; 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. Noborioji Route: Bound for Noborioji, bound for Kamo Branch
  2. Noboritachi-mon Gate of Uwajima-jo Castle
  3. Noboru ANDO was his best friend.
  4. Noboru FUKUI (Jugoinojo, Kazuenosuke [Assistant Director of Bureau of Statistics] and Bungo no kami [Governor of Bungo Province] concurrently, later his name changed to Sadanori)
  5. Noboru KURISAKI
  6. Noboru MIYATA
  7. Noboru NAKANISHI
  8. Noboru NAKANISHI (date of his birth and death is unknown) was a corporal in the Shinsengumi (a group who guarded Kyoto during the end of Tokugawa Shogunate).
  9. Noboru NAKANISHI, whose birth date is unknown, was a disciple of Seiichi ITO and Kashitaro ITO (or Daizo SUZUKI) of the Hokushin Itto school (a classical sword tradition).
  10. Nobu IKUTA
  11. Nobu IKUTA (1885 - 1950) was a chainman in the end of Meiji period.
  12. Nobuaki ARAKIDA, a mediator Shinto priest (corresponding to ryoke [a lord of the manor]) took half of the donation, and the other half was taken in the form of an offering of money for festivals by the top negi ([one comprehensive term for shrine priests]; corresponding to the honke [head family]) Motochika.
  13. Nobuaki MAKINO: student studying in America
  14. Nobuaki MATSUDAIRA (lord of the domain of Yoshii) (1745 to 1775)
  15. Nobuaki NAKAMIKADO (1662 - 1740)
  16. Nobuaki called himself Saburoemon KANBE in Takada Domain and contributed to the development of new fields.
  17. Nobuakira ADACHI - (Nobuyori ADACHI) - Nobuyuki ADACHI
  18. Nobuakira ADACHI became the assistant of Yoshitoki TAKAHASHI at the time of Kansei calendar revision (Kansei Calendar) and was appointed to Tenmonkata in 1835.
  19. Nobuakira NAKAMIKADO (1302 - 1365)
  20. Nobuakira, his father, initially decided Nobutomi, his third son, as his heir.
  21. Nobuari AYANOKOJI (Court Rank, Junior Deputy Chief Councillor of State, 1269 - 1324), the founder of the Ayanokoji family, was Tsunesuke's younger brother.
  22. Nobuari MATSUDAIRA (1739 to 1793)
  23. Nobuatsu NAGATANI
  24. Nobuatsu NAGATANI (March 30, 1818 - December 26, 1902) was a kugyo (the top court officials) and politician belonging to the peerage (viscount) from the end of Edo period to the Meiji period.
  25. Nobuatsu NAITO (1823-1825)
  26. Nobuchika (Ryuho) UNNO who was the second son of Shingen and became a priest due to blindness committed suicide after letting his son, Kenryo, Nobumichi TAKEDA, escape.
  27. Nobuchika HORIKAWA, Sashosho (Minor Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards) and Noriyasu HORIKAWA, Sangi (councillor) were his son, and Nobuchika HIGUCGHI was his daughter.
  28. Nobuchika KATAOKA, who was his father and held the title of daiguji (high priest of a great shrine) of Kashima-myojin in Hitachi Province, became a follower of Shinran, and made Junshin a disciple of Shinran.
  29. Nobuchika NAITO (1850-1851)
  30. Nobuchika ODA
  31. Nobuchika ODA (January 26, 1851 - October 30, 1927) was the 10th lord of Tanba Kaibara Domain, Tanba Province, and Governor of Kaibara Domain.
  32. Nobuchika UNNO, Katsuyori's second older brother, entered into priesthood because he was born blind, and Nobuyuki TAKEDA, his third older brother, died young.
  33. Nobufusa MADENOKOJI
  34. Nobufusa MADENOKOJI (1258 - November 11, 1348) was a court noble during the Kamakura period to the period of the Northern and Southern Courts.
  35. Nobufusa MADENOKOJI and Fujifusa MADENOKOJI played active role in the Kenmu Restoration as trusted vassals of Emperor Godaigo.
  36. Nobufusa TAKATSUKASA
  37. Nobufusa TAKATSUKASA (1565 to 1657)
  38. Nobufusa TAKATSUKASA (November 17, 1565 - January 18, 1658) was a kugyo (top court official) who lived in the era from the Azuchi-Momoyma period to the Edo period.
  39. Nobufusa UTSUNOMIYA, who became a Buddhist thanks to Shunjo, donated Senyu-ji Temple to him, and Shunjo changed the Chinese characters used for its name and fundraised for the re-construction of the temple.
  40. Nobufusa and Teruko had seven children, including Nobuhisa TAKATSUKASA and Takako TAKATSUKASA (the lawful wife of Iemitsu TOKUGAWA).
  41. Nobufusa wrote a diary called "Madenokoji Ipponki," of which a fragment still remains.
  42. Nobuharu FUSEHARA (commonly, FUSHIHARA)
  43. Nobuharu FUSEHARA (or FUSHIHARA) (May 14, 1790 - April 1, 1863) was a Confucian and Kugyo (high court noble) who lived in the late Edo period.
  44. Nobuharu NAKAMIKADO (1517 - 1555)
  45. Nobuharu TSUDA's: 2,000
  46. Nobuhide MATSUDAIRA
  47. Nobuhide MATSUDAIRA [Jugoinoge Kii no kami, Governor of Kii Province, (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  48. Nobuhide MATSUDAIRA was the sixth lord of the Kameyama Domain, Tanba Province.
  49. Nobuhide NAKAMIKADO (1469 - 1531)
  50. Nobuhide ODA
  51. Nobuhide ODA (jiju [a chamberlain])
  52. Nobuhide ODA is a busho (Japanese military commander) and daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) of Owari Province in the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  53. Nobuhide ODA was the sixth son of Nobunaga ODA.
  54. Nobuhide SAKUMA
  55. Nobuhide SAKUMA (1556-January 14, 1632) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Azuchi Momoyama Period.
  56. Nobuhide SAKUMA was born as the eldest son of Nobumori SAKUMA, who was a senior vassal of Nobunaga ODA and the family head of the Sakuma clan.
  57. Nobuhide SAKUMA was one of his children, and Moritsugu SAKUMA (father of Morimasa SAKUMA, Katsumasa SHIBATA, and Katsuyuki SAKUMA) was one of his cousins.
  58. Nobuhide TAKEDA was his older brother.
  59. Nobuhide built a window in the keep of a castle, and Ujitoyo completely trusted him, thinking it was for the splendor of enjoying the summer breeze.
  60. Nobuhide moved his base from Aki to Wakasa when he became shugo.
  61. Nobuhide was a visionary who brought economic distribution hub at the time under control in order to activate commerce, such as getting economic power by governing Tsushima City and Atsuta, commercial cities near Shobata-jo Castle.
  62. Nobuhide was given reigns of the family in 1527 when his father, Nobusada, was still alive.
  63. Nobuhiko HIGASHIKUNI (Nobuhiko HIGASHIKUNI)
  64. Nobuhiko KOBAYASHI (Yumihiko NAKAHARA) gave high marks for Nakahira's films such as "Gyunyuya Furanki" in 1956 and "Chizu no nai Machi" in 1960 after both of them were released.
  65. Nobuhiko served two terms as councilor of the prefectural council of Yamaguchi Prefecture and he was also a great scholar of the Chinese classics.
  66. Nobuhira MATSUDAIRA (1636 to 1689)
  67. Nobuhira MATSUDAIRA married a daughter of Yorinobu TOKUGAWA as his seishitsu (legal wife) and established a family as a relative of Kii family.
  68. Nobuhiro KONOE
  69. Nobuhiro KONOE (1599 to 1649)
  70. Nobuhiro KONOE (June 24, 1599 - November 15, 1649) was a court noble and Toshichoja (representative of the Fujiwara family) who lived in early Edo period.
  71. Nobuhiro KONOE, the 4th Prince of the 107th Emperor Goyozei, is the successor of the Konoe family.
  72. Nobuhiro ODA
  73. Nobuhiro ODA (date of birth unknown - October 23, 1574) was a military commander in the period of warring states.
  74. Nobuhiro ODA, Nobunaga's older brother but born of a concubine, was later defeated and captured by the IMAGAWA army, at which time Ieyasu was exchanged for Nobuhiro and sent to Sunpu.
  75. Nobuhiro SATO
  76. Nobuhiro SATO (January 25, 1816 - February 15, 1900) was a Japanese samurai (a feudal retainer of the Choshu clan).
  77. Nobuhiro begged Matehime to have Heizo his heir.
  78. Nobuhisa TAKATSUKASA
  79. Nobuhisa TAKATSUKASA (May 17, 1590 - December 31, 1621) was a Kugyo (high court noble) during the Edo period.
  80. Nobuhisa TAKATSUKASA, Nobuhira MATSUDAIRA, and Takako TAKATSUKASA (the lawful wife of Iemitsu TOKUGAWA) were his children.
  81. Nobuhisa TAKEDA, the son of the twlefth head of the Kai-Takeda clan Nobuharu Takeda, moved from Kai Province to Kitaura in Hitachi Province in 1392 and constructed his residential castle.
  82. Nobuhito had an enthronement ceremony on September 11, and it was held the next day when Emperor Nijo passed away at the early age of 23.
  83. Nobuie NAKAMIKADO (1765 - 1790)
  84. Nobukado TAKEDA (Shingen's brother) and others who knew about the abandonment of Iida-jo Castle lost the will to fight.
  85. Nobukane ODA
  86. Nobukane ODA (? - 1583) was a Japanese military commander who lived during the Sengoku period (the period of warring states).
  87. Nobukane ODA is also said to have personally protected Ichi and her three daughters and fostered his nieces, saying, 'It is unbearable to think of the extinction of the Asai family line.'
  88. Nobukane ODA, a younger brother of Nobunaga ODA, sided with the 'western' army in the Battle of Sekigahara, but was allowed to survive as a daimyo.
  89. Nobukane ODA, a younger brother of Nobunaga, was given favorable treatment as the lord of Tsu-jo Castle in Ise Province under the Toyotomi regime, but fell into disgrace with Hideyoshi and was punished by being deprived of his fief.
  90. Nobukane followed Nobutaka to the grave.
  91. Nobukane served Nobutaka ODA, a son of Nobunaga.
  92. Nobukane was a nephew of Nobunaga.
  93. Nobukane was the third son of Nobuyuki ODA, who was a younger brother of Nobunaga ODA.
  94. Nobukane's residence was located in 'Yoto-minami Suzaku-nishi,' and the property was designated as Heike Mokkanryo (Land rights confiscated by Kamakura bakufu from the Taira family) and put under the control of MINAMOTO no Yoshitsune who had become Kyoto Shugo (military governor of Kyoto).
  95. Nobukata KIYOHARA
  96. Nobukata KIYOHARA (1475 - August 24, 1550) was a Kugyo (the top court official) and a scholar during the Muromachi period and the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States).
  97. Nobukata KIYOHARA's daughter served the Muromachi Shogun Yoshiharu ASHIKAGA, and she was the biological mother of Yusai HOSOKAWA of the Hosokawa clan.
  98. Nobukata KIYOHARA, of the Muromachi period, was the third son of Kanetomo YOSHIDA who was a shintoist of Yoshida-jinja Shrine, and was adopted by the House of Kiyohara, which was Myogyo-hakase, professor of Confucian studies.
  99. Nobukata MATSUDAIRA [Jugoinoge Kii no kami, Governor of Kii Province, (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  100. Nobukata NAKAMIKADO (1350 -)
  101. Nobukata ODA
  102. Nobukata ODA (February 9, 1712 - September 22, 1741) was the seventh lord of the Yanagimoto clan in Yamato Province.
  103. Nobukata TAKEDA
  104. Nobukata TAKEDA (1420 - June 29, 1471) was a warlord and provincial military governor in the Muromachi period and the second head of the Wakasa-Takeda clan that was a branch family of the Takeda clan.
  105. Nobukata TAKEDA and Kuninobu TAKEDA: Wakasa Province and half of Aki Province
  106. Nobukata served in the imperial court and gave lectures, also studied Myogyodo (one of the Confucian schools) and wrote lucubration and literary works about Kokugaku and Jugaku (native studies and Confucianism).
  107. Nobukata served the Imperial Court, gave lectures and systematized Myogyo-do (the study of Confucian classics) in addition to producing many monographs of the study of Japanese classical literature and Confucianism.
  108. Nobukata sumo, held at Kashima Yoshida-jinja Shrine in Nobukata, Itako City, Ibaraki Prefecture
  109. Nobukata's works are still existing and they are the basis of Nihon kokugaku (studies of Japanese literature and culture).
  110. Nobukatsu (Nobuo) ODA
  111. Nobukatsu (Nobuo) ODA was a warlord/daimyo (feudal lord) who lived in the Azuchi-momoyama and early Edo periods.
  112. Nobukatsu ODA
  113. Nobukatsu ODA visited Saiga on the 28th and Hideyasu YUKI and Kazumasa ISHIKAWA did so on 29th.
  114. Nobukatsu ODA, Nobunaga's second son, who was discontent with this, raised an anti-Hideyoshi army in 1584 with Ieyasu TOKUGAWA, who had been an ally of Nobunaga's.
  115. Nobukatsu ODA, the second son of Nobunaga, had a fief of 1,000,000 koku as the lord of Kiyosu-jo Castle in connection of the Oda clan under the Toyotomi regime and became a minister of the center, but was punished by being deprived of his fief because he refused transference between domains after the Siege of Odawara.
  116. Nobukatsu OKABE (Jugoinoge, Mino no kami), the oldest son of Nagamori OKABE.
  117. Nobukatsu OKABE entered with 51,000 koku from Tatsuno domain, Harima Province, but was transferred to Kishiwada Domain, Izumi Province in 1640.
  118. Nobukatsu allied with Ieyasu TOKUGAWA and fought against Hideyoshi in the Battle of Komaki and Nagakute, but conciliated and yielded allegiance to him.
  119. Nobukatsu also participated in the conquest of Odawara in 1590, and distinguished himself in the attack on Nirayama Castle in Izu Province.
  120. Nobukatsu moved to Owari Kiyosu-jo Castle after an earthquake in December 1585 damaged Ise-Nagashima-jo Castle.
  121. Nobukatsu was born the second son of Nobunaga ODA in 1558.
  122. Nobukatsu was not nominated in the Kiyosu conference to the heir of the Oda family (It was partly because that he had been adopted by the other family, but the fact he had repeatedly committed mistakes was also a important factor.).
  123. Nobukatsu's Descendants
  124. Nobukatsu's eldest son, Hidekatsu, was also punished in the same way.
  125. Nobukatsu's mother was Kitsuno IKOMA, a daughter of Iemune IKOMA.
  126. Nobukatsu's place in the Battle of Sekigahara, which occurred in 1600, remains unclear.
  127. Nobukazu ODA
  128. Nobukazu ODA (? - June 21, 1582) was a Japanese military commander who lived during the Sengoku period (the period of warring states).
  129. Nobukazu OINOMIKADO
  130. Nobukazu OINOMIKADO (1442-August 31, 1487) was Kugyo (top court official) during the Muromachi period.
  131. Nobukazu died at the Honnoji Incident in June 2, 1582.
  132. Nobukazu died some time before Kozan's death and Yoshiyori succeeded Kozan, so that the Yamato school was continued to the Meiji period by Yoshiyori line as a lineal descendant in Shimabara.
  133. Nobukazu was one of the noble siblings at the Kyoto great military parade held in 1581.
  134. Nobukichi MIYAGAWA
  135. Nobukichi MIYAGAWA (1843 - January 1, 1868) was a member of Shinsengumi (a group who guarded Kyoto during the end of Tokugawa Shogunate) from Tama district, Musashi Province.
  136. Nobukichi MIYAKAWA and Kunzaburo AIBA joined together with him.
  137. Nobukimi ANAYAMA
  138. Nobukimi ANAYAMA took part in the major battles by Shingen, such as the Battle of Kawanakajima.
  139. Nobukimi ANAYAMA/Baisetsu ANAYAMA was a military commander during the period of warring states.
  140. Nobukimi ANAYAMA: Permitted to rule his inherited territories and to make his legitimate son, Katsuchiyo, succeed him as the head of the Takeda clan
  141. Nobukimi was adopted by Tadaka and changed her name to "Shokimi".
  142. Nobukimi's last moments
  143. Nobukiyo BOMON
  144. Nobukiyo BOMON (1159 - April 9, 1216) was a court noble during the Kamakura period.
  145. Nobukiyo BOMON, who held the post of Naidaijin (Minister of the Center), was her younger maternal half-brother.
  146. Nobukiyo MATSUDAIRA (1689 to 1724)
  147. Nobukiyo ODA (hatamoto [bannermen]), the second son of Nagamasa was given 300 koku, moved out and set up a new branch family, and became hatamoto.
  148. Nobukiyo OISHI
  149. Nobukiyo OISHI (1677 - March 20, 1703) was one of 47 samurai of Ako Roshi (lordless samurai of the Ako Domain).
  150. Nobukiyo belonged to the back gate unit in the raid on Kira-tei Residence.
  151. Nobukiyo had a home in Shijomibu and Sanjo bomon.
  152. Nobukiyo was a grandson of Nobukoto OISHI, a younger brother of Yoshikatsu OISHI, who was a great-grandfather of Yoshio OISHI, that is, Nobukiyo belonged to a branch family of the Oishi clan.
  153. Nobukiyo, Nobutaka's son, was the Emperor Gotoba's uncle, and Nobukiyo's daughter became the legal wife of MINAMOTO no Sanetomo, Shogun of the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun); as a result, the Bomon family came to hold enormous influence over both the imperial house and the bakufu.
  154. Nobuko TAKATSUKASA
  155. Nobuko TAKATSUKASA (1651 to 1709) was the legitimate wife of Tsunayoshi TOKUGAWA, the fifth-generation shogun of the Edo shogunate.
  156. Nobuko TAKATSUKASA (1651-March 17, 1709) was the lawful wife of Tsunayoshi TOKUGAWA, the fifth seii taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians") of Edo bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  157. Nobuko TAKATSUKASA - Midaidokoro of the fifth Shogun Tsunayoshi TOKUGAWA.
  158. Nobuko TAKATSUKASA and Fusako TAKATSUKASA were his sisters and Kaneharu KUJO was his brother.
  159. Nobuko became a Kotaifujin (title for previous retired emperors' wife.)
  160. Nobuko being called 'Gojo no Kisaki' was derived from her residence in Togojoin (Gojo no miya.)
  161. Nobuko, Princess Tomohito of Mikasa
  162. Nobukuni was born in Ise Province and, after he came of age, left home on a samurai warrior's quest, reaching Fujisawa-shuku.
  163. Nobumasa Asakura became a Tsukegaro to Tadanaga TOKUGAWA in 1624.
  164. Nobumasa MATSUDAIRA
  165. Nobumasa MATSUDAIRA (1661 to 1691)
  166. Nobumasa MATSUDAIRA [Jugoinoge Zusho no kami, Head of the Document Office, (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  167. Nobumasa MATSUDAIRA was the eighth (the last) lord of the Kameyama Domain, Tanba Province.
  168. Nobumasa NAITO
  169. Nobumasa NAITO (Jugoinoge, Kii no kami), the oldest son of Nobunari NAITO.
  170. Nobumasa NAITO was a busho (Japanese military commander) of the Sengoku period (Period of Warring States) (Japan).
  171. Nobumasa NAITO, the oldest son of Nobunari, transferred to Takatsuki domain in Settsu Province which was closer to Osaka, so the original domain was abolished.
  172. Nobumasa NAKAMIKADO (1691 - 1730)
  173. Nobumasa OKUDAIRA
  174. Nobumasa OKUDAIRA (1600-1601)
  175. Nobumasa OKUDAIRA was a busho (Japanese military commander) over the Sengoku period and the Edo period.
  176. Nobumasa OKUDAIRA, Kagetada MATSUDAIRA
  177. Nobumasa OKUDAIRA: 30,000-koku Kozuke-Miyazaki Domain (Obata Domain)
  178. Nobumasa WAKEBE
  179. Nobumasa WAKEBE (January 13, 1653 - January 23, 1715) was the 4th lord of the Omizo Domain, Omi Province.
  180. Nobumasa renovated Takatsuki-jo Castle and constructed Honmaru and Ninomaru.
  181. Nobumichi KOGA
  182. Nobumichi KOGA (October 11, 1744 - October 25, 1795) was a Kugyo (court noble) during the late Edo period.
  183. Nobumichi MATSUDAIRA
  184. Nobumichi MATSUDAIRA [Jugoinoge Kii no kami, Governor of Kii Province, (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  185. Nobumichi MATSUDAIRA was the third lord of the Kameyama Domain, Tanba Province.
  186. Nobumichi TSUBOI, who learned under Bosai UTAGAWA, was said to transcribe "Doeff Halma."
  187. Nobumichi YAMADA
  188. Nobumichi YAMADA (December 13, 1833 - March 11, 1900) was a government official and a statesman in Japan.
  189. Nobumichi and his family who had been in the domain fled to the territory of Sendai Domain beyond the Ou mountains.
  190. Nobumichi set up the jinya (regional government office) in Okidome, Yamato Province, leading to the foundation of Okidome Domain.
  191. Nobumine ANBE
  192. Nobumine MATSUDAIRA [Jushiinoge Kii no kami, Governor of Kii Province, (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  193. Nobumine OGASAWARA, Lord of Matsuo-jo Castle (located in present-day Iida City), also defected to the Oda army.
  194. Nobumine OGASAWARA, the lord of Matsuo-jo Castle in Shinano, Nobushige ASHIDA, the lord of Tanaka-jo Castle in Suruga Province, and others surrendered without fighting before the invasion of the Oda and Tokugawa allied forces.
  195. Nobumine OGASAWARA: 10,000-koku Honjo Domain
  196. Nobumitsu ISAWAGORO constructed the Genriki-kiyama-jo Castle in Oi-gun, Wakasa Province in the Kamakura period.
  197. Nobumitsu MATSUDAIRA (1775 to 1803)
  198. Nobumitsu achieved distinguished war service during the Jokyu War as well, and he became the founder of the Aki Takeda clan after being appointed to shugo of Aki Province.
  199. Nobumitsu also composed "Funa Benkei" (Benkei in the Boat) and "Kanemaki" (Coil Around a Bell) (the model for "Dojo-ji Temple [Noh play]").
  200. Nobumitsu was active as an otsuzumi kata (large hand drum player) and waki no shite (beside-the-doer-role).
  201. Nobumitsu was active until ripe old age on the front lines assisting tayu, and awarded the title of 'Gonno kami' (a title given to those who excelled at a wide range of performances).
  202. Nobumitsu, who was the seventh child of Onami, took the central role of the guild as the Gon no kami (provisional governor).
  203. Nobumori SAKUMA
  204. Nobumori SAKUMA spent his last time here.
  205. Nobumori SAKUMA was a busho (Japanese military commander) during the Azuchi-Momoyama Period.
  206. Nobumori proceeded to excuse their behavior tearfully by saying, "Whatever you say, no one would be able to have such excellent vassals as us," which fueled Nobunaga's anger ("Shinchoko-ki" [Biography of Nobunaga ODA]).
  207. Nobumori's escape after 'losing the will to fight' at the Battle of Mikatagahara was far from the attitude of samurai which Ieyasu and Hirohide HIRATE took to face the battle from the front.
  208. Nobumoto MIZUNO conquered in 1543 the Shinkai clan of current Miyazu, Aguhi-machi, Aichi Prefecture and occupied Yanabe-jo Castle in Owari Province (Yanabe-nakamachi, Handa City) that was guarded by Shuden SAKAKIBARA
  209. Nobumoto NAKAMIKADO (1659 - 1680)
  210. Nobumoto NISHINA and Nobusada NISHINA, the first and second son of Shingen's fifth son Morinobu NISHINA, served the Tokugawa shogunate as hatamoto (direct retainer of bakufu), and both families are existing at present (Nobusada reverted its family name to Takeda).
  211. Nobumoto NUMATA protected Musashi in Moji-jo Castle and later sent him to his father, Muni in Bungo, safely with guard armed with guns.
  212. Nobumoto TAKEDA, a younger brother of Nobumitsu who had become a monk at Mt. Koya in fear of bakufu's interrogation, was appointed as the successor of the shugo of Kai Province after the internal strife in Kai-Genji with the Hemi clan.
  213. Nobumoto became the vassal of Nobunaga ODA, who won in the Battle of Okehazama in 1560.
  214. Nobumune OINOMIKADO
  215. Nobumune OINOMIKADO (1391-after 1453) was Kugyo during the Muromachi period.
  216. Nobuna OINOMIKADO
  217. Nobuna OINOMIKADO (1699-November 20, 1684) was a retainer of the Imperial Court in the early Edo period.
  218. Nobunaga
  219. Nobunaga ODA
  220. Nobunaga ODA - Kipposhi
  221. Nobunaga ODA also frequently lodged at the temple during his visits to Kyoto ('Nobunaga Koki').
  222. Nobunaga ODA also proclaimed himself to be the title.
  223. Nobunaga ODA also wanted to acquire this famous piece and gave Soshitsu the order to bring it to Kyoto, although Nobunaga died in the Honnoji Incident before acquiring it.
  224. Nobunaga ODA and Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI basically promoted nanbanboeki.
  225. Nobunaga ODA and Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI exchanged part of their shoryo for 7,000 koku of Imperial property.
  226. Nobunaga ODA and Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI, who between them accomplished the task of unifying the whole country, completely and thoroughly abolished the barrier checkpoint system.
  227. Nobunaga ODA and Toshiie MAEDA
  228. Nobunaga ODA and his retainers commonly used gravestones and stone Buddhist images to build walls, but the large number of those stones found in the walls of this castle is outstanding, only matched by Koriyama-jo Castle.
  229. Nobunaga ODA appointed Suketada to the position of Tosa no kami, and also appointed his son as Umanosuke.
  230. Nobunaga ODA assumed that Yoshitaka KURODA, who went to Arioka-jo Castle alone, betrayed him and ordered Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI to kill Nagamasa KURODA.
  231. Nobunaga ODA beat Yoshimoto IMAGAWA in the Battle of Okehazama in 1560, and with that momentum, he conquered Mino Province.
  232. Nobunaga ODA became devoted to Nichijo and lodged at the temple while in Kyoto, but on June 21, 1582, an incident (known as the Incident at Honno-ji) occurred in which Nobunaga committed suicide after the forces of Mitsuhide AKECHI surrounded the temple which was then burnt to the ground.
  233. Nobunaga ODA conquered and killed the Takeda clan, making Takeda's domain chaotic.
  234. Nobunaga ODA constructed Azuchi-jo Castle (1576).
  235. Nobunaga ODA continuously moved the samurai's territories that Nobunaga exacted according to their power and progress, and Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI made the Sengoku daimyo that Hideyoshi subjugated, including Ieyasu TOKUGAWA, move in their entirety from their base territory to a new fief.
  236. Nobunaga ODA defeated all of such opponents.
  237. Nobunaga ODA disliked that the idea of 'Muen' of temples and shrines becoming a shield of his enemies.
  238. Nobunaga ODA forced Kennyo (顕如) to surrender and concluded the war with Ishiyama Honganji Temple (石山本願寺) (Ishiyama War (1570 ?1580)).
  239. Nobunaga ODA gave his retainers the license to hold a tea party or tea utensils as a part of the rewards.
  240. Nobunaga ODA had conducted genocidal killing in the cases of the fire attack against Mt. Hiei, Nagashima ikkoikki (an uprising of Ikko sect followers in Nagashima), and Echizen ikkoikki, and as similar execution was conducted in this case also, certain of Nobunaga ODA's troops inclined their heads.
  241. Nobunaga ODA held no official title after resigning as Udaijin (Minister of the Right) and Ukone no daisho (Major Captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards) in May (April in old lunar calendar), 1578.
  242. Nobunaga ODA initially aimed at prohibiting the erizeni act by imposing a severe punishment for such action.
  243. Nobunaga ODA launched rakuichi-rakuza (free markets and open guilds) in new cities, and Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI ultimately dismantled the za system of the medieval period.
  244. Nobunaga ODA obeyed Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA and arrived in Kyoto (in 1568).
  245. Nobunaga ODA officially designated the 10 go masu, which was used at that time, as the standard masu for commerce.
  246. Nobunaga ODA ordered Hideyoshi HASHIBA (later Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI) to construct Obai-an Temple to pray for the soul of his father Nobuhide when he first entered Kyoto in 1562.
  247. Nobunaga ODA ousted Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA, the shogun in Muromachi, and established the Kinai government (the government in the Kinai area - roughly corresponding to the present Kansai region) replacing the Muromachi bakufu.
  248. Nobunaga ODA period
  249. Nobunaga ODA severely punished the persons who carried out erizeni acts.
  250. Nobunaga ODA should be defeated and, regardless what might happen to situations of the world, the Hongan-ji Temple should not run out on ARAKI.
  251. Nobunaga ODA took this opportunity to invade Minami Omi in 1568.
  252. Nobunaga ODA used Eiraku-tsuho as his symbol.
  253. Nobunaga ODA was a busho (Japanese military commander), daimyo (Japanese territorial lord) during the Sengoku period (period of warring states) and a statesman who lived from the Sengoku period to the Azuchi-Momoyama period and he had a great influence on future generations.
  254. Nobunaga ODA was originally from the Inbe clan, but is said to have changed his family name to Taira due to the genpeikotairon (Minamoto and Taira clans rotation theory).
  255. Nobunaga ODA who appeared around the middle of the 16th century established a strong fighting organization in his territory, for example, by separating samurai from the farmers, and rapidly expanding his territory.
  256. Nobunaga ODA … The name came from udaijin, the government post of Nobunaga ODA.
  257. Nobunaga ODA's era
  258. Nobunaga ODA's horse guards, just like pages who served him, were chosen from among the second and third sons of local ruling families and played important roles as Nobunaga's aides.
  259. Nobunaga ODA's letter of pardon to Imai Gosochu
  260. Nobunaga ODA, Nobutada ODA, Hidetaka KAWAJIRI, Katsuie SHIBATA, Nagahide NIWA, Hideyoshi HASHIBA, Nobumori SAKUMA, Kazumasu TAKIGAWA, Narimasa SASSA, Toshiie MAEDA, Nobumoto MIZUNO (also Mitsuhide AKECHI according to a theory), and Masanari NONOMURA.
  261. Nobunaga ODA, a feudal lord from Owari Province (the western part of Aichi Prefecture), fought off the Imagawa clan of Suruga Province and seized Mino Province from the Saito clan, then they invaded Omi in order to go to the capital.
  262. Nobunaga ODA, aged 14 (1547, Attack to Ohama)
  263. Nobunaga ODA, in the process of extending his influence, put Yoshitaka KUKI who came from Kuki clan, the Shugo in Shima Province, under his control and organized his suigun that consisted of mainly the Kuku clan.
  264. Nobunaga ODA, who came up to Kyoto in 1568, adopted the 'Kyoto jugo-masu' as the standard masu in his territories, and it was also adopted by Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI for use in deciding the initial official productivity estimates (kokumori) of Taiko Land Survey and in collecting land tax.
  265. Nobunaga ODA, who departed for Kai Province in April 1582, is reported to have seen Mt. Fuji at Daigahara (in present-day Hokuto City) for the first time in his life.
  266. Nobunaga ODA, who grew in strength among these daimyo in the Sengoku period, defeated the Muromachi bakufu and formed the foundation for a strong centralized system (the Oda government).
  267. Nobunaga ODA, who had such a meteoric rise to power, conducted a land survey of his entire territory, making an effort to maintain both a high agricultural production and accurate tax ledgers.
  268. Nobunaga ODA, who is generally regarded as having been cruel to his retainers, nevertheless forgave Hisahide, which was very uncharacteristic of him.
  269. Nobunaga ODA, who knew the truth later, regretted very much that he killed Nagamasa KURODA telling that 'he lacked insight,' and he was very glad to know that Nagamasa KURODA was alive thanks to ready wit of Shigeharu TAKENAKA.
  270. Nobunaga ODA, who later becomes Udaijin also at one time held this rank, and his eldest son Nobutada ODA's rank was Jusanmi Sakone no chujo (Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  271. Nobunaga ODA, who started the subjugation of Takeda in April 1582, subverted the Takeda clan in Kai, and its territory--including Kai, Shinano, Suruga and Kozuke--was placed under the Oda government.
  272. Nobunaga ODA, who was astonished by Murashige ARAKI's rebellion, dispatched Mitsuhide AKECHI, Yukan MATSUI and Shigemoto MANMI to Arioka-jo Castle as emissaries for examination.
  273. Nobunaga ODA, who went to the capital to serve Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA in 1568, came to conflict with Yoshiaki who tried to recover a government by the shogunate, and Yoshiaki started to frequently send Gonaisho (official documents) to Yoshikage to suppress Nobunaga.
  274. Nobunaga ODA: Various opinions exist.
  275. Nobunaga TAKEDA (the second son of Nobumitsu TAKEDA), who had became a vassal of the Koga-kubo, Shigeuji ASHIKAGA, invaded Kazusa Province as ordered by Shigeuji, and embezzled the territory of the Kanto Kanrei Uesugi clan in the province, based on which event the Mariya clan emerged and became a warlord.
  276. Nobunaga accepted Yoshiaki's request to hunt down and kill the Miyoshi clan.
  277. Nobunaga accepted foreign soldiers who came with missionaries and adopted them as his own soldiers.
  278. Nobunaga adopted an army system which enabled him to react in multiple regions simultaneously and operated it in a large scale.
  279. Nobunaga agreed to this.
  280. Nobunaga also did not intend to use military force immediately as he gave shuinjo which admitted the territorial right over Uchi County to Koyasan on November 8.
  281. Nobunaga also dispatched reinforcement to Ieyasu for the battles against the Takeda clan at such battles as the Battle of Mikatagahara, the Battle of Nagashino, and so on.
  282. Nobunaga also ordered Kazumasu TAKIGAWA to make a large white ship and then on August 9, 1578, a fleet led by the seven ships, six armored warships and a large white ship, left Kumano for Osaka.
  283. Nobunaga also requested Hongan-ji Temple to pay 5000 kan (unit of volume, approx.3.75 kg) of war funds under the pretext of 'reconstruction expenses of the Kyoto Imperial palace' and to leave Ishiyama, but Kennyo only accepted the claim of the war funds.
  284. Nobunaga also sent Sakihisa KONOE, who knew how this war had broken out, to look for a compromise with Hongan-ji Temple.
  285. Nobunaga also visited the residence of Yamashina on the way back from his visitation of Nijo Castle in the same year.
  286. Nobunaga and Ieyasu were the sworn allies at the beginning.
  287. Nobunaga and his government post
  288. Nobunaga and his son, Nobutada, marched from Ina.
  289. Nobunaga appointed Hideyoshi KINOSHITA as the guard of the castle.
  290. Nobunaga armed for this retaliation battle and moved up to Kitaomi.
  291. Nobunaga arrived in Ejiri (present-day Shimizu Ward, Shizuoka City) on April 13, in present-day Hamamatsu City on April 16, and returned in triumph to Azuchi-jo Castle on April 21, 1582.
  292. Nobunaga attacked Echizen with an army of fifteen thousand men on September 29.
  293. Nobunaga awarded 33,000 goku of Fuchu, Echizen Province to the Fuchu sannin shu, Narimasa, Toshiie MAEDA and Mitsuharu FUWA as Katsuie's Yoriki (mounted warrior who belonged to a general in the Sengoku period) and Narimasa built the Komaru-jo Castle to use as the headquarters.
  294. Nobunaga believed this and invited Ittetsu to a tea gathering to kill Ittetsu.
  295. Nobunaga burned down Hyakusai-ji Temple because he thought that the temple was on the side of the Sasaki clan who opposed Nobunaga.
  296. Nobunaga changed his policy toward the invasion of Ishiyama due to this loss of the battle.
  297. Nobunaga chased the fleeing Asakura army and beat them at the Battle of Ichijodani Castle, before sending the troops against the Azai clan.
  298. Nobunaga deeply grieved Yoshinari's loss and immediately marched out to battle to avenge his death; indeed, Yoshinari's death is said to be one reason for his subsequent burning down of Mt. Hiei's Enryaku-ji Temple, whose monks had joined forces with the Asai and Asakura army.
  299. Nobunaga defeated the Asakura army in the Battle of Tonezaka Slope, and Yoshikage ASAKURA committed suicide.
  300. Nobunaga destroyed Ishiyama Hongan-ji Temple and the Hongan-ji religious group declined and broke into pieces.
  301. Nobunaga destroyed the enemy in the battle of Nagashima, Echizen, and others, but he accepted reconciliation with its commander at the Hongan-ji Temple led by Kennyo several times.
  302. Nobunaga didn't want to be stigmatized as 'the Shogun-killer' by killing Yoshiaki.
  303. Nobunaga dispatched a large military force commanded by Nobutada ODA to Shigisan-jo Castle and killed Hisahide in November (the Battle of Shigisan-jo Castle).
  304. Nobunaga entered Kyoto immediately, and sieged the castle, forcing Yoshiaki to surrender (the battle of Makishima-jo Castle).
  305. Nobunaga entered Wakae-jo Castle on June 11th and announced their mobilization orders, but only about 3,000 soldiers gathered.
  306. Nobunaga established rules for his territory and divided the former territory of the Takeda clan among his vassals.
  307. Nobunaga exiled Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA, the Seii Taishogun of the Muromachi shogunate, who was the power broker in the anti-Nobunaga network, to Kawachi Province.
  308. Nobunaga faced off against enemies both in the east and the west and his back was to the wall again, so he made peace with Yoshiaki by getting an Imperial order from Emperor Ogimachi on May 16.
  309. Nobunaga favored Hidemasa, and Hidemasa served as baby-minder of Sanboshi, Nobunaga's grand child.
  310. Nobunaga favored imported articles, and for example, he wore a velvet cape and western hat in "the great military parade in Kyoto" which he held inviting Emperor Ogimachi.
  311. Nobunaga gave his busho followers land as large as the territory of a daimyo and allowed them to govern freely and capture surrounding areas.
  312. Nobunaga got Yoshikage's head and exposed it at a prison gate in Kyoto.
  313. Nobunaga got angry with Hideyoshi's behavior but permitted him, and Hideyoshi achieved to subvert Hisahide MATSUNAGA commanded by Nobutada ODA.
  314. Nobunaga got mad about this and captured hundreds of Koya hijiri (ascetics of Temple on Mt. Koya) in the Oda territories and ordered the daimyo in Kawachi and Yamato Provinces to besiege Mt. Koya.
  315. Nobunaga guaranteed the special 'rakuichi' right held by Kano and Kanamori.)
  316. Nobunaga had Koremasa WADA enter Takatsuki-jo Castle along with three people of Katsumasa IKEDA who was shugo, the Itami clan and Koremasa ruled Settsu Province (three Settsu Shugo).
  317. Nobunaga had difficulty because of the coalition and was hit with a serious crisis when Shingen TAKEDA started his westward strategy and invaded Higashi Mino Province.
  318. Nobunaga had his pageboy, Oran ask the envoy about the business.
  319. Nobunaga had the body of Zenjubo buried alive up to his head and ordered his head to be cut off with a blunt bamboo saw to inflict upon him great pain for a long duration, to torture him to death.
  320. Nobunaga himself took charge as director of construction, and appointed Sadakatsu MURAI and Hidemitsu SHIMADA to be the head carpenters in charge of building the palaces and other buildings.
  321. Nobunaga himself was once wounded while being badly defeated (Ishiyama War).
  322. Nobunaga honed in so persistently that the Asakura army was caught up with the Oda army at Tonezaka Slope on their retreat and received critical damage.
  323. Nobunaga hurriedly returned to Kyoto after five days, and thought that merchants of Sakai were pulling strings behind the scene before imposing yasen (war funds) on Sakai to restrict their autonomy.
  324. Nobunaga immediately left Azuchi and came to Jogon-in Temple where he summoned the participants from both sects to his presence, admired and gave Reiyo and Seiyo a folding fan and a round fan.
  325. Nobunaga implemented good government all his life in most of his territories such as Owari and Mino Provinces.
  326. Nobunaga in Settsu, who had heard the news on the 31st and became aware of the situation in Omi, decided to prioritize the battle against the Asai and Asakura allied forces.
  327. Nobunaga initially rejected this operation outright when Tadatsugu SAKAI proposed it at the war council during the night of July 18.
  328. Nobunaga is even said to have mentioned that "If Ichi had been a man, she would have been a good Busho (Japanese military commander)."
  329. Nobunaga is said to have received Ichi and her children very warmly at the time, to have been concerned for Ichi and her three daughters, and to have let them live in luxury.
  330. Nobunaga killed two former masters of Yagami-jo Castle in Tamba, brothers Hideharu HATANO and Hidehisa HATANO, whom Mitsuhide had forced to surrender by leaving his mother at the castle as a hostage to assure their safety.
  331. Nobunaga led his army into battle and subdued the Ikko Ikki.
  332. Nobunaga led only about 100 soldiers, but it is said that he fought with a spear by himself at first.
  333. Nobunaga left Azuchi for Kyoto on 8th.
  334. Nobunaga left for the front for the punitive expedition of the Takeda clan on April 10, and Nobutada occupied Kofu on the same day.
  335. Nobunaga liked Kowaka-mai (story-telling accompanied by a simple dance) such as "Atsumori" which in known for the line 'life lasts only 50 years,' while Nobutada had an obsession for Kyogen (farce played during a Noh cycle).
  336. Nobunaga made Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA a leader, but expelled him later.
  337. Nobunaga made a rule 'Denchu on'okite', which had nine articles, on January 1569, and an additional seven articles on January 1570, and forced Yoshiaki to accept them.
  338. Nobunaga might have thought it was none of Nobumori's business.
  339. Nobunaga moved the base from Nagoya-jo Castle to Kiyosu-jo Castle and controlled the shugosho (provincial administration) of the Owari Province.
  340. Nobunaga moved the main hall and honzon (principal image of Buddha) of Jogon-in Temple from another place.
  341. Nobunaga nevertheless chose Shitaragahara as the battle field, and proceeded to construct a defense camp, using the stream (Rengo-gawa River) as moat.
  342. Nobunaga not only gave money to the Imperial Court, but also intervened, so he opposed the Emperor who did not obey him.
  343. Nobunaga occupied it for the first time in July of the following year, the improvements were finished at the end of August, and for about 2 years after that this "Nijo Goshinzo" was his residence in the capital.
  344. Nobunaga opened a temple at the remains of Jion-ji Temple with Meikan as its founder and named the temple Jogon-in Temple after it converted to the Jodo (Pure Land) sect.
  345. Nobunaga ordered Junkei TSUTSUI to destroy the Honzen-ji Temple, and the majority of the temple buildings were destroyed by a troop led by TSUTSUI in 1578.
  346. Nobunaga ordered Mitsuhide to reconcile with the Chosokabe clan of Shikoku.
  347. Nobunaga passed Gifu-jo Castle to Nobutada and moved to the Azuchi-jo Castle after it was completed.
  348. Nobunaga passed away, and Kai Province became a part of the estate of Ieyasu in June 1582.
  349. Nobunaga placed importance on the rule of Kyoto, and appointed Sadakatsu MURAI as the Kyoto shoshidai (The Kyoto deputy) for negotiation and surveillance.
  350. Nobunaga pretended to accept the proposal, but when just as about half of the rebels left Gansho-ji Temple, made a raid on them.
  351. Nobunaga pulled back the financial situation of the Imperial Family, which was on the edge of bankruptcy, by applying various policies or helping personally.
  352. Nobunaga removed Kazumasa ISONO, who belonged to the Azai clan, as lord of Sawayama-jo Castle, and made Nobusumi TSUDA the adopted son of Kazumasa ISONO, it is believed that Nobunaga wanted to keep this area under the control of his most trusted vassals.
  353. Nobunaga requested temples and shrines not to accept his enemies, for example, he requested Mt. Hiei to make the Azai and Asakura forces withdraw and Mt. Koya to deliver the remnants of the Araki clan.
  354. Nobunaga said 'You came here under agreement with the sect that if you make the Hokkeshu sect win the debate, the sect would make you live in comfort, and in exchange for money in kind, you entered the town of Azuchi without notifying the public office; you did such an illegal thing in contrast with your daily claims.'
  355. Nobunaga said to Ieyasu TOKUGAWA as follows, and this is how Nobunaga introduced Hisahide to Ieyasu.
  356. Nobunaga said to the other monks of the Hokkeshu sect as follows:
  357. Nobunaga said, 'We have no other way.' and fought with a bow (weapon) in the front, but as the string of the bow was broken, he took a spear and stabbed enemies.
  358. Nobunaga saw this as a good chance and marched to Echizen Province on September just after the battle of Nagashino.
  359. Nobunaga saw through the ability of Ujisato and had him marry his eldest daughter Fuyu-hime (Princess Fuyu).
  360. Nobunaga scolded Nobukatsu hardily and his feelings of hostility towards Kokujin of Iga Province increased (Tensho Iga War of Iga school).
  361. Nobunaga seemed to have the intention of using the authority of the Imperial Palace after having set up Crown Prince Sanehito as an Emperor at the early stage.
  362. Nobunaga sent Nagayori SUGAYA, Iesada YABE, Hidemasa HORI, and Hidekazu HASEGAWA as messengers to both sects to give a message that 'As a large number of retainers of the Oda family are Hokke followers and I'm ready to use my influence, do not be belligerent.'
  363. Nobunaga sent his five retainers Nobuzumi ODA, Nagayori SUGAYA, Iesada YABE, Hidemasa HORI, and Hidekazu HASEGAWA to guard inside the temple.
  364. Nobunaga sent his vassal, Kazumasu TAKIGAWA, to Mayabashi-jo Castle of Kozuke Province as Kanto Kanrei (a shogunal deputy for the Kanto region), and gave him western Kozuke Province and a part of Shinano Province to govern the Kanto region.
  365. Nobunaga sent the troops with commanded by Nobumori SAKUMA to the Kawachi Province.
  366. Nobunaga sent warlords such as Mitsuhide AKECHI, Nagahide NIWA, Kazumasu TAKIGAWA led by Nobutada as a supreme commander, to support Kozuki-jo Castle and Hideyoshi HASHIBA, who had been besieging Miki-jo Castle, also came under the command of Nobutada, deploying a total of 72 thousand of Oda army in Harima as a result.
  367. Nobunaga separated Tonobara-shu from Zenjin-shu and put the former under his control: the former had been discontented with Zenjin-shu-led autonomy.
  368. Nobunaga set fire to Kyoto, arrested Yoshiaki and banished him to Kawachi Province.
  369. Nobunaga spread the rumor that his army was weak in defiance of his usual tactics in which he made his army appear stronger than it was with a show of bravado.
  370. Nobunaga started minding Emperor Ogimachi in 1573.
  371. Nobunaga started to unify the whole country based at this castle.
  372. Nobunaga still continued 'You kept silent during the debate to make the other members of your sect make a statement, being ready to join the debate if the Hokkeshu sect would gain an advantage over the Jodoshu sect. You played such a dirty trick, which was unpardonable,' and he also beheaded Fuden.
  373. Nobunaga stopped entertaining Mitsuhide and ordered him to help Hideyoshi.
  374. Nobunaga subdued Ise Nagashima Ikko Ikki (an uprising of Ikko Buddhist sect followers in Nagashima, Ise Province) in 1574, and the next year, he defeated the Takeda army led by Katsuyori TAKEDA, the successor of Shingen TAKEDA, at the Battle of Nagashino with an ingenious use of matchlock guns.
  375. Nobunaga successfully carried out these policies in large scale earlier than the others.
  376. Nobunaga threw away the food that Mitsuhide had laboriously prepared, saying that it was rotten, to pick a fight with Mitsuhide, who had been asked to prepare some Kyoto cooking for the banquet in Azuchi-jo Castle held to reward the efforts of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA, who destroyed the Takedas.
  377. Nobunaga took a strategy of a long-term enclosure by granting a large-scale military force to Nobumori SAKUMA, the head of senior vassals.
  378. Nobunaga took advantage of the fact that Nobutomo killed Shugo, the Shiba clan, which meant a rebellion against Shugo, and succeeded in destroying Nobutomo.
  379. Nobunaga took advantage of this opportunity and immediately went to Kyoto with his army and banished the Shogun Yoshiaki to Kawachi Province.
  380. Nobunaga took control of Katata fleet and two years later, together with Tonobara-shu, attacked Zenjin-shu and temples of the Shinshu sect and made them surrender.
  381. Nobunaga took full advantage of it by 'divide and rule.'
  382. Nobunaga took personal charge of the operation of carrying the stone.
  383. Nobunaga took seven years to build this castle.
  384. Nobunaga tried to go to Akechi-jo Castle with his heir Nobutada ODA for rear guard (reinforcement), but he withdrew to Gifu because Katsuyori had already taken Akechi-jo Castle by storm.
  385. Nobunaga tried to protect Soshitsu on the condition of having trade with foreign countries, but as Nobunaga died in the Honnoji Incident in 1582, Soshitsu's plan was cancelled.
  386. Nobunaga tried to unify Japan, and in 1576, he handed over the right of the head of the family to his legitimate eldest son Nobutada ODA and retired to a new residence, Azuchi-jo Castle from Gifu-jo Castle.
  387. Nobunaga used it as his headquarters.
  388. Nobunaga was aiming to unify the whole country under 'Nobunaga ODA's unification of Japan policy,' however, he suddenly died in the Honnoji Incident.
  389. Nobunaga was angry and burned his carriage and locked himself up at home.
  390. Nobunaga was forced to discontinue conquering Hokuriku region due to the defeat at the Battle at Tetori-gawa River.
  391. Nobunaga was furious at the loss at the battle, and arrested the surviving members of the Ban family and retainers and took fierce measures against them such as confiscation of territories and forbiddance of lodging.
  392. Nobunaga was in great sorrow and had the Seishu-ji Temple built with Takugen Osho (high priest) kaisan (a founder of temple as the first chief priest) in order to mourn him.
  393. Nobunaga was much pleased at this, and an anecdote has been left that by saying, "Inuchiyo is still a young punk like this, but he made such a great achievement," he encouraged the men on his side during the battle.
  394. Nobunaga was weary of the prevailing Buddhist society, and because Frois was able to earn the trust of Nobunaga he was allowed to carry out his missionary work in the Kinai area.
  395. Nobunaga who had the advantage in the battle over the Saito clan made an alliance with Nagamasa AZAI of Kita-Omi Province in 1564, which strengthened their warning against the Saito clan.
  396. Nobunaga who learned of the waiting women's outing became mad and killed all of them without any regard to their ages after tying them up in a row.
  397. Nobunaga who was from a branch family of the Oda clan became the head of the Oda clan both in name and in reality.
  398. Nobunaga who was furious at this outcome raged at Nobuo who had moved army without permission and admonished him suggesting breakup of their relationship, but after two years, in 1581, he invaded into Iga Province himself leading about 40,000 soldiers.
  399. Nobunaga who with his back to the wall reported to Emperor OGIMACHI and received an Imperial order, by which he could make peace with the Azai and Asakura clans on January 18, 1571.
  400. Nobunaga worked to provoke a controversy between the monks of the Nichiren and Jodo sects (which came to be known as the Azuchi religious dispute).
  401. Nobunaga's Ambition
  402. Nobunaga's Siege
  403. Nobunaga's army of 3,000 soldiers and Ieyasu's army with 8,000 soldiers arrived at Shitaragahara in front of Nagashino-jo Castle.
  404. Nobunaga's body was not found.
  405. Nobunaga's government also ruled the kinai region (the five capital provinces surrounding the ancient capitals of Nara and Kyoto) and the Imperial Courts of this area.
  406. Nobunaga's legitimate son, Nobutada ODA also died in Nijo-jo Castle.
  407. Nobunaga's legitimate son, Nobutada ODA also killed himself at the Nijo-jo Castle, thus there was no one left in the Oda clan who could run the government.
  408. Nobunaga, Hideyoshi, and Ieyasu are called 'three heroes' in Nagoya where a parade takes place in an annual festival to honor these heroes.
  409. Nobunaga, after assuring the peace in Kyoto, returned once to his base Gifu-jo Castle in Mino Province.
  410. Nobunaga, building on the momentum and using Yoshiaki's authority, conquered almost all of Kinai region right after he entered Kyoto.
  411. Nobunaga, expecting this action, already restarted to ask the Imperial Court for a mediation for the pacification.
  412. Nobunaga, getting the information of Shingen's death, went on an offensive at a breath; nobody could stand up against Nobunaga, and one after another of the network was defeated impotently.
  413. Nobunaga, however, was put in a disadvantageous position as the anti-Nobunaga network was formed.
  414. Nobunaga, under the name of Yoshiaki, issued orders to various daimyo beginning to walk through his road to tenkabito (the ruler of the country).
  415. Nobunaga, who decided that it would be hard to capture the enemies only with forces, framed a conspiracy to cause internal divisions in the Azai clan.
  416. Nobunaga, who had himself changed his province several times, moved them to new provinces to develop the province, which may not have been a difficult matter for Nobunaga, but more so for his vassals, and was a possible cause of friction.
  417. Nobunaga, who now controlled Omi Province, established Azuchi-jo Castle in Omi Basin as his base ground.
  418. Nobunaga, who was exasperated at such losses at the battle, decided to wipe out enemy powers nearby by carrying out the fire attack (in 1571) against Mt. Hiei which supported Azai and Asakura.
  419. Nobunaga, who was woke up by sounds, thought that was quarrel of vassals and ordered a kinju (attendant) to check the situation.
  420. Nobunao KUMAGAI (the adapted child of Naotsune) (born in Kumagayakyo, Musashi Province)
  421. Nobunao KUMAGAI was his adapted child.
  422. Nobunao MATSUDAIRA
  423. Nobunao MATSUDAIRA [Jugoinoge Kii no kami, Governor of Kii Province, (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  424. Nobunao MATSUDAIRA was the second lord of the Kameyama Domain, Tanba Province.
  425. Nobunao ODA
  426. Nobunao ODA (1546 - October 23, 1574) was a busho (a military commander) who lived during the Sengoku period (warring states period) in Japan.
  427. Nobunari MATSUDAIRA (1767 to 1800)
  428. Nobunari NAITO (Jugoinoge, Buzen no kami), the adopted child of Kiyonaga NAITO.
  429. Nobunari NAITO: 10,000-koku Nirayama Domain
  430. Nobunari ODA (figure skater) (the 17th generation from Nobunaga) is said to be a direct descendent of Nobutaka.
  431. Nobunari TSUDA
  432. Nobunari TSUDA was busho (Japanese military commander), daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) of Mimaki Domain, Yamashiro Province.
  433. Nobunari Tsuda was related to Nobunaga ODA's family, and after the death of Nobunaga, he served Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI and possessed a territory worth 13,000 koku (crop yields).
  434. Nobunari became a major candidate for the Japanese national team in Turin Olympic in 2006.
  435. Nobunari was persuaded by Katsuie as 'If you can deceive Lord Nobunaga into writing a letter of hand over, Oda family shall be yours, as Lord Nobutomo ODA is already dead.'
  436. Nobunori MATSUDAIRA (19th son of Nariaki TOKUGAWA of the Mito Tokugawa household)
  437. Nobunori ODA
  438. Nobunori ODA (1599 - February 13, 1630) was daimyo (a Japanese feudal lord) who lived during the Edo period.
  439. Nobunori ODA was a hatamoto (direct retainers of the Edo bakufu) in the Edo period.
  440. Nobunori ODA, the former lord of the Domain but one was the third son of Yukika HOSOKAWA.
  441. Nobunori YOSHII (1853 to 1890)
  442. Nobunori was executed, and Yoshitomo was assassinated.
  443. Nobunori, on the other hand, was already retired and thus lived in comfort for the rest of his days.
  444. Nobuo IMAI
  445. Nobuo IMAI (November 14, 1841 - June 25, 1919) was a samurai who lived around the end of the Tokugawa shogunate to the early Meiji period.
  446. Nobuo IMAI became the deputy leader of this Shohotai and fought in the Boshin War until to the Battle of Hakodate.
  447. Nobuo IMAI learned the Kyushin school of Jujutsu (classical Japanese martial art, usually referred to as fighting without a weapon) from Jujutsu master Shigekatsu KUBOTA, and learned the Jikishinkage school of swordsmanship from Kenkichi SAKAKIBARA at the Kobusho (shogunate martial arts gymnasium).
  448. Nobuo IMAI said he intended to save Saigo, who had once petitioned for commutation of his death sentence, not to reinforce the imperial army.
  449. Nobuo IMAI stated that it was he who assassinated Ryoma SAKAMOTO in the Omiya Incident.
  450. Nobuo IMAI went to Kyoto as the head of the Yugekitai (one of Tokugawa clan sided units) and joined the Kyoto Mimawarigumi, which was under the command of Tadasaburo SASAKI.
  451. Nobuo ORIGUCHI pointed out that the Nahobi no kami were produced to counterbalance the Magatsuhi no kami and, as such, they were two sides of the same coin.
  452. Nobuo who was in on Shimoyama's words immediately repaired Maruyama-jo Castle (Iga Province) located on the border and decided to make it a foothold.
  453. Nobuo's will left with the company attorney was opened.
  454. Nobuoki MATSUDAIRA
  455. Nobuoki MATSUDAIRA (1690-1691)
  456. Nobuoki MATSUDAIRA (1824 to 1890)
  457. Nobuoki MATSUDAIRA was a Japanese feudal lord called daimyo (ruling Tsuchiura Domain in Hitachi Province, etc.), who also served as wakadoshiyori (junior councilor of the shogunate), Osaka jodai (the keeper of Osaka Castle), and Kyoto shoshidai (the Kyoto deputy).
  458. Nobuoki OISHI
  459. Nobuoki OISHI (1674 to October 15, 1741) was a samurai in the early Edo period.
  460. Nobuoki said "If the legitimate son is not an able person, my idea is the same as all of you have said, but as it is an important decision, you'd better consult with Tadamasa."
  461. Noburu KANAI
  462. Noburu KANAI (February 26, 1865 - August 13, 1933) was from Shizuoka Prefecture, an economist and a member of Society for the Study of Social Policy.
  463. Nobusada ANDO
  464. Nobusada IKAI
  465. Nobusada IKAI (year of birth and death unknown) was a Busho (Japanese military commander) from the Sengoku period (period of warring states) to the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  466. Nobusada IKAI - Yoriki
  467. Nobusada ODA became the castellan of Furuwatari-jo Castle, and Nobuhide, the father of Nobunaga, achieved equal power against the main branch family who was in charge of Shugodai.
  468. Nobusada was a member of the Oda clan of Shugodai (Deputy Millitary Governor) of Owari Province, and as a branch family of 'the Oda Yamato no Kami family' (the Kiyosu ODA clan) of Owarishimoyongun Shugodai, he served as one of the three magistrates of Kiyosu, a senior vassal of the master's house.
  469. Nobushi is an assistant who kicks a ball that goes outside, back inside.
  470. Nobushige (Yukimura) SANADA
  471. Nobushige (Yukimura) SANADA's energetic activity in Osaka Natsu no Jin was passed down the generations even in the Tokugawa government as it was performed in Kabuki and so on or drawn in nishikie (color prints) in the Edo period
  472. Nobushige KINOSHITA
  473. Nobushige KINOSHITA (date of birth and death unknown) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  474. Nobushige ODA (August 9, 1843 - February 17, 1898) was the twelfth lord of the Yanagimoto Domain in Yamato Province (Nara Prefecture).
  475. Nobushige ODA (daimyo, feudal lord)
  476. Nobushige ODA, the first son of Nobukane, was a daimyo with a fief of 10,000 koku in Hayashi Domain, Ise Province, but after the death of his father, he made a dispute with his younger brother over inheritance of his father's territory and was punished by being deprived of his fief.
  477. Nobushige OYAMADA, a powerful Kokujin (local samurai) and Ichimonshu (clansman) of Kai Province, and Masayuki SANADA, Kokujin of Shinano Province announced that they would accept Katsuyori.
  478. Nobushige SANADA
  479. Nobushige SANADA displayed a brave fight as praised by both sides as 'the best warrior in Japan' and drove out the troops on Tokugawa's side and approached very close to the headquarters of Ieyasu.
  480. Nobushige SANADA was a busho (Japanese military commander) over the Azuchi-momoyama in the early years of the Edo period.
  481. Nobushige TAKEDA … Nobushige was a younger brother of Shingen TAKEDA.
  482. Nobushige YODA also came within an inch of being executed by the order of Nobunaga; however, Ieyasu TOKUGAWA seeking manpower in the Takeda family let him get away.
  483. Nobushige YODA who withdrew to his home, Misawakoya, surrendered Tanaka-jo Castle, and on February 21, 1582, he moved to Sunpu-jo Castle.
  484. Nobushige called for former vassals of his father Nobuyuki SANADA to join the battle, escaped from Kudoyama and entered into Osaka-jo Castle with his child, Daisuke YUKIMASA.
  485. Nobushige died at the age of fifty-six on February 17, 1898.
  486. Nobushige gathered nearly 900 surviving retainers of Takeda by sending out circulars, and entered Komoro-jo Castle.
  487. Nobushige had many children, but as Nobushige SANADA's family in the Sanada clan he was already confined to Kudoyama when his legitimate son Daisuke (Yukimasa SANADA) was born; moreover, Yukimasa killed himself in Osaka-jo Castle without having a child, so this line failed.
  488. Nobushige had three sons, among them, Nobuyori, who was two years older than Nobutoyo, succeeded the family name of the Mochizuki clan in Shinano Province and became a territorial lord's relative who become the head of his own family.
  489. Nobushige inherited the family estate on January 30, 1858.
  490. Nobushige moved from Kyoto to Tokyo on June 11, 1874.
  491. Nobushige provided assistance to help Ieyasu conquer Shinano and Kai Provinces, which had been left without a territorial governor after the Honnoji Incident.
  492. Nobushige wanted to have Hideyori take the field in order to boost the morale of the troops on the Toyotomi's side, but it could not be realized.
  493. Nobushige was born in Yanagimoto on August 9, 1843.
  494. Nobushige was the ninth son of Nobuakira ODA, the eleventh lord.
  495. Nobushige's childhood name was Manjukuro.
  496. Nobushige's concubine, Ryuseiin, was a daughter of Hidetsugu TOYOTOMI, who was Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI's nephew, and Harusue's daughter (Ichinodai), and was therefore the granddaughter of Harusue.
  497. Nobushige's father, Masayuki SANADA, asked a son of Nobushige TAKEDA, who was a younger brother of Shingen TAKEDA, to let him use the name Nobushige, and he was allowed to do so, so Nobushige did not change his name.
  498. Nobushige's favorite spear was a 'Jumonji Yari' (a cross-shaped spear), a relatively thin weapon made by enhancing ryokamayari (a spear with two hooks).
  499. Nobushige's seventh daughter Okane's husband, Sadakiyo ISHIKAWA (Sorin), is also known for supporting Nobushige's bereaved family including Chikurin-in; he built a graveyard for Nobushige and his wife at Ryoan-ji Temple.
  500. Nobusue IMADEGAWA
  501. Nobusue IMADEGAWA (November 4, 1713 - July 30, 1746) was Kugyo (a Court noble) in the middle of the Edo period.
  502. Nobusue IMADEGAWA, Naidaijin (minister of the center) Munesue SAIONJI's son, succeeded the Imadegawa family as the adopted son of Saneoki.
  503. Nobusuke NAKAMIKADO (1392 - 1439)
  504. Nobusuke SHIBAYAMA (a samurai who worked for the Owari Domain), Fusatoyo ABE (a samurai who worked for the Yunagaya Domain) and Zuijun CHOTOKUIN (a court physician and a hatamoto (a direct vassal of the shogun) were his younger brothers.
  505. Nobusuke even insisted on serving as Nairan (Inspector of Imperial Documents) if he was not given the position of Kanpaku.
  506. Nobusumi TSUDA, a son of Nobukatsu, was raised by Katsuie by order of Nobunaga.
  507. Nobusumi TSUDA, the oldest legitimate son of Nobuyuki, was an older brother of Nobukane.
  508. Nobusumi was killed because he deemed to have a connection with Mitsuhide since his father, Nobukatsu had a plot to rebel against Nobunaga and he was killed and he was a son-in-law of Mitsuhide.
  509. Nobutada KONOE
  510. Nobutada KONOE (1565 to 1614)
  511. Nobutada KONOE (November 23, 1565 - December 25, 1614) was a court noble lived in the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  512. Nobutada MATSUDAIRA (1828 to 1847)
  513. Nobutada ODA
  514. Nobutada ODA also employed farmers to kill many other people, including ministers of justice, court ladies and persons named Damine or Nagashino, whose severed heads were presented to his army.
  515. Nobutada ODA burnt down the temple, and the temple priest, Kaisen Joki, died in the fire, leaving the well-known farewell words, "Suppress your self, and even fire is cool."
  516. Nobutada ODA was a busho (Japanese military commander) and daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) during the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  517. Nobutada ODA, a legitimate son of Nobunaga ODA, was killed together with Nobunaga in the Honnoji Incident.
  518. Nobutada fought as a brave commander and cut two warriors down despite many wounds and showed fierce resistance and drove Mitsuhide's troop retreat three times.
  519. Nobutada fought well with his few remaining soldiers, making sure that the Imperial Prince Sanehito, who was a crown prince and lord of the Nijo New Imperial Palace, was able to escape.
  520. Nobutada is well known for the anecdote of 'How FUJIWARA no Nobutada, Governor of Shinano, Took a Tumble at Misaka, Section 38,' which is included in the Konjaku Monogatari-Shu, Volume 28.
  521. Nobutada made a harrowing escape to arrange a cease-fire agreement just before the Nijo Palace was surrounded by Mitsuhide AKECHI, and then let Prince Sanehito escaped from the Palace.
  522. Nobutada marched from Ina-gun, bringing down Iida-jo Castle and Takato-jo Castle in the south of Shinano Province which had been the footholds of their Takeda counterparts, and then invaded Kai Province.
  523. Nobutada recommended surrender, but Morinobu NISHINA refused it.
  524. Nobutada said the following to the attendants relieved and amazed:
  525. Nobutada sent Morinobu gold and a letter through local priest designated as an emissary, and recommended the surrender of the castle.
  526. Nobutada started all-out assault, and after a fierce battle, Morinobu finally committed suicide (subjugation of Takeda).
  527. Nobutada was besieged there after he allowed Prince Sanehito and others to flee to the Imperial Palace; even though he fought desperately with the surrounding Akechi army Nobutada, Sadakatsu and over 60 others died in the battle, and Nijo Shin-gosho and the adjacent Myokaku-ji Temple were reduced to ashes.
  528. Nobutada was exiled to Bonotsu, Satsuma Province for three years and the things that happened during that period are described in detail in Nobutada's diary, 'Sanmyakuinki.'
  529. Nobutada was on his way back to Kyoto after serving his term as the Governor of Shinano Province.
  530. Nobutada was privately upset by the fact that Hideyoshi transferred the position of Kanpaku to Hidetsugu and resigned from the position of Sadaijin in February, 1592.
  531. Nobutada, chasing Katsuyori TAKEDA who set fire to Shinpu-jo Castle, entered Kofu on April 9 and put the headquarters.
  532. Nobutada, however, committed suicide as he was outnumbered as Sadaoki ISE, an elite of the Akechi army, advanced with his force.
  533. Nobutada, who invaded Kofu on March 7, 1582, and established an armed camp at a private house of Kurodo ICHIJO, found the clansmen, relatives, and senior vassals of Katsuyori, and executed them.
  534. Nobutada, who received a report of the revolt by the Akechi clan, intended to go to the Honno-ji Temple to rescue, but he was dissuaded by his close aide to run away because the situations in the Honno-ji Temple were already finalized.
  535. Nobutaka AKECHI
  536. Nobutaka HIGUCHI
  537. Nobutaka HIGUCHI (February 8, 1600 ? August 18, 1658) was a court noble of the early Edo period.
  538. Nobutaka KANBE's forces, with about 4000 dead and wounded, did not have any energy left to follow the retreating enemy, putting an end to the Battle of Yamazaki.
  539. Nobutaka KONPARU
  540. Nobutaka KONPARU (1920 -) is a Noh actor of the Konparu school of shite-kata (lead actors).
  541. Nobutaka KONPARU, the 79th headmaster, is his brother.
  542. Nobutaka MATSUDAIRA
  543. Nobutaka MATSUDAIRA was the fourth lord of the Kameyama Domain, Tanba Province.
  544. Nobutaka ODA
  545. Nobutaka ODA is a busho of the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  546. Nobutaka ODA was a busho (Japanese military commander) and daimyo (Japanese feudal lord)of the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  547. Nobutaka ODA's: 4,000 (some historians count this figure together with Hideyoshi's core troops)
  548. Nobutaka ODA, the third son of Nobunaga, who opposed Hideyoshi, lost a battle and forced to kill himself.
  549. Nobutaka ODA/Nagahide NIWA
  550. Nobutaka TAKEDA suppressed the remnants of the Isshiki clan as well as uprisings in Wakasa Province, and when the Onin War occurred, he sided with the east forces and invaded Tango Province.
  551. Nobutaka UENO
  552. Nobutaka UENO(year of birth and death unknown) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  553. Nobutaka was adopted by Tomomori KANBE, the lord of Kanbe-jo Castle (Suzuka City, Mie Prefecture) which was surrendered when Nobunaga subdued Ise Province in 1568, and he took over the Kanbe clan in 1572 when Tomomori was forced to retire by Nobunaga.
  554. Nobutaka was making preparation for conquest of Motochika CHOSOKABE of Shikoku in cooperation with Nagahide, Nobusumi TSUDA, who was a Nobunaga's nephew (his father was Nobuyuki ODA) in Osaka.
  555. Nobutaka was sent to Omido-ji Temple (Nomadaibo, where MINAMOTO no Yoshitomo had been assassinated in the late Heian period) in Noma, Chita-gun, Owari Province (Mihama-cho, Aichi Prefecture [Aichi Prefecture]), where he committed suicide.
  556. Nobutaka's biological mother (from the Saka clan), his younger sister, his daughter and his concubine named Kanbe no Ita Gozen were handed over to Hideyoshi as hostages upon the surrender, and were killed by him.
  557. Nobutaka's death haiku exudes his rage against Hideyoshi: 'You killed the one you'd long served, may god strike you down, Hashiba Chikuzen.'
  558. Nobutaka's great-grandson Nobuaki (the son of Nobushige KANBE) survived as a feudal retainer of Takada Domain, serving Mitsunaga MATSUDAIRA, the family head of the Matsudaira family of Takada Domain, Echigo Province.
  559. Nobutaka, also excelled in horseback archery, handed down the book of Kyuba Kojitsu and his son Eiyu EIHO possessed many books of Kojitsu.
  560. Nobutaka, who succeeded as the seventy-ninth head, revised their utai-bon (singing texts) which had been less developed than those of other schools (the Showa versions), and strove to increase the current Noh repertory by reviving old pieces.
  561. Nobutake ANDO
  562. Nobutake TAKEDA
  563. Nobutake TAKEDA was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the period of the Northern and Southern Courts in Japan.
  564. Nobutake TAKEDA, the Shugo (governor) of Aki province symphasized with Takauji and raised an army in December of the same year.
  565. Nobutake became the family head, taking over his father Nobumune.
  566. Nobutake died in the next year and his son Nobunari TAKEDA took over; Nobutake's second son Ujinobu inherited Aki Shugo.
  567. Nobutake strengthened the intervention in Kai Province after Masayoshi died.
  568. Nobutake was an educated man and good at Waka (Japanese poetry); his masterpieces are included in "Shin-senzai Wakashu" (New Collection of Japanese Poems of a Thousand Years).
  569. Nobutame HASEGAWA (commonly called Heizo, an officer of hitsuke tozoku aratame-kata [literally, "investigative division for arson and organized robbery"])
  570. Nobutame HASEGAWA, who assumed the post from 1787 to 1795, is famous.
  571. Nobutami ODA
  572. Nobutami ODA (March 5, 1840 - August 1, 1865) was a daimyo (a Japanese feudal lord) in the Edo period.
  573. Nobutane HARADA theory
  574. Nobutane NAKAMIKADO (1442 - 1525)
  575. Nobutane NAKANOMIKADO
  576. Nobutane NAKANOMIKADO (1442 - December 11, 1525) was a court noble from the middle of Muromachi period to the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States) (Japan).
  577. Nobutane NAKANOMIKADO was his son-in-law.
  578. Nobutane was also a skillful calligrapher and poet, and was often asked to conduct kigo (write with a brush).
  579. Nobutane-Kyo-Ki
  580. Nobutane-kyo-ki is a diary written by a court noble, Nobutane NAKANOMIKADO, who lived in the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  581. Nobuteru ODA (Heiemon Tadazane NAKANE) was a half brother of Nobunaga ODA.
  582. Nobuto TSUDA
  583. Nobuto TSUDA is busho (a Japanese military commander) and daimyo (a feudal lord) from the Sengoku period (period of Warring States) (Japan) through the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  584. Nobutoki HOJO and his son Munenobu HOJO
  585. Nobutoki NAKAMIKADO (1727 - 1745)
  586. Nobutoki was a grandchild of Tokifusa HOJO, who appears in the article of eulogy, and Nobutoki was a Rensho when Sadatoki was a regent.
  587. Nobutomo ANDO, the fourth head of the family, however, enjoyed various arts including waka (a traditional Japanese poem of 31 syllables), renga (linked verse), hokku (the first line of a waka poem), tea ceremony, kodo (incense-smelling ceremony), and Noh theater.
  588. Nobutomo BAN
  589. Nobutomo BAN (March 17, 1773-December 2, 1846) was a scholar of Japanese classical culture in the Edo period.
  590. Nobutomo BAN argued that the preface declared that "Kaifuso" contained poems 'from Tankai to Heito,' but Prince Otomo was the only one poet of the Tankai (Omi) period, indicating that this one was the emperor.
  591. Nobutomo BAN who lived in the Edo period presumed that the remote cause of the dissatisfaction between Emperor Tenchi and Emperor Tenmu was a dispute over Nukata no Okimi (woman) as in the contents of waka (Japanese poetry) written by Nukata no Okimi in the "Manyoshu" (anthology of Japanese poems).
  592. Nobutomo MATSUDAIRA (lord of the domain of Yoshii) (1712 to 1760)
  593. Nobutomo got mad with this and killed Yoshimune when his legitimate son Yoshikane SHIBA went to kawagari (a kind of fishing) with his troops.
  594. Nobutora TAKEDA
  595. Nobutora TAKEDA unified the whole Kai Province and made Kofu his base.
  596. Nobutora TAKEDA was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku period.
  597. Nobutora allied with the Suwa clan, the Murakami clan, and powerful families in Shinano, and proceeded to invade Saku County, Shinano Province.
  598. Nobutora conciliated with the Oyamada clan by having his sister marry Nobuari OYAMADA (Ecchu no kami [Governor of Ecchu Province]), and allocated Katsunuma which was closer to Gunnai to his younger brother Nobutomo.
  599. Nobutora governed Kai Province and established a strongly centralized system by shifting the Takeda clan from being a shugo daimyo to sengoku daimyo.
  600. Nobutora invited capable ronin shu (masterless samurais) from various districts and they became samurai in command of a troop of foot soldiers (so called five wise retainers of Takeda, including Obata, Tada and Haramino).
  601. Nobutora made peace with the Suwa clan in the same year.
  602. Nobutora possessed a noted sword 'Soza samonji,' which was handed down to Yoshimoto IMAGAWA.
  603. Nobutora reconciled with the Imagawa clan and made the Kosun Alliance (an alliance between the Takeda clan in Kai Province and the Imagawa clan in Suruga Province).
  604. Nobutora subsequently froze out Toratoyo and put him to death together with Toramoto, causing the Kudo clan family, including Sukenaga, Toratoyo's son, to flee Kai Province.
  605. Nobutora temporarily made peace with the Imagawa clan in 1517, and in 1520 allied with the Oi clan that he had conquered, and welcomed the daughter of Nobusato OI as his legal wife.
  606. Nobutora took an aggressive diplomatic policy; he welcomed the daughter of a court noble Kinyori SANJO as the wife of his heir Harunobu (Shingen), and promoted a marriage policy and made alliance with the Imagawa clan who had power over the neighboring district.
  607. Nobutora was born on February 20, 1494, as the heir of Nobutsuna, the 17th head of the family of Takeda clan.
  608. Nobutora's move at that point is unknown; however, when Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA went up to Kyoto following the order made by Nobunaga ODA, because Nobunaga then had an alliance with the Takeda as well, Nobutora ended up accompanying Yoshiaki.
  609. Nobutoshi KAWAKUBO, a son of Shingen's younger brother Nobuzane KAWAKUBO, served Ieyasu TOKUGAWA as hatamoto and also reverted his family name to Takeda.
  610. Nobutoshi NAKAMIKADO (1371 - 1414)
  611. Nobutoshi ODA
  612. Nobutoshi ODA (November 19, 1853 - June 6, 1901) was the third lord and governor of Dewa-Tendo Domain in the Edo period.
  613. Nobutoshi also died young, and his younger brother Nobutsune MATSUDAIRA was appointed Lord of the Sasayama Domain anew and Yasunobu, again, continued administering domain affairs until his death on July 17, 1682.
  614. Nobutoshi route
  615. Nobutoyo SHIBAYAMA
  616. Nobutoyo SHIBAYAMA (formerly Nobutoyo KAJUJI, Minister of the Treasury, April 25, 1612 to March 23, 1690) was a court noble (high court noble) in the early Edo period.
  617. Nobutoyo TAKEDA (the Kai-Takeda clan)
  618. Nobutoyo TAKEDA was a military commander in the period of warring states.
  619. Nobutoyo died in 1528 and his adopted son, Suketoyo YAMANA, succeeded the position of Tajima Shugo.
  620. Nobutoyo had a positive assessment as a senior vassal of Katsuyori.
  621. Nobutsugu KINOSHITA (Nobuyoshi KINOSHITA): Assumed that he could be Kunimatsu TOYOTOMI
  622. Nobutsugu ODA, the first son of Nobusada ODA, could not take over as head of the family due to illness, Sadamoto ODA, the first son of Nobutsugu, was employed by Mitsutomo TOKUGAWA, the lord of the Owari Domain, and promoted to Karo (chief retainer).
  623. Nobutsuna KUTSUKI
  624. Nobutsuna KUTSUKI (1582 - June 16, 1662) was a busho (Japanese military commander) from the Azuchi-Momoyama period to the early Edo period.
  625. Nobutsuna KUTSUKI <Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)
  626. Nobutsuna KUTSUKI was the eighth lord of the Fukuchiyama Domain in Tanba Province.
  627. Nobutsuna KUTSUKI was the seventh lord of the Fukuchiyama Domain in Tanba Province.
  628. Nobutsuna MATSUDAIRA
  629. Nobutsuna MATSUDAIRA, who was the lord of the Oshi domain in Musashi Prrovince (Gyoda City, Saitama Prefecture) and of the Kawagoe domain (Kawagoe City, Saitama Prefecture), and who was revered as the "Wisdom of Izu," was a member of the Okochi clan.
  630. Nobutsuna NAKAMIKADO (1511 - 1569)
  631. Nobutsuna later succeeded the Sasaki clan.
  632. Nobutsune MATSUDAIRA (leader of the Sasayama Clan) (1697-1714)
  633. Nobutsune OINOMIKADO
  634. Nobutsune OINOMIKADO (1355 - year of death unknown) was a Court noble during the period of Northern and Southern courts (Japan).
  635. Nobutsune invited the leading expert of Sogaku (Neo-Confucianism), Baikan MINAMIMURA, from Suo Province, and then established the foundation of Tosa Nangaku (neo-Confucianism learned in Tosa).
  636. Nobutsune was born in 1355 as a child of Iekoto OINOMIKADO.
  637. Nobutsura HASEBE
  638. Nobutsura HASEBE (year of birth unknown-1218) was a warrior who lived from the end of Heian period to the early Kamakura period.
  639. Nobuuchi ODA, the eldest son participated in the Umazoroe (inspection of military horses) as a brother of a prestigious noble man in 1581.
  640. Nobuyasu HIGUCHI
  641. Nobuyasu HIGUCHI (December 31, 1623 ? July 16, 1691) was a court noble of the early Edo period.
  642. Nobuyasu MATSUDAIRA, who was Ieyasu's legitimate son, and was later orderd to perform seppuku.
  643. Nobuyasu Mariya (Jokan), the fifth head of the Mariya clan, had the ambition of bringing Kanto region under his control.
  644. Nobuyasu died in 1534.
  645. Nobuyasu was still an infant of 3 years old.
  646. Nobuyasu, who turned from otsuzumi-kata and established his own school, was a master who actively performed in the Noh competitions called Tachiai Noh of the time.
  647. Nobuyori MATSUDAIRA (1834-1837)
  648. Nobuyori NAKAMIKADO (1613 - 1664)
  649. Nobuyori and Narichika joined Yoshitomo in taking up arms and marching out to battle, but MINAMOTO no Moronaka, in order to save his own life, took one of the three Imperial Regalia of Japan, the sacred Mirror, and fled.
  650. Nobuyori and Yoshitomo brought the retired emperor and his sister Josaimonin to the Ippon-goshodokoro (Ippon-gosho hall) inside the main imperial palace complex and kept them there under house arrest.
  651. Nobuyori arrives on the scene
  652. Nobuyori beheaded Tadatsune and returned to Kyoto.
  653. Nobuyori branded them rebels.
  654. Nobuyori gained MINAMOTO no Yoshitomo as a follower and succeeded in forcing Shinzei to commit suicide, but was himself defeated and executed when he was betrayed by the Nijo Shinsei group and counterattacked by Kiyomori.
  655. Nobuyori headed back to home with Tadatsune, but in June of the same year, Tadatsune died of illness in Nogami, Mino Province.
  656. Nobuyori was deployed at Taiken-mon Gate, where TAIRA no Shigemori, the eldest son and heir of Kiyomori, invaded.
  657. Nobuyori was intimidated and ran away; the enemy broke through the gate.
  658. Nobuyori was the person holding actual power in the Imperial Court.
  659. Nobuyori's branch of the Fujiwara clan had long controlled the provinces of Musashi and Hitachi through their fiefs there, and had a friendly relationship with MINAMOTO no Yoshitomo, who had strong ties to both provinces.
  660. Nobuyori, Yoshitomo, etc., who became traitors, were defeated and the Insei group was annihilated.
  661. Nobuyoshi ARAKI
  662. Nobuyoshi FUJITA
  663. Nobuyoshi FUJITA (1559 - August, 26, 1616) was a military commander from the period of warring states to the first half of the Edo period.
  664. Nobuyoshi HOSOKAWA
  665. Nobuyoshi HOSOKAWA (1548 - 1592) was a busho (Japanese military commander) and feudal lord over the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States, Japan) and the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  666. Nobuyoshi ICHIJO
  667. Nobuyoshi ICHIJO (Yoshiyasu's son), the head of the Ichijo family, and his nephew, Yoriuji ICHIJO (Takayoshi's son), were also employed as trusted personnel of Gotoba-in: the San-saemon trio were pardoned as well, but Mongaku alone, who was disliked by Gotoba-in, died in exile.
  668. Nobuyoshi ICHIJO (一条 信能, 1190 - 1221) was a Kugyo (high court noble) in the early Kamakura period.
  669. Nobuyoshi MATSUDAIRA
  670. Nobuyoshi MATSUDAIRA (1580 - August 28, 1620) was a person in the Azuchi-Momoyama period and the early Edo period.
  671. Nobuyoshi MATSUDAIRA (1798 to 1841)
  672. Nobuyoshi MATSUDAIRA [Jushiinoge Kii no kami Jiju, Governor of Kii Province and Chamberlain, (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  673. Nobuyoshi NAKAYAMA
  674. Nobuyoshi NAKAYAMA (1577 - February 5, 1642) was a Tsukegaro (Karo [chief retainer] assigned directly by the shogun when the sons of the Tokugawa became daimyo) of the Mito domain.
  675. Nobuyoshi NAKAYAMA became Tsukegaro to Yorifusa TOKUGAWA.
  676. Nobuyoshi NAKAYAMA:attache
  677. Nobuyoshi ODA
  678. Nobuyoshi ODA (1573 - May 15, 1615) was a person who lived during the Azuchi-Momoyama Period to the Edo Period.
  679. Nobuyoshi ODA (1584 - July 10, 1626) was a military commander and daimyo (feudal lord) in the Azuchi-Momoyama and Edo periods.
  680. Nobuyoshi ODA was born in Ise Province in 1584.
  681. Nobuyoshi SAITO
  682. Nobuyoshi SAITO (1559 - February 26, 1610) was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived in the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  683. Nobuyoshi SAWA
  684. Nobuyoshi SAWA (February 9, 1836-September 27, 1873) was Kugyo (high court noble) in the end of the Edo period and a politician in the Meiji period.
  685. Nobuyoshi became gokenin (an immediate vassal of the shogunate) during the Kamakura period and was appointed to shugo (military governor) of Suruga Province.
  686. Nobuyoshi died at the age of 52.
  687. Nobuyoshi first established the Jin-ya (regional government office) in Fukushima village of Kanra district, and later moved to Obata village where he made efforts to solidify the foundation for domain duties such as the improvement of the castle town and the irrigation system.
  688. Nobuyoshi held a tea ceremony and invited Yoshinobu SATAKE (Ukyo no Daibu, Minister of the Kyoto Right Administration Office) and others in February 15, 1622.
  689. Nobuyoshi is well known as a military commander who made the cause of the Battle of Sekigahara, and was said to have switched from the Uesugi clan to the Tokugawa clan to save himself.
  690. Nobuyoshi passed away at the age of 43 in July 10, 1626, ahead of his father, and his second son Nobumasa inherited the family estate.
  691. Nobuyoshi served Iemitsu TOKUGAWA in Nishimaru of the Edo Castle with Masamune DATE, Hidemoto MORI, and others in February 20, 1624.
  692. Nobuyoshi was a Shinto priest of Fushimi Inari Taisha Shrine.
  693. Nobuyoshi was a younger brother of Nobutoshi SAITO who was the Lord of Jono-jo Castle in Ecchu Province.
  694. Nobuyoshi was appointed to Jugoinojo jiju in November 1616.
  695. Nobuyoshi was the fourth son of Nobukatsu ODA.
  696. Nobuyoshi was the second son of Toshimoto SAITO.
  697. Nobuyoshi's common name was Kyuemon no jo.
  698. Nobuyoshi's homyo (posthumous Buddhist name) was Soin.
  699. Nobuyoshi's kemyo (assumed name) was Inaba no kuni no kami (Governor of Inaba Province), Hyobushoyu (Junior Assistant Minister of the Hyobusho Ministry of Military).
  700. Nobuyoshi's line survived as a hatamoto.
  701. Nobuyoshi's mother was a lady of the Jinbo clan.
  702. Nobuyoshi's real name is made up of two characters "信" (nobu) and "吉" (yoshi), the former of which was given by Nobunaga ("信長" in Japanese) ODA due to the tradition of 'henki' (granting subordinates the use of a character from the superior's real name to reward them).
  703. Nobuyoshi, however, was condemned for having disobeyed a military command and was thereby being placed under house arrest at Agatsuma in Kozuke Province, and when he was pardoned, he was promoted to one of the oban kumigashira (captains of the great guards), before his death on February 26, 1610, in Fushimi, Yamashiro Province.
  704. Nobuyuki ABE (1944-1945)
  705. Nobuyuki MATSUDAIRA
  706. Nobuyuki MATSUDAIRA was the fifth lord of the Kameyama Domain, Tanba Province.
  707. Nobuyuki MATSUDAIRA, his adopted son, succeeded to his position.
  708. Nobuyuki NAKAJIMA
  709. Nobuyuki NAKAJIMA (October 5, 1846 - March 26, 1899) was the statesman, the first chairman of House of Representatives and baron in the Meiji period.
  710. Nobuyuki ODA
  711. Nobuyuki ODA was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  712. Nobuyuki SANADA: 27,000-koku Numata Domain
  713. Nobuzane KAWAKUBO, Moritomo SAEGUSA, Muneyasu NAWA, Sukehito IIO, Takashige GOMI
  714. Nobuzane MATSUDAIRA [Jugoinoge Kii no kami, Governor of Kii Province, (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  715. Nobuzane excelled in the painting and the Japanese poem as good as his father Takanobu.
  716. Nobuzane fled to Izumo.
  717. Nobuzane-o, the imperial grandson of Emperor Kazan, was granted the family name of Minamoto when he became a subject of the state.
  718. Nobuzumi ODA and others caught monks and followers of the Hokkeshu sect who were trying to run away, and brought the record of the debate to Nobunaga.
  719. Nobuzumi ODA burned down this temple in 1572, confiscating the temple estate.
  720. Nobuzumi ODA entered into honmaru leading troops for seizure.
  721. Nobuzumi TSUDA (ODA) representing Nobunaga ODA
  722. Nochi Shite (the leading role in the latter half of a Noh play): TAIRA no Tomomori
  723. Nochi Shite (the leading role in the latter half of a Noh play): Yoshitsune
  724. Nochi no Higan (Autumn Higan) (September 20 to 26)
  725. Nochi no Hina
  726. Nochi no Hina refers to Hina dolls displayed on August 1st (old calendar) or September 9th (old calendar) in the Edo Period, or to displaying them.
  727. Nochi no Kagami
  728. Nochi no Okamoto no Miya of Empress Saimei
  729. Nochi no Sanbo (三房)
  730. Nochi shite (leading role in the latter half of a Noh play): the ghost of the wife of Mr. So-and-so of Ashiya
  731. Nochi-Shite (lead role of the latter half): The woman of Izutsu (spirit)
  732. Nochi-Shite (the leading role in the latter half of a Noh play) ? Emperor Murakami
  733. Nochi-shite (the leading role in the latter half of a Noh play), Wakeikazuchi no kami
  734. Nochi-zure (the companion role in the latter half of a Noh play), Tennyo (heavenly maiden)
  735. Nochigashima Island
  736. Nock (of a bow)
  737. Nock of an arrow
  738. Noda Police Station
  739. Noda worked successively in different positions such as Counselor of Commerce and Industry in the Hamaguchi Cabinet in 1930, Councilor of Research Bureau of Cabinet in 1935, and so on.
  740. Noda-gawa River runs through Kayadani from north to south runs into the inland sea (Aso-kai) of Amanohashidate, and is one of the three most scenic spots in Japan.
  741. Nodagawa Station
  742. Nodagawa Station (Tangoyamada Station): Kaya Railway
  743. Nodagawa Station - Tango-Omiya Station - Mineyama Station
  744. Nodagawa Station, located in Koaza Kakiuchi Aza Shimoyamada, Yosano-cho, Yosano-gun, Kyoto Prefecture, is a railway facility of the Miyazu Line operated by Kitakinki Tango Railway (KTR).
  745. Nodagawa-cho Forest Park
  746. Nodate (open-air tea ceremony)
  747. Nodate derives from the outdoor tea breaks that bushos (Japanese military commanders) in the Sengoku period (in Japan) and daimyos (feudal lords) in the Edo period enjoyed during expeditions and hunting respectively.
  748. Nodate is an open-air tea ceremony in which people make and enjoy green tea or powdered green tea.
  749. Nodate is held mostly in spring and autumn when the climate and temperature is mild, the weather is good and the sun is not too strong for such an outdoor event.
  750. Nodategasa (a type of umbrella)
  751. Nodding at night with salt breeze, autumn moon light equally spreads over the place ("Shoku Shui Wakashu" Volume 5, Autumn 1).
  752. Nodobue
  753. Noe and Morishoji stations on the old line were closed.
  754. Noen
  755. Noen (1140-1199) was a Buddhist monk who lived at the end of the Heian period.
  756. Noen was pardoned and went back to Kyoto in 1189, but Noriko had already given birth to MINAMOTO no Sadamichi and MINAMOTO no Michikata by Michichika, and was carrying another child.
  757. Nogake is an outdoor Japanese activity similar to a picnic which originated outside of Japan.
  758. Nogaku Kyokai (The Nohgaku Performers' Association)
  759. Nogaku Kyokai is an organization comprised of nogakushi (Noh actors) who belong to the schools that have directly inherited the methods of Yamato-yoza or Yamato-shiza (four sarugaku performance groups in the Yamato Province).
  760. Nogaku Kyokai is an organization for the nogakushi who have inherited those schools that were part of Yamato-shiza and who are professionally involved in Noh performances, not the kind taken as a lesson by amateurs.
  761. Nogami-no-sho
  762. Nogata Group
  763. Nogi (Old Nogi-mura)
  764. Nogi-jinja (Kyoto City) (Fushimi Ward, Kyoto City) -- It is located around the foot of the Imperial mausoleum of Emperor Meiji.
  765. Nogi-jinja (Shimonoseki City) (Shimonoseki City, Yamaguchi Prefecture) -- Chofu, Shimonoseki City is the place where Nogi came from.
  766. Nogi-jinja Shrine
  767. Nogi-jinja Shrine (Akasaka, Minato Ward, Tokyo) -- It is located next to the residence where Mr. and Mrs. Nogi fell on their swords.
  768. Nogi-jinja Shrine (Kyoto City)
  769. Nogi-jinja Shrine (Kyoto Prefecture)
  770. Nogi-jinja Shrine (Nasushiobara City) (Nasushiobara City, Tochigi Prefecture) -- It is located within the site of the villa where Nogi lived in retirement after Shino-Japanese War.
  771. Nogi-jinja Shrine in the site of Kagawa-ken Prefecture Gokoku-jinja Shrine (Zentsuji City, Kagawa Prefecture) -- The shrine is called 'Sanuki no miya Shrine,' so is Kagawa-ken Prefecture Gokoku-jinja Shrine.
  772. Nogi-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located at Fushimi-Momoyama Mausoleum (the mausoleum of the Emperor Meiji) in Fushimi-ku Ward, Kyoto City.
  773. Nogi-jinja Shrine is the Shinto shrine which deifies Maresuke NOGI who played an active role as a prominent military officer in Meiji period.
  774. Nogi-jinja Shrines are primarily located in the places which are associated with Nogi: Shimonoseki City where he was from, and Nasushiobara City where he owned a villa as his second residence.
  775. Nogo's noh and kyogen farce (May 4, 1976; Neonogo, Motosu City; Noh to Kyogen no Hozonkai [Noh and Kyogen Preservation Association])
  776. Nogoro forestry office
  777. Nogoya obi
  778. Noguchi who was disappointed by the death of Serizawa, returned to his homeland by Kondo's preach in a historical drama 'Shinsengumi!' of Japan Broadcasting Corporation, but that was a fiction.
  779. Noguchi-go
  780. Noguchino Ono-haka Tumulus
  781. Noguchino Ono-haka is a Hakkaku-fun (octagonal tumulus) constructed in the end of the Kofun period (tumulus period) located in Asuka-mura, Nara Prefecture.
  782. Noguchino Ono-haka recorded in documents
  783. Noguchino Ono-haka-kofun Tumulus (present-day Joint Tumulus of the Emperor Tenmu and the Empress Jito): Asuka-mura, Takaichi-gun, Nara Prefecture; the last half of the seventy century; an octagonal tomb on a rectangular basement
  784. Nogunaga no Yabo (Nobunata's Ambition) series and Inindo Dato Nobunaga (Inindo: Way of the Ninja)
  785. Noh
  786. Noh "Eguchi" and "Saigyozakura."
  787. Noh 'Higaki' (Cypress fence), 'Jue' and others.
  788. Noh 'Kogo' is appreciated as a masterpiece for its beauty and sadness and still frequently played on the stage.
  789. Noh 'Kogo' was one of the fourth-category plays and written by Zenchiku KOMPARU based on the Sagano scene of the Kogo story.
  790. Noh (Noh play), Yokyoku (Noh song)
  791. Noh (traditional masked dance-drama)
  792. Noh (traditional masked dance-drama) and dengaku (a style of dancing and music performed at agricultural festivals) developed in the capital and farming villages.
  793. Noh Actor
  794. Noh Chusei kara no Hibiki (Kadokawa Sosho of Kadokawa Group Publishing, 1998)
  795. Noh Designs' (Heibonsha New Color, 1976)
  796. Noh Expressions and Aesthetic Paradox' (Chukoshinsho, 1971).
  797. Noh Mask
  798. Noh Shite (main role): Musashibo Benkei
  799. Noh Shite (main role): The spirit of Ama Matsukaze (fisherwoman Matsukaze)
  800. Noh Shite-kata (main role in the Noh play): MINAMOTO no Yoshitsune
  801. Noh Sumida-gawa River
  802. Noh Tsure (subordinate role attached to the shite) (or Kokata): crane, tortoise
  803. Noh Waki (supporting role): A traveling priest
  804. Noh Waki (supporting role): Barrier keeper of the Ataka barrier station, a certain Togashi
  805. Noh Waki (supporting role): a monk from Kyoto, (Waki Tsure [companions who appear with the supporting actor in a Noh play]: two retainer monks)
  806. Noh Waki-kata (supporting role): MUSASHIBO Benkei, (Waki Tsure [companions who appear with the supporting actor in a Noh play]: three retainers of Yoshitsune)
  807. Noh and Kabuki
  808. Noh and Modern Literature' (Heibonsha, 1990)
  809. Noh as an art of improvisation
  810. Noh books (by Zeami), five volumes
  811. Noh chants are quoted from the sixth line of p.344 and the last of two lines of p.347, in the fourth printing of the same document.
  812. Noh clothing (63 items) used at annual festivals is designated a national important cultural property.
  813. Noh dancing is classified as follows.
  814. Noh dancing is static and has no drastic changes from fast to slow in one performance and it is characterized by showing stiff line by forcing a body to be under extreme tension.
  815. Noh dancing, Noh posturing, Noh chanting, Noh music, and in fact everything in Noh, has various forms.
  816. Noh drama
  817. Noh drama 'Crane and Tortoise'
  818. Noh dramas focusing on the same theme as the above story
  819. Noh during World War II
  820. Noh during the Edo period
  821. Noh farce pro
  822. Noh farce: Okura Style
  823. Noh farce: Okura Style and Okura Hachiemon School
  824. Noh farce: Okura Style and Okura Yadayu School
  825. Noh farce: Sagi Style
  826. Noh gaku (Noh music) Izumiryu kyogenkata (comic actors of Izumi school).
  827. Noh has a lot of unusual features, among which an especially important feature is that the "dead" play a central role in Noh.
  828. Noh in the Shokuho Period
  829. Noh in the Shokuho period
  830. Noh in the modern times
  831. Noh in wartime
  832. Noh is a kind of musical using masks (called "Omote" in Japanese).
  833. Noh is a music-and-mask play comprising mainly of the dance of a protagonist (Shite) accompanied by a Noh chorus and Noh musicians.
  834. Noh is a type of "Nohgaku (Noh music)" used in a kind of Japanese original stage performing art of which the completion was realized in the late Kamakura period or the beginning of the Muromachi period.
  835. Noh is characterized by an element of dancing, having plenty of intangible and symbolic expressions.
  836. Noh is composed of various forms (style and patterns of the performing techniques).
  837. Noh is in line of Kanze school, and Kyogen (farce played during a Noh cycle) is in line of Okura school.
  838. Noh is sometimes broadcasted on TV.
  839. Noh kyogen-kata: a fisherman from Daimotsu-ura cove
  840. Noh kyogenkata (Actors who perform lighthearted plays that are often staged between the more serious Noh pieces): Man around Ungo-ji Temple
  841. Noh kyogenkata (Actors who perform lighthearted plays that are often staged between the more serious Noh pieces): Man in front of the gate of Kiyomizu-dera Temple
  842. Noh kyogenkata (Actors who perform lighthearted plays that are often staged between the more serious noh pieces): Attendant of the party of beautiful women
  843. Noh kyogenkata: God of Hachiman-gu Shrine
  844. Noh mask
  845. Noh masks are made by carving wood (mainly Japanese cypress) and coloring it, a process called "omote wo utsu" (lit. to strike a mask).
  846. Noh masks have been influenced by gigaku-men (masks for gigaku, an ancient form of masked drama) and bugaku (Japanese court dance and music) masks.
  847. Noh music accompaniment without the side drum is called "triple time music (Sanbyoshi)," while Noh music accompaniment with the side drum is called "quadruple time music (Yonbyoshi)."
  848. Noh music pieces, unknown classics, master pieces or reproduction
  849. Noh musicians
  850. Noh of the Edo Period
  851. Noh performances held to raise subscriptions for religious purposes had already appeared in the early stages of Sarugaku (the prototype of Noh).
  852. Noh play
  853. Noh play's father and son pair, Kanami and Zeami also claimed to be descendants of Kawakatsu.
  854. Noh plays
  855. Noh plays can be performed in any place a long as the stage has an appropriate floor, an appropriate size, and pillars on four sides and Hashigakari (bridge-form passageway to main stage) is provided.
  856. Noh shite (a main role): a woman of Murotsu
  857. Noh shite (leading role): Wife of Mr. So-and-so of Ashiya
  858. Noh shite (main role) : Fuku no Kami
  859. Noh shite (main role), Sato no onna (woman of village)
  860. Noh shite (main role): Diver
  861. Noh shite (main role): Jinen Koji
  862. Noh shite (main role): Joro (high ranking female servant in the Imperial Court) viewing autumnal foliage (actually an Oni [ogre])
  863. Noh shite (main role): Kagetsu
  864. Noh shite (main role): Kyojo (madwoman), mother of Umewakamaru
  865. Noh shite (main role): Lucky fellow
  866. Noh shite (main role): Tarokaja
  867. Noh shite (main role): emperor
  868. Noh shite (the leading part): Ghost of Michizane SUGAWARA
  869. Noh shite: Fusasaki no Otodo
  870. Noh shite: Ryunyo
  871. Noh stage
  872. Noh stage of Hongan-ji Temple (tsukehashigakari [attached bridge-form passageway])
  873. Noh stage; Tsuketari Hashigakari passageway
  874. Noh stages were used to be built in shrines and the like, and the roof of the stage was exposed to the sky.
  875. Noh theater and Kyogen (Noh farce)
  876. Noh tsure (companion): Yugiri, maid of Mr. So-and-so of Ashiya
  877. Noh waki (a supporting part): Hossho-bo
  878. Noh waki (a supporting role): a man of Shimogyo
  879. Noh waki (supporting role), the shrine priest of Muro
  880. Noh waki (supporting role): Ferryman of Sumida-gawa River
  881. Noh waki (supporting role): Mr. So-and-so of Ashiya, resident in Ashiya, Chikuzen Province
  882. Noh waki (supporting role): minister
  883. Noh waki tsure: retainer
  884. Noh writers
  885. Noh' ability
  886. Noh' had been completed and established by the period when Zenpo wrote great works, so all what Zenpo could do was refine and polish Noh technically.
  887. Noh, Kyogen (farce played during a Noh cycle), Kabuki (traditional drama performed by male actors), Bunraku (Japanese puppet theater), Rakugo (traditional comic storytelling), Kodan storytelling (or called Koshaku storytelling), Naniwabushi (a kind of sung narrative popular during the Edo period), and Yose (storyteller theater)
  888. Noh, which derived from dengaku and other folk entertainments, developed its style in the Muromachi period, and fue seem to have been introduced into Noh-hayashi (Noh musical accompaniment) around the time of Zeami.
  889. Noh-jiutai, (Noh chorus) sings Utai (a song) containing the volume titles of the Tale of Genji in order, such as 'To being with, the smoke of Kiritsubo (the Paulownia Court) quickly rose to the sky over Hossho last night, and words of Hahakigi (the Broom Tree) in the evening...,' and Murasaki Shikibu dances to the music.
  890. Noh-kyogen-kata (noh-kyogen player): A follower of Hossho-bo
  891. Noh-no-ma (Noh room)
  892. Nohara Fishery Facility 'Shionome'
  893. Nohara Kaisui Yokujo (Nohara Seaside Resort) is a seaside resort facing the Sea of Japan, located in Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  894. Nohara Kanko Kyokai (野原観光協会)(Nohara Tourist office): phone: 0773-67-0706
  895. Nohara Seaside Resort
  896. Nohara swimming beach
  897. Nohgaku
  898. Nohgaku is a Japanese traditional performing art.
  899. Nohgaku is divided into the following three fields: Noh play, Shiki Sanban (three rituals), and Kyogen (farce played during a Noh play cycle).
  900. Nohgaku theatre: Okura school, Kuzuno school, Ishii school, Takayasu school and Kanze school
  901. Nohgakushi
  902. Nohgakushi as profession
  903. Nohgakushi belonging to the Sohu Association
  904. Nohgakushi of the Aiba family
  905. Nohgakushorin
  906. Nohgakushorin Co., Ltd. is a publishing company in Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo which mostly produces books on nogaku (the art of Noh).
  907. Nohgeki Sozoroaruki, Nohgakushorin, 1996
  908. Nohgekisyoyo, Chikuma Shobo Publishers, 1984
  909. Nohime
  910. Nohime (1535 - August 5, 1612), was the daughter of Dosan SAITO and lawful wife of Nobunaga ODA.
  911. Nohkan
  912. Nohkan and shinobue (Japanese bamboo flutes) were mainly used for Kabuki (traditional drama performed by male actors), which became popular in the Edo period.
  913. Nohkan is a sort of the Japanese transverse flutes.
  914. Nohkyogen: a local man
  915. Nohon Sakusha Chumon
  916. Nohonshoki mentions the second dispatch, and it says ONO no Imoko was sent to Great Tang with the sovereign's message in 607.
  917. Nohwaki plays the role of finding out what is in the mind of the protagonist (shite) through questioning.
  918. Nohwaki was originally an abbreviation for "Side protagonist (waki-no-shite)" and in the old days, there was no difference between pro protagonist and pro Nohwaki.
  919. Nohwaki: Shimogakari-hosho Style
  920. Nohwaki: Shindo Style, Fukuo Style
  921. Nohwaki: Shundo Style
  922. Nohwaki: Takayasu Style
  923. Noin
  924. Noin (988-1058) was a monk and a poet who lived during the mid-Heian period.
  925. Noin: Secular name: TACHIBANA no Nagayasu.
  926. Noinbon (type of manuscript)
  927. Nojo-oe: Yoku Owai wo Nozoku. - To remove impurities from a mind
  928. Nojoho
  929. Nojun
  930. Nojun is in the opposite end of "tanrei."
  931. Noka (farm houses)
  932. Noka (farm houses) and machiya (town houses) in the Edo Period are called minka in the architectural history of Japan and in ethnology.
  933. Noka domain in Echizen Province - 35,000 koku (approximately 6.3 million liters of crop yield).
  934. Nokaku-suimin: Yoku suimin wo Samasu. - To make alert
  935. Nokan no gi (coffin rite)
  936. Nokiba no Ogi: Utsusemi's daughter-in-law.
  937. Nokimoru Tsuki (literally, Moonlight Through the Eaves) (April 1895, 'Mainichi Shimbun')
  938. Nokitsuke-sai
  939. Nokonoshima Island
  940. Nokotsu (place a person's ashes in a tomb)
  941. Nokotsudo (A Japanese Ossuary)
  942. Nokotsudo run by the public sector
  943. Nokyoto pagoda (stone two-storied pagoda) - built in the latter half of the Heian period
  944. Noma-jinja Shrine Pagoda (Imabari City, Ehime Prefecture), Important Cultural Property
  945. Nomads in the Northern Asia
  946. Nomen-zumi': Stacking natural stones as they are;
  947. Nomin-ei
  948. Nominally this marked the revival of 'enka' as a genre which had been discontinued in the Showa prewar period, but the enka songs completely lacked social satirical elements as conventional enka songs originated in enzetsuka had been passed on to the folk songs.
  949. Nominated to the Mokunoryo (Bureau of Carpentry), in 957.
  950. Nominated to the post of naiki (secretary), in 925.
  951. Nomination of the Successor
  952. Nomitori Otoko (the man catching fleas)
  953. Nomori (Source: Verse in Manyo-shu, or Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves)
  954. Nomoto Shogen fell in love with a yujo (prostitute) in Nakazato (Noda City, Chiba Prefecture) and sneakeed out of his castle to meet her night after night.'
  955. Nomugi -Kaido Road (Kaido to transport yellow tail)
  956. Nomuhiro was also an educated man who was well versed in various arts, such as calligraphy, tea ceremony, and renga (a poetic form, poetic dialogue).
  957. Nomura Art Museum
  958. Nomura Art Museum is located at 61Nanzenji Shimo-Kawara-cho, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture
  959. Nomura Hekiunso villa [Nanzenji Shimokawara-cho and Nanzenji Fukuchi-cho, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City]
  960. Nomura Line: Yasumori NOMURA
  961. Nomura Manzo Chosakushu (Writings of Manzo NOMURA), published by Gogatsu-shobo in 1982.
  962. Nomura also produced "Hakkodasan" (Mt. Hakkoda) (the film adaptation), "Kinema no Tenchi" and "Amagi goe."
  963. Nomura did not return to the fold of the Shinsengumi, and although he was exclusively in charge of a squad of the army forces, he was not satisfied with the commander Kasuga's leadership and caused various troubles including disobedience to Kasuga's orders.
  964. Nomura died in this battle.
  965. Nomura received the Jury's Special Awards at Moscow International Film Festival for "Suna no Utsuwa" (A Castle of Sand) made in 1974 and, in 1978, established a production company "Kiri Productions" with Seicho MATSUMOTO but that company was dissolved in 1984.
  966. Nomura was from Kyoto Prefecture.
  967. Nomura's father Hotei NOMURA was a pioneering Japanese movie director who also worked as the general manager of Shochiku Kamata Studio.
  968. Nomura's posthumous Buddhist name (Jodo Shinshu sect (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism)) is 映芳院釋顕真.
  969. Nomuro-Honjo route: Nomuro - Honjo Clinic
  970. Non-Contentious Cases Procedures Act (Act No. 14: June 21, 1898)
  971. Non-Councilor.
  972. Non-belligerency pact' in 1929, by 'Nihonkoku Kotei'
  973. Non-citizens of Niigata Prefecture may mistake tare katsudon for the sauce katsudon because of its appearance.
  974. Non-compliance with emission allowances
  975. Non-compliance with reporting requirements
  976. Non-consolidated: 11.11% based on domestic standards, or 14.66% based on the International FinancialReporting Standards
  977. Non-daimyo
  978. Non-degree graduate program
  979. Non-foaming Miyagi-my yeast (MY-3227)
  980. Non-free people organized under them included low-ranked people, servants, and retainers.
  981. Non-heat-treated soy-sauce or soy-sauce are used in the preparation process instead of salt water.
  982. Non-hereditary feudal lord with Kokudaka being 50,000 koku.
  983. Non-hereditary feudal lord, with Kokudaka being 100,000 koku
  984. Non-hereditary feudal lord, with Kokudaka being 240,000 koku
  985. Non-hereditary feudal lord, with Kokudaka being 51,500 koku
  986. Non-listed buildings include Baisa-do, which is dedicated to Baisao.
  987. Non-religion/religion theories and creeds
  988. Non-reserved cars of the inbound "Monju No. 2" are very crowded with passengers from the area around Osaka and bound for Toyooka, Kinosaki, Miyazu or Maizuru.
  989. Non-seafood Sashimi
  990. Non-stop
  991. Non-volcanic hot springs are further divided into deep hot water, which was heated by geothermal heat that becomes higher according to the geothermal gradient, and those whose heat source is unknown.
  992. Non-wild plants are often planted in the precincts of shrines.
  993. Nonangular pillar
  994. Noncombatants fled to ninomaru (second bailey), but as troops of Nobunaga ODA rushed into Ninomaru, they retracted to honmaru (the keep of the castle).
  995. Noncommissioned Officer: Sanzo TSUDA (March 11 -)
  996. None
  997. None in this category achieved a success in making up a part of the genre and this particular trend rather developed in the chilled-cup market.
  998. None of Tomoyasu's achievements had gone down to posterity.
  999. None of his father, mother, or imina (personal name) is unknown.
  1000. None of his followers knew his name, either.


257001 ~ 258000

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