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

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

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  1. Katsuyori dispatched his own troop of about 15,000 soldiers as well.
  2. Katsuyori dispatched troops to Echigo in an attempt to intervene at the request for support from Kagetora, who was a younger brother of Ujimasa HOJO (a distant relative, according to one theory) and had been adopted out to Uesugi from Hojo.
  3. Katsuyori explains how stupid it was to act so impetuously.
  4. Katsuyori expresses his opinion that a conflict with the Tokugawa family is inevitable, but it is time to gain strength and wait for right time.
  5. Katsuyori finally switched to Kagekatsu side on the condition of the cession of Numata, Kozuke Province (the Koetsu Alliance).
  6. Katsuyori had no power to resist against these situations, and being at last betrayed even by Nobushige OYAMADA, killed himself with his sword at Tano on Mt. Tenmoku in the eastern part of Kai Province.
  7. Katsuyori hid family treasures (a suit of armor called "tatenashi yoroi" and a flag) in a temple in Enzan (in Koshu City) to protect them from damage.
  8. Katsuyori however decided to go ahead with the battle.
  9. Katsuyori was enraged at the maternal relative Yoshimasa KISO's treason, and immediately sent out troops for subjugation of Kiso.
  10. Katsuyori was guarded by only a few hundreds hatamoto (banner men), and withdrew to Takato-jo Castle.
  11. Katsuyori was reminded of this when he formed an alliance with UESUGI.
  12. Katsuyori who took over the enlarged territory of the era of Shingen held the office for a short time but the amount of the remaining documents is second to those of the era of Shingen.
  13. Katsuyori, who succeeded the family after Shingen died, followed Shingen's will, and kept the death of Shingen secret without performing a funeral.
  14. Katsuyori, who took over the family from Shingen, essentially followed his strategy.
  15. Katsuyoshi ANDO
  16. Katsuyuki HISAMATSU
  17. Katsuyuki HISAMATSU was the seventh lord of Tako Domain in Shimosa Province.
  18. Katsuyuki TANAKA ? December 24, 1842 to May 24, 1844
  19. Katsuzane was born in 1780.
  20. Katsuzo SATOMI, "Maiko" (舞妓) 1921, "Onna" (女) (Woman) 1925, "Kanran" (橄らん) (Olive) 1960-1962, "Fudo Zo"(不動像) 1944, "Ajisai" (あじさい) (Hydrangea), "Jinbutsu (Kao)" (人物(顔)) (Person - Face)
  21. Katsuzo YANAGIYA (second son of Juraku)
  22. Katta' was not known as an aristocrat of the capital, but a person with the same surname appeared as gunji hogandai (a district manager and administrative official of the Retired-Emperor's Office) in "Katori Monjo" (Katori document).
  23. Katte-kudari (right-hand fall)
  24. Katte-nobori (right-hand rise)
  25. Kattekata (financial commissioner and civil administrator) and Ginmiyaku (judicial and criminal investigator), with an estate of 100 koku (second generation).
  26. Katu (Co Tu) ethnic group
  27. Katugiyama-gata (the style of carrying on a pedestal)
  28. Katugiyama-gata (the style of carrying on a pedestal): Murotsu taiko-mikoshi (Murotsu Japanese Drum Portable Shrine, Hyogo Prefecture), Tokuyama taiko-mikoshi (Tokuyama Japanese Drum Portable Shrine, Yamaguchi Prefecture), Aso ondaue-matsuri (Aso Crop Planting Festival, Kumamoto Prefecture)
  29. Katugiyama-gata (the style of carrying on a pedestal): Tsugai-danjiri (Hyogo Prefecture), Tenjin-sai Festival Moyoshi-daiko (Osaka Prefecture), Furukawa-matsuri Festival (Gifu Prefecture)
  30. Kauchi no shinaga no nakanoo no misasagi(Taishi Nishiyama Tumulus located in Oaza Taishi, Taishi-cho, minamikawachi-gun, Osaka Prefecture) was presumed to be the Imperial mausoleum of Emperor Bidatsu.
  31. Kawa (river) bushin:
  32. Kawa (river) jizo
  33. Kawa Chikuwa in Yawatahama City, Ehime Prefecture, has only ten Chikuwa skin, which are left after taking fish cakes away from Chikuwa, wrapped around the stick and baked, it has different taste compared to ordinary Chikuwa.
  34. Kawa ishi (stones from a river)
  35. Kawa or torikawa (skin)
  36. Kawabata Doki (Kyoto): Founded in the early 16th century.
  37. Kawabata Marutamachi
  38. Kawabata-dori Street
  39. Kawabata-dori Street (to the north)
  40. Kawabata-dori Street (to the south)
  41. Kawabata-dori Street - Horikawa-dori Street
  42. Kawabata-dori Street bus stop (to the north)
  43. Kawabata-dori Street bus stop (to the south)
  44. Kawabata-dori Street bus stop (to the west)
  45. Kawabata-dori Street is one of the streets of Kyoto City.
  46. Kawabata-dori Street/Shidan-kaido Road
  47. Kawabe Buddhist altar
  48. Kawabe [Kawanobe] Basha Tetsudo later had a name change to Settsu Railway; the horse tramway was reconstructed into a light railway using steam power, and services started between Amagasaki and Ikeda (currently Kawanishiikeda).
  49. Kawabe no fu, 759, unknown, Kawabe gun, unknown
  50. Kawachi Dynasty occupies a big position in the previous theory on the changes of the dynasties.
  51. Kawachi Genji is a name that is associated with the territories held by Yorinobu, the younger brother of Yorimitsu, who was the eldest son of Mitsunaka, in Tsuboi, Ishikawa-gun County (Osaka Prefecture), Kawachi Province (present-day Tsuboi, Habikino City, Osaka Prefecture).
  52. Kawachi IKOMA, who later became a vassal of the Ikoma clan, was his son.
  53. Kawachi Juningiri (Ten killings in Kawachi area)
  54. Kawachi Katakami Station
  55. Kawachi Ondo (A Folk Song of Kawachi for a Dance): In Osaka Prefecture
  56. Kawachi Otsukayama Tumulus (Matsubara City, Osaka Prefecture: length of the tumulus is 335 meters long.)
  57. Kawachi Prefecture: established on January 20 (old lunar calendar) in 1869 -> abolished and incorporated into Sakai Prefecture on August 2 (old lunar calendar) in 1869
  58. Kawachi Province
  59. Kawachi Province (that separated Izumi Province)
  60. Kawachi Province disturbance
  61. Kawachi Province: Tannan Domain
  62. Kawachi Santaishi
  63. Kawachi Shiki
  64. Kawachi Shiki established Yuge-no-Miya Palace in Kawachi Province as a separate capital during the period in which Dokyo held power.
  65. Kawachi koku shi (Records of Kawachi Province)
  66. Kawachi somen (Osaka Prefecture): Though flourished until the modern times, gradually declined according to the urbanization and the degradation of the environment.
  67. Kawachi, the son of Ei Sazanami who was a monk from overseas, was given the name of Sukune TAKAOKA and later that of the Takaoka Ren by the Emperor.
  68. Kawachi-Genji
  69. Kawachi-Genji and Ishikawa-Genji
  70. Kawachi-Genji is a school of Seiwa-Genji based in Kawachi province
  71. Kawachi-no-kuni Taizeifu-Shibocho
  72. Kawachi-no-kuni Taizeifu-Shibocho (record of the dead with unpaid tax in Kawachi Province) (owned by Tenri Central Library)
  73. Kawachibon
  74. Kawachibon is a group of The Tale of Genji manuscripts allegedly created by Daikenmotsu (duty) MINAMOTO no Mitsuyuki and his son, MINAMOTO no Chikayuki, and their copies.
  75. Kawachibon line (Kawachi book line)
  76. Kawachiiwafune Station became a stop for rapid trains.
  77. Kawachiiwafune Station opened.
  78. Kawachinagano City, Chihayaakasaka Village in Minamikawachi County
  79. Kawachishiki - Under the Dokyo administration, this was established to replace Kawachikokushi.
  80. Kawada Soyama-kofun Tumulus (the length of the burial mound 53.6 meters, Ishikawa Prefecture)
  81. Kawagoe City landmarks
  82. Kawagoe Fishing Port (Mie Prefecture)
  83. Kawagoe Hikawa-matsuri Festival dashi float parade (February 21, 2005; Kawagoe City; Kawagoe Hikawa Matsuri no Dashi Gyoji Hozonkai [Association for the Preservation of the Kawagoe Hikawa-matsuri Festival dashi event])
  84. Kawagoe clan castle town.
  85. Kawagoe clan was sentenced to death after the Musashi Hei Revolt of 1368 and fled to Ise Province with General Naoshige KAWAGOE, and records related to the Kawagoe-yakata disappeared from the historical stage.
  86. Kawagoe, Kawagoe City, Saitama Prefecture, 1999, merchant town
  87. Kawagoe-Kodama Okan (Highway): It stretches farther toward Joshu Fujioka City than Kawagoe-kaido Road.
  88. Kawagoe-kaido Road: A Waki-kaido Road (other main road) of Nakasen-do Road.
  89. Kawagoe-yakata
  90. Kawagoe-yakata (also known as Kawagoe-kan) was a castle which existed in Uwado, Kawagoe City, Saitama Prefecture.
  91. Kawaguchi Settlement
  92. Kawaguchi anpan from Itayanagi-machi, Kitatsugaru-gun, Aomori Prefecture is a manju-like Japanese sweet wrapping of shiroan with castella-like sponge cake made from wheat flour.
  93. Kawaguchi settlement was the foreign settlement established in the city of Osaka during the same period that the port of Kobe and the city of Tokyo were also opened.
  94. Kawahara no Miya Palace
  95. Kawahara no Miya Palace (an ancient Imperial Palace where Empress Kogyoku lived in the middle of seventh century)
  96. Kawahara no Miya was a palace where Empress Kogyoku lived in the middle of the seventh century.
  97. Kawahigashi Route
  98. Kawai Cable, Ltd.
  99. Kawai Kanjiro Kinenkan
  100. Kawai Kanjiro Memorial Museum
  101. Kawai Obara Route: Tsuji - Senzoku - Welfare Center Front - Miwa Apartment - Sinbashi - Kawai Day-care Center - Kawaiguchi - Obara - Teramachi - Ayabe Station
  102. Kawai Residence (Important Cultural Property): The Kawai family bore the trade name 'Jobonjiya' and moved from Jobonji village (Jobonji-cho, Kashihara City) in the Kanei era.
  103. Kawai-jinja Shrine (Shikinaisha listed in Engishiki, Myojin Taisha, by its formal name 'Kamonokawaai ni imasu okosoyakeno jinja.' Connected to KAMO no Chomei).
  104. Kawaii (cute)
  105. Kawajima-go (加八之末)
  106. Kawajiri fude: Kawajiri-cho, Kure City, Hiroshima Prefecture (former Kawajiri-cho, Toyota-gun)
  107. Kawajiri no tomari (Kanzaki, Amagasaki City, Hyogo Prefecture [Amagasaki City])
  108. Kawakami Line: Konuma Station - Kawakami coal mine Station (21.9km)
  109. Kawakami North - Isikawa Kamiji - Kameyama - Nodagawa Government Office - Akasi Apartment (- Will) - Kaya Government Office - Kuwagai Elementary School Front - Kago North - Omiya - Kameyama - Nodagawa Government Office
  110. Kawakami and thirteen roshi returned to Mt. Myoken and committed suicide by the sword.
  111. Kawakami coal mine
  112. Kawakami no iratsume
  113. Kawakami no irazume
  114. Kawakami predicted that due to the secondary nature of kaisho, it was not placed in front of Tsune no gosho but was probably placed at the back, and attempted the reconstruction of the coordinated location of Higashiyamadono.
  115. Kawakami who was on Mt. Myoken with his men for the battle formation, tried to die heroically in Ikuno Town, but the farmers, who thought they had been deceived, got angry, execrated them as 'fake roshi' and attacked them.
  116. Kawakatsu Clan
  117. Kawamata's Genpuku-shiki coming-of-age ceremony (January 8, 1987; Nikko City; Kawamata Jichikai [Kawamata Residents' Association])
  118. Kawamata, Kuriyama-mura, Shioya County, Tochigi Prefecture (present Nikko City)
  119. Kawamata-jinja Shrine
  120. Kawamata-jinja Shrine is located in Kashihara City, Nara Prefecture.
  121. Kawamata-machi erected the statue of Otehime in Chuo-koen Park in the town in 1992.
  122. Kawamatabime
  123. Kawamori Station, a Hokutan Railway terminal station, was once located approximately 100 meters west of this facility.
  124. Kawamura is the only person in the Imperial Japanese Navy that was posthumously promoted to full admiral for the reason other than death in battle.
  125. Kawanabe-go(加波乃倍)
  126. Kawanakajima
  127. Kawanakajima (poem on a famous battle)
  128. Kawanakajima Derby
  129. Kawanishi City commissions famous people or a person from Kawanishi City as an 'ambassador of hometown of Minamoto clan,' in an effort to promote sightseeing.
  130. Kawanishi City, Hyogo Prefecture, home to the founder of Seiwa-Genji, TADA no Manju, is promoting regional development as the 'hometown of Minamoto clan,' based on its history.
  131. Kawanishi Gymnasium
  132. Kawanishi-mura and Yamadasho-mura were merged to form Seika-mura.
  133. Kawanishiikeda Station on the Myoken Line, owned by Nose Electric Railway Co., Ltd. (Nose Electric Railway before JNR) (Kawanishi-Kokutetsumae Station): Discontinued on December 20, 1981
  134. Kawanui-jinja Shrine in particular is considered a possible site of Kawanui no Mura (where the imperial ancestral deity Amaterasu Omikami was moved from the Imperial Court and worshipped by Toyosukiiribime no mikoto, before being transferred to Ise).
  135. Kawao-sha Shrine (Mizuhanome-no-kami)
  136. Kawaoka Elementary School, Kyoto City
  137. Kawara (tile)
  138. Kawara Domain (former Kokura Domain, Buzen Province)
  139. Kawara Museum
  140. Kawara made of materials other than clay
  141. Kawara no Ishikawa Goemon (song, produced by Eichi OTAKI, sung by Oshamanbe Cats, an alias of Singers Three).
  142. Kawara no Sadaijin (Minister of the Left), MINAMOTO no Toru was one of Emperor SAGA's children.
  143. Kawara soba (the buckwheat noodles of Toyoura-cho in Yamaguchi Prefecture)
  144. Kawara tiles made of cement or metal are still used today instead of clay tiles if normal clay tiles can not be used because of cold climate or depending on personal preference.
  145. Kawara was introduced into Japan together with Buddhism from Baekje in 588, about 1420 years ago.
  146. Kawara-cho, Kawarano-cho:
  147. Kawara-dera Temple
  148. Kawara-dera Temple (Asuka) has an asymmetric garan layout with one tower and two main halls; it has a central main hall in front of the Chumon, a west main hall on its left and a pagoda on its right, and can be regarded as an Asuka-dera Temple garan layout without an east main hall.
  149. Kawara-dera Temple Ruins
  150. Kawara-dera Temple is a Buddhist temple located in Asuka (Asuka Village, Takaichi District, Nara Prefecture), which was the center of political culture in ancient Japan.
  151. Kawara-dera Temple was rebuilt in the Kamakura Period, but it burnt down once again at the end of the Muromachi Period after being struck by lightning, and it was never able to regain the scale it once had.
  152. Kawara-oharai
  153. Kawaraban (commercial news-sheet of the Edo period)
  154. Kawarada - Nara section: 95 km/h
  155. Kawarake (earthen vessel)
  156. Kawarake Nage (throwing an earthen cup)
  157. Kawaramachi Campus (professional education program of the School of Medicine)
  158. Kawaramachi Nijo
  159. Kawaramachi OPA
  160. Kawaramachi Oike
  161. Kawaramachi Sanjo-kita (north) - Kawaramachi Sanjo-minami (south) - Shijo Kawaramachi-kita (north) - Shijo Kawaramachi-minami (south) - Kyoto Station
  162. Kawaramachi Station (Kyoto Prefecture)
  163. Kawaramachi Station (Kyoto Prefecture) (south edge of the street), Shijo Station (Keihan), Kyoto Shiyakusho-mae Station, the Tozai Line of Kyoto City Subway
  164. Kawaramachi Station (Kyoto Prefecture) on the Hankyu Kyoto Main Line of Hankyu Corporation
  165. Kawaramachi Station (Kyoto Prefecture), Hankyu Kyoto Line
  166. Kawaramachi Station (Kyoto Prefecture), underground of Shijo-dori Street
  167. Kawaramachi Station is the last station on the Hankyu Railway Hankyu Kyoto Main Line, and is located at 52 Shin-cho, Kawaramachi-Nishi-iru, Shijo-dori, Simogyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  168. Kawaramachi Vivre
  169. Kawaramachi Vivre - now it has Kyoto Loft (variety store) as a main tenant.
  170. Kawaramachi Yoru Bus (night buses from Kawaramachi)
  171. Kawaramachi-dori Street
  172. Kawaramachi-dori Street is one of the streets located in Kyoto City.
  173. Kawaramono (discriminated position)
  174. Kawaramono is also referred to as Kawarabito, and they were a type of people which were discriminated against in medieval Japan.
  175. Kawaramono was also referred to as Eta and Kiyome.
  176. Kawaranadeshiko nozekichiku (a pink, a wild China pink).
  177. Kawarano-in
  178. Kawarano-in, the residence of MINAMOTO no Toru, was located along Rokujo-dori Street, Kyoto.
  179. Kawarazaki-za Theater had been renamed to Shinbori-za Theater, but Gonnosuke (the eighth), his nephew-in-law had difficulty carrying out the duty of the Zamoto; he soon fell into financial difficulties, and entreated Danjuro to help him.
  180. Kawarazuka-kofun Tumulus (Ikaruga-cho)
  181. Kawarhara Palace was a temporary palace used after Itabuki Palace burnt down, until the move to Okamoto Palace the following year.
  182. Kawari Kenjo' has hira-ori (plain weave), and is arranged with design.
  183. Kawasaki City Museum exhibits the distribution maps of the regions and models of Sagicho.
  184. Kawasaki Tenno-sai Festival, Kawabenanakusa-jinja Shrine, Kawasaki-cho, Ise City, Mie Prefecture
  185. Kawasaki was not only well known for being an art lover but also for creating artworks of his own.
  186. Kawasaki-daishi Daruma Market
  187. Kawasaki-daishi Daruma Market is annually held on January 3.
  188. Kawasaki-sha Shrine
  189. Kawase House - one of registered tangible cultural properties in Japan
  190. Kawase assumed the Buddhist name of Nyudo Hyobubo KAWASE and built a new dojo of which he was appointed jushoku (the resident priest) in Imai-go.
  191. Kawase summarized the discussion among the clan and conveyed a message of obedience to Saionji and others.
  192. Kawase-jinja Shrine (Hikone City)
  193. Kawase-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located in Hikone City, Shiga Prefecture.
  194. Kawase-mai-rei Law (Rice-purchase Law)
  195. Kawashima Selcon Textiles Co., Ltd. head office, plant, Kawashima Textile School, Textile Museum
  196. Kawashima Textile Museum
  197. Kawashima clashed with Nikkatsu over the budget allocation for "Bakamatsu taiyo den", and ended up leaving Nikkatsu over the dispute.
  198. Kawashimake Bunsho (Important Cultural Property)
  199. Kawashimo-zukuri (to prepare sashimi with skin)
  200. Kawasho
  201. Kawasho in which essences of wagoto (the production style of a love scene) were concentrated, and which was handed down to Ganjiro NAKAMURA the second and to Tojuro SAKATA the fourth was one of the specialties (Ganjiro-junikyoku (12 Ganjiro roles)) of Narikoma-ya in Osaka.
  202. Kawata Umegadani-Cho was partly left in Higashiyamaku Ward when Yamashinaku Ward separated in 1976, as Umegadani-Cho, Imagumano, Higashiyamaku Ward.
  203. Kawata and twenty-one men from the same clan, including Gonemon OTA, Hanroku TAKUMA, and Mototatsu SAZEN, attacked four including Kurobe staying at Honkoku-ji Temple at night on August 17, the day before the Coup and killed three of them and let one of them commit suicide with a sword (Honkoku-ji Temple Incident).
  204. Kawata-jinja Shrine
  205. Kawata-jinja Shrine (Konan City)
  206. Kawata-jinja Shrine (Minakuchi-cho, Koga City)
  207. Kawata-jinja Shrine (Tsuchiyama-cho, Koga City)
  208. Kawata-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located in Kosei-cho, Konan City, Shiga Prefecture.
  209. Kawata-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located in Minakuchi-cho, Koga City, Shiga Prefecture.
  210. Kawata-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located in Tsuchiyama-cho, Koga City, Shiga Prefecture.
  211. Kawatabime is considered to have been a wife of Emperor Suizei and a mother of Emperor Annei.
  212. Kawato-go Village (川人郷)
  213. Kawatsugu ran away but he was arrested in Yamato Province.
  214. Kawatsugu was forgiven his crime and returned to Kyoto in 806.
  215. Kawatsura Hogen
  216. Kawauchi is located in Minamikawachi-gun, Osaka Prefecture.
  217. Kawauso as used in his pen name "Dassaishooku Shujin"means an otter.
  218. Kawawake TAKENUNA (aka Kawawake no Mikoto TAKENUNA)
  219. Kawawake TAKENUNA (aka TAKENUNA Kawawake no Mikoto) is noted in the classic Japanese book "Nihon Shoki" (Japan Chronicles) as Kawawake TAKENUNA but by a separate title (TAKENUNA Kawawake no Mikoto) in "Kojiki" (an ancient historical record of Japan).
  220. Kawawake was a child of Obiko no Mikoto.
  221. Kawawake was a forebear of the Abe Clan.
  222. Kawawake was posted to the Tokai (Eastern region of Japan) as a Shogun during the reign of Emperor Sujin.
  223. Kawayoke ofushinsho and the like were established to conduct river improvement.
  224. Kawazarae Myogakin
  225. Kawazarae Myogakin is votive offering tax imposed by the government for dredging rivers in Osaka in the Edo period.
  226. Kawazu: a drowned person
  227. Kaya
  228. Kaya (in Yosano-cho)
  229. Kaya Fellow Line
  230. Kaya Fellow Line 'Iwatakiguchi-ekimae'
  231. Kaya Fellow Line Bus
  232. Kaya Railway DB201
  233. Kaya Railway DC351
  234. Kaya Railway Kokutetsu 1260-Type Steam Locomotive
  235. Kaya Railway Tokyu 3000 series electric train (First model): Train Cafe Joki-ya (a restaurant in a remodeled passenger car)
  236. Kaya Railway fu-ha 2
  237. Kaya Railway ha 10
  238. Kaya Railway ha 21
  239. Kaya Railway ha 4995
  240. Kaya Railway ha-bu 3
  241. Kaya Railway ki-ha-101: Stationary but assembled properly and maintained ready to work
  242. Kaya Railway ki-ha-yu-ni 51
  243. Kaya SL Ground
  244. Kaya Steam Locomotive Square
  245. Kaya fushin is when neighbors, without compensation, help repair thatched roofs.
  246. Kaya is an alternative name for susuki or Japanese pampas grass, but it is sometimes as a general term for chigaya (Imperata cylindrica).
  247. Kaya no sato (Souvenir shop.
  248. Kaya was a familiar grass for humans, used to thatch roofs, and therefore, became the name of the god of grass, representing grass.
  249. Kaya, Yosano-cho, 2005, weaving town
  250. Kaya, Yosano-cho, Kyoto Prefecture, weaving town
  251. Kaya-goya-ato' is a trace of a small village.
  252. Kayabuki is a type of roof structure using kaya (grass) (Japanese pampas grass or cogon) as the material for thatching and is also called kaya-thatched roof.
  253. Kayabuki no sato Kitamura
  254. Kayabuki no sato Kitamura (Kitamura thatched village) (in Nantan City)
  255. Kayabuki no sato Kitamura is a village located in Miyama-cho Kita, Nantan City, Kyoto Prefecture (formerly Miyama-cho, Kita-Kuwada-gun).
  256. Kayabuki no sato Kitamura, Nantan City, 1993, mountain village
  257. Kayabuki no sato Kitamura, Nantan City, Kyoto Prefecture, mountain village
  258. Kayabuki-no-sato (thatched house village): Kitamura (Miyama-cho, Nantan City, Kyoto Prefecture)
  259. Kayabuki-no-sato, Inc. and Kitamura Kibi (millet) Kobo (workshop) are located in this building.)
  260. Kayabuki-no-sato-Kitamura (historic village of thatched room houses; Miyama-cho; Preservation Districts for Groups of Historic Buildings)
  261. Kayadani
  262. Kayadani is an alluvial fan surrounded on two sides by the Oeyama and Egasa mountain range in the Tango region, Kyoto Prefecture.
  263. Kayain (a residence)
  264. Kayain had ponds at all sides of the shinden, some had only yarimizu without ponds, and at Sanjoin, ponds were intentionally not built to create a noble atmosphere with the indigenous trees.
  265. Kayain was one of the Satodairi (temporary imperial residence) in Heian-kyo.
  266. Kayakabe-kyo
  267. Kayaku Udon, Gomoku Udon, and Okame Udon
  268. Kayakugata Ninsokuyoseba
  269. Kayama was a professor emeritus at Tokyo University of the Arts.
  270. Kayanarumi
  271. Kayanarumi is a female deity whose name is written 賀夜奈流美 in "Izumo kokuso kamuyogoto" (Divine Words of the Ritual Priest of Izumo Taisha Shrine), which can be found in the section on prayer rituals in the "Engishiki" (Regulations and Laws of the Engi Era), and 加夜奈留美 at Asukani Imasu-jinja Shrine and Kayanarumi-jinja Shrine.
  272. Kayanaruminomikoto-jinja Shrine
  273. Kayano School: Jinsai KAYANO, the nephew of Oribe FURUTA (it is uncertain whether it presents itself or not)
  274. Kayano-hime
  275. Kayano-hime (or Kayanu-hime) is a god (Shinto) of grass appearing in Japanese mythology.
  276. Kayanohime no mikoto
  277. Kayanomiya (the descendants of Kayanomiya Prince Kuninori, main male descendant is Masanori KAYA)
  278. Kayanomiya Palace: This place no longer exists.
  279. Kayanomiya Prince Tsunenori (Tsunenori KAYANOMIYA)
  280. Kayanomiya Prince Tsunenori also asked the Emperor to approve him ceasing to be a member of the Imperial Family.
  281. Kayanomiya Prince Tsunenori's third son
  282. Kayao-jinja Shrine
  283. Kayaoku/Okutaki Route
  284. Kayariki (a mosquito repellent stick holder)
  285. Kayariki (a mosquito repellent stick holder) is a device to steady a burning repellent stick and to facilitate the post-cleaning of it, keeping ashes from flying off, by burning a mosquito repellent stick in or on it.
  286. Kayariki (a mosquito repellent stick holder) vary in shape or color, and exquisite (or simple) ceramic kayariki is one of the summer features.
  287. Kayariki is a device for burning mosquito repellent sticks, and it needs to secure stable burning of such sticks.
  288. Kayariki is small, but it deals with fire; it is made of materials with fire resistance and are flame resistant such as ceramic or metal.
  289. Kayo
  290. Kayo Kango Shuraku
  291. Kayo Rokyoku (songs combined with rokyoku [a kind of sung narrative popular during the Edo period]): 'Tawaraboshi Genba' (Genba TAWARABOSHI) and 'Kinokuniya Bunzaemon' (Bunzaemon KINOKUNIYA) by Haruo MINAMI, etc.
  292. Kayo WATANABE and others fought in his stead and perished in the battle.
  293. Kayo YAMAGUCHI
  294. Kayo YAMAGUCHI (October 3, 1899 - March 16, 1984) was a Japanese-style painter.
  295. Kayo YAMAGUCHI (painter)
  296. Kayo YAMAGUCHI, "Kusa" (草) (Grass) 1941, "Hare" (霽) 1968, "Keito no Niwa" (鶏頭の庭) (Garden of Plumed Cockscomb) 1977
  297. Kayo no kuni no miyatsuko
  298. Kayo refers to works of a poetry form with a musical nature.
  299. Kayo was always in the public realm as oral literature that was not recorded in letters.
  300. Kayocho (palanquin bearer) (Fifty persons each were assigned to the Left and Right Divisions.)
  301. Kayoi Komachi (Komachi visiting)
  302. Kayoikomachi
  303. Kayokai (Tuesday) Parliamentary Group
  304. Kayu (porridge) is a dish made by boiling grains such as rice seeds, foxtail millet and buckwheat, beans or potatoes in a large quantity of water until they become soft.
  305. Kayu HITOTSUYANAGI (sentenced to death)
  306. Kayu cooked using five times the amount of water to rice.
  307. Kayu cooked using seven times the amount of water to rice.
  308. Kayu cooked using ten times the amount of water to rice.
  309. Kayu cooked using twenty times the amount of water to rice.
  310. Kayu is a dish that can be cooked easily if one has grains, water, a source of heat and a single pot.
  311. Kayuura (Porridge Fortunetelling)
  312. Kayuura is an annual fortune-telling, where people's fortunes for the year are read using Kayu (porridge).
  313. Kayuzue (rice porridge stick)
  314. Kayuzue is a stick made by shaving a piece of firewood that was not completely burnt when making kayu (rice porridge) on January 15.
  315. Kazahaya-ryu school
  316. Kazami
  317. Kazami (young girl's formal costume)
  318. Kazami for modern day Shinto rituals
  319. Kazami is a lightweight top (clothing) for girls of the noble class during the Heian period.
  320. Kazamotsuwakenooshio-no-kami
  321. Kazan Genji and Shirakawa family
  322. Kazan Observatory of Kyoto University
  323. Kazan WATANABE
  324. Kazan WATANABE (A Karo officer of the Miyake family in the Tahara domain. He was the only one to receive an official commendation from the bakufu in the movements to reform domain government administration in the Tenpo era [1830 - 1844]. He is famous as a Rangakusha scholar [a person who studied Western sciences thorough the Dutch language] as well.)
  325. Kazan WATANABE (October 20, 1793 to November 23, 1841) was a politician and painter who lived during the late Edo period.
  326. Kazan WATANABE (the chief retainer of the Tahara clan, 1793 to 1841)
  327. Kazan WATANABE painted a portrait of Beian known as 'A Portrait of Beian ICHIKAWA' (a collection of the Kyoto National Museum, Important Cultural Property).
  328. Kazan WATANABE was arrested and Choei TAKANO surrendered himself to the police.
  329. Kazan WATANABE was put in prison in Denmacho town for criticizing the bakufu in 'Shinkiron' (personal document criticizing the bakufu) and then was confined to his house (later committed suicide), and Choei TAKANO was sent to prison.
  330. Kazan WATANABE's 'Portrait of Senseki Takami (housed in Tokyo National Museum)', appreciated as a masterpiece of the early-modern picture that incorporated the Western painting style, is designated as a national treasure.
  331. Kazan WATANABE: "Takami Senseki-zo" (Portrait of Senseki Takami)
  332. Kazan as Painter and Literati
  333. Kazan came to be on good terms with Tomonobu as one of his chamberlains, and this close relationship led to Tomonobu's willing provision of funds when Kazan wanted to purchase foreign books.
  334. Kazan had originally started painting partly for the purpose of supporting his family, but his talent brought great success, and the frame of reference and personal connections he obtained as he mastered painting were indispensable for enhancing his very original manner of thinking.
  335. Kazan inari-sha Shrine
  336. Kazan participated in Shoshikai (a kind of think tank) established by a Confucian official of Kishu Domain, Katsusuke ENDO, and exchanged notes with many people (including Choei TAKANO) regarding measures to be taken against famine.
  337. Kazan strongly opposed their plan and conducted an effort, together with Sadachika MAKI, one of the lord chamberlains, demanding that Yasuaki's half-brother Tomonobu MIYAKE be made the next lord.
  338. Kazan, however, didn't accept that approach; instead he opened the lid of the coffin, took a look of Kinrei's face, sketched it and touched his face (according to Bakin's book, "Nochino tameno ki" (Records for the Future).
  339. Kazan-Genji
  340. Kazando (tunnel) was dug during Higashiyama in the Meiji period.
  341. Kazanin
  342. Kazanin family, his mother's family, had a connection with both the Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa and TAIRA no Kiyomori and maintained its influence based on the balance of power between them.
  343. Kazanin was a residence that was located in Sancho, Shibo, Ichijo, Sakyo (present Kyoto Gyoen) in Heian-kyo City.
  344. Kazaorieboshi
  345. Kazari Yamakasa
  346. Kazari-fu
  347. Kazari-fu are gluten cakes formed into various shapes such as flowers and traditional Japanese handballs that are also dyed in attractive colors with food colorings.
  348. Kazari-musubi (decorative knot) shaped like a crane, for example, may also be used.
  349. Kazari-sensu (decorated folding fan)
  350. Kazarikanagushi (chaser)
  351. Kazarikanagushi (craftsman for metal ornament) is divided into omotekanagushi (in charge of outside embrowned metal fittings) and uchikanagushi (in charge of glided or not glided metal fittings of shoji (a paper sliding door) and of the inside).
  352. Kazarimono is generally a procedure for when using meibutsu or a utensil with history.
  353. Kazarimusubi (Decorative Knots)
  354. Kazarimusubi is a traditional craft which was originally learned from China and was developed in Japan.
  355. Kazarimusubi is as follows.
  356. Kazarimusubi is often referred to as 'kumihimo,' which is in fact a craft of braiding threads together to make cords, and therefore is not a same thing as kazarimusubi that is made by making knots with cords.
  357. Kazarimusubi used in sado is sometimes referred to as hanamusubi in particular.
  358. Kazashi
  359. Kaze fukeba okitsu shiranami tatsuta yama yawaniya kimiga hitori koyuramu
  360. Kaze hikaru; Breeze shine (Taeko WATANABE) (from 1997)
  361. Kaze naruko
  362. Kaze no Gunzo written by Sonoko SUGIMOTO
  363. Kazenbo
  364. Kazenbo (literally, a bonze in front of the fire) is a type of Japanese yokai (ghosts, spirits and monsters) described in "Konjaku Hyakki Shui" (literally, Supplement to The Hundred Demons from the Present and the Past), a yokai art collection book or a supernatural bestiary by Sekien TORIYAMA.
  365. Kazo City, Saitama Prefecture, which has been at the pinnacle of koi-nobori production since the prewar period, gained fame in February 1988 when it created the world's longest koi-nobori, measuring 100 meters in length and weighing 350 kg.
  366. Kazo Udon
  367. Kazo Udon is a local dish of Kazo City, Saitama Prefecture.
  368. Kazoe uta (Counting song)
  369. Kazoku
  370. Kazoku could receive special treatments from the state under public laws, but they were treated in the same manner as shizoku and heimin under private laws.
  371. Kazoku indicates the noble class that existed in modern Japan from 1869 to 1947.
  372. Kazoku were permitted to adopt children.
  373. Kazoku were permitted to enter the Imperial Court, and if they obtained permission, they could even visit Kashikodokoro, one of the Three Shrines in the Imperial Court.
  374. Kazoku were supervised by Minister of the Imperial Household Agency and Sochitsuryo (the Department of Imperial Affairs) of the Imperial Household Agency, and expected to maintain dignity and grace as "loyal hedge guarding the Imperial family."
  375. Kazoku's private lives also attracted people's interest, and many scandals including the one by Byakuren YANAGIHARA and the one by Iwao OYAMA and Sutematsu YAMAKAWA were written in newspapers and magazines.
  376. Kazoku-ei
  377. Kazoku-rei (Peerage Law)
  378. Kazokuso (family funeral)
  379. Kazue (主計) TAKENOUCHI was his son.
  380. Kazue MATSUNAGA: on September 26, 1863, he was revealed as a spy from Choshu and escaped
  381. Kazue SOMA
  382. Kazue SOMA (1835 or 1843 - 1875?) was the last commander of the Shinsengumi (a special force that guarded Kyoto during the end of Tokugawa Shogunate).
  383. Kazue-machi, 2008, chaya-machi
  384. Kazue-ryo (officials to audit the Soyocho-cho (Cho of Soyocho tax system: textile goods or alternative money))
  385. Kazuemon Masatane FUWA
  386. Kazuemon changed his name to Gengobe SATSUMA and tried hard to gather 100 ryo to be allowed joining the group of the avengers.
  387. Kazufusa HOSHO is his eldest son.
  388. Kazuharu KUWAYAMA
  389. Kazuharu KUWAYAMA (1575 - March 26, 1604) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  390. Kazuhiko KOMATSU
  391. Kazuhiko KUDO, Kasen YOSHIMURA
  392. Kazuhiko TAKAO firstly proposed the notion of Dynastic polity in his book 'Shoen and Koryo' (manor and Imperial demesne) ("Japanese history course," volume 2, 1956).
  393. Kazuhiko UESUGI pointed out that "Hyakuren-sho" and "Azuma Kagami" were compiled years later, and the compilers would have had preconceived notions that the battle at Hokuriku was fought to prevent Yoshinaka KISO invading Kyo because he fought up to Kyo through Hokurikudo.
  394. Kazuka (the intersection of the National Highway No. 9 Sanin-Kaido Road)
  395. Kazuki: From the Heian period to the Kamakura period, some of attired adult females used another garment to cover her whole body from the head to go out.
  396. Kazukiyo later served Mitsunaka IKEDA, the lord of the Tottori Domain and became a guest of Tomoyoshi IKEDA, Karo (Chief retainer) of Tottori Domain getting Rokudaka (amount of stipend) of 150 Koku crop yields.
  397. Kazuko TAKATSUKASA (Kazuko TAKATSUKASA, 1950)
  398. Kazuko made the Imperial Consort's bridal entry as an Emperor Gomizunoo's nyogo (a high-ranking lady in the court (a consort of an emperor)) into court on July 17, 1620.
  399. Kazuko, the wife of Shinpei GOTO, was his real daughter.
  400. Kazuma ISSHIKI
  401. Kazuma ISSHIKI (year of birth unknown - 1590) was an Azuchi-Momoyama period military commander and Kokujin (local samurai)とする。
  402. Kazuma KAWASE used Hanawabon and referred to the reprint in 1908 that has less typographical errors when he wrote "Zeami nijusan bushu."
  403. Kazuma MIYAKAWA
  404. Kazuma MIYAKAWA (1841 ? - January 27, 1868) was a member of Shinsengumi.
  405. Kazuma ODA
  406. Kazuma ODA (November 11, 1882 - March 18, 1956) was an artist and a printmaker, who lived during the Meiji period to the Showa period.
  407. Kazuma ODA, an artist who played an active role from the Meiji period to the Showa period, was a direct descendent.
  408. Kazuma SAKURAI
  409. Kazuma SAKURAI (birth year unknown - January 29, 1868) was a member of Shinsengumi (a group who guarded Kyoto during the end of Tokugawa Shogunate).
  410. Kazumasa IKOMA is his child.
  411. Kazumasa ISHIKAWA and the Ishikawa Clan
  412. Kazumasa ISHIKAWA, who had once been a vassal of Ieyasu, but went over to Hideyoshi's side, was also present.
  413. Kazumasa ISONO
  414. Kazumasa ISONO (dates of birth and death unknown) was a Japanese military commander who lived from the Sengoku period (Japan) to the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  415. Kazumasa SOGO, Yoshioki MIYOSHI, and Fuyuyasu ATAGI, who were of the Miyoshi family, died one after another, probably because they were assassinated by Hisahide.
  416. Kazumasa TAKIGAWA, who was a great vassal of the Oda clan, was rewarded with a holding of 700,000 koku (approximately 126,000 cubic meters).
  417. Kazumasa TSUDA
  418. Kazumasa TSUDA (year of birth unknown - April 22, 1585) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  419. Kazumasa TSUDA - leader of Negoroshu.
  420. Kazumasa and Nobuyasu were familiar with each other.'
  421. Kazumasa was therefore outraged that Nobuyasu had been killed by Ieyasu on Nobunaga's order.'
  422. Kazumasa's vigorous attack closing in on Nobunaga's headquarters is recorded as 'Kazumasa no Anegawa juichidan kuzushi' (Kazumasa's destruction of eleven rows of Oda's military formation in the battle of Anegawa)
  423. Kazumasa, who was based in Sawayama-jo Castle, frequently achieved military exploits because of his military prowess in the battles against the Rokkaku clan and served as the spearhead of the Azai army corps.
  424. Kazumasu TAKIGAWA
  425. Kazumasu TAKIGAWA was absent because he was at war in the Kanto region.
  426. Kazumasu TAKIGAWA was one of the best commanders at that time who was praised as 'Takigawa is the best to advance, and Takigawa is the best to retreat,' with excellent talent for carrying out stratagem.
  427. Kazumasu TAKIGAWA: Holding out as Kanto Kanrei (shogunal deputy for the Kanto region) against the Hojo forces at Umayabashi Castle-jo in Kozuke Province.
  428. Kazumasu TAKIGAWA: Informed of the incident by Ujimasa HOJO and of the declaration that 'Hojo will not intervene,' but Kazumasu noticed that it was a trick, eventually running into a fight with the Hojo troops (Battle of the Kanna-gawa River).
  429. Kazumasu TAKIGAWA: Kozuke Province, Chiisagata-gun, Saku-gun
  430. Kazumasu abandoned Kozuke and withdrew to Ise Province.
  431. Kazumasu is also believed to have been appointed as governor of the Kanto region or as an official with similar authority.
  432. Kazumasu was in the Umayabashi-jo Castle in Kozuke Province.
  433. Kazumi NONAKA, town mayor of Sonobe town, assumed the office of chairperson.
  434. Kazumichi ARISAWA who was a chief retainer of Matsue Domain and was much trusted by Fumai often gave and received correspondences about tea ceremony.
  435. Kazumomiya posed with both her hands slightly out of her sleeves in this photograph.
  436. Kazunaga (Sancho) TSUDA (1499 - January 22 or 23, 1568) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku period.
  437. Kazunaga SUGINOBO.
  438. Kazunaga TSUDA
  439. Kazunari OTA was his son.
  440. Kazunobu (和信) INUI
  441. Kazunobu (和信) INUI (1544 - January 18, 1586) was samurai of the late Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  442. Kazunobu (和信) had two children, but they were raised by Kenshoin (Katsutoyo YAMAUCHI's lawful wife) because they were very young when their parents sacrificed themselves.
  443. Kazunobu (和信) was granted Henki (granting subordinates the use of a character from the superior's real name) by Katsutoyo (一豊) with the letter '一 (pronounced "Katsu")' for his two children.
  444. Kazunobu INUI
  445. Kazunobu INUI (year of birth unknown - June 9, 1570) was a samurai in the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  446. Kazunobu INUI was born as the legitimate child of Kyuemon Shigeyori INUI (TOKI) in Ikeda County, Mino Province.
  447. Kazunoko (herring roe)
  448. Kazunoko (salt-cured herring roe)
  449. Kazunoko has traditionally been eaten to pray for the prosperity of descendants, because the number of roe is large.
  450. Kazunomiya Imperial Princess Chikako
  451. Kazunomiya Imperial Princess Chikako (July 3, 1846 - September 2, 1877) was a woman who lived during the late Edo period, she was a wife of Edo bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun), fourteenth Shogun Iemochi TOKUGAWA.
  452. Kazunomiya gave the Nishijin brocade with the following poem to the Zojo-ji Temple, and later the Nishijin brocade was made into Kesa (an oblong piece of ornamental cloth worn over the robe by a Buddhist priest) on the anniversary, "Even though I have this gorgeous Nishijin brocade Kimono, I would enjoy wearing it if you are still alive."
  453. Kazunomiya is one of the rare Imperial family members whose cemetery was excavated for investigation, since currently most Imperial mausoleum studied for reference are in fact not allowed to be excavated for investigation purposes, ancient tombs also fall under the policy of the Imperial Household Agency.
  454. Kazunomiya shaved her head and became 'Seikanin no Miya.'
  455. Kazunomiya' was her childhood name which was given when she was born, 'Chikako' was given by the Emperor when she officially became the Princess in 1861.
  456. Kazunori HISHINUMA
  457. Kazunori HISHINUMA (Scientific Research Collaborator, National Museum of Japanese History)argues in his book as follows:
  458. Kazunori HISHINUMA (research partnership member of the National Museum of Japanese History) stated his theory on this battle in his book, "The battle and strategy of MINAMOTO no Yoshitsune: His legend and real image" (Kadokawa Sensho, published in 2005), as follows.
  459. Kazuo AOKI assumes that Obitona had read agricultural books of China as well as learning the ritsuryo.
  460. Kazuo HATOYAMA
  461. Kazuo HATOYAMA (May 6, 1856, to October 3, 1911) was a samurai, a feudal retainer of Mimasaka-Katsuyama Domain, Mimasaka Province, in the late Edo Period, and a statesman and an advocate (lawyer) after Meiji Restoration.
  462. Kazuo IKEHIRO
  463. Kazuo IKEHIRO (October 25, 1929 -) is a Japanese movie director.
  464. Kazuo INAMORI
  465. Kazuo INAMORI, who was born in Kagoshima Prefecture and is a chairperson emeritus of Kyocera, described the Kakure Nenbutsu religious practices he experienced when he was a child in his autobiography, 'Ikikata' (The Way of Living).
  466. Kazuo MORI
  467. Kazuo MORI (January 15, 1911-June 29, 1989) was a film director in the Showa period.
  468. Kazuo SHIBUI (Artist, Nika Art Exhibition Incentive Award)
  469. Kazuo YAMADA who was a chief priest of Teisho-in Temple, which is Tadateru's ancestral temple, has the idea of Tadateru being pardoned for the anniversary of 300 years after his death, and petitioned Tsunenari TOKUGAWA, who is the 18th head of the Tokugawa family, to have it fulfilled.
  470. Kazuo was born in Tokyo.
  471. Kazura Noh
  472. Kazura Noh is one of the programs of Noh theatrical performance, when the shite (the main actor of a Noh play) performs the roles of a beautiful woman, a scion of a noble family, or a heavenly being.
  473. Kazura: (Maizuru City)
  474. Kazuragi passed away at the camps of Koromogawa.
  475. Kazuraki clan was located in Katsuragi Region of Yamato Province.
  476. Kazuraki no Aratahiko: He was a legendary person in the Kofun period.
  477. Kazuraki no Iwamura: He was a person in the Kofun period.
  478. Kazuraki no Kuni no Miyatsuko
  479. Kazuraki no Kuni no Miyatsuko (also called 'Kazuraki Kokuzo', 'Katsuragi no Kuni no Miyatsuko', or 'Katsuragi Kokuzo') was a Kuni no Miyatsuko (the head of a local government) who ruled over the southern-west of Yamato Province.
  480. Kazuraki-no-takaoka-no-miya (presently, Moriwaki in Mitokoro City in Nara Prefecture?)
  481. Kazusa Awa Chikenji: established on July 2 (old lunar calendar) in 1868.
  482. Kazusa Province
  483. Kazusa Province: Domains of Kikuma, Tsurumai, Tsurumaki, Sakurai, Kururi, Iino, Kokubo, Sanuki, Matsuo, Oami, Ichinomiya and Otaki
  484. Kazusa no suke (Assistant Governor of Kazusa Province):Prince Okiyo.
  485. Kazusa no suke Hirotsune was widely used as his name.
  486. Kazusa province was Shinno-ningoku (provinces whose gubernatorial posts were reserved as sinecures for imperial princes); therefore, Suke was essentially the head of Kokufu (ancient provincial offices).
  487. Kazusa-Toki clan
  488. Kazusa-Toki clan is also called Mangi-Toki clan because it was based on Mamgi-jo castle.
  489. Kazusa-bori drilling technique (March 15, 2006; Kazusa region; Kazusa-bori Gijutsu Densho Kenkyukai [Association for Transmission and Study of Kazusa-bori Technique])
  490. Kazusa-no-kuni (central Chiba Prefecture)
  491. Kazusa-no-suke: Okiyo-o (Musashi-no-gon-no-kami)
  492. Kazushi OSHITA (the birth year unknown - 1985)
  493. Kazushige AOKI
  494. Kazushige UGAKI (1927) (Acting deputy)
  495. Kazushige UGAKI (1931-1936)
  496. Kazushige, the first lord of the domain, did not have an heir, and Masashige AOKI, who was adopted to be the heir, was of poor health and was not considered.
  497. Kazusuke YAMANODA and Syuichiro Kono kept a secret which saved Saigo's life, and called themselves parsons who explained the meaning of raising the army, and visited Sumiyoshi KAWAMURA of Sangun (commander of the Sangun department of the army) and they were captured on 19th.
  498. Kazutada HATTORI (sentenced to death)
  499. Kazutada SHOBAYASHI
  500. Kazutami UKITA
  501. Kazuto NATSUME (businessman, media creator,
  502. Kazutoyo YAMANOUCHI acting as the lord of Tosa Domain sent Ieyasu a request asking 'to relieve the governor of Echizen Province from the confinement,' which was accepted, and Tsunaie was invited to take the position of the magistrate of building a castle which yielded 7,000 koku in rice.
  503. Kazutoyo YAMAUCHI
  504. Kazuuji HOSOKAWA
  505. Kazuuji HOSOKAWA (1296 - October 21, 1342) was a busho (Japanese military commander) from the late Kamakura Period through the period of the Northern and Southern Courts.
  506. Kazuuji NAKAMURA
  507. Kazuuji NAKAMURA was a Daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) in the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  508. Kazuuji and Akiuji traveled to Shikoku with an order of Takauji.
  509. Kazuuji became Hikitsuke tonin (chairman of the court of justice), then tonin (head) of Samurai-dokoro (board of retainers).
  510. Kazuuji, with Shigeyoshi UESUGI, played the role of envoys requesting for the Emperor Godaigo to return to the allegiance, and also he joined to attack on Rokuhara Tandai (an administrative and judicial agency in Rokuhara, Kyoto) in Kyoto.
  511. Kazuyasu NAKANO, who was a vassal of Nobunaga ODA during the Period of Warring States is said to have been a descendant of Tamesada, and it is said that Yukitomo SHINGU, who was a military commander (busho) also in the Period of Warring States, was a descendant of Yukiie, but the genealogy of Yukitomo is not clear.
  512. Kazuyoshi OTA
  513. Kazuyoshi OTA (? - 1617) was an Azuchi-Momoyama era military commander (and daimyo).
  514. Kazuyoshi SATO was given a bit of seed rice in the husk which were miraculously reserved by Kiichi ABE, the grandchild of grandchild of Kameji ABE.
  515. Kazuyoshi followed Takauji ASHIKAGA with Takatsune SHIBA of head family of the Ishibashi family and when Takauji escaped to Saigoku (western part of Japan), he was appointed as a guard of the Mitsuishi-jo Castle of the Bizen Province.
  516. Kazuyoshi himself started out as a retainer of Nagahide NIWA, but after Nagahide's death, he began serving Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI, and was granted jurisdiction over a territory worth 65,000 koku in Usuki in Bungo province.
  517. Kazuyoshi was the first clan member to be appointed as Shugo by the Ashikaga government, but one year service was not long enough to vassalize local lords, which fact partly resulted in his rapid decline.
  518. Kazuyoshi's original surname was not OTA but SUGAWARA; he was born in Otamura village in Mino province.
  519. Kazuyuki FUKUO
  520. Kazuyuki FUKUO (July 30, 1973 -) is a Noh actor of the Fukuo school of waki-kata (supporting actors).
  521. Kazuyuki FUKUO is his eldest son; Tomotaka FUKUO is his second son (Both of them are Noh actors).
  522. Kazuyuki SAWAGUCHI
  523. Ke (or Ka) (holiday)
  524. Ke no Kazami (informal or daily kazami)
  525. Ke-shima Island (an island in Maizuru City)
  526. Ke-shima Island is an island that belongs to Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  527. Keage Funadamari
  528. Keage Power Plant
  529. Keage Power Plant was Japan's first utility power plant.
  530. Keage Purification Plant used Japan's first rapid filtering system.
  531. Keage Purification Plant was built as a part of this project.
  532. Keage Purification Plant, Kyoto City Waterworks Bureau
  533. Keage Station
  534. Keage Station (Keihan)
  535. Keage Station (Kyoto City Subway Tozai Line)
  536. Keage Station (T09) - Higashiyama Station (T10) - Sanjo Keihan Station (T11)
  537. Keage Station on the Tozai Line, Kyoto City Subway Line
  538. Keage Station was a stop provided on the tramway that ran on the Sanjo-dori Street (old National Route 1).
  539. Keage Station's platform is located on sub-level four.
  540. Keage Station, located in Keage, Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City, was a stop on the Keihan Keishin Line operated by the Keihan Electric Railway.
  541. Kebiishi
  542. Kebiishi (Office of Police and Judicial Chief)
  543. Kebiishi (a police and judicial chief)
  544. Kebiishi (a police and judicial chief) as well as Emonfu
  545. Kebiishi (a police commissioner), Uemon-no-jo (the third ranked official of the Right Division of Outer Palace Guards), Kami (Governor) of Dewa Province.
  546. Kebiishi (police and judicial chief)
  547. Kebiishi Betto (Secretary in the Office of Police and Judicial Chief)
  548. Kebiishi did not have an official court rank.
  549. Kebiishi no Betto (Superintendent of the Imperial Police) held the highest authority of the Kebiishi but was not personally a Kebiishi.
  550. Kebiishi no betto (Superintendent of the Imperial Police)
  551. Kebiishi was a Ryoge no kan post (class outside of the Ritsuryo system) under the Ritsuryo system (a system of centralized government based on the Ritsuryo Code).
  552. Kebiishi was a government official within the Kebiishicho (Office of Police and Judicial Chief).
  553. Kebiishi was established at the beginning of Heian period when the judicial function of gyobusho and daijokan was diminishing, and they gained authority for tsuibu (pursue and capture) as judicial police, as well as condemnation and adjudication.
  554. Kebiishi were in charge of maintaining security and handling civil affairs in Kyoto.
  555. Kebiishi.
  556. Kebiishishiki' (a private record of Kebiishi) contained the consultations which Naomoto had for FUJIWARA no Tokihira who was the Kebiishi no betto (Superintendent of the Imperial Police).
  557. Kebuka Ise ebi, or Panulirus homrus (Carl von Linn?, 1758)
  558. Kebutsu
  559. Kebutsu (the Artificial Buddha)
  560. Kebutsu, a small statue of Buddha.
  561. Kecap asin is salty bland seasoning with lighter color.
  562. Kecap manis (sweet soy-sauce) and kecap asin (salty soy-sauce) (Indonesia and Malaysia)
  563. Kecap manis is creamy, sweet and salty seasoning with dark color.
  564. Kechien-kanjo
  565. Kechimyaku Sojo (Nichiren Shoshu sect)
  566. Kechimyaku Sojo is often mystified by saying, for example, 'various elements that cannot be captured as objects (such as the attitude for faith, spirituality and accumulation of pious acts, etc.) are inherited by golden paper or through oral transmission.'
  567. Kechimyaku at Zenko-ji Temple
  568. Kechimyaku-sojo
  569. Kechimyaku-sojo (also referred as kechimyaku-sosho) or blood inheritance is a metaphor that is used to describe the inheritance of teachings (Buddhism) from a mentor to a pupil, taking the blood flow as an analogy.
  570. Kechimyaku-sojo in Each Sect
  571. Kedo's first son could get into service for other domain, so the second son succeeded the Takano family.
  572. Kee-Chung SOHN won the Marathon at the Berlin Olympics.
  573. Keenly realizing the importance of agriculture through his experience in the cultivation of Hokkaido, in 1891he founded the Tokugawa Ikueikai Foundation (now Tokyo University of Agriculture) and assumed the role of its president.
  574. Keep chanting in the faith that even a single invocation saves you.
  575. Keep in mind that if the warishita soup still has a strong flavor, it may simply make the noodles spicy.
  576. Keep it cold.
  577. Keep the amount of issued kinsatsu to the present 32.5 million ryo, and stop additional printing.
  578. Keep your hands behind your back when you give the fishing hook back to your older brother saying "this fishing hook is obobari, susubari, majibari, urubari (a fishing hook that makes you depressed, a fishing hook that makes you anxious, a fishing hook that make you poor, and a fishing hook that makes you dumb)."
  579. Keeper of Edo - Kiroku TAKEBE (250 koku), Masaemon KONDO (250 koku)
  580. Keeping a distance from politics, Imperial Prince Takahito started to become involved in the dissemination of State Shinto and the study of Japanese classical literature as soon as he assumed the post of the governor general of the Jingikan (the department of worship) on February 10, 1868.
  581. Keeping and disposal of castles (notice) January 14, 1873, to Okura-sho
  582. Keeping away from the kappogi so that it doesn't touch the body, hold the collar straps, and put the collars together.
  583. Keeping in mind his strategy in which the teppo units would play a central role, he also attempted to decoy Takeda's cavalry into it.
  584. Keeping the low costs of group Ko as its advantage, by adding the flavour of group Otsu, inexpensive and flavoured products are realized.
  585. Keeping the names and the actual color combinations accurately corresponding with one another was part of Yusoku kojitsu (the court and samurai rules of ceremony and etiquette) and they were organized until the Edo Period.
  586. Keeping the old street names unchanged as a 'street name' cultural asset is considered that should be done.
  587. Kefukigusa (haiku book) (compiled by Shigeyori MATSUE in 1645) describes many specialties of Kyoto in the early Edo period.
  588. Kegare
  589. Kegare and sin are often collectively called as 'Tsumi Kegare' and while Tsumi is caused by man, Kegare is thought to arise naturally.
  590. Kegare can be removed by Misogi or Harae (form of Shinto purification.)
  591. Kegare in Japanese myths
  592. Kegare is a notion in Buddhism and Shinto and means a dirty, bad, not clean state, such as being unclean, impure etc.
  593. Kegawari Jizo (Jizo with changed hair)
  594. Kegi-no-shikyo
  595. Kegi-no-shikyo is the categorization of Shaka's teachings based on the form of teaching to guide people (such as rites) with the calling of such form as Gi.
  596. Kegon Bungi-ki (Huayan Wenyu-ji), Volume 6
  597. Kegon Komoku-sho Hotsugoki, Volume 21, written by Gyonen
  598. Kegon Sect
  599. Kegon Shichikasho Gikeiki Commentary, Volume 3, written by Gyonen
  600. Kegon Yogi Mondo - written by Gyofuku
  601. Kegon no Myo
  602. Kegon sect-Ichijo-Kaishinron volume 2
  603. Kegon sect: founders (in Japan) included 'Shinjo', head temple is Todai-ji Temple.
  604. Kegon-Denongi
  605. Kegon-Komoku sho volumes 1-4
  606. Kegon-Shinshugi written by monk Myoe
  607. Kegon-ji Temple (Kyoto City)
  608. Kegon-ji Temple (Kyoto City) (Suzumushi-dera Temple)
  609. Kegon-ji Temple is a temple belonging to the Rinzai Sect located in Nishigyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  610. Kegon-kyo (Avatamsaka Sutra): Vols. 1, 4, 5, 6, 9 and 11
  611. Kegon-kyo Sutra, Lotus Sutra, Hannya-kyo Sutra (except one section), Nehan-gyo Sutra, among others.
  612. Kehi no Matsubara (a scenic beach with many beautiful pine trees)
  613. Kehisha (Kehi) Chuaitenno
  614. Keho-no-shikyo
  615. Keho-no-shikyo is the categorization of Shaka's teachings based on their contents and such teachings (such as the Four Axioms, and so on) are called ho (teaching).
  616. Kei (a unit of area)
  617. Kei HARA scornfully explained why Yamagata was unusually obsessed with power and decoration, saying that 'it was because he was a foot solider (in fact he was from a chugen family, which was ranked lower than a foot solider).'
  618. Kei MIKAWA "Cloistered Emperor Shirakawa ? The Emperor who started Cloistered Rule" published by Japan Broadcast Publishing Association in 2003. ISBN 4140019735
  619. Kei MIKURIYA, Satomi MIKURIYA, and Takashi MIKURIYA are famous examples.
  620. Kei Shueki Shosho (textbooks for Confucianism)
  621. Kei school
  622. Kei-En era (Katsura-Saionji era)
  623. Kei-En' (桂園) was the combination of Kanji (Chinese characters) '桂' and '園' contained in their names.
  624. Kei-no-hama Beach
  625. Keiai-ji Temple - The first rank
  626. Keian AMAKO (Sukemasa's wife, according to a theory, Hisamasa's mother)
  627. Keian February 15, 1648 - September 18, 1652)
  628. Keian printed books: Published in 1648
  629. Keiba Kentei is a certification examination on the knowledge of horse racing, and it has been held since 2006 during periods when Kyoto racing is being held.
  630. Keiba Kentei' (horse racing certification examination)
  631. Keibatsu (the Blood connection)
  632. Keibun and Toyohiko also accepted a lot of pupils: Keibun's pupils include Hoen NISHIYAMA, Gyokuho HASEGAWA and Seiki YOKOYAMA, and Toyohiko's pupils include Bunrin SHIOKAWA, Sukehiko OKAMOTO, Zeshin SHIBATA and Nikka TANAKA.
  633. Keicars (light motor vehicles) are rarely used for other than nursing purposes.
  634. Keichi YASUKAWA
  635. Keichi graduated from Army War College (Japan) in the 28th class, and advanced to the rank of the Colonel of the Army.
  636. Keichiku Shinsai' (溪竹新霽) (1938)
  637. Keichitsu (Insects Awaken) => Shunbun (Vernal Equinox) => Seimei (Clear and Bright)
  638. Keichitsu (awakening of insects) is around March 6.
  639. Keicho (March 27, 1611) - July 13, 1615
  640. Keicho Campaign and Hideyoshi's death
  641. Keicho Chogin Keicho Mameitagin (around 1620, 80%)
  642. Keicho Chogin and Keicho Koban are called Keicho Kingin (gold and silver of Keicho), having vital importance as the early currency by Edo bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun), representing domination of the whole country by Ieyasu TOKUGAWA.
  643. Keicho Chokuhan (慶長勅版): Printed upon the order of Emperor Goyosei
  644. Keicho Cogin (July 1601, approximately 4500 t, 80%)
  645. Keicho Ichibuban
  646. Keicho Koban (oval coin)
  647. Keicho Koban and Keicho Ichibuban are called Keicho Kin,and generally, Keicho-Oban is also included.
  648. Keicho Koban had been issued since 1601, during the early period of the Edo period,and was currency by table having one Ryo value per one Koban.
  649. Keicho Kochu Koban
  650. Keicho Kochu Koban is defined as the early Keicho Koban, cast based on Ieyasu's plan, changing sumigaki of Musashi Sumigaki Koban to hallmark, around 1600, previous year in which the currency system of Keicho was established, supposed to be circulated publicly.
  651. Keicho Kosode
  652. Keicho Nibuban
  653. Keicho Nibuban has hammer tone and the same style as Keicho Kochu Koban, and its ryome is about half as much as it, 2 monme 4 bu (8.9gram),called also Keicho Nibukoban.
  654. Keicho Oban
  655. Keicho Oban is a large-sized old Japanese gold coin issued in the early Edo period, from 1601 more specifically, and this can be classified into several varieties according to writings in ink, karat (gold measurement), timing of issuance, and so on.
  656. Keicho Oban was in currency was used until 1695, when Genroku Oban started to be used.
  657. Keicho Oban, Keicho Koban (small-sized coin), Keicho Ichibuban, Keicho Cho-gin, and Keicho Mameita-gin are generically called Keicho Kingin (gold and silver of the Keicho era) and they are positioned as symbolic currencies of the unification of the whole country achieved by Ieyasu TOKUGAWA.
  658. Keicho October 27, 1596 - (March 27 1611)
  659. Keicho Tsuho coin
  660. Keicho and distribution of assignments
  661. Keicho family
  662. Keicho is a basic ledger to levy duties.
  663. Keicho koban (around 1601, 14,727,055 ryo [estimation] 4.76 monme, 84.3%=>86.8%)
  664. Keicho koban Keicho ichibuban (around 1601, 1.19 monme [a unit of weight], 84.3%=>86.8%)
  665. Keicho koban musashisumigaki koban (around 1595, 4,8 monme, 84%)
  666. Keicho koban surugagaki koban (in 1595 [unspecified], 4,5 monme, 84%)
  667. Keicho koban was made based on the principle of kyome 1ryo, however, later, due to economic policies of different periods except in Shotoku Kyoho period, it became often made worse both in karat (content rate of gold) and ryome (a weighed value).
  668. Keicho nibuban that was casted in the early Edo period is considered as proof coin.
  669. Keicho was a Tang name for Ukyo no daibu, and originated from that the family head was appointed to the post for generations.
  670. Keicho- chogin (Silver oval coin)
  671. Keicho-Koban Musashi Sumigaki Koban/Musashi Bokusho Koban: '武蔵壹?光次 (written seal mark)' (Musashi One Ryo Koji) is written in Indian ink and it is said that Ieyasu TOKUGAWA ordered Shosaburo Koji GOTO to mint it.
  672. Keicho-Oban: minted during the Keicho era (around 1601) to the Enpo era (around 1673.)
  673. Keicho-chogin is a kind chogin (collective term of silver) which started to be minted in July 1601, the beginning of Edo period, and it is a silver coin by weight standard as well.
  674. Keicho-koban Suruga Sumigaki Koban/Suruga Bokusho Koban: '駿河京目壹? (written seal mark)' (Suruga Kyome [old Japanese unit of measure used around Kyoto] One Ryo) is written in Indian ink and it is said that Ieyasu TOKUGAWA or Kazuuji NAKAMURA, who was a vassal of Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI, had it minted.
  675. Keicho-mameitagin
  676. Keicho-mameitagin was minted at the same karat as keicho-chogin where hallmark of "(daokokuzo) joze" or "joze, ho"were inscribed, and daikokuzo inclines a little, which is similar to chogin.
  677. Keicho-sasagaki-Oban: 'kao' (written seal mark) in India ink looks like the shape of bamboo leaf.
  678. Keichu
  679. Keichu (1640 - March 4, 1701) was a priest of the Shingonshu sect and a Japanologist (Kokugaku [national study] scholar) who lived in the mid-Edo period.
  680. Keichu established an empirical study method, and his academic achievements contributed to the development of early modern Japanology (Kokugaku) and became a landmark of the history of the study on the Japanese classics, thus greatly influencing the establishment of old kana orthography of the posterity.
  681. Keichumyosha (the parable of a brilliant gem in a king's top-knot (Anrakugyohon)
  682. Keidai
  683. Keidai toshi (temple city), a place of extraterritoriality
  684. Keidai-cho and Kujo-cho were newly set up within the precincts of temples and shrines at the beginning of the Meiji period.
  685. Keidai-sha (sub-shrines in precincts)
  686. Keidaichi' is defined as the fixed land that is necessary for a religious corporation, as described from item 2 to item 7, to conduct activities stipulated in those same articles.
  687. Keiden-ji Temple
  688. Keidokan (KD)
  689. Keien
  690. Keien (Kyoen, 944 - October 9, 1019) is a Buddhist priest of the Tendai sect during the mid Heian period.
  691. Keien (Tendai sect)
  692. Keien (also read as 'kyoen;' 1140 - February 28, 1223) was a priest who established Shinbutsu ryobu shiso (the idea of Dual-Shinto and Buddhism) during the early part of the Kamakura period.
  693. Keien School
  694. Keien School is a school of Waka (Japanese poem) led by Kageki KAGAWA (1768-1843), a poet in the late Edo period.
  695. Keien-isshi
  696. Keien-isshi is a collection of waka (Japanese poetry) by Kageki KAGAWA (1768-1843) compiled by himself in the late Edo Period.
  697. Keifu (genealogy)
  698. Keifuku Arashiyamaeki-mae (in front of Keifuku Arashiyama Station) (Kyoto Bus Co., Ltd.)
  699. Keifuku Electric Railroad
  700. Keifuku Electric Railroad - Kitano-Hakubaicho Station, Tojiin Station
  701. Keifuku Electric Railroad - Shijo-Omiya Station
  702. Keifuku Electric Railroad - Shijo-Omiya Station - Sai Station
  703. Keifuku Electric Railroad Arashiyama Line (Randen)
  704. Keifuku Electric Railroad Co., Ltd.
  705. Keifuku Electric Railroad Co., Ltd. is a company that operates a tramway business (electric tramway), cable cars and cableways in Kyoto City.
  706. Keifuku Electric Railroad Co., Ltd., is listed on the Osaka Securities Exchange.
  707. Keifuku Electric Railroad Co., Ltd.: Arashiyama Main Line/Kitano Line (Katabiranotsuji Station/Tokiwa Station (Kyoto Prefecture))
  708. Keifuku Electric Railroad Co., Ltd.: Randen-Saga Station on the Arashiyama Main Line of Keifuku Electric Railroad Co., Ltd.
  709. Keifuku Electric Railroad then merged the subsidiary railway companies of Kyoto Dento.
  710. Keifuku Electric Railroad's acceptance of Kyoto City's proposal of the construction of the previously mentioned new station (the Randen-Tenjingawa Station) is also, in a way, a countermeasure against JR.
  711. Keifuku Electric Railroad, Arashiyama Main Line A
  712. Keifuku Electric Railroad, Arashiyama Main Line B
  713. Keifuku Electric Railroad, Cable Car Line (Eizan Cable Railway)
  714. Keifuku Electric Railroad, Eiheiji Line
  715. Keifuku Electric Railroad, Maruoka Line
  716. Keifuku Electric Railway Eizan Ropeway
  717. Keifuku Electric Railway Keifuku Cable Line (Eizan Cable)
  718. Keifuku Myoshinji-ekimae (in front of Myoshinji Station)
  719. Keifuku Omuro-ekimae (in front of Omuro Station) Bus Stop (discontinued)
  720. Keigamon Gate
  721. Keigamon gate of Kyoogokoku-ji Temple
  722. Keiganin
  723. Keigannin (Year of birth unknown, died on September 10, 1604, referred to as 'the concubine Yotsutsuji hereafter) was a woman who lived from the Azuchi-Momoyama period to the early Edo period.
  724. Keigetsu OMACHI has argued that 'This line stresses the importance of benevolent rule.
  725. Keigetsu OMACHI, among others.
  726. Keiha School.
  727. Keihaimono (low-ranked people) such as Ashigaru were placed on the outside of the townsmen district and current place names include Ban-cho, Yumino-cho, and Teppo-cho.
  728. Keihan
  729. Keihan Bus
  730. Keihan Bus (Choose one of the following stops, depending on the destination.)
  731. Keihan Bus (Keihan Group, Keihan Bus Kyoutanabe Sales Office is in the city)
  732. Keihan Bus (gradually extended by route and service office)
  733. Keihan Bus (major routes only)
  734. Keihan Bus Co. Ltd. (Otokoyama/Kyotanabe) period
  735. Keihan Bus Co., Ltd.
  736. Keihan Bus Co., Ltd. (Gojozaka stop)
  737. Keihan Bus Co., Ltd. (Refer to Keihan Bus Co., Ltd Yamashina Office.)
  738. Keihan Bus Co., Ltd. (Rokujizo area only), Keihan City Bus Co., Ltd., and Keihan Uji Bus Co., Ltd.
  739. Keihan Bus Co., Ltd. Otokoyama Office located within the city offers bus service in almost all areas except for the eastern part of the city covered by its Kyotanabe Office (with exceptions).
  740. Keihan Bus Co., Ltd. head office
  741. Keihan Bus Co., Ltd., has been a big competitor for the Tozai Line of Kyoto Municipal Subway, not only because the fare of the three above-mentioned routes of Keihan Bus is less expensive than that of the Tozai Line, but also because Keihan Bus provides bus services to Shijo-Kawaramachi, the downtown area of Kyoto City.
  742. Keihan Bus Co., Ltd., which had previously operated bus routes in the Yamashina-Daigo region, changed routes drastically in accordance with the transfer of the control and the inauguration of the subway.
  743. Keihan Bus Co.,Ltd.[1]
  744. Keihan Bus One Day Ticket
  745. Keihan Bus One Day Ticket is a one day pass for Keihan Bus.
  746. Keihan Bus Otsu Office, Keihan Bus Yamashina Office (it was Kyoto at that time), and Rakunan Office used to be co-managed until December 1985, but merged to form Rakunan Office.
  747. Keihan Bus Otsu Regular Tour Office was located near Otsu Station until February 1966, but was later abolished and merged with Otsu Office (the second office), Otsu Office was charged with the route of Otsu Regular Tour Office after the relocation.
  748. Keihan Bus Rakunan Eigyosho (Rakunan business office) operate one round-trip service.
  749. Keihan Bus Rakunan Office (Only top drivers are able to drive in all 11 offices of Keihan Bus)
  750. Keihan Bus Rakunan Office common-route bus (Keihan City Bus): for Kyoto Station Hachijo Exit, Yodo Station
  751. Keihan Bus Yamashina Eigyosho (the Yamashina business office of Keihan Bus): Bound for the west exit of Takeda Station / for Daigo Bus Terminal
  752. Keihan Bus Yamashina Office, inside of the bus which belongs to Yamashina Office (only adult tickets are sold in the bus).
  753. Keihan Bus Yamashina Station Information Center, Sanjo Keihan Information Center.
  754. Keihan Bus Yamashina Ticket Office, to Mt. Hiei
  755. Keihan Bus and Keihan City Bus
  756. Keihan Bus offers a variety of networks mainly between Kuzuha Station and Yawatashi Station and has high passenger load factors.
  757. Keihan Bus/Keihan City Bus/Keihan Uji Bus
  758. Keihan Bus/Keihan City Bus/Keihan Uji Bus/Keihan Kyoto Kotsu
  759. Keihan Bus/Keihan City Bus/Keihan-Uji Bus
  760. Keihan Bus: Bound for Shijo Kawaramachi, Daigo Sanpo-in, Takeda Station, etc.
  761. Keihan Buses are in service.
  762. Keihan Chushojima
  763. Keihan Chushojima/Fushimi-port park
  764. Keihan City Bus
  765. Keihan City Bus Rakunan Office
  766. Keihan City Bus, Keihan Kyoto Kotsu, Keihan Uji Bus, and so on.
  767. Keihan East Rose Town
  768. Keihan Electric Railway
  769. Keihan Electric Railway (KER): Tanbabashi Station
  770. Keihan Electric Railway - Demachiyanagi Station
  771. Keihan Electric Railway - Gojo Station (Keihan)
  772. Keihan Electric Railway - Keihan Yamashina Station
  773. Keihan Electric Railway - Marutamachi Station (Keihan)
  774. Keihan Electric Railway - Shichijo Station
  775. Keihan Electric Railway - Shijo Station (Keihan)
  776. Keihan Electric Railway - The number of passengers boarding at this station came to approximately 3,441 per day (according to a survey by Keihan Electric Railway Co., Ltd.).
  777. Keihan Electric Railway - The number of passengers boarding at this station came to approximately 6,216 per day in fiscal year 2006.
  778. Keihan Electric Railway Keihan Ishiyama Sakamoto Line, 10 minutes walk from Mii-dera Temple Station・12 minutes walk from Bessho Station (Shiga Prefecture)
  779. Keihan Electric Railway Keihan Keishin Line
  780. Keihan Electric Railway Keihan Uji Line also has a Uji Station (Keihan), which is located across the Uji-bashi Bridge and some 890 m along the road to the northeast.
  781. Keihan Electric Railway Rokujizo Station: The number of passengers boarding at this station came to approximately 4,578 per day in fiscal year 2006 (source: same as above).
  782. Keihan Electric Railway Series 10000, which is four cars long, is currently operated provisionally.
  783. Keihan Electric Railway Series 10000: This is the same as the above.
  784. Keihan Electric Railway Series 1900 (five cars long)
  785. Keihan Electric Railway Series 1900: This is due to be used during events or as a temporary replacement train.
  786. Keihan Electric Railway Series 2600 (four or five cars long)
  787. Keihan Electric Railway Series 2600 (only five cars for the prototype)
  788. Keihan Electric Railway Series 3000: This is the first generation.
  789. Keihan Electric Railway Series 6000
  790. Keihan Electric Railway Series 6000 (four cars long, before the voltage is boosted to 1500V)
  791. Keihan Electric Railway Series 7000 (only the trains of Series 7003 are made up of four cars at the time of production).
  792. Keihan Electric Railway Series 7200 (except for 7203F)
  793. Keihan Electric Railway Series 7200 (five cars long, special train units for special trains)
  794. Keihan Electric Railway Series 8000
  795. Keihan Electric Railway Series 9000
  796. Keihan Electric Railway and Nara Electric Railway (later Kintetsu Railway) would make a connection at Tanbabashi Station to operate through-trains.
  797. Keihan Electric Railway had already opened the railway, which is the current Keihan Main Line, between Osaka and Kyoto in 1910.
  798. Keihan Electric Railway operated between Yawata City and Yodo runs through a small area of Kumiyama-cho, but no station is established.
  799. Keihan Electric Railway promotes 'the effective use of Kyoto Tower,' particularly stressing 'commercial renewal' in its future business plan.
  800. Keihan Electric Railway, Keihan Main Line/Keihan Uji Line, Chushojima Station
  801. Keihan Electric Railway, Keihan-Honsen (main line): Fushimi Inari Station.
  802. Keihan Electric Railway. Keihan Main Line, Fushimi-Momoyama Station
  803. Keihan Electric Railway: Five minutes on foot to the west from exit 6 of Sanjo Station
  804. Keihan Electric railway (same as the above)
  805. Keihan Furukawabashi Station
  806. Keihan Hai
  807. Keihan Hashimoto Substation
  808. Keihan Higashi Rose Town Community Bus
  809. Keihan Highway No. 2 (Route 1 Toll Road)
  810. Keihan Kadomashi Station
  811. Keihan Keishin Line
  812. Keihan Keishin Line (Otsu Line)
  813. Keihan Keishin Line of Keihan Electric Railway
  814. Keihan Kokudo Crossing
  815. Keihan Kyoto Kotsu
  816. Keihan Kyoto Kotsu (Maizuru)/Yakuno Route
  817. Keihan Kyoto Kotsu (except a part of the route)
  818. Keihan Kyoto Kotsu (subsidiary of Keihan Bus)
  819. Keihan Kyoto Kotsu Bus (on the National Route 9 and 27)
  820. Keihan Kyoto Kotsu: buses bound for Hankyu Katsura Station, JR Kyoto Station, Kyoto Gakuen University and Sonobe Station, etc.
  821. Keihan Kyoto Kotsu[2] (scheduled to be introduced in stages after around March 2008)
  822. Keihan Kyoto Station changed its name to Keihanshin Kyoto Station, and Keihan Suita Station's name was changed to Suita Higashiguchi Station.
  823. Keihan Main Line
  824. Keihan Main Line (Shijo Station (Keihan))
  825. Keihan Main Line - Gojo Station, Shichijo Station, Tofukuji Station, Tobakaido Station, Fushimi-inari Station, Fukakusa Station, Fujinomori Station, Sumizome Station
  826. Keihan Main Line - Sanjo Station (Kyoto Prefecture), Shijo Station (Keihan), Gojo Station (Keihan), Shichijo Station
  827. Keihan Main Line - Tobakaido Station
  828. Keihan Main Line Fujinomori Station * Due east approximately 1.2 km
  829. Keihan Main Line Sumizome Station
  830. Keihan Main Line and Keihan Oto Line in Sanjyo Station (in Kyoto Prefecture)
  831. Keihan Main Line of the Keihan Electric Railway
  832. Keihan Main Line which is operated by Keihan Electric Railway Co., Ltd. - Fushimi Momoyama Station
  833. Keihan Main Line, Keihan Electric Railway
  834. Keihan Main Line/Oto Line
  835. Keihan Main Line: Get off at Shijo Station and walk for five minutes.
  836. Keihan Main Line: Tenmabashi Station - Sanjo Station (Kyoto Prefecture), etc.
  837. Keihan Nishisanso Station
  838. Keihan Oto Line
  839. Keihan Oto Line *terminal station
  840. Keihan Oto Line - Demachiyanagi Station, Marutamachi Station (Keihan)
  841. Keihan Oto Line of Keihan Electric Railway
  842. Keihan Oto Line, and Keihan Main Line, Keihan Electric Railway: Sanjo Station (Kyoto Prefecture)
  843. Keihan Otsu Line
  844. Keihan Otsu Line: Sanjo Station - Hamaotsu Station / Ishiyamadera Station - Sakamoto Station (Shiga Prefecture)
  845. Keihan Owada Station (Osaka Prefecture)
  846. Keihan Railway Company
  847. Keihan Sanjo Station is directly below Kawabata-dori Street including Sanjo Ohashi Intersection, and Sanjo Keihan Station is located directly below Sanjo-dori Street slightly east of Sanjo-ohashi Intersection.
  848. Keihan Uji Bus
  849. Keihan Uji Bus (Began operating in the eastern part of the city on November 10, 2007.
  850. Keihan Uji Bus (Keihan Group, Keihan Uji Bus Kyoutanabe Sales Office is in the City)
  851. Keihan Uji Bus Co., Ltd
  852. Keihan Uji Bus Co., Ltd., operates in the eastern part of the city, centering around the Joyo residential complex while, in the west, there are fewer routes.
  853. Keihan Uji Bus Uji Office (except for part of Line No. 27 which is under the control of Kyotanabe Office)
  854. Keihan Uji Bus, Keihan Bus
  855. Keihan Uji Bus/Keihan Bus
  856. Keihan Uji Kotsu had operated two-men-buses (each bus with a driver and a conductor) on the Uji-Yodo Route via Ogura until Aprill, 1985, when these buses were all replaced with one-man-operated buses.
  857. Keihan Uji Line
  858. Keihan Uji Line (* a station where trains start their runs)
  859. Keihan Uji Line of the Keihan Electric Railway
  860. Keihan Uji Station (Keihan Bus/Keihan City Bus)/Keihan Uji (Keihan Uji Bus)
  861. Keihan Uji Transport Co. Ltd. period
  862. Keihan buses
  863. Keihan buses (for Yamashina Station, Sanjo-Keihan, Hino, etc..) and Keihan Uji buses (for Okurayama) leave for their respective destinations from the bus terminal in front of the station.
  864. Keihan may include Yawata City, Uji City, Kumiyama-cho in Kuse-gun, Joyo City, Kyotanabe City, Tsuzuki-gun, Kizukawa City, and Soraku-gun in Kyoto Prefecture, but in general, these areas are called the Yamashiro area.
  865. Keihan planned to purchase this company in order to make use of the license to operate between Awaji Station and Tenjinbashi (Tenroku) Station.
  866. Keihan series 800 (second generation)
  867. Keihan-Kokudo (National Route 1) runs from south to north through the center of the ward.
  868. Keihan-Uji Bus
  869. Keihan-Yamashina Station
  870. Keihan-Yamashina Station - Shinomiya Station - Oiwake Station (Shiga Prefecture)
  871. Keihan-Yamashina Station, located in Anshu-sajiki-cho, Yamashina Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Keishin Line, which is operated by Keihan Electric Railway.
  872. Keihan-higashi Rose Town
  873. Keihanna Commemorative Park
  874. Keihanna Commemorative Park (the Kyoto-prefectural park commemorating the establishment of Kansai Science City)
  875. Keihanna Commemorative Park is a vast park occupying 24.1ha, of which 14.1ha is the area for preserving nature and 10.1ha is the area where facilities for various activities participated in by persons visiting the park are located.
  876. Keihanna Commemorative Park is located in Seika-cho Town, Soraku-gun County, Kyoto Prefecture
  877. Keihanna Human Info-Communication Research Center, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology
  878. Keihanna Innovation Center, Omron
  879. Keihanna Plaza Hotel
  880. Keihanna Plaza Hotel is an accommodation facility within Keihanna Plaza which is the central intersecting facility of Kansai Science City.
  881. Keihanshin
  882. Keihanshin Area (Urban Network Area)
  883. Keihanshin Dream Saitama-go (Nishinihon JR Bus/Seibu Bus)
  884. Keihanshin Dream Shizuoka-go (Nishinihon JR Bus/JR Central Bus)
  885. Keihanshin Kyoto Station changed its name to Hankyu Kyoto Station.
  886. Keihanshin Kyuko Railway Company
  887. Keihanshin Local Line
  888. Keihanshin Local Train is not a fixed name, and there are various other names used such as Tokaido- Sanyo Local Train, Osaka Local Train and Honsen Local Train.
  889. Keihanshin Metropolitan area (world's 3rd largest GDP, world's 6th to 7th largest population)
  890. Keihanshin forms a large urban area; however, a considerably undulating landscape spreads therein.
  891. Keihanshin is both a collective name for the cities of Kyoto, Osaka and Kobe, and an area name indicating the main part of the Kinki region centered around these three cities.
  892. Keihanshin' as a collective name
  893. Keihanshin' as an area name
  894. Keihin-Tohoku Line between Tokyo Station and Takashimacho temporary Station (later the second Yokohama Station) started operating to meet the schedule for the opening of Tokyo Station in 1914.
  895. Keihoku (Kyoto City)
  896. Keihoku Branch Office
  897. Keihoku Furusato Bus
  898. Keihoku Town
  899. Keihoku Town had contact with Kyoto City at the city's northern border, and the whole area of the town was in the Tanba highland.
  900. Keihoku Town offered Kyoto City the absorption in response to the signatures.
  901. Keihoku Town was a town which existed in Kitakuwada-gun, Kyoto Prefecture until March 31, 2005.
  902. Keihoku municipal bus (It became Kyoto Keihoku Furusato [hometown] public corporation after the town was absorbed into Kyoto City.)
  903. Keihoku was connected with Ukyo Ward by the Shuzan Kaido Road (National Route 162) or the Katsura-gawa River before the merger of Keihoku.
  904. Keihoku-cho operated its own buses before being merged into Kyoto City in 2005, but the operation of these buses has been maintained by the Kyoto Keihoku Furusato (hometown) public corporation as Keihoku Furusato (hometown) buses, not as Kyoto City buses.
  905. Keiichi HOTTA (professor of Koyasan University) suggests that a royal class member of the Goguryeo was buried.
  906. Keiichi MIYAMOTO (sign philosopher) 'Buddha's Words'
  907. Keiichi YANAGAWA said that 'State Shinto had clear doctrines' and offered the following four.
  908. Keiichiro KUME - Kiyomizu Shukeizu (Autumn Scenery in Kiyomizu) (Sankeibanki) (1893).
  909. Keiichiro RYU wrote a book called "Imposter: Ieyasu TOKUGAWA" in which he proposed that Ieyasu died in the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600 and that an imposter took over at that point.
  910. Keiin shochiku zu (image of a building in a valley)
  911. Keiji (collective term of Kyoto and Shiga Prefectures and Kyoto City)
  912. Keiji By-pass
  913. Keiji Bypass
  914. Keiji Bypass (Kumiyamayodo IC to Oyamazaki JCT)
  915. Keiji Bypass Kumiyama Yodo Interchange → Kyoto prefectural road No.15, Uji Yodo Route → Kyoto prefectural road No.126, Shinmachi Teishajo-line →Kyoto-Moriguchi-line, Kyoto Fudo 13 Go and Osaka Fudo 13 Go (Kyoto/Osaka Prefectural Road No.13)
  916. Keiji KAINOSHO, a senior researcher of Japan Energy Co. and a co-author of the book 'Hakushoku LED Shome system Gijutsu no Oyo to Shorai Tenbo (The Application of the White LED Lighting System Technology and its Future Prospects).'
  917. Keiji MORI comments that Sokei's tsume-shogi exercises provide examples of practical and powerful shogi strategies.
  918. Keiji NAGAHARA has expressed his opinion that the written material 'Kinsei Tokuseirei Jojo' (prohibition tokuseirei articles) which was handed down to Kofuku-ji Temple is a document that laid down the rules to enforce tokusei.
  919. Keiji NISHITANI
  920. Keiji NISHITANI (February 27, 1900 - November 24, 1990) was a Japanese researcher who studied philosophy and the philosophy of religion.
  921. Keiji Shinyokumiai (Keiji Credit Association)
  922. Keiji Shinyoukumiai, head office sales department, satellite office
  923. Keiji University Baseball League
  924. Keiji refers to the area made up of Kyoto Prefecture or Kyoto City (hereinafter, collectively written as 'Kyoto') and Shiga Prefecture (hereinafter, written as 'Shiga').
  925. Keijina (Kyoto, Shiga and Nara Prefectures)
  926. Keijina Preliminary Games of Amateur Baseball Championship
  927. Keijina is a term referring to the area combining Kyoto Prefecture, Shiga Prefecture, and Nara Prefecture.
  928. Keijiro KATAYAMA and Motosaburo SUGIURA, Noh actors of the Kanze school of shite-kata, are his uncles.
  929. Keijitsu-in Temple - Wooden Statue of Seated Jigan Daishi
  930. Keijo (old name of Seoul City in the period of Japan's rule) and Taipei
  931. Keijuin
  932. Keijuin (1514 - June 27, 1565) was the lawful wife of Yoshiharu ASHIKAGA, who was the 12th Seii Taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians") of the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  933. Keijuin and her older brother Taneie's concern in politics had already started during the reign of Shogun Yoshiharu, which was recorded in "Hirojikiroku" (literally, records of announcements) and "Odachi Joko Nikki" (The Diary of Joko ODACHI).
  934. Keijun MIYABE
  935. Keijun MIYABE (1528? - April 20, 1599) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States) (Japan).
  936. Keijun YAMAZAKI and some other people established Kyoto Law School (京都法学校).
  937. Keijuro KAWAMURA
  938. Keijyo (Gyeong-seong) Normal School (Seoul National University Normal College)
  939. Keijyo (Gyeong-seong) Women's Normal School (Seoul National University Normal College)
  940. Keika Ajari
  941. Keika Ajari was born in China.
  942. Keika KANASHIMA, "Kusamura" (叢) 1918, "Keshi" (芥子) 1925, "Koshoku" (紅蜀) 1934, "Gashitsu no Kyaku" (画室の客) (A Guest in the Atelier) 1954, "Yagyu" (野牛) (Bison) 1958
  943. Keikai was from Nagusa-gun County, Ki Province.
  944. Keikei Tannen, 6th founder, who was a disciple of Genro and is deemed as the beginner of the restoration of Tendai Sect, wrote many books concerning the doctrine of the Tendai Sect, including Sandaibu.
  945. Keiken
  946. Keiken (year of his birth and death is not clear) was a Buddhist monk cum waka poet in the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  947. Keiken, the monk and waka poet, was his son.
  948. Keiki HITOTSUBASHI, representing the Shogunate, went to Kyoto to have the Entrustment of Political Power confirmed but the Sonjo Group aimed for the restoration of imperial rule by having the Emperor tour throughout Japan.
  949. Keikikan
  950. Keiko HIRONO in Japanese.
  951. Keiko HORI pointed out that Koyo modeled his work in his later years "Konjiki Yasha" on "Weaker Than a Woman" by Bertha M. Clay.
  952. Keiko OGINOME asks to attend, but Fukasaku's wife Nakahara declines her request.
  953. Keiko UTSUMI, a Tokyo-based comedian, also performs one of karukuchi repertoires, called "Meicho Meiboku" when she appears on stage with her pupil comedian duo, Knights.
  954. Keikoku bidan
  955. Keikoku bidan (Commendable anecdotes creating a nation: young politicians of Thebes) is a political novel written by Ryukei YANO.
  956. Keikokushu
  957. Keikokushu (A collection of managing the country)
  958. Keikokushu is an anthology of Chinese poems compiled at the command of Emperor Junna in 827 during the early Heian period.
  959. Keikyu-in Temple main hall
  960. Keikyu-in Temple main hall (National Treasure): Stands on a site surrounded by a wall in the west of the main precinct.
  961. Keimeikan
  962. Keimyo KUDARANOKONIKISH: a wife of Emperor Saga.
  963. Keimyo was a nephew (old brother's son) of FUJIWARA no Arikuni, who was the main person responsible for restarting the second period of Kangakue, and in 1028, he was appointed as the Tendai-zasu and held that post throughout that year.
  964. Keina Road
  965. Keina Road, the first section of the Keinawa Jidoshado Expressway to be opened, runs parallel to the west of (closer to the mountain than) the railway of the JR Katamachi-sen/Kintetsu Kyoto Line, and does so nearly all the way.
  966. Keinakita Road
  967. Keinawa Expressway
  968. Keinawa Expressway (Route 24 Toll Road)
  969. Keinawa Expressway (a toll road along the National Route 24, opened in 1991, and an expressway)
  970. Keinawa Expressway (for bypassing National Route 24)
  971. Keinawa Expressway (scheduled): Currently, a section of the road within Gojo City is also called 'Gojo Road.'
  972. Keinawa Expressway : the Kizu interchange (Kyoto Prefecture) (managed by West Nippon Expressway Company Limited)
  973. Keinawa Expressway Tanabe-nishi Interchange: 1.5 km west of the station
  974. Keinawa Jidoshado Expressway
  975. Keino
  976. Keinosuke MIURA
  977. Keinosuke MIURA (1848 - February 26, 1877) was a Japanese samurai and a member of Shinsengumi (a group who guarded Kyoto during the end of Tokugawa Shogunate).
  978. Keinosuke SAWADA' credited as the leading actor was a supporting actor of Makino that called himself as 'Myoichiro OZAWA' during the 'Kinugasa Eiga Renmei' period of Teinosuke KINUGASA.
  979. Keio
  980. Keio Gijuku Yochisha elementary school, which was founded in 1874, adopted a coeducation system from 1877 for some years; the school's adoption of a coeducation system in such an early period was a rare example in the modernized Japan's education.
  981. Keion SUMIYOAHI or Mitsunobu "Kanjo no maki"
  982. Keion SUMIYOAHI or Nobuzane "Koshibagaki-zoshi"(lit. small brushwood fence books) (another title "Nonomiya-emaki")
  983. Keirin focuses on copying the shape of characters and Irin, reading Hitsui (calligrapher's intention).
  984. Keirin-ji Temple
  985. Keirin-ji Temple is the historically prominent Tango Province Chuhonzan (mid-level head temple) of the Soto Sect located in Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  986. Keiro no Hi (Respect for the Aged Day)
  987. Keisai DAIMATSU
  988. Keisai DAIMATSU (years of birth and death unknown) was a member of the Miburoshigumi (Mibu masterless warriors group) which was the forerunner of the Shinsengumi (literally, the newly selected corps, referring to a special police force for the Tokugawa regime).
  989. Keisai DAIMATSU: Left the group by July 1863
  990. Keisai joined the Miburoshigumi in around June or July, 1863, as his name appeared in a 'List of Signers for Official Documents Submitted to the Shogunate' ('Bakufu Teishutsu Josho Shomeisha Ichiran' in Japanese) which was dated July 10, 1863.
  991. Keisaku (kyosaku) (a Zen stick)
  992. Keisaku (kyosaku) is considered as a substitute of the hand of Monju Bosatsu (Manjusri) in a Zendo hall.
  993. Keisaku in the Rinzai sect
  994. Keisaku introduced him to Siebold's daughter, Ine KUSUMOTO, who was studying obstetrics.
  995. Keisaku is the abbreviation for Keikakusakurei.
  996. Keisei
  997. Keisei (1189 - November 18, 1268) was a Buddhist priest in the Kamakura period.
  998. Keisei Hanako is Kiritaro the Tengu kozo (which literally means long-nosed goblin boy) in disguise, who is the head of the gang of thieves, but in fact he is Matsuwaka YOSHIDA who became a robber to investigate the theft of the genealogical table.
  999. Keisei Hangonko (Domomata)
  1000. Keisei Iro-jamisen' and 'Yakusha Kuchi Samisen' written by Kiseki became the basis of hyoban-ki (books of public estimation on various matters) of actors and Ukiyozoshi.


222001 ~ 223000

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