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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. Kamiyui is a general term referring those who were engaged in hairdressing from the Edo period to the Meiji period, who are now called hairdressers.
  2. Kamiza (seat of honor):
  3. Kamiza (the seat of honor), the most important seat, or the seat where the guest of honor sits.
  4. Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada (July 1, 1990)
  5. Kammaki-Sakurainoeki Station changed its name to Kanmaki Station.
  6. Kamo (Noh)
  7. Kamo (Station), Kizu (Station), Shin-Kizu Station, Hosono Station, Kyotanabe Station, Nagao Station (Osaka Prefecture), Tsuda Station, Hoshida Station, Shijo-Nawate Station, Nozaki Station (Osaka Prefecture), Suminodo Station, Tokuan Station, Hanaten Station, Amijima Station, Sakuranomiya Station
  8. Kamo (name of an area in Kyoto City) nasu
  9. Kamo - JR Namba section
  10. Kamo - JR Namba: Shin-Osaka General Control Center (Kamo - Kizu section is a CTC section controlled by Kameyama Control Center)
  11. Kamo - Oji section: Automatic train stop system (base P system) and automatic train stop system
  12. Kamo - Sakuranomiya 32M41C
  13. Kamo -JR Namba section (JR West)
  14. Kamo Community Bus
  15. Kamo Cultural Center (Ajisai Hall)
  16. Kamo Elementary School, Kizugawa City
  17. Kamo Inariyama-kofun tumulus (Historic site designated by the prefecture)
  18. Kamo Kaido
  19. Kamo Kannushi Tsunehisa ki
  20. Kamo Mioya-jinja Shrine (Shimogamo-jinja Shrine)
  21. Kamo Mioya-jinja Shrine (Shimogamo-jinja Shrine) is located on this street.
  22. Kamo Nanban (or Kamo Nanba)
  23. Kamo Nanban is a bowl of buckwheat noodles in hot soup with the duck meat and green onions topping.
  24. Kamo SERIZAWA
  25. Kamo SERIZAWA and Mito Group often appear in films and TV dramas about Shinsen-gumi.
  26. Kamo SERIZAWA, (1827? - October 28 or October 30, 1863) was a roshi of Mito Clan during the last days of Tokugawa shogunate, and also the original lead commander of Shinsen-gumi (Mibu Roshi).
  27. Kamo SERIZAWA, the descendant, who was the head of Shinsengumi in the end of Edo period was from the Serizawa clan of the upper grade country samurai of Serizawa Castle in Serizawa-mura, Hitachi Province, and had the real name of TAIRA no Mitsumoto.
  28. Kamo SERIZAWA: Died September 18, 1863 in a surprise attack by Hijikata and other members.
  29. Kamo Saiin Rekidai Saio Jinrei-sha Shrine (enshrining those Imperial princesses who served as Saiin and Saio)
  30. Kamo Shrines are the first shrines (Ichinomiya) in Kyoto -Kamowakeikazuchi Shrine (called Kamigamo Shrine) at Kita district, and Kamomioya Shrine (called Shimogamo Shrine) at Sakyo district.
  31. Kamo Station (Kyoto Prefecture)
  32. Kamo Station - JR Namba Station
  33. Kamo Station - Kizu Station (Kyoto Prefecture)
  34. Kamo Station - Kizu Station - Narayama Station
  35. Kamo Station came into operation in 1897 as a station of Kansei Railway Company, which operated the line connecting Osaka and Nagoya via Nara.
  36. Kamo Station, located in 1-6-3, Eki-Nishi, Kamo-cho, Kizugawa City, Kyoto Prefecture, is the station of the Kansai Main Line that is operated by the West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
  37. Kamo Taketsunumi no mikoto
  38. Kamo Taketsunumi no mikoto and Tamayorihime no mikoto are the enshrined deities of Kamomioya-jinja Shrine, and Kamowake ikazuchi no mikoto is the enshrined deity of Kamowake Ikazuchi-jinja Shrine.
  39. Kamo Taketsunumi no mikoto has two mikogami (the child god in a shrine where parent-child gods are enshrined), Taketamayorihiko no mikoto and Taketamayorihime no mikoto.
  40. Kamo Wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine (Kamigamo-jinja Shrine) Misono-bashi Bridge
  41. Kamo Wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine [Kamigamo Motoyama-cho, Kita Ward, Kyoto City]
  42. Kamo dolls
  43. Kamo is one of the Noh works.
  44. Kamo kaido is a street running the embankment of the left shore of (west shore) the Kamo-gawa River in Kyoto City.
  45. Kamo ningyo (dolls originates from Kamo-jinja Shrine)
  46. Kamo no Mabuchi stated a similar opinion in "Norito ko" (On Norito Prayers).
  47. Kamo priest genealogy (legend and catalogue) (owned by The Foundation of The Kamoagatanushi Clan)
  48. Kamo seiro (buckwheat noodles on a bamboo basket served with a bowl of duck meat in soysauce-based soup on the side)
  49. Kamo-Ohashi Bridge (Yodo-gawa River System)
  50. Kamo-cho (Kyoto Prefecture)
  51. Kamo-cho absorbed Tono-mura and Mikanohara-mura.
  52. Kamo-cho cultural center (Ajisai Hall)
  53. Kamo-cho was a town located in Soraku-gun, Kyoto Prefecture.
  54. Kamo-gawa River
  55. Kamo-gawa River (Takashima City)
  56. Kamo-gawa River (Yodo-gawa River system)
  57. Kamo-gawa River (Yodo-gawa River system) flows on the east side.
  58. Kamo-gawa River (賀茂川(加茂川))
  59. Kamo-gawa River (鴨川) (Yodo-gawa River system)
  60. Kamo-gawa River and other rivers
  61. Kamo-gawa River and other rivers' includes Kamo-gawa River (Yodo-gawa River system) and Takano-gawa River (Kyoto City).
  62. Kamo-go
  63. Kamo-jinja Shrine
  64. Kamo-jinja Shrine in Imabari City, Ehime Prefecture performs yabusame for the 'Otomo Uma' in the autumn festival in October.
  65. Kamo-jinja Shrine is the collective name for Kamo Wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine (Upper Kamo-jinja Shrine) and Kamo Mioya-jinja Shrine (Lower Kamo-jinja Shrine) in Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  66. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine
  67. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Eastern Gokusho (daily offering hall) (constructed around 1628)
  68. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Eastern Watariro (constructed in 1628)
  69. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Four-legged inner gate (constructed in 1628)
  70. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Gakunoya (bandstand) (constructed in 1628)
  71. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Gakusho (bandstand) and Western Gokusho (constructed around 1628)
  72. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Geheiden (outer treasury) (constructed in 1628)
  73. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Gonden (associate shrine) (constructed in 1863)
  74. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Hallway connecting the Heiden and Igoden (constructed around 1628)
  75. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Hallway connecting the main hall and Eastern Watariro (constructed in 1863)
  76. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Hallway connecting the main hall and the associate shrine (constructed in 1863)
  77. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Hei Chumon gate (constructed in 1628)
  78. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Heiden (hall of offerings) (constructed in 1628)
  79. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Honden (main hall) (constructed in 1863)
  80. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Igoden (a place to go into seclusion) (constructed around 1628)
  81. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Kara-mon gate (constructed around 1628)
  82. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Kataoka-bashi bridge (constructed in 1868 [Shigeo TANI])
  83. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Kitashinsensho (Choya, where food for the gods is prepared) (attached to Nara-jinja Shrine worship hall) (constructed in 1628)
  84. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Maidono (Hashidono - performance area built over a stream) (constructed in 1863)
  85. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Mifuda-no-ya (constructed in 1628)
  86. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Naorai-dokoro (priests retire after performing the Shinto ritual of offering food and drink to the gods) (constructed around 1628)
  87. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Noritoya (ritual prayer hall) (constructed in 1628)
  88. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Ro-mon gate (constructed in 1628)
  89. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Sessha Kataoka-jinja Shrine main hall and worship hall (2) (constructed in 1628)
  90. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Sessha Shingu-jinja Shrine main hall and haiden (worship hall) (2) (constructed in 1628)
  91. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Sessha Wakamiya-jinja Shrine main hall (constructed in 1628)
  92. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Shinhouko (constructed in 1628)
  93. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Sukiro (passageway open on both sides) (constructed in 1628)
  94. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Takakura-den (constructed around 1628)
  95. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Tsuchinoya (Tochakuden) (constructed in 1628)
  96. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Watariro (constructed in 1628)
  97. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine Western Watariro (constructed in 1628)
  98. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine corridors (2) (constructed around 1628)
  99. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine is located in Kita Ward, Kyoto City.
  100. Kamo-wakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine worship hall (Hosodono) (constructed in 1628)
  101. Kamoba (imperial wild duck reserves)
  102. Kamoe: kamoi (a lintel, or a narrow board continuing around an entire Japanese-style room and covering the top slots into which sliding doors, shoji, and fusuma fit).
  103. Kamogata somen: Asakuchi City, Okayama Prefecture.
  104. Kamogawa Higashi Half-interchange
  105. Kamogawa Nishi Half-interchange - Kamogawa Higashi Half-interchange (under construction; scheduled to be opened in March 2011)
  106. Kamogawa Odori (Kamo River Dance): performed at the Ponto-cho Kaburen-jo Theater from May 1 to 24 with the largest number of performances among all the hanamachi in Kyoto.
  107. Kamogawa Odori from May 1 to May 24
  108. Kamogawa River (Yodo-gawa River System)
  109. Kamogawa River replacement theory
  110. Kamogawa-Noryoyuka (wooden floors set by the Kamo-gawa River)
  111. Kamohani-jinja Shrine
  112. Kamoin Yoshichika' was killed together with his cabal of 10 people.
  113. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine
  114. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine (Higashi-Honden (an east main hall) and Nishi-Honden (a west main hall)): two buildings
  115. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine (Shimogamo-jinja Shrine)
  116. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine (Shimogamo-jinja Shrine) was the landlord for the manor.
  117. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine (the Shimogami-jinja Shrine)
  118. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Azekura (storehouse)
  119. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Azukariya
  120. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine East Honden (main hall)
  121. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Eastern and Western Gakunoya (bandstand) (2)
  122. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Eastern and Western Goryoya (where food for the gods is prepared) (2)
  123. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Eastern and Western passageways (2)
  124. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Four-legged inner gate
  125. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Hashidono (performance area built over a stream)
  126. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Heiden (hall of offerings)
  127. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Hosodono (long thin worship hall)
  128. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Inner gate Eastern and Western corridors (2)
  129. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Kugosho (where food for the gods is prepared)
  130. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Maidono (stage)
  131. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Noritoya (ritual prayer hall)
  132. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Ooidokoro (where rice is cooked)
  133. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Ro-mon gate
  134. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Ro-mon gate Eastern and Western corridors (2)
  135. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Sessha Izumo-Inoe-jinja Shrine Honden (main hall)
  136. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Sessha Mitsui-jinja Shrine Eastern and Western hallways (2)
  137. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Sessha Mitsui-jinja Shrine Haiden (worship hall)
  138. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Sessha Mitsui-jinja Shrine Honden (3)
  139. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Sessha Mitsui-jinja Shrine Muna-mon Gate
  140. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Shimpukuden hall (where winter and summer clothing are sewn and offered to the deities)
  141. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine West Honden (main hall)
  142. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine Western Kara-mon gate
  143. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine [Shimogamo Izumigawa-cho, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City]
  144. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine is located in Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  145. Kamomioya-jinja Shrine' National Designated Historic Site
  146. Kamon
  147. Kamon (family)
  148. Kamon (to break a sutra or treatise down into small sections for exegesis and analysis)
  149. Kamon FURUSHO, Minoru Ota, Mamichi TSUDA, Kakugoro INOUE, Kencho SUEMATSU, Tomofusa SASSA, and Arasuke SONE were members of the committee.
  150. Kamon SHIBATA
  151. Kamon SHIBATA (February 6, 1863 - August 25, 1919) is a statesman who served as Education Minister, a member of the House of Peers, and so on.
  152. Kamon SHIBATA, Secretary of the Cabinet
  153. Kamon does not necessarily correspond to blood line except in cases where descent is clear (especially among common people) (even if Kamon is common in a noble family, it does not mean they have common blood).
  154. Kamon have often been exchanged from one person to another.
  155. Kamon were a kind of alternate identity so, it was increasingly used among samurai to show who they were.
  156. Kamon were commonly used in daily life.
  157. Kamon were handed down in each family with this Myoji and began to be used among the common people's private Myoji in recent times.
  158. Kamon were often exchanged between clans and were also freely created.
  159. Kamonabe
  160. Kamonasu
  161. Kamonasu is a large round eggplant of Kyo-yasai (vegetable indigenous to Kyoto).
  162. Kamonomiya
  163. Kamonomiya (November 21, 1618 - November 4, 1622) was a member of the Imperial family in the early part of the Edo period.
  164. Kamonomiya passed away on November 4, 1622 without attaining manhood.
  165. Kamonryo
  166. Kamonryo (Bureau of Housekeeping)
  167. Kamonryo refers to Ryoge no kan (class outside of the Ritsuryo system) belonging to Kunaisho (Ministry of the Sovereign's Household) under the Ritsuryo system in Ritsuryo Japan.
  168. Kamonryo was in charge of setup when court functions were held, and cleaning the inside of the palace.
  169. Kamori (Housekeeping)
  170. Kamori (Housekeeping) of Tomo no miyatsuko (Servant of the Court administering a group) was attached, and was in charge of cleaning and setup.
  171. Kamosha-gohongu-no-ezu'
  172. Kamosha-kozu'
  173. Kamosu-jinja Shrine (Matsue City, Shimane Prefecture)
  174. Kamotsuba-jinja Shrine
  175. Kamotsuba-jinja Shrine enshrines Tsumihayae-Kotoshironushi-no-mikoto (also called Kotoshironushi-no-kami) and Shitateruhime (or Shitateruhime-no-kami) as main enshrined deities, while enshrining Takeminakata-no-kami as an associated god.
  176. Kamotsuba-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located in Gose City, Nara Prefecture.
  177. Kamotsuba-jinja Shrine is also referred to as 'an associated shrine of Omiwa-jinja Shrine' because Kotoshironushi-no-mikoto was the son of Okuninushi (chief god of Izumo in southern Honshu Island, Japan, and the central character in the important cycle of myths set in that region) enshrined in Omiwa-jinja Shrine (Sakurai City, Nara Prefecture).
  178. Kamotsuba-jinja Shrine was designated as a prefectural shrine in 1927.
  179. Kamowakeikazuchi no Mikoto
  180. Kamowakeikazuchi no Mikoto does not appear in the "Kojiki" (Record of Ancient Matters), the "Nihonshoki" (Chronicles of Japan) or Japanese mythology.
  181. Kamowakeikazuchi no Mikoto is a Shinto god (Shinto).
  182. Kamowakeikazuchi no Mikoto is enshrined at Kamowakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine (Kamigamo-jinja Shrine) and also at Kamo-jinja Shrines around the country.
  183. Kamowakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine
  184. Kamowakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine (Kamigamo-jinja Shrine) and Kamomioya-jinja Shrine (Shimogamo-jinja Shrine)
  185. Kamowakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine (the Kamigamo-jinja Shrine)
  186. Kamoyamaguchi-jinja Shrine (Shikinaisha listed in Engishiki. Midoshi-no-kami)
  187. Kampaku
  188. Kampaku is a post held by a person who governs in the Emperor's stead.
  189. Kampei
  190. Kampu Ferry Co., Ltd.(sailing between Shimonoseki and Busan, South Korea)
  191. Kampyo
  192. Kamu Yai Mimi no Mikoto
  193. Kamu-oichi-hime
  194. Kamu-oichi-hime is a Shinto goddess from Japanese mythology.
  195. Kamukushi no Miko
  196. Kamukushi no miko (神櫛王: year of birth and death unknown) was a member of Japanese Imperial family (Royal family), who appears in the "Kojiki" (The Records of Ancient Matters) and the "Nihonshoki" (Chronicles of Japan).
  197. Kamunabi no Ihase no mori no Yobukodori Itaku na nakiso Waga koi masaru' means 'Do no cry so painfully, Calling bird, In the forest, Of sacred Iwase - My love only increases.'
  198. Kamununakahamimi no Sumeramikoto, the Emperor Suizei
  199. Kamununakawa-miminomikoto settled in the palace of Takaoka at Kazuraki, and governed the country (Minami Kazuraki-gun, Nara prefecture).
  200. Kamununakawamimi became Emperor Suizei, but there are no records of the 8 emperors after Emperor Suizei.
  201. Kamununakawamimi gave a weapon to his older brother Kamuyaimimi and told him to kill Tagishimimi.
  202. Kamununakawamimi no Mikoto was informed of this plan through a poem written by his mother, and together with Kamuyaimimi no Mikoto, his elder brother born of the same mother, he attacked Tagishimimi no Mikoto in his home in Kataoka (present-day Oji-cho in Kitatsuragi-gun, Nara Prefecture).
  203. Kamununakawamimi no mikoto (later the Emperor Suizei) and Kamiyaimimi no mikoto scented out this plot from their mother's poem.
  204. Kamununakawamimi's father, Emperor Jinmu (Kamuyamatoiwarebiko), was also the youngest among four children of Ugayafukiaezu, whose father Hori was also the youngest child.
  205. Kamuro
  206. Kamuro shimada: Elongated takashimada.
  207. Kamuro were promoted to furisode shinzo at around this age by their mentor courtesans.
  208. Kamuro: Bobbed hair.
  209. Kamutsubayashi-go(加無都波也之)
  210. Kamuyaimimi failed, however, because his hands and legs were trembling, so Kamununakawamimi took the weapon from his older brother and gave the finishing blow to Tagishimimi.
  211. Kamuyaimimi no Mikoto
  212. Kamuyaimimi no mikoto
  213. Kamuyaimimi no mikoto (year of birth unknown; died in May, 578B.C.) was a member of the Imperial family (the royal family), described in the "Kojiki" (The Records of Ancient Matters) and the "Nihon Shoki" (Chronicles of Japan), etc.
  214. Kamuyaimimi no mikoto.
  215. Kamuyaimimi was so deeply ashamed of this blunder that at the enthronement of his younger brother, he decided to help the new Emperor by administering religious matters.
  216. Kamuyaimimi-no-mikoto gave up the right of succession to the Imperial Throne and ceded it to his younger brother, despite being the eldest child of the Emperor Jinmu.
  217. Kamuyaimimi-no-mikoto is also referred to as 'Mishiritsuhiko' on the grounds that such conduct as withdrawing oneself from something is translated as 'Mi o shirizoita' in Japanese.
  218. Kamuyaimimi-no-mikoto was ashamed of his blunder and helped his younger brother, and together they ruled the gods of heaven and earth, and it was determined that Kamununakawamimi-no-mikoto would be enthroned as emperor.
  219. Kamuyaimiminomikoto
  220. Kamuyamato iharebiko no Sumeramikoto, the Emperor Jinmu
  221. Kamuyamato iwarehiko schemed with his older brothers to rule Yamato.
  222. Kamuyamato iwarehiko was enthroned at the foot of the mountain at Unebi no kashihara no miya.
  223. Kamuyamatoiwarebiko and Nagasunehiko showed each other their symbols as a child of Amatsu kami, so both of them were proved to be genuine.
  224. Kamuyamatoiwarebiko asked Takakuraji how he received the sword.
  225. Kamuyamatoiwarebiko gave them a feast and made them accompanied by 80 cooks who secretly had swords.
  226. Kamuyamatoiwarebiko made rough deities obey him and succeeded to the throne at the palace of Kashiwara at Unebi (the Kashihara Imperial Palace in the southeast of Mount Unebi).
  227. Kamuyamatoiwarebiko no mikoto settled in the palace of Kashiwara at Unebi, and governed the country (the southeast area of Mt. Unebi in Nara Prefecture).
  228. Kamuyamatoiwarebiko sent the yatakarasu first to ask the brothers whether they would serve him or not, but the older brother Eukashi shot a whistling arrowhead to chase the bird away.
  229. Kan (An Unit of Weight and Currency)
  230. Kan HOSHO
  231. Kan HOSHO (May 15, 1934 -) is a Nohgakushi (Noh actor) playing waki (supporting role) of the Shimogakari-Hosho-ryu school.
  232. Kan KIKUCHI "Shunkan" (a work of fiction)
  233. Kan KIKUCHI Award (1972)
  234. Kan KIKUCHI wrote "Tojuro's Love Affair," a play about Tojuro SAKATA (the first).
  235. Kan Pro' produced many works during its second period providing income for Shinko Kinema.
  236. Kan SATO, Rikijiro SATO (a debate on the beliefs in relation to Inui and Kimon [the northeastern unlucky] direction, person, a thing to be avoided by Rikijiro in 1976).
  237. Kan SHIMOZAWA wrote "Mibu shinju" on Matsubara's death, reconstructing the stories that Tamesaburo YAGI of the Yagi family, where Shinsengumi quartered, had heard about him from Tainoshin SHINOHARA and Hajime SAITO.
  238. Kan Yu (Han Yu) claimed in his book "Gen Do" that the 'way' of humanity and justice continually instructed from Gyo Shun to Koshi, Moshi was what should be replaced by the way of Buddhism and Taoism.
  239. Kan and Shoku
  240. Kan and monme, which were originally the weight units, also served as the currency units of the silver coin used as the currency by weight, and 1000 monme of silver was equalized with 1 kan of silver.
  241. Kan in no Miya
  242. Kan is a weight unit in the traditional Japanese system of weights and measures, and it was also a Japanese currency unit for the silver coin used as the currency by weight before the Edo period.
  243. Kan jikomi or kan zukuri (preparation in cold season)
  244. Kan means general kinds of duties, and Shoku means specific scopes of duties to be undertaken.
  245. Kan means the kanjin (to look inside oneself to see the nature), under the words of sutra.
  246. Kan originated from KANZE (sect for Sarugaku).
  247. Kan' (Penetration) is a strong penetrating power that can pass through enemy's armor; 'Chu' (Precision) is a hit rate of 100 hits out of 100 shots; 'Kyu' (Persistence) means 'Kan' and 'Chu' can be persistently maintained.
  248. Kan' indicated a government office itself, and is different from present usage as a 'government officer.'
  249. Kan' is the Tang reading derived from early-modern Chinese, and is close to the tone of Putonghua (Chinese common language) 'kon (geng1).'
  250. Kan, Ho, Haru, Go, and Ki represent programs presently performed by the Kanze school, Hosho school, Konparu school, Kongo school and Kita school respectively.
  251. Kan-ami and Zeami appeared.
  252. Kan-ji Temples
  253. Kan-ji temples (state-sponsored temples) were temples that received financial guarantees instead of state supervision.
  254. Kan-ji temples were mainly used to hold Buddhist services to pray for nation and the emperor or for the security of the imperial family based on the idea of spiritual protection of the state.
  255. Kan-shu
  256. Kan-shu is sake that is brewed during winter.
  257. Kan: one piece of nigiri-zushi is counted as one kan.
  258. Kana (Shodo): Koya-gire (fragment of Kokin Waka Shu Poetry Anthology), First Class, Koya-gire, Third Class, and others
  259. Kana (the Japanese syllabary) (letter)
  260. Kana Kana (a coffee shop)
  261. Kana Zoshi
  262. Kana Zoshi refers collectively to stories/practical texts of Kinsei Bungaku (Japanese Edo period literature) written in kana characters, or a mixture of kanji and kana, during the early Edo period.
  263. Kana characters
  264. Kana characters were created from kanji characters by noblewomen, and literature including waka (a traditional Japanese poem of thirty-one syllables), tale and diary literature as typified by The Tale of Genji and Makura no soshi (the Pillow Book) was popularized.
  265. Kana is basically placed beside the entire text, and it is said that the literary quality is rich.
  266. Kana was called Onnade and regarded as characters for women, and Kanji was called Otokode.
  267. Kana,' which retained the ink brush used for Chinese character, established a refined mental state and is an extremely elegant piece of work.
  268. Kana-hogo
  269. Kana: a Japanese-style plane.
  270. Kanabiki-no-taki Waterfall (Japan's Top 100 Waterfalls)
  271. Kanadehon Chushingura (Chushingura) (The Treasury of Loyal Retainers)
  272. Kanadehon Chushingura (The Treasury of Loyal Retainers)
  273. Kanadehon Chushingura itself is sometimes used as the theme for story-telling.
  274. Kanae: a pot to cook meat.
  275. Kanagamisaki Cape
  276. Kanagamisaki Cape belongs to Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture, and faces the Japan Sea (western part of Wakasa Bay).
  277. Kanagamisaki Cape juts into Wakasa Bay.
  278. Kanagari suru'
  279. Kanagashira
  280. Kanagawa Hase-dera Temple (Kamakura City) - Juichimen Kannon
  281. Kanagawa Normal School (the faculty of liberal arts of Yokohama National University)
  282. Kanagawa Ofuna Kannon-ji Temple - Byakue Kannon
  283. Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Cultural History (Yokohama City, Kanagawa Prefecture)
  284. Kanagawa Prefectural Office Building (Yoshiro KOBI in 1928)
  285. Kanagawa Prefecture
  286. Kanagawa Rinkai Railway DB202: Stationary but assembled properly and maintained ready to work
  287. Kanagawa Youth Normal School (the faculty of liberal arts of Yokohama National University)
  288. Kanagawa oki nami ura' had a great impact on Western artists such as Vincent VAN GOGH, who saw it and later praised it in a letter to a fellow painter; and Claude Debussy, who got an idea and composed the symphonic poem "La Mer (The Sea)."
  289. Kanagawa-fu: established on June 17 (old lunar calendar) in 1868.
  290. Kanaguri, it seems impossible for Japanese to compete in short-distance run.'
  291. Kanaizawa no hi (Kanaizawa Stone Monument in Gunma Prefecture)
  292. Kanaizawa no hi is an ancient stone monument located in Yamana Town, Takasaki City and designated as a historic site.
  293. Kanakabaridaja, Kanakabharadraja
  294. Kanakabassa, Kanakavatsa
  295. Kanaku Choaku
  296. Kanaku Choaku is a combination of Kanzen Choaku and Picaresque and a variation of Kanzen Choaku.
  297. Kanamari: a metallic bowl
  298. Kaname (Pivot)
  299. Kaname OKUBO's grave is located next to Azumao's.
  300. Kaname YONAMINE
  301. Kaname-ishi (spirit rocks)
  302. Kaname-ishi (spirit rocks) are found in Kashima-jingu Shrine in Kashima City, Ibaraki Prefecture and Katori-jingu Shrine in Katori City, Chiba Prefecture.
  303. Kanami (Sarugaku (a form of theatre popular in Japan))
  304. Kanami and Zeami
  305. Kanami and his son Motokiyo ZEAMI, who both enjoyed the patronage of Yoshimitsu ASHIKAGA, were able to take the Sarugaku (a style of comedy) and Dengaku (a musical, rhythmic ritual dancing concerned with rice) that had existed from the Kamakura period and perfect them into Noh theater.
  306. Kanami or Kannami (1333 - June 16, 1384 (May 19, 1384 by the old calendar)) was a sarugakushi (a performer of sarugaku, a form of theatre popular in Japan during the 11th to 14th centuries) from the Period of the Northern and Southern Dynasty to the Muromachi Period.
  307. Kanamikankei no Noh (Kanami-related Noh)', the first book of 'Yokyokushu (collection of Noh songs,' Japanese Classic Literature Systematic Edition by Iwanami Shoten Publishers
  308. Kanamonoshi (hardware maker)
  309. Kanamori family came to its end of the line at the time of the seventh head of the family Tomonao, and the lineage of the head family was inherited by Naomasa TAGA (多賀直昌), who became a new head on recommendation.
  310. Kanamura was deeply distressed about the Emperor's atrocities and admonished him according to "Tensho "(a chronological history of Japan) and "Sendai Kujihongi Taiseikyo".
  311. Kanasago soba (buckwheat noodles of Kanasago in Hitachiota City)
  312. Kanasai
  313. Kanasashi Joei: A regional powerful clan during the Heian period.
  314. Kanawa
  315. Kanawa no onna (iron woman), Hashihime (bridge princess): female in even deeper jealousy.
  316. Kanaya-machi (Takaoka City), Takaoka City
  317. Kanayago-jinja Shrine which is located in Nishihida, Hirose-cho, Yasuki City, Shimane Prefecture and which is considered to be the main shrine for Kanayago-kami, has the following legend.
  318. Kanayago-kami
  319. Kanayago-kami first descended from Takamagahara (the place where gods live) to Iwanabe in Shiso County in Harima Province (currently, Iwanoryo, Chigusa-cho, Shishiawa City, Hyogo Prefecture) in response to a rain-inviting ritual carried out by the villagers.
  320. Kanayago-kami god (also pronounced as Kanayako-kami god, etc.) was a god which is believed by blacksmiths to live mainly in Chugoku Region (Shintoism).
  321. Kanayago-kami had the following features.
  322. Kanayamahiko no Mikoto, the tutelary deity of Mt. Yoshino, is enshrined.
  323. Kanayamahiko-no-kami
  324. Kanazane's daughter had already been chugu (the second consort of an emperor) of Emperor Gotoba and Michichika TSUCHIMIKADO and Tango no tsubone were his political enemy.
  325. Kanazashihachimaro: A regional powerful clan during the Nara period.
  326. Kanazawa
  327. Kanazawa Buddhist altar
  328. Kanazawa City (Ishikawa Prefecture)
  329. Kanazawa Classroom (17-27, Musashimachi, Kanazawa City, 920-0855)
  330. Kanazawa Hayamagomori ritual (January 28, 1980; Fukushima City; Hayamagomori Hozonkai [Hayamagomori Preservation Association])
  331. Kanazawa Higher Normal School (1944-)
  332. Kanazawa Manyoshu (Collection of Ten-Thousand Leaves, FUJIWARA no Sadanobu's handwriting)
  333. Kanazawa Medical University 0060
  334. Kanazawa bunko kire (small piece)(巻子万葉集切)
  335. Kanazu-cho (Fukui Prefecture)
  336. Kanazume: Finely split, shaved bamboo with a needle made of iron, brass, zinc or the like sticking out from each end
  337. Kanbae suru'
  338. Kanbaku-zu (Chorin-ji Temple, Tochigi Prefecture) Important Cultural Property
  339. Kanban-kenchiku
  340. Kanban-musume (poster girls) and Yujo, who were popular at that time, were depicted.
  341. Kanbara Tetsudo (Kanbara Railway) track maintenance lorry
  342. Kanbari Nyudo
  343. Kanbari Nyudo is a deity or monster of toilets according to Japanese folk beliefs.
  344. Kanbayashi Kinenkan (Kanbayashi Memorial Hall)
  345. Kanbayashi Memorial Hall
  346. Kanbayashi Route
  347. Kanbayashi Shunsho Honten
  348. Kanbayashi Shunsho Honten (tea wholesaler)
  349. Kanbayashi Shunsho Honten Ltd. is a tea wholesale store in Uji City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  350. Kanbayashi-sanso Lodge
  351. Kanbe Domain: Kanbe-jo Castle
  352. Kanbe FUJIMA
  353. Kanbe FUJIMA (year of birth unknown - 1769)
  354. Kanbe FUJIMA (year of birth unknown - April 21, 1785)
  355. Kanbe FUJIMA (year of birth unknown - January 12, 1822)
  356. Kanbe FUJIMA is the myoseki (family name) of Kanbe line, Fujima school.
  357. Kanbe Munetoshi YOKOKAWA
  358. Kanbe SASAGAWA, a fellow of Daigakunosuke, comes to know that his lord Toshiyuki is in love with Satsuki, his younger sister and Yajuro's wife, and he then confines her in attempt to divorce her from Yajuro.
  359. Kanbe was the person whom Hideyoshi and Katsuie SHIBATA had wanted and offered a fief of 20,000 koku, but he responded by saying, "I will not serve for less than 100,000 koku," and rejected their offers.
  360. Kanbe, where he was born and brought up, was a prosperous post-station situate on the Sanyo-do Road; however, the town was in disorder due to gambling and drinking.
  361. Kanbe-go
  362. Kanbe-jo Castle refused to accept Nobutaka's head, so the coroner, Gazaemon OTSUKA, brought it back to Fukuzo-ji Temple in Seki-machi, Ise Province.
  363. Kanbei was said to be cold towards his retainers.
  364. Kanbokujo' (Castle of Brush and Ink Album), 'Moshiogusa Album of Exemplary Calligraphy,' 'Companions of Past Ages,' and 'Otekagami' are national treasures.
  365. Kanbun
  366. Kanbun April 25, 1661 - (January 26, 1663)
  367. Kanbun Kosode
  368. Kanbun printed books: Published in 1671
  369. Kanbun rei (Kanbun code)
  370. Kanbun-inchi
  371. Kanbunden
  372. Kanbunden is a style of biography written in classical Chinese, influenced by Kidentai (an East Asian historical writing style) of Chinese authentic history and Kokushitai (Japanese historical writing style) of Japanese authentic history.
  373. Kanbutsu (dry food) is another form of dried seafood, but is made by thoroughly drying part of it, or the whole seafood.
  374. Kanbutsu Zanmai-kyo Sutra (Also known as Kanbutsu Zanmaikai-kyo (the Sutra on the Ocean-like Samadhi of Contemplation of Buddhas))
  375. Kanbutsue
  376. Kanbutsue (April 8):
  377. Kanbutsue (Buddha's birthday)
  378. Kanbutsue is a ceremony that celebrates the birth of Buddha.
  379. Kanchi-in Temple: the reception hall
  380. Kanchiin
  381. Kanchiin Reception Hall ? built in 1606
  382. Kanchiin was considered as the center of scholarly learning not only for To-ji, but for the whole Shingon sect and it produced many scholarly monks.
  383. Kancho
  384. Kancho (916 - July 13, 998) was a Buddhist monk of the Shingon Sect in the middle of the Heian period.
  385. Kancho (Chief Abbot) (also serves as the monzeki of Daikaku-ji Temple)
  386. Kancho: Nichinyo (the chief priest of Taiseki-ji Temple of Sohonzan), daisojo
  387. Kanchu Chutai
  388. Kanchu Chutai (year of birth unknown-April 30, 1406) was the ninth priest of Shokoku-ji Temple in Kyoto.
  389. Kanchu-keizu (genealogical records based on surveys)
  390. Kanchu-keizu supplements the Hon-keizu with detailed footnotes while maintaining a family-tree-style.
  391. Kanchumimai (a winter greeting card)
  392. Kanchumimai (a winter greeting card) is one of the Japanese customs.
  393. Kanchumimai is also used as a reply for nengajo (New Year's card) or a substitute for nengajo during the period of mourning.
  394. Kanda (Chiyoda Ward)
  395. Kanda Church (Tokyo)
  396. Kanda Myojin Shrine (Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo)
  397. Kanda Myojin-Shine
  398. Kanda-dera Temple
  399. Kanda-inari-jinja Shrine
  400. Kanda-jinja Shrine (in Mano, Otsu City)
  401. Kandaijin Tenmangu Shrine
  402. Kandaijin-Tenmangu
  403. Kandaka Sei (system of measuring the amount of rice production based on land size)
  404. Kandaya
  405. Kanden (imperial estates)
  406. Kanden had two systems: a direct administration system that contracted farm work out to 正長 and gave eiryo to collect a certain amount of crop, and the system of jishi or chinso (land taxes under Ritsuryo system).
  407. Kanden in the Song period was mainly composed of the four factors written below.
  408. Kanden provided in Yoro-rei Act
  409. Kando (obi of vertical or lateral stripes, or plaid woven using dyed or scoured silk yarn)
  410. Kando HAKURA was a fellow student of the arts.
  411. Kandoko Copper Sake Warmer
  412. Kane KOSUGI
  413. Kane no misaki' (a cape of bell) as Ogie-bushi (a style of singing that split off from Nagauta in the late 18th century)
  414. Kane no torii (bronze torii) of Yoshino (designated as an important cultural asset)
  415. Kane's cap rank was Taikinjo (.seventh grade of 26 ranks)
  416. Kane, Sho
  417. Kane-hitsu no sei (a rule of bell and box) was established.
  418. Kaneaki HIROHASHI was his son.
  419. Kaneaki MIMAKI
  420. Kaneaki MIMAKI, after sending a messenger to Mitsuhide to urge him, 'Please pull out while I am fighting to death,' was drowned in the vast crowd of Hashiba's forces.
  421. Kanebugyo (safe keeper and accountant) and Chugosho (the lowest samurai rank) with a stipend of 10 koku for three people (second generation).
  422. Kanebugyo (safe keeper and accountant), Zenbanmotokata (cook), and Koshimonokata (sword keeper) with a stipend of 20 koku for five people.
  423. Kanechika's son,
  424. Kaneda-jo Castle (also known as Kanetanoki Castle) is an ancient mountain castle (Korean-style mountain castle) built in Tsushima Province during the Asuka Period.
  425. Kaneda-jo Castle (an ancient mountain castle in Tsushima Province during Asuka period)
  426. Kaneda-jo Castle is situated on Mt. Jo (also known as Joyama) 275 meters above sea level which stands on the south shore of Aso-wan Bay in the central Tsushima.
  427. Kanefusa, who loved waka poems (31-syllable Japanese poems) and respected KAKINOMOTO no hitomaro (a poet and a noble of the late Asuka period), but did not have much political skill, was able to keep himself intact and apart from political turmoil during the years of wars between the Minamoto clan and the Taira clan.
  428. Kanefuyu ICHIJO was his elder brother.
  429. Kanegasaki-cho (Iwate Prefecture): Important Preservation District for Groups of Historic Buildings
  430. Kaneharu YOSHIDA
  431. Kaneharu YOSHIDA (1565 ? 1616) was the 10th head of the Yoshida family (lineage can be traced to the hanke, Urabe clan) who were tosho-ke (the hereditary lineage of Court nobles occupying relatively high ranks).
  432. Kanehide HIROHASHI
  433. Kanehide HIROHASHI (1506-September 17, 1567) was a kuge (court noble) during the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  434. Kanehiko TOGI
  435. Kanehira IMAI
  436. Kanehira IMAI (1152 - March 4, 1184) was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived at the end of Heian period.
  437. Kanehira IMAI fought alongside his foster brother MINAMOTO no Yoshinaka until the end, and the death of Yoshinaka and Kanehira in the 'Death of Kiso' section of "Heike Monogatari" (The tale of the Heike) is full of tragic beauty.
  438. Kanehira IMAI, who had been fighting Noriyori's troops at Seta, retreated, having heard about the defeat at Uji, and successfully joined Yoshinaka in Awazu.
  439. Kanehira TAKATSUKASA
  440. Kanehira TAKATSUKASA (1228 - August 30, 1294) was a Kugyo (top court official) during the Kamakura period.
  441. Kanehira TAKATSUKASA (1228 to 1294)
  442. Kanehira assumed positions such as Izumo no Kami (Governor of Izumo Province) and Awaji no Kami (Governor of Awaji Province), and was advanced to Ukone no Shosho (Minor Captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards) of the Jushiinojo (Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade).
  443. Kanehiro IJUIN
  444. Kanehiro IJUIN (January 27, 1838 - April 20, 1898) was a samurai, a feudal retainer of the Satsuma clan, a military officer, and a government official in Japan.
  445. Kanehiro IJUIN was born in 1838, as the legitimate son of Kaneyoshi IJUIN, a feudal retainer of the Satsuma clan.
  446. Kanehiro IJUIN: He became a councilor in 1878.
  447. Kanehiro TAKAGI, head of the Medical Bureau of the Navy and the general office director of the a Navy Medical Service
  448. Kanehiro TAKAKI, who recommended eating barley rice, proposed 'Dissemination of Poverty' to resolve the urban hygiene issue, and insisted on kicking the poor out of Tokyo.
  449. Kanehiro TAKATSUKASA
  450. Kanehiro TAKATSUKASA (January 17, 1660 - December 24, 1725) was a kuge (court noble) and Kanpaku (chief adviser to the Emperor) in the early part of the Edo period.
  451. Kanehiro TAKATSUKASA, Sanesuke SAIONJI (married into Yasuhime SAIONJI's family), Sukenobu TAKATSUKASA, and Kaneka ICHIJO were his children.
  452. Kanehiro YOSHIDA
  453. Kanehiro YOSHIDA (1348 to 1402) was a priest of Yoshida-jinja Shrine and court official who was in charge of matters related to Shinto rituals during the period of the Northern and Southern Courts.
  454. Kanehiro was dedicated to the eradication of beriberi and was called the 'barley rice baron.'
  455. Kanehisa UTSUNOMIYA, the son of Sadahisa UTSUNOMIYA, Sadayasu's second son, of the Southern Court, became the patriarch of the Kamachi clan of Chikugo-Utsunomiya clan descendants.
  456. Kanei (November 8, 1629) - (October 3, 1643)
  457. Kanei (October 3, 1643) - December 16, 1644
  458. Kanei February 30, 1624 - (November 8, 1629)
  459. Kanei Mohan Kojou (Government-run model factories)
  460. Kanei Tsuho was born when Shinsuke SATO, a wealthy merchant in Mito City, asked the bakufu and the Mito Domain for permission to mint copper coins due to a short supply of coins in 1626, and was granted such permission.
  461. Kanei Tsuho which had been minted by this time was called Kokanei, and had a better quality than imported coins which had been widely circulated.
  462. Kanei Tsuho which was minted in Shichijo, Kyoto and also in Kameido, Edo after 1697, was called Ogiwara-sen, being turned into a thin and small type as a result of policies set by Shigehide OGIWARA.
  463. Kanei culture (in the early stage of the Edo period)
  464. Kanei culture, Genroku culture, Tenmei culture, and Kasei culture
  465. Kanei rei
  466. Kanei-bunka (Kanei culture)
  467. Kanei-bunka means the culture that prospered during the first half of the 17th century (the early Edo period), namely the culture sandwiched between Momoyama-bunka of the latter half of the 16th century and Genroku-bunka of the latter half of the 17th century.
  468. Kanei-ji Temple
  469. Kanei-ji Temple (Taito-ku Ward, Tokyo Prefecture)
  470. Kanei-ji Temple practically approved the proposal, saying that since it was another sect's matter, they entrusted it to the other sect, while Zojo-ji Temple was infuriated.
  471. Kanei-tsuho
  472. Kanei-tsuho also had two types of proof coin, Nijihoei (two characters hoei) and Nijieiju (two characters eiju) on which two characters were inscribed.
  473. Kanei-tsuho do ichimonsen coin: 1 ri
  474. Kanei-tsuho do ichimonsen coin: 10 - 12 mon
  475. Kanei-tsuho monsen and Mimijirozeni (one mon coin issued by the Tokugawa shogunate in 1714): 6 mon
  476. Kanei-tsuho refers to coins that were in wide use throughout the entire Edo period in Japan.
  477. Kanei-tsuho shinchu shimonsen coin: 12 mon
  478. Kanei-tsuho shinchu shimonsen coin: 2 ri
  479. Kanei-tsuho shinchu shimonsen coin: 20 - 24 mon
  480. Kanei-tsuho tetsu ichimonsen coin: 1 mon
  481. Kanei-tsuho tetsu ichimonsen coin: 1 ri for 16 coins
  482. Kanei-tsuho tetsu shimonsen coin: 1 ri with 8 coins
  483. Kanei-tsuho tetsu shimonsen coin: 2 mon
  484. Kanei-tsuho was minted for the first time in 1636.
  485. Kanei-tsuho was not minted for a while thereafter.
  486. Kanei-tsuho was round and included a square hole in the center.
  487. Kanei-tsuho which was made of copper or brass continued to be recognized as a currency around the period of the Meiji Restoration.
  488. Kanei-tsuho, which as minted around 1668 was called Shin-Kanei (new Kanei-tsuho).
  489. Kanei-tsuho, which was minted before 1659, was called Ko-Kanei (old Kanei-tsuho).
  490. Kaneie expressed his disappointment to Emperor Enyu by donating a choka (a long waka) to him.
  491. Kaneie himself arrived in the middle of the night at the Imperial Palace without its emperor to quickly do the administrative work necessary for abdication and the next morning, he had the Crown Prince Yasuhito (Emperor Ichijo) ascend to the throne.
  492. Kaneie hoped that Senshi would become Chugu (the second consort of the Emperor), but in 982, Emperor Enyu appointed FUJIWARA no Junshi, a daughter of Yoritada, to the post of Chugu.
  493. Kaneie in 989, Enyu in 990 died consecutively and there was a situation of "no guardian" similar to that immediately after Enyu's ascension to the throne.
  494. Kaneie is said to have greatly trusted Uchifushi no miko and followed her every single word for anything.
  495. Kaneie passed away in July, 990, and his eldest son, Michitaka, became Kanpaku, and then Regent.
  496. Kaneie quickly promoted his sons, and in 987, Michinaga was given the rank of Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) as well as the position of Sakyo Daibu (Minister of Left Kyoto).
  497. Kaneie then became a maternal relative of the Emperor, and then became a Sessho as well as the head of the clan.
  498. Kaneie trusted Sa-chuben FUJIWARA no Arikuni and U-chuben (First Assistant Controller of the Right) TAIRA no Korenaka saying that 'they are my right and left eyes.'
  499. Kaneie was born the third son of an influential person, FUJIWARA no Morosuke, was appointed to the Jugoinoge rank (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) in 948, and was permitted to enter the Tenjo no ma room in Seiryo-den in 949 when he was only 10 years old.
  500. Kaneie was both the Emperor and Crown Prince's maternal grandfather and had obtained absolute power.
  501. Kaneie was in adverse circumstances for some time, but Yoritada could not leave his maternal uncle the emperor as he was and, in 979, reinstated him by promoting to udaijin.
  502. Kaneie was seen as being very likely to gain the position of Kanpaku (chief advisor to the emperor) after Koretada, but his older brother Kanemichi gained the position by the will of Chugu Anshi.
  503. Kaneie was the new Emperor's maternal grandfather and became regent instead of Yoritada.
  504. Kaneie wished to become the Kanpaku, but Yoritada was still in the Kanpaku post, and furthermore, the Emperor's maternal uncle, Chunagon FUJIWARA no Yoshichika, was controlling the Imperial Court government.
  505. Kaneie wished to see the Imperial Prince Yasuhito enthroned, and in 986, he carried out a scheme to turn the Emperor Kazan into retiring and becoming a priest.
  506. Kaneie's deceased elder brother FUJIWARA no Koretada was the maternal grandfather of Emperor Kazan, and Koretada's son Chunagon (vice-councilor of state) FUJIWARA no Yoshichika, who was accordingly a maternal uncle of Emperor Kazan, assisted the Emperor.
  507. Kaneie's promotions had stopped by then, and according to "Eiga Monogatari" (A Tale of Flowering Fortunes), Kanemichi commented that he 'wishes he could transfer Kaneie to Kyushu or some other place, but he could not because Kaneie did not commit any crime.'
  508. Kaneie, the maternal grandfather of the Emperor Ichijo, became sessho, and Kaneie's legitimate son Michitaka was rapidly raised from shosanmi (Senior Third Rank) Gon Chunagon (a provisional vice-councilor of state) to Junii (Junior Second Rank) Gon Dainagon (a provisional chief councilor of state).
  509. Kaneie, then, in the same year, had himself treated as Jun-san-gu (officially a vassal but treated as a member of the Imperial family) of the Juichii rank and resigned as U-daijin, thus becoming the first Sessho who was formerly a minister (meaning that he was not concurrently serving as a minister).
  510. Kaneie, who had lived in obscurity due to Kanemichi for a long time, took the post of regent as the maternal grandfather of Emperor Ichijo.
  511. Kaneie, who was envied by Kanemichi, faced misfortune.
  512. Kaneie, who was seriously at odds with Kanemichi, no longer had prospects for promotion, with even his half brother, FUJIWARA no Tamemitsu, appointed as the master prime minister, a post superior to Kaneie's.
  513. Kanekado had three sons and one daughter, and Tadahiko was born as the second son.
  514. Kanekata URABE
  515. Kanekata URABE (year of birth and year of death not known) was a kanjin (government official (esp. one of low to medium rank)) in charge of matters relating to Shintoism (in other words, Shintoist), who lived in the middle and late Kamakura period.
  516. Kanekatsu HIROHASHI
  517. Kanekatsu HIROHASHI (December 12, 1558 - January 18, 1623) was a court noble and kajin (waka poet) who lived during the Azuchi-Momoyama period and the early Edo period.
  518. Kanekazu YOSHIDA was not a formal Ason, though he was given an official rank from the Emperor as Jingikan.
  519. Kaneko YANAGI was a female singer (alto singer), who represented modern day Japan.
  520. Kaneko called Kizokuin "Genroin" (the Chamber of Elders) initially but Ito disagreed with Kaneko because the Chambers of Elders overseas were selected by election and not in the same way as that of Japan; as a result, it was decided to call it as "Kizokuin" (The House of Peers).
  521. Kaneko made a seventy-day inspection tour of Hokkaido and returning to the capital, reported that the present system of three prefectures did not function.
  522. Kaneko, Takauta's third daughter, married Viscount Yataro MISHIMA and gave birth to Michiharu MISHIMA.
  523. Kanemaki (Coiling around a temple bell; the original version of the noh play "Dojo-ji Temple")
  524. Kanemaki' (Coiling around a bell), and its adaptation, 'Dojo-ji Temple (Noh)' as Noh plays
  525. Kanemasa KASANNOIN, who possessed the title of Togu no Daibu.
  526. Kanemasa meets the two of them again, and takes Nakatada in.
  527. Kanemi YOSHIDA
  528. Kanemi YOSHIDA (1535 - October 6, 1610) was the ninth head of the Yoshida family (and 25th of the Urabe Clan), a hanke (lowest rank family) of Tosho-ke (the hereditary lineage of Court nobles occupying relatively high ranks) and descended from the Urabe clan.
  529. Kanemichi NISHIO (Jugoinojo, Tosa no kami [Governor of Tosa Province])
  530. Kanemichi and Kaneie did not get along, and Kaneie spent a period of unhappy days.
  531. Kanemichi and Kaneie never reconciled with each other, and even on the verge of death, Kanemichi forced himself to preside over an appointment ceremony at the Imperial Palace in order to relegate Kaneie and passed away.
  532. Kanemichi appeared before the emperor just as Kaneie was filing his petition; appalled at the sight of Kanemichi, Kaneie fled elsewhere.
  533. Kanemichi beard a bitter grudge against his younger brother Kaneie because he once was taken an upper order of precedence in the Court, and when he became a Kanpaku naidaijin (Chancellor Minister of the Center), he left Kaneie at a position of Dainagon as it was and trusted his cousin FUJIWARA no Yoritada as an advisor.
  534. Kanemichi declared that he was going to hold his last appointment ceremony, and appointed Yoritada, the Minister of the Left, as the person to succeed him as the Councilor of State.
  535. Kanemichi died shortly after.
  536. Kanemichi died shortly later.
  537. Kanemichi got up feeling furious, went to the Imperial Palace in spite of sickness to execute personnel replacements for the last time, transferred the Kanpaku post to FUJIWARA no Yoritada, took the Udaisho and Azechi posts away from Kaneie, and demoted him to Jibu-kyo (Minister of the Interior).
  538. Kanemichi promoted his sons to court nobles and attempted to make their positions hereditary, but failed due to his death from an illness soon after appointing them as court nobles.
  539. Kanemichi was normally on friendly terms with FUJIWARA no Yoritada, the Minister of the Right, whom Kanemichi succeeded as the head of the Fuji clan and whom Kaneie considered as his successor.
  540. Kanemichi's son, FUJIWARA no Akimitsu, was assigned as the next Udaijin, but Akimitsu was already regarded as an inept person.
  541. Kanemichi, coming from the post of acting major counsellor, became the next chancellor, by being appointed as chancellor after becoming a Private Inspector, then Great Minister of the Center.
  542. Kanemichi, who hated his younger brother, Kaneie, intended to make Yoritada his successor fearing that Kaneie who had a higher official rank than Kanemichi's children would occupy the position of the kanpaku after Kanemichi's death.
  543. Kanemigi YOSHIDA
  544. Kanemigi YOSHIDA (May 31, 1516-February 22, 1573) was the eighth head of the YOSHIDA family, a "Tosho-ke" (the hereditary lineage of Court nobles occupying relatively high ranks - its social standing was hanke (court noble), the Urabe clan).
  545. Kanemigi's father Nobukata became his conservator, and Yuiitsu Shinto (One-and-Only Shinto) was succeeded.
  546. Kanemitsu FUJII initially went by the surname of INOKUMA and subsequently referred to himself as FUJII.
  547. Kanemitsu HIGUCHI
  548. Kanemitsu HIGUCHI (year of birth unknown - March 22, 1184) was a military commander during the end of the Heian period.
  549. Kanemitsu IGA
  550. Kanemitsu IGA (year of birth and death unknown) was a gokenin (an immediate vassal of the shogunate in the Kamakura and Muromachi through Edo periods) and a governmental official responsible for practical works in the late Kamakura period through the period of the Northern and Southern Courts.
  551. Kanemitsu himself became Hikitsuke tonin (chairman of the court of justice) and Hyojoshu at the Rokuhara Tandai in the late Kamakura period.
  552. Kanemitsu, writing in his diary criticized that 'Takasue and Michichika's suggestions pander to the Taira family.'
  553. Kanemon FUJIMA
  554. Kanemon FUJIMA (Mar.15, 1840 - Jan.23, 1925) had a real name, Kintaro FUJIMA.
  555. Kanemon FUJIMA III established the derivative Matsumoto school.
  556. Kanemon FUJIMA was the hereditary family name of the head family of the Kanemon Sect of the Fujima school.
  557. Kanemon IMBE had served Ieyasu as a head of Takajo-gumi, astringers, even after Ieyasu retired as Shogun.
  558. Kanemon NAKAMURA
  559. Kanemon NAKAMURA (the first)
  560. Kanemon NAKAMURA (the second)
  561. Kanemon NAKAMURA (the third)
  562. Kanemon NAKAMURA as yakko Gunsuke.
  563. Kanemon NAKAMURA was a kabuki actor.
  564. Kanemori's date of birth is unknown, but considering his father Atsuyuki's dates of birth and death, he seems to have lived to be around eighty.
  565. Kanemori's daughter (Akazome Emon) was married to OE no Masahira, therefore OE no Hiromoto and the Mori clan whose family name was OE were descended from Kanemori.
  566. Kanemoto NIJO (1268 to 1334)
  567. Kanemoto TAKATSUKASA
  568. Kanemoto TAKATSUKASA (鷹司 兼基, 1185 - year of death unknown) was a Kugyo (high court noble) in the early Kamakura period.
  569. Kanemune NAKAYAMA
  570. Kanemune NAKAYAMA (1163 - October 5, 1242) was a court noble and a waka poet who lived in the Heian period.
  571. Kanen July 12, 1748 - October 27, 1751
  572. Kanenaga FUJIWARA
  573. Kanenaga FUJIWARA (1138 - 1158) is a court politician during the late Heian period.
  574. Kanenaga died from a disease there only two years later when he was 21 years old.
  575. Kanenaga stood by in Uji together with his brothers during the rebellion and surrendered after Yorinaga's defeat and death.
  576. Kanenaga was adopted by his uncle Tadamichi and Kanenaga's maturity ceremony was held at Tadamichi's house.
  577. Kanenaga was promoted to Shonii (Senior Second Rank) and Chunagon (vice-councilor of state) in 1153, and came to also hold the post of Konoefu in 1154.
  578. Kanenaga was said to have died of disease in Yabe-mura, Chikugo Province after he ceded the post of seisei shogun to the Imperial Prince Yoshinari (prince of Emperor Gomurakami).
  579. Kanenaga was the eldest son of Yorinaga FUJIWARA.
  580. Kanenaga's child name was Ayawaka.
  581. Kanenaga's final position was Shonii (Senior Second Rank), Chunagon (vice-councilor of state), and Konoefu (palace guard).
  582. Kanenaga's mother was a daughter of Gon Chunagon (a provisional vice-councilor of state) Morotoshi Minamoto.
  583. Kanenaka HIROHASHI
  584. Kanenaka HIROHASHI (1244 - February 12, 1308) was a kugyo (a court noble) during the late Kamakura period.
  585. Kanenari Elementary School: 1887: Kurihara City, Miyagi Prefecture
  586. Kanenari MINASE
  587. Kanenobu HIROHASHI
  588. Kanenobu HIROHASHI (December 16, 1366-October 21, 1429) was a Kugyo (top court official) in the Muromachi period.
  589. Kanenotorii Gate
  590. Kanenotorii Gate (Important Cultural Property) - It is written "銅鳥居" and read as Kanenotorii.
  591. Kanenotorii Gate corresponds to "Hosshinmon" of these four gates.
  592. Kanera ICHIJO (1402 to 1481)
  593. Kanera ICHIJO added correct explanations in his book "Gengo hiketsu" (Secrets of The Tale of Genji) (a book of secrets explaining 15 points which were put on hold in "Kacho yojo" (Aesthetic Impressions)) in 1477 as follows:
  594. Kanera ICHIJO was the first person to compile such a systematic chronology covering every chapter of the Tale of Genji.
  595. Kanera ICHIJO's chronology is called 'the old chronology' in contrast with the later one by Norinaga MOTOORI ('the new chronology').
  596. Kanera ICHIJO, during the Muromachi period, was active not only in politics but also in the cultural world such as academics and renga (linked verse).
  597. Kanesada ICHIJO
  598. Kanesada ICHIJO was a kokushi (governor) in Tosa Province in the Sengoku period (period of warring states) and was effectively the last head of the Tosa Ichijo clan.
  599. Kanesada Ichijo, who barely escaped with his life from the battle, did not have another opportunity for a revenge battle, and he died at the age of 40 after living in retirement for 10 years.
  600. Kanesada established headquarters in the Kurimoto Castle on the west bank at the mouth of the Shimanto-gawa River, and prepared for the enemy's attack by planting stakes and utilizing the geography.
  601. Kanesada was known as a notorious unenlightened warlord because he ruined the Tosa Ichijo clan in his lifetime.
  602. Kanesada's Christian name was Don Paul.
  603. Kanesashiwakashima: A woman active during the Nara period.
  604. Kanesawa line, which was held back on a promotion due to the Shimotsuki Sodo, got into the fast lane to the nucleus of the bakufu by this selection by the regent Sadatoki HOJO.
  605. Kanesue IMADEGAWA
  606. Kanesue IMADEGAWA (1281 - February 25, 1339) was a court noble in the late Kamakura period to the Muromachi period.
  607. Kanesue was the son of Sanekane SAIONJI, who took the duties of Kanto moshitsugi, and was Kinmune's grand-uncle.
  608. Kanesuke NOGUCHI
  609. Kanesuke NOGUCHI (November 7, 1879 - October 4, 1953) was a Noh actor of the Hosho school of shite-kata (lead actors).
  610. Kanesuke YOSHIDA (spear), Hidekazu ONODERA (spear) and Mitsunobu HAZAMA (spear) took up positions at the back gate and commanded the party.
  611. Kanesuke shu gire (Fragment of FUJIWARA no Kanesuke's collection)
  612. Kanetaka KAZANIN and Iesuke KAZANIN were his sons.
  613. Kanetaka KUJO
  614. Kanetaka KUJO (January 4, 1554 - February 23, 1636) was a kanpaku in the era from the Azuchi-Momoyama period to the early Edo period.
  615. Kanetaka KUJO, Akizane NIJO, and Gien were his brothers.
  616. Kanetaka YAMAKI was once an exile belonging to the Taira clan, and during the Taira reign, he was appointed Mokudai and the Taira's representative in Izu.
  617. Kanetaka resigned from the post of Chunagon in 1035 and entered priesthood in 1046.
  618. Kanetaka's children included FUJIWARA Kanefusa (Chugu no suke (Assistant Master of the Consort's Household)).
  619. Kanetaka's mother was the daughter of FUJIWARA no Takazu.
  620. Kanetake OURA (Viscount), Minister of Agriculture and Commerce
  621. Kanetane HIRATA
  622. Kanetane HIRATA (December 31, 1799 ? October 25, 1880) was a scholar of ancient Japanese literature and culture.
  623. Kanetane claimed Kuranosuke and later also claimed Daigaku.
  624. Kanetane devoted his life to studying and worked hard for which he obtained a lot of endowments as a scholar; he was a good-tempered person, disliked arousing rivalry, earnestly devoted himself to close examinations, and never neglected his duties.
  625. Kanetane died on October 15, 1880.
  626. Kanetane ordered all the students of Hirata's school to reject all books by Sotetsu and stopped the printing as well.
  627. Kanetane's father-in-law and teacher, Atsutane HIRATA, left a fragment of "Koshi-den"; volumes 1 to 28 had already been finished, however, volumes 29 and 30 had been left halfway, and volume 31 onwards hadn't been written.
  628. Kanetayanenohime no mikoto was another daughter of him, younger than the other one, and was the wife of Homudamawaka no miko and mother of Empress Nakatsuhime no mikoto and two other wives of Emperor Ojin.
  629. Kanete Mizen wo Shiroshimesu
  630. Kaneto SHINDO
  631. Kaneto SHINDO (April 22, 1912 -) is a Japanese movie director and screenwriter.
  632. Kaneto SHINDO directed the 1981 movie "Hokusai Manga," starring Ken OGATA and Yuko TANAKA, which depicted Hokusai's life.
  633. Kanetoki HOJO
  634. Kanetoki HOJO (1264 - November 3, 1295) was a member of the Hojo clan from the late Kamakura period.
  635. Kanetoki HOJO (year of birth unknown - July 26, 1263) was a member of the Hojo clan from the mid Kamakura period.
  636. Kanetoki's dispatch to Kyushu is sometimes considered as the first Chinzei tandai (office of the military governor of Kyushu).
  637. Kanetomo KIKUCHI
  638. Kanetomo KIKUCHI (1383 - April 5, 1444) was a busho (Japanese military commander), who lived from the period of the Northern and Southern Courts to the early Muromachi Period.
  639. Kanetomo YOSHIDA
  640. Kanetomo YOSHIDA (1435 to March 28, 1511) was a Shintoist during the mid-Muromachi period to Sengoku period (Period of Warring States).
  641. Kanetomo YOSHIDA is an author of "Yuiitsu shinto myoho [myobo] yoshu" (Compendium of the Doctrines of the One-and-Only Shinto) and "Shinto Taii" (Gist of Shinto) which are said to be the first theoretical system in the history of Shinto.
  642. Kanetomo called himself Jingikanryochojo, and after that, Kanetomo increased his control on shrines pushing away Jingikan, the Shirakawa family.
  643. Kanetomo served as Jingi taifu (Senior Assistant Head of the Department of Shinto) and inherited his family's business and scholastic tradition, but later organized the Shinto tradition of his family into a system and wrote 'Shinmei Sangen Godaiden Shinmyo Kyo' (Theory of Shintoism), laying the foundation of Unitarian Shintoism.
  644. Kanetoshi MARUMO
  645. Kanetoshi MARUMO (year of birth unknown - March 4, 1647) was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived in the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  646. Kanetoshi died in 1647.
  647. Kanetoshi participated in the Kyushu conquest and the Siege of Odawara, and became the Lord of Fukutsuka-jo Castle in Mino Province in 1589, with a stipend of 20,000 koku.
  648. Kanetoshi served in vassalage to Nobunaga ODA before serving Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI.
  649. Kanetoshi was a son of Nagateru MARUMO.
  650. Kanetoshi's 'homyo' (Buddhist name) was Dowa.
  651. Kanetoshi's common name was Saburobe.
  652. Kanetoshi's real name was Chikayoshi.
  653. Kanetoshi's younger brother (Gorobe) Toshikatsu MARUMO's line survived as a 'hatamoto' (direct retainers of the Edo bakufu) with a stipend of 800 koku.
  654. Kanetsu Expressway
  655. Kanetsugu NAOE
  656. Kanetsugu NAOE (a Karo officer of the Uesugi family in the Yonezawa domain. A busho [Japanese military commander] of the Uesugi family in the Sengoku period [Period of Warring States].)
  657. Kanetsugu NAOE lifted the siege of the Hasedo-jo Castle and returned to his domain.
  658. Kanetsugu NAOE, Jugoi no ge (1583 (Tensho 1)~)
  659. Kanetsugu NAOE, who was active as a tactful vassal of the Uesugi family in the Azuchi-Momoyama period, is said to be a descendant of Kanemitsu.
  660. Kanetsugu YAMADA
  661. Kanetsugu YAMADA (circa 1208 - the date of death unknown) was a samurai and a Buddhist monk during the early Kamakura period.
  662. Kanetsugu YAMADA, Shigechika YAMADA and Rennin were his sons.
  663. Kanetsugu survived this war, though his grandfather and father were killed, and was exiled to Echigo Province after the war.
  664. Kanetsugu was also appointed as lord of Sakato-jo Castle.
  665. Kanetsuna immediately reported the Taira's plan to Yorimasa.
  666. Kanetsuna's descendants ended up in Okochi, Nukata District in Mikawa Province (Aza Okochi, Ohira-cho, Okazaki City, Aichi Prefecture; near the Okazaki Interchange of the Tokyo-Nagoya Expressway) and founded the Okochi Clan, from which Nobutsuna MATSUDAIRA, who was known as Matsudaira Izu no Kami, was descended.
  667. Kanetsune KONOE
  668. Kanetsune KONOE (1210 - May 27, 1259) was a kugyo (court noble) during the Kamakura Period.
  669. Kanetsune KONOE (1210 to 1259)
  670. Kanetsune became a victim to the downfall of Michiie and he was dismissed from his position as a Kanto moshitsugi, but he was reappointed as Emperor Gofukakusa's Regent in 1247 in the form of filling in for Sanetsune ICHIJO (Michiie's third son), who also met his downfall.
  671. Kaneyasu SENOO
  672. Kaneyasu SENOO (1123-November 28, 1183) was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived during the last days of Heian period and who was on the side of the Taira clan.
  673. Kaneyasu was soon appointed as jiju (a chamberlain) and he changed his name to 'Terusuke HINO' with one Chinese character given by Yoshiteru.
  674. Kaneyori HAGIWARA
  675. Kaneyori HAGIWARA (1588 - September 17, 1660) was a Shintoist, who lived during the early Edo period.
  676. Kaneyoshi ICHIJO
  677. Kaneyoshi ICHIJO (June 7, 1402 - April 30, 1481) was a court noble, who held titles of Sessho regent and Kanpaku (chief adviser to the Emperor), and was a classical scholar in the Muromachi period.
  678. Kaneyoshi ICHIJO (his given name can also be pronounced "Kaneka," January 21, 1693 - September 21, 1751) was a Kugyo (top court official) in the mid-Edo period.
  679. Kaneyoshi ICHIJO of the Muromachi period recorded that "Saikyuki" is about old ceremonial styles, "Hokuzansho" is about ceremonies during and after the era of Emperor Ichijo, and "Goke-shidai" is about ceremonies during and after the era of Emperor Gosanjo.
  680. Kaneyoshi ICHJO, who lived in the Muromachi Period, stated: 'This Japan is a country of Princesses.
  681. Kaneyoshi KUJO
  682. Kaneyoshi KUJO (九条 兼良, 1167 - February 3, 1221) was a Kugyo (high court noble) in the early Kamakura period.
  683. Kaneyoshi was born the sixth son of Tsunetsugu ICHIJO, who held the title of Kanpaku.
  684. Kaneyoshi was shocked by this decision and became sick in frustration next year.
  685. Kaneyoshi's diary "Kaneyoshi Koki" and its companion volumes (including the collection of his writings "Kyugyokusa" (求玉鈔) and "Tamamo Hiki" (confidential record) that describe how the official rank reform happened) are still in existence.
  686. Kaneyuki was also the descendant of MINAMOTO no Kiyokage who rose to Dainagon (chief councilor of state) and Shonii (Senior Second Rank), and since Kiyokage was born as the sixth prince of Emperor Yozei, Kiyokage belonged to Yozei-Genji (the Minamoto clan whose ancestor was Emperor Yozei).
  687. Kaneyuki's father Enkan is said to have been Kiyokage's grandson, or great-grandson.
  688. Kanezan deplored that the reality was quite different; a Court noble (Emperor Takakura) took over all the estates and the Kamon (family) of Toji would fall (."Gyokuyo" (Diary of Kanezane KUJO) Article of June 18, 1179).
  689. Kanezane KUJO
  690. Kanezane KUJO (1149 - May 3, 1207) was a court noble who lived from end of the Heian period to the beginning of the Kamakura period.
  691. Kanezane KUJO (1149-1207)
  692. Kanezane KUJO called this measure "the work of a devil ("Gyokuyo")
  693. Kanezane KUJO consistently criticized the Monk-Emperor's conduct to provoke Yoshinaka as below; "There is no way that Yoshinaka will immediately jeopardize the nation.
  694. Kanezane KUJO criticized this in an entry in Gyokuyo (the name given to his diary) that he made on February 23, 1179, in which he said: "He is willingly trying to extinguish the line of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan".
  695. Kanezane KUJO deplored the appointment saying, 'There is no such a disgrace as this throughout the whole of the country. It's regrettable, it's regrettable.'
  696. Kanezane KUJO inherited the fief of the elder sister by a different mother, Kokamonin, which became the foundation of the Kujo Family fiefdom.
  697. Kanezane KUJO laughed down the public rumor that a punishment by Kasuga Daimyojin came down on her because not a man but a woman obtained estates of the Fujiwara clan, saying 'If so, why she did not suffer such a punishment for fourteen years?'
  698. Kanezane KUJO severely criticized 'this is not what Imperial Court government is supposed to do' to accept a demand soon after the daishu came despite the original policy that disallow any demand.
  699. Kanezane KUJO was born in 1149 as the third son of FUJIWARA no Tadamichi.
  700. Kanezane KUJO was close to Yoritomo and understanding for Kamakura bakufu.
  701. Kanezane KUJO who received the news expressed his words of grieving in his diary "Gyokuyo" as "far beyond description".
  702. Kanezane KUJO wrote the war situation described above in "Gyokuyo."
  703. Kanezane KUJO, Udaijin (Minister of the Right) referred to Hidehira as 'Iteki ((barbarian) of Oshu' and deplored the appointment as 'the root of troubled times.'
  704. Kanezane KUJO, minister of right, who gave much assistance to restoration of Nanto later, lost words when he heard of this devastation ("Gyokuyo" [Diary of Kanezane KUJO]).
  705. Kanezane KUJO, who served as Sessho kanpaku (regent), is his mother's elder brother while Jien, who became Tendai zasu (the chief priest of Enryaku-ji Temple), is her younger brother.
  706. Kanezane KUJO, who was supported by Yoritomo gained power in the Imperial Ccourt after the death of the Cloistered Emperor, and those who opposed Kanezane allied with Michichika TSUCHIMIKADO and Tango no tsubone to go against him.
  707. Kanezane also wrote regarding this and argued that promoting the 'barbarian' Hidehira was 'the cause of more troubled times,' but these actions led to further developments in Japan-Song trade.
  708. Kanezane and Cloistered Emperor attended the ceremony while Yoritomo did not.
  709. Kanezane and Yoshimitsu supported the promotion of Yasuchika and Ariyo because of the value of their high performance.
  710. Kanezane described in his diary "Gyokuyo" an article about the friendship between Nobunori and Kanezane (in the sections of the end of May in the first year of the Joan era and December 15 and 16 in the third year of the Jisho era, etc.).
  711. Kanezane lamented, 'I have never heard of a high priest of noble birth who had such hardship' ("Gyokuyo," entry of January 13, 1184).
  712. Kanezane launched a furious criticism of Takasue and Michichika's official report to the emperor, saying 'you try to divine Kiyomori's will, but care nothing if it causes great harm to the imperial family.'
  713. Kanezane lost his position, but rose up in position within the Buddhist region as the conservator of his younger brother Jien.
  714. Kanezane mentioned, 'the Cloistered Emperor Toba was an ordinary person and regretted administering punishment, he gave all the authority to Bifukumon in.
  715. Kanezane objected, 'What benefit is there in laying waste to an entire sect?' which provoked Takasue into showing his displeasure on his face.
  716. Kanezane said as follows in astonishment.
  717. Kanezane started to strongly believe in Nenbutsu (Buddhist prayer) and especially in Honen.
  718. Kanezane strongly criticized this saying 'It had never been experienced that any person who was punished became a tutor,' ("Gyokuyo" (Diary of Kanezane KUJO)).
  719. Kanezane strongly opposed to this insisting that the authority to issue Senji (imperial decree) and stamp Kanpu (official notice from Daijokan) was solely given to the emperor.
  720. Kanezane was critical of the Taira clan administration and Pope Goshirakawa; he became regent by recommendation of MINAMOTO no Yoritomo and then chief advisor to the Emperor, whereupon the Konoe and Kujo families took positions as regents to the emperor.
  721. Kanezane wrote 'Yoshinaka's moshijo was moderate, but the security measures in the Imperial Palace are excessive. The stance is not regal ("Gyokuyo," entry of January 9, 1184).
  722. Kanezane wrote about this, 'The world is insane' ("Gyokuyo," entry of January 19).
  723. Kanezane's diary "Gyokuyo" shows how deeply Kanezane KUJO, Uji no choja (chieftain of family), was related to the reconstruction of statues in Nanendo.
  724. Kanezane's diary, "Gyokuyo (Kanezane KUJO's Diary)," is famous.
  725. Kanezane's grandson, Michiie KUJO, gained power in the Imperial court since Michiie's son Yoritsune KUJO, and then Yoritsune's son Yoritsugu KUJO, became Sekke Shogun in the Kamakura Shogunate.
  726. Kanezane, who was eager to reconstruct Todai-ji Temple, became a key person in the national government, which also worked favorably for Todai-ji Temple.
  727. Kanezumi DAIGO
  728. Kanezumi DAIGO (November 18, 1747 - May 27, 1758) was a Kugyo (a Court noble) during the middle of the Edo period.
  729. Kanfugenkyo'
  730. Kanfukuju-ji Temple (Kanagawa Ward, Yokohama City, Kanagawa Prefecture)
  731. Kangae Ochi
  732. Kangakai
  733. Kangaku
  734. Kangaku (Kangaku ranking) means the title to be given to Buddhist monks who are in a commanding position with a high level of education and learning in religious schools of Japanese Buddhism after the end of modern times.
  735. Kangaku (Sinology)
  736. Kangaku has Kangaku-ryo which is a consultative body of the chief priest to answer to the problems in education and learning.
  737. Kangaku-e (Association for the encouragement of learning) - In September
  738. Kangaku-in, which scholar monks not only from the Kegon sect, but also from a variety of sects visit as instructors and learners, becomes an educational institution appropriate for learning the eight sects of Buddhism.
  739. Kangaku-in: The facility (boarding school) owned by the Fujiwara clan
  740. Kangakue
  741. Kangakue was an event held mainly by people of the Kidendo and Tendai sect (Enryaku-ji Temple).
  742. Kangakuin
  743. Kangakuin (Daigaku Nanso): Established by the Fujiwara clan in 821, and officially approved in or prior to 872.
  744. Kangakuin Kyakuden (guest hall)
  745. Kangakuin Kyakuden (guest hall) (National Treasures): It stands on the place adjoining the south side of To-in.
  746. Kangakuin Kyakuden shohekiga: 16 surfaces of paintings of copper pheasants, wild ducks and mandarin ducks, and paintings of bamboos and Japanese sparrows, 8 surfaces of paintings of bamboos and Japanese sparrows and paintings of reeds and snowy herons
  747. Kangakuin Kyakuden shohekiga: 3 surfaces of waterfall paintings, 4 surfaces of paintings of ume trees and hinoki cypresses, and paintings of flowers and grasses, 4 surfaces of paintings of cherry trees and Japanese cedars, and paintings of flowers and grasses, 4 surfaces of hinoki cypresses paintings, and flowers and grasses paintings
  748. Kangakuin gakumonryo
  749. Kangakuin was established by the Fujiwara no Fuyutsugu in 821, and officially approved in or prior to 872.
  750. Kangakuin was the Fujiwara clan's Daigaku-besso (academic facility for nobles) in the Heian period.
  751. Kangakukigen
  752. Kangakukigen is a history book of the study of the Chinese classics written by Sueyasu IJICHI of Satsuma domain in the late Edo Period.
  753. Kangangiin
  754. Kangangiin (1217 - October 12, 1300), a Buddhist priest of the Soto sect, lived in the mid-Kamakura period.
  755. Kangeiko
  756. Kangen
  757. Kangen (854 - July 9, 925) was a priest of the Shingon sect during the mid Heian Period.
  758. Kangen (January 19, 1246) - February 28, 1247
  759. Kangen (Japanese court music)
  760. Kangen (gagaku piece without dance)
  761. Kangen February 26, 1243 - (January 19, 1246)
  762. Kangen became Toji-Choja (the chief abbot of To-ji Temple) and at the same time Kongobu-ji Temple's head priest, and established the Honmatsu system in which To-ji Temple was the head temple and Kongobu-ji Temple was the sub-temple.
  763. Kangen music (Kangen Bugaku)
  764. Kangen shaved approx. 30-cm long disheveled hair, repaired his clothes and juzu (beadroll), and then sealed the place again.
  765. Kangen, the first zasu (head priest) of Daigo-ji Temple, was considered to be Shobo's legal child, who accompanied by Junyu, his disciple, dedicated Kobo Daishi-go title to Oku no in (inner sanctuary) on Mt. Koya, and intended for the prosperity of the post-Kukai Shingon organization.
  766. Kangetsu Chakai (Moon-viewing Tea Ceremony)
  767. Kangetsu Sanbutsu E (a gathering held to watch the moon and praise Buddha), 14 to 16 August depending on the lunar calendar; the Kon-do Hall is open to the public during the night and the silhouettes of the Sansonbutsu (three Buddhist deities) stand out sharply against the light.
  768. Kangetsu-an of Omotesenke
  769. Kangetsu-kai (moon viewing party) held at Daikaku-ji Temple (Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City) from October 5 to 7 every year
  770. Kangetsu-tei Teahouse
  771. Kangetsudai (literally, moon-viewing pavilion) of Kodai-ji Temple
  772. Kangetsukyo Station
  773. Kangetsukyo Station (Keihan Uji Line of Keihan Electric Railway) located on the opposite bank of the Uji-gawa River
  774. Kangetsukyo Station - Momoyama-Minamiguchi Station - Rokujizo Station
  775. Kangetsukyo Station, located in Bungobashi-cho, Fushimi Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop of the Keihan Uji Line, which is operated by the Keihan Electric Railway.
  776. Kangi March 5, 1229 - April 2, 1232
  777. Kangi-in Temple (Kumagaya City, Saitama Prefecture) - one of the three main shotens in Japan
  778. Kanginshu
  779. Kanginshu is a collection of Japanese songs and ballads.
  780. Kangiten (Nandikesvara)
  781. Kangiten (Nandikesvara, or Ganesh): 16th of each month
  782. Kangiten (or Nandikesvara) (Ganapati in Sanskrit) is one of the tenbu, guardian deities that reside in a heavenly realm, one of six realms in which the souls of living beings transmigrate from one to another, in Buddhism.
  783. Kangnam University
  784. Kango ARIDOOSHI
  785. Kango ARIDOSHI
  786. Kango ARIDOSHI (1839 - June 20, 1869) was a member of the Shinsengumi (a special police force of the late Tokugawa shogunate period).
  787. Kango ARIDOSHI: Died May 11, 1869 fighting in the Hakodate War
  788. Kango Trade and Kitayama Culture
  789. Kango bokuseki (圜悟墨蹟)
  790. Kango trade started in 1401 when Yoshimitsu ASHIKAGA proposed to start the trade with Ming by dispatching a Buddhist monk Soa and a merchant in Hakata Koitomi and received 'Eiraku kangofu' from the envoy of Ming.
  791. Kango-jinja Shrine
  792. Kango-jinja Shrine is located in Nara City, Nara Prefecture.
  793. Kangoemon TAKAHASHI
  794. Kangofu
  795. Kangofu was a tally or trading license issued by the Ming dynasty and used in trade, such as the Ming-Japanese trade, to confirm authorized tribute and trade ships between the Ming dynasty and a tributary state.
  796. Kangofu were issued in about 50 countries in Southeast Asia.
  797. Kangoro HASHIMOTO
  798. Kangoro HASHIMOTO (1822-1897) was a mason from Higo Domain who was active from the end of the Edo period until the Meiji period.
  799. Kangyo Gengibun (On the Essential Meaning), Volume 1
  800. Kangyo Jobungi (On the Prefatory Part), Volume 2
  801. Kangyo Shoshubun (the main part) Jozengi (On the Meditative Good), Volume 3
  802. Kangyo Shoshubun Sanzengi (On the Non-meditative Good), Volume 4
  803. Kangyo from the otabisho to the shrine
  804. Kangyoin (Tsuneko, Kangyoin), the younger sister of Saneakira, worked as a maid of honor to the Emperor Ninko, and gave birth to Imperial Princess Chikako KAZUNOMIYA who was married to Iemochi TOKUGAWA, the fourteenth Shogun.
  805. Kangyoin and her people disregarded the intention of Tenshoin, valued the life of Princess Kazunomiya's imperial palace style, and made no attempt to become accustomed to the life of the Edo style.
  806. Kangyoin frequently experienced moving with Princess Kazunomiya.
  807. Kangyoin's death, told only to few people including Tsuguko NIWATA, was kept confidential even to Princess Kazunomiya until it was announced officially on the 14th.
  808. Kanhasshu or the eight provinces of Kanto region (the Mito Domain ・Nikko Tosho-gu Shrine), Izu Province, the southern end of Mutsu Province and a part of Kai Province ・Suruga Province besides Edo were in the control of Danzaemon, so Hinin people in these regions were under Danzaemon.
  809. Kani
  810. Kani (1062 - July 12, 1101) was a Buddhist monk of Shingon Sect in the late Heian period.
  811. Kani (crab)-zushi (Nagaoka Koyoken)
  812. Kani Official Court Rank Matching Chart
  813. Kani Official Court Rank Matching Chart (Ryoge no kan: a post outside the original Ritsuryo code created by Imperial edicts of Japan)
  814. Kani Official Court Rank Matching Chart (Yoro Code 1)
  815. Kani Official Court Rank Matching Chart (Yoro Code 2)
  816. Kani Official Rank System of Ancient Japan
  817. Kani Soto Table
  818. Kani Sotosei
  819. Kani Sotosei was the bureaucrats hierarchy system that set the constant suitability relationship between Ikai (Court rank) and government post given to a government official on the Japanese Ritsuryo system (a system of centralized government based on the ritsuryo code).
  820. Kani means Ikai (Court rank).
  821. Kani zosui (crab hotpot & rice porridge)
  822. Kani-Botan (crab and peony): it was modeled on the Botan crest and modified by Yoshimura DATE.
  823. Kani-Isoku: Sukunakute Tareri to nasu. - To emit enough incense even in small amounts
  824. Kanichi SHINOFUSA: 'Sonata for Soh Solo' (1938), the first Soh composed by Western music composer
  825. Kanichi SUMITOMO
  826. Kanichi and his wife, a daughter of Munemitsu MINAGAWA, had four sons and two daughters.
  827. Kanichi then gave a kick at Omiya and rejected her begging for forgiveness; Kanichi became a usurer in order to take a revenge on her.
  828. Kanichi was infuriated by the act of Omiya; he questioned her closely about the reason when she came after Kanichi to Atami, yet she did not tell him the truth.
  829. Kanichiro YOSHIMU in the media
  830. Kanichiro YOSHIMURA
  831. Kanichiro YOSHIMURA (1840 - January 27, 1868)
  832. Kanidon (Master Crab's Revenge)
  833. Kanie Station, Maegasu Station (current Yatomi Station) and Kuwana Station were established.
  834. Kaniman-ji Temple
  835. Kaniman-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple belonging to the Chizan school of the Shingon Sect located in Yamashiro-cho, Kizugawa City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  836. Kanin
  837. Kanin (dates of birth and death unknown) was a Tendai sect priest in the middle Heian period.
  838. Kanin (official seal)
  839. Kanin came to be stamped on papers after the age of the Tang Dynasty, but until the period of Wei and Jin in the Northern and Southern Dynasties, kanin were stamped on 'fudei' (a lump of clay) which was used to seal a bundle of mokkan or chikkan (narrow, long, and thin pieces of wood or bamboo strung together that were used to write on in ancient times).
  840. Kanin learned Tendai doctrine under Ryogen and Genshin (priests) at Mt. Hiei and was famous for his academic accomplishment.
  841. Kanin was originally the residence of FUJIWARA no Fuyutsugu who formed the basis of the Northern House's prosperity, before it was inherited and lived by Kinsue, then it was also used as a satodairi (a temporary palace) from the end of the Heian period to the early Kamakura period.
  842. Kanin was seen as a symbol of government officials because government officials attached inju (a thick string for kanin) to the grip of kanin and always wore kanin on their obi (a waist belt).
  843. Kanin were originally designed only for actual use, but their high artistic quality was recognized approximately after the age of the Sung Dynasty and they became the subject of collection and appreciation and also used as a reference material for tenkoku (seal-engraving).
  844. Kanin' was created to easily provide official evidence for those cases.
  845. Kanin-gu - The only residence of the court nobility left inside Kyoto Gyoen.
  846. Kanin-ryu (a linage of court noble of a branch one of the Fujiwara clique)
  847. Kanin-ryu was a linage of kuge (court noble) of a branch of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan including the Sanjo Family, the Saionji Family, or the Tokudaiji family.
  848. Kanin-ryu was originated from FUJIWARA no Kinsue, Kanin minister, an uncle of FUJIWARA no Michinaga.
  849. Kaninke-ryu (the Kanin line) of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan.
  850. Kaninnomiya (the descendants of Kaninnomiya Imperial Prince Kotohito, discontinued)
  851. Kaninnomiya Imperial Prince Sukehito
  852. Kaninnomiya Imperial Prince Sukehito (April 1, 1733 - August 1, 1794) was the head of the Miyake (house of an imperial prince) in Edo period and member of the Imperial family.
  853. Kaninnomiya Palace: This place no longer exists.
  854. Kaninnomiya Prince Haruhito (Sumihito KANIN)
  855. Kaninseki and Masudokoseki (Jukoin of Daitoku-ji Temple, Kyoto City): Important Cultural Property
  856. Kanja (spy) of Noriyori was captured while lurking in Yoritomo's bedspace on September 13 (August 10 under the old lunar calendar).
  857. Kanja-sha Shrine
  858. Kanjaku NAKAMURA
  859. Kanjaku NAKAMURA is a professional name of Kabuki (traditional drama performed by male actors).
  860. Kanjaku NAKAMURA the fifth
  861. Kanjaku NAKAMURA the first
  862. Kanjaku NAKAMURA the fourth
  863. Kanjaku NAKAMURA the second
  864. Kanjan (a Korean soy-sauce) (South Korea)
  865. Kanjan (a Korean soy-sauce; kanjan means 'salted food') is the soy-sauce of Korea.
  866. Kanjan is darker than Japanese soy-sauce in color, and it is usually blended and used with other seasonings as yangnyeom.
  867. Kanji '法被' is also used for 'happi' that is a cloth hanged from backrest of a chair for high priest but it is believed to be just a phonetic-equivalent character, as there is no connection with happi coat.
  868. Kanji (Chinese character) of the Year
  869. Kanji (Chinese characters)
  870. Kanji (Chinese characters) was made into Japanese style by the three great brush traces in the mid Heian period, and at the same time "kana" was also created.
  871. Kanji (state-sponsored temples) were classified into daiji (temples built by Emperors), kokubunji (provincial monastery) and jogakuji (temples supported by nobles or local ruling families).
  872. Kanji April 7, 1087 - December 25, 1094
  873. Kanji Description
  874. Kanji GOTO
  875. Kanji GOTO (May 19, 1871 - February 23, 1936) was a battlefield missionary priest and a founder of schools in Japan.
  876. Kanji MAETA: "Toryo no Kazoku" (The Family of the Boss)/"Umi" (Sea)
  877. Kanji character readings used in Japanese people's names which differ from the standard on-yomi (Sino-Japanese reading) and kun-yomi (native Japanese reading).
  878. Kanji characters for "Obiko no Mikoto" are 大彦命 or 大毘古命.
  879. Kanji characters for Kanbari Nyudo are: 加牟波理入道, 雁婆理入道, or 眼張入道.
  880. Kanji characters inside the brackets are for transcription.
  881. Kanji day
  882. Kanji day is the memorial day, which the Japan Kanji Aptitude Testing Foundation has established in 1995.
  883. Kanji of Himorogi '神籬' was originally read as 'Kamigaki' or 'Mizugaki.'
  884. Kanji of the Year
  885. Kanji of the Year is a Chinese character representing the social conditions in Japan or World of the year which is announced once a year by the Japan Kanji Aptitude Testing Foundation on the "Kanji's day", December 12.
  886. Kanji-no Shoen Seiri-rei 1093 Emperor Shirakawa
  887. Kanjiin (Kanjiin Temple's) Manuscript.
  888. Kanjin
  889. Kanjin (government officials) in Konoe-fu patrolled crying out their own names, and this was called Tonoi-moshi.
  890. Kanjin (勧進) is a synonym of fushin.
  891. Kanjin Heike
  892. Kanjin Heike refers to a total of 200 phrases of "Tale of the Heike," as narrated by Biwa Hoshi to collect money for temple repairs.
  893. Kanjin Heike were often performed during the Edo period, too; kengyo (temple or shrine administrators) are said to have commonly spent about a month narrating all the phrases on rotation.
  894. Kanjin Shicho (a manservant doing odd jobs)
  895. Kanjin Zonin
  896. Kanjin Zonin (lower-ranking government official)
  897. Kanjin Zonin (lower-ranking government official) newly established four members.
  898. Kanjin Zonin (lower-ranking government official) newly established.
  899. Kanjin Zonin (lower-ranking government official) six, later four.
  900. Kanjin Zonin (lower-ranking government official) was newly established.
  901. Kanjin Zonin (lower-ranking government official), newly established
  902. Kanjin Zonin (lower-ranking government officials): newly established
  903. Kanjin Zonin => shibu (low rank bureaucrats) => kanjin shicho (a manservant doing odd jobs) => kushicho (servant doing odd jobs).
  904. Kanjin Zonin, newly established.
  905. Kanjin Zumo
  906. Kanjin Zumo was held mainly in the three major cities of Kyoto, Osaka and Edo.
  907. Kanjin bune
  908. Kanjin bune was a boat in the middle ages on which kanjin-hijiri monks were sent to promote kanjin.
  909. Kanjin cho
  910. Kanjin cho, or kange cho, refers to a rolled book that describes the objectives of kanjin.
  911. Kanjin entertainment
  912. Kanjin refers to the work of monks in which they encouraged or persuaded followers and supporters to offer money for building and repairing temples.
  913. Kanjin shicho (a manservant doing odd jobs)
  914. Kanjin shicho (a manservant doing odd jobs) one member.
  915. Kanjin shicho (a manservant doing odd jobs) two members.
  916. Kanjin shicho (a manservant doing odd jobs).
  917. Kanjin shicho.
  918. Kanjin was work done by Buddhist monks in connection with missionary activities intended to bring relief to people.
  919. Kanjin' (temple solicitation) was originally meant to promote a relationship with the Buddha, and then turned to be to collect contribution for the revival of a temple.
  920. Kanjin' in this lyric is kanjin, as described in this section, and refers to a beggar.
  921. Kanjin-Noh (Noh performances held to raise subscriptions for the construction of shrines or temples)
  922. Kanjin-eigyo-den (hereditary field of officials) system in Tang Ritsuryo Code was modified to be suitable for the situation in Japan and was applied to the Japanese ritsuryo system.
  923. Kanjin-eigyo-den in Tang Dynasty could be succeeded to offspring for generations, but differently, iden in Japan were officially confiscated after ones' death.
  924. Kanjin-hijiri monks read and showed this book to people who gathered to hear preaching, and encouraged them to have a relationship with Buddha through donations and good deeds.
  925. Kanjincho
  926. Kanjindai: one person
  927. Kanjinsho (Office for Raising Funds)
  928. Kanjinsho (Office for Raising Funds) Kyoko (storehouse)
  929. Kanjiro KAWAI
  930. Kanjiro KAWAI (August 24, 1890 - November 18, 1966) was a ceramic artist in Japan.
  931. Kanjiro NISHI
  932. Kanjiro NISHI (April 5, 1846 - January 27, 1912) is a military man in the Imperial Japanese Army.
  933. Kanjiro completed the production of a ceramic panel inscribed with his essay 'Inochi no mado' (literally, window of life) on the pot clay.
  934. Kanjiro declined the Order of Culture in 1955.
  935. Kanjiro joined the Kyoto Ceramic Research Center (京都市立陶芸試験場) after graduating from Tokyo Higher Technical School, and along with Shoji HAMADA, his junior at the school, he studied more than 10,000 types of glazes, reproduced and studied ceramics from the past, such as Chinese ceramics.
  936. Kanjiro stopped producing his own works, saying to himself, "My works are like costumes and makeup, but what has happened to the body inside and the spirit?"
  937. Kanjiro was born as a son of a carpenter in Yasugi-cho, Shimane Prefecture (present-day Yasugi City).
  938. Kanjiro's daughter married Kiichi SAJI, Army Major General.
  939. Kanjiseigen (restrictions on the number of kanji recognized for usage), daily-use kanji (superseded in 1981), kanji for common use (list of 1945 kanji established in 1981), list of 1006 kanji taught in Japanese primary schools, and kanji officially for use in names
  940. Kanjizai means that contemplation with prajna leads to the religious fruit (妙果) of the universalist.
  941. Kanjizokucho' (a study of Manyoshu) was published.
  942. Kanjo
  943. Kanjo (1057 - February 19, 1125) was a Shingon Sect Buddhist monk who lived during the latter part of the Heian period.
  944. Kanjo (Iwafune, Murakami City, Niigata Prefecture)
  945. Kanjo Tumulus (also referred to as Yoraku Kanjo-kofun Tumulus) is a tumulus located in Yoraku, Takatori Town, Nara Prefecture.
  946. Kanjo bugyo (commissioner of finance)
  947. Kanjo bugyo (commissioner of finance)…in charge of finance.
  948. Kanjo bugyo was a governmental post in the Edo period and the highest accounting officer, who was in charge of finance and control of the tenryo (the areas controlled directly by the bakufu).
  949. Kanjo bugyo:
  950. Kanjo entered the Buddhist priesthood under Tsunenori of Ninna-ji Temple and studied esoteric Buddhism before being consecrated by priest-Imperial Prince Shoshin.
  951. Kanjo from Ki Province.
  952. Kanjo is a ceremony mainly celebrated in Esoteric Buddhism, in which a legitimate successor is declared by pouring water over the top of the head.
  953. Kanjo no maki is a chapter describing days of nenbutsu-zanmai (mental absorption in the nenbutsu) of TAIRA no Tokuko, who jumped into the sea in the naval battle of Danno-ura but was rescued and entered the priesthood, and a tragic love story of a maid.
  954. Kanjo no zanmu (record on experience in Soul) (1892)
  955. Kanjo rekimei (a record list of the Ganjo - an important ceremony in the esoteric Buddhism) (written as 灌頂歴名 or 灌頂記)
  956. Kanjo retsuden jikutosho is the oldest shomono in existence today.
  957. Kanjo was originally a ritual carried out for the enthronement of a king or official investiture of the Crown Prince in Ancient India in which water called kanjosui was poured onto the head of the king being enthroned.
  958. Kanjo-bugyo (commissioner of finance)
  959. Kanjo-kofun Tumulus
  960. Kanjo-kofun Tumulus (a tumulus in Yuraku, Takatori Town, Nara Prefecture)
  961. Kanjo-kumigashira
  962. Kanjo-kumigashira is a bureaucratic post in the Edo shogunate.
  963. Kanjo: to request the gods and Buddha to come, or to appeal to the main shrine to impart the enshrined deity to make a branch shrine.
  964. Kanjobeya (accounting room) in the residence of the former feudal domain was reconstructed in a new location within a town.
  965. Kanjocho (Account Books)
  966. Kanjocho were also used by domains, merchants and other citizens, but in a more limited sense they mean a variety of account books prepared by local governors dispatched from the Edo bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) for reports to be submitted to kanjosho (financial offices).
  967. Kanjoginmiyaku (a governmental post in the Edo period)
  968. Kanjoginmiyaku officers audited all of these jobs.
  969. Kanjoginmiyaku was a governmental post in charge of auditing all jobs in the Kanjo-sho office (the office for finance) in the Edo Bakufu.
  970. Kanjoginmiyaku was installed at the Kanjo-sho office, and the officers were appointed from Hatamoto (direct retainers of the bakufu) or Gokenin (also direct retainers of the bakufu, but lower-ranked than Hatamoto).
  971. Kanjoin (Important Cultural Property)
  972. Kanjoin Temple of Kyoogokoku-ji Temple [Kujo-cho, Minami Ward, Kyoto City]
  973. Kanjoin, and its Kitamon Gate, Higashimon Gate
  974. Kanjosho
  975. Kanjosho is a kind of account book prepared for settlement of balances on rice, soy beans, gold, silver and others.
  976. Kanjosho is the name of an office or a governing organization established for finance and civil administration in the Edo bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun), in each domain and at each hatamoto (direct retainers of the Edo bakufu).
  977. Kanjoso, Matsuo, Genzo and Tokihei, of "SUGAWARA"
  978. Kanjuji-ryu simplified lineage (founder, Kanshin): Kukai - Shinga - Gennin - Shobo - Kangen - Ningai - Seison - Hanshun - Genkaku - Kanshin
  979. Kanjuro FUJIMA
  980. Kanjuro FUJIMA (1796 - Jan. 16, 1841)
  981. Kanjuro FUJIMA II
  982. Kanjuro FUJIMA II (1823 - 1882) was the third-generation head of the Fujima school of performance.
  983. Kanjuro FUJIMA III
  984. Kanjuro FUJIMA III (year of birth unknown - 1877)
  985. Kanjuro FUJIMA IV
  986. Kanjuro FUJIMA IV (year of birth and death unknown)
  987. Kanjuro FUJIMA V
  988. Kanjuro FUJIMA V (year of birth unknown - March 10, 1935) was the sixth-generation head of the Fujima school.
  989. Kanjuro FUJIMA VI
  990. Kanjuro FUJIMA VII
  991. Kanjuro FUJIMA VIII
  992. Kanjuro FUJIMA is the professional name used by the head of the Fujima school and the Kanjuro line of performance.
  993. Kanjuro YAMAZAKIYA: Jiroza NAKAMURA, the second
  994. Kanka-kei Gorge
  995. Kankaku-kijin: Kan wa Kijin-ni Itaru. - To make one's senses as sharp as those of an Oni (ogre) or deity
  996. Kankan no' (Kankan dance), 'Hokaibushi' and 'Enka' (Japanese ballad) all derived from Shingaku.
  997. Kanken' is a petition addressed to the new government (addressed to Oyakusho) in July, 1868, in which Kakuma argued about the ideal situation of Japan in 22 different areas such as politics, economics and education.
  998. Kankichi YUKAWA, who was riji, assumed the position of soriji.
  999. Kankidan
  1000. Kankiko-ji Temple


219001 ~ 220000

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