Surrender in which they promised to follow the provisions in the Potsdam Declaration in good faith on September 2, 1945.
  695. Japan missed an opportunity to return to gold standard system since it had to deal with the aftermath of the Great Kanto Earthquake, and Osachi HAMAGUCHI cabinet announced 'the lifting of an embargo on the export of gold' in 1930, but the embargo again laid by Tsuyoshi INUKAI cabinet in the next year.
  696. Japan mobilized approximately 1.09 million soldiers, which far exceeded its standing army of 200,000 soldiers.
  697. Japan now imports large amounts of mackerel from Norway.
  698. Japan now uses the units of the International Unit System, but it generally uses the shaku as a basic scale for designing Japanese-style houses, regarding the shaku as a scale appropriate to Japanese living environment.
  699. Japan of the time had no more energy enough to continue the war.
  700. Japan opened the ports of Shimoda and Hakodate.
  701. Japan paved the way for expansion into East Asia such as Korea, Manchuria and others through the realism and imperialism diplomacy of Mutsu diplomacy.
  702. Japan planned a political reform in the Korean Peninsula, together with Qing.
  703. Japan plunged into the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States) (Japan) with advent of the Onin War and Meio Incident.
  704. Japan produced a large amount of gold and silver (especially silver) during this time, using these abundant resources for trade.
  705. Japan received the southern part of Sakhalin starting at a latitude of 50 degrees north and the belonging islands.
  706. Japan repeatedly set forth on expeditions with large armies, and eventually SAKANOUE no Tamuramaro, the seii taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians"), subdued the enemy by building the Isawa and Shiwa castles.
  707. Japan responded to the tribute from Tamna by dispatching envoys to Tamna in 679 and 684.
  708. Japan ruled over and governed Taiwan from 1895 when the Treaty of Shimonoseki was concluded to 1945 when Japan was defeated.
  709. Japan saw no birth of an empress for more than 850 years after Empress Shotoku until Empress Meisho in Edo period.
  710. Japan shall be accepted to have the right of predominance in the Korean Peninsula.
  711. Japan should trade with America from the port of Nagasaki.
  712. Japan started a war with the United States.
  713. Japan started paying tribute to the court of dynasties in China around from the era of the Former Han, and came to accept products of culture in China which was an advanced cultured country.
  714. Japan succeeded in containing the southward advance of the Russian Empire and confirming their respective spheres of influence through the Russo-Japanese Treaty.
  715. Japan thought they could give a strong impression to China by the theory of the unbroken Imperial line, because China had a longer history than Japan as a country, but none of their dynasties lasted longer than that of Japan.
  716. Japan took over the Kwantung Leased Territory as a leased territory from the Russian Empire as a result of the Treaty of Portsmouth signed in 1905.
  717. Japan tried to coerce Korea by sending a guard of battleships and soldiers to accompany the envoy.
  718. Japan tried to prevent the Qing dynasty from intervening in Korea by determining the interpretation.
  719. Japan understood that the envoy was dispatched in order to revitalize Goguryeo, the predecessor of Bokkai, treating the envoy extremely well and dispatching Kenbokkaishi early the following year.
  720. Japan used to conduct 'Sokui-Kanjo' to celebrate enthronement of the emperor between the Kamakura period and the end of Edo period.
  721. Japan was a closed country for over 200 years in the Edo period with the exception of Dejima in Nagasaki which remained open to other countries; regulations such as a ban on foreign voyage to Japan and production of large ships were in effect.
  722. Japan was actually founded about 1,000 years after the legendary foundation day, but still Japanese people accepted the day written on the Nihonshoki as the actual foundation day of Japan.
  723. Japan was an island country and with its stable state system with the emperor, betrayal or defection to neighboring countries, as well as overthrowing the government without an emperor, was unlikely.
  724. Japan was filled with samurai feeling dissatisfaction toward the government which treated samurai unfairly and Takauji ASHIKAGA finally gathered troops in Kamakura.
  725. Japan was globally recognized as 'suiei-okoku' (a nation of the best swimmers) when Japanese athletes won five swimming events at the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics.
  726. Japan was keen to learn advanced science and technology through the Tsushinshi envoy.
  727. Japan was leased Lushun and Dalian City within the territory of China and the Russian rail system in the area south of Changchun including the relative rights thereof.
  728. Japan was still a lesser nation at that time, so Japanese government made all-out efforts to entertain Nicholas.
  729. Japan was still in the prehistoric age at that time, so we can only know about the Japanese history of this period indirectly from the contemporary Chinese history books.
  730. Japan was then dragged into the quagmire of the Sino-Japanese War.
  731. Japan was thought to have become a fortunate land through the power of kotodama, a so-called "land of happy kotodama."
  732. Japan was unable to send missions to Tang China through the northern route and had to find a new route, because Japan lost its base foot in the Korean Peninsula in the Battle of Baekgang in 663 and Silla drove the Tang army out of the peninsula to unify its country in 676.
  733. Japan welcomed this tribute as the second coming of the 'barbarian country' Goguryeo and, highly valuing friendly relations with Balhae in relation to their struggle with Silla, they dispatched envoys.
  734. Japan which became a major economic power following the United States of America regained self-confidence, and in the Osaka Expo in 1970, a slogan, 'Progress and Harmony of Mankind,' was set out.
  735. Japan which was isolated from the world started the Pacific War with the Attack on Pearl Harbor, participated in World War II, and controlled food and resources for national warfare.
  736. Japan will almost collapse once.'
  737. Japan won the Japanese-Sino War, Japanese-Russo War and the First World War, fighting against powerful countries around the world.
  738. Japan's Good Design Award (Emergency Tower with Multiple Functions) (1999)
  739. Japan's National Defense Women's Association and kappogi
  740. Japan's Onmyodo
  741. Japan's Onmyodo does not practice Shokon no matsuri on the dead, which is the key difference from the Chinese Taoism.
  742. Japan's Rinzai is one of Zen schools in Japan.
  743. Japan's Sky Perfect! (CS digital television broadcasting) provides excellent programs of Noh, and recorded Noh performances are often broadcasted through 'Kabuki Channel' and 'Kyoto Channel.'
  744. Japan's Tendai Sect (Sanmon school and Jimon school) and various schools of Hokke sect, such as Nichiren Sect or Nichiren Shoshu school, regard the theory as their doctrine and the three sutras as the basis.
  745. Japan's advance into the south caused her to lose the war.
  746. Japan's ancient funeral style was described in Japanese mythology, particularly in the episode of the funeral for Amenowakahiko in "Kojiki" (The Records of Ancient Matters), in which details of ancient funerals are elaborated on.
  747. Japan's basic attitude towards negotiations was based on a combination of these two points.
  748. Japan's being far behind the naval technologies of the West was glaringly clear to everyone to see when Kurofune (the Black ships of Commodore Matthew Perry) came to Japan and this fact led Japan to the Meiji Restoration.
  749. Japan's case, in which this sort of primitive religion survived the feudal and Medieval periods and reached the modern period intact, is almost unique.
  750. Japan's cession of Taiwan under the Treaty of Shimonoseki came as a surprise to the people living in Taiwan.
  751. Japan's consideration that wintertime training was to be the most urgent task was the background of the incident.
  752. Japan's current navy falls under the umbrella of the Japan Self-Defense Forces as the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force.
  753. Japan's defeat and the Republic of China's seizure of Taiwan
  754. Japan's economic exchange with Southern Sung affected the Mongolian invasion attempts against Japan, and the trade between Japan and Yuan Dynasty was done even after the fall of Southern Dynasty as the extension of the trade.
  755. Japan's first code, the Asuka Kiyomihara Code, was also edited here.
  756. Japan's first electric railcars, on the Kyoto Electric Railway (later Kyoto Municipal Streetcar), were established to connect Fushimi-ko Port and Kyoto City.
  757. Japan's first radio broadcast was made from here in 1925.
  758. Japan's first serial comic was "A Tall Man and a Short Man Make a Trip to Enoshima and Kamakura" (1896) by Beisaku TAGUCHI serialized in "Marumaru Chinbun" and it was the first comic that describes a coherent story with specific characters.
  759. Japan's first target was French Indochina.
  760. Japan's mainland became the target of air raids in 1945.
  761. Japan's national anthem "Kimigayo"
  762. Japan's national anthem is called 'Kimigayo.'
  763. Japan's national constitution draft was strongly influenced by the constitutions of Belgium (1831) and Prussia (1850), and insisted the emperor's compliance with the constitution and the strong authority of the assembly.
  764. Japan's naval technologies, however, came to lag behind those of European countries because of the isolation policy taken during the Edo period.
  765. Japan's numerical goal of -6% was brought in through a political agreement at a non-official meeting between Japan, America and Europe, and the agreement between America and Japan was intended for encouraging developing countries to join the conference.
  766. Japan's obligation of defence of the Korean territories
  767. Japan's official histories
  768. Japan's old calendar is Tenpo-reki (calendar).
  769. Japan's old lunisolar calendars
  770. Japan's perception on the envoy dispatched from Bokkai was that they visited Japan because they were impressed by the virtue of the Japanese Emperor.
  771. Japan's policy to spread the education system influenced the high educational standard of today's Taiwan to a certain extent.
  772. Japan's railway, in a limited sense, means railways under the control of Railway Bureau of MLIT (Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism) based on the Railway Business Act.
  773. Japan's record was set with 32 skips by Shunsuke Watanabe, a pitcher of the Chiba Lotte Marines, in a TV program, 'Tokumitsu Tokoro no sports eraihito Grand Prix' (Tokumitsu and Tokoro's Great-People Grand Prix of Sports).
  774. Japan's relations with Korea
  775. Japan's relations with Ming China
  776. Japan's tributary status, which followed the case of Altan KHAN, was high (for example, generals from the peace-seeking group including Yukinaga and Yoshitsugu OTANI were appointed to governor-generals and Yukinaga's vassals to commanders of governor-general in addition to Hideyoshi).
  777. Japan's victory in the Russo-Japanese War brought relaxation of international tensions in Asia, leading to the formation of the Chinese Revolutionary Alliance (Tongmenghui) in Tokyo in 1905 and other movements aspiring to winning democratic freedom.
  778. Japan's victory over Russia raised the repute of Japan among the great powers and greatly contributed to Japan's objective to revise the unequal treaties which had been a priority issue for the Japanese government since the Meiji Restoration.
  779. Japan's victory over the major power Russia made an impact abroad but there was an opinion that its objective to develop itself to become a modern nation comparable to Western powerful countries after the earth-shattering visit by Kurofune during the Kaei era (1848-1854) was at least accomplished.
  780. Japan's winning the Russo-Japanese War was significant in the course of world history because it was a victory of a small colored country over a big white country as well as a triumph of a constitutional monarchy over a country under an absolutistic ruler.
  781. Japan, after exchanging ratification, appointed Naval Captain Sukenori KABAYAMA as governor of Taiwan, and dispatched the Imperial Guards led by Imperial Prince Kitashirakawanomiya Yoshihisa to Taiwan.
  782. Japan, among advanced countries, has been pointed out having shown very little understanding about industrial heritage since the Industrial Revolution, and in fact this tendency is a marked one.
  783. Japan, at that time, abandoned its ambition to invade Korean Peninsula after the loss of the Battle of Hakusukinoe.
  784. Japan, based on the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, joined in World War I as a member of the Allies.
  785. Japan, based on the third Anglo-Japanese Alliance, participated in the World War I as a member of the Allies.
  786. Japan, disregarding the act of smuggling, negotiated with China in hard-line manners under plea of the issues of territorial sea and of the Japanese (rising sun) flag, and demanded an apology and compensation for damage of a hundred thousand yen.
  787. Japan, having sided with the Allies consisting of Britain and others in this war, became the Ottoman Empire's enemy.
  788. Japan, however, was in the midst of a movement to expel Western-style paintings.
  789. Japan, included in this group of small empires, had a system of ritsuryo kokka, where the emperor was in a position comparable to the emperor of China and Japan had an imperial structure in which Japan was regarded as the center of the world, similarly to Tang.
  790. Japan, opening its country to the world in the late Edo period, became conscious of the overwhelming national power of Western countries.
  791. Japan, the host country of Kyoto conference, was pressured to make the conference be a success by public opinions at home and from overseas.
  792. Japan, which achieved rapid progress after the Meiji Restoration, believed the Korean Peninsula was geopolitically important, when it considered its national defense policy against foreign countries.
  793. Japan, which fell far behind the Western powers due to its national isolation policy in the Edo era, was heavily burdened by the Ansei Five-Power Treaties long after its start as a renewed nation.
  794. Japan, which was devastated by the war, came to be dependent on aid from the Allied Forces such as the United States after the defeat.
  795. Japan, which won the Sino-Japanese War, succeeded in eliminating Qing's clout in Korea by concluding the Treaty of Shimonoseki that compelled Qing to acknowledge Yi Dynasty Korea as an independent country.
  796. Japan, with an intention to remove conflicts eternally in Korea and maintain peace in the entire East, dispatched troops under the Jemulpo Treaty and proposed Quing to work together to do so.'
  797. Japan-China Japan Sea regular service (Maizuru - Chongjin, Vostochny Sea Port) - once a month
  798. Japan-Korea Annexation Treaty of 1907
  799. Japan-Korea Joint Communication
  800. Japan-Korea Protocol' in 1904, by 'Dainippon Teikoku Kotei'
  801. Japan-Korea relations
  802. Japan-Mexico Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Navigation
  803. Japan-Mexico Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Navigation is a treaty concluded between Japan and Mexico on November 30, 1888.
  804. Japan-Ming trade
  805. Japan-Ming trade was also called the tally trade, because Kangofu (certificate to show that the ship is lawfully registered by Ming) was used in the trade.
  806. Japan-Netherlands relations
  807. Japan-Russia relations
  808. Japan-US treaty on the protection of invention, design, trademark and copyright in Korea' in 1910, by 'Nihonkoku Kotei'
  809. Japan-specific dishes in which foodstuffs or a cooking method originated in a foreign country is used (examples: rice omelet and Japanese-style chicken rice)
  810. Japan-style restaurants up to now
  811. Japan.
  812. Japan/Kinki Region/Kyoto Prefecture/Funai-gun
  813. Japan/Kinki Region/Kyoto Prefecture/Kuse-gun
  814. Japan/Kinki Region/Kyoto Prefecture/Naka-gun
  815. Japan/Kinki Region/Kyoto Prefecture/Otokuni-gun
  816. Japan/Kinki Region/Kyoto Prefecture/Soraku-gun
  817. Japan:
  818. Japan: Asuka Period
  819. Japan: Heian Period
  820. Japan: Kamakura Period
  821. Japan: Nara Period
  822. Japan>Kinki region>Kyoto Prefecture>Tsuzuki county
  823. Japanese
  824. Japanese "Mikan"
  825. Japanese "o" (横, side) is phonetically similar to Chinese "o" (枉, to bend) and has the same meaning as bending into a sidetrack (横道に逸れる), including the following meanings:
  826. Japanese 'apart'
  827. Japanese Alphabetical Index of Nanjio's Catalogue of the Buddhist Tripitaka with Supplements and Corrections (edited by Nanjo Hakase Kinen Kankokai [Dr. Nanjo memorial publication society]) (1930)
  828. Japanese Americans
  829. Japanese Americans are U.S. citizens who have roots in Japan.
  830. Japanese Americans call the first generation who immigrated to the U.S. "Issei," their children "Nisei," "Sansei," and "Yonsei," but such words as "Issei" and "Nisei" can be used and understood in English.
  831. Japanese Art
  832. Japanese Barons
  833. Japanese Beech Forest at Mt. Tokin
  834. Japanese Buddhism
  835. Japanese Buddhism includes many sects.
  836. Japanese Buddhism/Mikkyo
  837. Japanese Buddhist monks
  838. Japanese Calendar
  839. Japanese Castle Data Sheet
  840. Japanese Cedar Pollinosis
  841. Japanese Cedar Pollinosis and Information
  842. Japanese Cherry Birch in Kamitsubai
  843. Japanese Cherry Birch, hornbeam and spice bush grow mostly in the secondary forests.
  844. Japanese Chokusenshu
  845. Japanese Classics
  846. Japanese Coiffure
  847. Japanese Comics
  848. Japanese Cormorant
  849. Japanese Cormorants range from 80 to 90 cm in length.
  850. Japanese Court Caps
  851. Japanese Court caps are headgear for Court nobles and adult samurai to wear when they visit the Imperial Palace.
  852. Japanese Cuisine
  853. Japanese Culture
  854. Japanese Cypress Pollen and Hay Fever
  855. Japanese Doll
  856. Japanese Emperor at the time was Emperor Gomizunoo.
  857. Japanese Envoy to Sui Dynasty in China
  858. Japanese Envoys to Tamna (Korean kingdom which ruled Jeju Island in ancient times)
  859. Japanese Envoys to Tamna was dispatched to Tamna from Japan (Wakoku).
  860. Japanese Foods Boom
  861. Japanese Geido
  862. Japanese Giant Salamander
  863. Japanese Government Railways (JGR) (National Railways)
  864. Japanese History
  865. Japanese Imperial Court
  866. Japanese Imperial Family
  867. Japanese Imperial Property
  868. Japanese Imperial succession, it is at the crossroads to end the old tradition and establish new Imperial lineage, whether to keep the traditional Imperial succession by the male Imperial line since the beginning of the Imperial family, or to accept succession from the female Imperial lineage.
  869. Japanese Inns such as Yoshinoya Inn, Uedaya Inn are scattered on the bank of Futatsuno Dam.
  870. Japanese Inpu
  871. Japanese Kenjutsu was revived in the Army long afterward.
  872. Japanese Kyujutsu developed independently and has its own technique, culture, and history, and is totally different from modern sports like archery, based upon Tankyu (short bow) from Europe.
  873. Japanese Kyujutsu is the art of shooting a bow (Wakyu -Japanese bow classified as Chokyu, or long bow), and arrow.
  874. Japanese Literature
  875. Japanese Method of Producing Tea
  876. Japanese Military Currency
  877. Japanese Mythology
  878. Japanese Mythology also contains anecdotes that seem to be variations of the banana type myth.
  879. Japanese National Railways Diesel Locomotive Class DE10
  880. Japanese National Railways Passenger Car 50 Series
  881. Japanese National Railways Rolling Stock 12: Tokaido Line III (Hoikusha, 1984) ISBN 458653012X
  882. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class 8620 - Working
  883. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class 9600
  884. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class B20 - Working
  885. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class C11
  886. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class C51 *
  887. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class C53 *
  888. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class C55
  889. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class C56 - Working (registered, operable on the main line)
  890. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class C57 - Working (registered, operable on the main line)
  891. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class C58
  892. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class C59
  893. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class C61 - Working (registered)
  894. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class C62 *
  895. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class D50
  896. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class D51
  897. Japanese National Railways Steam Locomotive Class D52
  898. Japanese Navy again investigated the Sydney at Kobe and discovered some material evidences; two American were thus arrested and the fleet was released.
  899. Japanese Paper Tradition Museum
  900. Japanese Physical Education Association Training Institute of Gymnastics => Japanese Physical Education Normal School of Gymnastics => Japan Vocational Sports School => Nippon Sport Science University
  901. Japanese Pigments
  902. Japanese Posthumous Title
  903. Japanese Race
  904. Japanese Red Cross Kyoto Daiichi Hospital
  905. Japanese Regents
  906. Japanese Rikyu
  907. Japanese Sado
  908. Japanese Sado classifies korai chawan as follows.
  909. Japanese Shinengo
  910. Japanese Shinno
  911. Japanese Shishimai
  912. Japanese Shojin ryori
  913. Japanese Shosei
  914. Japanese Spirit (Gakken Co., Ltd., 2003)
  915. Japanese Spirit' HARAJUKU GALLERY (Tokyo)
  916. Japanese Studies
  917. Japanese Sword
  918. Japanese Swords on battlefields
  919. Japanese TV drama series "Hissatsu Shigotonin" (The Professionals - Certain Death)
  920. Japanese Table Manners
  921. Japanese Tendai Sect
  922. Japanese Tojo were characterized by the lack of the alter of imperial ancestors and the altar of soil and grain, which were the features of Chinese Tojo, and by the absence of Rajo to surround the city, which was seen in the mainland China, or if any, it stretched only several dozen meters horizontally from Rajo-mon Gate.
  923. Japanese Traditional Archery on Horseback Association (Takeda-ryu Kamakura school)
  924. Japanese Wisteria Room (Fuji-no-ma)
  925. Japanese Yuba
  926. Japanese Yumiya is officially called wakyu and is classified as Chokyu.
  927. Japanese actor Katsuo NAKAMURA played Fusho in the film version of the novel released in 1980.
  928. Japanese administrative villages
  929. Japanese ancient matsuri
  930. Japanese ancient matsuri has a long history and is traditional, and when Japanese matsuri is introduced in English, the term 'festival' is used as a translated word.
  931. Japanese and 'Mujo'
  932. Japanese and Chinese Poems to Sing, Sekito copy
  933. Japanese and Chinese Poems to Sing, the "deccho" binding-style copy
  934. Japanese and Korean Views on the Annexation Treaty
  935. Japanese and Western style leather monument of the earliest ancestor
  936. Japanese appellation Unshu mikan was named by the Japanese local reading of Wenzhou, Zhejiang Province, China known for its citrus production.
  937. Japanese archaeological study also failed in the first place to completely get rid of the inclination to rationalize the existence of Mimana Nihon-fu in accordance with such interpretaion, partly because Koreans were prohibited from participating in the study.
  938. Japanese archery court
  939. Japanese architecture
  940. Japanese architecture has developed with influences from the Korean Peninsula and China.
  941. Japanese architecture represents the Japanese preference, placing an emphasis on natural materials and the harmonic unity of the outside and inside of a building.
  942. Japanese architecture, which mainly uses posts and beams, differs from Western architecture of bricks and stones, and traditional Japanese architecture gained attention in 20th century architectural modernism since it was ahead of its time in the use of modern architectural concepts.
  943. Japanese are allowed to engage in all kinds of manufacturing industries in the areas of the open markets and ports.
  944. Japanese army sustains crushing defeat at battle of Hakusukinoe, Korea
  945. Japanese art culture, originating in 10000 B.C. was descended from the period when new culture or foreign concepts was introduced all of a sudden, followed by the long period when cultural exchange was interrupted.
  946. Japanese art has been greatly influenced by Chinese and Korean art since ancient times, but it also developed a culture of its own, including Kokufu Bunka (Japan's original national culture) in the Heian period.
  947. Japanese art has developed its peculiar style always - except for the Jomon period - under the great influence of other countries - mainly that of China before the early modern ages, and that of Western countries after the modern age.
  948. Japanese art has such a wide variety of arts.
  949. Japanese art history
  950. Japanese art merchants were greatly involved in making the world aware of the value of Chinese art.
  951. Japanese art uses perspective differently from Western art, placing the focus away from the centre.
  952. Japanese assets in the United States were placed entirely under the administration of the U.S. Government, and after Japan's advancement into southern French Indochina was confirmed, there was a total ban on the export of oil to Japan.
  953. Japanese attendants at the ceremony were the Imperial family, executive government officials such as the heads of the three powers, local representatives such as prefectural governors, and representatives from every sector or industry of the society.
  954. Japanese big-leaf magnolia found at Kaicho-jinja Shrine
  955. Japanese biwa favored nuanced performances by making the most of a player's techniques rather than increasing the number of frets (reducing frets according to circumstance) while Chinese biwa increased frets and enhanced its powers of expression by improving functions as an instrument.
  956. Japanese biwa values the sensitive tones of silk strings but Chinese biwa used metal strings.
  957. Japanese bonsai, known as 'enBonsai,' became very popular in Europe from the 1970s, however due to the discovery on October 15, 2008, of an Asian long-horned beetle parasite on a garden tree being exported to the Netherlands, an emergency measure was taken to tighten import regulations.
  958. Japanese bow
  959. Japanese bow, approximately 221cm long (possibly being slightly longer or shorter), held about one-third the way from the bottom.
  960. Japanese brought curry and rice into Taiwan during the period of Japan's rule.
  961. Japanese buildings have been designed with 'ken' as a unit.
  962. Japanese calendar
  963. Japanese calendar covers Japanese own subjects relating to calendars.
  964. Japanese calendar dates are in old lunar calendar style.
  965. Japanese called Europeans 'Nanban-jin' (southern barbarians) because they came from the south.
  966. Japanese castles were built on the Korean peninsula during the Bunroku-Keicho War in order to serve as headquarters for the invading daimyo (Japanese feudal lords), and many of these were constructed near to shorelines and rivers in order to secure landing sites for supply ships from Japan.
  967. Japanese cats
  968. Japanese cats (nihon neko) are cats native to Japan which have long enjoyed the companionship with the Japanese.
  969. Japanese cavalry
  970. Japanese cedar pollen measures between 25-35?m and is dispersed over great distances by the wind.
  971. Japanese cedar pollinosis is a form of hay fever caused by pollen of the Cryptomeria japonica (Japanese cedar) tree.
  972. Japanese cedar pollinosis was thought to be a condition particular to Japan.
  973. Japanese celebrities who stayed at the hotel
  974. Japanese cellular phone
  975. Japanese ceramics are the most excellent across the world, and it has the longest history amongst the Japanese arts.
  976. Japanese char likes cold water and the upstream part of Totsu-kawa River is considered to be the southern limit of its habitat.
  977. Japanese chestnut
  978. Japanese chimaki
  979. Japanese chofuku was equivalent to the Chinese jofuku.
  980. Japanese citizens were also allowed to visit Korea and trade freely with the Koreans, and the ship dispatched for them were called Koriwasen and the Japanese citizens who visited Korea only for commercial purposes were called Koriwa.
  981. Japanese classic Rakugo (traditional comic storytelling) called Nezumiana (rat hall): There is a scene in which a person who moves from rags to riches with a large store, when one day, while fire-proofing, he neglects to cover the vent called Nezumiana, and the whole dozo storehouse burns down, so he is turned out on the street.
  982. Japanese clock
  983. Japanese clothes during the Jomon period are mostly unknown.
  984. Japanese clothes during the Kofun period are mostly unknown.
  985. Japanese clothes during the Nara period are mostly unknown.
  986. Japanese clothing
  987. Japanese clothing, which originated from Han Chinese traditional ethnic clothing, currently has the closest design to the Chinese Hanfu clothing, the ethnic clothing of the Han race.
  988. Japanese comic started to be exported around the 1980s and it gained new fans.
  989. Japanese comics generally consist of 'frame, character, background, speech balloon, onomatopoeia, manpu (signs, symbols and characters used in manga to represent actions, emotions, etc.), dialogue and other techniques.'
  990. Japanese commanders held a council of war in Jeonju and divided themselves into the Right, Middle, and Left groups and the Navy and allocated marching routes and districts to conquer, and determined which troops were in charge of defense and immediately occupied Jeolla Province after marching from Chungcheong.
  991. Japanese composer Minao SHIBATA composed "Shuni-e san" (Praise of Shuni-e) in 1978.
  992. Japanese confectionery
  993. Japanese confectionery called Kinakonejiri is made with soybean flour as a main ingredient.
  994. Japanese consciousness was indoctrinated such as worshipping the Emperor by 'reverentially reading' ordinance on Education and setting hoanden (premises where an imperial portrait and the Imperial Rescript on Education are housed before and during the war) as well as hoisting Hinomaru (national flag of Japan) and singing Kimigayo (Japan's national anthem).
  995. Japanese convenience stores in Shanghai City also sell Oden; however, the difference is that the ingredients are skewered and put in a disposable cup when sold.
  996. Japanese copper coins were also exported to Vietnam.
  997. Japanese copper, a domestic type that doesn't need refining, was found in the Chichibu district in the year 708.
  998. Japanese crane
  999. Japanese cuisine
  1000. Japanese cuisine is categorized into Yusoku ryori (dishes prepared for the royal court) derived from court dishes, honzen ryori (full-course haute cuisine) which are party dishes for feudal lords, Kaiseki ryori (formally arranged dinner to enjoy sake) established as party dishes for townspeople in the Edo period, and so on.


212001 ~ 213000

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