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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. Kojuro NAKAGAWA
  2. Kojuro NAKAGAWA (February 18, 1866 - October 7, 1944) is a former member of the House of Peers, official of the Ministry of Education, and the founder of Kyoto Hosei School (present Ritsumeikan University).
  3. Kojuro NAKAGAWA was buried in the graveyard of Tojiin Temple beside the Kinugasa Campus of Ritsumeikan University.
  4. Kojuro NAKAGAWA's philosophy on education was to place the importance on women's education and this seems to have been largely influenced by his uncle Kenjiro NAKAGAWA, who was the principle of Ochanomizu University.
  5. Kojuro NAKAGAWA, who was central to the establishment of Kyoto Imperial University as a secretary to the Education Minister Saionji, left the government and later moved to the business world after the university establishment was settled.
  6. Kojuro notation
  7. Kojuro notation was a form that evolved based on the methodology developed by Kojuro YOSHIZUMI, a disciple of Kosaburo YOSHIZUMI the 4th, in the Taisho era.
  8. Kojyo SONODA
  9. Kojyo SONODA (male 1886 - 1968) was a Tenkoku artist (artist of seal engraving) in modern times of Japan.
  10. Kojyuro NAKAGAWA assumed the "Secretary", the corresponding position of the bureau chief.
  11. Koka
  12. Koka 4, August
  13. Koka City community bus (Aikuru Bus, Tsuchiyama line)
  14. Koka City, Shiga Prefecture
  15. Koka fifty-three families
  16. Koka fifty-three families refers to jizamurai (local samurai) fifty-three families in Koka, who stood by Rokkaku clan's side in 'Siege of Magari,' who later became the center families of Koga-ryu school ninjutsu (ninja techniques).
  17. Koka means that an Imperial princess or a princess marries a man who is not a member of Imperial family nor the royal family.
  18. Koka no miya
  19. Koka-Isshin School (a school handed down within the Hanamoto family)
  20. Koka-Isshin School: Munemitsu TENKO (巓崢宗光) and ended it's relationship and separated from the School of Senke
  21. Koka-Isshin school is a school handed down within the Hanamoto family which was a merchant family in Bitchu.
  22. Koka-mon in ryo (territory of Kokamon-in Shrine) such as Saisho kongo in ryo (territory of Saishokongo-in Shrine,) etc. he succeeded from Seishi became the origin of family estate of the Kujo clan.
  23. KokaI Kaisen (the Naval battle at the mouth of the Yalu River [Sino-Japanese War])
  24. Kokachi was FUJIWARA no Nakamaro's son, and was killed in the tenth month of 764 during FUJIWARA no Nakamaro's Revolt.
  25. Kokaho
  26. Kokaho (price regulation law) is a law that stipulated the official prices and the conversion rates for goods at the market from ancient times to medieval periods under the Court, kokuga (provincial government offices) and the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  27. Kokai (Buddhist priest)
  28. Kokai (January 29, 1608 ? November 22, 1695) was a Buddhist priest of the Tendai Sect in the early part of the Edo period.
  29. Kokaji
  30. Kokakai (Department of Industrial Chemistry of the Faculty of Engineering, Chemical Engineering of the Graduate School of Engineering, and the like)
  31. Kokaku
  32. Kokaku (date of birth and death unknown) was a priest of the Tendai Sect in the late Heian period.
  33. Kokamonin Seishi had already become a Buddhist nun when she died in 1182.
  34. Kokamonin no Betto
  35. Kokamonin no Betto (year of birth and death unknown) was a poetess of the late Heian period.
  36. Kokamonin was the only daughter of the legal wife of Tadamichi, and Tadamichi would not act indifferently to the departure of the emperor from the capital (Tadamichi became the victor after a hard battle in the Hogen War which destroyed the structure of Sekkan Family.)
  37. Kokan SHIBA
  38. Kokan SHIBA (1747 - November 19, 1818) was a painter who lived during the Edo Period.
  39. Kokan SHIBA (a painter, 1738 to 1818)
  40. Kokan SHIBA: "Mimeguri Kei-zu" (Landscape of Mimeguri), in which the technique of etching was used
  41. Kokan Shiren
  42. Kokan Shiren (1278 - August 11, 1346) was a Rinzai Sect Buddhist monk who lived during the latter part of the Kamakura period and the Northern and Southern Courts period.
  43. Kokan Shiren founded Tenju-an Temple in 1339 as the burial place of Mukan Fumon, a founder Nanzen-ji Temple.
  44. Kokan Shiren was devoted to a life of study and gained a vast knowledge; studying 'Wen Xuan' ('Monzen' in Japanese) from SUGAWARA no Arisuke and the art of divination from Arifusa ROKUJO.
  45. Kokan contributed to spreading Western paintings by featuring traditional Japanese sceneries such as Mt. Fuji while using Western drawing methods and oil-painting techniques, and offering the paintings to shrines and temples in various places across Japan.
  46. Kokan had such a deep interest in Western natural history including astronomy and plants and animals and introduced them to Japan.
  47. Kokan is also the first Japanese etcher.
  48. Kokan started his career as an Ukiyo-e painter but later turned to a Western-influenced painter.
  49. Kokan worked as a forgery painter of Harunobu SUZUKI (Ukiyo-e painter, a person who achieved the perfection of Nishikie [colored woodblock print]) under the name of Harushige SUZUKI.
  50. Kokando
  51. Kokanya Zenu' (a king of Xiongnu)
  52. Kokasagake (Short-Range Kasagake) Archery
  53. Kokasagake' archery gets its name from the small size of the target used.
  54. Kokashu
  55. Kokashu is a collection of Japanese poetry.
  56. Kokata (child's role): Child (boy or girl depends on school)
  57. Kokata (child's role): MINAMOTO no Yoshitsune
  58. Kokatsuji bon (popular edition)
  59. Kokatsuji bon published in 1618 is extant.
  60. Kokatsuji-bon (Old Movable Type Imprints)
  61. Kokatsuji-bon covered a variety of topics, but since type-printing itself went out of use soon, there are quite a few so-called rare books.
  62. Kokatsuji-bon or Kokatsuji-han (old type editions) are general terms for movable type imprints published in Japan from the Bunroku era (1592 - 1596) to around the Keian era (1648 - 1652).
  63. Kokawa-dera Temple and Sofuku-ji Temple.'
  64. Kokawadera Engi-emaki (The illustrated handscroll of Legends of Kokawa-dera Temple): owned by Kokawa-dera Temple, and deposited in Kyoto National Museum
  65. Kokawadera Engiemaki (a picture scroll of legends of Kokawadera Temple)
  66. Kokawadera Engiemaki (a picture scroll of the legends of Kokawadera Temple)
  67. Kokawadera Engiemaki (a picture scroll of the legends of Kokawadera Temple), one of representative picture scrolls in Japan, is designated as a national treasure.
  68. Kokawadera Engiemaki is owned by Kokawa-dera Temple, Wakayama Prefecture.
  69. Koke members, excluding Yoshihisa
  70. Kokei
  71. Kokei (1648 to August 30, 1705) was a monk of the Sanronshu Sect who lived in the early Edo period.
  72. Kokei (977 - August 27, 1049) was a Tendai sect priest in the middle days of the Heian period.
  73. Kokei (birth and death dates are unknown) was a Busshi (sculptor of Buddhist Statues) from the last years of the Heian period through the early years of the Kamakura period.
  74. Kokei (high chignon) was hair style for noblewomen in Nara period.
  75. Kokei BAN
  76. Kokei BAN (November 7, 1733-September 7, 1806) was kajin (a waka poet) and a writer in the latter part of the Edo period.
  77. Kokei BAN and Guzan MATSUMOTO wrote a preface to "Saiyuki" and "Toyuki", respectively.
  78. Kokei HOAN
  79. Kokei HOAN (1532 - March 5, 1597) was a Rinzai Sect Buddhist monk who lived during the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  80. Kokei KOBAYASHI, a Japanese-style painter, also painted a picture on the theme of this legend.
  81. Kokei attained the Buddhist rank as hokkyo (the third highest rank for Buddhist priests) in 1177, in consideration of building the five-story pagoda of Rengeoin Temple for Emperor Goshirakawa.
  82. Kokei constructed temple buildings one after another.
  83. Kokei decided that the trees would be good materials for Koryo; the trees were 54-meter long, with no bendings or worm holes.
  84. Kokei had searched various places for huge red pine trees that would meet the conditions mentioned above, but had not succeeded.
  85. Kokei participated in the reconstruction of Buddhist statues of Kofuku-ji Temple in Nara, which had been burnt down in the fire set by TAIRA no Shigehira in 1180, and then led Busshi of his school to construct statues which included the principal image, the statue of Fukukenjaku Kannon (Kannon of the Never Empty Lasso).
  86. Kokei was born in Miyazu in Tango Province (now Miyazu City) in 1648.
  87. Kokei was decorated using hana-kanzasi, an ornamental hairpin with a flower-shaped accessory, made of colored ivory having a portion to be inserted into the hair made of a metal.
  88. Kokei, on receiving that information, went to Shiratori Shrine to see whether those trees would meet the conditions.
  89. Kokei-do Hall
  90. Kokei-kanten (solid agar):
  91. Kokei: Tani Ajari.
  92. Kokei: The statue of Fukukenjaku Kannon enshrined in Nanen-do Hall of Kofuku-ji Temple
  93. Koken OTANI
  94. Koken OTANI (September 4, 1965 -) is a Jodo Shinshu (True Pure Land Sect Buddhism) priest and the 26th hoshu (high priest) of the Higashi Hongan-ji school of the Jodo Shinshu sect.
  95. Koken, one of his disciples, founded the Anrakuritsu-in Temple (manda - a place of Buddhist practice or meditation) and became the first chief priest there.
  96. Koken-ji temple (Fukui City, Fukui Prefecture)
  97. Kokerabuki
  98. Kokerabuki is a roofing method in which thin wood boards are used as the roofing material.
  99. Kokerakyo (Sasatoba, a very small common type of memorial stupa that is made of bamboo grass)' is enshrined.
  100. Kokeshi ningyo (wooden dolls)
  101. Koki NAKAMURA
  102. Koki NAKAMURA (his name can also be called Hirotake) (November, 1838 - July 3, 1887) was a feudal retainer of Tosa Province in the end of Edo period.
  103. Koki TAIHO (Sumo wrestler, forty-eighth Yokozuna, special sumo coaching stock awarded to retired grand champion)
  104. Koki' is regarded to be established in 738.
  105. Koki-den (the Palace for the Empress, Chugu (second consort of an emperor, Nyogo)
  106. Kokichi KANO
  107. Kokichi KATSU (a father of Kaishu KATSU): He joined nuke mairi in his boyhood.
  108. Kokiden
  109. Kokiden no nyogo (Empress Kokiden) --- a daughter of Udaijin (Minister of the Right).
  110. Kokiden no nyogo (Empress Kokiden): The daughter of To no Chujo (Minister of the Palace).
  111. Kokiden no nyogo (Lady Kokiden): Emperor Kiritsubo's wife and Emperor Suzaku's mother (later called Grand Empress Kokiden).
  112. Kokiden no nyogo (the Empress Kokiden) --- a daughter of Tono Chujo (the first secretary's captain), and her mother was Shi no Kimi (the fourth daughter) of Udaijin (Minister of the Right) of the Emperor Kiritsubo.
  113. Kokido
  114. Kokikan
  115. Kokin
  116. Kokin (a seven-string zither)
  117. Kokin (literally, 'old Kin') was such an old stringed instrument as to be mentioned in "Shikyo," together with Se (ancient Chinese plucked zither, usu. with 25 or 23 strings).
  118. Kokin Waka Shu (Manshuin-bon (Manshuin Temple version)), 1 volume - a manuscript copy of Kokin Wakashu written on dyed paper with different colors with elegant Japanese style handwriting, and is an article that goes back to the eleventh century.
  119. Kokin Wakashu
  120. Kokin Wakashu (A Collection of Ancient and Modern Japanese Poetry)
  121. Kokin Wakashu (collection of ancient and modern Japanese poetry) Volume 15, Koiuta (Lovers' Poetry) Part 5, 747
  122. Kokin Wakashu Anthology, Surviving Portion of Vol. XII (Honami Gire Bon)
  123. Kokin Wakashu Kanajo
  124. Kokin Wakashu Kanajo (Preface of Kokin Wakashu written in kana) of the "Kokin Wakashu" (A Collection of Ancient and Modern Japanese Poetry) written by KI no Tsurayuki was an early work written in Hiragana while keeping the usage of a text in Chinese.
  125. Kokin Wakashu Kanajo (The Preface to "A Collection of Ancient and Modern Japanese Poetry") is a preface to Kokin Wakashu (A Collection of Ancient and Modern Japanese Poetry).
  126. Kokin Wakashu Kanajo (relevant part only)
  127. Kokin Wakashu Kikigaki
  128. Kokin Wakashu consists of 20 volumes with the number of poems totaling 1111.
  129. Kokin Wakashu established the tradition of anthology of waka by Imperial command as a state project and it is recognized as the number one among Hachidaishu (the eight collections of history books by Imperial command) and Nijuichidai-shu (the twenty-one collections of waka compiled by imperial command).
  130. Kokin Wakashu made a significant contribution to establishing the Kokufu Bunka (Japan's original national culture) in the mid Heian period and, according to "Makura no Soshi" (the Pillow Book), it was considered a cultural accomplishment to recite Kokinshu among noblemen in those days.
  131. Kokin Wakashu' (A Collection of Ancient and Modern Japanese Poetry) (transcription of commentary)
  132. Kokin Wakashu: Japan's first chokusen wakashu (anthology of Japanese poetry compiled by Imperial command) in 905 which was ordered by the Emperor Daigo and compiled by KI no Tsurayuki, KI no Tomonori, OSHIKOCHI no Mitsune, MIBU no Tadamine, etc.
  133. Kokin denju (the secret transmissions of the "Kokinshu," Anthology of Old and New Japanese Poems)
  134. Kokin denju, with its mystique, made to be authoritative as the supreme inherited secret teachings in the poetry circles of the medieval period.
  135. Kokin established by the Joshin tribe in Manchuria change its name of the country into Qing and transferred the capital to Beijing in 1644.
  136. Kokindenju no Tachi refers to Japanese sword made by Hirasaku YUKI, sword craftsman in Bungo Province.
  137. Kokindenju no Tachi.
  138. Kokinji KATSURA
  139. Kokinshu (Collection of Ancient and Modern): Written by Tamesuke REIZEI
  140. Kokinshu poets figured prominently also in Gosenwakashu, which includes eighty-one poems by KI no Tsurayuki, seventy-two by Ise (a poet), and twenty-four by FUJIWARA no Kanesuke, partially because no more than forty years had passed since the compilation of "Kokinshu."
  141. Kokinzo (Shinzei) ? - ?
  142. Kokinzo came from Goguryeo.
  143. Kokiriko
  144. Kokiriko bushi (folk song)
  145. Kokiriko, Bin-sasara (Bin-zasara, Kokiriko-sasara)
  146. Kokka Anko Bell: Cast in 1614 in Kama-za in Sanjo, Kyoto by Nagoya Sansho.
  147. Kokkagakkai (Society for the Science of the Nation)
  148. Kokkagakkai is a study group at law school of the University of Tokyo (the predecessor of the Faculty of Law at the University of Tokyo) founded in February 1887.
  149. Kokkan AZAI
  150. Kokkan AZAI (1848-1903) was a Japanese doctor in the Meiji period who engaged in the Kampo (traditional Chinese medicine practiced in Japan) Revival Movement.
  151. Kokkan gakko School became the predecessor of present Sakanoue Elementary School, Nagaoka City and Nagaoka High School, Niigata Prefecture.
  152. Kokkan was elected the third chairman in the Onchisha National Convention.
  153. Kokkei banashi (comic story): Rakugo, in general, contains ochi or sage (punch line), whereas kodan does not.
  154. Kokkeibon (humorous book)
  155. Kokkeibon (humorous book) was a genre of gesaku literature (literary work of a playful, mocking, joking, silly or frivolous nature) in the late Edo period.
  156. Kokkeibon book
  157. Kokkeibon is a book of humorous stories.
  158. Kokken Hanron (General Remarks on the National Constitution) (Azusa ONO)
  159. Kokken Iken (Opinion for the National Constitution) (Genichiro FUKUCHI)
  160. Kokken Taiko (Outline of National Constitution) (Nagazane MOTODA)
  161. Koko-Genji
  162. Kokoku era (April 28, 1340-December 8, 1346 (old calendar))
  163. Kokoku-in Temple
  164. Kokokushikan
  165. Kokokushikan is the understanding that Japanese people live in Japan, a country with a history of successive Emperors, lore and the history of which was passed from generation to generation to the present.
  166. Kokon Hyakumonogatari Hyoban (A Critique of Hundred Tales Old and New)
  167. Kokon chomonshu (Collected Anecdotes, Ancient and Modern)
  168. Kokonoe CHOJIYA and Oshizu the wife of Bunri: Ichinojo AZUMA
  169. Kokonoe-zakura (cherry tree with ninefold cherry flowered)
  170. Kokopelli (spirit of native American)
  171. Kokoro (April 1914 - August, "Asahi Shinbun"/November 1914, Iwanami Shoten)
  172. Kokoro Research Center
  173. Kokoro no Kage
  174. Kokoro no yami
  175. Kokoro yori kokoro ni tsutauru hana (flowers brought by heart to heart), Hakusuisha Publishing Co., Ltd., 1979 (later published by Hakusui U books)
  176. Kokoronaki mi ni mo aware wa shirarekeri shigi tatsu sawa no aki no yugure (Even one who claims to no longer have a heart feels this sad beauty: snipes flying up from a marsh on an evening in autumn).'
  177. Kokorozuke (gratuites, tips)
  178. Koku (a unit of volume in old Japanese system of weights and measures originated in China)
  179. Koku (石) was originally written as 斛 in Chinese character and both sill means the same in present Japan.
  180. Koku Cho shonin shi (哭澄上人詩) (held by an individual, hereditary item of the Shoren-in Temple)
  181. Koku is a physical unit of old Japanese system of weights and measures represents volume.
  182. Koku is still used in China as a unit of mass.
  183. Koku of koikoku comes from kokusho, a kind of soup with miso, and koikoku used to be one variation of kokusho.
  184. Koku' (石) was essentially an unit of weight, pronounced 'seki.'
  185. Kokua
  186. Kokua (1314 - October 4, 1405) was a Ji Sect Buddhist monk who lived from the Northern and Southern Courts period (Japan) to the mid-Muromachi period.
  187. Kokua founded Shobo-ji Temple (Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City) at Ryozen in Kyoto's Higashiyama (Kyoto Prefecture) which became the headquarters of the Ryozen School, and restored Sorin-ji Temple (Kyoto City) which became the headquarters of the Kokua School.
  188. Kokuanten
  189. Kokuanten (Sanskrit:K?lar?tri,K?lar?tr?) was one of Tembu-shin in Buddhism.
  190. Kokubetsushiki and Soso (attendance at a funeral) follow the mass in an appropriate form.
  191. Kokubi (headlock throw): the attacker turns into his opponent, throwing him by wrapping one arm around his neck as he makes that turn.
  192. Kokubu Amazuka-kofun Tumulus (Ishikawa Prefecture)
  193. Kokubu-jinja Shrine, JTEKT (former Koyo Seiko Co. Ltd.) factory, Kawabata-bashi Bridge, Aotani Athletic Ground for Young People (the route via Kokubu)
  194. Kokubun-ji Temple (Kashihara City)
  195. Kokubun-ji is a Buddhist temple of Jodo Sect located in 2-chome, Kitayagi, Kashihara City Nara Prefecture.
  196. Kokubunji (provincial monasteries) were built all over the country and the Buddhist Tenpyo culture, flourished.
  197. Kokubunji (provincial monasteries), Ikai (Court ranks) of priests, taboos of priests, and local koshi (monk lecturers)
  198. Kokucho and the surrounding government offices as well as its urban area were collectively called Kokuga or Kokufu.
  199. Kokucho built in a square lot was usually equipped with three buildings in the north, east and west, which was called "Seiden," "Higashi-wakiden" (palace located on the east side) and "Nishi-wakiden" (palace located on the west side) in that order, as well as a main gate in the south, all of which surrounded a square courtyard.
  200. Kokudachi
  201. Kokudachi (spiritual practice of eating no grain) is one of Buddhism "gyo" (spiritual practices).
  202. Kokudaka (The Figure Of Land Productivity)
  203. Kokudaka (stipend) Chui earned was 400 koku.
  204. Kokudaka of daimyo
  205. Kokudaka of sake produced from a koku of unhulled rice is referred to as sakedare percentage.
  206. Kokudaka refers to the figure of land productivity shown with koku (a unit), which was used in the early modern ages of Japan.
  207. Kokudaka system is sometimes called 'hyakusho takashoji' (system to measure the property of a farmer with kokudaka) when mentioned for the farmer, or called 'kokudaka chigyo system' (system to measure the annual stipend of a samurai with kokudaka) when mentioned for samurai (especially daimyo).
  208. Kokudaka system lasted until the land-tax reform in the Meiji period.
  209. Kokudaka was used to show the income of samurai including daimyo gained from their territory, and to show the retainers' salary given from the lord as well.
  210. Kokudaka-sei tax system was gradually formed through heino-bunri (the separation of warriors and peasants) and kenchi (cadastral surveys) during the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  211. Kokudo Higashino
  212. Kokudo chiri-in (Geographical Survey Institute)
  213. Kokufu
  214. Kokufu (provincial capital)
  215. Kokufu (provincial office) was placed in Seta, Kurita County and the remains of the office were found in the present Sandaiji, Otsu City in 1964.
  216. Kokufu Ongaku Kai (the Traditional Japanese Music Association), which continues to preserve Yoshizawa's tradition, has made three pieces, Yoshizawa's kokyu pieces 'Chidori no Kyoku' and 'Semi no Uta' (Song of the Cicadas), and Gentoku's 'Tsuru no Sugomori' their 'kokyu honkyoku' (music for the kokyu).
  217. Kokufu Shigo is Amemikoto hirakasuwake no mikoto/Amatsumikoto sakiwake no mikoto
  218. Kokufu bunka (aristocratic culture)
  219. Kokufu established from the Nara period to the early Heian period has a unique feature in its Seicho which consists of a square lot, Seiden, Wakiden and others.
  220. Kokufu in each province of the shichido were connected with other kokufu by roads, and each road had the same name as the shichido.
  221. Kokufu was also called Fuchu
  222. Kokufu was entirely extinct in the Muromachi period, whose location became uncertain.
  223. Kokufu, Ichinomiya, etc.
  224. Kokufu-bunka
  225. Kokufu-bunka is one of the Japanese historical cultures.
  226. Kokufu: Under the Ritsuryo system, cities developed around the Kokuga (provincial government headquarters).
  227. Kokuga (provincial government office compounds)
  228. Kokuga (provincial government offices) of Suruga Province was located in the age of ritsuryo system (a system of centralized government based on the ritsuryo code) and was the center of Suruga Province.
  229. Kokuga (provincial government offices), in turn, used incentives such as exemption from kanmotsu (tribute goods paid as taxes or tithes) to constantly recruit land developers inside and outside of their provinces.
  230. Kokuga admitted 'the warrior line' as being a part of the Kokuga force system, which was established at that time.
  231. Kokuga is a term for describing the section in which a government office, a Kokushi (provincial governor) executed the local government functions of the ritsuryo system (a system of centralized government based on the ritsuryo code) in Japan, used to be located.
  232. Kokugakai
  233. Kokugaku
  234. Kokugaku (Educational institutes under the Ritsuryo system)
  235. Kokugaku Kenkyusho (Institute of Japanese Studies) was established.
  236. Kokugaku criticized the heretofore strong academic focus on Confucian and Buddhist classics, especially the "Four Books and Five Classics" of Confucianism, trying instead to unearth native Japanese cultural, philosophical, and spiritual traditions to be found in the Japanese classics and ancient histories.
  237. Kokugaku in the previous period and the thought of revering the Emperor existed in the background of such a move, and the thought of emphasizing uniqueness of Japanese that existed in "Nihonshoki" and had been maintained thereafter as well existing base.
  238. Kokugaku rejected the moral philosophy of both Confucianism and Buddhism, which forced people to repress natural human emotions, instead placing value on the natural expression of human emotions.
  239. Kokugaku was a study that took place in the mid-Edo period in Japan.
  240. Kokugaku, which stressed positivism became the basis of modern Japanese Literature, National Language, and Ethnology studies because of the work of Kiyonori KONAKAMURA.
  241. Kokugakuin University Specialty Division Higher Normal School Section (1927)
  242. Kokugaryo
  243. Kokugaryo is a historical term referring to koryo (an Imperial demesne) after around the mid-Heian period, differentiated from shoen (manor in medieval Japan).
  244. Kokugokai (an instruction of different ethnic languages)
  245. Kokugun zatsuji (miscellaneous matters about administrative divisions) (the number is unknown)
  246. Kokuhei Shosha
  247. Kokuhei Taisha
  248. Kokuhei-chusha Shrine
  249. Kokuhei-shosha (minor shrines under the control of provincial governors)
  250. Kokuhei-shosha Shrine
  251. Kokuhei-taisha (grand shrines under the control of provincial governors)
  252. Kokuhei-taisha Shrine
  253. Kokuho Chaseki San-Meiseki (Three National Treasure Teahouses)
  254. Kokui' means Japanese spirit.
  255. Kokui' refers to this Japanese spirit, and it is preached as being a circle consisting of a smooth arch instead of a multilateral rectangular like Shushigaku.
  256. Kokuiko (Thoughts on the Meaning of the Nation)
  257. Kokuiko was also used in Japan during the Pacific War for its idea of protecting the 'unbroken line of sovereignty in the hands of Emperors' as well as by being understood as the source of the 'reverence for the Emperor.'
  258. Kokuji (Japanese Kanji).
  259. Kokujin
  260. Kokujin in Chikuzen and Buzen, such as the Munakata clan and the Aso clan were influenced by the Ouchi clan in the Chugoku district.
  261. Kokujin in that Province were under influence of the Hosokawa clan during the Sengoku period as known from the fact that the uprising in Yamashiro Province had certain relation with Masamoto HOSOKAWA who was the Kanrei (shogunal deputy) at that time.
  262. Kokujin rose to become a residing force with power reserved to influence the actions of the Muromachi bakufu, shugo daimyo (Japanese territorial lord as provincial constable), and manor lords.
  263. Kokujin ryoshu (local samurai lord).
  264. Kokujin were therefore unable to neglect the intentions of their branch families and Dogo.
  265. Kokujin-ikki (riots by kokujin) that occurred frequently from the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan) to the Muromachi period, varied in style, but can be seen as uniting kokujin ryoshu.
  266. Kokujin-ryoshu sei
  267. Kokujin-shu admitted the military mobilization right of the Hatakeyama clan as Shugo, but they were independent in the management of their territories.
  268. Kokujin-shu after that
  269. Kokuketsu yo 2047
  270. Kokumen no sho
  271. Kokumen no sho (also referred to as Kokumensho) was a kind of shoen (manor in medieval Japan) during the late Heian period which was exempt from miscellaneous taxes by kokushi (provincial governor).
  272. Kokumen sho (provincially exempted shoen)
  273. Kokumen sho was valid only during the kokushi's service, who approved the exemption.
  274. Kokumi
  275. Kokumi refers to a condition in which a person develops a big lump, on the back, or so-called hunchback.
  276. Kokumin Domeikai (People's Alliance Society)
  277. Kokumin Domeikai is the political society organized in the Meiji period, in September, 1900.
  278. Kokumin gakko (national schools) were established by the National School Order in 1941, and jinjo shogakko and koto shogakko were put to an end.
  279. Kokuminfuku (national uniform (such as mandated for Japanese males in 1940))
  280. Kokumo (or Kokubo) is the title for real mothers of emperors or kings.
  281. Kokumo/Kokubo (imperial mother)
  282. Kokumori
  283. Kokumori refers to the estimated production output (To-dai; one To was about 18 liters) per tan (an old land area unit; 991.7 square meters) of rice in rice paddies, fields and residential areas in a land survey.
  284. Kokunai Jimmyo-cho is a list of the shrines that the Kokushi visited when he made his pilgrimage.
  285. Kokuon-ji Temple - The third rank
  286. Kokura Domain (Buzen Province)
  287. Kokura Domain: Kokura-jo Castle
  288. Kokura Hirata Bangin: cupelled silver coins hallmarked with '平田' (Hirata).
  289. Kokura-jo Castle large keep
  290. Kokuritsu Ginko Shihei (National paper currency)
  291. Kokuritsu Ginko Shihei was paper currency issued by the National Bank in the early Meiji Period.
  292. Kokuritsu ginko' was literal translation of the National Bank in the United States (now it is often translated as kokuho ginko), however, it was established not by the nation but by the private capitals from Eichi SHIBUSAWA, Mitsui gumi, and so on.
  293. Kokuryo miyako
  294. Kokusai Kogyo Co., Ltd.
  295. Kokusaikaikan Station
  296. Kokusaikaikan Station (K01) - Matsugasaki Station (K02) - Kitayama Station (Kyoto Prefecture) (K03)
  297. Kokusaikaikan Station (K01) - Matsugasaki Station (Kyoto Prefecture) (K02)
  298. Kokusaikaikan Station - Matsugasaki Station (Kyoto Prefecture) - (to/from Takeda Station (Kyoto Prefecture))
  299. Kokusaikaikan Station on the Karasuma Line of the Kyoto Municipal Subway is located about 1 km northwest of the station.
  300. Kokusaikaikan Station, located in Iwakura, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto, City Kyoto Prefecture, is a terminal on the Karasuma Line, which is operated by Kyoto Municipal Subway.
  301. Kokusei-ji Temple at Yamanoi, Himeji City, Kyoto Prefecture is also his family temple.
  302. Kokusei‐ji was built around 1504 by Tadasue ANDO as the family temple of the warrior Hiyama-Ando clan, however it was abandoned when Ando clan (then called Akita clan) changed the territory to Hitachi Province.
  303. Kokusen, kankanbo - Hida dagashi
  304. Kokusenya Kassen (Kokusenya) (The Battles of Coxinga)
  305. Kokusetsu KANZE felt sorry about the discontinuance of the family and rebuilt the Fukuo family by making the child of Seigen HATTORI (服部栖元), who was his younger brother, as Morichika FUKUO the fifth.
  306. Kokusetsu KANZE, the ninth (1566-1626) waited on Ieyasu TOKUGAWA in Shizuoka from his infancy.
  307. Kokushi
  308. Kokushi (Kutadanti) or Crooked Teeth
  309. Kokushi (Makutadanti) or Black Teeth
  310. Kokushi (Provincial Governors)
  311. Kokushi (an officer of local government) in Sanuki Province.
  312. Kokushi (provincial governor)
  313. Kokushi (provincial governor) dispatched from the central government were given substantial authority, while Gunji (local magistrates) whose position was occupied by powerful local clans were also given a certain level of authority.
  314. Kokushi (provincial governors) in charge of local administration focused attention on gunji (district managers) and the rich and powerful class, and changed management of the province to control through local management by gunji (district managers) and persons in the rich and powerful class.
  315. Kokushi (provincial governors) ruled their assigned provinces through vicegerents they had dispatched.
  316. Kokushi (provincial governors) were allowed an additional income as Kokushi as well as the remuneration paid by the government.
  317. Kokushi Kasei Joso
  318. Kokushi Taikei (Compilation of historical and juridical texts from the fourteenth century)
  319. Kokushi Taikei was completed in 1964, and the Asahi Prize was awarded to the chief of the project, Jiro MARUYAMA in the same year.
  320. Kokushi became in charge of Shoso (warehouse) in each Gun, and deprived Gunji of the right to collect taxes as well as the authority over the suiko (government loans, often seed rice, made to peasants in Japan from the 7th through 12th centuries) which had been the Gunji's major source of income.
  321. Kokushi consisted of kami, suke, jo, sakan and shisei.
  322. Kokushi doubled as Naizenshi in Shima Province, and it indicated that Shima Province was 'Miketsukuni' obligated to supply offerings.
  323. Kokushi existed in the Kamakura period as well.
  324. Kokushi had the obligation of carrying and delivering, to the Imperial Court in the capital, choyo (tributes and labor) and fubutsu (products from fuko [the families supplied to each noble]).
  325. Kokushi kasei joso was also commonly regarded as evidence of disrupting local governments with Juryoso (career provincial official class) seeking only for their own interests.
  326. Kokushi kasei joso was effective in having an effect on Daijokan's policies, resulting in the enactment of "Koden kanmotsu rippo" (fixing a limit of 3 to of rice per tan of land) in 1040 for fixing the tax rates in Japan.
  327. Kokushi kasei joso, an appeal made by tato fumyo to the central government against lawless actions of kokushi, was the manifestation of the above situation and became conspicuous after the late tenth century.
  328. Kokushi managed to extend his influence even to shoen that had already been granted Fuyu no ken (the right of tax exemption, Japan) and Funyu no ken (the right to keep the tax agents from entering the property, Japan), which had resulted in Kokumen no sho.
  329. Kokushi occupied a very important position in the Ritsuryo system.
  330. Kokushi of In no Kinshin (the Retired Emperor's courtier) had been busy with filing private estates of Enryaku-ji Temple and had constant conflict with jinin (associates of Shinto shrines) throughout the country.
  331. Kokushi originally administered the government affairs at Kokucho, although the center of the administration was shifted to Kokushi-kan after the mid Heian period.
  332. Kokushi was a shigo (a posthumous name) given to monks by the Emperor and used to express the emperor's respect to the monks.
  333. Kokushi was able to assign a temporary Gunji (called Ginin Gunji [literally, a quasi-appointed district manager]) until an official Gunji was assigned.
  334. Kokushi were appointed from central government on an alternate basis as mikotomochi (a court official dispatched to a provincial post by imperial order) of the emperor, and were responsible for governing the province by serving as commanders of gunji (district managers).
  335. Kokushi were obliged to pay these newly introduced tax items (kanmotsu/rinji zoyaku) to the central government.
  336. Kokushi-hoheisha Shrine
  337. Kokushi-kan, including Kamiyakata (守館) (official residence for the highest-ranked Kokushi) and Sukeyakata (介館) (official residence for the second highest-ranked Kokushi), was an official residence for Kokushi.
  338. Kokushi-kenzaisha Shrine
  339. Kokushikijo: Sanbaso (the third Okina in Sanbaso Play)
  340. Kokushis consisted of eight groups and, even though it is not clear which area each group was sent to, it can be assumed, from the grant of honors to the latter-day reports on their missions, that the third and fifth groups were sent to the Keno area and Tokai area, respectively.
  341. Kokushitai (Japanese-style chronological format)
  342. Kokushitai is regarded as a kind of Hennentai style, since it is basically written in the Hennentai method and contains a series of biographies along with a necrology of each major figure.
  343. Kokushitaikei Shomoku Gedai (Annotated Bibliography of Source Materials for Zoku Kokushi Taikei) by the historian Taro SAKAMOTO is a reference book.
  344. Kokushitsu Shihoden Shari Zushi (black lacquered box to hold the urn containing the Buddha's ashes)
  345. Kokusho (literally a letter of announcement): unknown.
  346. Kokusho almost disappeared after the Edo period, and only koikoku, a variety of kokusho with carp, remains up until today.
  347. Kokusho used to be cooked popularly until the Edo period.
  348. Kokusho' of the 9th song of "Kinji" states that when you die, your body dies but by the power of god, your soul turns into a demon.'
  349. Kokusho-ji Temple: Kubizuka (tomb containing only a head) for Mitsuhide AKECHI
  350. Kokushu
  351. Kokushu was one of social statuses of daimyo (feudal lords) which existed during the early modern Edo period, and it referred to the daimyo having domain of one or more provinces; another name for kokushu was "kunimochidaimyo".
  352. Kokuso (state funeral)
  353. Kokuso-in gakumonryo
  354. Kokusoin (Imperial Granary)
  355. Kokuta SUDA - Todaiji Temple in tender green (1968).
  356. Kokutai no hongi
  357. Kokutai-ji sect
  358. Kokutetsu (Japan National Railways (JNR)) Steam Locomotive Type 120
  359. Kokutetsu (Japanese Railway) 120-Type Steam Locomotive: Important Cultural Property
  360. Kokutetsu 1200-Type Steam Locomotives 1250, 1265 (1200 series made by Kawasaki Dockyard): Former Nagano Dentetsu (Nagano Electric Railway)
  361. Kokutetsu C20 Container
  362. Kokutetsu C21 Container
  363. Kokutetsu C57 Steam Locomotive
  364. Kokutetsu C58 Steam Locomotive
  365. Kokutetsu ki 100-Type Freight Car
  366. Kokutetsu ki-ha 08-Type diesel multiple unit
  367. Kokutetsu ki-ha 10-Type diesel multiple unit
  368. Kokuto shochu
  369. Kokuyaku Constitution defined laws that were formulated by representatives of the people and approved by the ruler (in Japan's case it would be the Emperor) and this procedure served as a sort of promise between the ruler and his people.
  370. Kokuyaku Kenpo
  371. Kokuyoseki (obsidian)
  372. Kokuzekomoku (break a national policy down and analyze it both generally and in detail)
  373. Kokuzekomoku was a petition that Hirobumi ITO who was a governor of Hyogo Prefecture submitted it with three executives of Prefecture (Nobuyuki NAKAJIMA, Mitsuaki TANAKA, Noriyuki GA) and Finance officer/ judge, Munemitsu MUTSU who was in Osaka.
  374. Kokuzo Bosatsu
  375. Kokuzo Bosatsu (Akasagarbha Bodhisattva): 13th of each month
  376. Kokuzo Bosatsu (Bodhisattva), wood plate painting (an image for esoteric prayers for memory power (求聞持根本像))
  377. Kokuzo Bosatsu Nenju Shidai Shihai Kana Shosoku (letter written in kana with the back side of the paper used for the procedures for reciting a prayer to Kokuzo Bosatsu [Akasagarbha Bodhisattva])
  378. Kokuzo Bosatsu is ?k??agarbh or Gaganagajja in Sanskrit, and is a Bosatsu that is revered in Buddhism.
  379. Kokuzo Bosatsu stone engraving: A carved Buddhist image that survived the fires of the Genko War.
  380. Kokuzo Magaibutsu of Mt. Kasagi (Kyoto Prefecture)
  381. Kokuzo hongi (the original record of provincial governors) says that OOTADARO no Mikoto, a grandchild of HIKOKUNIBUKU no Mikoto, was appointed to NUKATA no Kunimiyatsuko (the head of the local government) by the Seimu Imperial Court.
  382. Kokuzo' literally means 'to have Koku,' and the Kokuzo Bosatsu is a Bosatsu that has limitless wisdom and compassion like the wide universe.
  383. Kokuzo-kyo (Kokuzo Sutra): Vols. 1 to 8
  384. Kokuzo-seki stone, Magaibutsu (a Buddhist image carved into the surface of natural rock such as a cliff face, a large rock, or a stone cave), a line engraved seated Maitreya
  385. Kokyo
  386. Kokyo (Imperial Palace) is the residence of the Emperor during normal times.
  387. Kokyo (Imperial Palace) no Gosho (for the present Emperor and Empress)
  388. Kokyo Higashi Gyoen (the East Garden of the Imperial Palace)
  389. Kokyo Keimo (one of the most important documents in Confucianism enlightenment) in 1642.
  390. Kokyo in Kyoto was called Kyoto Gosho, Kinri (Imperial Palace), and Dairi (Imperial Palace) and, after the Tokyo Gyoko (Emperor's going out to Tokyo) of the Meiji Restoration, became empty and came to be called the Kyoto kogu Imperial Palace after it came to be maintained under the Emperor's order.
  391. Kokyo in Tokyo
  392. Kokyo in Tokyo is located at the former site of Edo-jo Castle, which was the castle of Tokugawa Shogun until the end of the Edo period.
  393. Kokyo is registered as one of the world landmarks on the satellite panoramic images program, Google Earth.
  394. Kokyu
  395. Kokyu (a stringed instrument)
  396. Kokyu (empress's residence)
  397. Kokyu (ranks of the Orders of the Golden Kite)
  398. Kokyu (the Inner Palace)
  399. Kokyu ASAKURA, who had adopted Norikage, got furious.
  400. Kokyu Junishi
  401. Kokyu first appeared in a document in the early Edo period, slightly later than that of Shamisen.
  402. Kokyu for Kokyu-gaku, for Jiuta songs and for So music uses San-sagari tuning dominantly.
  403. Kokyu in Gidayu-bushi (a style of reciting the dramatic narrative of the puppet theatre)
  404. Kokyu in Sangyoku (Kokyu-gaku, Jiuta songs and So music)
  405. Kokyu in folk songs
  406. Kokyu is a Japanese stringed instrument.
  407. Kokyu is also played in not a few other pieces of music for Gidayu-bushi such as in "Shoutsushi-Asagao-banashi" (Morning Glory Diary).
  408. Kokyu is also used in the following types of music:
  409. Kokyu is made in the same shape as that of the Shamisen, but smaller in size, and the tuning can be made in the same way as that of the Shamisen.
  410. Kokyu is one of 'Sangyoku,' or one of the instruments that are used for Sangyoku three instrument ensemble.
  411. Kokyu is played in Kokyu-gaku (music played with Kokyu alone), for the accompaniment to Jiuta songs (traditional Japanese shamisen music), and for the accompaniment to Gidayu-bushi (musical narrative of the puppet theatre).
  412. Kokyu is used for Japanese ballads of the areas from the Hokuriku region to the Kansai region.
  413. Kokyu music also prospered in the middle of the Edo period, so it produced its own schools and new pieces.
  414. Kokyu palace was where the empress of the king or emperor lived.
  415. Kokyu palaces in China
  416. Kokyu palaces in Japan
  417. Kokyu palaces in Korea
  418. Koma (bridges) and tenjin (a bar mounted on the head of a stringed instrument to wind up a string around) resemble the one of Yagumo-goto.
  419. Koma (kabuki)
  420. Koma Stadium Co., Ltd. belongs to the Toho Group.
  421. Koma-bue
  422. Koma-dori (Couching stitch)
  423. Koma-geta (low wooden clogs)
  424. Koma-hyojo tone: Ringa
  425. Koma-ichikotsucho tone: Shintoriso, Shinsotoku, Taisotoku, Nasori*, Kocho*, Choboraku, Engiraku, Soriko*, Ayakiri, Shinmaka, Shikite, Onnintei, Kitoku, Komaboko, Hassen (Gagaku), Ninnaraku, Kotokuraku, Hannari, Shinsoriko
  426. Koma-sojo tone: Chikyu, Hohin (Gagaku), Totenraku, Soshimari
  427. Koma: Lacquerwares made in Thailand and other countries, named as the colored lacquer painted in a concentric circle style resembles a koma (spinning top).
  428. Komabe: clerks who worked in the tannery
  429. Komabue
  430. Komabue (a Japanese wind instrument)
  431. Komabue (高麗笛)
  432. Komabue is one of the wind instruments used in the orchestra of gagaku (ancient Japanese court dance and music).
  433. Komachi (trains)': E3 series Shinkansen train-cars are used: Basically, this train is operated connected to a 'Hayate' train in the southern section of Morioka Station (some Komachi trains run between Akita Station and Sendai Station independently, and are connected to a Hayate train at Sendai Station).
  434. Komachi odori dance
  435. Komachi yeast
  436. Komachi's Poetry Book
  437. Komachi, Omachi
  438. Komachi-odori (dance)
  439. Komachimono' in Noh contains 'Soshiarai Komachi, 'Kayoi Komachi,' ' Omukomachi,' 'Sekidera Komachi,' 'Sotoba Komachi,' and so on.
  440. Komachizoshi'
  441. Komada Station - Kintetsu Kyoto Line
  442. Komada Station - Shin-Hosono Station - Kizugawadai Station
  443. Komagaku
  444. Komagaku has three types of rhythms: Yon-byoshi (quadruple time), Age-byoshi (a faster tempo) and Kara-byoshi (a Chinese beat).
  445. Komagaku is a form of Gagaku (traditional Japanese court music) that was introduced into Japan from Korea.
  446. Komagaku music (Uho)
  447. Komagaku uses komabue (a transverse flute with six finger holes), hichiriki (an oboe), san-no-tsuzumi (an hourglass-shaped drum), shoko (a small gong) and taiko (an ornately decorated drum).
  448. Komagane City was particularly enthusiastic about proclaiming that its sauce katsudon was the 'original.'
  449. Komagata Otsuka-kofun Tumulus (the length of the burial mound 64.0 meters, Tochigi Prefecture)
  450. Komagata-jinja Shrine, which is common in eastern Japan enshrines Ukemochi no kami as the god of horses, and is also viewed as equal to Bato Kannon (horse-headed Kannon) because of the 'horse from head' incident.
  451. Komagawakaishin-ryu school of ken jutsu (art of fencing)
  452. Komahe: craftsmen who worked in the tannery
  453. Komahiki
  454. Komahime
  455. Komahime (1581 - September 5, 1595) was the second daughter of Yoshiaki MOGAMI and Osaki Fujin, and was a concubine of Hidetsugu TOYOTOMI.
  456. Komahime was also forcibly taken to Sanjo-gawara Riverside with the other concubines of Hidetsugu on August 2, and was the eleventh to be executed.
  457. Komahime's father Yoshimitsu desperately pleaded for her life visiting various quarters, and there was also an outcry to save her life from various people.
  458. Komahime's mother Lady Osaki was filled with sorrow when she heard of her daughter's death, and passed away in mourning fourteen days after the execution.
  459. Komahime's tragedy and the way it influenced later history
  460. Komai (lath): a long and narrow piece of wood to lay over the rafter.
  461. Komainu
  462. Komainu (a pair of stone-carved guardian dogs)
  463. Komainu (shrine guardian dog statues)
  464. Komainu are placed in pairs, one of each on either side of the entrance to a shrine or temple or the fa?ade of its main hall.
  465. Komainu as a couple
  466. Komainu in shrines and temples
  467. Komaki City (Aichi Prefecture)
  468. Komame MIYAKE
  469. Komame MIYAKE (1910 -) is a Gion Kobu geisha (Japanese professional female entertainer at drinking parties) and an accredited master of the Inoue school of Kamigatamai (dance).
  470. Koman (交満)…In order to replace him following the expiration of his term of office.
  471. Koman already cheated a ronin (master-less samurai) Gengobe SATSUMA, whom Sangoro had introduced, out of a considerable amount of money, however Sangoro is urging her to impose Gengobe's love for her and to squeeze more money out of him.
  472. Koman cries saying that "You are an ogre, must be an ogre."
  473. Koman tells that she tattooed it as shinju-date (an evidence of love) for Gengobe ('Go五' is one kanji character of the name of Gengobe源五兵衛), so he is pleased and poses as her husband, then Sukeemon TOMINOMORI, an uncle of Gengobe, comes to the house with 100 ryo.
  474. Komao HAYASHI (Holder of Important Intangible Cultural Property [Living National Treasure])
  475. Komaro and WAKAINUKAINO Amita completed the killing of Iruka.
  476. Komaro and others jumped out as well and slashed Iruka's shoulder and head.
  477. Komaro made a protest about Japan's seat being the second on the west side, although Shiragi (ancient Korean kingdom) was the first on the east side, which gave Shiragi's precedence over Japan, so he forced Shiragi exchange positions ("Shoku Nihongi" [Chronicle of Japan Continued], Article of the 6th Year of Tenpyo-shoho).
  478. Komaru (small round)
  479. Komaru-agari (small round rise)
  480. Komaru-sagari (small round fall)
  481. Komaruyama-jo Castle was abolished by the Ikkoku Ichijo Rei (Law of One Castle per Province).
  482. Komasaka Magaibutsu
  483. Komatsu
  484. Komatsu - former ryotei for navy
  485. Komatsu no Miya
  486. Komatsu no Miya Imperial Prince Akihito was born as the eighth Prince of Fushimi no Miya Imperial Prince, Kuniie in 1846.
  487. Komatsu no Miya was established by the Fushimi no Miya Imperial Prince Kuniie's eighth Prince, Komatsu no Miya Imperial Prince, Akihito during the early Meiji period.
  488. Komatsu stone
  489. Komatsu-date
  490. Komatsu-ji Temple: A memorial of the Ryukyuan missions is in the precincts, and it used to have a pine tree planted directly by TAIRA no Shigemori.
  491. Komatsubara Honan (Komatsubara Persecution)
  492. Komatsubara Honan is an incident that Nichiren was assaulted and injured in Komatsubara (present-day Kamogawa City, Chiba Prefecture).
  493. Komatsuna (Japanese mustard spinach), lettuce, wakegi (scallion), Japanese white radish, Chinese cabbage, turnip, green onion, eggplant, and cucumber
  494. Komatsuna and katsuona are known as its related vegetables.
  495. Komayamato Kuomi no Shiranami
  496. Komazawa University Specialty Division Higher Normal School Course (1929)
  497. Komazuka-kofun Tumulus
  498. Kome (rice) miso
  499. Kome's post is considered to have not been called Kori-no-miyatsuko while he was alive.
  500. Komehyappyo (a hundred straw rice bags)
  501. Komehyappyo (a hundred straw rice bags) is a historical episode regarding the education by Torasaburo KOBAYASHI, a vassal of Nagaoka Domain Echigo Province, who was active from the end of Edo period through until the early Meiji period.
  502. Komei for busho (Japanese military commander) aged forty or fifty years with an intelligent and delicate expression
  503. Komeya-koshi
  504. Komibashi
  505. Komin KAWAMOTO
  506. Komin KAWAMOTO (1810 to July 18, 1871) was a scholar of Western sciences by the means of the Dutch language at the end of the Edo period and in the period of the Meiji Restoration.
  507. Kominka (Subjects of the Emperor) movement (1937 - 1945)
  508. Kominka (traditional Japanese houses)
  509. Kominka are not defined by the period they were built or how old they are, but usually the term is used when referring to houses built before the World War II, and especially to those built before the Taisho Period.
  510. Komise (Small Stalls)
  511. Komo-dofu (tofu rolled in a wooden straw mat called "komo" and boiled) and tsuto dofu in Ibaraki Prefecture
  512. Komochi shoji
  513. Komochi shoji, which are the oldest remnants of architecture of the abbot's chamber in Zen sect temples, are seen in Ryogian hojo (abbot's chamber) in the Tofuku-ji Temple.
  514. Komochi-koshi
  515. Komochi-shoji is also used in Ryoginan hojo (abbot's chamber) of Tofuku-ji Temple, which was the oldest remains of the architecture of Hojo room in Zen sect's style.
  516. Komogai
  517. Komokuten (Virupaksa)
  518. Komomakura, Shizuya, Isoragasaki, Sasanami, Uetsuki, Agemaki, Omiya, Minatoda, Kirigirisu, Senzai (Some suggest that 'Senzai' is excluded.)
  519. Komon
  520. Komon Enban (relics of Kibi type goods for religious service)
  521. Komon Hachi Honzan (8 honzan temples succeeding the dharma lineage of Nikko)
  522. Komon Hachi Honzan (eight major temples)
  523. Komon is a kind of Japanese kimono (Japanese clothes).
  524. Komon of Mito gained popularity as the subject matter of popular Kodan storytelling and Kabuki plays.
  525. Komonjo
  526. Komono
  527. Komori Gakko (Baby-sitter Schools)
  528. Komori Jizo (babysitting Jizo)
  529. Komori Yasu played by Nakazo NAKAMURA (the third)
  530. Komori gakko is a term used to refer to schools made for children who were not able to attend ordinary schools because they had to baby-sit their own little brothers and sisters or other families' little chidren in the early Meiji period.
  531. Komori-jinja Shrine
  532. Komori-jinja Shrine (enshrining O-no-Yasumaro): the small shikinaisha referred to by the name Shosha Shinmei-jinja Shrine
  533. Komori-sha Shrine
  534. Komori-sha Shrine (Mikumari-no-kami)
  535. Komoridani, Ryujin-mura, Tanabe City, Wakayama Prefecture
  536. Komoriue Daycare Center
  537. Komoro Domain: Komoro-jo Castle
  538. Komoto shuffles these 25 packages, picks up five packages arbitrarily from these 25 packages, burns one package out of five packages, and passes Koro to guests in sequence, and then, guests listen to the incense.
  539. Komotsuwatashi
  540. Komoyo mikomochi fukushimoyo mibukushimochi konookani natsumasuko iekikan nanorasane soramitsu Yamatonokuni wa oshinabete warekoso ore shikinabete warekoso mase warekoso wa norame iewomo nawomo ("Manyoshu," Volume One)
  541. Komparu Family documents associated with military art, 13 volumes
  542. Komparu Style (25), Kanze Style (16)
  543. Komparu Style (Komparu-za)
  544. Komparu Style (discontinued in Meiji Period)
  545. Kompeito (confetti)
  546. Kompira Ema-kan
  547. Komponchudo Hall (National Treasure) _ The remains of Ichijoshikan-in Temple, built by Saicho
  548. Komu-nin (kogi-nin) were selected one each representing government, each school in affiliation with governments, each domain, no one representing prefectures, and counseled in 19 departments.
  549. Komushi is thought to have been a descendant of Oyori's, but his actual genealogy remains unknown.
  550. Komuso
  551. Komuso pilgrimages were revived in 1888 with the establishment of the Meian Association and Meian-ji Temple which was formerly Zennein, a sub-temple of Tofuku-ji Temple in Kyoto.
  552. Komuso were monks of the Fuke sect of Zen Buddhism who did not shave their heads in the traditional monk fashion and, co-existed as monks in the day to day lay world.
  553. Komusubi (the fourth-highest sumo rank)
  554. Komyo Hoden
  555. Komyo shingon (Mantra of Light) should be chanted and Dosha kaji (incantation) conducted.
  556. Komyo-in Temple
  557. Komyo-ji Temple
  558. Komyo-ji Temple (Ayabe City)
  559. Komyo-ji Temple (Ayabe City): Nio-mon Gate
  560. Komyo-ji Temple (Kamakura City)
  561. Komyo-ji Temple (Nagaokakyo City)
  562. Komyo-ji Temple (Nagaokakyo City): autumn leaf color
  563. Komyo-ji Temple, located in Ayabe City, Kyoto, is a temple of the Daigo school of the Shingon sect.
  564. Komyo-ji Temple, which is Sohonzan (grand head temple) of Seizan Jodo Sect in Ao, Nagaokakyo City, Kyoto Prefecture, began with the establishment of Nenbutsu-zanmai-in Temple in 1198 by Rensho, who worshipped Honen and became his disciple.
  565. Komyo-ji, the Grand Head Temple of the Seizan Jodo sect, is located in Ao, Nagaokakyo City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  566. Komyoho-ji Regent Grand Minister priest Michiie (Michiie KUJO)
  567. Komyojimura joko shoshi jiken
  568. Komyojimura joko shoshi jiken ("the incident in Komyoji-mura Village in which female factory workers perished by fire") refers to the fire that broke out in 1900 in a textile factory in the village of Komyoji-mura (the present-day city of Ichinomiya) in Haguri-gun County of Aichi Prefecture and killed 31 female factory workers.
  569. Komyomonin born between Sanjo and Kenshi became Crown Prince Atsunaga's wife and she gave birth to the second prince Takahito.
  570. Komyosan Aizen-in Temple (光明山愛染院) (Itabashi Ward, Tokyo) - worshipped by local dye manufacturers
  571. Komyoshingon Kudoku Picture Scroll, color on paper
  572. Komyozan Shoho-in Temple (Kizugawa City, Kyoto Prefecture) - Zezu Shoten
  573. Kon ICHIKAWA
  574. Kon ICHIKAWA (his childhood name was Giichi ICHIKAWA, November 20, 1915 - February 13, 2008) was a Japanese film director.
  575. Kon ICHIKAWA was one of his colleagues at that time.
  576. Kon Komyo Saisho-O kyo Chushaku (Commentary on the Golden Light of the Most Victorious Kings Sutra): Vols. 5 and 9
  577. Kon Ruri no Tsuki: A blue glass goblet with a metal stem
  578. Kon is considered to be a soul which manages the spirit and Haku for the flesh.
  579. Kon is the positive soul from the heavens and Haku the negative soul from the earth.
  580. Kon-do (Great Buddha) Hall
  581. Kon-do Hall
  582. Kon-do Hall (Great Buddha Hall) (National Treasure)
  583. Kon-do Hall (National Treasures): According to the will of Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI who approved restoration of Mii-dera Temple, it was restored by Kita no Mandokoro in 1599.
  584. Kon-do Hall (an important cultural property)
  585. Kon-do Hall (main hall of the Buddhist temple), a foundation stone of the East Pagoda, and the central base of the West Pagoda have remained in the ruins of Moto-Yakushiji Temple.
  586. Kon-do Hall (national treasure)
  587. Kon-do Hall of Mii-dera Temple was relocated to Mt. Hiei and today exists as Enryaku-ji Temple Tenborin-do (Shaka-do Hall).
  588. Kon-do Hall of Todai-ji Temple
  589. Kon-do hall (Important Cultural Property)
  590. Kon-jin God was believed to stay in one direction for a year.
  591. Konacha
  592. Konacha (Dust Green Tea)
  593. Konacha is the powdery fragments collected in the production process of sencha (green tea of middle grade).
  594. Konacha is the standard tea served in sushi restaurants.
  595. Konacha, (powdered tea)
  596. Konami Sports & Amp Life (sixth floor)
  597. Konami and her mother, Tonose, come to Yamashina and ask for marriage, but Rikiya's mother Oishi refuses, because Konami is a daughter of Honzo, a person who stopped Hangan.
  598. Konami's father tries to be forgiven for his conduct by being killed by Rikiya.
  599. Konan City, Aichi Prefecture
  600. Konan NAITO
  601. Konan NAITO (born on August 27, 1866 and passed away on June 26, 1934) was one of the Japanese outstanding historians.
  602. Konan NAITO also joined, and Ryoun TAOKA and Shusui KOTOKU often contributed to the magazine.
  603. Konan NAITO is said to have been respected by the villagers, despite that, by giving Shin-kyoiku (New education) to their children.
  604. Konan NAITO was appointed as a lecturer of Oriental History at the same time.
  605. Konan NAITO, a representative scholar of Oriental history before the war, identified Yamato Hime no Mikoto (a princess of Emperor Suinin) as Himiko.
  606. Konan coal mine
  607. Konan was also included in his titles, as well as Unpin.
  608. Konan was born as the second son of Choichi NAITO (1832-1908, his pen name was Juwan), a warrior of the Nanbu Domain, and his wife, Yoko, in Kemanai Village, Mutsu Province (present day, Kazuno City, Akita Prefecture).
  609. Konan was his pen name.
  610. Konan-no-haru (spring in Konan)
  611. Konarai is sometimes called shoden (meaning elementary-level instruction) since it used to be taught in private by means of "denmono" (oral instruction).
  612. Konarai level of study (for beginners)
  613. Konarai, or naraigoto, is a learning course of tea ceremony, which putting together the procedure of the use of each utensil and the procedures appropriate for the situations.
  614. Konashi (Steamed Cake)
  615. Konaya offered shelter to them and one day Shino was out with a high fever from tetanus which was caused by an injury he had gotten in Horyukaku.
  616. Konayajikingindeie ryokaimandarazu (The picture which paints the Ryokai Mandala, which means the wisdom world and the mercy world, with gold color and silver color, on the dark blue twill cloth)
  617. Konbu
  618. Konbu (kelp)
  619. Konbu kelp soy-sauce, sashimi soy-sauce, seasoning soy-sauce, Tosa soy-sauce, etc.
  620. Konbu taken out from soup stock after extraction is tied and used as an ingredient.
  621. Konbu-in Temple
  622. Konbu-in Temple is a Jodo (Pure Land) sect nunnery temple located in Horen-cho, Nara City, Nara prefecture.
  623. Konbu-maki (boiled herring wrapped with seaweed)
  624. Konbu-maki has been eaten to pray for happiness because of its similarity in pronunciation to the word "yorokobu (happiness)."
  625. Konbujime (making salted fish sandwiched between seaweed to transfer the flavor of seaweed to the fish)
  626. Konbushime (raw fish sandwiched between kelp)
  627. Konbushime is a local dish in Toyama Prefecture.
  628. Konbushime is one of the uses of konbu for people in Toyama who have consumed konbu in large quantity since the Edo period in which konbu was sent by kitamae-bune (cargo ships) from Hokkaido.
  629. Konbushime is usually made with yellowtails and marlins, though it may also be applied to most sashimi including sea breams, squids and deep-water shrimps.
  630. Konchi-in Shohekiga (wall painting at the Konchi-in Temple) (Konchi-in subtemple of Nanzen-ji Temple, Kyoto) Important Cultural Property
  631. Konchi-in Temple
  632. Konchi-in Temple is a sub-temple within the precinct of Rinzai Sect Daihonzan (head temple) Nanzen-ji Temple located in Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  633. Konchi-in Temple was founded in Takagamine of northern Kyoto at the beginning of the 15th century by Yoshimochi ASHIKAGA, 4th Shogun of the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun), who named Daigo Tokuki as kaisan (founding priest).
  634. Konchiki
  635. Kondei (regular soldiers guarding the Kokubu (ancient provincial offices) or Sekisho (checking station))
  636. Konden (New rice field)
  637. Konden Einen Shizai no Ho (the law allowing permanent ownership of newly cultivated land)
  638. Konden means a newly developed rice field in the Ritsuryo period of Japan.
  639. Kondo
  640. Kondo (Main Hall)
  641. Kondo (Main Hall, National Treasure) _ The Seiden and the Shishinden from the old Imperial Palace built in 1613, were moved and remodeled in the Kan'ei years (1624-1644), and are valuable examples of the Shinden-zukuri style of the time.
  642. Kondo (Main hall, National Treasure) -The current building was the main hall from Kishu Yuasa (a temple built for the Monk-Emperor Go-Shirakawa in the latter half of the 12th century), which was moved and rebuilt in 1599, at the request of Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI.
  643. Kondo (National Treasure)
  644. Kondo (main hall of a Buddhist temple) of Daigo-ji Temple
  645. Kondo (main hall)
  646. Kondo (main hall): Situated atop a stone staircase to the right as one enters the interior of the temple precinct via the Romon Gate.
  647. Kondo Goko Rei
  648. Kondo Hakkaku-Toro (gilt-bronze octagonal stone lantern) (National Treasure)
  649. Kondo Hakkaku-Toro (octagonal gilt bronze lantern) (situated in front of the Great Buddha Hall)
  650. Kondo Hall (Golden Hall), Shinra Zenjin-do Hall
  651. Kondo Hall of Muroo-ji Temple: Uda City, Nara Prefecture
  652. Kondo Hoto (two storey pagoda made of copper)
  653. Kondo Nosa Shoto (The bronze pagoda)
  654. Kondo ONO no Emishi boshi (Gilt Bronze Memorial Tablet of ONO no Emishi)
  655. Kondo Sukashibori Keman (gilt bronze Buddhist floral decorations with open sculpture work) -The year 1243 is incribed in the 5 faces gilt bronze keman with open sculpture work
  656. Kondo and Hijikata sent Okita to chase him, and Sannan was was captured in Omi Province, Otsu City and brought back to the quarter.
  657. Kondo founded Kogyokusha and was praised as one of the six greatest educators in the Meiji period.
  658. Kondo in Toshodai-ji Temple: standing statue of Senju Kannon, standing statue of Yakushi Nyorai (Buddha of healing and medicine)
  659. Kondo is To-ji's central building, the construction of which started before the other buildings, and is thought to have been completed before To-ji was granted to Kukai in 823.
  660. Kondo kanaguso yamabushi oi (a wooden case embellished with gilt gold in which a Buddhist statue is placed) (deposited by Nara National Museum)
  661. Kondo of Kyoogokoku-ji Temple (national treasure)
  662. Kondo of Natsumi Hai-ji is known to have had the same form as that of Yamada-dera Temple in Asuka, and this is said to imply that it was strongly connected with the central government.
  663. Kondo of Ninna-ji Temple
  664. Kondo praised his Seppuku as 'even Takuminokami ASANO couldn't die this beautifully.'
  665. Kondo refused to do so, saying "There is no today without Tokugawa," he wrote.
  666. Kondo seems to have trusted and loved Yamazaki.
  667. Kondo' is mainly used in reference to those temples constructed between the Nara Period and the Heian Period.
  668. Kondo-karakusamon-kei (Buddhist ritual gong with arabesque design)
  669. Kondo-rengemon-kei (Musical Instrument with Lotus Pattern)
  670. Kondo-toro (national treasure), a bronze lantern that used to be located in front of Nanen-do Hall, and currently exhibited at the Museum of National Treasures.
  671. Kondoso oi
  672. Kone
  673. Kone (also pronounced Koni) is the Japanese name given to an emperor's costume in the Tang style.
  674. Kone is also called Konfuku, Benfuku or Tenshi-Go-raifuku.
  675. Konetsu ekika jikomi (preparation using high heat liquefaction) or koon ekika jikomi
  676. Kongo Hannya-kyo Sanjutsu (The Script of the Kongo Hannya-kyo Sutra), Volume 1 (with white dots for punctuation marks)
  677. Kongo Hannyakyo Kaidai Zankan (Segment of the Kongohannyakyo Sutra Commentary), written by Kobo Daishi (38 lines)
  678. Kongo Hannyakyo Kaidai Zannkan (Segment of the Kongohannyakyo Sutra Commentary), by Kobodaishi (63 lines)
  679. Kongo Kokuzo (east, yellow)
  680. Kongo Rikishi (Vajradhara, Nio [guardians of a temple])
  681. Kongo Style (Kongo-za)
  682. Kongo roru usually has two separate functions based on the grinding levels: coarse grinding and fine grinding.
  683. Kongo school
  684. Kongo zori (strong, durable zori) made in the Edo period (1603-1868) were sold at three mon (an old unit of currency) for two pairs, giving rise to the expression 'nisokusanmon' (two pairs for three mon), meaning dirt cheap.
  685. Kongo-Choyukakyo volumes 1-3
  686. Kongo-in Temple
  687. Kongo-in Temple (Maizuru City)
  688. Kongo-in Temple (Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture) - Standing Statue of Jisha Taisho, Important Cultural Property
  689. Kongo-in Temple (Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture) - Standing Statue of Shukkongo-shin (Vajrapani), Important Cultural Property
  690. Kongo-in Temple is a Buddhist temple belonging to the Toji school of the Shingon Sect located in Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  691. Kongo-in Temple: Located 1.5 km southwest
  692. Kongo-ji Temple
  693. Kongo-ji Temple (Kameoka City)
  694. Kongo-ji Temple (Kameoka City) (Okyo-dera Temple) (4 minutes walk)
  695. Kongo-ji Temple (Kawachinagano City)
  696. Kongo-ji Temple (Kyoto City)
  697. Kongo-ji Temple (Okyo-dera Temple, Kameoka City)
  698. Kongo-ji Temple in Hino City, Tokyo (Takahata Fudo): The wooden statue of Fudo Myoo with two youths (Heian period, an important cultural property)
  699. Kongo-ji Temple is a temple located in Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City.
  700. Kongo-ji Temple, a Buddhist temple of the Tenryu-ji school of the Rinzai sect, is located in Kameoka City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  701. Kongo-san Ropeway which connects the point in the foot of a mountain in Osaka Prefecture side and the mountaintop, is the only cable way operated by a village in Japan.
  702. Kongoai Bosatsu, with a bow in the four major bosatsus, and Aizen Myoo.
  703. Kongobu-ji Temple
  704. Kongobu-ji Temple (Goma-do, small buildings at Buddhist temples of Shingon and Tendai sects, Shingonshu and Tendaishu, used especially for esoteric practices, Mikkyo and for the performances of the burnt-offering goma ceremonies) in Wakayama: The seated statue of wooden Fudo Myoo (Heian period, an important cultural property)
  705. Kongobu-ji Temple (Koya-cho, Wakayama Prefecture) - Statue of Kujaku Myo-o (1200), Important Cultural Property
  706. Kongobu-ji Temple - Grand head temple of the Koyasan Shingon sect (高野山真言宗総本山)
  707. Kongobu-ji Temple - Standing Statues of Shitenno (Four heavenly kings), Important Cultural Property
  708. Kongobu-ji Temple in Wakayama: The standing statue of wooden Fudo Myoo (Heian period, an important cultural property)
  709. Kongobuji Temple Fudo-do Hall
  710. Kongobusshi Eison Kanshin Gakushoki (autobiography of Eison)
  711. Kongobutsushi Eison Kanjingakushoki
  712. Kongobutsushi Eison Kanjingakushoki is an autobiography of Eison, a Buddhist monk who founded the Shingon Ritsu sect in the Kamakura period.
  713. Kongochisanzo
  714. Kongochisanzo went to Tang and conveyed "Kongocho-kyo" after he learned Mikkyo from Ryuchi in India.
  715. Kongocho Yuga Sutra Volumes One and Two (designated in 2007)
  716. Kongocho-kyo
  717. Kongohokikai cannot be commited transgression once it is accepted.
  718. Kongokai Dembo Kanjo Saho
  719. Kongokai Kechien Kanjo in Kondo Hall - On October 1,2,3
  720. Kongooin-ryu simplified lineage (founder, Shoken): Kukai - Shinga - Gennin - Shobo - Kangen - Ningai - Seison - Gihan - Shokaku - Shoken
  721. Kongorin-ji Temple
  722. Kongorin-ji Temple is a temple of the Tendai Sect in Aisho-cho, Echi-gun, Shiga Prefecture.
  723. Kongorin-ji Temple is located east of Lake Biwa on the west mountainside of the Suzuka mountain range and is said to have been founded by a priest of the Nara period: Gyogi.
  724. Kongosanmai-in Temple (Koya-cho, Wakayama Prefecture) - the temple related to Masako HOJO.
  725. Kongosanmaiin Temple
  726. Kongosanmaiin Temple (Koya-cho, Wakayama Prefecture)
  727. Kongosatta
  728. Kongosatta, who is counted as one of the Bosatsu, and Gozanze Myoo, who has a fierce look, are believed to be the reincarnation of Dainichi Nyorai after attaining the state of enlightment and this depiction represents the belief that everything derives solely from Dainichi Nyorai.
  729. Kongosho (Vajra club), also called 'Tokkosho' (a pestle with a single sharp blade at each end).
  730. Kongosho (Vajra; a ritual implements in Exoteric Buddhism and Tibetan Buddhism)
  731. Konida
  732. Konida (provision transporters)
  733. Konida bugyo often served as local governors within the domain during peace time.
  734. Konida of sonae composed prior to this counted 40 kuchitori and 40 packhorses.
  735. Konida was positioned in the back of the troop during advance and in the front during retreat.
  736. Konin (caretakers of dominion of Todai-ji Temple)
  737. Konin Gishiki
  738. Konin Gishiki was one of Gishiki (Court rules and customs Books) considered to be compiled during the Konin era at the beginning of the Heian period.
  739. Konin-Jogan Culture
  740. Konin-Jogan culture around the reign of the Emperor Saga in the early Heian Period, was centered around the culture of the central nobles, which was deeply influenced by China (Tang).
  741. Konin-Jogan culture is considered in Japanese history to be the culture that flourished in Japan during the Konin and Jogan era of the early Heian period (about the ninth century).
  742. Konin-Kyaku
  743. Konin-Kyaku Code
  744. Konin-Kyaku-Shiki Act
  745. Konin-ji Temple
  746. Konin-ji Temple located in Nara Prefecture is a temple of Koyasan Shingon sect.
  747. Konin-shiki (Supplementary laws)
  748. Konine at Daian-ji Temple (January)
  749. Koninkyaku-sho (Extracts of the Konin-kyaku Code)
  750. Konishi Ribbon Co., Ltd, Motoseiganji Sagaru (to the south of Motoseiganji)
  751. Konishi family documents
  752. Konito Odoshi Yoroi (odoshi armor with navy blue string) (Itsukushima-jinja Shrine) ? handed down from and dedicated by TAIRA no Shigemori
  753. Konito Odoshi Yoroi (odoshi armor with navy blue string) (Oyamazumi-jinja Shrine) ? handed down from and dedicated by TAIRA no Shigemori
  754. Konito Odoshi Yoroi (odoshi armor with navy blue string) (Oyamazumi-jinja Shrine) ? handed down from and used by Michinobu KONO
  755. Konito-odoshi Domaru (an armor sewn with dark blue thread)
  756. Konjac
  757. Konjaku Craft Museum
  758. Konjaku Monogatari (Tales of Times Now Past) (anonymous)
  759. Konjaku Monogatari Shu (The Collection of Tales of Times Now Past)
  760. Konjaku Monogatari Shu (The Tale of Times Now Past)
  761. Konjaku Monogatari-Shu Volume 28, 'How FUJIWARA no Nobutada, the Governor of Shinano, Took a Tumble at Misaka, Section 38'
  762. Konjaku Monogatarishu
  763. Konjaku monogatari shu (The Tale of Times Now Past)
  764. Konjiki Hokomyogyo Jojuo Nyorai
  765. Konjiki Yasha (The golden demon)
  766. Konjiki Yasha is a representative novel of Meiji Period written by Koyo OZAKI.
  767. Konjiki-do Hall (Golden Hall) of Chuson-ji Temple
  768. Konjiki-in Temple is said to have been built in 1102 by FUJIWARA no Kanshi, the empress of Emperor Goreizei, but it was closed in 1868.
  769. Konjikondeihokekyo (with black lacquer decorated box)
  770. Konkai Komyo-ji Temple
  771. Konkai Komyo-ji Temple (also known as Kurotani)
  772. Konkai Komyo-ji Temple is a Jodo (Pure Land) Sect temple located in Kurodani-cho, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  773. Konken Kondei Rokujikyo Mandara-zu
  774. Konko-ji Temple (Kyoto City)
  775. Konko-ji Temple is a temple of the Jishu sect located in Motoshiogama-cho, Shimogyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  776. Konkomyo saishookyo chushaku (Commentary on the Golden Light Sutra of the Most Victorious Kings), Volumes 1-10
  777. Konku (a kind of musical instrument), inscribed with the year '1192'
  778. Konku: a golden hand drum.
  779. Konma
  780. Konmeichi no shoji (a type of standing screen)
  781. Konmeichi no shoji is a tsuitate shoji (a partitioning screen, which stood between Hirobisashi no futama of Seiryo-den Imperial palace and ue no mitsubone - a kind of room).
  782. Konmeichi pond was painted on the face (south side), and Sagano Kotakagari (falconry at Sagano) was painted on the back (north side).
  783. Konnichi-an, Ura-senke (head of a tea school)
  784. Konnichian and Yuin (Ura Senke, Kyoto City): Important Cultural Properties
  785. Konnichian tea room of Urasenke school
  786. Konno Hachiman Shrine (Konno Hachiman-gu shrine)
  787. Konnyaku
  788. Konnyaku (Konjac)
  789. Konnyaku (jelly made from devil's-tongue starch) (konnyaku)
  790. Konnyaku (scientific name: Amorphophallus konjac) refers to an herb of the Araceae family or a food derived from the plant's bulb.
  791. Konnyaku as a plant
  792. Konnyaku as food
  793. Konnyaku is also known as Konnyaku imo (Taro).
  794. Konnyaku is believed to be native to India or the Indonesian Peninsula (near Viet Nam), widely distributed in Mainland Southeast Asia.
  795. Konnyaku is mainly used as an ingredient in shirumono (a soup dish) and nabemono (a dish served in a pot at the table) such as oden (a Japanese dish containing all kinds of ingredients cooked in a special broth of soy source, sugar, sake, etc), nimono (food boiled and seasoned), miso soup, and pork miso soup.
  796. Konnyaku is sometimes used as a fun item to frighten people in a haunted house or in a place of kimodameshi (a test of courage).
  797. Konnyaku jelly
  798. Konnyaku jelly is fruit jelly solidified by mixing konnyaku powder and fruit juice.
  799. Konnyaku used in a haunted house
  800. Konnyaku used in other ways except as food
  801. Konnyaku, watery and soft, has an image of something both flexible and elastic.
  802. Konnyaku, which was originally used for making Japanese umbrellas as 'konnyaku adhesive,' found an application in producing weapons such as balloon bombs at the end of the war.
  803. Kono Shrine (Ichi-no-miya Shrine, or first shrine, of Tango Province)
  804. Kono kuchi ni namu to tonae, renjitsu gasshosu.
  805. Kono tsuide
  806. Kono-Issen-ni-ari (Heihachiro TOGO's words, meaning "It depends on this battle")
  807. Kono-ji Temple (Yamazoe-mura)
  808. Kono-ji Temple (Yamazoe-mura), bronze statue of Bosatsu (Bodhisattva) in half lotus position (important cultural property), Asuka to Nara period
  809. Kono-ji Temple, located at Yamazoe-mura, Yamabe-gun in Nara Prefecture, is the temple of the Buzan school of Shingon Buddhism.
  810. Kono-jinja Shrine
  811. Kono-jinja Shrine in Yosa-gun (Miyazu City)
  812. Kono-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located near Amanohashidate in Miyazu City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  813. Kono-jinja Shrine keeps the Kaifu clan genealogical table designated as a National Treasure, and in this table a person who had the same name as Takefurukuma no mikoto is registered as the 19th generation of the Kaifu clan, the clan that proclaimed its lineage with Ame no Hoakari (one of the gods in Japanese mythology).
  814. Kono-jinja Shrine:
  815. Konodai
  816. Konodai, Shimousa Province (Ichikawa City).
  817. Konoe
  818. Konoe Family
  819. Konoe School: Founded by Taneie KONOE
  820. Konoe also asked Kazushige UGAKI to be Foreign Minister, but he failed to adequately support Ugaki's peace overtures.
  821. Konoe also hoped for negotiations with the U.S. based on the draft of a mutual understanding plan but Yosuke MATSUOKA, who objected to the parts that watered down the tripartite alliance, proposed an amendment version which was sent to the United States of America, where it was ignored.
  822. Konoe also used the quiet presence of Tekigaiso, which was completely different from the bustle at the Prime Minister's official residence, as his political stage.
  823. Konoe clan
  824. Konoe could no longer give any answers.
  825. Konoe family
  826. Konoe fell deeply in love with this house located on a hill with a sloping south side and a beautiful, sweeping view of the near-by Zempukuji-gawa River and Mt. Fuji in the distance, and persuaded Irisawa to sell it.
  827. Konoe no chojo was sometimes called by its Tang name Shinei churosho, Shinei shogun or Urin shogun.
  828. Konoe no chujo (middle captain of the court guards), who was the husband of late daughter of imotoama, visited the hermitage at Ono in remembrance of his wife.
  829. Konoe no daisho
  830. Konoe no daisho (Major Captain of the Palace Guards)
  831. Konoe no daisho (Major Captain of the Palace Guards) is one of the government posts in the ritsuryo system.
  832. Konoe no daisho is Ryoge no kan (a post outside the original Ritsuryo code created by Imperial edicts).
  833. Konoe no daisho is equivalent to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank), but it was considered higher than the actual rank.
  834. Konoe no daisho sometimes concurrently assumed the post of 'Umagogen' (head of Imperial stable).
  835. Konoe no daisho was sometimes called by its Tang name Urin taishogun, Shinei taishogun or Koga taishogun.
  836. Konoe no daisho was the highest position among the permanent military officers.
  837. Konoe no shosho was sometimes called by its Tang name Urinrosho, Shineirosho, Urinchurosho, Asho or Kohon churosho.
  838. Konoe published 'A Diary - Efforts toward Peace' in "World Cultures", in which he shifted all the responsibilities for the quagmire of the Sino-Japanese War and the start of the Pacific War to the military, and explained that he regretted the fact that he was unable to stop the runaway military.
  839. Konoe served as the Prime Minister for 3 terms, the 34th, 38th, and 39th.
  840. Konoe was the name of the street in Kyoto and where Kageyushicho (an organization auditing local governments in the Ritsuryo period) was located.
  841. Konoe's mother, Bifuku mon in, adopted Sutoku's eldest child, Imperial Prince Shigehito, to placate Sutoku.
  842. Konoe's negotiation plan was to disclaim all the territories overseas, the Ryukyu Islands, the Ogasawara Islands (Bonin Islands) and the Kuril Islands, and to offer officers and soldiers of the Japanese Army as a labor force.
  843. Konoe's somewhat shadowy and rebellious temperament was formed during this period, as he himself later reminisced.
  844. Konoe-cho, Takatsukasa-cho:
  845. Konoe-dori Steet is one of the streets that run from east to west in Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  846. Konoe-dori Street
  847. Konoefu (Headquarter of the Inner Palace Guards): newly established
  848. Konoefu (Headquarters of the Inner Palace Guards)
  849. Konoefu Masasue OMIYA (1743 - 1804) was the first of this family line to become a kugyo (high-ranking court noble) when he was awarded the rank of Shosanmi (Senior Third Rank).
  850. Konoefu was one of Ryoge no kan (official organizations outside of the Ritsuryo code).
  851. Konoefu was responsible for guarding the inside of Dai-dairi (precinct of the Imperial palace and government offices) surrounded by Senyo-mon Gate, Shomei-mon Gate, Inmei-mon Gate and Genki-mon Gate.
  852. Konoefu, or the headquarters of the Inner Palace Guards (part one)
  853. Konoefu, or the headquarters of the Inner Palace Guards (post two)
  854. Konoehei Rokue-fu (Six imperial guard): The upper Goe-fu (Five imperial guard) was reorganized in the later Nara period, and became Rokue-fu (Six imperial guard), each consisting of the right and left of Konoe-fu (a division of the imperial guard), Hyoe-fu (a division of the imperial guard) and Emon-fu (an order of guards to keep the gates of Heiankyo).
  855. Konoeke Shoryo Mokuroku (list of land property of the Konoe family)
  856. Konoekebon *
  857. Konoeshi (The acting Imperial Guard delegate (Imperial delegate): This is because the Konoefu (Imperial Guard Office) used to be dispatched to the Kamo matsuri as an Imperial Delegate.
  858. Konoha-don (egg rice bowl with kamaboko)
  859. Konoha-don, also referred to as Konoha-donburi, is a kind of donburimono (rice dish) which is commonly served in Osaka and Kyoto area.
  860. Konohagata (a leaf-shape) Sentoki was used as a lance and Yuzetsu Sentoki (points with projection) was used as a dart.
  861. Konohana Sakuyabime made a vow saying, 'If this is a child of a Kunitsukami, then it will not be a safe birth. If the child is Amatsukami's, then the birth will be safe' (the "Kojiki").
  862. Konohana no Sakuyabime implies "Hana" (flower) that would soon fall, so it can be considered that she was a variation of a banana that would be eaten and gone.
  863. Konohana no Sakuyabime was a symbol of the prosperity of the descendents of the sun goddess and Iwanagahime was a symbol of long life, but since the latter was returned, the descendants (emperors) became short lived.
  864. Konohana no sakuya-bime
  865. Konohana no sakuya-bime became pregnant overnight, and Ninigi suspected that the child belonged to Kunitsukami (god of the land).
  866. Konohana no sakuya-bime is a goddess that appears in Japanese mythology.
  867. Konohana no sakuyabime means a woman as beautiful as flowers blossoming on a tree (cherry tree flowers).
  868. Konohana sakuyabime and Iwanagahime
  869. Konohana sakuyabime became pregnant overnight.
  870. Konohana sakuyabime giving birth.
  871. Konohanano sakuya bime
  872. Konohanano sakuya bime is also known as the 'deity of fire.'
  873. Konoikeshinden Station opened.
  874. Konomakuni-no-sho
  875. Konomi SASAHARA
  876. Konomi, death of Kokingo on the battle field, and sushi shop are performed in sequence.
  877. Konomoto-sai
  878. Konoshi
  879. Konoshi would also be worn by a family member of the Ashikaga shogunate on being appointed as a general.
  880. Konoshi' is the name used when it is worn by an imperial prince.
  881. Konoshima (lady-in-waiting associated with the Edo residence maintained by the Satsuma Domain, the end of the Edo period)
  882. Konoshimanimasu Amaterumitama-jinja Shrine
  883. Konoshimanimasu Amaterumitama-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located in Uzumasa, Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  884. Konoshimanimasu Amaterumitama-jinja Shrine means 'a shrine in Konoshima that enshrines the god Amaterumitama' and it originally enshrined 'Ameterumitamano-kami.'
  885. Konoshimanimasu amateru mitama-jinja Shrine ("Kaiko no yashiro" (shrine of silkworms))
  886. Konoshimanimasu-Amaterumimusubi-jinja Shrine (Kaiko-no-yashiro) near Koryu-ji Temple and Umenomiya-taisha Shrine in Umezu, Ukyo Ward and Matsuno-taisha Shrine in Arashiyama, Nishikyo Ward (both devoted to the deity of sake brewing) are also said to be connected to the Hata clan.
  887. Konoshimanimasu-amaterumitama-jinja Shrine (Kaikonoyashiro Shrine)
  888. Konoshiro (dotted gizzard shad): Sometimes excluded from the Shusseuo category
  889. Konoshita Kage Hazama Gassen
  890. Konoura, Oshima Village, Hirado City, 2008, port town
  891. Konoura, Oshima Village, Hirado City, Nagasaki Prefecture, port town
  892. Konowata
  893. Konowata (salted guts of sea cucumber)
  894. Konowata is also cooked with miso.
  895. Konowata is one of three major food and drink in Japan, together with sea urchin and karasumi (botargo.)
  896. Konowata is salted guts of a sea cucumber.
  897. Konowata produced in mid-winter or with long guts is considered of good quality.
  898. Konowata with warmed sake poured is called "konowata shu."
  899. Konoyo hajimatte nido to nai kuro dearu.' (It is the biggest hardship that the world ever has.)
  900. Konpeito (confetti)
  901. Konpeito has been a popular candy for children since long ago and so it is featured as the first item in the so-called 'Kazoe uta.'
  902. Konpeito has been used as party favors or commemorative gifts for various occasions by the Imperial Family.
  903. Konpeito is small ball-shaped candy with horn-like prongs on the surface made from sugar and flavored liquids.
  904. Konpeito is written in kanji characters such as: "金米糖" (golden rice candy), "金餅糖" (golden cake candy) and "糖花" (flower candy).
  905. Konpeito, along with rock sugar, is often packed in a tin of sea biscuits as emergency provisions.
  906. Konpeito, included in the emergency food package, provides calories necessary for physical work as well as effective in encouraging salivation to moisten sea biscuits when eating in which it would be easier to ingest.
  907. Konpeito, produced by such companies as Maruta Food Inc.
  908. Konpira
  909. Konpira (guardian deity of seafaring): 10th of each month
  910. Konpira (金毘羅) is a water god and demon god of Mt. Ryojusen in India, and is the head of the Juni Shinsho (the twelve protective deities) of Yakushi Nyorai (the Healing Buddha).
  911. Konpira in Shinto
  912. Konpira taxi in Tokushima Prefecture offers services with Hatsunori fare of 260 yen (for a medium-sized car, 280 yen for a full-size car)
  913. Konpon Chudo
  914. Konpon Chudo is the largest central hall of Hieizan Enryaku-ji Temple.
  915. Konpon Nyoho-to - A two-story pagoda, the current structure is a reconstruction from the Taisho era.
  916. Konpon-sonsu
  917. Konponchu-do Hall
  918. Konponchudo Hall (with Shumidan altar and 3 box shrines)
  919. Konponchudo Hall Corridor
  920. Konpuku-ji Temple
  921. Konpuku-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple belonging to the Nanzen-ji school of Rinzai Sect located in Ichijoji, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  922. Konren-ji Temple
  923. Konren-ji Temple, located in Kita Ward, Kyoto City, is a temple of the Ji sect.
  924. Konrin-in Temple
  925. Konrin-in Temple is a temple of the Tendai sect located in Koizumi-cho, Yamatokoriyama City, Nara Prefecture.
  926. Konryu-ji Temple, wooden standing statue of Bosatsu (important cultural property), Nara period
  927. Konsei-shin
  928. Konsei-shin, who is also called as Konsei-daimyojin or Konsei-sama, is the god representing a goshintai (object of worship housed in a Shinto shrine and believed to contain the spirit of a god) made of stone, wood or metal which is shaped like a phallus.
  929. Konshi Ginji Kegon-kyo Zankan (remaining part of Kegon-kyo Sutra in silver letters on dark-blue Paper) (also called Nigatsu-do Yakegyo)
  930. Konshi Kinji Kegon-kyo (Kegon-kyo Sutra in gold letters on dark-blue paper)
  931. Konshi Kinji Konkomyo-kyo (Konkomyo-kyo Sutra in gold lettering on dark-blue paper)
  932. Konshi Kondei Yakushikyo by Emperor Kokaku, to Sainin Shinno
  933. Konshikondei Hannya Shingyo - Written by Emperor Go-Nara
  934. Konshu-ji, 金鐘寺, is also written as 金鐘山房, 金鍾寺, 金鷲寺 or 金熟寺.
  935. Kontai (kon and tai) means Kongokai (Diamond Realm) and Taizokai (Womb Realm) which represent Esoteric Buddhism's way of seeing the world of cosmos.
  936. Kontai-ji Temple
  937. Kontai-ji Temple (Tojiin Nishimachi, Kita Ward)
  938. Kontai-ji Temple (Wazuka-cho, Kyoto Prefecture)
  939. Kontai-ji Temple Pagoda (Wazuka Town, Kyoto Prefecture), Important Cultural Property
  940. Kontai-ji Temple is at Wazuka-cho, close to the southeast end of Kyoto Prefecture, and is located on Mt. Jubuzan, of which the highest peak is 685 meters above sea level.
  941. Kontai-ji Temple, located at Harayama, Wazuka-cho, Soraku-gun, Kyoto Prefecture, is part of the Daigo school of the Shingon sect.
  942. Kontengi
  943. Konton-shisha was established in 1764, and Hokkai was recommended as the leader, and it quickly became the most active poetry club in Osaka.
  944. Konuka hada (very fine grain pattern)
  945. Konukayama-kofun Tumulus (Gifu Prefecture)
  946. Konwa-kai
  947. Konwa-kai refers to a faction within the Diet of the House of Peers under the Constitution of the Empire of Japan.
  948. Konyo
  949. Konyo (1798 - August 19, 1871) was a priest of the Jodo Shinshu (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) in the end of the Edo period, the 20th head priest of the Nishi Hongan-ji Temple, and daisojo (a Buddhist priest of the highest order).
  950. Konyo AOKI
  951. Konyo AOKI (June 19, 1698 to November 9, 1769) was a Confucianism scholar, and a Dutch scholar in mid Edo period.
  952. Konyo AOKI carried a language study research on the Dutch language, and wrote books such as "Japanese Dutch Translation", "Later Collection of Japanese Dutch Translation", "Japanese Dutch Article Translation", and "Brief Introduction to Japanese Dutch Words", etc.
  953. Konyo and Nobuhiro SATO
  954. Konyo classified the collected documents, transcribed them and brought them together as "Shoshu Komonjo" (ancient writings about provinces).
  955. Konyo originally had four sons and a daughter, but since all of them died early, he appointed Tokunyo (also known as Kojun (広淳)) who came from the Kensho-ji Temple (Yao City) as the new monzeki (successor of a temple) and Myonyo himself was assigned as the next successor of hoshu as an adopted son of Tokunyo.
  956. Konyo, the sixth chief priest, was also engaged in missionary work at Hokuriku, centered on Zuisen-ji Temple.
  957. Konzen-ji Temple Pagoda (Toyonaka City, Osaka Prefecture), Important Cultural Property
  958. Koo February 29, 1389 - March 26, 1390
  959. Kookimi
  960. Kookimi (date of birth and death unknown) was a female waka poet in the mid-Heian period.
  961. Koomote (young face) masks are modeled on the female face.
  962. Koomote, Kohime (young princess): pretty young girl
  963. Koon-ji Temple
  964. Koon-toka-ho (a high-temperature saccharification method)
  965. Koon-toka-ho is a Japanese sake-making method used today, in which the starch component of polished rice is gelatinized not by being steamed but by being heated at a high temperature, and then is fermented with the rice malt and yeast that is added at the next stage.
  966. Koon-toka-moto (the high-temperature saccharification method of sake mash)
  967. Koon-toka-moto is made by culturing yeast in cooled Amazake (sweet mild sake), which is made by keeping steamed rice, rice malt and water at a temperature of 50 to 60 degrees C, with yeast and lactic acid added in it.
  968. Koontokamoto (sake mash made using a high temperature saccharification method instead of steaming rice)
  969. Koori-Nishiyama Castle (Koori Town, Date County, Fukushima Prefecture)
  970. Koppo (a martial art with bare hands) (kakutogi)
  971. Koppo jutsu (a martial art with bare hands)
  972. Koppo jutsu…A martial art of fighting with bare hands.
  973. Kora Shrine, Aizuchi Shrine, Iwashimizusha, Otobira inarisha, Sanmyo Shrine, Mikumarisha, Hirotasha, Ikutasha, Nagatasha, Sumiyoshisha, Ichidosha, Tatsutasha, Kibunesha, Wakamiyasha, Wakamiyadensha, Kehisha, Mizuwakamiyasha and so on.
  974. Korai (Koguryo) type (one variety of Korean-type ishi-doro)
  975. Korai Chawan (Tea Bowl coming from Korea)
  976. Korai Daisu
  977. Korai Futeisho
  978. Korai Futeisho (a treatise on poetry-writing and the history of waka, written by FUJIWARA no Toshinari)
  979. Korai Futeisho is a textbook on poetry that was completed during the early Kamakura period.
  980. Korai chawan (originated in Korea)
  981. Korai chawan' was a product of this background and it first appeared in literature in "Matsuya Kaiki" (Record of tea ceremonies), where 'korai chawan' is described as being used in Sogo JUSHIYA's tea ceremony in 1537.
  982. Korai chawan, ido chawan, and mishima chawan (patterned by pressing tools)
  983. Korai mono (Korean pieces)
  984. Korai mono is the collective name of tea utensils made in Korean Peninsula in contrast to 'karamono,' Chinese tea utensils.
  985. Korai-ban Kegon-kyo Zuisho Engi Sho (The Subcommentary of Korean Kegon-kyo Sutra)
  986. Korai-bashi Bridge (Chuo Ward, Osaka City, Osaka Prefecture)
  987. Korai-bashi Bridge, Taniyama-do Road, the Area along the Sea Coast, and Nishida-bashi Bridge
  988. Korai-mon Gate
  989. Korai-mon Gate is a castle gate which started to be constructed during the Bunroku-Keicho War from 1592 to 1598.
  990. Korai-mon Gate is one of the gate types in Japan.
  991. Korai-mon gate: A cultural property designated by Oyamazaki-cho.
  992. Koraku OGAWA (the sixth generation)
  993. Koraku OKINAYA, currently fourth generation (who is now acting as a member of Okinaya's Waraku and Koraku combination).
  994. Koraku-en Garden (located in Okayama City, Okayama Prefecture)
  995. Koraku-en Garden, Okayama City, Okayama Prefecture.
  996. Koran: a handrail.
  997. Korea
  998. Korea - Spread to neighboring countries 2 -
  999. Korea Goodwill Ambassador to the Visit Japan Campaign: Younha (2007)
  1000. Korea Meteorological Administration announces tsuyuiri and tsuyuake of each region and carries out also forecast of tsuyuiri and tsuyuake in advance.


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