; 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. Minarai
  2. Minarai and zenza are not supposed to be considered human (in the rakugoka world).
  3. Minase Koijugoshu Uta-awase: Held in 1202 (Retired Emperor Gotoba)
  4. Minase Station - Oyamazaki Station - Nagaokatenjin Station
  5. Minase in Naishi no tsukasa (Emperor's secretary section) to be banished to Nii-jima Island of Izu
  6. Minase-jingu Shrine
  7. Minase-no-sho: estate of Todai-ji Temple.
  8. Minashi-Jinja Shrine
  9. Minashi-jinja Shrine, which is the ichinomiya (the highest-ranked shrine in the area) in Hida Province, has been worshipping Kuraiyama Mountain as shintaizan (a mountain worshiped as the sacred dwelling place of a deity or deities), but its enshrined deity is unknown, so a theory states that Ryomen-sukuna is a hidden deity of the shrine.
  10. Minato Maizuru Chatta Matsuri Festival
  11. Minato Maizuru Chatta Matsuri Festival (July)
  12. Minato Maizuru Chatta Matsuri Festival is a festival held in Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  13. Minato Ward, Tokyo (Tokyo): A work owned by The Okura Shukokan Museum of Fine Arts
  14. Minato no kami is a collective term for them.
  15. Minato no kami means god of sea port.
  16. Minatogawajinja Shrine
  17. Minatomachi (port town)
  18. Minatomachi Station (current JR Namba Station), Tennoji Station, Hirano Station, Yao Station and Kashihara Station were established.
  19. Minatomachi Station was relocated and the line's distance was revised accordingly (-0.2km).
  20. Minatomachi Station was renamed JR Namba.
  21. Minazuki is a confectionery prepared by placing azuki beans on white Uiro (a sort of sweetened steamed cake made of rice powder) and then cutting it into triangular shapes.
  22. Minazuki-no-tsugomori-no-oharae
  23. Minazuki-no-tsukinami (Festival)
  24. Minazuki-no-tsukinami-no-matsuri
  25. Minazuki-shiwasu-no-tsukinami-no-matsuri
  26. Minazukibarai (Purification in June) (Noh play)
  27. Minazukibarai is a Noh play.
  28. Minbu no jo (Secretary of Ministry of Popular Affairs), Iyo no suke (Assistant Governor of Iyo Province).
  29. Minbu-Kyo, the Secretary of Minbu-sho, corresponded to Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  30. Minbu-sho
  31. Minbu-sho (Ministry of Popular Affairs) was a government-regulated organization under the Ritsuryo system (a system of centralized government based on the ritsuryo codes).
  32. Minbu-sho (in the Meiji period)
  33. Minbu-sho was also one of the ministries in the Meiji period.
  34. Minbu-sho was one of eight central ministries under the Ritsuryo system.
  35. Minbu-sho was one of the ministries established in the Daijokan on August 15, 1869, administering the domestic and administrative affairs.
  36. Minbu-taifu (First assistant to the Minister)> "appointed as the lord of the domain on June 25, 1708 - died on November 24, 1721"[Sojaban (an official in charge of the ceremonies)]
  37. Minbusho (Ministry of Civil Affairs): in charge of civil administration, particularly tax and finance.
  38. Minbusho-satsu
  39. Minbusho-satsu is a bank note issued by the Minbusho (Ministry of Popular Affairs) of the Meiji government from November 15, 1869 to the next year.
  40. Minbusho-satsu was used as a complement of Dajokan-satsu and for public demand, and 1 ryo of Minbusho-satsu could be exchanged for 1 ryo of Dajokan-satsu.
  41. Mince cooled vegetables into 5mm squares to be mixed together, adding such seasonings as soy sauce, sake (Japanese liquor), umami-chomiryo (chemical seasoning) and others, and then let them soak for a few hours or one night before eating.
  42. Mince green chilies after removing the seeds.
  43. Minced fish
  44. Minced meat cutlet
  45. Minced meat of whitefish or shrimp, with egg added to it, is mashed and mixed well, seasoned with mirin (sweet cooking rice wine) and sugar, and baked.
  46. Mincho (1352-1431): a priest in Tofuku-ji Temple
  47. Mincho KITSUSAN
  48. Mincho KITSUSAN (1352 - 5 October,1431) was an artist monk during the early and middle Muromachi period.
  49. Mincho Shoichi Kokushi zo (image of Shoichi Kokushi)(Tofuku-ji Temple)
  50. Mincho, an artist monk who lived at Tofuku-ji Temple is a representative artist of the period and there exists many of his works including chromatic pictures and ink-wash paintings.
  51. Mind sports (these are recognized as hobby or recreation rather than as sport in Japan)
  52. Mind tainted by Bonno (earthly desires)
  53. Mind to sufficiently chew the rice when you eat it with natto, yam, or the like.
  54. Mine (Yamashi): In recent coal pit operations the custom has been abolished and women have come to work in the pits.
  55. Mine MASAI
  56. Mine MASAI (February 3, 1888 - November 20, 1909) was a Japanese worker.
  57. Mine MASAI was born in a farming community of Kawai Village, Yoshiki County, Gifu Prefecture (present Tsunogawa, Kawai-cho, Hida City, Gifu Prefecture).
  58. Mine married with Tokio YOKOI (the oldest son of a Confucian scholar Shonan YOKOI and the third president of Doshisha) in 1881.
  59. Mine was assigned to a filature, Yamaichibayashi-gumi, where she faced a harsh condition to work that is not remotely comparable to the condition of today.
  60. Minehira TACHIBANA
  61. Minehira TACHIBANA (1671 - January 10, 1746) was a master of the Nambo school of tea ceremony during the Edo period.
  62. Minehira TACHIBANA had one daughter; however, she died in childbirth while having her first child.
  63. Minehira TACHIBANA is recognized for the support he gave for their efforts over the ensuing decades and, at 33 years of age became the foremost successor to the legacy.
  64. Minehira is also known as the writer who took part in writing a tea book "Nanboroku" ("Nanporoku," Record of Nanbo's Remarks).
  65. Minehira was born in Fukuoka, the fourth son of Shigetane TACHIBANA (chief retainer of the Kuroda clan in the Fukuoka Domain), and served Tsunamasa KURODA from 19 years old onwards.
  66. Minehira was trained as a tea ceremony master by his second brother Jitsuzan and, he was one of Jitsuzan`s best pupils who was given permission to copy "Nanporoku," which was reportedly Sen no Rikyuu`s secret book.
  67. Minehira`s brothers and sisters included his eldest brother Shigeyuki ICHIKAWA inherited his father's (Shigetane) hereditary 10,000 koku stipend as chief retainer of the Kuroda family.
  68. Mineko IWASAKI
  69. Mineko IWASAKI (1949 -) is an author and former Gion Kobu geisha (Japanese professional female entertainer at drinking parties) from Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  70. Minemori, in order to acquire funds and provide relief for the poor, proposed that they make parts of 'Kannai fields' Kubunden directly governed by Dazaifu on a temporary basis (30 years at the longest) and that they make the income part of the financial resources.
  71. Minenobu won the favor of the Shogun Ienobu TOKUGAWA, and he later gained independence as 'Hamacho family,' which was ranked as one of the inner court painter families.
  72. Mineo HASHIMOTO
  73. Mineo HASHIMOTO (1924 - 1984) was a Japanese philosopher and the thirtieth chief abbot of the Honen-in Temple.
  74. Mineo OSUMI, full admiral, Minister of the Navy at the time of May 15th Incident and February 26th Incident
  75. Mineo became Ise no Gon no kami (Provisional Governor of Ise Province) and served Saigu (Imperial Princess appointed to serve the deities of the Ise-jingu Shrine), Imperial Princess Tenshi (also known as Imperial Princess Yasuko).
  76. Mineo, the sixth head of the school, was a daughter of the fifth head, Soryu, and an English teacher of a girls' high school in Kyoto; however, she promoted the Tamagawa Enshu school of tea ceremony in her late years.
  77. Mineoka-ji Temple... Kadono, Kyoto City
  78. Mineral
  79. Mineral and semiprecious stone
  80. Minerals such as copper and sulfur, lumber produced in western pars of Japan including Suo Province and handicrafts including Japanese swords were exported from Japan.
  81. Minerals such as sulfur and copper, fans, swords, lacquer ware, folding screen and others
  82. Minerals were carried by industrial railway (Kaya Railway) to the refinery in Iwataki-cho, bordering the Sea of Japan, where they were refined.
  83. Mines
  84. Mineta KIUCHI
  85. Mineta KIUCHI (year of birth and death unknown) was a member of the Shinsengumi (a Tokugawa shogunate police force located in Kyoto).
  86. Minetaro YAMANAKA, who attended military academy a year ahead of him, later, as a novelist, wrote the popular novel 'Tekichu Odan Sanbyakuri' (Crossing 300-ri Behind Enemy Lines) and influenced him to read Roan UCHIDA's translation of the controversial novel "Resurrection" written Lev Tolstoi.
  87. Mineyama - Mineyama eki-mae Station - Arayama - (Main-mae) - Kobe - Omiya chosha-mae Town Office - Tango Omiya eki-mae Station - Deai - Okuono - Shimo-tsuneyoshi - Iwaya-kami - Yotsu-tsuji - Ishikawa - Nodagawa eki-mae Station - Iwataki - Kurhaus Iwataki - Yosanoumi Hospital
  88. Mineyama - Mineyama eki-mae Station - Arayama - (Main-mae) - Nagaoka- Omiya chosha-mae Town Office - Misaka - Kamimie - Morimoto - Nobutoshi - Komachi Park
  89. Mineyama Domain
  90. Mineyama Domain (Echigo Province)
  91. Mineyama Line
  92. Mineyama Naval Air Squadron
  93. Mineyama Prefecture
  94. Mineyama Prefecture was established in 1871 through Haihan-chiken (abolition of feudal domains and establishment of prefectures).
  95. Mineyama Station
  96. Mineyama Station - Amino Station - Kitsu-onsen Station
  97. Mineyama Station, located in Mineyama-cho of Tango City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Miyazu Line of the Kitakinki Tango Railway.
  98. Mineyama Taxi
  99. Mineyama chugakko-mae Junior High School - Mineyama eki-mae Station - Mineyama - Goka - Sano - Sano Elementary School - Hashizume - Kumihama byoin-mae Hospital - Jyuraku - Kumihama eki-mae Station
  100. Mineyama eki-mae Station - Mineyama - Amino eki-mae Station - Amino - (Kohama, Shimazu) - Kotobikihama - Mitsu - Taiza - Tango chosha-mae Town Office - Taira - Nakahama - Sodeshi - Kyoga-misaki
  101. Mineyama is most often written with the Chinese characters 峰山, the same characters as used for Mineyama Town (currently Kyotango City) adjacent to Kawabe Village (which became Omiya Town, and now Kyotango City) where the squadron was stationed, but the members of the squadron more often used the characters 峯山.
  102. Mineyama is well known as the birthplace of Tango chirimen (silk crepe).
  103. Mineyama route
  104. Mineyama-Sugitani Post Office
  105. Mineyama-cho
  106. Mineyama-cho, Tango City where Hinumanai-jinja Shrine is located has a crescent-shaped rice field called Tsukinowaden that Toyouke no Okami started rice cultivation in Tanba and a sacred fountain called Seisuido which was used to immerse rice seed.
  107. Minezo SHINOTSUKA
  108. Minezo SHINOZUKA: Participated in the Ikedaya Incident
  109. Minezuka Tumulus (Tenri City, Nara Prefecture: Burial tomb mounds for the Mononobe family clan, a circle tumulus with a diameter of 35 meters)
  110. Minezuka-kofun Tumulus: A round barrow of 35 meters in diameter and 6 meters in height, which has the two stage construction and is located about 500 meters east of Nishiyama-kofun Tumulus.
  111. Ming & Xing-era Chinese music is a traditional music of China, brought by 林得建.
  112. Ming Bao Ji: This copy of a Tang Dynasty collection of Buddhist tales is believed to have been transcribed in the late Tang Dynasty, 2 centuries after being first written.
  113. Ming Dynasty (1368 - 1644)
  114. Ming also forbid the travelling of Chinese trading ships to Japan.
  115. Ming currencies in addition to the Sung currencies that had already been in use became used additionally.
  116. Ming dynasty-style hyogu (the technique and the craft of mounting) was introduced into Japan in the Edo period, and kakejiku began to be flourished as 'Bunjinga' (literati painting) was mounted with literati painting mounting.
  117. Ming forbid voyage to Japan, and these Chinese people arrived while trading in secret and lived in Japan.
  118. Ming was ruined without having diplomatic relations with Japan and Qing, which began to control China after Ming, because Japan adopted a national isolation policy, conducted only trade, but had no official diplomatic relations.
  119. Ming's envoys came from Beijing.
  120. Ming, which suffered the attack of Japanese pirates, forbade Japanese ships to visit Chinese ports and restrictions became partiulcarly severe after Ming and Japan fought a war during the Bunroku and Keicho eras.
  121. Mingaku (Ming-era Chinese music, popularized in Japan during the early 17th century)
  122. Mingaku contained much more elements of the Chinese court music and gagaku than any other music introduced from China.
  123. Mingaku is Chinese Ming Dynasty music that was imported into Japan in 1629 and it once became very popular among the people of high society in Kyoto.
  124. Mingaku is the name of the music played in mausoleum halls or the Imperial Court, and the music was brought to Japan from the Ming dynasty during the Edo period.
  125. Mingaku was on the decline in the middle of the Edo period, so Minshingaku substantially means - in many cases - Shingaku.
  126. Mingaku was stately music to be played in mausoleum halls or the Imperial Court in the Ming Dynasty or was Gagaku.
  127. Mini Golf: Must be six years old or older, 1000 yen for 18 holes and 700 yen for 9 holes
  128. Mini Pirate Ship: Must be three years old or older (No unaccompanied children five years old or younger) 300 yen
  129. Mini SL Festa (late October)
  130. Mini-FM inside the racecourse
  131. Mini-stop
  132. Mini-stop on the Higashi-Maizuru Interchange
  133. Miniature 5-Story Pagoda
  134. Miniature Cymbals ? 1 set
  135. Miniature golf costs 400 yen for adults, and the pottery house 200 yen for adults (plus fees for using subsidiary facilities and for clay material); it is half price for children at both facilities
  136. Miniature model of the port facility
  137. Miniature pig
  138. Miniature scale boat
  139. Minie rifle
  140. Minimum age for employment
  141. Minimum grade: 78‰
  142. Mining concession on the line should be ensured.
  143. Mining industry
  144. Minister
  145. Minister SOGA no Emishi discussed the matter with Uchimaro and sought for opinions from his retainers at his residence.
  146. Minister of Agriculture and Commerce
  147. Minister of Agriculture and Commerce: Nobuaki MAKINO (Baron)
  148. Minister of Army
  149. Minister of Communications (the House of Representatives, the Constitutional Party, the former Liberal Party faction)
  150. Minister of Communications and Transportation : Tadasu HAYASHI (Count)
  151. Minister of Education
  152. Minister of Education Sukenori KABAYAMA of the second Yamagata cabinet that was organized in 1898 at the stage of establishment of Kyoto Imperial University told that he wished to establish imperial universities in the Tohoku and Kyushu regions.
  153. Minister of Education: Sumitaka HASEBA
  154. Minister of Finance
  155. Minister of Finance: Tatsuo YAMAMOTO
  156. Minister of Foreign Affairs (Japan)
  157. Minister of Foreign Affairs (Japan): Kosai UCHIDA (Viscount)
  158. Minister of Foreign Affairs, Kaoru INOUE employed the policy of Europeanization which was called the Rokumeikan (Rokumeikan guest house) diplomacy to aim at revising the European treaties and the grand capital construction was an integral part of the policy.
  159. Minister of Foreign Affairs, Tadasu HAYASHI was his own younger brother.
  160. Minister of Home Affairs (Japan)
  161. Minister of Home Affairs (Japan): Takashi HARA
  162. Minister of Justice
  163. Minister of Justice: Masahisa MATSUDA
  164. Minister of Navy
  165. Minister of Navy: Makoto SAITO (Baron/Full Admiral)
  166. Minister of State
  167. Minister of land, infrastructure and transportation must compile and decide the basic construction policy, while the prefectural governors concerned must compile and decide the construction plans.
  168. Minister of the Imperial Guard': thought to be Kanehira TAKATSUKASA.
  169. Minister of the Imperial Households
  170. Minister of the Left Kanesue IMADEGAWA, who was a son of Sanekane SAIONJI, a grand minister of state during the Kamakura period, started a branch of the Saionji Family and resided in Imadegawa-dono palace; accordingly, they called themselves Kikutei (Imadegawa).
  171. Minister of the Right Tsunehiro KONOE was his foster-father.
  172. Ministerial Responsibility System/Ministerial Advice System
  173. Ministers and kugyo in the audience wanted Seimei who was an onmyoji belonging to the central government to win, but they were disappointed since they knew the contents were unquestionably oranges and it was clear that Seimei had lost the game.
  174. Ministers from various countries made repeated protests against the Japanese government while reporting what was going on to their countries.
  175. Ministers of State
  176. Ministers, counselors, and generals used it everyday, and it was also used by jiju (chamberlains), chujo (middle captains), shosho (major generals), and officials of Shii (the Fourth rank) and Goi (Fifth rank).
  177. Ministry of Army
  178. Ministry of Communication of Japan issued a commemorative postage stamp called "日韓通信業務合同紀念" (Commemoration of Japan-Korea Joint Communication Service) on July 1, to mark the completion of takeover.
  179. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Education Board, school superintendent, principal (president), teacher, teacher's license, and teaching practice
  180. Ministry of Information and Communication
  181. Ministry of Interior Notification No. 49.
  182. Ministry of Jingi
  183. Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism
  184. Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism define construction of the Science City as 'strengthening cooperation among industries, government offices and academic institutes while promoting international, interdisciplinary and inter-industrial exchange of culture, science and research.'
  185. Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, Kinki Regional Development Bureau, Nara National Road Office
  186. Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, Kyoto National Highway Office, Kyoto First Maintenance Branch Office (National Highway 24, National Highway 1 within Kyoto City)
  187. Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, Kyoto National Highway Office, Kyoto Second Maintenance Branch Office (National Highway 478)
  188. Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, Kyoto National Highway Office, Kyoto Second Maintenance Branch Office (for the general road section between Oyamazaki-cho and Kumiyama Town)
  189. Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, Maizuru Marine Transport Bureau
  190. Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, Shiga National Highway Office, Kusatsu Maintenance Branch Office
  191. Ministry of Railways (National Railways)
  192. Minka (folk dwellings)
  193. Minka and work were closely connected: doma were used also to make ropes; the engawa or veranda for weaving; and silkworms were raised in the attic.
  194. Minka are closely connected to everyday life, so many minka that have survived to today have been extended or reconstructed as was required at the time.
  195. Minka are houses lived in by ordinary people, but in architectural history or in ethnology, minka means noka or machiya that are built with traditional designs (old ones are also called kominka) in particular.
  196. Minka are residences where ordinary people lived.
  197. Minka parks where minka were transferred to and restored were constructed in many places in order to pass traditional Japanese culture down the generations.
  198. Minka vary from region to region, showing particular characteristics in each area.
  199. Minke whales, having been an important target in small-scale whaling from the pre-war era in Japan, have also become a target in large-scale whaling since 1960s.
  200. Minki Soshuns, Jikusen Bonsens, and so on had visited Japan previously.
  201. Minnan Eisai (also pronounced Yosai) was also called Yojobo, and his shi (a posthumous name) was Senkokokushi.
  202. Mino (straw raincoat) and Kasa (umbrella), Waraji (straw sandals), and Tekko (covering for the back of the hand and wrist) and Kyahan (leggings)
  203. Mino (straw raincoat), Kasa (umbrella), Kasa (a cap), and Jingasa (a soldier's cap)
  204. Mino Endo clan
  205. Mino Kannonjiyama-kofun Tumulus (Gifu Prefecture)
  206. Mino Province
  207. Mino Province.
  208. Mino Province: Domains of Naeki, Iwamura, Yawata, Takatomi, Kano, Ogaki, Nomura and Imao
  209. Mino Shoinshi
  210. Mino Shoinshi was developed along with the shoin style (a residential architecture study-room style) and holds an established position as paper most suitable for akari shoji.
  211. Mino Shoinshi was made while being decorated with beautiful watermark patterns such as a dappled pattern, key pattern, chrysanthemum arabesque pattern, oval-ring pattern, and hexagonal pattern, and used for paper-covered lamp stands, garden lanterns, and so forth, besides shoji.
  212. Mino Tsuka (Mound for Straw Raincoats)
  213. Mino gaeshi (Return to Mino)
  214. Mino no Mikoto
  215. Mino no Okimi
  216. Mino no Okimi (date of birth and death unknown) lived in the Asuka period in Japan.
  217. Mino no Okimi was one of the member of investigation group and ordered to go to Shinshiro (新城) together with a chief of the office of the Imperial palace to investigate topography on April 16, 682.
  218. Mino no Okimi's rank was shoshi (which corresponds to Jusanmi, Junior Third Rank of Taiho Code) at this time.
  219. Mino no Okimi's rank was still shoshi at that time.
  220. Mino was a very important province, because it had Fuwa-no-seki checking station.
  221. Mino, Kai and Tosa Provinces are still producing shoji paper.
  222. Mino, being close to Kyoto, was the province Kuninao was most familiar with; his ancestors MINAMOTO no Yorimitsu and MINAMOTO no Yorikuni had served as Kokushi (provincial governor) of Mino Province, and his father, Yoritsuna, had accompanied Yorikuni when he went to Mino.
  223. Mino, who was Shorokuinojo (Senior Sixth Rank, Upper Grade) at that time, destroyed the force of FUJIWARA no Nakamaro after fighting against them at 三尾埼, Takashima County, Omi Province, and was appointed to Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade).
  224. Mino-Arima Electric Tramline (Mino-Arima denki kido), which was founded in 1907, began operating the section between Umeda Station and Takarazuka Station as well as the section between Ishibashi Station (Osaka Prefecture) and Mino Station, which respectively correspond to the current Takarazuka Line and the Mino Line, on March 10, 1910,
  225. Mino-bari' is pasting on the frame and sticking one sheet over another by gradually shifting, like the process for making a straw raincoat.
  226. Mino-gaki
  227. Mino-ji: It was the road starting from Miya-juku on Tokaido Road (Atsuta) to Tarui-juku on Nakasen-do Road.
  228. Mino-machi, Mino City, 1999, merchant town
  229. Mino-machi, Mino City, Gifu Prefecture, merchant town
  230. Mino-zasshi
  231. Minobe's Emperor Organ Theory has the following theoretical construction in general.
  232. Minobe's theory gave a theoretical foundation to the party government.
  233. Minobu Jinkyo Hospital
  234. Minobu Sojo
  235. Minobu Sojo is bogus because its date and the activities of Nichiren don't coincide.
  236. Minobu Sojo, from its contents, is also called Nichiren Ichigo Guho Fuzokusho (document entrusting Nichiren's lifetime preachings) and Sofuzokusho.
  237. Minobu manju is one of the miso-manju.
  238. Minobusan Hospital
  239. Minobusan University
  240. Minokamo Catholic Church (Minokamo City, Gifu Prefecture)
  241. Minokichi - Kyo-ryori, local cuisine of Kyoto
  242. Minonosakino kuninomiyatsuko
  243. Minonosakino kuninomiyatsuko 三野前国造 (also known as Minonosakinokokuzo, Minonomichinokuchi no kuninomiyatsuko, and Minonomichinokuchikokuzo) was kuninomiyatsuko (local ruling families in ancient Japan) ruled Mino Province.
  244. Minonoshiri no kunimiyatsuko
  245. Minonoshiri no kunimiyatsuko (also known as Minonosihrinokokuzo) was kuninomiyatsuko (local ruling families in ancient Japan) ruled the east of Mino Province.
  246. Minoota Station
  247. Minor Captain (Tadateru) stayed helplessly at a zen temple in the castle town.'
  248. Minor Offensive Act (No. 39 in 1948)
  249. Minor change of the operation routes
  250. Minor ritual days (under Articles 20 and 21 of the Imperial Household Religious Rites Ordinance)
  251. Minori (The Rites)
  252. Minori is one of the fifty-four chapters of "The Tale of Genji."
  253. Minors (first to 9th grade students): 100 yen
  254. Minoru FUKUHARA, Army Major General who was awarded with Grand Cordon of the Order of the Sacred Treasure and Kinkei no mashiko
  255. Minoru FUKUHARA: Baron, Army Major General, Grand Cordon of the Order of the Sacred Treasure
  256. Minoru FUKUHARA: From December 28, 1882 to April 14, 1887 and from September 18, 1888 to September 29, 1890.
  257. Minoru KITA
  258. Minoru KITA (February 23, 1900 to October 2, 1986) was a Noh actor of the shite-kata Kita school (one of the five schools of shite-kata [main roles]), and the 15th Soke (headmaster of the head family) in the Kita school.
  259. Minoru KITA and Rokuro UMEWAKA, and so on, are famous as the performer.
  260. Minoru KITA, Tokuzo GOTO were great actors of this school of the Taisho and the Showa periods, and after them, other masters such as Kikuo TOMOEDA, Akiyo TOMOEDA (Kikuo and Akiyo are father and son), Kikuo AWAYA, and Akio SHIOTSU appeared from this school.
  261. Minoru KITA, the 15th head of the leading family in the Kita school, is his younger brother.
  262. Minoru KOUDA energetically wrote about garden-related columns and Katsuya YASUOKA published many books regarding invitation to tea-ceremony rooms and architecture in the style of a tea-ceremony pavilion.
  263. Minoru MIKI: 'Eurasian Trilogy ha-no kyoku,' 'Shunkinsho Jokyoku to Shunoden,' 'ka Pine Concerto,' 'Soh Concerto No.5' (these are concerto with Western music orchestra), 'Concerto Requiem' (concerto with traditional Japanese music orchestra)
  264. Minoru MIKI: 'Tenjo' (1969), the first solo for 20-stringed Soh.
  265. Minoru MURATA
  266. Minoru MURATA (March 2, 1894-June 26, 1937) was a movie director, scriptwriter and actor who lived from the Taisho period to the early Showa period.
  267. Minoru NOGUCHI has put forward the Yoshiie Conspiracy Theory about this incident.
  268. Minoru SENDA (professor of International Research Center for Japanese Studies) supports Zenko as the prime candidate.
  269. Minoru SENDA mentions as the tomb owner Kudara no Konikishi Shojo, who immigrated to Japan from Kudara (Paekche).
  270. Minoru SHIBUYA
  271. Minoru SHIBUYA (January 2, 1907 - December 20, 1980) was a Japanese movie director.
  272. Minoru SUZUKI (dyer)
  273. Minoru UMEWAKA
  274. Minoru UMEWAKA is the name used as an "inkyomei" (name after retirement) in the UMEWAKA family, shite-kata (main roles) of Kanze school of Noh.
  275. Minoru UMEWAKA, the 1st: inkyomei of Rokuro UMEWAKA, the 52nd.
  276. Minoru UMEWAKA, the 2nd: inkyomei of Rokuro UMEWAKA (the 2nd son of the 1st), the 54th.
  277. Minoru UMEWAKA, the second.
  278. Minoru YAMASAKI
  279. Minoshu
  280. Minosuke BANDO
  281. Minosuke BANDO the Fifth
  282. Minosuke BANDO the First
  283. Minosuke BANDO the Fourth
  284. Minosuke BANDO the Second
  285. Minosuke BANDO the Seventh
  286. Minosuke BANDO the Sixth
  287. Minosuke BANDO the Third
  288. Minosuke, Yohei ISEYA・・・・・・・・Uzaemon ICHIMURA XV
  289. Minowaraji, also called Minosoji
  290. Minpoten Ronso (Disputes over the Civil Code)
  291. Minpoten Ronso (disputes over the legal code provided for basic stipulation related to Civil Code) was the disputes whether to postpone or carry out the effectuation of the Old Civil Code (Act No.28, No.29 of 1890) in Japan from 1889 to 1892).
  292. Minryoku-Kyuyou and Seihi-Setsugen (Rest for Financial Resources of People and Reduction of Government Expenses)
  293. Minryoku-Kyuyou and Seihi-Setsugen referred to the policy pledge of Minto (general term of the political parties such as the Liberal Party and Progressive Party that conflicted with a han-dominated government when the Imperial Diet was inaugurated) in early the Imperial Diet of the Meiji Period.
  294. Minsen (Eiraku-tsuho, bronze coins produced in the Ming Dynasty), raw silk thread, textiles, book and others
  295. Minsen Giin Setsuritsu Kenpaku Sho (The Petition to Establish an Elected Assembly)
  296. Minsen Giin Setsuritsu Kenpaku Sho' was the first petition requesting the government to establish a parliament with democratically-elected representatives supported by people including former Sangi councilors Taisuke ITAGAKI and Shojiro GOTO on January 17, 1874.
  297. Minshuku (private homes that run an inn providing room and board): 11 facilities (total capacity: approximately 190 guests)
  298. Mint Museum and Currency Museum of the Bank of Japan own them, which are thought to be all Hachiburyouban exist now.
  299. Mint-flavored sugar-based placoid snacks with a picture of an animal or a character printed on them, which people buy and then cut out the picture.
  300. Minteki
  301. Minteki and shinteki are sometimes collectively called Minteki.
  302. Minteki, a type of flute, has acoustic bore to stick chikushi, which vibrate to give out unique sound and the sound reverberates better when the flute is played.
  303. Minting amount of keicho-gin
  304. Minting amount of kyoho-gin (shotoku-gin)
  305. Minting continued until the end of Edo period.
  306. Minting processes were different in Kanei and Shin-Kanei.
  307. Minting was done at the jouze-fukisho
  308. Minting was restarted in August 1837, and the number of coins minted until February 1842 was 10,024,500; the total coins during Tenpo era was 39,735,200.
  309. Minto (literally, the people's party)
  310. Minto is the general term of the political parties such as the Liberal Party (in the Meiji period) and the Constitutional Progressive Party and so on which promoted the Movement for Democratic Rights in the Meiji Period.
  311. Mints were established in the Kawachi Province, Suo Province, Nagato Province and so on.
  312. Minu no Okimi
  313. Minu no Okimi (year of birth unknown - May, 708) was one of the Imperial family members of the Asuka period.
  314. Minu no Okimi, a descendant of Prince Naniwa, who was Emperor Bidatsu's son, had a wife named Agata no Inukai no Michiyo, who was bestowed the ason surname of "Tachibana," and her sons, Tachibana no Moroe and Tachibana no Sai, continued to use the Tachibana family name.
  315. Minu no kuni no miyatsuko
  316. Minuet (piano piece)
  317. Minushi no Himemiko
  318. Minushi no Himemiko (year of birth unknown - September 22, 737) was the daughter of Emperor Tenchi.
  319. Minyo
  320. Minyo (a traditional folk song):
  321. Minyo-nagashi dance events
  322. Minyu-sha
  323. Minyu-sha also began publishing "Kokumin Shinbun" (newspaper) in 1890.
  324. Minyu-sha promoted "democratism" (commoner's Europeanism) and criticized 'Europeanism' by the government as "aristocratic Europeanism".
  325. Minyu-sha saw the Rokumeikan-bunka Culture, led by the government, as an aristocratic Europeanism and continued to criticize the government from the position of the commoners' Europeanism.
  326. Minyu-sha took the position close to moderates faction of The Freedom of People's Rights Movement (such as Kaishin Party), and progressive comments and European and American social problems were introduced in "Kokumin no Tomo".
  327. Minyu-sha was an opinion group and publishing house established by Soho TOKUTOMI.
  328. Mio-jinja Shrine
  329. Mio-jinja Shrine is located in Takashima City, Shiga Prefecture.
  330. Mio-jinja shrine
  331. Mioga ginger: Mioga ginger cut in round slices and soaked in water beforehand may be used.
  332. Miotsukushi (Channel Buoys)
  333. Miotsukushi (Channel Buoys) is one of the fifty-four chapters of "The Tale of Genji."
  334. Miotsukushi (The Tale of Genji)
  335. Miotsukushi, Sakaki, Eawase (A Picture Contest)/ Eawase, Matsukaze (Wind in the Pines)/ Matsukaze, Mukuge (Rose of Sharon)
  336. Miraculous water that is said to have been bestowed by Saicho.
  337. Mirage Kuta (resort house area)
  338. Mirai NAGASU
  339. Mirai' Zone
  340. Mirai-tei
  341. Mirai-tei is now rapidly expanding, with more than 100 stores; while still less than Tenka-ippin, its growth knows no limits.
  342. Miraiha-Bijutsu-Kyokai (Futurist Art Association) (Gyo FUMON, Shuichiro KINOSHITA [1896 - 1991], Masamu YANASE, Kamenosuke OGATA, Shuzo OURA, Mofu ASANO [1900 - 1984], and others) was established in 1920.
  343. Mirei SHIGEMORI
  344. Mirei SHIGEMORI (1896-1975) (his real name was Kazuo SHIGEMORI) was aJapanese gardener during the Showa period and a researcher into the history of Japanese gardens.
  345. Mirei SHIGEMORI, who started to research gardens alongside this movement, measured gardens remaining in the whole country, and when entering Showa period, produced many karesansui gardens, and criticized naturalistic gardens existing within temples and revived symbolic gardens.
  346. Mirei had a large circle of friends that he established through his work with gardens, and made friends with Isamu NOGUCHI, the sculptor in the United States, who visited the residence of Mirei SHIGEMORI several times.
  347. Miria & Isaac (BACCANO! series)
  348. Mirin
  349. Mirin (a type of sweet sake used in cooking) often substitutes sake.
  350. Mirin (sweet cooking sake) and salt are also sometimes added.
  351. Mirin - 50 cc
  352. Mirin is also used as an ingredient of sweet white sake and toso.
  353. Mirin is an alcoholic condiment used as a seasoning in Japanese cuisine and also as an alcoholic beverage.
  354. Mirin was originally an alcoholic beverage and was drunk as a sweet luxury drink before sake became common during the Edo period.
  355. Mirin-like seasonings are also sold, which contain the liquor tax exempt alcohol content of less than 1% to which flavor enhancers that mimic the taste of mirin and sweeteners such as starch syrup are added.
  356. Mirin:
  357. Mirin: Was for drinking originally, but nowadays, is used as cooking alcohol to add a sweet taste to meals.
  358. Mirinboshi
  359. Mirinboshi which is made using small butterflied fish is also referred to as sakuraboshi.
  360. Mirinkasu taken from the main fermenting mash of mirin has a different flavor because it includes glutinous rice, and shochukasu taken from unrefined shochu (Japanese distilled spirit) has a sour taste because it contains a large amount of citric acid.
  361. Miroku (Maitreya) is a Bosatsu who is promised to become Buddha next to Gotama Siddhartha (Shakamuni-butsu, Buddha at present); it is said that he appears in the future 5670 million years after Gotama Siddhartha's demise and will bring relief to many people.
  362. Miroku Bosatsu (Maitreya Bodhisattva in Sanskrit) is one of the Buddhas of Buddhism.
  363. Miroku Bosatsu Hanka Shiyui statue (Maitreya Bodhisattva sitting contemplatively in the half-lotus position) at Koryu-ji Temple
  364. Miroku Bosatsu appears as a future Buddha at the very early stage of Buddhism, and is described in the Agon-kyo sutra.
  365. Miroku Bosatsu is considered to appear in this world as 弥勒仏 after ascetic training for 5670 million years.
  366. Miroku Bosatsu needs attention.
  367. Miroku Bosatsu statue, the principal image of Onjo-ji Temple (Shiga): never unveiled ('absolute' hibutsu).
  368. Miroku Bosatsu, Maitreya Bodhisattva
  369. Miroku Buddha seated statue (national treasure), the principal image of Jisonin Temple (Wakayama): unveiled every 21 years.
  370. Miroku Dai Magaibutsu (Buddha statues in cliffs and rocks)
  371. Miroku Magaibutsu (a historic site)
  372. Miroku daisekkanbutsu (a statue of Miroku [Maitreya] sculpted on stone)
  373. Miroku's Sanskrit name 'Maitreya' has the same origin as the name of ミスラ神.
  374. Miroku-do (Maitreya hall)
  375. Miroku-ishi Stone (a stone dedicated in hokora [a small shrine] near the entrance to Oku no in [inner sanctuary] of Mt. Koya)
  376. Miroku-ishi Stone is the stone placed in hokora near the entrance to Oku no in of Mt. Koya, the sacred ground of Wakayama Prefecture.
  377. Mirokudo Hall at Koryu-ji Temple in Taga Village (Omihachiman City, as of now) was later moved to Jogon-in Temple by Nobunaga.
  378. Mirokudo hall
  379. Mirokudo hall - built in the Kamakura period
  380. Mirokudo hall was built in the Kamakura period, but remodeled drastically later.
  381. Mirokujosho-kyo written by ISHIKAWA no Toshitari
  382. Mirror (copper) (excavated from Akatsuka Tumulus in Usa, Bizen Province (Usa City, Oita Prefecture)), five mirrors
  383. Mirror Pond of Benkei (Engyo-ji Temple, Hyogo Prefecture)
  384. Mirror craftsman
  385. Mirror of Goei (image of a deity)
  386. Mirror with Four Buddhas and Four Animals (with the border patterns of illustrations and Chinese characters)
  387. Mirror with Inscribed Twelve Saints (線刻十二尊鏡像) (Octagonal Bronze Mirror with Design of Auspicious Flowersand Felicitious Birds)
  388. Mirror with a Pattern of Paulownia, Bamboos, and Phoenix (桐竹鳳凰鏡)
  389. Mirror with a Pine Tree, Wisteria Flowers, and Two Cranes
  390. Mirror with a band of animal patterns in relief
  391. Mirror with geometric patterns and the four spirits
  392. Mirrors as burial goods were so-called Han mirrors or Han style mirrors in the early, mid and late period, and they later came to be Zui-Tang mirrors among the tombs of the Final Kofun period.
  393. Mirrors excavated are classified into load ship mirrors which were imported from the continent and domestic Hoseikyo mirrors which were modeled after the former.
  394. Miruroto-ji Temple
  395. Mirus reinianus is similar to them, but belongs to a different family.
  396. Misaishoko (lectures on the Konkomyo-saishoo sutra) in Sanno-in Temple (old lunar calendar) - On June 10, 11
  397. Misakacho Kokuga, Fuefuki City, Yamanashi Prefecture (Kai Kokuga ruin)
  398. Misaki no sho (三崎庄) was shoen of Sekkan-ke.
  399. Misaki type (type intended for placement at the seaside)
  400. Misaki-, or Onzaki-jinja Shrine
  401. Misaki-cho is also a birthplace of Ginko KISHIDA believed to be the first person who ate tamago kake gohan in Japan.
  402. Misakiyama-kofun Tumulus (Shimane Prefecture)
  403. Misao FUJIMURA, who committed suicide at Kegon Falls, Nikko City, Tochigi Prefecture, with the farewell note titled 'Gonto no Kan' (Thoughts at the edge of Kegon Falls), was Michiyo's nephew.
  404. Misao INOUE (founder of Kansai Horitsu Gakko [Kansai Law School])
  405. Misao TAMAMATSU, who played an active role in the end of Edo period, was also a descendant of the Ano family.
  406. Misao YASHIRO (the founder of Meiji Horitsu Gakko)
  407. Misasa Medical Center of Okayama University Medical School has been established at Misasa-onsen Hot Spring with the aim of proving the therapeutic efficacy of Radon hot springs and is conducting research activities on a full-scale.
  408. Misasa's Jinsho tug of war festival (March 11, 2009; Misasa-cho, Tohaku-gun; Misasa-ku Jinsho Hozonkai [Association for the Preservation of Jinsho in Misasa district])
  409. Misasagi (Imperial mausoleum)
  410. Misasagi (Imperial mausoleum) location
  411. Misasagi (the imperial mausoleum)
  412. Misasagi - Hinooka - Kujoyama - Sanjo Keihan - Shijo Kawaramachi
  413. Misasagi - Yamashina Station
  414. Misasagi Station
  415. Misasagi Station (T08)-Keage Station (T09)-Higashiyama Station (Kyoto Prefecture) (T10)
  416. Misasagi Station - Keihan-Yamashina Station - Shinomiya Station
  417. Misasagi Station became an underground station as the common station with the Kyoto Municipal Subway Tozai Line.
  418. Misasagi Station is a railway facility located in the Yamashina Ward, Kyoto City, which is jointly operated by the Kyoto Municipal Transportation Bureau and the Keihan Electric Railway.
  419. Misasagi Station was built by a third-sector company called Kyoto Kosoku Railway Co., Ltd.
  420. Misasagi Station was moved westward approximately 300 meters and became the underground station for common use with the Kyoto Municipal Subway Tozai Line.
  421. Misasagi Station, a junction station to the Keihan Keishin Line, has a platform for westbound trains (for Keage Station) on the second basement level and a platform for eastbound trains (for Yamashina Station) on the third basement level.
  422. Misasagi bus stop
  423. Misasagi' originally referred to an emperor's graveyard, and the area around the station is known by that name due to the fact that the Imperial Tomb of Emperor Tenchi is located approximately 300 meters north of the station.
  424. Misato MOCHIZUKI: 'Intermezzi II'
  425. Misato nishiki
  426. Misawa clan
  427. Misawa clan (which is read Misawa-shi or Misawa-uji) was a clan acting as estate steward in Iijima District, Shinano Province, which were the descendants of Shinano-Genji (Minamoto clan).
  428. Misawa clan, a kokujin ryoshu (local samurai lords) of Izumo Province, was reportedly oriignated from the Kiso line descended from Yoshinaka KISO of Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto Clan), or the Iijima line descded from MINAMOTO no Mitsuyoshi who was also from Seiwa-Genji.
  429. Miscellaneous
  430. Miscellaneous Division
  431. Miscellaneous affairs related to chirimen
  432. Miscellaneous metals consist of copper, lead and iridium.
  433. Miscellaneous notes
  434. Miscellaneous: 20.18%
  435. Miscellaneous:20.61%
  436. Misconduct or outrageous behavior due to mental instability
  437. Mise Maruyama Tumulus (Mise Maruyama Kofun: It is apparently the burial tomb mound of Emperor Kinmei; the total length is 318 meters long, Kashihara City, Nara Prefecture)
  438. Mise Maruyama-kofun Tumulus
  439. Mise Maruyama-kofun Tumulus - a special historic site
  440. Misedana (stores with wares on display)
  441. Misemaruyama Kofun
  442. Misemaruyama Kofun had its designation as a joint tomb canceled by the Imperial Household Ministry, but a part of the upper stage of the back circular part was designated as a site for a ryobosanakochi (site possibly related to an imperial tomb).
  443. Misen-ryu school
  444. Misfortunes, such as the natural disaster mentioned above, an epidemic, and the empress's and imperial prince's illness, were said to be caused by Imperial Prince Sawara's ghost.
  445. Mishaguji
  446. Mishaguji belief is widely distributed in eastern Japan, and it is said that Mishaguji is a kami in snake form with stones and trees being its main yorishiro (object representative of a divine spirit).
  447. Mishasokukonma Bon
  448. Mishige
  449. Mishige or Mishige-Majimun is a kind of Fumo-gami which has been known in Okinawa Prefecture and is a kind of Majimun (the general name for devils in Okinawa and Amami Islands south of Kagoshima Prefecture).
  450. Mishima established Constitutional Monarchy Party and intensified confrontation against Liberal Party.
  451. Mishima graduated from Tokyo Imperial University in 1913 and entered Yokohama Shokin Ginko (Yokohama Specie Bank) at which his brother Yataro had been working.
  452. Mishima had a gentle character for a sportsman, perhaps because he was well-brought-up person.
  453. Mishima mastered skiing when he was a student of Tokyo Imperial University.
  454. Mishima supported a Western-style painter Yuichi TAKAHASHI and made Yuichi paint pictures of architectures and view of the city that he constructed to pride himself on his achievements.
  455. Mishima took part in a preliminary short-distance run in that afternoon, but he was soon eliminated in the initial 100-meter preliminary race by more than a second behind the winner.
  456. Mishima was more than 170 centimeters in height when adult males were about 155 centimeters on average in those days.
  457. Mishima was the first national member of Japan in modern Olympics.
  458. Mishima's Kasedori Festival (February 20, 2002)
  459. Mishima's Sainokami Festival (March 13, 2008; Mishima-machi, Onuma-gun; Mishima-machi Nenchugyoji Hozonkai [Mishima Town Annual Events Preservation Association])
  460. Mishima's given name Yahiko (弥彦) was also written as 彌彦.
  461. Mishima, Hagi City, Yamaguchi Prefecture
  462. Mishima-gun
  463. Mishima-jinja Shrine (Kyoto Prefecture)
  464. Mishima-mura Village, Tokara Islands and Amami Islands, Kagoshima Prefecture
  465. Mishima-mura, Kagoshima County, Kagoshima Prefecture
  466. Mishima-taisha Shrine
  467. Mishima-taisha Shrine in Mishima City, Shizuoka Prefecture performs yabusame for the annual festival in August.
  468. Mishima: bowls made by etching a detailed continuous pattern on the paste and covering with a thin white clay.
  469. Mishimade Kyusu (teapot with Mishimade design) (Kyoto National Museum)
  470. Mishirabe is sometimes confused with 'Kakure Nenbutsu' or 'Kakushi Nenbutsu' (secret Buddhist invocation), but they are unrelated.
  471. Mishiritsuhiko is the same as Kamuyaimimi-no-mikoto.
  472. Misho is presumed to be something like bean miso of today, but it was only in later ages when koji was frequently used.
  473. Misho school
  474. Misho school is one of the schools of flower arrangement, founded by Ippo MISHOSAI.
  475. Misho, which is considered to be the original form of miso, was written in the literature already in Nara period, and the existence of misho stores in the western market of Heian-kyo (the ancient capital of Japan in current Kyoto) is recorded.
  476. Misleading others can be said 'shamisen o hiku' (to play shamisen) in other words.
  477. Miso
  478. Miso (fermented soybean paste)
  479. Miso Katsu
  480. Miso Katsudon (bowl of rice topped with cutlet and miso sauce)
  481. Miso Matsukaze
  482. Miso Soup
  483. Miso is a Japanese food made by fermenting grains.
  484. Miso is an original seasoning of Japan, and its original form dates back to the Jomon period.
  485. Miso itself, cooked miso, and miso mixed with additional ingredients (for example, kinzanji miso, or miso made from soybeans, barley and vegetables) are sakana for sake.
  486. Miso katsudon is a dish in Nagoya City.
  487. Miso made with a lot of rice koji (malted rice) tend to mature in a short period.
  488. Miso soup
  489. Miso soup in Okinawa Prefecture
  490. Miso soup is a Japanese dish that is cooked by adding ingredients (called 'gu' or 'mi') such as vegetables and fish in soup, boiling and seasoning with miso.
  491. Miso varies in flavor and color by region, making them a home-grown food.
  492. Miso-Nikomi Udon
  493. Miso-Nikomi Udon is a local dish of Aichi Prefecture, which is characterized by its soup broth seasoned with Aka-miso (dark-brown miso paste, also called Haccho-miso) and elastic noodles.
  494. Miso-manju
  495. Miso-shiru: the name for all hot shiru-mono dishes in which miso is dissolved into soup stock, with a variety of ingredients placed in it
  496. Miso: a basic seasoning used form ancient times
  497. Misodengaku (skewed and roasted foodstuff with miso coating)
  498. Misogi (Ablution)
  499. Misogi and harae were originally different ceremonies.
  500. Misogi is conducted commonly on those who serve Shinto rituals when they have come into contact with an impurity.
  501. Misogiharae
  502. Misogiharae is a word combined by misogi (purification ceremony) and harae (exorcism).
  503. Misoka,' was originally an old way of saying '三十日,' literally means the 30th day, but it came to mean the last day of the month regardless of its actual date.
  504. Misoma-hajime-sai
  505. Misomatsukaze
  506. Misomatsukaze is a kind of baked confectionery.
  507. Misomi (Southern part of Old Mikata, Old To-mura)
  508. Misoname Jizo (Jizo who licks miso (Japanese soybean paste))
  509. Misonobashi Hachimaruichi Shotengai (the Misonobashi 801 shopping street)
  510. Misora Hibari Memorial Hall - Opened on April 26, 2008 after renovating 'Misora Hibari Hall' temporarily closed in November 2006
  511. Misoshiru (miso soup)
  512. Misozuke
  513. Misozuke (pickling in miso (fermented soybean paste))
  514. Misozuke is vegetable, meat, or fish pickled in miso paste (bean paste).
  515. Misperceptions, and phenomena which couldn't be explained by the science level at that time
  516. Miss Kunoichi Audition
  517. Missho NOZAWA
  518. Missing Book
  519. Missing troops
  520. Missing works
  521. Mission San Xavier del Bac (close to Tucson, Arizona) established by Eusebio KINO in 1699.
  522. Missionaries of the Society of Jesus enhanced the propagation of Christianity.
  523. Missionaries who came to Japan after Xavier's time also went to see daimyo in various places throughout Japan, and just as Xavier had, they obtained permission to spread Christianity in the domains of those daimyo, and also proselytized to the daimyo themselves.
  524. Missionary Institute and Newspaper Company
  525. Missionary Ranks
  526. Missionary work
  527. Missionary work proved to be difficult.
  528. Missionary work was limited to the ports of treaty until that period, but the Treaty of Tianjin signed after the Arrow War (Second Opium War) allowed travel inland of the Qing dynasty (permit to propagate inland) and many foreign missionaries entered the country and went inland.
  529. Missions dispatched by the bakufu were accompanied by influential Japanese merchants from Hakata and Sakai City, and private trade was conducted among them.
  530. Missive (important cultural assets) is stored in a personal library etc.
  531. Misso (private funeral)
  532. Missouri State University System
  533. Mistakenly, it was thought that he didn't join the War in Korea but instead remained in Japan.
  534. Mistakes about the date of the battle are often seen.
  535. Mistaking them for battleships, the Irtysh turned back the way she came.
  536. Mistresses
  537. Misu Komon Shiryokan (Misu Lock Gate Museum)
  538. Misu Park
  539. Misu are a type of Sudare that has been provided with a cloth fringe, which is often green in color.
  540. Misu bamboo blinds
  541. Misu have been in use for a long time, and can be seen depicted in historically relevant works, such as the Hyakunin Isshu (one hundred waka poems by one hundred poets).
  542. Misu were used in large residences of feudal lords and court nobles and the like to demarcate the interior and exterior spaces of the house.
  543. Misu-gaki
  544. Misukomon
  545. Misukomon Shiryokan (museum)
  546. Misunderstanding
  547. Misunderstanding of Tendai-zasu
  548. Misunderstanding of nenbutsu
  549. Misunderstandings may arise such as in the case of Kashii-gu Shrine in Higashi Ward, Fukuoka City, Fukuoka Prefecture, which is not a 'jingu' but the closest station is named 'Kashii Jingu Station (Kashii Line).
  550. Mita 2 chome, Minato Ward, Tokyo, (Tokyo Prefecture)
  551. Mita coal mine
  552. Mita was the land owned by the Imperial Family in ancient Japan.
  553. Mita were fields that the Daio (Yamato kingdom) directly controlled.
  554. Mita-cho, where Sanda Domain established its jinya, flourished as the center of commerce because it was close to the border between Settsu Province and Harima Province (where many territories of the shogunate, small domains, detached areas of domains in Kanto region, and hatamoto were located).
  555. Mitachi was composed of onhiroma (a hall), gokoshoin (small study), godaishoin (large study), ima (a living room), daidokoro (a kitchen), mitsubone (room for dignified lady) and goshuden (room for legal wife) and so on.
  556. Mitafugetsuan: Rikyu manju
  557. Mitake Bus Route
  558. Mitake, the length from shoulder to hem
  559. Mitake-jinja Shrine (Otaki-mura, Kiso-gun, Nagano Prefecture)
  560. Mitake: The length from Katayama to Suso of the finished Wafuku.
  561. Mitama are believed to be able to be split.
  562. Mitama are believed to be spherical in shape.
  563. Mitama matsuri (Soul Festival): August 13-16
  564. Mitama refers to all gods except Mikoto.
  565. Mitama wo iwaido ni shizumuru matsuri Festival
  566. Mitama-jinja Shrine (Kamo-cho) (formerly Tomyo-ji Temple)
  567. Mitamamatsuri
  568. Mitamamatsuri held on the 10th and 50th day after death correspond to Buddhist memorial service held on the 7th and 49th days after death, respectively.
  569. Mitamamatsuri held on the 20th, 30th, and 40th day after death are sometimes omitted, although this varies depending on regions and Shinto priests in charge of funeral rites.
  570. Mitamashiro, yorishiro, and shiro all refer to substitutes (that can be honored in place of spirits or gods), and are used to describe all objects--except for those already mentioned--in which gods come to dwell temporarily.
  571. Mitamaya (where ancestral spirits were enshrined)
  572. Mitani School: Sochin MITANI, the disciple of Kakukakusai, the sixth Omotesenke (it is unclear whether it presents itself or not)
  573. Mitani Seito, the main shop of Baikodo, and others selling Sanuki Wasanbon are located.
  574. Mitarai (Kure City), Kure City, Hiroshima Prefecture, 1994, port town
  575. Mitarai (Kure City), Kure City, Hiroshima Prefecture, port town
  576. Mitarashi Dango: Generally it refers to a non-sweetened kushi-dango broiled a little and coated with kuzu-an (a paste made from kuzu vine) flavored with sugar and soy-sauce as a finish.
  577. Mitarashi Festival (July)
  578. Mitarashi dango
  579. Mitarashi dango are dumplings coated with a soy-and-sugar syrup, and usually three to five are stuck on a stick.
  580. Mitarashi dango were originally made at the Kamo Mitarashi Tea House at Shimogamo, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City, and apparently these dumplings were made to look like bubbles in the Mitarashi no ike Pond, which is in the precincts of Shimogamo-jinja Shrine.
  581. Mitarashi sai or Tanabata sai (Star Festival): July 7
  582. Mitate Ochi
  583. Mitate likening of Rakugo (Japanese sit-down comedy)
  584. Mitate-e: Parodies of classical works.
  585. Mitatemono chozubachi (literally re-used-object water basins)
  586. Mitera Sennyu-ji wo mamoru kai (An organization for guarding Sennyu-ji temple.)
  587. Mithai
  588. Mito City, Ibaragi Prefecture (Komon Matsuri)
  589. Mito City, Ibaraki Prefecture
  590. Mito Domain
  591. Mito Domain: Mito-jo Castle, Matsuoka-jo Castle (Hitachi Province)
  592. Mito Hitachi sightseeing area: 'Your sky and soil'
  593. Mito Kairaku-en Garden (Mito City, Ibaraki Prefecture)
  594. Mito Tokugawa Marquis family
  595. Mito Tokugawa clan: Mito Domain - Takamatsu Domain
  596. Mito Tokugawa family
  597. Mito Tokugawa family (ditto)
  598. Mito Tokugawa family heads after the war
  599. Mito dai-kagura
  600. Mito-Tokugawa family (the Mito family and the Mito domain) founded by Yorifusa TOKUGAWA, the eleventh son of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA
  601. Mito-jinja Shrine
  602. Mito-jinja Shrine: the main shrine (Important Cultural Property)
  603. Mito-sai
  604. Mito-sen: This coin was minted in Mito, Hitachi Province.
  605. Mitogaku (the scholarship and academic traditions that arose in the Mito Domain)
  606. Mitogaku (the scholarship and academic traditions that arose in the Mito Domain) and the principle of reverence for the Emperor.
  607. Mitogaku was strongly influenced by Shushigaku Meibunron, and emphasized the validity of the Imperial line.
  608. Mitogaku's view of Takauji was inherited by the later generations, and in the late Tokugawa period when Sonno-Joi (Revere the Emperor, Expel the Barbarian) culminated, the heads of wooden statues of Takauji, Yoshiakira and Yoshimitsu (ASHIKAGA) in Toji-in were pilloried.
  609. Mitoshi no kami
  610. Mitoya Clan
  611. Mitra/miθra' originally meant only 'contract' but later meant 'a sworn friend' with an intimate relationship by contract.
  612. Mitsu's great grand son Tetsuya OKITA (1930-) is a scholar of public administration and an emeritus professor of the department of politics and economics at Meiji University.
  613. Mitsu-an Teahouse at the Ryoko-in of Daitoku-ji Temple (Kyoto City)
  614. Mitsuaki IRAKO, a son of Yoshikado, ranked among Takiguchi no musha (samurai guards of the Imperial Residence) and granted an official rank of Shorokuinoge (Senior Sixth Rank, Lower Grade) Nagato no Kami (a deputy minister in charge of regional administration in Nagato).
  615. Mitsuaki SATO: "Ruten-shokusei" (Flux weaves) (2006) is an ensemble of Japanese drums, Tsugaru-jamisen (three-stringed Japanese banjo of Tsugaru), and gamelan.
  616. Mitsuaki TANAKA: He was in the position from May 28, 1888.
  617. Mitsuaki TANAKA:resident
  618. Mitsuakira ASHIKAGA
  619. Mitsuakira ASHIKAGA (July 7, 1364 - June 27, 1418) was a military commander and gon-dainagon (Provisional Manor Councilor) who lived in the period of the Northern and Southern Courts(Japan) and the Muromachi period.
  620. Mitsuba (Japanese honewort): Mitsuba with its stems tied into a bundle may be used.
  621. Mitsuba-aoi
  622. Mitsuba-aoi (Three Leaves of Hollyhock)
  623. Mitsuba-aoi is a type of aoi-mon (mallow patterns), which have been used as Japanese family crests.
  624. Mitsubishi Fuso Aero Ace
  625. Mitsubishi Fuso New Aero Bus
  626. Mitsubishi Zaibatsu
  627. Mitsubishi-Kagaku Foods Corporation used to sell soymilk.
  628. Mitsuchika AKECHI - referred to as both Mitsuhide's cousin and Mitsutada's son, though this it is not clear.
  629. Mitsuchika MATSUDAIRA
  630. Mitsuchika MATSUDAIRA <Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade), Governor of Tanba Province> "appointed as the lord of the domain on November 1, 1717 - transferred on the same date"
  631. Mitsuchika MATSUDAIRA was the second lord of the Yodo Domain in Yamashiro Province.
  632. Mitsuda-e (a kind of oil painting)
  633. Mitsudomoe
  634. Mitsudomoe (literally, three comma-shaped figures in a circle)
  635. Mitsue Plateau Meadow
  636. Mitsufusa OIKAWA's great-grandson Mitsumura OIKAWA was killed in the Yuki War, so that the line temporarily went to ruin; Mitsumasa's son Mitsumura OIKAWA lost his territories, ran away and sought refuge in the KASAI clan.
  637. Mitsufusa OYA
  638. Mitsugake (a three-fingered glove)
  639. Mitsugake covers the thumb, the forefinger and the middle finger and yotsugake covers fingers from the thumb to the annular finger and it is equipped with a thimble-like wood (or a horn of water buffalo and so on) which is hollowed out, covering a whole of the thumb.
  640. Mitsugake without yawaraka boshi and hikae is sometimes used when a beginner starts to draw a bow or when an amateur experimentally does so because the feel of setting a string is easy and the wrist can move freely.
  641. Mitsugake' refers to kataboshi with a hikae and a beginner uses mitsugake at first.
  642. Mitsugi NYUI, the kanjo bugyo (commissioner of finance), introduced a hyofu, which was similar to a han bill, in 1756 to rebuild the economy of Hirosaki Domain in Mutsu Province, which had been battered by the Horeki Famine.
  643. Mitsugi SENGOKU
  644. Mitsugo NOZAWA
  645. Mitsugokuin: This variety was minted at the obanza in Kyoto in and after the Meireki era.
  646. Mitsugon-in Temple
  647. Mitsugon-in Temple is located along the way that runs from Ichinohashi to Okunoin (Ichinohashi and Okunoin are both on Mt. Koya, and Okunoin is the name of the place where the mausoleum of Kukai is situated).
  648. Mitsugon-in Temple was the base of religious activities of Kakuban, who founded "Shingi Shingonshu" (New Shingon Sect of Buddhism) and was posthumously given the title of "Kogyo Daishi" (Great Priest of Prosperous Teachings).
  649. Mitsugoro BANDO
  650. Mitsugoro BANDO (the 10th)
  651. Mitsugoro BANDO (the 10th) and actress Kimiko IKEGAMI are his grandchildren, and Shikisa KISHIZAWA the 11th is his nephew.
  652. Mitsugoro BANDO (the 8th)
  653. Mitsugoro BANDO (the eighth)
  654. Mitsugoro BANDO (the fifth)
  655. Mitsugoro BANDO (the first)
  656. Mitsugoro BANDO (the fourth)
  657. Mitsugoro BANDO (the ninth)
  658. Mitsugoro BANDO (the second)
  659. Mitsugoro BANDO (the seventh)
  660. Mitsugoro BANDO (the sixth)
  661. Mitsugoro BANDO (the third)
  662. Mitsugoro BANDO III is a son of the Mitsugoro BANDO I who was a brilliant dancer and a leading actress of the Kasei culture era.
  663. Mitsugoro BANDO V as Hanako who is in fact Kiritaro the Tengu kozo who is in fact Matsuwaka YOSHIDA.
  664. Mitsugoro BANDO VII
  665. Mitsugoro BANDO VII (September 21, 1882 - November 4, 1961) was a Japanese kabuki actor.
  666. Mitsugoro BANDO VII was born in Tokyo as the eldest son of Kanya MORITA XII, the proprietor of the Shintomi-za Theater.
  667. Mitsugoro BANDO is a Kabuki (traditional drama performed by male actors) actor's professional name.
  668. Mitsugoro BANDO the 8th (October 19, 1906 - January 16, 1975) was a kabuki actor.
  669. Mitsugu FUKUOKA, of "Ise-ondo"
  670. Mitsuharu AKECHI
  671. Mitsuharu AKECHI (c. 1537 - 1582) was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived in the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  672. Mitsuharu AKECHI - thought to be the daughter of Mitsuyasu AKECHI and Mitsuhide's uncle, though this is not clear.
  673. Mitsuharu's childhood name was Iwachiyo.
  674. Mitsuharu, Ujiharu's son, inherited the shugo family of Awaji province and the family continued for generations as one of powerful branch families of the Hosokawa clan, but was destroyed by the Miyoshi clan in the reign of Hisaharu HOSOKAWA at the beginning of the Sengoku period (the period of warring states) and the family line ended.
  675. Mitsuhashi Setsuko Art Museum
  676. Mitsuhashi increased the number of tegoto within his compositions, making them even longer and richer in variation.
  677. Mitsuhawake no Sumeramikoto, the Emperor Hanzei
  678. Mitsuhide AKECHI
  679. Mitsuhide AKECHI and Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI made an agreement to avoid combating in the city during the Battle of Yamazaki.
  680. Mitsuhide AKECHI and his upper officers may have intended by attacking Nobunaga to make the whole Akechi army accomplices and create a situation from which they could not escape.
  681. Mitsuhide AKECHI attempted to solicit someone as a betrayer within Yagi-jo Castle, and the person who accepted his offer set a fire in the honmaru (main compound) and the ninomaru (secondary compound) of Yagi-jo Castle.
  682. Mitsuhide AKECHI escaped from Yamazaki, supported by Katsumata SHIBATA.
  683. Mitsuhide AKECHI started building this castle at Kameyama in 1578 in Kuchitanba which was the center of the Kameyama basin when he was attacking the Tanba area under the order of Nobunaga ODA.
  684. Mitsuhide AKECHI was a warrior who lived in both the Sengoku and Azuchi-Momoyama periods.
  685. Mitsuhide AKECHI was on route to help Hideyoshi's forces.
  686. Mitsuhide AKECHI was the first castellan of Fukuchiyama-jo Castle, and many events and items around Fukuchiyama City are related to the Akechi clan and Mitsuhide, despite the short length of his rule, due to the positive reputation of his administration.
  687. Mitsuhide AKECHI's forces retreated from the front, leaving over 3000 dead and injured.
  688. Mitsuhide AKECHI's letter to Imai Gosochu
  689. Mitsuhide AKECHI's relief columns were ready for the Sanindo corner of the battle line against MORI and were not for the Sanyoudo corner.
  690. Mitsuhide AKECHI, Nagahide NIWA, Ietsugu SUGIHARA, Nagamasa ASANO
  691. Mitsuhide AKECHI, Tadaoki HOSOKAWA, Junkei TSUTSUI, Nagahide NIWA, Hidemasa HORI, Hidekazu HASEGAWA, Ujisato GAMO, Ukon TAKAYAMA, Kiyohide NAKAGAWA, etc.
  692. Mitsuhide AKECHI, a close friend of his, also had only one wife and no concubines.
  693. Mitsuhide AKECHI, after conquring Tanba Province, changed its name to Fukuchiyama-jo Castle (福智山城), and embarked on major renovations to turn it into a new structure of the time (its castellan was Gonbee FUJIKI and later, Hidemitsu AKECHI).
  694. Mitsuhide KARASUMARU
  695. Mitsuhide KARASUMARU (September 16, 1689 - April 11, 1748) was a Kugyo (high court noble) and kajin (waka poet), who lived during the Edo Period.
  696. Mitsuhide TAKECHI as a real person Mitsuhide AKECHI in history.
  697. Mitsuhide TAKECHI, who was ashamed by his lord, Harunaga ODA finally got beyond bearing and decided to rise in revolt, killed Oda.
  698. Mitsuhide TAKECHI: Koshiro MATSUMOTO V
  699. Mitsuhide also killed Nobunaga's son Nobutada ODA, Sadakatsu MURAI of Kyoto Shoshidai and others in Nijo Gosho.
  700. Mitsuhide and his wife had two daughters, Nobusumi ODA's wife and Tadaoki HOSOKAWA's wife Garasha (Christian name Gracia) HOSOKAWA, and a son, Mitsuyoshi (Jugoro) AKECHI.
  701. Mitsuhide captured a number of castles with Mitsuharu AKECHI, Motoaki TAKEDA, Takatsugu KYOGOKU and others including Nagahama Castle at Omi (Omi Province), Sawayama Castle and Azuchi Castle, but was defeated and killed just as he was about to lay siege to Hino.
  702. Mitsuhide chanted in the meeting, "The time is now, May, when raindrops fall."
  703. Mitsuhide cheerfully appears in the room.
  704. Mitsuhide dejectedly comes back home where his wife Satsuki, his retainer Kunitsugu YASUDA (sometimes substituted with Tajima SHIHOTEN), and the renga poet Joha, are all worrying about him.
  705. Mitsuhide endures Harunaga's brutality.
  706. Mitsuhide evoked 'the incident of Honno-ji Temple' aiming at that chance, but he had a big problem.
  707. Mitsuhide finally hits the box, meaning that he has decided to rebel, out of the despair of knowing that he is totally doubted.'
  708. Mitsuhide had fully entertained Ieyasu from the 15th to 17th.
  709. Mitsuhide is said to have expressed his intention to rebel in that meeting, but this leaves many questions.
  710. Mitsuhide put Kyoto under control, but Fujitaka HOSOKAWA and Junkei TSUTSUI, to whom Mitsuhide had asked for cooperation, did not answer his request as he had expected.
  711. Mitsuhide requests ASAYAMA to, "Please use the knife 'Hiyoshimaru,' which you received from my lord, if you behead me."
  712. Mitsuhide says, "Come closer, Sakube."
  713. Mitsuhide simply endures the humiliation.
  714. Mitsuhide tried harakiri but was remonstrated, and left for the Imperial Palace to kill Hisayoshi.
  715. Mitsuhide was also instrumental in getting Toshimitsu SAITO's sister married to Motochika CHOSOKABE, but in 1580 Nobunaga changed his policy and tried to govern Shikoku with force, for which Mitsuhide lost face.
  716. Mitsuhide was born to the Akechi clan, a branch of the Toki clan of Seiwa Genji, his father was Mitsutsuna AKECHI.
  717. Mitsuhide was characterized as being tender toward family, especially to his mother.
  718. Mitsuhide was informed that he could have two Provinces in the Chugoku region (Izumo and Iwami Provinces) if he could win the battles, but at the same time he would be ousted from Tamba Province in Shiga District (Omisakamoto).
  719. Mitsuhide was obliged to retreat to Shoryuji-jo Castle to the rear of the battle front.
  720. Mitsuhide was routed because Hideharu HATANO in Yagami Castle sent for support from Naomasa.
  721. Mitsuhide was successful in executing flood prevention for the Yura-gawa River, which often caused heavy flood damage; today, similar work continues uninterrupted, continuing the history of his flood prevention works.
  722. Mitsuhide's core troops: 5,000
  723. Mitsuhide's costume in this scene is bluish purple, both top and bottom.
  724. Mitsuhide's grandchild Masazumi ODA (daughter's child) participated in the Siege of Osaka on the Toyotomi side, but was rescued after the Siege (it is unknown whether Tenkai involved in it or not).
  725. Mitsuhide, who lost Satsuki and Jujiro was upset but Hisayoshi and Masakiyo SATO appeared and promised Mitsuhide to meet him again at Tenno-zan Mountain.
  726. Mitsuhide-kun, Hiroko-san
  727. Mitsuhira HEKI
  728. Mitsuhira HEKI was a sword craftsman in Musashi Province who lived during the Edo period.
  729. Mitsuhira TOKI
  730. Mitsuhira TOKI (year of birth and death unknown) was a samurai from the closing years of the Heian period to the beginning of the Kamakura period.
  731. Mitsuhira TOMOBAYASHI
  732. Mitsuhira TOMOBAYASHI (also called Mitsuhira BANBAYASHI, 1813 to March 23, 1864) was a scholar of Japanese classical literature, poet, and loyal supporter of the Emperor, who lived in the end of the Edo period.
  733. Mitsuhira lived in the period of Jisho-Juei War, and became Gokenin (a Shogunal retainer) of MINAMOTO no Yoritomo, with the establishment of Kamakura bakufu (a feudal government headed by Yoritomo).
  734. Mitsuhiro KARASUMARU
  735. Mitsuhiro KARASUMARU (1579 - August 22, 1638) was a court noble and poet of the early Edo period.
  736. Mitsuhiro MATSUDAIRA
  737. Mitsuhiro MATSUDAIRA (1674 -October 8, 1717) was fudai daimyo (a daimyo in hereditary vassal to the Tokugawa family) during the middle of the Edo Period.
  738. Mitsuhiro MATSUDAIRA (1674-October 8, 1717) was the third lord of the Kano Domain in Mino Province.
  739. Mitsuhiro MATSUDAIRA <Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade), Governor of Kawachi Province> "appointed as the lord of the domain on February 15, 1711- died on September 4, 1717"
  740. Mitsuhiro OUCHI, Morimi OUCHI, and Hiroshige OUCHI were his brothers.
  741. Mitsuhiro was excellent at 31-syllable Japanese poems and calligraphy, especially skilled at appraisal of old writings and collected them by himself.
  742. Mitsuhisa SHIMAZU once held the event for Ietsuna TOKUGAWA.
  743. Mitsui Zaibatsu
  744. Mitsui-jinja Shrine (Shikinaisha listed in Engishiki, Myojin Taisha)
  745. Mitsui-jinja Shrine Massha main halls (Suwa-sha Shrine, Komori-sha Shrine, Shirahige-sha Shrine) (3)
  746. Mitsui-sha Shrine
  747. Mitsui-zaibatsu's secret trade with Joseon (to which the Ministry of Foreign Affairs gave silent approval) was discovered.
  748. Mitsuie HATAKEYAMA
  749. Mitsuie HATAKEYAMA (1372 - October 31, 1433) was a shugo daimyo (shugo, which were Japanese provincial military governors, that became daimyo, which were Japanese feudal lords) and a kanrei (shogunal deputy) in the period of the Northern and Southern Courts and the Muromachi period.
  750. Mitsuie HATAKEYAMA was a child of Motokuni HATAKEYAMA.
  751. Mitsuie ISHIKAWA
  752. Mitsuie ISHIKAWA (year of birth and death unknown) was a samurai who lived during the late Heian period.
  753. Mitsuie KUJO
  754. Mitsuie KUJO (1394 - June 3, 1449) was a Kanpaku in the Muromachi period.
  755. Mitsuie influenced the shogunate government also in the period of Yoshinori as a shukuro (chief vassal).
  756. Mitsuie made an effort to avoid the war, trying to reconcile shogun with Kamakura kubo (Governor-general of the Kanto region), Mochiuji ASHIKAGA.
  757. Mitsuie was a samurai and established his base in Ishikawa sho, Oshu (Northern Honshu, the region encompassing Mutsu and Dewa provinces).
  758. Mitsuie was born as a legitimate son of Motokuni HATAKEYAMA, the family head of Hatakeyama clan.
  759. Mitsuie's descendant, Akimitsu ISHIKAWA, fought against Masamune DATE in the Sengoku period, although he was Masamune's uncle, but he later became Masamune's vassal.
  760. Mitsuiko SONO (1602 - March 6, 1656) was one of the consorts of the Emperor Gomizunoo.
  761. Mitsukane ASHIKAGA
  762. Mitsukane ASHIKAGA, (1378 - September 1st, 1409) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in mid Muromachi period.
  763. Mitsukane ASHIKAGA, kubo (shogunal representative) of the Kanto, led about 10,000 men into Musashi Province, advancing as far as Koan-ji Temple in the city of Fuchu, but halted his advance after he was warned by the Kanrei of the Kanto, Norisada UESUGI not to continue.
  764. Mitsukane ASHIKAGA, the kubo of the Kanto, had taken his army and marched from Fuchu in Musashi Province as far as the Ashikaga family's private estates in Shimotsuke Province (modern-day Ashikaga City in Tochigi Pref.), but when news of Yoshihiro's defeat and death reached him, he turned back to Kamakura.
  765. Mitsukazu KATO also received reward grants.
  766. Mitsuke-tenjin Shrine Hadaka-matsuri naked festival (December 27, 2000)
  767. Mitsukigoshi is "a popular custom that Chuin must not exceed three months."
  768. Mitsuko SONO
  769. Mitsuko was conferred Juichii (Junior First Rank) later on.
  770. Mitsuko's paternal grandfather was FUJIWARA no Kosemaro who was executed during FUJIWARA no Nakamaro's War.
  771. Mitsukuni (the second lord of Mito Domain)
  772. Mitsukuni TOKUGAWA
  773. Mitsukuni TOKUGAWA favored him for his boldness and knowledge and kept him as a close aid.
  774. Mitsukuni TOKUGAWA gave it the name Rekidaikoki in the Edo period.
  775. Mitsukuni TOKUGAWA mentioned about him in Dainihonshi (Japanese History Book). "Mitsunari was a fine man.
  776. Mitsukuni TOKUGAWA was the second lord of the Mito Domain in Hitachi Province.
  777. Mitsukuni TOKUGAWA … Mitsukuni TOKUGAWA, the family head of the Mito Tokugawa family.
  778. Mitsukuni TOKUGAWA, his younger brother became the second lord of the Mito Domain.
  779. Mitsukuni WAKEBE
  780. Mitsukuni WAKEBE (June 28, 1786 - October 20, 1810) was the ninth lord of Omizo clan in Omi Province.
  781. Mitsukuni also invited SHU Shunsui, a surviving retainer from the Ming Dynasty, who had exiled himself in Japan, and Mitsukuni learned the meaning of historical orthodoxy from him.
  782. Mitsukuni as an empirical figure has been studied without recourse to the Mitsukuni legend.
  783. Mitsukuni dispatched his retainers to various places in Japan to gather information required for the compiling "the Dainihonshi."
  784. Mitsukuni moved to a villa in Komagome because a mansion in Koishikawa was burned down by Great fire of Meireki in 1657 and he set up a department to compile the history there.
  785. Mitsukuni was enshrined as the chief deity of Tokiwa-jinja Shrine in Tokiwa-cho, Mito City.
  786. Mitsukuni who secluded himself in Nishiyamaso in 1690 encouraged the staff to complete honki by stopping other enterprises than the Japanese history and 'Hyakuohonki' was completed in 1697.
  787. Mitsukuni's Personality
  788. Mitsukuni's father was Yorifusa TOKUGAWA.
  789. Mitsukuni's graveyard lies on Mt. Zuiryu in Zuiryu-cho, Hitachiota City.
  790. Mitsukuni's mausoleum called Gikobyo can be found in Jojozan Kyusho-ji Temple in Arajuku-cho, Hitachiota City where his mother was buried.
  791. Mitsukuni's older maternal half-brother, Yorishige MATSUDAIRA was apparently born under similar circumstances.
  792. Mitsukuni's prodigy left many episodes in such biographical sources as "Togen Iji," "Giko Iji," and "Gento Hitsuji."
  793. Mitsukuri and his wife Mitsu (a daughter of 進十六) had two sons and three daughters: the first son, Shukichi MITSUKURI, was a chemist with a Doctorate of Science, and also was a composer; the second son, Yosuke, was known as an industrial technician.
  794. Mitsukuri graduated from the Zoology Department of the University of Tokyo.
  795. Mitsukuri kagura dance (December 27, 2000)
  796. Mitsukuri suddenly died of a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 58.
  797. Mitsukuri went back to Japan in 1892.
  798. Mitsumame
  799. Mitsumame is one of Japanese style sweets or desserts.
  800. Mitsumasa IKEDA succeeded him after his death.
  801. Mitsumasa KAMATA
  802. Mitsumasa KAMATA (date of birth unknown - March 23, 1185) was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived during the late Heian period.
  803. Mitsumasa KAMATA: one of the Yoshitsune's four heavenly kings in "Genpei Seisuiki"
  804. Mitsumasa KITABATAKE
  805. Mitsumasa KITABATAKE (date of birth unknown - January 25, 1429) lived during the early Muromachi period.
  806. Mitsumasa Nozawa
  807. Mitsumasa YONAI (ex-premier) took office as Minister of Navy for the third time.
  808. Mitsumasa YONAI, who became the prime minister of Japan, was the graduate of the Naval Academy of the same year with SAKUMA.
  809. Mitsumasa was fascinated by neo-Confucianism, so he gave Banzan, who was a pupil of Toju NAKAE, a senior position.
  810. Mitsumichi was adopted into his wife's family as a son-in-law of a surgeon Mitsuaki IRAKO, and permitted to establish another new school (Sennodo Irako school) separated from Soke (the head family) (Kendosai Irako school) taken over by Mitsuaki's biological child.
  811. Mitsumine-jinja Shrine
  812. Mitsumine-jinja Shrine (Chichibu City, Saitama Prefecture)
  813. Mitsumine-jinja shrine (Chichibu City, Saitama Prefecture)
  814. Mitsumon' with the crest on three places in the back, and the back of the sleeves
  815. Mitsumono (three songs)
  816. Mitsumoto HOSOKAWA
  817. Mitsumoto HOSOKAWA (1378 - November 15, 1425) was a Kanrei (shogunal deputy) lived in the early Muromachi period.
  818. Mitsumoto NIJO
  819. Mitsumune IGA
  820. Mitsumune IGA (1178 - February 10, 1257) was a Japanese military commander who lived during the early Kamakura period.
  821. Mitsumune IGA approached Yoshimura MIURA, a powerful Gokenin, the shogunal retainer of the Kamakura bakufu.
  822. Mitsumune IGA, a nephew of Yukimitsu NIKAIDO, became Mandokoro Shitsuji after his father Yukimitsu, and Yukimori assumed the post after Koshu was exiled in the incident of the Iga clan in 1224 ("Azuma Kagami" article dated July 29, 1224).
  823. Mitsumune IGA, a nephew of Yukimitsu, became Mandokoro Shitsuji (chief of Mandokoro, the Administrative Board) after Yukimitsu, but after Mitsumune was exiled in the incident of the Iga clan in 1224, Yukimori NIKAIDO, a child of Yukimitsu, was assigned to Mandokoro Shitsuji, and this family succeeded this post.
  824. Mitsumura MIURA
  825. Mitsumura MIURA was a gokenin (an immediate vassal of the shogunate in the Kamakura and Muromachi through Edo periods) of the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) during the mid Kamakura period.
  826. Mitsumura died while his kosode still smelled like him, and his wife cried over the loss of her husband.
  827. Mitsumura led the army and fought, and urged his older brother Yasumura to rise in revolt.
  828. Mitsumura regretted his brother's cowardice, lamented over the fall of the Miura clan and parting from his wife and children, showed his guts by cutting his face with a knife so that people wouldn't recognize, and then killed himself along with the rest members of the clan (Battle of Hoji).
  829. Mitsumura was entrusted to the Tsurugaoka Hachiman-gu Shrine when he was little to become a Buddhist monk and became a disciple of Kugyo.
  830. Mitsumura was good at military art as well as Kangen (gagaku piece without dance), and was a good biwa (Japanese lute) player thanks to the lessons given by FUJIWARA no Takatoki.
  831. Mitsumura was regarded as a threat to the Hojo clan for being a vanguard who controlled the powers of anti-Hojo and Shogun side forces backed by Michiie.
  832. Mitsumura's surviving wife was the daughter of FUJIWARA no Yoshishige, a Hokumen (north face) of the Emperor Toba, and she was known for her beauty.
  833. Mitsumura's wife, who had a baby, entered into priesthood and left Kamakura along with the other wives and children of the Miura clan.
  834. Mitsunaga ISHIKAWA
  835. Mitsunaga ISHIKAWA (year of birth unknown - January 16, 1291) is a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Kamakura period.
  836. Mitsunaga MATSUDAIRA was Jusani Chujo while Tadamasa MATSUDAIRA was Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) Saisho.
  837. Mitsunaga TOKIWA
  838. Mitsunaga TOKIWA (year of birth and death unknown) was a painter (Tosa school) during the late Heian period.
  839. Mitsunaga WAKEBE
  840. Mitsunaga WAKEBE (February 22, 1714 - December 15, 1783) was the 6th lord of the Omizo Domain, Omi Province.
  841. Mitsunaga was dismissed from his position for his involvement in the revolt in March 1181.
  842. Mitsunaka ordered his son MINAMOTO no Yorimitsu, a hero in doing away with specters, to kill her.
  843. Mitsunari ISHIDA
  844. Mitsunari ISHIDA was a feudal warlord in the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  845. Mitsunari ISHIDA was one of them.
  846. Mitsunari ISHIDA who became the local lord of Omi asked Sakon to serve him.
  847. Mitsunari ISHIDA, Masaie NAGATSUKA, Nagamori MASHITA, included in the Gobugyo (five Bugyo) of the Toyotomi government, were originally the members of Yuhitsushu belonged to Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI.
  848. Mitsunari ISHIDA, aged 22 (1581, Battle of Awaji Island)
  849. Mitsunari ISHIDA, in particular, tried everything to save the life of Hidetsugu, and pleaded the 'innocence of the lord Hidetsugu' (according to "Buso-ki") directly to Hideyoshi.
  850. Mitsunari ISHIDA, mainly in charge of administrative affairs (possessed land worth 190,000 koku of rice in Sachiyama in Omi Province)
  851. Mitsunari ISHIDA, who felt the need to prevent the social instability that may result from the increasing number of ronin, took pity on the former vassals of Hidetsugu and accepted them into the Ishida clan.
  852. Mitsunari TOGASHI fled to Mt. Koya, but was killed by the subjugation of Mitsuie HATAKEYAMA on February 28, 1419.
  853. Mitsunari accused Hideyoshi's nephew, Hidetsugu TOYOTOMI, of plotting a coup (which became known as the Hidetsugu Incident) in 1595.
  854. Mitsunari and Masaie NATSUKA took the families of Kogashu as hostages and threatened the kogashu (local samurai based in Koga County, Omi) who served under Torii.
  855. Mitsunari appointed Terumoto MORI as a captain general of the western army and instructed him to enter Osaka Castle on July 17, and he also sent to feudal lords an impeachment letter bearing thirteen articles of the charges signed by three magistrates (Geni MAEDA, Nagamori MASUDA and Masaie NATSUKA).
  856. Mitsunari arranged Yoshihisa SHIMAZU's audience with Hideyoshi in 1588.
  857. Mitsunari conducted kenchi (survey of crop yields) in the domains of the Shimazu and Satake clans as a survey magistrate in 1594.
  858. Mitsunari consulted with Toshiie MAEDA and in January 1599 dispatched an envoy to Ieyasu in order to investigate the crime because Ieyasu's relationship by affinity violated the law of the act banning marriage without authorization, which Hideyoshi had instituted in 1595.
  859. Mitsunari devised a plan along with Kagekatsu UESUGI and Kanetsugu NAOE to defeat Ieyasu in July 1600 (but one theory asserts that no such secret plot existed).
  860. Mitsunari gave Yoshimasa a short sword which Mitsunari was granted by Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI (over-30.3 cm-long short sword called Sadamune ISHIDA, a property of Tokyo National Museum).
  861. Mitsunari gave a sword called "Mumei Masamune (sword without the Masamune's name)" to Hideyasu Yuki, who had escorted him to Sawayama Castle; Hideyasu loved it and took good care of it all his life, calling it "Masamune ISHIDA."
  862. Mitsunari had built up more and more works, such as arranging an audience with Hideyoshi for Yoshinobu SATAKE (Ukyo-no-daibu, chief of Ukyoshiki government agency), who was from Hitachi, and becoming a kenchi bugyo(survey magistrate) in Oshu after the clamp-down on Oshu.
  863. Mitsunari had exercised benevolent government throughout his territory, making the people on his lands dearly miss him, so Naomasa planned to build a new castle at Hikone in order to sweep away all memory of Mitsunari.
  864. Mitsunari hated injustice and implemented the Toyotomi government on the basis of morality without personal consideration.
  865. Mitsunari is said to have lost his fighting spirit because of that.
  866. Mitsunari launched a large-scale repair project, constructing a towering castle with a five-storey (others claim it was a three-storey) central donjon on the mountain's summit, which lead to the saying 'Mitsunari outdid himself about two things, Sakon SHIMA and Sawayama-jo Castle.'
  867. Mitsunari made a decision to attack Ieyasu, using it as an opportunity to effect a pincer strategy by closing in from the east and west, and tried to get Yoshitsugu OTANI on his side.
  868. Mitsunari might have worked in a businesslike manner on Hideyoshi's disposition, and might have played the bad guy instead of Hideyoshi.
  869. Mitsunari perceived their scheme and fled with his chief vassal Kiyooki SHIMA (also known as Sakon SHIMA) to the residence of his ally Yoshinobu SATAKE (Ukyo no daibu).
  870. Mitsunari resigned from the magistrate and stayed at his residence of Sawayama Castle due to Ieyasu's arbitration.
  871. Mitsunari served in the Battle of Shizugatake in 1583.
  872. Mitsunari then found himself in a standoff with seven lords in Fushimi, but they made peace through the arrangements of Ieyasu and Mitsunari agreed to retire, giving up the title to five major magistrates.
  873. Mitsunari tried to remove people involved in the Society of Jesus including Paul MIKI, but failed.
  874. Mitsunari was a talented bureaucrat who rendered distinguish services.
  875. Mitsunari was approximately 156 centimeters tall, according to the analysis.
  876. Mitsunari was said to exempt villagers from customs when famine struck Furuhashi-mura Village in his domain.
  877. Mitsunari's concubine, Hatsume-no-Tsubone, was a kunoichi (a female ninja and part of a group of secret agents) sent by Ieyasu TOKUGAWA.
  878. Mitsunari, Yodo-dono and Kodaiin
  879. Mitsunari, however, had already escaped from Osaka to Fushimi Castle with the help of Yoshinobu SATAKE.
  880. Mitsunaru YANAGIWARA became a chunagon (vice-councilor of state) and a giso, and he was active in affairs of state.
  881. Mitsunaru's son, Sakimitsu YANAGIWARA, and Kinmochi SAIONJI were both described as rare talents among the young kuge, and during the Boshin War, Sakimitsu served as lieutenant governor of the force deployed to subdue the Tokaido; after the Meiji Restoration, Sakimitsu joined the Foreign Ministry.
  882. Mitsunobu "48 Shunga"
  883. Mitsunobu IRAKO (Jurokuinojo [Junior Sixth Rank, Upper Grade], Awa no suke [Assistant Governor of Awa Province], the family head of Kendosai Irako School)
  884. Mitsunobu KANO
  885. Mitsunobu KANO (1565-July 15, 1608) was a painter of the Kano school during the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  886. Mitsunobu TOSA
  887. Mitsunobu TOSA (1434-June 20, 1525) was a painter from the middle of the Muromachi period to the Sengoku period (period of Warring States).
  888. Mitsunobu TOSA (date of birth and death unknown): the founder of the Tosa School.
  889. Mitsunobu WAKEBE
  890. Mitsunobu WAKEBE (1591-April 10, 1643) was the second lord of the Ise-Ueno Domain.
  891. Mitsunobu created the screen paintings in the Reception Hall of Kangakuin, Onjo-ji Temple; in contrast to Eitoku he specialized in delicate painting in the Yamatoe style.
  892. Mitsunobu distinguished himself by building Nijo-jo Castle, Sunpu-jo Castle, Osaka-jo Castle, and Sawayama-jo Castle.
  893. Mitsunobu made efforts in constructing jinya (regional government office) and samurai residence, and in the bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun), he also played an active role in constructing Honmaru (the keep of a castle) of Osaka-jo Castle and as Zoei Bugyo (Temple Administrator) of Enryaku-ji Temple on Mt. Hiei.
  894. Mitsunobu searched Kofuku-ji Temple first.
  895. Mitsunobu was charged with this incident and deported to Tosa Province, but behind the incident was a fight between the warrior's force being granted the privilege of the ex-emperor (including TAIRA no Tadamori), Sekkan-ke (the families which produced regents), and Daijo Tenno (the retired Emperor) after the demise of the Retired Emperor Shirakawa.
  896. Mitsunori ISSHIKI
  897. Mitsunori ISSHIKI (1368-January 25, 1409) was a son of the family head of the Isshiki clan, Akinori ISSHIKI.
  898. Mitsunori died on January 31, 1409; he was given the hogo (posthumous Buddhist name) of "Jikoji dono".
  899. Mitsunori's success led him to rule over land such as Tango Province and Mikawa Province; he became a dominant Shugo Guardian Feudal Lord holding three provinces, and established the height of power for the Isshiki family.
  900. Mitsuo AKIYAMA
  901. Mitsuo MAKINO
  902. Mitsuo MAKINO (November 15, 1909-December 9, 1957) was a movie producer in Japan.
  903. Mitsuo SENDA (Comedian)
  904. Mitsuo left for Manchuria in June following Negishi with respect, and took up the position of general manager of the production department, while experiencing a lot of hardship in a foreign country where language, natural conditions, and customs were different.
  905. Mitsuoki IRAKO (Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade), Oribenokami (an official position equivalent to Shorokuinoge or Senior Sixth Rank, Lower Grade), Mutsunokami (the head of the current Tohoku district area))
  906. Mitsuoki TOSA
  907. Mitsuoki TOSA (November 21, 1617 - November 14, 1691) was a leading painter in the Tosa school in the Edo period.
  908. Mitsuoki TOSA: "The folding screen of Thirty-six Immortal Poets"
  909. Mitsuosa IRAKO
  910. Mitsuosa IRAKO (Jugoinojo, Oribe no kami [Governor of Oribe Province] and Mutsu no kami [Governor of Mutsu Province] concurrently)
  911. Mitsuosa IRAKO (October 7, 1823-September 23, 1881) was a Japanese medical doctor from the end of Edo period to the early Meiji period.
  912. Mitsuosa kept taking notes on the Emperor's medical conditions from his onset of fever to death, describing them in a journal in detail.
  913. Mitsuosa was not entitled to conduct that examinations at that time when he succeeded the family, so he examined mainly court nobles and ladies.
  914. Mitsuru got his permit and read it, and found Saigo's hand-written notes in the book.
  915. Mitsuru ignored it for a year.
  916. Mitsuru then asked Seppo to see Saigo's cherished books, and Seppo showed him "Senshin Dosatsu-ki" and said "Saigo always had this book by his side and read during he was shutting himself up at the southern island."
  917. Mitsuru visited Kagoshima again and went to see Seppo to return the book; then Seppo was delighted and took out his "Wang Yangming Collection" to give Mitsuru, besides, Seppo apologized for his irrational behavior.
  918. Mitsusada (the second lord of Kishu Domain)
  919. Mitsusada INOUE and Taro SAKAMOTO (both historians) opposed Tsuda's theory.
  920. Mitsusada INOUE was the seventh director of National Museum of Japanese History.
  921. Mitsusada ISHIKAWA
  922. Mitsusada ISHIKAWA (year of birth unknown - March 13, 1269) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Kamakura period.
  923. Mitsusada SHONI
  924. Mitsusada TOKI married the daughter of Sadatoki HOJO, the regent to the Kamakura shogunate, which implies that the Toki clan was in a powerful position in the bakufu.
  925. Mitsusada WAKEBE
  926. Mitsusada WAKEBE (1816 - May 12, 1870) was the 11th lord of the Omizo clan in Omi Province.
  927. Mitsusada became an adopted heir of Mitsuyasu WAKEBE, the former lord, and on April 22, 1831, he succeeded to Mitsuyasu's position due to his retirement.
  928. Mitsusada died in the following year of the return of lands and people to the emperor, and his son, Mitsunori WAKEBE, succeeded to his post.
  929. Mitsusada fled from the battlefield and came back to the capital, and appealed to Yoshimitsu about Yasuyuki and Akinao's rebellion.
  930. Mitsusada joined the Meitoku war, but he was blamed when he behaved in unfair way, and was dismissed from Owari Shugoshiki in 1392.
  931. Mitsusada was an ambitious person and wanted to have the shugoshiki of Owari Province, so he pandered to Yoshimitsu, making false accusations against Yasuyuki and Akinao.
  932. Mitsushige HIROHASHI
  933. Mitsushige HIROHASHI (February 22, 1797 - September 29, 1862) was a court noble in the Edo period.
  934. Mitsushige OIKAWA, Mitsufusa OIKAWA, Mitsumasa OIKAWA.
  935. Mitsushige was his another name.
  936. Mitsushuza AKAMATSU (Nenshuza-ryu school, Shobonen-ryu school)
  937. Mitsusue IGA
  938. Mitsusue IGA (date of birth unknown -June 13, 1221; his first name 光季 (Mitsusue) is also written as 光末) was a busho (Japanese military commander), who lived during the early Kamakura Period.
  939. Mitsusue had only a handful of samurai with him and was killed in heavy fighting, but he managed to get one of his servants safely away who went and reported the critical state of affairs to the shogunate.
  940. Mitsusue responded in stead, '[as] I am in charge of guarding, if it is an emergency, I should have been informed, however, now that I haven't been received any imperial order so far, I can't help being confused by such an abrupt invitation at the last minute.'
  941. Mitsusue settled down there as a samurai backed up by the Yamashiro clan of Matsuura Party, who was the local ruling family in Kanzaki.
  942. Mitsusue was granted the position of Jugoinoge, and in 1168, left the capital as a shokan (supervisor of the shoen [manor]) for Kanzaki-no-sho (Kanzaki-no-sho of the Tobain-ryo), a shoen directly controlled by the Imperial Family located in Hizen Province in Kyushu.
  943. Mitsusue's grandson (or son, younger brother of Sadamune) MINAMOTO no Hisanao performed well on the Genpei War and became a jito (manager and lord of manor) of Kamachi, Mizuma County, Chikugo Province, as a Chinzei vassal of the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal governmend headed by a shogun), and began to use the family name of Kamachi.
  944. Mitsusuke AKAMATSU
  945. Mitsusuke AKAMATSU was defeated in 1427, and Yoshitsura ISSHIKI was assassinated in 1440.
  946. Mitsusuke AKAMATSU who was treated as the greatest patriarch of bakufu at that time had gotten on the wrong side of Yoshinori, and in 1437, there was a rumor circulating that his territoies in the provinces of Harima and Mimasaka were going to be confiscated.
  947. Mitsusuke NASU
  948. Mitsusuke NASU (year of birth and death unknown) was a person who lived during the Kamakura period.
  949. Mitsusuke and people in the Akamatsu clan expected that pursuers of the shogun would come to attack them immediately and they were determined to commit suicide in the residence.
  950. Mitsusuke gave back the head quite readily.
  951. Mitsutada AKECHI
  952. Mitsutada AKECHI (1540 ?) - July 4, 1582) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  953. Mitsutada AKECHI - Mitsuhide's uncle, son of either Mitsuhisa AKECHI or Mitsuyasu
  954. Mitsutada WAKEBE
  955. Mitsutada WAKEBE (August 26, 1698 - April 20, 1731) was the 5th lord of the Omizo Domain, Omi Province.
  956. Mitsutaka ROKKAKU
  957. Mitsutaka ROKKAKU (1365 - 1416) was a samurai (warrior) who lived in the period of the Northern and Southern Courts.
  958. Mitsutaka together with Ujinori went to capture Mochiuji and Norimoto, however Mochiuji and others had already escaped led by their retainers (according to "Kamakura Ozoshi").
  959. Mitsutane CHIBA
  960. Mitsutane CHIBA (1359 - 1426 July 12) was a busho (Japanese military commander) from the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan) to the early Muromachi period.
  961. Mitsutane SHIBA
  962. Mitsutane SHIBA, a nephew of Yoshimasa, incurred the displeasure of the Shogun Yoshimochi ASHIKAGA in 1414, lost his position as Shugoshiki of Kaga Province, and retired to Mt. Koya.
  963. Mitsuteru YOKOYAMA described this fruits as "Unshu Mikan" in his cartoon or Manga, "Romance of the Three Kingdoms," however, correctly it is a Koji of Wenzhou, China and not Unshu mikan.
  964. Mitsutoki barely escaped death, and was banished to Izu, while Tokiaki and Noritoki were not blamed.
  965. Mitsutomo (the second lord of Owari Domain)
  966. Mitsutomo DAIJO continued to occupy Baba-jo Castle even after the incident, but in 1426, Michifusa attacked and captured the castle when he was away.
  967. Mitsutorii
  968. Mitsutorii is a combination of three myojin-gate torii (a pillared gate-like entrance to a Shinto shrine), and it is sometimes called yotsuashi torii (four-legged torii) because it has four pillars.
  969. Mitsutoshi SHINOMIYA
  970. Mitsutoshi TAKAYANAGAI mentions in "The Battle of Nagashino" that the Oda force had 12,000 to 13,000, Tokugawa 4,000 to 5,000 and Takeda 8,000 to 10,000, of whom 6,000 to 7,000 were deployed in Shitaragahara.
  971. Mitsutoshi TAKAYANAGI had authority in academic society at that time, which made the foolish image he had established of Nobutada prevail for a long time.
  972. Mitsutoshi served Toyotomi family and became a vassal of Hidehisa SENGOKU.
  973. Mitsutoyo KAJUJI
  974. Mitsutoyo KAJUJI (January 17, 1576-November 18, 1612) was a Kuge (court noble) from the Azuchi-Momoyama period to the early Edo period.
  975. Mitsutoyo KAJUJI, Tsuneto KANROJI, Gyogen DATE, Toshimasa BOJO, Okiyasu ABE and Josho HORIN were his real childen.
  976. Mitsutoyo KAJUJI, who assumed the post of Gon Dainagon (provisional major counselor), Tsuneto KANROJI, who assumed the post of Kurodo no to (Head Chamberlain), Toshimasa BOJO who assumed the post of Sangi (councilor), Okiyasu ABE, who assumed the post of Ukyo no suke (Assistant Master of the Western Capital Offices), were his brothers.
  977. Mitsutsuna AKECHI
  978. Mitsutsuna ROKKAKU
  979. Mitsutsuna ROKKAKU (1401 - March 10, 1445) was a samurai (warrior) who lived in the Northern and Southern Courts period and Muromachi period.
  980. Mitsutsuna may have been Yoritsuna's younger brother or nephew.
  981. Mitsutsune KUJO (tonin for the Hokurikudo region)
  982. Mitsutsune's second son Mitsusuke later resided in Nagasawa, Ecchu Province, and continued his family line by the name of Nagasawa, and Mitsukuni NAGASAWA was one of the known descendants who lived in the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  983. Mitsuuji MOGAMI was not an adopted son of Yoshiaki, but his biological child.
  984. Mitsuuji OGAWA, who is said to have been a Daimyo (feudal lord) as well as a Hita daikan (Edo period prefectural governor), was said to have been the first son of Suketada.
  985. Mitsuwa (three rings) Mage/Osafune: the former mostly uses crepe and the latter brocade and those are almost the same style of Mage, but for different women in different positions.
  986. Mitsuwamage: A hairstyle of the mistresses kept by wealthy merchants at the end of the Edo Period and after.
  987. Mitsuya-kofun Tumulus: Yoshioka-machi, Kitagunma-gun, Gunma Prefecture; the first half of the seventh century
  988. Mitsuyasu AKECHI - Mitsuhide's uncle
  989. Mitsuyasu WAKEBE
  990. Mitsuyasu WAKEBE (September 3, 1809 - August 29, 1858) was the 10th lord of the Omizo clan in Omi Province.
  991. Mitsuyasu and his soldiers got frustrated because they had lost the reason for supporting the Nobuyori's camp; and although they took charge of guarding the Yomei-mon Gate at the beginning, they eventually went over to the TAIRA no Kiyomori's camp.
  992. Mitsuyasu cut off Shinzei's head and returned to Kyoto, where the head was processed down the main streets of the capital before being exposed on the city's prison gate.
  993. Mitsuyasu's father, Morimitsu, died in battle at the Siege of Odawara he participated for the Hideyoshi's side in 1590.
  994. Mitsuyasu's second son
  995. Mitsuyasu's son
  996. Mitsuyo
  997. Mitsuyo (year of birth and death unknown) was a swordsmith who lived in Chikugo Province during the late Heian period.
  998. Mitsuyo URAMATSU
  999. Mitsuyo URAMATSU (December 12, 1736 - August 31, 1804) was a scholar of Yusoku kojitsu (studies in ancient court and military practices and usages) and Kugyo (high court noble), who lived during the Edo Period.
  1000. Mitsuyo's Swords


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