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

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

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  1. MINGEI (National Art) Movement is a movement started by the first issue of "Prospectus for establishment of the Japanese Folk Crafts Museum" in 1926.
  2. MINO no Ishimori
  3. MINO no Ishimori was a person of the Nara period.
  4. MINO no Namiuo
  5. MINO no Namiuo was a person of the Nara period.
  6. MINO no Obayashi
  7. MINO no Obayashi was a person of the Nara period.
  8. MINO no Otomasu
  9. MINO no Otomasu was a person of the Nara period.
  10. MINO no Sonoki
  11. MINO no Sonoki was a person of the Nara period.
  12. MINO no Umakai
  13. MINO no Umakai (馬甘) was a person of the Nara period.
  14. MISHIMA also constructed many other roads that horse-drawn buggies could pass, connecting Yamagata to neighboring prefectures.
  15. MISHIMA enforced it on the very day as Tokyo Metropolitan Police Commissioner.
  16. MISHIMA is the only Tokyo Metropolitan Police Commissioner who died during his term of office.
  17. MISHIMA was appointed Kenrei of Tsuruoka and Yamagata Prefecture.
  18. MISHIMA was arrogant toward the people and the measures he took against criticism were nothing but oppression, such as forcible taxation, the imposition of royaku (labor service) and forcing donations.
  19. MISORA Hibari Museum
  20. MISTER Zipangu (manga by Takashi SHIINA)
  21. MIURA also incorporated Norinaga's theory with his own, advocating that the phrase also means the whole legal system starting from the Taika Reforms to the laws created in the reign of Emperor Tenchi.
  22. MIURA no Heitaro Tametsugu
  23. MIURA said that it was originally called '父薬師' (pronounced chichiyakushi) after his father the Emperor Matsunaga and his forefather Imperial Prince Takayoshi.
  24. MIWA no Fumiya
  25. MIWA no Fumiya (the year of birth unknown - 643?) was a person in the Asuka period.
  26. MIWA no Kimisakashi
  27. MIWA no Kobito
  28. MIWA no Kobito (year of birth unknown - August, 676 in old lunar calendar) was a person who lived in the Asuka period of Japanese history.
  29. MIWA no Sakau
  30. MIWA no Sakau (year of birth unknown - May, 586) was a person of the Asuka era.
  31. MIWA no Sakau escaped and hid in the inner palace of Princess Kashiyaki-hime (Empress Suiko).
  32. MIWA no Sakau, a favorite retainer of the former Emperor, refused to let him in closing the gate.
  33. MIWA no Takechimaro
  34. MIWA no Takechimaro (year of birth unknown - February 3rd, 706) was a person of the Asuka Period in Japan.
  35. MIYAGI also developed a seventeen-stringed koto which has low tone like a cello and an eighty-stringed koto (a normal koto has 13 strings).
  36. MIYAJI no Iyamasu
  37. MIYAJI no Iyamasu was the Dairyo (chief magistrate of a district) in charge of Uji county in Yamashiro Province (present-day Yamashina Ward, Kyoto City).
  38. MIYAJI no Kunihira
  39. MIYAJI no Kunihira (year of birth and death unknown) was a Japanese military commander and gokenin (an immediate vassal of the shogunate in the Kamakura and Muromachi through Edo periods) who lived during the early Kamakura period.
  40. MIYAKE no Ihatoko' is the reading of his name in the old Japanese syllabary characters.
  41. MIYAKE no Iwatoko
  42. MIYAKE no Iwatoko (July 23rd, 680 ? year of birth unknown) was a person of the Asuka Period in Japan.
  43. MIYAKEHONTEN was established in 1856.
  44. MIYAKO no Sadatsugu
  45. MIYAKO no Sadatsugu (791-June 13, 852) was a government official (esp. one of low to medium rank) who lived in the early part of the Heian period.
  46. MIYAKO no Yoshika
  47. MIYAKO no Yoshika (834 - March 25, 879) was a literatus and kanshi (Chinese verse) poet who lived in the early Heian period.
  48. MIYOSHI no Nagahira
  49. MIYOSHI no Nagahira (1168 - May 3, 1244) was a court official during the early Kamakura period.
  50. MIYOSHI no Tamenaga
  51. MIYOSHI no Tamenaga (1007-September 14, 1081) was a court noble of the mid-Heian Period.
  52. MIYOSHI no Tameyasu
  53. MIYOSHI no Tameyasu (1049-August 29, 1139) was an aristocrat and Sando-ka (a professional of mathematics) who lived in the latter part of the Heian period.
  54. MIYOSHI no Yasunobu
  55. MIYOSHI no Yasunobu (also known as Yasunobu MIYOSHI) (1140 - September 3, 1221) was a court noble who lived from the end of the Heian period to the beginning of Kamakura period.
  56. MIYOSHI no Yasutsura
  57. MIYOSHI no Yasutsura (1193 - October 22, 1256) was a personal retainer to the shogun in the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) and judicial official during the first half of the Kamakura period.
  58. MIZOI entrenched himself in the castle alone, set fire to the castle and committed suicide with his sword.
  59. MIZUNO Jurozaemon…Gonjuro ICHIKAWA
  60. MIZUNO Shuzen, a chief vassal of the Mizuno family comes to Chobei's house.
  61. MOCHIZUKI retorted that "you were fortunate enough to seize Utsunomiya Castle, but wasn't the castle soon retaken?
  62. MOCHIZUKI who got annoyed by this arrogant attitude refused by saying, "I am a public servant so I cannot fight."
  63. MOJO WEST led to expand exchanges between external students and individuals at the Seibu-Kodo Hall.
  64. MOKUAN Shoto
  65. MOMO Kintetsu (Kintetsu Department Store Momoyama Store)
  66. MONONOBE no Arakahi
  67. MONONOBE no Arakahi (year of birth unknown - September, 536) was a member of Gozoku (local ruling family) during the Kofun Period (tumulus period).
  68. MONONOBE no Arakahi, who quelled the war, died in July in the first year of the Emperor Senka.
  69. MONONOBE no Emaro: a Toneri, active during the reign of Emperor Suiko.
  70. MONONOBE no Himuka
  71. MONONOBE no Himuka (years of birth and death unknown) lived during Japan's Asuka period.
  72. MONONOBE no Iwayumiwakugo, Kanayumiwakugo, and Kagehime were his children.
  73. MONONOBE no Maro was on the side of Prince Otomo (Emperor Kobun).
  74. MONONOBE no Moriya
  75. MONONOBE no Moriya and NAKATOMI no Katsumi (from the clan supportive of Shinto) believed that an epidemic started spreading due to having faith in God of a foreign country, and thus asked for its prohibition.
  76. MONONOBE no Moriya commanded his army and tried to surround MIWA no Sakau at Iware-ike Pond.
  77. MONONOBE no Moriya directly took over Omuraji, and SOGA no Umako became Omi.
  78. MONONOBE no Moriya was Omuraji (ancient Japan) (powerful local ruling family) during the Asuka Period.
  79. MONONOBE no Moriya, NAKATOMI no Katsumi, and others insisted that the plague was caused by worship of Buddhism by the Soga clan, and implemented a large-scale Haibutsu-kishaku (a movement to abolish Buddhism).
  80. MONONOBE no Muraji Maro came back from Silla.
  81. MONONOBE no Muraji was given the hereditary title of Ason.
  82. MONONOBE no Okoshi
  83. MONONOBE no Okoshi (date of birth and death unknown) was a member of Japanese powerful family in the middle of the sixth century.
  84. MONONOBE no Omae
  85. MONONOBE no Omae (the years of birth and death unknown) was a member of the Mononobe clan, an ancient powerful family, around the era of Imperial Court of Emperor Anko.
  86. MORI, Shigeaki. (2000). Go-Daigo Tenno: Nanboku-cho Doran o Irodotta Hao. Chuko Shinsho. ISBN 4-12-101521-5.
  87. MOTODA began compiling with Masakaze TAKASAKI and Masakata SENGOKU and more or less finished in the summer of 1881, however, there was a debate whether to adopt cases from the West or not.
  88. MOTODA stressed that true education was to imprint the virtues of humanity, justice, loyalty to their masters and filial piety on children's minds before they were given knowledge.
  89. MOTOORI advocated the transaction by real things and although it is difficult to call his idea the theory of kikoku (respecting rice), but it is the theory of senkin (abhorring money).
  90. MOTOORI thought that, the formulation of the code, nevertheless, was not attributed to the work of Kotoku but to the achievement of Tenchi, because at that time the central role of the system reform was played by Prince Naka no Oe.
  91. MOVIX Kyoto
  92. MSAOKA UJI (clan)
  93. MUKAIJIMA GAKUSEI CENTER
  94. MUNAKATA no Kiyouji
  95. MUNAKATA no Kiyouji (宗形 清氏) was a member of the Japanese Imperial Family who was the first chief priest of Munakata-taisha Shrine (Munakata City, Fukuoka Prefecture).
  96. MUNAKATA no Tokuzen
  97. MUNAKATA no Tokuzen was a local ruling family in the Munakata region, Fukuoka Prefecture.
  98. MUNAKATA no Ushishi
  99. MUNAKATA no Ushishi was a local ruling family in Munakata (present Munakata City, Fukuoka Prefecture).
  100. MURAKUNI no Komushi
  101. MURAKUNI no Komushi (year of birth and death unknown) was a figure who lived during Japan's Nara period.
  102. MURAKUNI no Komushi accompanied the Emperor, and separately from the promotions given out to the Emperor's attendants on the occasion of the Emperor's departure on the eighteenth day of the twelfth month, Komushi was promoted to Ge-jugoinoge.
  103. MURAKUNI no Muraji Oyori died in July, 676.
  104. MURAKUNI no Mushimaro
  105. MURAKUNI no Mushimaro (year of birth and death unknown) was a figure who lived during Japan's Nara period.
  106. MURAKUNI no Oi
  107. MURAKUNI no Oi (year of birth and death unknown) was a figure who lived during Japan's Nara period.
  108. MURAKUNI no Oyori
  109. MURAKUNI no Oyori (99,170 square meters), FUMI no Nemaro and WANIBE no Kimite (79,336 square meters for each), FUMI no Chitoko (39,668 square meters), and OKISOME no Usagi (49,585 square meters)
  110. MURAKUNI no Oyori (date of birth unknown - July 676) was a person who lived in the Asuka Period.
  111. MURAKUNI no Oyori, after defeating Prince Otomo and setting up a camp in Awazu no Oka, slew INUKAI no Ikimi and TANI no Shiote with his sword on the next day.
  112. MURAKUNI no Shigamaro
  113. MURAKUNI no Shigamaro (year of birth and death unknown) was a figure who lived from Japan's Asuka period into the Nara period.
  114. MURAKUNI no Shigamaro was his son.
  115. MURAKUNI no Shigamaro was known to be Oyori's son, but whether Shigamaro was Shimanushi's father remains uncertain.
  116. MURAKUNI no Shimanushi
  117. MURAKUNI no Shimanushi (year of birth unknown - October 23, 764) was a figure who lived during Japan's Nara period.
  118. MURAMATSU, Takeshi. (1981). Teio Go-Daigo "Chusei" no Hikari to Kage. Chuko Bunko. ISBN 4-12-200828-X.
  119. MURAOKA argues that Ieyasu became a different person at this point and makes reference to an account written on September 14, 1612 in the "Records of Sunpu Government" by Razan HAYASHI.
  120. MURAOKA argues that Motoyasu's followers did not consider the infant to be an equal match for the ODA and IMAGAWA Clans, so they allowed Motonobu SERATA to lead the MATSUDAIRA Clan until Nobuyasu grew up.
  121. MURAOKA argues that the tomb of Nobuyasu in Hamamatsu City is modest and that no reburial has been done because Nobuyasu was not Ieyasu's biological child.
  122. MURAOKA asserts that the legend of Kiyoyasu's assassination was told to disguise the death of Motoyasu.
  123. MURAOKA asserts the following:
  124. MURAOKA believes that the imposter who replaced Ieyasu was Jokei SAKAI, a gannin Buddhist priest who was later known as Jiro Saburo Motonobu SAKAI.
  125. MURAOKA distinguished Ieyasu from Motonobu SERATA and assumed that Ieyasu was a wanderer like Soun HOJO.'
  126. MURAOKA presumes that Jokei SAKAI was born after that time.
  127. MURAOKA quotes the following from the book:
  128. MURAOKA suggests that Motonobu may have exacted this punishment in revenge for the late Kazumasa.
  129. MURAOKA's book was sold for 25 sen, but only 500 copies were issued before it went out of print and it was never reprinted.
  130. MURAOKA's work was like the raw materials of a novel.'
  131. MUSASHI no Takeshiba
  132. MUSASHI no Takeshiba (dates of birth and death unknown) was a member of a local ruling family in the mid Heian period.
  133. MUTSU no Rokuro Yoshitaka are men, young Yoritaka MORI announced.
  134. MUTSUGE no Hiro
  135. MUTSUGE no Hiro (date of birth and death unknown) was a man who lived during the Asuka Period.
  136. MUTSUGE was of a Mutsugenokuni no miyatsuko descent (the heads of local governments in ancient Japan) and a powerful local clan in Muge District (later became Mugi District), Mino Province.
  137. Ma (room), jo(one sheet of tatami), tsubo (3.3 square meters/tsubo), square meters, eat-in kitchen, LDK
  138. Ma Gui reached Suwon City together with four warrior groups of Deputy Admiral Kaisei, the ranger Gyu, Yang, and Haki (pronunciation unconfirmed) leading 2,000 experienced horsemen, and set out for Shokusan on the 16th.
  139. Ma became engaged to Juzo SAKUMA, who was the vassal of Katsuie SHIBATA, and began to live in Kitanosho-jo Castle in 1582.
  140. Ma-di-gu (the number of poems unknown each having eight lines of five characters): This gu is the gu which lost its characters in the Jingkang incident and less than 20 characters can be read from the Song rubbed copy and interpretation of its poems was given up from the first.
  141. Ma-kyogen
  142. Maa escaped out of the castle and returned home to the Maeda family.
  143. Maa made the following waka (a traditional Japanese poem of thirty-one syllables) at that time:
  144. Mabi-cho, Okayama Prefecture
  145. Mabo curry (curry-flavored Sichuan style bean curd)
  146. Maboroshi (The Wizard)
  147. Maboroshi (The Wizard) (The Tale of Genji)
  148. Maboroshi is one of the fifty-four chapters of "The Tale of Genji."
  149. Mabuchi advocated that Shinto, or Kannagara no Michi (Shinto, way of Gods), was the main way of heaven, earth, and nature, as descended since ancient times, but it had become turbid due to Buddhism and Confucianism which were introduced later.
  150. Mabuchi instructed him to begin with the commentaries on the oldest existing collection of Japanese poetry "Manyoshu" in order to become familiar with a form of syllabary used in the Manyoshu.
  151. Mabuchi only knew the half of the charm of Sanetomo's poems, and he might not have known the other half.
  152. Mabuchi rejected Confucian thought and believed that the true spirit of the ancient Japanese was to be found in the "Manyoshu", devoting his life to researching it.
  153. Mabuchi was also a good teacher and his disciples include Norinaga MOTOORI, Hisaoyu ARAKIDA, Chikage KATO, Harumi MURATA, Nahiko KATORI, Hokiichi HANAWA, Matatsu UCHIYAMA, Hijimaro KURITA and Shigekiko MORI; their school was called Agatai.
  154. Mabuchi was his pseudonym, named after his birth place Fuchi County, and he also called himself 淵満.
  155. Mabuchimaru
  156. MacArthur, Assistant Chief of Staff Sutherland and Acheson, political adviser to the Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers, agreed and they put Konoe in charge of revising the constitution.
  157. Macao and Hong Kong (from April 7 to April 28),
  158. Macartney requested the Qing dynasty to conclude a treaty based on the principle of European diplomacy, namely the principle of sovereign equality.
  159. Maccha (Matcha) (Hikicha) (=>tea ceremony)
  160. Maccha (green tea)
  161. Maccha (powdered green tea) is made by grinding this tencha in a stone mill.
  162. Maccha products are on sale only during the period of higan (equinox) and obon festivals (available in other periods than the higan and obon festivals by ordering a certain quantity of products).
  163. Maccha, brought by Eisai, who spread the Zen sect of Buddhism, and Dogen, who brought it as a medicine, spread along with Zen during the Kamakura period and increased the concept of spiritual training.
  164. Macha (powdered green tea) (=> tea ceremony)
  165. Machi (Cho) of four rows running east-west (except for the northern two rows) were called 'Jo,' and Machi of four rows running north-south were called 'Bo.'
  166. Machi MOKU was from a prestigious clan in Baekje; however, his grandchild's name was Goryeo which referred to the kingdom of Goguryeo.
  167. Machi fushin refers to the development of the public infrastructure of a town, though, unlike mura fushin, it was supported financially by chonin or odana and was carried out by a staff of specialists, and therefore was not widely (fu) asked (shin) for.
  168. Machi fushin:
  169. Machi named his child "Karako," (means Korean) and Karako, in turn, named his own child, who would later father Iname, "Koma" (means Goryeo), both of which are distinctly exotic names.
  170. Machi-Nushi was a familiar name for a town headman.
  171. Machi-asobi Festival (August)
  172. Machi-bugyo (town magistrate)
  173. Machi-bugyo adopted a policy to restrain the expansion of the town but it was in fact the case that until then end of the Edo period, a situation continued in which the city's expansion preceded any ratification by the machi-bugyo or the yoriki (police sergeants) who were responsible for assessing the propriety of new town planning.
  174. Machi-bugyo was a name of a governmental post in the Edo period that was in charge of administration and judicature in an urban area (called machi-kata) in a territory.
  175. Machi-doshiyori (ward head: Osaka and other region)
  176. Machi-gaisho' (community kaisho) of a machigai was used as an office or a gathering place in the community.
  177. Machi-koji Street
  178. Machi-koji Street was a street that was central to the townspeople of Kyoto in the middle ages, and was lined with doso (underground warehouses).
  179. Machi-shu
  180. Machi-shu (also known as Cho-shu) was a class consisting of wealthy commercial and industrial men, including doso (pawnbrokers and moneylenders), in Kyoto from the Muromachi period to the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States) in Japan.
  181. Machi?zuki (Waiting for the Moon) and Ryosho no zu (Painting of Comfortable Moonlit Night), 1926
  182. Machiai (waiting space) and roka (corridor)
  183. Machiai-chaya (tea houses that rented rooms in which visitors and geisha could amuse themselves)
  184. Machiai-chaya is an industry which offers rental rooms used for waiting for others and gatherings.
  185. Machidai
  186. Machidai originally represented Kyoto citizens as a manager of town officials; Later, it became authorized to act as a proxy in execution of secretarial works of the Kyoto city magistrates, gradually recognized as a subordinate organization of the city magistrates.
  187. Machidai, a townsman who originally represented the Kyoto citizens, gradually built up a position in the Kyoto city magistrates' office, and also formed relationship with the court nobles, temples, and shrines, which were quite influential in legislature and administration of Kyoto.
  188. Machikata and Mawarikata-doshins as well as doshin under the investigation division for arson and organized robbery often used their private pawns called okappiki or meakashi as an investigation assistant and information source.
  189. Machiko Kyo, Kinuyo TANAKA, and others appear in the movie.
  190. Machiko OGIMACHI (a concubine of Yoshiyasu YANAGISAWA) was his sister.
  191. Machiko OGIMACHI in the Genroku Era during the Edo Period was the daughter of Sanetoyo OGIMACHI and a concubine of Yoshiyasu YANAGISAWA.
  192. Machilus thunbergi
  193. Machinami Denshokan (Townscape Museum)
  194. Machinami Hozon-kan, Sagatoriimoto Kyoto City
  195. Machine used to throw stones
  196. Machine-made Torinoko
  197. Machine-made hand-made style noodles
  198. Machine-made noodles
  199. Machines for issuance of the starting-station certificate were put into operation at Otani Station and Kamisakaemachi Station.
  200. Machines that grind sumi called sumi grinding machines are sold commercially.
  201. Machino-machi, Wajima City, Ishikawa Prefecture
  202. Machiya (Merchant House)
  203. Machiya (town houses)
  204. Machiya are small in width at the entrance and long in depth, often with a passage running through from the front of the house to the back.
  205. Machiya fushin:
  206. Machiya houses of the common people in urban areas are depicted on picture scrolls and others in the early feudal period.
  207. Machiya is a house of common people in town.
  208. Machiya or Choka (町家) is a term used to refer to popular style houses in Kyoto in which residence and retail store functions are combined.
  209. Machiyakan (the birthplace of a politician, Tokutaro KIMURA)
  210. Machiyakunin (Municipal Official)
  211. Machiyumi (literally waiting and shooting): Shooting arrows at an enemy or game after long periods of waiting.
  212. Mackerel
  213. Mackerel captured in Wakasa Bay and sprinkled with salt were said to become delicious while being carried to Kyoto overnight without sleep, and they became popular among ordinary people in Kyoto, who would wait for them.
  214. Macromolecular Science and Engineering
  215. Mada shiranu/Hito mo arikeru/Azumaji ni/Ware mo yukite zo/Sumu bekarikeru (Someone, it seems/Had not yet heard./Better for me had I too/Journeyed to an eastern province/And made it my home.)
  216. Madam (of Kadoebi)
  217. Madame Giry (The Phantom of the Opera (1986 Musical))
  218. Madame Kimiko is the Secretary General in the same organization
  219. Madame Myoren gave birth to the third daughter Kameju who would later become female castellan of Kokubu-jo Castle (Osumi Province).
  220. Madara-jiso, f. rosea (G.Nicholson) Kudo
  221. Made a fundamental plan for improving landscape of trails on Mount Fuji in Kawaguchiko Town (1993).
  222. Made a fundamental plan for landscape of the Sano Hot Spring (2002).
  223. Made a fundamental plan for the residence of Kameda (2004).
  224. Made by Busshi Kosho (statue maker), this is an excellent work from the Momoyama period, a time when Buddhist statue making was in decline in Japan.
  225. Made by Johannes Klais Orgelbau GmbH & Co. KG, Germany.
  226. Made by KURATSUKURI no Tori.
  227. Made by acetic acid fermentation.
  228. Made by adding sugar and mirin (sweet cooking rice wine) to soy sauce before leaving to stand for a while.
  229. Made by boiling black rice.
  230. Made by boiling grains in water or milk.
  231. Made by boiling rice in hojicha tea (roasted green tea).
  232. Made by boiling rice in milk.
  233. Made by boiling rice in water without any other ingredients.
  234. Made by cooking yam or sweet potato in rice kayu.
  235. Made by kneading together wheat flour and alkaline water solution containing no buckwheat flour, yakisoba (fried noodles) is also referred to as a type of 'soba.'
  236. Made by putting kirizuma hafu (gable built on a kirizuma) directly on the roof of fukioroshi (the extension of a roof or the elongation of eaves on the main part of a building in order to cover an adjacent area).
  237. Made by stepping on barakasu or itakasu in a tank, forcing out air, and allowing it to mature (ferment) for four to six months.
  238. Made by wrapping red bean paste in a lightly fried skin made from a batter consisting of rice flour or glutinous rice flour mixed with wheat flour like a crepe.
  239. Made during the end of the Nara period to the beginning of the Heian period (late 8th to early 9th century).
  240. Made from a single piece of wood and has a hollow cavity carved inside to prevent the wood from cracking.
  241. Made his debut on the stage playing a role of a kid among tachishu (the walk-on's) in 'Narihira-mochi' (業平餅: ARIWARA no Narihira and the Rice Cakes) in 1933
  242. Made his debut on the stage playing a role of a kid in 'Narihira-mochi' (業平餅: ARIWARA no Narihira and the Rice Cakes) in 1983
  243. Made in 1064 by Buddhist statue maker Chosei.
  244. Made in 1977.
  245. Made in Jianyao, Fujian Province.
  246. Made in large amounts for the troops to eat, it was flavored with easy-to-use tomato ketchup under policies typical to the Army.
  247. Made in the early Heian period (9th century).
  248. Made in the early Heian period, in the 9th century.
  249. Made in the early Heian period.
  250. Made in the late Heian period.
  251. Made in the later years of the Kamakura period.
  252. Made into Kabuki (traditional drama performed by male actors)
  253. Made many sacred grounds in Tohoku, such as Osore-zan Mountains.
  254. Made no Koji dono (named after the place where the Palace is located)
  255. Made of a bamboo, komabue is a Japanese flute having six holes on its face.
  256. Made of a wooden board on which an ogre, specter and a bad fellow were drawn, and it had a mechanism that moved depending on where the arrow hit.
  257. Made of ceramic, Height: 8.8 cm
  258. Made of cross-grained cedar slates.
  259. Made of enchanted copper and plated with gold, 510 characters are inscribed in 24 rows describing the reason for and history behind the burial of scriptures.
  260. Made out of bodies of Hokyoin pagoda or multi-storied pagoda, featuring the relief of Buddha on sides.
  261. Made out of the cornerstone of an old building, and there are many different shapes.
  262. Made to take the responsibility of this defeat, he was dismissed.
  263. Made up of samurai from each domain.
  264. Made using a cloth woven from kudzu fiber.
  265. Made using only sakekasu or sakekasu mixed with miso (fermented soy bean paste).
  266. Made with azuki beans, which have been cooked until soft, boiled with rice.
  267. Madeira Island (from December 11 to December 15, 1852),
  268. Madras Presidency College (Chennai (India)) (2 persons): Chandrasekhara Venkata Raman, Subramanyan Chandrasekhar
  269. Mae Noh Shite (main roles of the first half in the Noh play): a fisherman, (Tsure [companions who appear with the main actor in a Noh play]: another fisherman)
  270. Mae Noh Shite-kata (main role of the first half in the Noh play): Shizukagozen
  271. Mae-Shite (lead role of the first half): Village woman (incarnation)
  272. Mae-Shite (leading role in the first half): Grass-cutter
  273. Mae-Shite (the leading role in the first half of a Noh play) - Jo (Lieutenant)
  274. Mae-Tsure (companion of Mae-Shite): Grass-cutter
  275. Mae-chirashi' is inserted before tegoto.
  276. Mae-ishi
  277. Mae-shite (the leading role in the first half of a noh play) in plays such as "Aoi no Ue."
  278. Maebashi Domain: Maebashi-jo Castle and Musashi-no-kuni Kawagoe-jo Catsle
  279. Maebashi Hachimanyama-kofun Tumulus (the length of the burial mound 130.0 meters, Gunma Prefecture)
  280. Maeda Toshiro, short sword, owned by Maeda-Ikutokukai, Tokyo
  281. Maeda group: Seison MAEDA (1885 - 1977), Chihiro KONDO, Tadashi MORIYA, and Ikuo HIRAYAMA; the walls No. 3, No. 10, and No. 12.
  282. Maedabon
  283. Maedake manuscript: Maeda Ikutokukai Sonkeikaku bunko bon (in a hand attributed to Tamesada NIJO)
  284. Maedare
  285. Maedare (also 'Maedara' in Edo dialect), sometimes known as Maekake, was a cloth worn by shop workers or housemaids to protect their clothes from dirt, which hangs from an obi, a kind of belt for a kimono.
  286. Maedare for men use mostly quiet colors such as black or blue, while those for women use a variety of brighter colors, especially red as trademark of maids.
  287. Maedare has a simple design of an oblong cloth with a string attached to the upper part to tie around the hips.
  288. Maedares were traditionally made of a plain, simply-woven cloth but these days there is a wider variety, including pieces dyed elaborately so that a name of a shop is revealed in white.
  289. Maegahata-toge Pass (Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture)
  290. Maegahata-toge Pass (a pass on a national route in Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City)
  291. Maegahata-toge Pass is a pass on a national route in Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  292. Maegasu Station was renamed Yatomi Station.
  293. Maejima Minato-koen (the Maejima port park)
  294. Maejima Wharf (前島埠頭)
  295. Maejima Wharf is located in Maizuru Port in Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  296. Maemachi-dori Street
  297. Maemigoro
  298. Maemigoro: The parts that come front among the parts of Nagagi without the parts of sleeves.
  299. Maesaka Pass
  300. Maesaka Pass (a pass in Kita Ward, Kyoto City)
  301. Maesaka Pass is a pass in Kita Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  302. Maesaka Pass is closely-linked to Kyomi-toge Pass.
  303. Maesashi: kanzashi which is inserted into the both sides of the bangs (around both temples).
  304. Maewari settles shochu and water, so once already-diluted shochu is warmed, it tastes mellower than oyuwari.
  305. Mafu Bosatsu (Shoso-in Treasure Repository), the Nara period
  306. Mafuchakushoku Kichijoten-zo (portrait of Kichijoten)
  307. Maga means disaster, tsu means 'of,' and hi means divine spirit, thus Magatsuhi means god of disaster.
  308. Magaibutsu (Buddha statues in cliffs and rocks)
  309. Magaibutsu in Japan
  310. Magaki (Japanese oyster), for which Hiroshima is famous, is usually used for kaki furai, but after its season (from fall to winter), iwagaki (another type of oyster) in turn comes into season (spring to summer), allowing us to eat kaki furai throughout the year.
  311. Magana (Manyo-gana - a form of syllabary used in the Manyo-shu or Collection of Myriad Leaves)
  312. Magari
  313. Magari no Jin
  314. Magariya (Iwate Prefecture)
  315. Magatama
  316. Magatama (also written with the characters for "curved jewels") have been used for personal adornment in Japan since ancient times.
  317. Magatama (comma-shaped beads)
  318. Magatama and diplomacy
  319. Magatama are also called "曲玉 (magatama)", curved jewels.
  320. Magatama of jadeite are often found during the excavation of tombs from the early part of the Kofun Period.
  321. Magatsuhi no kami
  322. Magatsuhi no kami (evil gods) and Naobi no kami (gods of restoration) are the original deities, as mentioned in the "Gogun Jinja-ki" (Record of Shrines in Five Counties).
  323. Magazines (monthly and weekly magazines), free papers, and kawaraban (commercial news-sheet of the Edo period)
  324. Mage (chignon) became larger and wider as seen in Shimada-mage and Katsuyama (for yujo [prostitutes]), while sideburns became more puffed up downward, which introduced nukiemon (pulled back collar) at this time.
  325. Mage was tied by putting hair around it and the side which originally tapered off became a stick of same width with the other side.
  326. Mage-wappa (bentwood) in Odate City, Akita Prefecture
  327. Mage-wappa in Hinoemata-mura, Fukushima Prefecture
  328. Magemono (bentwood work)
  329. Magemono in Nakano Ward, Tokyo Metropolis
  330. Magemono in Narai-juku, Kiso
  331. Magemono in Osaka City, Osaka Prefecture
  332. Magemono in Shiojiri City, Nagano Prefecture
  333. Magemono in Utsunomiya City, Tochigi Prefecture
  334. Magemono is said to have been used as a daily commodity since ancient times.
  335. Magemono of hiba (type of Japanese cypress) in Fujisaki-machi, Aomori Prefecture
  336. Magemono products in Tsubame City (former Yoshida-machi), Nigata Prefecture
  337. Magesashi is seen in most types of Japanese coiffure.
  338. Magesashi: Kanzashi which is inserted into the base of mage at the front.
  339. Magic by Koji KASHIN, according to tradition, includes the following:
  340. Magic show
  341. Magical factors of obi
  342. Magiri officials headed by jito-dai (deputy Jito) were stationed in bansho by rotation.
  343. Magistrate for arms and Edo Jofu (a Daimyo's retainer who remained permanently in Edo with their lord's family) with an estate of 150 koku (newcomer).
  344. Magistrate of the county as well as the pictorial map - Matanojo-Takanori USHIODA (200 koku)
  345. Magistrates of spear - Jurozaemon INAGAWA (a little over 220 koku), Heisuke HAGIWARA (150 koku), Jiroemon KOBAYASHI (150 koku)
  346. Magistrates: Nagayori HASE, Hidemasa HORI, and Hidekazu HASEGAWA
  347. Magnesium
  348. Magnetically levitated railway/linear motor train (there are some linear motor trains that are not levitated and thus belong to 1. Common railways, for example, steel-wheel linear motor train)
  349. Magnificent beard Ikyu and a courtesan Shiratama enter the hanamichi.
  350. Magnificent clothing
  351. Magobe SODA
  352. Magodayu Shigemori OKUDA
  353. Magoemon YOKOI's legitimate child, yoriai more than 1000 koku Magotaro YOKOI.
  354. Magoemon is a townsman, but is disguised as samurai.
  355. Magohashi-dori Street
  356. Magohashi-dori Street is a street running east-west through the western part of Sakyo-Ward, Kyoto City.
  357. Magoichi SUZUKI was one of the most powerful leaders in the Saigashu that barricaded themselves inside of the Ishiyama Hongan-ji Temple, and as Magoichi himself was a follower of Hongan-ji Temple, he was extremely trusted by Hongan-ji Temple.
  358. Magokoro-ni-Ikiru (lyrics and music by Kosetsu MINAMI)
  359. Magokumamaru was killed by Korezumi ASO (husband of Koretoki's daughter).
  360. Magokuro Masatoki MASE
  361. Magonojo TERAO and his younger brother Kumanosuke (Motomenosuke) were Musashi's disciples in Kumamoto and demonstrated great ability in familiarizing Niten Ichi-ryu Heiho in the Kumamoto domain of Higo Province.
  362. Magoshichi, Gappo who is in fact Yajuro TAKAHASHI - Mitsugoro BANDO the third
  363. Magoshichiro SUGI
  364. Magoshichiro SUGI (February 13, 1835-May 3, 1920) is a Japanese samurai, from the Choshu Domain.
  365. Magotaro (Yoshinori) SHIBUKAWA, a former Tenmonkata, was employed by Seigaku-kyoku.
  366. Magotaro UMEZAWA
  367. Magozaemon KONAYA:
  368. Magozaemon SEO
  369. Magozaemon SUEYOSHI
  370. Magozaemon SUEYOSHI (1570 to May 1, 1617) was a great merchant in Osaka who was very active in Shuinsen Boeki (trading by ships with a shogunal charter for foreign trade) during the early Edo period.
  371. Magpie
  372. Magura Station - Nishi-Maizuru Station - Higashi-Maizuru Station
  373. Magura, Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture
  374. Maguro (tuna): Despite being called by different names, they are not called Shusseuo)
  375. Maguro no zuke (tuna soaked in soy sauce)
  376. Magurobushi (dried tuna)
  377. Maguwa: a tool for plowing paddy fields drawn by a horse or ox.
  378. Mah-jong
  379. Maha kala has three aspects; namely, those relating to battle, good fortune, and the underworld.
  380. Maha kala, an incarnation of the Hindu deity Shiva, was adopted into the Indian Mikkyo religion.
  381. Mahakasyapa was a disciple from Brahman society and regarded as a hoshi (successor of Buddhism) of Shakyamuni, and his legend called nenge misho (heart-to-heart communication (literally, "holding a flower and subtly smiling")) is seen in "Mumonkan" (The Gateless Gate), books of the Zen sect in Sung.
  382. Mahakasyapa's smile symbolizes the preaching of Zen Buddhism that the truth is beyond all verbal explanation, and Zen Buddhism maintains that through this wordless sermon Buddha entrusted the eternal truth of Buddhism to Mahakasyapa.
  383. Mahavira (the originator of Jainism)
  384. Mahayana Buddhism
  385. Mahayana Buddhism advocates 'no increase, no decrease' and 'no beginning, no end' as the development of Kuron (theory of Ku (mind that is not bound by anything)).
  386. Mahayana Buddhism is a sect of Buddhism that has been traditionally practiced in central and eastern Eurasian Continent.
  387. Mahayana Buddhism is further distinguished into Gonkyo and Jitsukyo.
  388. Mahayana Buddhism maintains a, stance based on an assumption that the Satori of others is proceeded by ones own enlightenment.
  389. Mahayana Ordination Hall
  390. Mahayana priest in India
  391. Mahayana sutras promised all people in the world religious salvation in the future, just as rain brings benefits to all farmers in summer.
  392. Mahayana's creed is superior as compared to so-called geten (non-Buddhist writings).
  393. Mahiro TAMAMATSU
  394. Mahiro TAMAMATSU (April 20, 1810 ? March 23, 1872) is a scholar of Japanese classical literature at the end of the Edo period.
  395. Mahito
  396. Mahito (真人) is one of the kabane (hereditary titles) enacted by Yakusa no Kabane (the eight honorary titles).
  397. Mahito clans who lost political value gradually disappeared from the political world.
  398. Mahito died at the age of 59 on September 27, 805.
  399. Mahito was one of the Yakusa no Kabane established in 684 and was top grade kabane.
  400. Mahoroba Hana yeast
  401. Mai ("まい", or "まひ" as written in old kana) refers to a performing art whereby dancers move around the stage while performing various choreographed movements including walking in suriashi (sliding steps) to the accompaniment of songs and music.
  402. Mai (a formal, traditional Japanese dance), and Classical Japanese dance
  403. Mai (dancing) (a story of an ignorant man who heard a libretto of mai)
  404. Mai Dance
  405. Mai KITAJIMA
  406. Mai KURAKI performed live in the precinct of Heian-jingu Shrine during the first Kyoto Intercollegiate Festa in October 2003.
  407. Mai bakama
  408. Mai dance: Kabuki dance and Kamigata dance
  409. Mai dances are mainly dances which include circling movements in time with melodies.
  410. Mai is said to be classical kagura (shinto music and dance) with the addition of arts introduced from China and requires specialist techniques as compared with the dances (odori) originating from the common people.
  411. Mai of Ryochukan no ji mono (mai-goto based on Ryochukan (repeated four-line score of Japanese flute)
  412. Mai offered at a ritual performed at the Imperial Court
  413. Mai performed at festivals of the people
  414. Mai performed in a Japanese-style room
  415. Mai-goto (concerns Noh dance)
  416. Mai-goto depending on an independent score
  417. Mai-goto in Kyogen (a farce played during a Noh cycle)
  418. Mai-goto in Noh are largely classified into dai-sho mono (a type that uses big and small hand drums), which is accompanied on fue (Japanese flutes), Kotsuzumi (small hand drums) and otsuzumi (big hand drums); and taiko mono (a drum-using type), in which drums are included among the instruments for playing the music.
  419. Mai-goto means abstract acts (mai) that, in Noh, the shite (an actor playing the leading part), tsure (a supporting actor) and waki (the partner of a shite) perform accompanied solely by the hayashi (music played in the background), mostly in the latter half of a Noh or a Kyogen (a farce played during a Noh cycle) play.
  420. Mai-jitaku (Preparation for Dance) (a set of two), 1914
  421. Mai-ogi (a fan used for Japanese dance)
  422. Mai-ogi (fan for Japanese dance)
  423. Mai-ogi (folding fan used in a Japanese dance)
  424. Mai-ogi are not always used in Japanese dances, and some Japanese dance programs need other types of folding fans such as chukei (ceremonial folding fans) and gunsen (fans used by ancient commanders).
  425. Maiami (Tea ceremony)
  426. Maibara City
  427. Maibara Station - Kyoto Station - Shin-Osaka Station
  428. Maibataraki
  429. Maibataraki is a performance resembling maibataraki in Noh and used for Fukujinmono, pieces of Gods of Good Fortune, such as "Ebisu Daikoku" (Two Happy Gods) or Ozeimono such as "Kasen" (The Six Famous Poets).
  430. Maibayashi (An abbreviated presentation from Noh in which the main part is performed by the protagonist, the Noh chorus and the Noh musicians in Montsuki-hakama without masks.)
  431. Maibito (dancer) of performances, such as kagura (sacred music and dancing performed at shrines), had the strings down from the left shoulder, most likely because it was less obstructive than from the right shoulder.
  432. Maido Okini Shokudo of Fujio Food System Co., Ltd started to add the gyudon to its menu and offer the regular size for 280 yen.
  433. Maigetsusho (Monthly Notes)
  434. Maigetsusho (The Monthly Commentary)
  435. Maigetsusho (The Monthly Commentary) is a treatise on waka poetry written by a kajin (waka poet) FUJIWARA no Teika in 1219.
  436. Maihime (The Dancing Girl) ("Kokumin no tomo" (The Nation's Friend)), January 1890.
  437. Maiko (apprentice geisha) wear hanging Kanzashi, which is more splendid than the ones for geigi (geisha), her senior.
  438. Maiko (apprentice geisha, dancing girl)
  439. Maiko Haaaan!!!
  440. Maiko Monogatari (The Story of Apprentice Geisha, 舞妓物語)
  441. Maiko and Geigi in Kyoto
  442. Maiko customarily visit dressing rooms on the occasion of a kaomise performance (traditional kabuki performance in Kyoto) and asks her favorite actor to sign the 'maneki' of her kanzashi.
  443. Maiko in Kyoto
  444. Maiko is mainly in charge of dancing at ozashiki and performs the dancing of Kyomai Inoue school in Gion Kobu district and other dancing such as the Wakayagi school in other districts.
  445. Maiko makeover
  446. Maiko whose career is less than a year wear kanzashi to which small flowers and 'bura' (a hanging ornaments) are attached and from the second year onward, she wears kanzashi with no bura.
  447. Mail Hall - Wayo style building constructed in 1371, important cultural property
  448. Mail and telephone service ? Chosen Sotoku-fu, Communication bureau
  449. Mail and telephone service ? Nanyo-cho, Transportation department, Communication Section (Telephone service was transferred to International telecommunication later.)
  450. Mail and telephone service ? Taiwan Sotoku-fu, Transportation bureau, Communication department
  451. Mail and telephone service ? The Ministry of Communication
  452. Mail marked 'Nenga' in red during the period is separately forwarded to each post office in charge of the mailing address, and is stored there until January 1.
  453. Mail service ? The Ministry of Communication, Kwantung Communication bureau
  454. Mail, and door-to-door delivery service
  455. Maimai House, a child center in Kanzaki
  456. Main Achievements
  457. Main Beliefs
  458. Main Branch Families of the Minamoto Clan
  459. Main Brands
  460. Main Buddhist memorial services
  461. Main Building
  462. Main Buildings
  463. Main Businesses having headquartered in Yawata City
  464. Main Campus (Koyama Kamifusacho, Kita-ku, Kyoto City)
  465. Main Characters
  466. Main Chokugan-ji Temples
  467. Main Compound
  468. Main Connecting Roads
  469. Main Densho
  470. Main Desiccated Foods
  471. Main Differences with Kidzania
  472. Main Doboshu
  473. Main Entrance
  474. Main Events
  475. Main Events (as of 2005)
  476. Main Examples of Dried Fish
  477. Main Examples of Karamete-mon Gate
  478. Main Examples of Ranpeki
  479. Main Facilities along Itsutsuji-dori Street
  480. Main Facilities along Kamishichiken-dori Street
  481. Main Facilities along Kizuyabashi-dori Street
  482. Main Facilities along Manshuin-michi
  483. Main Facilities along Sakuranobanba-dori Street
  484. Main Facilities along Shimogamo Naka-dori Street
  485. Main Facilities along Shimogamo Nishi-dorii Street
  486. Main Facilities along Shin Karasuma-dori Street
  487. Main Facilities along Tonodan-dori Street
  488. Main Facilities along the Street
  489. Main Facilities on the Street
  490. Main Festivals
  491. Main Figures
  492. Main Fuseya
  493. Main Gate: designed by Tokuma KATAYAMA, completed in 1895, an important cultural property
  494. Main Hall
  495. Main Hall (Abbot's Quarters, Important Cultural Property)
  496. Main Hall (Important Cultural Property)
  497. Main Hall (Miei-do) (including corridor)
  498. Main Hall (National Treasure)
  499. Main Hall (National treasure)
  500. Main Hall (Sairai-do): Constructed in 1969 and enshrines the principal image of Amida Nyorai.
  501. Main Hall (guest hall): Once housed sliding panel paintings believed to be the work of Tohaku HASEGAWA but these were lost as a result of the anti-Buddhist movement at the beginning of the Meiji period.
  502. Main Hall (honden/shinden)
  503. Main Hall (including entrance hall)
  504. Main Hall (large abbot's chamber) (Important Cultural Property)
  505. Main Hall ? The Godai Kokuzo Bosatsu statues that are the objects of worship were brought from Tang China, and are said to have been worshiped at Qinglong Temple.
  506. Main Hall: 1654 - Built in a distinctive style called Gion-zukuri, it combines the main hall and the worship hall (separate buildings at most shrines) under one Irimoya Yane roof.
  507. Main Ingredients
  508. Main Kaido developed for district-specialty products
  509. Main Ken Asobi were 'kazuken' (finger number game) and 'sansukumi-ken' (a three-cornered deadlock finger game).
  510. Main Kofun similar in size and scale, tomb mounds contents of the King, or Emperor
  511. Main Kumigashiras
  512. Main Line
  513. Main Literary Works:
  514. Main Masterpieces
  515. Main Models
  516. Main Obo (also pronounced, "O-no-haka": Tombs of the King, Emperor, Queen) mounds during this period
  517. Main Part
  518. Main Poems in Seven-and-five Syllable Meter
  519. Main Points of Interest
  520. Main Prizes He Won
  521. Main Products
  522. Main Programs
  523. Main Rangakujuku
  524. Main Reasons for Diminishing Territory
  525. Main References
  526. Main Remainders
  527. Main Remains
  528. Main Roads
  529. Main Roadside Facilities
  530. Main Ryotei
  531. Main Sanctuary
  532. Main Shigi Kempo (Private Draft for National Constitution)
  533. Main Shingaku scholars
  534. Main Shingaku schools
  535. Main Shrine, Ishi-no-ma (a stone room), worship hall, Raku-no-ma room (all combined into one building)
  536. Main Songs in Seven-and-five Syllable Meter
  537. Main Stalls
  538. Main State Shinto policies
  539. Main Store in Shinkyogoku
  540. Main Street in Haborland, Kobe City, Hyogo Prefecture
  541. Main Sub-temples
  542. Main Taishimichi includes followings:
  543. Main Techniques
  544. Main Temples and Facilities Located Roadside
  545. Main Tumuli
  546. Main Tunnels
  547. Main Varieties
  548. Main Vassals
  549. Main Work
  550. Main Works
  551. Main activities
  552. Main articles on Kaido
  553. Main attractions
  554. Main bacteria are Lactobacillus fructivorans, L. hilgardii, L. paracasei, L. rhamnosus etc. of the Lactobacillus genus.
  555. Main branches are cylindrical and have a thickness of 3-4 mm.
  556. Main building
  557. Main building (hojo, 'abbot's quarters')
  558. Main building of the shrine
  559. Main building: 4, Yoshidaushinomiya-machi, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City
  560. Main building: Completed in 1887; a two-storey shoin (reception room) style building with sohinoki-zukuri (built with only a Japanese cypress), yosemune-zukuri (hipped roof), and kawarabuki (tiled roof); the Imperial throne is on the second floor; the total amount of floor space is 500 square meters and the construction cost was 10,000 yen (at the time of the construction).
  561. Main buildings Registered as Cultural Property in Makabe Town
  562. Main business is in the supermarket business rooted in the area.
  563. Main business places
  564. Main categories
  565. Main cathedrals except for a lecture hall of Akishino-dera Temple was burned down in 1135.
  566. Main ceremonies
  567. Main characteristics of the translation are as follows:
  568. Main characters
  569. Main characters appeared in Nakatsumaki
  570. Main characters appeared in Shimotsumaki
  571. Main characters in the sequel changed to Prince Umayado's and Emishi's children, and it described the fall of the Umayado family once famed for Jogu Oke.
  572. Main collection
  573. Main collections
  574. Main collections (before the sale in 2003)
  575. Main collections.
  576. Main companies selling Yatsuhashi
  577. Main constituents of powdered green tea are as follows:
  578. Main constructions are Entrance hall, Oshoin, Koshoin, kuri (monastery kitchen), and goma-do Hall (a hall for the goma (holy fire) rites).
  579. Main contents
  580. Main contents of the law
  581. Main contents of the treaty
  582. Main contributors include Tameuji NIJO, Sanekane SAIONJI, FUJIWARA no Tameie, and FUJIWARA no Sadaie.
  583. Main deposited articles
  584. Main descendants
  585. Main differences from Ogura Hyakunin Issu
  586. Main differences were the outer form of the gun barrel (round, horn tube), the thickness, the length, the form of gunstock, the karakuri (inside and outside of karakuri), the foresight and so on.
  587. Main different views are as follows:
  588. Main dramas in which TAIRA no Kagekiyo appeared
  589. Main enshrined deity (主祭神): Ono-no-okami (Amanoshitaharu-no-mikoto)
  590. Main enshrined deity: Chichibu-no-okami (Yagokoroomoikane-no-mikoto, Chichibuhiko-no-mikoto)
  591. Main enshrined deity: Hikawa-no-Okami (Susanoo-no-mikoto, Inadahime-no-mikoto)
  592. Main enshrined deity: Kanasana-no-okami (Amaterasu-omikami, Susanoo-no-mikoto)
  593. Main enshrined deity: Ogawa-no-okami (Kuninotokotachi no Mikoto (eternal god of the land))
  594. Main enshrined gods
  595. Main entrance portions can be found in Kawagoe castle and Matsumae castle.
  596. Main episode
  597. Main events
  598. Main examples are Kyuden, Chonan-cho, Chosei-gun, Chiba Prefecture, Kyuden, Sedagaya Ward, Tokyo, Kyuden, Shimokanuki, Numazu City, Shizuoka Prefecture.
  599. Main exchangers formed the 'Honryogae Nakama' (Association of Main Exchangers) in Edo, the 'Junin Ryogae Nakama' (Association of 10 Exchangers) in Osaka, and each agreed on gold exchange rates, etc.
  600. Main exhibition room
  601. Main facilities
  602. Main facilities along the Konoe-dori Street
  603. Main facilities along the Street
  604. Main facilities along the road
  605. Main facilities along the street
  606. Main facilities near the intersection
  607. Main facilities.
  608. Main facility along Shinmonzen-dori Street
  609. Main factor
  610. Main famiy yashiki-gami: Only specific old families within a community have a yashiki-gami which is worshipped.
  611. Main features
  612. Main features of Meiji Tsuho bills
  613. Main festivals
  614. Main figures
  615. Main floor exhibition hall
  616. Main garden: Chisen Kaiyushiki Teien Garden, in which tsukiyama (small hill), pond and fountain, and dry fountain are harmonizing with splendid rock arrangement and pine trees.
  617. Main gate
  618. Main gate (Ogonkaku) (cultural property designated by Miyazu City)
  619. Main gate pillars were set up around 1936 and have been used since then.
  620. Main gate: Constructed in 1661.
  621. Main gate: Reconstructed in the mid Edo period
  622. Main gate: Thought to be the Yakui-mon gate (a gate where one roof covers both the main front pillars and the rear support pillars) relocated from Fushimi-jo Castle
  623. Main gods appear in Kamitsumaki (Volume 1)
  624. Main graduates
  625. Main guests were the actors who played on the third floor.
  626. Main hall
  627. Main hall (Goei-do Hall)
  628. Main hall (Important Cultural Property)
  629. Main hall (Important Cultural Property): Constructed in 1691.
  630. Main hall (Kaizan-do): A hosangen (the length between front pillars and those of side pillars are three squared mats) yosemune-zukuri style (hipped roof on a square building) building with a pantile roof.
  631. Main hall (National Treasure): Constructed in 1107.
  632. Main hall (Zao-do Hall) (Important Cultural Property) - It is called Zao-do of Sange as compared to the main hall of Ominesan-ji Temple of Mt. Sanjogatake (Zao-do of Sanjo).
  633. Main hall (a tangible cultural property designated by Kyoto City)
  634. Main hall (abbot's chamber) (including entrance hall): Was constructed in 1513 to serve as the retirement retreat for Kogaku Soko and the oldest abbot's chamber in Japan after those of Ryogin-an of Tofuku-ji Temple.
  635. Main hall (hojo)
  636. Main hall (hojo) (tsuketari an entrance)
  637. Main hall (hojo) including entrance hall
  638. Main hall (including 2 ridgepole plaques) : Built during the Edo period
  639. Main hall (including a miniature shrine, an old ridge beam and a ridgepole sign)
  640. Main hall (large abbot's chamber)
  641. Main hall - Cultural Property designated by Nara Prefecture
  642. Main hall - Kamakura period
  643. Main hall ? A very unique style with three gables at the front and three halls in a row, the middle hall built in Kasuga-zukuri style and the remaining two in Nagare-zukuri style
  644. Main hall and Bankaro corridor
  645. Main hall garden: Named Genji Garden and features white sand, moss and Chinese bellflowers.
  646. Main hall, constructed in 1797
  647. Main hall, the Kojindo hall, the Chinju-sha shrine, Shoin (reception room), Gansuiken (tea ceremony room), Kyakuden (reception hall), Kuri (building where priests live), gateway
  648. Main hall: Around 1350.
  649. Main hall: Completed in 1774
  650. Main hall: Constructed by the order of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA and repaired in 1990 when its richly colored carvings were restored
  651. Main hall: Constructed in 1717.
  652. Main hall: Constructed in 1815 and designated a tangible cultural asset by Kyoto City.
  653. Main hall: Izanami (Izanamino mikoto), Haniyasu (Haniyasuhimeno kami), Amenokumahitono mikoto, Wakumusubi (Wakumusubino kami), Toyoukebime (Toyoukehimeno mikoto)
  654. Main hall: Nationally designated an Important Cultural Property, rebuilt during in the mid Kamakura period and houses a statue of the Thousand-armed Kannon.
  655. Main hall: Rebuilt in 1700 using funds donated by Keishoin, the mother of Tsunayoshi TOKUGAWA.
  656. Main hall: Rebuilt in 1735 and designated a Cultural Property by the Kyoto Prefectural Government.
  657. Main hall: Rebuilt in 1774.
  658. Main hall: Reconstructed during the Meiji period.
  659. Main hall: Reconstructed in 1521
  660. Main hall: Reconstructed in the mid Edo period
  661. Main hall: Restored in 1606 and topped by a formal tile hip-and-gable roof.
  662. Main hall: Said to be the relocated remains of Fushimi Castle-jo and the ceiling of the corridor to the left, right and front is known as the bloody ceiling.
  663. Main hall: Said to have been relocated from Sento Gosho-palace by the order of the Emperor Kokaku.
  664. Main hall: Shinmei tsukuri (style of shrine architecture based on that of Ise-jingu Shrine)
  665. Main hall: The building reconstructed in 1987 that houses the Heian period seated statue of Amida Nyorai.
  666. Main hall: The kyakuden (reception hall) of Momoyama-jo Castle that was relocated to its current site during the Keicho era (1596-1615).
  667. Main horses belonging to the Heian cavalry
  668. Main image (left): Seishi Bosatsu (Seishi Bodhisattva)
  669. Main image (right): Kannon Bosatsu (Kannon Bodhisattva)
  670. Main image: Amida Buddha
  671. Main industries
  672. Main industries.
  673. Main ingredients
  674. Main items that Bunkokuho regulated were control over farmers, discipline for retainers, control over temples and shrines, lawsuits about land, military service, and so on.
  675. Main kagakusho (a book on the study of waka poems)
  676. Main line (the figure in parentheses represents the operation kilometer from Amagasaki Station)
  677. Main manzai
  678. Main mihashira-torii
  679. Main name was not detailed (Main name was unknown).'
  680. Main new Kuni no miyatsuko
  681. Main nishiki-e-shinbun
  682. Main office of the city hall is located in Higashi-Maizuru.
  683. Main part
  684. Main part of Kinki region.
  685. Main parts
  686. Main person responsible for refurbishing was Katsuyoshi MATSUDAIRA
  687. Main person responsible for refurbishing was Tadataka KYOGOKU.
  688. Main person responsible for refurbishing was Toyonobu YAMAUCHI.
  689. Main person(s) responsible for repairs/refurbishing is unknown.
  690. Main personnel affairs
  691. Main persons of complicity of Hidetsugu's seppuku
  692. Main persons responsible for refurbishing were Ieharu YAMAZAKI and Takakazu KYOGOKU.
  693. Main persons responsible for refurbishing were Motochika MIMURA and Katsumune MIZUTANI
  694. Main persons responsible for refurbishing were Takatora TODO and Munetoshi DATE.
  695. Main places of production
  696. Main poets: OTOMO no Tabito, OTOMO no Yakamochi, YAMANOUE no Okura (famous for his poems "Bingu-mondoka"), and YAMABE no Akahito
  697. Main pool (50mX25m, 10 courses, movable floor, a seating capacity of approximately 2,200)
  698. Main pool (international B class certified, 50 x 25 m, 10 lanes each 2.5 m wide, 0 to 3 m deep with movable floor, about 2,200 seats)
  699. Main posts
  700. Main producing areas:
  701. Main production areas
  702. Main production regions were concentrated in the Kinki region mainly including Yuasa town which was stated above and Sanuki Province (Hiketa Town, Shodo-shima Island).
  703. Main programs
  704. Main published books
  705. Main purposes of the dispatch of Tosen
  706. Main receivers
  707. Main regional road
  708. Main results
  709. Main rink (60 m x 30 m)
  710. Main role: Okina (old man)
  711. Main route
  712. Main routes other than Gokai-do Roads
  713. Main sanctuary
  714. Main sanctuary of the Kasuga-jinja auxiliary shrine
  715. Main shihai monjo
  716. Main shingu
  717. Main shop of Tenkaippin Ramen
  718. Main shop, Doyu-cho, Sakaimachi-dori Sanjo-dori sagaru, Nakagyo Ward, Kyoto City, 205 seats in total
  719. Main shrine
  720. Main shrine (1872)
  721. Main shrine that enshrines Haraedo no Okami
  722. Main shrines
  723. Main shrines dedicated to Sukunabikona
  724. Main shrines where Kinomata no kami is enshrined
  725. Main shrines where Tsumatsu-hime is enshrined
  726. Main stages
  727. Main station in the town: Sonobe Station
  728. Main station: Higashi Maizuru station of JR West Maizuru Line and Obama Line.
  729. Main station: Oe Station
  730. Main stations
  731. Main streets in the ward
  732. Main sutras
  733. Main temple: Hoju-in Temple (in Koya-cho, Wakayama Prefecture)
  734. Main temples and sub-temples that were used to supervise temples were also part of Jikaku.
  735. Main texts
  736. Main tombs of Shucho
  737. Main tourist spots
  738. Main tournaments
  739. Main traffic that connects Kyoto and Shiga
  740. Main treasures
  741. Main tumuli
  742. Main types
  743. Main types of mochi
  744. Main unit: Hidetaka KAWAJIRI, Hideyori MORI, Moritaka MIZUNO, and Tadashige MIZUNO
  745. Main uses of Jidenshu
  746. Main uses of Jizake
  747. Main uses of akazake
  748. Main water routes
  749. Main works
  750. Mainerudesupotto (2003 -)
  751. Mainerumonsuta (2002 -)
  752. Mainichi Broadcasting System, Inc.: Although many people imagine that Hankyu is the company that took part in launching Kansai Telecasting Corporation, it was also involved in opening the station of Mainichi Broadcasting System, formerly the Shinnihon Broadcasting System.
  753. Mainichi Film Awards
  754. Mainichi shimbun netsuzo hodo jiken (Incident of fabricated report by Mainichi Shimbun)
  755. Mainland China
  756. Mainland China and Taiwan
  757. Mainly Kurama Denki Tetsudo's own cars, equipped with electric brakes, were operated up to Kurama, while cars on the Eizan Line were running on a comparatively flat section up to Nikenchaya, but sometimes electric cars, Type DENA 21 of Eizan Line were also used up to Kurama.
  758. Mainly Tocha and occasionally Sarei was performed in Kaisho.
  759. Mainly a sheet of kitchen wrap, aluminum foil, Japanese paper, and others are used.
  760. Mainly according to the description in "Kugyoubunin."
  761. Mainly along Imadegawadori Street and Higashioji Street, old book stores, restaurants, cafes and the like stand, contributing to the atmosphere of the student town.
  762. Mainly based on "Kojiki" (The Records of Ancient Matters).
  763. Mainly before the Battle of Sekigahara
  764. Mainly created tea sets for green tea and powdered green tea.
  765. Mainly described below is the Ninsokuyoseba set up on Ishikawa-jima Island, Edo.
  766. Mainly due to this reason peasants started off for Tokyo on September 26, 1898 for the third mass demonstration.
  767. Mainly during the Bunka era, he was active as a player of jiuta shamisen and so (or koto) and a composer.
  768. Mainly for deeds related to lands; when a deed was lost, a person wrote down the source of his or her right, and petitioned his or her superior about it.
  769. Mainly for nature science classes.
  770. Mainly from the Battle of Sekigahara to Kanei era
  771. Mainly government officials of ministries in Kyoto except ministers were appointed.
  772. Mainly in Tohoku and Hokkaido regions, there is a remaining forestry custom in which no one works in the mountain and woods on December 12 (or on January 12 in some regions).
  773. Mainly in charge of financial affairs in the Oda family, he was also a talented diplomat, seeking to make peace with Hongan-ji Temple.
  774. Mainly in the Kansai region, donburimono using beef is called "tanin-don."
  775. Mainly in the Kansai region, merchants competed with each other to attach splendid udatsu to their houses as an indication of their financial power.
  776. Mainly in the daytime, a two-car local train of Series 113 runs approximately every hour without a conductor on board in the section between Sasayamaguchi and Fukuchiyama.
  777. Mainly in the end of the late Yayoi period, square front, square back funkyubo, which were the prototype of square front, square back tomb mounds, began to be built.
  778. Mainly in western Japan, large-amount transactions were conducted in "shoryo ginka" or silver coins which were hallmarked pieces of cupelled silver mined from a silver mine and whose real values were determined by their weight (mass).
  779. Mainly initiated by the Association of Japanese Gardens, research on old gardens and investigations of new gardens were conducted by contemporary architects, gardeners, and the garden producers.
  780. Mainly it appears from under the sea and floats above the sea and some of them are lined up or stay on seashore trees.
  781. Mainly of the court's nobles opposed this doctrine, so the new government only performed Imperial visitation in Osaka.
  782. Mainly on Saturdays and Sundays, the distillery holds seminars on single malt whisky's knowhow and charms.
  783. Mainly out of pursuit of practicability, calligraphic style changed from Kikko jukotsu moji (ancient Chinese characters inscribed on oracle bones and tortoise shells) to Kinsekibun (words written on metal or stones), from Shoten (a style of Chinese characters) to reisho-tai (clerical script) and sosho-tai (cursive style writing).
  784. Mainly over the Muromachi period and the Sengoku period (period of warring states), they were granted as an unofficial name of government post to vassals who had made military exploits and achievements by shugo daimyo (shugo were Japanese provincial military governors, that became daimyo, which were Japanese feudal lords) and daimyo (Japanese territorial lord) in the Sengoku period.
  785. Mainly pike soldiers fought in actual fighting.
  786. Mainly rind part of the fruit is used.
  787. Mainly sardines and Japanese horse mackerels are caught landing at Maizuru Port, and recent years, they try to sell local iwagaki (oyster) caught in near Maizuru water with the brand name 'Maizuru Kaki Oyster.'
  788. Mainly seen in Tenshu construction.
  789. Mainly she appeared in the three chapters of 'Hahakigi' (The Broom Tree), 'Utsusemi,' and 'Sekiya' (The Gatehouse).
  790. Mainly the Zen sect followed this system.
  791. Mainly the actual Satomi clan is honored in this festival but Princess Fuse and the eight Dog Warriors appear in the fancy-dress parade.
  792. Mainly they are caught in Ehime, Tokushima, Hiroshima, Kochi, Hyogo, Wakayama, Aichi and Shizuoka Prefectures.
  793. Mainly used as a tool of pleasure for gambling during the Edo period.
  794. Mainly used for pleasure by kuge during the Heian period.
  795. Mainly used for the measurement related with kimono.
  796. Mainly used in Shinto events (weddings and ground-breaking ceremonies), it is a table made of plain wood.
  797. Mainly warlords of the Taira family (it was uncommon for the Minamoto clan)
  798. Mainly, a female role performs this dance.
  799. Mainly, it was widely and commonly used to convey the emperor's intention.
  800. Mainly, tea utensils, such as tea caddies, leaf-tea jars, and hanging scrolls, along with respective owners, are listed according to their ranks from the highest one, revealing the tea utensil hierarchy at the time.
  801. Mainly, this dance is for a female role.
  802. Mainly, this series was compiled by Ukichi TAGUCHI and edited by Katsumi KUROITA.
  803. Mainstream bento now available, such as Makunouchi-bento, reflects the traditional Japanese dietary habit of having rice as staple diet.
  804. Mainstream instant miso soup products have been those with fresh miso.
  805. Maintaining a close relationship with activists from the domain of Choshu, Sanetomo and Kintomo ANEGAKOJI, as court nobles of the Sonno-joi-geki-ha (a group of Sonno-joi extremists), urged the Shogunate to stage a war against foreigners and planned Emperor Komei's trip to Yamato (Yamato Gyoko).
  806. Maintaining his people well, his land and peasants were rich, whereas Naganori is also written he really liked women.
  807. Maintenance
  808. Maintenance Management
  809. Maintenance cost of Shinkansen lines were shouldered by each JR company, and the Shinkansen Holding Corporation collected only the fees of lending the facilities.
  810. Maintenance of Public Order
  811. Maintenance of kiseru
  812. Maintenance of suzuri
  813. Maintenance of the information environment, and a shift to strict assessment of school records
  814. Maintenance of the remains and restoration of the buildings are in progress based on 'Tokubetsu shiseki heijokyuseki hozon seibi kihon koso' (Special Historic Site Heijo-kyu Site Preservation and Maintenance Project) settled by the Agency for Cultural Affairs.
  815. Maintenance procedure
  816. Maintenance project
  817. Maintenance' of Kodo
  818. Maiodori, kagura (sacred music and dancing performed at shrines)
  819. Maishima-jo Castle was once located in Makishima-cho, Uji City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  820. Maison (fashion)
  821. Maisorusaundo (2008 -)
  822. Maisosai (interment rite)
  823. Maitake Bento (Nagaoka Koyoken)
  824. Maitreya Bodhisattva in Manas in a Semi-Lotus Position
  825. Maitreya Bodhisattva in manas in a semi-lotus position came to Japan when Miroku (Maitreya) worship was imported from China in the sixth through the seventh centuries, and many statues created in the Asuka and Nara period still remain in Japan.
  826. Maitreya Magaibutsu was lost in the Genko no hen, the Genko Incident; at present, the outline of boat-shaped halo remains.
  827. Maitreya means 'amicable, friendly and merciful (person)' in its derived adjective and noun.
  828. Maitreya with berretta: at the Reiho-den of Koryu-ji Temple in Uzumasa, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture; woodcraft
  829. Maiwashi spawn in the southern sea of Japan between February and March, and those small fish are caught between March and May on the Pacific side and in the Seto Inland Sea.
  830. Maize porridge is known as ?ganci in Croatia, M?m?lig? in Romania and mush in North America.
  831. Maizuru
  832. Maizuru (name of a city in Kyoto Prefecture) kabu
  833. Maizuru Akarenga sokogun (Red Brick Warehouses) (Twelve Brick Warehouses)
  834. Maizuru Bay
  835. Maizuru Branch Office of the Plant Protection Station
  836. Maizuru Chiegura (Maizuru Wisdom Warehouse)
  837. Maizuru Chinju-fu (Maizuru navy base) was established on October 1, 1901.
  838. Maizuru Chinjufu (Maizuru Naval Base) was established in Maizuru in 1901.
  839. Maizuru Chinjufu (Maizuru Naval District)
  840. Maizuru Chinjufu was Chinjufu (navy base) of Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) located in Maizuru City, Kyoto.
  841. Maizuru City
  842. Maizuru City Commemoration Hall
  843. Maizuru City Hall
  844. Maizuru City Local Museum
  845. Maizuru City Office, West Branch Office
  846. Maizuru City also built the Maizuru Port Toretore Center, a wholesale shop for marine products.
  847. Maizuru City bought the land of the former Seibu Farm, and the city is now transforming it into a park, with 15.5 ha currently open to the public out of the total area of 43.7 ha.
  848. Maizuru City has many national branch offices as the city is the northern center of economy and administration for Kyoto Prefecture, while also possessing the port of Maizuru.
  849. Maizuru City has no domestic friendship town(s).
  850. Maizuru City has the largest number of existing pre-war brick structures in Japan, and some of these buildings such as a group of warehouses are lit up during the evening to create a fantastic and romantic view.
  851. Maizuru City is poised to tackle these issues through administrative reform in its policies.
  852. Maizuru City local history museum
  853. Maizuru City local history museum is a history museum specializing in the history of Maizuru City, located on the second floor of the Maizuru City civic hall, Kitatanabe, Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  854. Maizuru City which is the center of the urban area has long been positioned as the central city for military and administration, and recently has been developing as a commercial city.
  855. Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture
  856. Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture declared the city to be the "birthplace of nikujaga" in October, 1995.
  857. Maizuru City, Miyazu City, Ayabe City, Kyotango City, Nantan City, Kyotanabe City, Kizugawa City, Hikone City, Nagahama City, Omihachiman City, Takashima City and Nagoya City
  858. Maizuru City, the center of the urban area, has a few educational institutes including high schools, that is only one national high school (Maizuru National College of Technology), two public schools, and one private school, and consequently the daytime population is not necessarily large in statistics.
  859. Maizuru City: Maizuru Chinjufu (a navy base) was the first place of Heihachiro TOGO's assignment as Admiral, and the oldest existing recipe of nikujaga was donated to Maizuru District Headquarters by the deceased who used to be a cook on a naval vessel belonging to Maizuru Chinjufu.
  860. Maizuru Coast Freight Office Station officially opened.
  861. Maizuru Coast Guard Air Support Center (Kitakinki Coast Guard Air Support Center)
  862. Maizuru Crane Bridge
  863. Maizuru Crane Bridge, measuring 735 meters in length and about 95 meters in height measured from the level of the water, is a white cable-stayed bridge over Maizuru Taira Bay, a repatriation base after the Second World War.
  864. Maizuru Domain was originally called Tanabe Domain of the Tango Province, but the name overlapped with Tanabe Domain of the Kii Province.
  865. Maizuru Ferry Terminal
  866. Maizuru Fisheries Research Station (Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture)
  867. Maizuru Fishermen's Cooperative
  868. Maizuru Fururu Farm
  869. Maizuru Fururu Farm is an agricultural park located in Sezaki, Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  870. Maizuru Fururu farm
  871. Maizuru Higashi Interchange
  872. Maizuru Higashi Port (Maizuru East Port)
  873. Maizuru Hikiage Kinenkan (Maizuru Repatriation Memorial Museum)
  874. Maizuru Kaki (oyster)-don Rice Bowl dishes, Maizuru Iwa-gaki (oyster)-don Rice Bowl dishes,
  875. Maizuru Kaki Oyster
  876. Maizuru Kamaboko (Fish Minced and Steamed)
  877. Maizuru Kamaboko Cooperative Society (Furusato Maizuru Bin)
  878. Maizuru Kamaboko is a specialty of Maizuru City, having Maizuru Port, as the sea gateway in the northern part of the Kinki region, and the kamaboko is made by traditional methods, mincing fish (including white croakers) caught along the coast of the Japan Sea near Maizuru, and it is popular as a gift item.
  879. Maizuru Kanpo no Yado inn
  880. Maizuru Kanzaki Beach Tourist Office (舞鶴神崎浜観光協会): phone: 0773-82-5120
  881. Maizuru Kyosai Hospital
  882. Maizuru Line
  883. Maizuru Line * This station is basically the terminal station but, using the Sanin Line, some of the local trains go to Fukuchiyama and all of the limited express trains go to Kyoto.
  884. Maizuru Line and Obama Line of West Japan Railway Company cross the city, while the west part of the city is served by the Kitakinki Tango Railway, Miyazu Line.
  885. Maizuru Line was constructed by the Government where railway lines were generally constructed privately at the time, due to the needs to hasten completion because of the coming Russo-Japanese War.
  886. Maizuru Line was opened.
  887. Maizuru Line was succeeded by the West Japan Railway Company on April 1, 1987 and in 1991, the Maizuru Railway Department in charge of the Maizuru Line was newly organized as part of JR West.
  888. Maizuru Marine Observatory
  889. Maizuru Municipal Administrative Museum
  890. Maizuru Municipal Kanzaki Elementary School
  891. Maizuru Municipal Yuragawa Junior High School
  892. Maizuru Natural Park
  893. Maizuru Natural and Cultural Gardens
  894. Maizuru Natural and Cultural Park
  895. Maizuru Nature Cultural Park
  896. Maizuru Nature Cultural Park is a park with 30,000 camellias of approximately 1500 varieties and 50,000 hydrangeas of 50 kinds.
  897. Maizuru Nature and Cultural Park
  898. Maizuru Nishi (Maizuru West) Interchange located on Maizuru Wakasa Expressway.
  899. Maizuru Nishi Port (Maizuru West Port)
  900. Maizuru No. 4 and No.10 are made up of A + D.
  901. Maizuru No.3 and No.9 are made up of C +D.
  902. Maizuru Office, NSG
  903. Maizuru Plant of Hinode Kagaku Kogyo Kaisha, Ltd.
  904. Maizuru Plant of Kirin Beverage Company, Limited
  905. Maizuru Plant, Shinryo Corporation
  906. Maizuru Police Station (former Maizuru West Police Station)
  907. Maizuru Port
  908. Maizuru Port - Otaru Port (six times a week)
  909. Maizuru Port -Tomakomai Port (irregular)
  910. Maizuru Port Pleasure Boat
  911. Maizuru Port Pleasure Boat - the boat circles in Higashi Maizuru Bay from Higashi-maizuru Sanjo Coast.
  912. Maizuru Port Toretore Center
  913. Maizuru Port Toretore Center is at Maizuru Port which produces seafood in abundance from the Sea of Japan and is the largest fish industry center in Kyoto Prefecture.
  914. Maizuru Port is designated as a Specified Port.
  915. Maizuru Port was developed as the main port for the Kinki region on the Japan Sea side, and a long-distance direct ferry route has operated since 1970 between this port and Otaru Port in Otaru City, Hokkaido Prefecture.
  916. Maizuru Port, located in Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a key port.
  917. Maizuru Port, which faces the Japan Sea and is located in the western part of the Wakasa Bay within Maizuru Bay, is known as a suitable port, due to its formation as an inlet off the open sea and is less subject to weather conditions.
  918. Maizuru Power Plant's PR Hall 'El Mar Maizuru'
  919. Maizuru Prefecture
  920. Maizuru Prefecture is a prefecture established in 1871 based on the policy of Haihan-chiken (abolition of feudal domains and establishment of prefectures).
  921. Maizuru Prefecture was established under the policy of Haihan-chiken and lasted only three months.
  922. Maizuru Red Brick Festa (in October)
  923. Maizuru Red Brick Warehouses
  924. Maizuru Red-brick Warehouses - consists of 12 old red-brick buildings
  925. Maizuru Repatriated Museum
  926. Maizuru Repatriation Memorial Museum
  927. Maizuru Safety Department
  928. Maizuru Sakana Matsuri Festival (October)
  929. Maizuru Sea Park
  930. Maizuru Seaside Park
  931. Maizuru Shinkai Koen (Maizuru Sea Park)
  932. Maizuru Shinkai Park
  933. Maizuru Shinkai Park (Maizuru Sea Park)
  934. Maizuru Shinkai Park (Maizuru Sea Park) is a park in Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  935. Maizuru Shinkai-koen Park
  936. Maizuru Shisei Kinenkan (Maizuru City Commemoration Hall): 12 brick warehouses
  937. Maizuru Shisei Kinenkan (Maizuru City Commemoration Hall): a group of twelve brick warehouses
  938. Maizuru Shisei Kinenkan (Maizuru Municipal Government Memorial Hall) (12 buildings of Maizuru red brick warehouses)
  939. Maizuru Shisei Kinenkan (twelve warehouses made of brick)
  940. Maizuru Sightseeing Bus "Please"
  941. Maizuru Sightseeing Round-trip Bus 'Please Go' (プリーズ号) takes you to this Tower.
  942. Maizuru Suisan Kaikan Hall
  943. Maizuru Tanabe-jo Matsuri Festival (May)
  944. Maizuru Tourist Association (within the Group for creating attractive town of the Industrial Development Office of Maizuru city hall) (Phone: 0773-66-1024)
  945. Maizuru Tourist Office (舞鶴観光協会)in the Attractive Town Group of the Industry Development Office, Maizuru City (舞鶴市産業振興室まちの魅力づくりグル-プ): phone: 0773-66-1024
  946. Maizuru Tsutsuji (azalea) Matsuri Festival
  947. Maizuru Tsutsuji (azalea) Matsuri Festival (May)
  948. Maizuru Tsutsuji (azalea) Matsuri Festival is one of the festivals that takes place in Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  949. Maizuru Tsutsuji Matsuri (Azalea Festival) is held on May 4 every year.
  950. Maizuru Wakasa Express Way - (from Kobe to Maizuru-higashi Interchange: Approximately 1hour)
  951. Maizuru Wakasa Expressway
  952. Maizuru Wakasa Expressway (Route No. 8)
  953. Maizuru Wakasa Expressway Maizuru-Nishi Interchange exit - Route 27 - Route 178 (about forty minute car ride from the interchange exit)
  954. Maizuru Warehouse Co., Ltd. uses three warehouses, and the remaining seven buildings are now warehouses belonging to the Maizuru General Directorial Division of the Maritime Self-Defense Force.
  955. Maizuru Wisdom Warehouse
  956. Maizuru Wisdom Warehouse, called "Maizuru Chiegura" in Japanese, is a cultural facility in Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  957. Maizuru bay
  958. Maizuru bay comprises Wakasa Bay and its mouth is Y-shaped oriented north-northeast.
  959. Maizuru bay constitutes the features of the coastal geography in Maizuru City Kyoto Prefecture.
  960. Maizuru bay in English
  961. Maizuru branch store of Sato (Kyoto Prefecture)
  962. Maizuru established itself as a regional hub city in Kita-kinki.
  963. Maizuru faces the Japan Sea while Maizuru bay splits the city to the east and west with its ria coasts.
  964. Maizuru has many historic sites, owing to its development as Kokufu (provincial capital) of Tango Province from the Muromachi to Azuchi-Momoyama Period.
  965. Maizuru is a harbor city located in the northern part of Kyoto Prefecture (formerly Tango Province) overlooking the Sea of Japan.
  966. Maizuru steam ship: Ceased operation in the end of September 2004.
  967. Maizuru urban area
  968. Maizuru urban area collectively means an economic zone surrounding Maizuru City.
  969. Maizuru, a major city in northern Kyoto Prefecture, has been developed as Nishi Maizuru (western Maizuru) with an ancient castle town flourishing as a commercial city and Higashi Maizuru (eastern Maizuru) prospering as a naval port, separately.
  970. Maizuru-Fukuchiyama Line of the Kyoto Prefectural Route 55
  971. Maizuru-Nishi Port (Maizuru West Port)
  972. Maizuru-ben (Maizuru dialect)
  973. Maizuru/Ayabe, Fukuchiyama, Tango
  974. Maizuruko Tore Tore Center (Maizuru Harbor Freshly Caught Center)
  975. Maji Station, Yunotsu Station, Kuromatsu Station and Asari Station commenced operations.
  976. Majinai refers to the magic of pronouncing a curse on the original cause in order to bring down harmful results; Noroi (curse) is concerned with evil omen only whereas Majinai includes both good fortune and evil omen.
  977. Majirugani: Princess (Aji or Anji or Anzu) Matsugawa (or Machigaa) (the term aji refers to the highest rank below a prince in the Ryukyu Kingdom) (her father was Mo Kisho:Misato Ueekata [the term ueekata refers to the highest rank below Aji in the Ryukyuan aristocracy] An-ko)
  978. Majirugani: Princess (Aji) Hirara (or Pisara or Taira) (her father was Takamiya-gusuku Ueekata Cho-ko)
  979. Major 'Engishikinaisha' (shrines listed in Engishiki laws) included Taku-jinja Shrine (Tanba, Mineyama-cho), Omiyame-jinja Shrine (Suki, Omiya-cho), Takeno-jinja Shrine (Miya, Tango-cho), Nagu-jinja Shrine (Funaki, Yasaka-cho) and Amino-jinja Shrine (Amino, Amino-cho).
  980. Major 'large companies with their own winery'
  981. Major Active Performers of Kamikiri
  982. Major Akita Ranga painters were a statesman named Naotake ODANO (1750 - 1780), a feudal lord named Shozan SATAKE (1748 - 1785) and a member of his family named Yoshimi SATAKE (1749 - 1800).
  983. Major Alfred Thayer MAHAN, who later became famous as an advocator of the theory of sea power, was the vice chief of the U.S. warship Ikoroi, which was anchoring at Hyogo port during the Kobe Incident.
  984. Major Artists in Ikebana
  985. Major Books
  986. Major Buddhist Architecture
  987. Major Buddhist Scriptures
  988. Major Busshi
  989. Major Cases of Adauchi
  990. Major Chiho Kahei (Local Currencies) Minted during the Edo Period
  991. Major Chunagon
  992. Major Contributions
  993. Major Dainagon
  994. Major Edomae-nori-maki
  995. Major Ennichi
  996. Major Examples of the Ote-Mon Gate
  997. Major Families
  998. Major Fugu Dishes
  999. Major Gojunoto
  1000. Major Gon Dainagon


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