; 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. Sadafusa was the successor of the Jimyoin Imperial line, and descended from the Northern Court's third Emperor Suko.
  2. Sadaharu KUWAYAMA
  3. Sadaharu KUWAYAMA (Sosen), the lord of the Gose Domain of Yamato Province.
  4. Sadaharu KUWAYAMA (also known by his Buddhist name, Sosen), the lord of Gose Domain in Yamato Province.
  5. Sadaharu SHINDO
  6. Sadaharu SHINDO (1497 ? 1551) was a military commander during Japan's Sengoku period (Warring State period) and was chief vassal of the Rokkaku clan.
  7. Sadaharu had excellent diplomatic skills and, among other successes, is said to have brokered peace between the shoguns of the day, Yoshiharu ASHIKAGA and Harumoto HOSOKAWA.
  8. Sadahide GAMO
  9. Sadahide GAMO (1444? - 1513) was a busho (military commander) and a waka poet of the Muromachi period.
  10. Sadahide GAMO fully constructed the castle in earnest in Hino during the period from 1533 to 1536.
  11. Sadahide GAMO was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  12. Sadahide participated in most of Sadayori's major battles such as the departure for Kyoto in 1530, and beheaded 29 enemy generals in the war against Sukemasa AZAI in 1531 (the Battle of Minoura) as a vassal of Sadayori, and distinguished himself in those wars.
  13. Sadahime (Princess Sada): became a wife of Yorimoto ARIMA.
  14. Sadahira YAMAZAKI (the Kumamoto-tai troop)
  15. Sadahisa SHIMAZU
  16. Sadahisa SHIMAZU (May 10th, 1269 - August 12th, 1363) was the fifth-generation, family head of the Shimazu Clan.
  17. Sadahisa greatly contributed to the establishment of the Ashikaga Shogunate by actions known for his assistance of Takauji who escaped to Kyushu as he incurred a temporary loss in a battle and so on, and by beating back Kikuchi's force in the Battle of Tatarahama which paved the way for Takauji's comeback.
  18. Sadahisa rapidly attacked Taniyama-jo Castle but he was defeated, and the ascendancy of the Southern Court such as the injury of Sadahisa's son, Ujihisa, continued.
  19. Sadahisa, who was fighting in Kyoto at the time, found the crisis of his main domain and ordered his first son of concubine Yorihisa KAWAKAMI and Hisanaga's son Munehisa SHIMAZU to return to the domain to attack the Soutnern Court.
  20. Sadahusa HOJO
  21. Sadahusa HOJO (1272 - January 11, 1310) was from the Hojo clan in the late Kamakura Period.
  22. Sadaiben, Sachuben, Sashoben
  23. Sadaie KIRA
  24. Sadaie KIRA (dates of birth and death unknown) was a busho (Japanese military commander) during the early Muromachi period.
  25. Sadaie as a Politician
  26. Sadaie developed the idea of Yugen (subtle and profound beauty) or Ushin, which was advocated by his father Toshinari, and established 'suggestiveness and fascinating style,' being greatly reflected in the collected poems.
  27. Sadaie himself worked as Konoe no Chujo (middle captain of the palace guards) for a long time but failed to become Tono Chujo (the first secretary's captain) and finally managed to join the realm of Kugyo (the top court officials) at the age of 51.
  28. Sadaie restored his power once again and fought Akinobu, but died.
  29. Sadaie was a great-great-great-grandchild (descendant of five generations) of FUJIWARA no Michinaga, Sessho Daijo daijin (Regent and the Grand Minister).
  30. Sadaie was a typical Shinkokin-style (tone of poems seen in "New Collection of Ancient and Modern Japanese poetry") poet, and his poetry has been highly acclaimed for generations.
  31. Sadaie was also involved in the transcription and annotation of classics such as "The Tale of Genji" and "The Tosa Diary."
  32. Sadaie's child, Mitsuie, became Oshu Kanrei and fought with Kuniakira HATAKEYAMA who was a child of Kuniuji HATAKEYAMA and Yoshinori ISHIDO who was a child of the supreme commander of Oshu, Kuniuji HATAKEYAMA.
  33. Sadaie's direct descendants (the Nijo family, the main branch of the Mikohidari line) became extinct in the Muromachi period.
  34. Sadaie's son, FUJIWARA no Tameie's family was also celebrated as a family of kemari (a type of football played by court nobles in ancient Japan) and its traditional style of kemari was known as the Mikohidari style.
  35. Sadaie, however, served the Kujo family as Keishi (household superintendent), was involved in many political operations and ceremonies of a court noble as an aide to Sekkan (regents and advisers), and mastered Yusoku-kojitsu (knowledge of court rules, ceremony, decorum and records of the past).
  36. Sadaie, however, was unable to achieve his goal of holding a top-notch political post like Udaijin (Minister of the Right), FUJIWARA no Sanesuke, who seemed to be Sadaie's role model and even appeared in his dream according to the chapter of 'September 27 of the first year of the Antei era' in "Meigetsuki."
  37. Sadaijin
  38. Sadaijin (Minister of the Left)
  39. Sadaijin (Minister of the Left) FUJIWARA no Yorinaga was his cousin both on his paternal and maternal sides, so he acted as Keishi (household superintendent) and kinju (attendant) of Yorinaga.
  40. Sadaijin (Minister of the Left) usually served as ichinokami, however, in the case where the position of Sadaijin was vacant or Sadaijin served concurrently as Sessho Kanpaku (Sessho Kanpaku was not qualified as ichinokami), Udaijin (minister of the right) was appointed as ichinokami.
  41. Sadaijin (Minister of the Left) was conferred posthumously to both Mototo and Motonari.
  42. Sadaijin (minister of the left) MINAMOTO no Makoto arrested for a crime he had not committed, the grieving women of the palace
  43. Sadaijin (minister of the left) MINAMOTO no Takaakira was ousted based upon a tip-off that he committed treason.
  44. Sadaijin (minister of the left), FUJIWARA no Yorinaga was famous as a book collector and his book storerooms were said to have been strengthened by applying caustic lime or oyster shell to their wood walls.
  45. Sadaijin (minister of the left): ABE no Uchimaro, Udaijin (minister of the right): SOGANOKURA-YAMADA no Ishikawamaro, Naishin: FUJIWARA no Kamatari.
  46. Sadaijin (the Minister of the left), Kinnao and his father, Sadaijin, Kinyuki became his foster parent, Sadafusa remembered his parent's kindness for the rest of his life.
  47. Sadaijin Shonii ISONOKAMI no Maro died.
  48. Sadaijin Shonii ISONOKAMI no Maro took charge of the old capital.
  49. Sadaijin and Udaijin (the Minister of the Left and the Minister of the Right): 30 ha
  50. Sadaijin no nyogo (court lady of the Minister of the Left), Chunagon no musume (daughter of Middle Counselor), Saisho no musume (daughter of the prime minister) --- they appear in the chapter of 'Makibashira' (The Cypress Pillar).
  51. Sadaijin was replaced by Morotada, and Dainagon (chief councilor of state) FUJIWARA no Arihira was promoted to Udaijin.
  52. Sadaijin's servant, MUSA no Saga presented 嘉瓜 to the emperor.
  53. Sadaishi (Senior Sixth Rank, Upper Grade): 2
  54. Sadaishi, which presided over Benmukyoku, was called Kanmu, and the Otsuki clan handing down the title of Kanmu for generations began to be called Kanmu family.
  55. Sadaisho (Major Captain the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards) FUJIWARA no Tomokata, who is a favorite retainer of the Cloistered Emperor, pretended that it was an order from a retired emperor and ordered Yoshitsune to subdue Yoritomo.
  56. Sadaisho: Father of Ukon no Shosho
  57. Sadajiro ATOBE, the director of the Kyudo-bu in Butoku Kai, became the committee's chairman, and discussions for 'the united shooting form' were held for three days, beginning on November 10, at the Butokuden in Kyoto.
  58. Sadajiro MURAMATSU
  59. Sadaka IJICHI
  60. Sadaka IJICHI (1926 - 1887) was a bureaucrat who lived during the Meiji period.
  61. Sadakage ASAKURA (the ninth family head) who became Echizen no kuni shugo (the Governor of Echizen Province) and Mino no kuni shugo (the Governor of Mino Province) Shigeyori TOKI did not move for fear that they would become the next targets, although they had geographically better conditions than Kaga Province to join the camp.
  62. Sadakage ASAKURA (the ninth family head), shugo of Echizen Province,
  63. Sadakage led thousands of soldiers to head for Tsuruga and completely seized the Tsuruga-jo Castle where Kagetoyo resided on May 8.
  64. Sadakata's wife was the daughter of FUJIWARA no Yamakage.
  65. Sadakatsu MATSUDAIRA
  66. Sadakatsu MATSUDAIRA (1560 - May 1, 1624) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States) and a daimyo (Japanese territorial lord) in the early Edo period.
  67. Sadakatsu MATSUDAIRA was born in February, 1560 in Agui-jo Castle in Owari Province.
  68. Sadakatsu MIZUNO
  69. Sadakatsu MURAI
  70. Sadakatsu MURAI was the Kyoto Shoshidai (the Kyoto deputy) under the Oda administration.
  71. Sadakatsu NAITO, a son of the late Kunisada NAITO, went to Kyoto to fight with Nobunaga ODA for the decisive battle between Nobunaga and Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA in 1573,
  72. Sadakatsu already served Nobunaga when Nobuyuki ODA raised a flag of rebellion against his older brother Nobunaga in 1556, and tried to make a peace negotiation between Nobukatsu and Katsuie SHIBATA together with Hidemitsu (Hideyori) SHIMADA from the orders of Dota-gozen.
  73. Sadakatsu died in battle at Nijo-jo Castle along with Nobunaga's heir, Nobutada ODA, in the Incident at Honnoji, in which Mitsuhide AKECHI killed Nobunaga on June 2, 1582.
  74. Sadakatsu found a wife by the mediation of Ieyasu.
  75. Sadakatsu is also thought to be the member of the Naito clan who later joined the conquest of Tanba by Mitushide AKECHI.
  76. Sadakatsu ordered civilians to complete the repairment of tsuijibei (mud-filled fence or moat) of gosho in 1575, and divided them into groups to compete with each other in the progress of repairment.
  77. Sadakatsu received an imperial grant of 20,000 koku for his contribution to the defense of Kyoto together with Katsushige ITAKURA of Kyoto shoshidai (the position which administered western Japan).
  78. Sadakatsu was appointed to Nagato Province.
  79. Sadakatsu was assigned to be the Kyoto Shoshidai (Tenka Shoshidai (the Bakufu-appointed governor of the country)) in September 1573 after Nobunaga outcasted Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA and assumed full control of Kyoto.
  80. Sadakatsu, living up to Nobunaga's expectation, governed Kyoto without any serious mistakes while Nobunaga was alive.
  81. Sadakazu GASSAN who later became a member of Imperial Household Performance Art also inscribed Gimei including Ikkanshi Tadatsuna, with excellent skills.
  82. Sadakichi KAWADO accumulated media (other than SP records) containing recordings of rakugo aired on the radio and other locations.
  83. Sadakichi KIDA criticized this theory by pointing out that the Jinshin year was the first year of an emperor's reign whether "Chronicles of Japan" was revised or not.
  84. Sadakichi KIDA of the Ministry of Education was given a leave of absence from work to take responsibility for the above.
  85. Sadakichi KITA (a historian of modern Japan) forms a conjecture that Sakahoko (a halberd placed upside down) was planted on the peak of Mt. Takachiho-no-mine by an ascetic Buddhist monk who, being prompted by "Jinno Shotoki" and the like, created the myth of the divine descent on Mt. Kirishima.
  86. Sadakiyo ISHIKAWA
  87. Sadakiyo ISHIKAWA (year of birth and death unknown - May 3, 1626) was a busho (military commander) and daimyo (Japanese territorial lord) in the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  88. Sadakiyo ISHIKAWA's wife (some say Shigemasa's wife) is believed to have been Okane (Okane-dono), the seventh daughter of Nobushige SANADA who is known as Yukimura SANADA.
  89. Sadakiyo MATSUDAIRA
  90. Sadakiyo MATSUDAIRA (November 13, 1729 - August 25, 1779) was a daimyo (a feudal lord) who lived in the Edo period.
  91. Sadakiyo joined the Western Camp at the Battle of Sekigahara, and after the war, he became a tea master and a merchant, and there are several theories about his wife, which is said to be the daughter of Mitsunari ISHIDA, a younger sister of Yoshitsugu OTANI, or the daughter of Nobushige SANADA.
  92. Sadako SAWAMURA
  93. Sadako SAWAMURA (November 11, 1908 - August 16, 1996) was an actress and essayist.
  94. Sadako SAWAMURA was born as the second daughter of Denzo TAKESHIBA (his real name was Dentaro KATO), the Kabuki playwright.
  95. Sadako TOYOTOMI (the daughter of Nisshu's son, Katsuhide TOYOTOMI, and Yukiie KUJO's wife)
  96. Sadako YUCHI: a daughter of the Ikeda family who was samurai, and her childhood name was Tei.
  97. Sadako, a child by her former husband Hidekatsu, was fostered by her eldest sister Chacha (Yodo-dono) as an adopted child.
  98. Sadakuni ISE
  99. Sadakuni ISE (1398 - 1454) was a steward of the Bakufu Mandokoro in the Muromachi period.
  100. Sadakuni ISE's daughter was the mother of Soun HOJO and Kitagawa-Dono (wife of Yoshitada IMAGAWA).
  101. Sadakuro does not speak a word until he kills Yoichibei.
  102. Sadakuro doesn't speak to Yoichibei.
  103. Sadakuro drags Yoichibei and stabs him to death.
  104. Sadakuro hides himself in the weeds.
  105. Sadakuro is originally a son of a high-ranking samurai before he becomes disinherited.
  106. Sadakuro is shot on his back and falls down while squirming.
  107. Sadakuro takes out the wallet from Yoichibei's inside pocket.
  108. Sadakuro wears tattered clothes of a bandit.
  109. Sadakuro's wife takes revenge on the wives of Yoichibei and Kanpei.
  110. Sadakyo was diligent in his studies since he was young, studied under Shinyo EDAYOSHI and Matsudo ISHII, learned keigaku (study of Keisho in Confucianism), and was excellent in archery and the art of the spearmanship.
  111. Sadamasa HATAKEYAMA defeated.
  112. Sadamasa KATAGIRI (Sekishu) was the lord of the Yamato-Koizumi Domain worth 13,000 koku, and also held the post of Fushin-bugyo (shogunate official responsible for public works).
  113. Sadamasa KATAGIRI's tea ceremony handed down to Soen KATAGIRI was passed on to Sowa from Soryu KAJI.
  114. Sadamasa KATAGIRI, the second lord of the domain, was the son of Sadataka, and he was a master of tea ceremony well known as the alias Sekishu KATAGIRI.
  115. Sadamasa KAZANIN
  116. Sadamasa KAZANIN (December 21, 1218 - March 28, 1294) was a kugyo (court noble) who lived in the Kamakura period.
  117. Sadamasa OKUDAIRA who guarded Nagashino-jo Castle from the large army of Takeda in this battle was given Henki (a portion of the name of a person in high rank, which is given to a retainer to show subordination) from Nobunaga and he changed his name to Nobumasa.
  118. Sadamasa OKUDAIRA, lord of Nagashino Castle was renamed 'Nobumasa" as he was granted "henki" (one of the characters used in the superior's name) by Nobunaga for his military achievements (yet as had been previously agreed).
  119. Sadamasa TOKI
  120. Sadamasa TOKI (1551 - April 19, 1597) was a busho (Japanese military commander) (feudal lord) who lived from the Sengoku period to Azuchi Momoyama period.
  121. Sadamasa TOKI, Jugoi no ge (1593 (Bunroku 2) ~)
  122. Sadamasa TOKI: 10,000-koku Moriya Domain
  123. Sadamasa YABE
  124. Sadamasa YABE (date of birth and death unknown), a busho (Japanese military commander) in Azuchi-Momoyama period, served Nobunaga ODA, and then served Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI as a vassal.
  125. Sadamasa and Soun fought Akisada UESUGI's troops at the Ara-kawa River (Kanto) but when Sadamasa fell off his horse and died, Soun returned with his troops.
  126. Sadamasa holed up in Nagashino-jo Castle and withstood the offensive by the Takeda army.
  127. Sadamasa was given 10,000 koku (approximately 1.8 million liters of crop yield) in Moriya, Shimousa Province (Moriya domain) when the territory of the Tokugawa clan was transferred to Kanto region.
  128. Sadamasa's descendants served the Gohojo clan.
  129. Sadamasa's foster father, Zenshichiro Iesada YABE served Nobunaga ODA as his kinju (attendant), and was called ODA ke bugyo goninsyu (five administrators of the ODA family) together with Nagayori SUGAYA, Hidekazu HASEGAWA, Hidekatsu FUKUTOMI, and Hidemasa HORI.
  130. Sadami was enthroned at once as Emperor Uda.
  131. Sadami was the Emperor's favorite son, and the emperor was so happy that he grasped Mototsune's hands in thanks.
  132. Sadamichi INABA
  133. Sadamichi INABA (1546 - October 7, 1603) was a busho or military commander (daimyo or feudal lord) from the Sengoku to the early Edo period.
  134. Sadamichi INABA and Shigemichi INABA were his sons.
  135. Sadamichi ISHIKAWA
  136. Sadamichi ISHIKAWA (date of birth and death unknown) was a daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) in Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  137. Sadamichi ISHIKAWA served Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI in Tensho era as the Kenchi survey magistrate of Yamashiro Province, and occupied 12000 koku (crop yields) in Yamashiro Province and Amata county, Tanba Province around 1599 to 1600.
  138. Sadamichi MAKINO
  139. Sadamichi MAKINO (1742-1749)
  140. Sadamichi MAKINO was a daimyo (feudal lord) during the Edo period.
  141. Sadamichi MAKINO was born when Narisada was 73 years old.
  142. Sadamichi MAKINO was part of the 4th generation of the Makino family with ties to Narisada.
  143. Sadamichi MAKINO was the eldest son of Sadamichi MAKINO who was a close aide to Tsunayoshi TOKUGAWA.
  144. Sadamichi MATSUDAIRA
  145. Sadamichi MATSUDAIRA (July 4, 1834 - September 18, 1859) was a Daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) during the end of the Edo Period.
  146. Sadamichi TSUCHIMIKADO
  147. Sadamichi TSUCHIMIKADO (1188 ? November 4, 1247#) was a court noble in the Kamakura period.
  148. Sadamichi TSUCHIMIKADO, who was a maternal uncle of the new Emperor, had married Yasutoki's younger sister, and therefore Yasutoki started to infiltrate the Imperial Court through Sadamichi.
  149. Sadamichi died In 1749 at 49 years of age.
  150. Sadamichi hesitated to rise up against his former master's son.
  151. Sadamichi was Mandokoro Shitsuji (chief of Mandokoro, the Administrative Board) of Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) from 1490 through 1498.
  152. Sadamichi was not directly involved in the incident but lost his position as a related person to the office of the Retired Emperor Gotoba.
  153. Sadamichi's childhood names were 'Konosuke' and 'Sadatomo.'
  154. Sadamichi's descendants continued as feudal retainers of the Domain.
  155. Sadamichi's performance of his duties was recognized and in 1747 he was transferred to the role in the Hitachi-Kasama domain.
  156. Sadamichi's son, Genrokuro Sadatsugu OKUMURA, made his eldest son Genshiro serve Toshiie MAEDA, and later the son became a clansman of Kaga Domain, calling himself 'Okumura Settsu no Kami Sadamitsu.'
  157. Sadamitsu HORIGUCHI
  158. Sadamitsu HORIGUCHI (1297 - 1338) was a busho (Japanese military commander), who lived from the late Kamakura period to the Northern and Southern Courts period.
  159. Sadamitsu SUGANUMA: 10,000-koku Abo Domain
  160. Sadamitsu USUI
  161. Sadamitsu USUI (954-1021) was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived during the middle of the Heian Period.
  162. Sadamitsu raised the army to make a stand but was defeated instead, and in 1335, followed Takauji ASHIKAGA and took the side of the Northern Court.
  163. Sadamori and Hidesato defeated the spearhead of Masakado's army, FUJIWARA no Harumochi, and chased the army through Kawaguchi, Shimousa Province.
  164. Sadamori and Hidesato gathered more soldiers and, on Feburary 13, they invaded and set fire to Masakado's Ishii base.
  165. Sadamori showed TAIRA no Masakado his stance that promoting friendly relationships with each other would be the best way.
  166. Sadamori thought that his family members were involved in the incidents as a penalty for the crime committed by their relatives in line with the rule of those days (the rule indicated that not only a criminal but also his or her relatives are punished).
  167. Sadamori tried to escape to Mutsu Province, but was chased by Masakado and forced to continue wandering in Togoku.
  168. Sadamori went to Kyoto and filed a complaint against Masakado, who was then summoned.
  169. Sadamoto NOMIYA and Michinatsu KUZE were his real younger brothers.
  170. Sadamoto NONOMIYA
  171. Sadamoto NONOMIYA (August 10, 1669 - August 13, 1711) was a court noble in the middle of the Edo Period.
  172. Sadamoto YUCHI: a member of the House of Peers, a prefectural governor (1843-1928)
  173. Sadamune INOO served Nobunaga ODA and died in the battlefield of Okehazama.
  174. Sadamune ISE was his son.
  175. Sadamune ISE, a child of Sadachika, and Sadamichi ISE, a grandson of Sadachika, cooperated with Masamoto HOSOKAWA who was from the rising Hosokawa clan and continued to have the influential position in the bakufu..
  176. Sadamune NANJO, who was referred as the child of Takasada, named himself as the Nanjo clan and prospered as Hoki-kokujin (samurai in Hoki Province) as well as the younger brother of Takasada, Tokitsuna ENYA and his descendants survived as the Kinju (attendant) of the shogun.
  177. Sadamune OTOMO
  178. Sadamune OTOMO (year of birth unknown - January 17, 1334) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the late Kamakura Period.
  179. Sadamune UTSUNOMIYA, noted as the eldest in the Iyo-Utsunomiya family records, became the Governor of Iyo Province.
  180. Sadamune did not have any children and so he adopted Toyofusa UTSUNOMIYA (the third son of Yorifusa UTSUNOMIYA of the Bizen-Utsunomiya clan), patriarch to the Iyo-Utsunomiya clan.
  181. Sadanaga MAKINO
  182. Sadanaga MAKINO (1781-1784)
  183. Sadanaga MAKINO (December 26, 1733 - October 30, 1796) was a daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) and politician during the mid Edo period.
  184. Sadanao MATSUDAIRA
  185. Sadanao MATSUDAIRA (February 29, 1660 - November 24, 1720) was a daimyo (Japanese territorial lord) in the Edo period.
  186. Sadanao MATSUDAIRA was born in 1660.
  187. Sadanari MANABE, jizamurai of Otsu, beat off the Kan navy consisting of 200 ships and 1,000 soldiers.
  188. Sadanji ICHIKAWA (the second) adapted it to kabuki play.
  189. Sadanji ICHIKAWA (the second) in Taisho period, and Shoroku ONOE (the second) in 1965, both revived the performances respectively.
  190. Sadanji was bad, too.
  191. Sadanobu KAZANIN
  192. Sadanobu KAZANIN (April 17, 1640 - November 18, 1704) was a Kugyo (high court noble) who lived in the early Edo period.
  193. Sadanobu MATSUDAIRA "Shukojisshu" Inshobu 1800
  194. Sadanobu MATSUDAIRA confiscated Tanuma's private property after his death, but it is said that Tanuma had so little property that 'there wasn't so much as a dust mote'.
  195. Sadanobu MATSUDAIRA continued the production restriction decree of sake brewing to one-third in the Tenmei era as part of the Kansei Reform and severely limited the Edo Nyushin of kudarizake because he thought that 'people would not drink sake if it does not come in.'
  196. Sadanobu MATSUDAIRA issued Kansei Igaku no Kin (Prohibition of heterodoxy in the Kansei era) in 1790.
  197. Sadanobu MATSUDAIRA stuck to a policy of simplicity and frugality to the extent that he restricted even the patterns on the kimono of the common people, and, for better or for worse, some looked back on the worldly politics of Okitsugu TANUMA with nostalgia.
  198. Sadanobu MATSUDAIRA was perplexed and asked Rinnojinomiya of Kanei-ji Temple to mediate the controversy.
  199. Sadanobu MATSUDAIRA who criticized Tanuma's politics subsequently appeared in 1787, and promoted the Kansei Reforms.
  200. Sadanobu MATSUDAIRA, who was a grandchild of Yoshimune TOKUGAWA, was adopted by the Hisamatsu-Matsudaira family of Shirakawa Domain of Mutsu Province, and therefore, Sadanobu carried out the Kansei Reform as a roju from fudai daimyo.
  201. Sadanobu MATSUDAIRA, who was adopted from the Tayasu family, had been told cautiously by the karo of his home Tayasu family not to invite antipathy from the people in the Hisamatsu-Matsudaira family by showing off the kafu of the Tayasu family.
  202. Sadanobu Wakan Roeishu gire (fragmentary leaves of Wakan Roeishu (Japanese and Chinese poems to sing), FUJIWARA no Sadanobu's handwriting)
  203. Sadanobu became a calligraphy artist of folding screens used during the Daijoe (court banquets held during the first harvest festival), and many of his works remain to this date.
  204. Sadanobu died in 1829, and Buncho, who was 67 years old then, appointed as Goeshi (a painter for Shogun) and shaved his head.
  205. Sadanobu reprimanded the nobles, including Naruchika NAKAYAMA and Kinaki OGIMACHI, as well as punishing Hikokuro TAKAYAMA, an imperialist who was active in Kyushu.
  206. Sadanobu, the grandson of the eighth Shogun Yoshimune, regarded Yoshimune's reforms as ideal ones, so he encouraged frugality, watched over public morals, and drew up an extremely reduced budget in order to put an end to inflation from the Tanuma period.
  207. Sadanori KAZANIN (November 15, 1629 - January 30, 1654) was a Kugyo (high court noble) who lived in the early Edo period.
  208. Sadanori KAZANIN (Sakon e no chujo [Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards])
  209. Sadanori ODA, the third son of the second Sadaoki ODA, and Sadateru ODA, the fourth son, moved out and set up new branch families and became hatamoto.
  210. Sadanori YUCHI: Chujo (Middle Captain), a member of the House of Peers
  211. Sadanushi suffered from syphilis and was given medication by the Imperial command, but died shortly at Seishoin of Jion-ji Temple.
  212. Sadanushi was conferred Ge-jugoinoge (Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) given to persons outside Kyoto) and was appointed as Zusho no kami (Director of the Bureau of Drawing and Books) and Togu gakushi (Teacher of the Classics of the Crown Prince).
  213. Sadao MUNEMORI
  214. Sadao SHIDARA
  215. Sadao SHIDARA (July 3, 1864 - December 15, 1943) was a private architect in Kansai from the Meiji era to the early Showa era.
  216. Sadao TSUBAKI and Kakujiro YOKOBORI of Sodosha moved to Kugenuma due to their respect for Ryusei and there were young men, including Kazumasa NAKAGAWA, who lived in the Kishida family's house without paying.
  217. Sadao YAMANAKA
  218. Sadao YAMANAKA (November 8, 1909 - September 17, 1938) was a Japanese film director and screenwriter.
  219. Sadao YAMANAKA was a buddy in the script writer department of Makino Production and his script was later used and worked as an assistant director of "Ronin Town" (town of masterless samurai) but his talent did not bloom yet.
  220. Sadaoki ISE
  221. Sadaoki ISE (1559 - July 12, 1582) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku period and a researcher of Yusoku Kojitsu (court and samurai rules of ceremony and etiquette).
  222. Sadaoki ISE's corps, positioned to the right of Toshimitsu SAITO's, attacked Nakagawa's in transit, and in return Saito's staged a fierce raid on Takayama's.
  223. Sadaoki ISE's powerful forces steadily pushed back Kiyohide NAKAGAWA's numerically superior forces.
  224. Sadaoki ISE, Katsubee MIZOO, Morinao SUWA and Kaneaki MIMAKI's: 2,000
  225. Sadaoki ISHII
  226. Sadaoki ISHII (March, 1842 to October 26, 1877) was a feudal retainer of the Saga Domain of Hizen Province and a local official from the end of Edo Period to the early Meiji period.
  227. Sadaoki KATAGIRI
  228. Sadaoki KATAGIRI (1669 - May 15, 1741) was the fourth lord of Koizumi Domain, Yamato Province.
  229. Sadaoki ODA was the second son of Nobusada ODA, who was the ninth son of Nobunaga ODA, and was Hatamoto (direct retainer of the shogun) holding 10,000 koku (180.39 cubic meters) as his territory, and after the death of Nagayoshi ODA, Sadaoki inherited the Uraku school and had many disciples as koke (privileged family under Tokugawa Shogunate).
  230. Sadaoki School: Sadaoki ODA, the son of Nobusada, who was the nephew of Yuraku ODA
  231. Sadaoki and his brother, Sadatame, did not advance beyond kinju (attendants) of the bakufu.
  232. Sadaoki didn't go to Bingo with Yoshiaki, but he became a yoriki (a police sergeant) for Mitsuhide AKECHI.
  233. Sadaoki died in Koizumi on May 15, 1741 and his second son Sadanari succeeded.
  234. Sadaoki's nephew Sadamoto ODA served the Nagoya clan of Owari Province and passed down the Uraku school, and it was continued by sado people (people in charge of the tea ceremony) including successive Suya HIRAO and the Kasuya family until the end of the Edo period.
  235. Sadaoku OE (year of birth unknown - 1334) was believed to be a distant descendant of OE no Hiromoto, who was an Inaba no kami (Governor of Inaba Province).
  236. Sadashige KAWAGOE
  237. Sadashige KAWAGOE (1272 - June 21, 1333) was a Japanese military commander of Kawagoe Yakata, Iruma District, Musashi Province in the late Kamakura period.
  238. Sadashiro TANAKA
  239. Sadasuke FUJITA
  240. Sadataka ISE
  241. Sadataka ISE was a 'busho' (Japanese military commander) who lived in the Sengoku period (period of warring states.
  242. Sadataka MATSUDAIRA
  243. Sadataka MATSUDAIRA (July 27, 1716 - May 3, 1763) was a daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) who lived during the Edo period.
  244. Sadataka NIJO
  245. Sadataka NIJO (1190 - February 15, 1238) was a kugyo (a high court noble) during the early Kamakura period.
  246. Sadataka SAKAI
  247. Sadataka SAKAI (1435 - May 29, 1522) was a Japanese military commander during the time from the late Muromachi period to the Sengoku period (Period of Warring States), and is believed to be the founder of the Kazusa Sakai clan.
  248. Sadataka also served Hideyoshi just like his brother and left achievements in the Siege of Odawara and the Bunroku War, which earned him 10,000 koku crop yields in Harima Province.
  249. Sadataka and his brother Katsumoto struggled to support the declining Toyotomi clan, but after the issue of Hoko-ji Temple Shomei (inscription on the bell) incident which occurred in 1614, Hideyori started to suspect he and Katsumoto secretly contacted with Ieyasu.
  250. Sadataka was a 'bakushin' (shogun's retainer) of the Muromachi bakufu (shogunate).
  251. Sadataka was born as a son of Sadatada ISE.
  252. Sadataka was in so deep acquaintance with Muneyuki HAMURO that Muneyuki granted his position of Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) to Sadataka, but the two parted ways as Sadataka, together with his older brother Nagafusa, opposed to the Retired Emperor Gotoba raising an army in the occasion of Jokyu War.
  253. Sadatake HIRAI's daughter (Nagamasa's wife)
  254. Sadato was also called ABE no Kuriyagawa jiro Sadato.
  255. Sadatoki HOJO, who reached adulthood in 1293, eliminated the family of TAIRA no Yoritsuna (Heizenmon Incident).
  256. Sadatoki after the incident
  257. Sadatoki regained real political power from Uchi-Kanrei and further strengthened the Tokuso autocracy.
  258. Sadatoki's policies aimed to forcibly stop the collapse of Gokenin system which was the foundation of bakufu.
  259. Sadatomo MATSUDAIRA
  260. Sadatomo MATSUDAIRA (Shoo MATSUDAIRA, an expert of breeding Japanese irises)
  261. Sadatoshi (Sadanori) OTOMO
  262. Sadatoshi (Sadanori) OTOMO (year of birth unknown - 1336) was a person who lived during the Kamakura Period and the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  263. Sadatoshi NONOMIYA's wife, Shigetaka NIWATA's wife and Tadakata OKUBO's wife were his daughters, and Sadatoshi NONOMIYA was his adopted son.
  264. Sadatoshi SUGANUMA: 20,000-koku Yoshii Domain
  265. Sadatoyo SHIBAYAMA
  266. Sadatoyo SHIBAYAMA (May 23, 1638 - June 1, 1707) was a court noble who lived in the Edo period.
  267. Sadatsugu KAZANIN and Masanaga KAZANIN were his sons.
  268. Sadatsugu OIKAWA, Shigeuji OIKAWA, Shigetane OIKAWA, Tsunashige OIKAWA, Mitsumura OIKAWA, Yorio OIKAWA, Yorikane OIKAWA, Yoritaka OIKAWA, Yoritada OIKAWA
  269. Sadatsugu himself was put under the custody of Tadamasa TORII.
  270. Sadatsugu served Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI as his vassal.
  271. Sadatsuna MATSUDAIRA
  272. Sadatsuna MATSUDAIRA (March 8, 1592 - February 4, 1652) was a daimyo (Japanese territorial lord) in the Edo period.
  273. Sadatsuna MATSUDAIRA <Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade), Governor of Ecchu Province> "appointed as the lord of the domain on August 20, 1623 - transferred on March 23, 1633"
  274. Sadatsuna OKOCHI joined hands with the Shiba clan and determinedly fought against the Imagawa clan.
  275. Sadatsuna OKOCHI was killed in this battle, and Yoshitatsu SHIBA, who surrendered by entering into the priesthood, was sent back to Owari Province.
  276. Sadatsuna OUCHI
  277. Sadatsuna OUCHI (1545 - 1610) was a warlord of the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States).
  278. Sadatsuna UTSUNOMIYA
  279. Sadatsuna UTSUNOMIYA (1266 - August 13, 1316) was a Japanese military commander who lived in the middle through late Kamakura Period.
  280. Sadatsuna died on August 13, 1316 at the age of 51.
  281. Sadatsuna was famous for being skilled at battle and stratagem, and is also said to have been an excellent spearman with a cross headed spear.
  282. Sadatsuna was the eighth family head of the Utsunomiya clan.
  283. Sadatsuna was the father of Kintsuna UTSUNOMIYA and Fuyutsuna UTSUNOMIYA.
  284. Sadatsuna was transferred to the Ogaki Domain in Mino Province in March 1633, and was replaced by Naomasa NAGAI who took over the domain from the Koga Domain in Shimousa Province with assigned revenues of 100,000 koku.
  285. Sadatsuna worked on the construction of Yodo Castle.
  286. Sadatsuna's official court rank was Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) and he held the office of Mikawa no kuni Kokushi (the governor of the Mikawa Province).
  287. Sadatsune SHONI
  288. Sadatsune SHONI (born in 1272, birth date unknown - April 19, 1336) was a military commander who lived from the late Kamakura period through the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  289. Sadauemon OKUDA, his younger paternal brother, became a son-in-law of Shigemori OKUDA.
  290. Sadayakko KAWAKAMI
  291. Sadayakko KAWAKAMI (real name Sada KAWAKAMI [maiden name; Koyama], September 2, 1871 - December 7, 1946) was an actress in the Meiji to Showa era.
  292. Sadayakko was acted by Keiko MATSUZAKA and Otojiro by Masatoshi NAKAMURA.
  293. Sadayakko was favored by outstanding statesmen, including Kinmochi SAIONJI and Hirobumi ITO, the Prime Minister of the time, and she became the best geigi in Japan in both nominally and readily.
  294. Sadayasu IKEDA
  295. Sadayasu IKEDA (池田 定保) was the seventh lord of Inaba-wakasa Domain (the Tottori Nishikan Nitta domain).
  296. Sadayasu UTSUNOMIYA
  297. Sadayasu UTSUNOMIYA was a busho (Japanese military commander) during the Kamakura and Muromachi Periods.
  298. Sadayasu UTSUNOMIYA, the second son of Yasumune UTSUNOMIYA, held the office of jito (a manager and lord of manor) in Iyo Province and built a foundation of the Iyo-UTSUNOMIYA clan with placing its governance center on Negoroyama-jo Castle.
  299. Sadayasu YUCHI: Taijo (Captain)
  300. Sadayasu moved from Kita of Iyo Province in Shikoku to join the Kii clan in Nakatsu, Buzen Province together with Imperial Prince Kagenaga.
  301. Sadayasu successively held the posts of Gomonban (watchers of the various gates) of Edo-jo Castle, and in 1814, he was appointed as Oban-gashira (captain of the great guards) of Nijo-jo Castle.
  302. Sadayasu was the son of Yasumune UTSUNOMIYA, the younger brother of Sadatsuna UTSUNOMIYA, and the sixth head of the Shimotsuke-Utsunomiya clan (the eighth counting from FUJIWARA no Soen), and went to Chikugo Province in Kyushu.
  303. Sadayo (Ryoshun) IMAGAWA, Kyushu Tandai (local commissioner) of the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) was on friendly terms with Meishomaru, a disciple of Kenko YOSHIDA, so it is natural for him to have been involved in the compilation of the work after the death of Kenko.
  304. Sadayo IMAGAWA
  305. Sadayo KITA is his younger brother.
  306. Sadayori MITAMURA and his son Mitsuyori also died in battle when the Odani-jo Castle was defeated.
  307. Sadayori MITAMURA of the Mitamura clan, supported the Azai side, sometimes counted as a member of the Azai family, since he married Sukemasa's daughter.
  308. Sadayori ROKKAKU, Takayori's second son, appeared at the start of the Sengoku period (Japan).
  309. Sadayori SUGANUMA
  310. Sadayori SUGANUMA was a busho (military commander) in the the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States) (Japan) and a daimyo (Japanese territorial lord) in the Edo period.
  311. Sadayori became the kanryodai (delegated lord) of the Ashikaga shogun family, was based at Kannonji Castle, and built power across Omi in order to foster the full blossoming of the Rokkaku clan.
  312. Sadayoshi KAZANIN
  313. Sadayoshi KAZANIN (Juichii Sadaijin [Junior First Rank, Minister of the Left]), who succeeded to the headship of the Kazanin family, was his younger brother.
  314. Sadayoshi KAZANIN (November 28, 1599 - August 15, 1673) was a Kugyo (high court noble) who lived in the early Edo period.
  315. Sadayoshi KUSAKABE
  316. Sadayoshi KUSAKABE was a retainer of the Tokugawa clan in the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States).
  317. Sadayoshi MATSUDAIRA
  318. Sadayoshi MATSUDAIRA was the second lord of Kuwana Domain in Ise Province.
  319. Sadayoshi OKUNO
  320. Sadayoshi SUGANUMA
  321. Sadayoshi SUGANUMA [Jugoinoge Oribe no kami, Director of Wooven Stuff Office, (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  322. Sadayoshi SUGANUMA is a fudai daimyo (feudal lord in hereditary vassal to the Tokugawa family) in the early Edo period.
  323. Sadayoshi SUGANUMA moved from the Nagashima Domain in Ise Province to take his place.
  324. Sadayoshi TAKANO
  325. Sadayoshi TAKANO (1829 - February 21, 1913) was a Japanese Samurai and retainer of the Echigo-Nagaoka Domain.
  326. Sadayoshi TOKI
  327. Sadayoshi TOKI (1580 - February 22, 1619) was a busho (Japanese military commander) and a daimyo (Japanese territorial lord) from the Azuchi-Momoyama to the early Edo periods.
  328. Sadayoshi TOKI (Jugoinoge, Yamashiro no kami), the second son of Sadamasa TOKI.
  329. Sadayoshi TOKI entered with 20,000 koku from Moriya City, Shimousa Province, but died in 1619.
  330. Sadayoshi TOKI, Jugoi no ge
  331. Sadayoshi took a part in the Boshin War and the Hokuetsu War with his father, Shichizaemon TAKANO (or Hideemon TAKANO).
  332. Sadayoshi was a vassal of Nobuyuki SANADA, the lord of the Ueda Domain in the Shinano Province.
  333. Sadayoshi was injured in Aizu-Wakamatsu, but he recovered.
  334. Sadayoshi was the natural father of Isoroku YAMAMOTO, the navarch of combined fleet.
  335. Sadayuki ATSUJI
  336. Sadayuki ATSUJI (1528 - July 7, 1582) was a Japanese military commander and vassal of the Asai and the Oda clans during the Sengoku Period.
  337. Sadayuki ATSUJI and Shigetomo AKECHI's: 3,000
  338. Sadayuki GOTO ('Aiba Shisso,' Favorite Horse Sprinting), Sataro KAJI ('Obin Shipoyaki,' Large Cloisonne Vase), Yuichi OGURA (bust of General Nogi), Kanbashi YUZUKI (Su-go and Aratama-go), Akira OTSUKA ('Daigyosen,' Large Fishing Boat), Yasunari FUJIKI (statue of a young Maresuke NOGI polishing rice)
  339. Sadayuki HOJO
  340. Sadayuki HOJO was a busho (Japanese military commander) of the end of the Kamakura period.
  341. Sadayuki YUCHI, a doctor of the Kagoshima domain.
  342. Sadayuki claimed to be Awaji no kami (the governor of Awaji Province).
  343. Sadayuki was the lord of the Yamamotoyama Castle of Omi Province.
  344. Sadazane UESUGI, shugo of Echigo Province,
  345. Sadazane himself received 7,000 koku (alternate yoriai, a family status of samurai warriors in the Edo period) and distributed 3,000 koku to his brother Sadayoshi SUGANUMA.
  346. Saddles with similar design were excavated in Chaoyang City (Liaoning Province, China) where used to be the capital of Northern Yan of the Sixteen Kingdoms, a Senbi nation.
  347. Sadly enough, his valiant efforts brought him to an untimely death.'
  348. Sadly, however, Enjaku died in the same year, just before the rehabilitation of Kansai Kabuki.
  349. Sado
  350. Sado (Japanese tea ceremony), Kodo (traditional incense-smelling ceremony), and Kado (flower arrangement)
  351. Sado (also known as chado) (Japanese tea ceremony) is the act of a ritual preparing and serving tea for guests.
  352. Sado Achievements
  353. Sado Bugyo
  354. Sado City, Niigata Prefecture
  355. Sado Court: Niigata Prefecture: Kinhisa SHIGENOI
  356. Sado Fujian School
  357. Sado Gold Mine, Ikuno Silver Mine, Iwami Silver Mine, and Besshi Copper Mine
  358. Sado KAWAKAMI and Gorobe KAWAKAMI are his sons.
  359. Sado MATSUI, or Okinaga MATSUI was born in 1582 as the second son of Yasuyuki in Kumihama, Tango Province.
  360. Sado Prefecture: established on September 2 (old lunar calendar) in 1868 -> put under management of Niigata-fu on November 5 (old lunar calendar) in 1868 (de facto incorporation)
  361. Sado Toku Tsu In-gin: a board-like piece of silver hallmarked with '徳' (Toku, virtue) and '通' (Tsu, pass), minted with much lead added, lowering quality after Hoei era (1704-1710).
  362. Sado ban (Sado version) had a character '佐' as hallmark of Sujimiyaku (inspector) on the place of test hallmark of Kobanshi, along with characters '神' and '当' as test hallmark of Fukisho.
  363. Sado has almost no set rules of etiquette for Nodate.
  364. Sado no Shima: Sadoga-shima Island
  365. Sado spread even around the world after World War II, and the popularization of sado achieved world level recognition.
  366. Sado's Kurumataue rice planting ceremony (February 3, 1979; Sado City; Sado no Kurumataue Hozonkai [Association for the Preservation of Kurumataue in Sado])
  367. Sado's puppet play (Bunya, Sekkyo and Noroma puppets) (May 17, 1977; Sado City; Sado Ningyo Shibai Hozonkai [Sado Puppet Play Preservation Association], etc.)
  368. Sado, Kado, Kodo
  369. Sado-ji
  370. Sadowara Domain: Sadowara-jo Castle
  371. Sadowara-tai troop (Keijiro SHIMAZU, Hajime SAMEJIMA)
  372. Sae
  373. Sae no kami theory
  374. Saeki Domain: Saeki-jo Castle
  375. Saeki Doro Lanterns (March 11, 2009; Kameoka City; Saeki Doro Hozonkai [Saeki Lantern Preservation Association])
  376. Saeki no Komaro (the year of birth unknown - 666) was a government official of zo-daikinjo (the seventh grade of twenty-six of cap rank, which corresponds to Shoshii, Senior Fourth Rank and Jushii, Junior Fourth Rank of Taiho Ritsuryo, Taiho Code).
  377. Saeki no Miyatsuko
  378. Saeki no Otoko, the emissary, followed the Prince Otomo's order and tried to take step forward to kill Kurikuma no Okimi with his sword.
  379. Saeki no komaro
  380. Saeki-go Village
  381. Saekibe
  382. Saekibe has been said to derive from 'Sakebu' (to shout) since the Heian period.
  383. Saekibe is one of the Shinabe (technical groups) that existed in ancient Japan.
  384. Saekibe was organized in the extension period of the Yamato sovereignty during the invasion of eastern Japan eastward of Chubu region by moving the local people, who became captives, to western Japan westward of Kinki region.
  385. Saemon KAKUMI plotted to take up arms together with Sakyoshin OKI, Yagiemon OTSUKA, Genba EGUCHI, Izumi HASHIMOTO, and the like, who had always been antagonistic toward old retainers of the ICHIJO clan, and attacked Nakamura and subjugated the old retainers.
  386. Saemon KASUGA : 43
  387. Saemon no daijo (Senior Lieutenant at the Left Division of Outer Palace Guards), Kebiishi (officials with judicial and police powers).
  388. Saemon no jo (Government Post)
  389. Saemon no jo (a third-ranked officer of the Left Division of Outer Palace Guards)
  390. Saemon no jo (third-ranked officer of the Left Division of Outer Palace Guards)
  391. Saemon no jo Yorimasa SHIMAZU, the fifth son of Rokurozaemon no jo Tadayori SHIMAZU (the fourth son of Tadatsuna) of the Echizen Shimazu Clan was appointed as Jito (manager and lord of manor) of Yono-go, Asai-gun County, Omi Province, where he became the founder of the Goshu Shimazu Clan.
  392. Saemon no jo was a government post under the Japanese ritsuryo legal code system.
  393. Saemon no jo was hangan (inspector [third highest of the four administrative ranks of the ritsuryo period]) in Saemonfu, and the corresponding court rank was Sixth Rank.
  394. Saemon no kami
  395. Saemon no kami.
  396. Saemon no suke (assistant captain of the Left Division of Outer Palace Guards) died on the battle field.'
  397. Saenokami/ Funadonokami: it was originally a god of defending villages from external enemies and fending off epidemics, and also of reproduction and relationships between men and women.
  398. Saezuri
  399. Safe trip
  400. Safety device: Automatic Train Stop System (with speed check function)
  401. Safety device: Automatic Train Stop using the Keihan-type speed-check ATS
  402. Safety equipment
  403. Safety equipment: ATC (Automatic Train Control)
  404. Safety equipment: ATS (Automatic Train Stop system)
  405. Safety issues with imported eels
  406. Safety measures
  407. Safety of Shinkansen
  408. Safety of one's family
  409. Safety system: ATS (Automatic Train Stop system), Keihan-type speed ATS-P
  410. Safflowers are still used as food coloring as well.
  411. Saffron cod (Eleginus gracilis)
  412. Saga Arashiyama Station and Kameoka Station are both currently being reconstructed on bridges, and pedestrian passages are being installed.
  413. Saga Arashiyama Station on the Sagano Line of West Japan Railway Company
  414. Saga Books (Sagabon) are books printed using movable type at the beginning of the early-modern period of Japan.
  415. Saga Branch Office
  416. Saga Dai-Nembutsu (Dai-nembutsu Kyogen)
  417. Saga Dainenbutsu kyogen comic pantomime (January 14, 1986)
  418. Saga Dento Gakuin (located within Daikaku-ji Temple.
  419. Saga Domain: Saga-jo Castle, Ogi-jo (jinya), Hasuike-jo Castle, Kashima -jo Castle
  420. Saga Goryu
  421. Saga Goryu Kado Soshisho
  422. Saga Kitabori-cho, Ukyo-ku Ward, Kyoto City
  423. Saga Normal School (the faculty of education of Saga University)
  424. Saga Prefecture
  425. Saga Prefecture (separated from Nagasaki Prefecture)
  426. Saga Shaka-do Temple - see the section of 'Seiryo-ji Temple.'
  427. Saga Shimbun Co.,Ltd published an illustrated book by Kyuyo ISHIKAWA, Shinichi KUSAMORI, and Yoshitaka SHIMA.
  428. Saga Shodo Gakuin
  429. Saga Tenryuji Wakamiya Cho, Ukyo Ward, Kyoto city, Kyoto Prefecture 616-8371
  430. Saga Toriimoto
  431. Saga Toriimoto (in Ukyo Ward of Kyoto City)
  432. Saga Toriimoto (preservation districts for groups of historical buildings)
  433. Saga Toriimoto - Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City - Atago-jinja Shrine (Kyoto City)
  434. Saga Toriimoto was designated as the Nation's Preservation District for Groups of Historic Buildings.
  435. Saga Toriimoto, 1979, temple town
  436. Saga Toriimoto, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, temple town
  437. Saga Toriimoto, once called 'Adashino,' was a burial site for the dead in Kyoto.
  438. Saga Torokko Station
  439. Saga Torokko Station - Arashiyama Torokko Station
  440. Saga Torokko Station - Arashiyama Torokko Station - (to/from Torokko Kameoka Station)
  441. Saga Torokko Station - Arashiyama Torokko Station - Hozukyo Torokko Station
  442. Saga Torokko Station - Kameoka Torokko Station (7.3 km)
  443. Saga Torokko Station ? Arashiyama Torokko Station ? Hozukyo Torokko Station ? Kameoka Torokko Station
  444. Saga Torokko Station, located in Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Saga Sightseeing Tram Line of Sagano Scenic Railway.
  445. Saga Torokko Station, on the Sagano Sight-seeing Tram Line, is operated by the Sagano Scenic Railway.
  446. Saga Torokko Station: Sanin Main Line (Sagano Line) (Saga Arashiyama Station)
  447. Saga Town was originally Saga village when the Municipal Government Act came into effect in 1889.
  448. Saga Youth Normal School (the faculty of education of Saga University)
  449. Saga already had a son with Takatsu called Imperial Prince Nariyoshi, but Nariyoshi had a severe physical and mental congenital disability and was considered to have no possibility of attaining the throne.
  450. Saga became an important point of water transport connecting Tanba Province and Kyoto, resulting in many wholesalers who dealt timbers and other goods.
  451. Saga installed Otomo instead of Takaoka as Crown Prince.
  452. Saga jinja shrine
  453. Saga ningyo (dolls originating in Saga)
  454. Saga no hana
  455. Saga no in
  456. Saga paid great care in reconciling between brothers and tried to respect Otomo's position as much as possible so as not to repeat the conflict with Heizei that ended in armed confrontation.
  457. Saga so-en (Saga mulberry field) was renamed Saga no-jo (Saga farm).
  458. Saga-Arashiyama - Umahori section: 130km/h
  459. Saga-Arashiyama Station
  460. Saga-Arashiyama Station - Hozukyo Station - Umahori Station
  461. Saga-Arashiyama Station - Kameoka Station - Namikawa Station
  462. Saga-Arashiyama Station is a facility of the JR West Sagano Line (Sanin Main Line) in Ukyo Ward.
  463. Saga-Arashiyama Station is an aboveground station which has one side platform with one track and one island platform with two tracks.
  464. Saga-Arashiyama Station is the JR West stop that functions as a gateway to Sagano and Arashiyama, both of which are premier sights in the Kansai area.
  465. Saga-Arashiyama Station, located in Saga Tenryuji Kurumamichi-cho, Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Sanin Main Line (Sagano Line), which is operated by the West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
  466. Saga-Arashiyama Station, on the Sanin Main Line (Sagano Line), is operated by the West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
  467. Saga-Arashiyama Teishajo Line of Kyoto Prefectural Route 135 starts in front of Saga-Arashiyama Station and leads to Tenryu-ji Temple.
  468. Saga-Genji
  469. Saga-Genji (the Minamoto clan originated from the Emperor Saga) who emerged in Watanabe in Settsu Province called themselves the Watanabe clan.
  470. Saga-giku chrysanthemums (Chrysanthemum grandiflorum cv.Saga)
  471. Saga-giku chrysanthemums (Chrysanthemum grandiflorum cv.Saga) are perennial plants belonging to the family Asteraceae.
  472. Saga-no-higashi-no-misasagi (the imperial mausoleum of the Emperor Chokei) is located just south of the station.
  473. Saga/ Arashiyama (C course): Daikaku-ji Temple "former Saga-gosho," Tenryu-ji Temple, walking in Arashiyama (free time), Ninna-ji Temple "former Omuro-gosho," Ryoan-ji Temple
  474. Sagabon (Saga Books)
  475. Sagaehachiman-gu Shrine in Sagae City, Yamagata Prefecture performs yabusame for the Zenjitsu Sai (eve festival) and Rei Dai Sai in September.
  476. Sagakado Senmon Gakko
  477. Sagami (Sagami Office for Motor Vehicle Inspection and Registration, Kanagawa Transport Branch Office,Kanto District Transport Bureau)
  478. Sagami (dates of birth and death unknown, 998? - after 1061) was a female poet in the early eleventh century, and one of the medieval 36 Immortal Poets.
  479. Sagami (poet)
  480. Sagami Ashina
  481. Sagami Ashina originated from Tamekiyo ASHINA, the third son of Yoshitsugu MIURA, who first bore the name of Ashina.
  482. Sagami Province
  483. Sagami Province: Domains of Odawara and Ogino-yamanaka
  484. Sagami joined many uta awase (poetry matches), and was actively involved in the waka poem circles of the Gosuzaku and Goreizei dynasties.
  485. Sagami ningyo shibai (Sagami puppet play)
  486. Sagami no kami (Governor of Sagami Province):TAIRA no Masafumi.
  487. Sagami no kami (governor of Sagami Province)
  488. Sagami puppet play (January 28, 1980; Atsugi and Odawara Cities; Sagami Ningyo Shibai Rengokai [Sagami Puppet Play Joint Association])
  489. Sagami-ji Temple (Kasai City, Hyogo Prefecture)
  490. Sagami-no-kami: TAIRA no Masafumi (younger brother of Masakado)
  491. Sagami-no-kuni (Kanagawa Prefecture)
  492. Sagamihara City, Kanagawa Prefecture
  493. Sagamu no kuni no miyatsuko (also known as Sagamu kokuzo) was a kuni no miyatsuko ruled the east part of Sagami Province.
  494. Sagamu no kuni no miyatsuko (regional governor in ancient Japan)
  495. Saganaka-jinja Shrine
  496. Saganaka-jinja Shrine (Saganaka, Kizugawa City)
  497. Saganishi Station: Sanin Main Line (Saga Station; present-day Saga Arashiyama Station) of Japan National Railways (present-day West Japan Railway Company)
  498. Sagano
  499. Sagano Arashiyama Store
  500. Sagano Church, headquarters of the Congregation of Jesus
  501. Sagano Express
  502. Sagano Hospital
  503. Sagano Line
  504. Sagano Line (Sanin Main Line)
  505. Sagano Line - Enmachi Station
  506. Sagano Line of Sanin Main Line, Tanbaguchi Station
  507. Sagano Line/Sanin Main Line
  508. Sagano Scenic Line of Sagano Scenic Railway: Sight-seeing tram running between Saga Torokko Station and Kameoka Torokko Station (no operation in winter)
  509. Sagano Scenic Line of the Sagano Scenic Railway
  510. Sagano Scenic Railway
  511. Sagano Scenic Railway (type Ⅱ railway business operator):
  512. Sagano Scenic Railway is a wholly-owned subsidiary of West Japan Railway Company.
  513. Sagano Scenic Railway is the company operating Torokko trams on the Sagano Sight-seeing Tram Line, which utilizes the old San-in Line in Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  514. Sagano Scenic Railway's Sagano Sightseeing Tram
  515. Sagano Scenic Railway, Sagano Sight-seeing Tram Line - Saga Torokko Station to Kameoka Torokko Station: 7.3km
  516. Sagano Scenic Railway: Sagano Sightseeing Tram Line
  517. Sagano Scenic Railway: Sagano Sightseeing Tram Line (Saga Torokko Station)
  518. Sagano Sight-seeing Line and Sagano Sight-seeing Tram
  519. Sagano Sightseeing Tram Line
  520. Sagano is a wide area which extends west of Uzumasa and Utano, north of the Katsura-gawa River (Yodo-gawa River system), east of Mt.Ogura, and south of Mt. Atago (Kyoto City), although sometimes it is simply called 'Saga.'
  521. Sagano is the place-name for Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  522. Sagano spreads on the north side of the station, and Arashiyama spreads on the southwest side of the station.
  523. Sagano-jinja Shrine (present, Saga-jinja Shrine [Oaza Miyazu, Kyotanabe City]) suki-yugi (spade and arrow case)
  524. Sagara Domain: Sagara-jo Castle
  525. Sagara-nui (French knot stitch)
  526. Sagari
  527. Sagari or harami: cow's diaphragm
  528. Sagari: a pot with a narrow mouth
  529. Sagarifuji crest
  530. Sagawa Art Museum in Shiga Prefecture
  531. Sagawa Express Co., Ltd.
  532. Sage' (final punch lines): some routines end with a usual punch line and others include the following after the closing.
  533. Sagegami (From mid- to late Edo Periods; Worn by the married women of the daimyo families)
  534. Sagemon
  535. Sagemon is a custom that is passed down in Yanagawa City, Fukuoka Prefecture.
  536. Sagemon, or something to be hung, of Yanagawa City in Fukuoka Prefecture, Hina no tsurushi kazari of Inatori district, Higashi Izu-cho in Shizuoka Prefecture, and Kasafuku of Sakata City in Yamagata Prefecture are called Japan's great three art crafts.
  537. Sagemons are ornaments used during the Dolls' Festival in Yanagawa district.
  538. Sageshita (Late Edo Period; Worn by the married women of the daimyo retainer families)
  539. Sagi Style (although descendants continue to practice on Sado Island, Yamaguchi, etc., they are not recognized by the Nohgaku Performers' Association)
  540. Sagi mai (dance of hernshaw)
  541. Sagi-ike Pond
  542. Sagi-mai heron dance (December 13, 1994)
  543. Sagiccho (Ishikawa Prefecture, Fukui Prefecture, Kochi Prefecture and Fukuoka Prefecture)
  544. Sagicho Festival
  545. Sagicho Festival in Katsuyama City of Fukui Prefecture has been held in February since 300 years ago.
  546. Sagicho Festival in Oiso-cho in Kanagawa Prefecture is designated as Important?Intangible Folk-Cultural?Property.
  547. Sagicho Festival in Omihachiman City in Shiga Prefecture is held on Saturday and Sunday close to March 14, 15.
  548. Sagicho Festival is described in "The Diary of Ben no Naishi "(Ben no Naishi is a woman poet in Kamakura period) of January 16 in 1251 and in the "Tsurezuregusa"(Essays in Idleness).
  549. Sagicho carriers dressed in costume by the tradition of Nobunaga (Nobunaga ODA), shouts "Choyare Masse Masse."
  550. Sagicho in Kaizu City of Gifu Prefecture is also designated as Gifu Important Intangible Folk-Cultural Property and they have a magnificent festival on February 11.
  551. Sagicho is a fire festival held on the small New Year's Day (January 15).
  552. Sagicho was from tying three giccho sticks together.
  553. Sagimori Betsuin branch temple of Hongan-ji Temple
  554. Sagimori-jinja Shrine
  555. Saginomori Betsuin of Hongan-ji Temple: Built in 1467 by 8th chief priest Rennyo.
  556. Saginomori-jinja Shrine
  557. Saginomori-jinja Shrine is a shrine, that is located in Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  558. Sagoromo Monogatari
  559. Sagoromo grows sick and tired of the world, and on his way to Kokawa-dera Temple receives news of Asukai Onnagimi and the existence of his daughter (Asukai Himegimi) to whom she gave birth.
  560. Sagoromo grows weary of the world from the bottom of his heart and resolves to enter the priesthood but his parents and an oracle of Kamo Myojin Shrine prevent him from doing so.
  561. Sagoromo is eventually declared emperor by an oracle, and it is promised that his real son, Wakamiya, will succeed the imperial throne.
  562. Sagoromo is heartbroken after being rejected by Genji no Miya but his heart is healed after a chance sexual encounter with Asukai no Onnagimi.
  563. Sagoromo is shocked by the disappearance of Asukai Onnagimi and obstinately refuses to marry Onna Ninomiya but falls in love with her at first sight, breaks into her bedroom and forces himself upon her.
  564. Sagoromo later becomes involved with Shikibukyo no Miya no Himegimi, who is beautiful and exactly like Genji no Miya, and his heart is healed.
  565. Sagoromo, who is the only son of Emperor Saga's younger brother Chancellor (kanpaku) Horikawa, is secretly deeply in love with his younger female cousin, Genji no Miya, with whom he was raised like a brother.
  566. Saguribashi
  567. Sagyo of Hongan-ji Temple, the leader of the uprising, and Raitan SHIMOTSUMA were shot and killed, and the surviving rebels became furious at the deception, fought back desperately and burst into the attackers' headquarters, which Nobuhiro couldn't stop and died in the battle.
  568. Sahari: Refers to mainly copper mixed metals, but sometimes refers especially to Southeast Asian group products.
  569. Sahasrabhuja' means 'a thousand arms' literally.
  570. Saheiji TOMOKAI, a vassal of Owari domain bumped into a townsman on the street.
  571. Saheiji reproached the townsman, who tried to leave, ignoring Saheiji.
  572. Saheiji was unwilling to kill the townsman without any arms, tried to fight like by dueling and giving him his short sword.
  573. Sahichi, however, had committed suicide secretly in a mountain before that.
  574. Saho River
  575. Saho Signal Station (the first) was abolished.
  576. Saho Signal Station (the first) was established between Kizu and Nara.
  577. Saho Signal Station (the second) was established between Kizu and Nara.
  578. Saho and Uho
  579. Saho-hime
  580. Saho-hime is the god of spring.
  581. Sahobiko no Miko (狭穂彦王) (also written as "沙本毘古王" or "沢道彦命"?)
  582. Sahobime no Miko (狭穂姫命) (also written as "沙本毘売之命 [Sahobime no Mikoto]" or "波遅比売.")
  583. Sahohiko no miko
  584. Sahohiko no miko (year of birth unknown - November, 25 B.C.) was a member of the Imperial family (Royal family), who appears in the Kojiki (The Records of Ancient Matters) and the Nihonshoki (Chronicles of Japan).
  585. Sahohime no mikoto
  586. Sahohime was the Empress of Emperor Suinin.
  587. Sahomai dance and Togaku music, from China, Tenjiku (India), Rinyu (South Vietnam)
  588. Sahyoe-no-suke, as it was
  589. Sahyogo and Uhyogo usually do not have the suffix 'ryo.'
  590. Sahyogo/Uhyogo (Independent)
  591. Sai (a unit of volume in old Japanese system of weights and measures)
  592. Sai Station (A3) - Nishioji-Sanjo Station (A4) - Yamanouchi Station (Kyoto Prefecture) (A5)
  593. Sai Station is the first and last station for the trains that operate mainly in the early morning and late evening.
  594. Sai dies, his younger brother Chin accedes to the throne and his envoys present tributes..'
  595. Sai is a unit of volume (capacity) in old Japanese system of weights and measures.
  596. Sai no Kami Festival (Uwano-mura-machi, Nyuzen-machi, Shimoniikawa-gun, Toyama Prefecture)
  597. Sai no Kawara (On the Banks of Hell)
  598. Sai no Kawara (Torture of a Dead Man)
  599. Sai-do hall: The dining hall houses a statue of Kinnarao.
  600. Sai-dori Street
  601. Sai-dori Street is one of the major north-south streets in Kyoto City.
  602. Sai-in (Imperial Princess appointed to serve the deities of the Kamo-jinja Shrines).
  603. Sai-ji Temple
  604. Sai-ji Temple Remains : Toji-dori Street sagaru nishi-iru
  605. Sai-ji Temple and To-ji Temple are thought to have been of approximately the same size and believed to have contained a Sogosho (office of the Buddhist ecclesiastical authority).
  606. Sai-ji Temple is believed to have stood in present-day Karahashi, Minami Ward, Kyoto City, and was one of the two first governmental temples permitted to be constructed within the city of Heian-kyo by the order of Emperor Kanmu in 796.
  607. Sai-ji Temple, and To-ji Temple which still exists today, were built at the west and east guardians' positions of the Rajomon.
  608. Sai-no-kami no Fuji Matsuri Festival in May
  609. Sai-no-kamo no Fuji (Japanese wisteria)
  610. Sai-no-kawara Jizo
  611. Saiakira SHIMAZU
  612. Saibanshiyo-sho (a lawbook from the Kamakura period)
  613. Saibanshiyosho
  614. Saibanshiyosho is a law book compiled by SAKANOUE no Akimoto on the Imperial command of the retired Emperor Gotoba in 1207, the beginning of the Kamakura period.
  615. Saibara
  616. Saibara (a genre of Heian-period Japanese court music [primarily consisting of gagaku-styled folk melodies])
  617. Saibara are Japanese folk songs or waka arranged in Togaku (Chinese-style) music style.
  618. Saibara is a style of ancient music.
  619. Saibara originated from the songs of the ordinary people such as Riyo (ballad, folk song, popular song) and popular songs adopted by nobles for utaimono (utai, Noh chant piece for recitation) in their banquets.
  620. Saibara was sung with gagaku in the medieval period.
  621. Saibara, Imayo
  622. Saichiro INOUE was a shita yokome who was investigating the case of the assassination of Toyo YOSHIDA that took place on May 6th of the same year.
  623. Saicho
  624. Saicho and Kukai decided to break away from each other in 816, owing to their ideological difference in terms of deciding which school, Hoke-kyo ichijo Sutra (the Lotus Sutra) of the Tendai sect or Shingon ichijo, was superior.
  625. Saicho and Kukai had never met before going to Tang, and after arriving in Tang they went to different destinations.
  626. Saicho began to study Mikkyo borrowing Buddhist scriptures brought by Kukai and in 812 received kanjo with his disciple Taihan (778 - year of death unknown) and so on in Jingo-ji Temple of Kukai and officially became a disciple of Kukai.
  627. Saicho brought back those teachings from Jungyo, Esshu, and tried to introduce them into Tendai Doctrinal Studies.
  628. Saicho first received the precepts of Buddhism in Todai-ji Temple, but secluded himself in Mt. Hiei and had ascetic training in the mountain forests for 12 years.
  629. Saicho held the Mandala in his hands and cried with happiness.
  630. Saicho introduced it into Japan.
  631. Saicho proceeded to the holy site of Mt. Tiantai, where he learned the Tiantai doctrine and Bodhisattva precepts from Dozui, a descendant of Tiantai master Zhiyi, and the Tiantai doctrine from a chief priest named Gyoman.
  632. Saicho then sent a letter to Kukai on November 25, saying he would send a poem with a Japanese rhyme as reply; the letter was "Saicho Kyukakujo."
  633. Saicho took Taihan with him to go twice to visit Kukai and persuade him to bestow the dharmic succession ritual of the Diamond Realm on him, but Taihan refused (this led Saicho to go in 812 without Taihan, accompanied by other disciples, to see Kukai, who then granted him the dharmic succession ritual of the Diamond Realm).
  634. Saicho tried to heighten the status of new religious school by incorporating the elements of Mikkyo into Tendai sect, but allegedly the break with Taihan and Kukai deepened his isolation and drove him to be more antagonistic towards Nanto sects.
  635. Saicho was a Buddhist monk during the Heian Period, and he founded the Tendai School of Buddhism in Japan.
  636. Saicho was at the time a Buddhist priest who represented the Buddhist region of the Heian period, but he was also a Gengakusho (scholar sent to China for a short period) who intended to make a brief inspection of the country.
  637. Saicho was the 1st in the line of Myoho-in chief priests, the 13th was Kaishu, the 15th was Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa (under the Buddhist priest name 'Gyoshin'), and the 16th was Shoun.
  638. Saicho was trying to establish original doctrinal studies as Japanese Tendai Sect, which has different meanings from Chinese Tendai Sect, but was based on the Chinese Tendai Doctrinal Studies founded by Chigi.
  639. Saicho went to Tang and learned mainly Tendai Doctrinal Studies, but it was popular to learn nenbutsu (Buddhist invocation), Zen, Buddhist precepts, and Esoteric Buddhism in China back then.
  640. Saicho's idea of "Shishu Sosho" (literally, four types of inheritance of Buddhism: Tendai, Esoteric Buddhism, Zen and Daijo-kai [Mahayana precepts]) was allegedly influenced by the teachings of Gyokusen Tendai (the Tiantai [Tendai] group at the Gyokusen-ji Temple in Jingzhou) that Dosen had introduced.
  641. Saicho's profane name was Hirono MITSUNOOBITO; and he was born in 766 (some accounts say 767) in the Shiga district of Omi province (present-day Shiga Prefecture, Otsu City).
  642. Saicho, Ennin, and Anne, are names representing religious lineage of Buddhism in Tendai Sect, and it can be said that the history of Manshuin virtually begin in the period of Zesan.
  643. Saicho, a Buddhism monk, erected Enryaku-ji temple on the Mt Hiei, and the Hiyoshi Taisha Shrine, jinushigami (tutelary deity) of Mt. Hiei, was admired as a shrine for protection of Enryaku-ji temple of Tendai sect.
  644. Saicho, in a letter dated August 24, 809, asked Kukai to lend him "Dainichikyo ryakusetsu nenju zuigyoho."
  645. Saicho, of the Tendai sect, named his sect the 'Tendai Hokke sect' and regarded the Hokke-kyo sutra as the supreme dharma.
  646. Saicho, who is considered to have been one of the most active Buddhist priests in the early Heian period along with Kukai, also planned to build six pagodas in various parts of Japan in order to house 1000 copies of the Lotus Sutra.
  647. Saicho, who wanted to reciprocate Kukai's favor, introduced Kukai to WAKE no Matsuna and asked Jingo-ji Temple to accept Kukai.
  648. Saicho, who was the Founder of Nihon Tendai sect, became the disciple of Kukai, who was still nameless and young at that time, and Saicho received kanjo (a consecration ceremony by pouring water onto the top of monk's head).
  649. Saichu-fu (Vegetables and Insects) (Yoshizawa Memorial Museum of Art, Sano)
  650. Said Emperor Showa, who beat the long-standing record of Emperor Gomizunoo, 'During Emperor Gomizunoo's reign, people's lives were shorter, so his record is more valuable than mine.'
  651. Said that the meat of this portion is in the high-class.
  652. Said to be built with old materials of Kyoto Imperial Palace Shishinden hall.
  653. Said to be the dressing hall of the wife of Emperor Ogimachi that was relocated to its current site in 1638.
  654. Said to be the earliest shigajiku (hanging scroll with a literary inscription written above an ink painting)
  655. Said to be the oldest Tanegashima arquebus in Japan due to the inscription dating it at 1583.
  656. Said to be the site of a former "shoen" (a manor in medieval Japan) of the Fujiwara clan.
  657. Said to enshrine the hair of Shinran who was ordained by the third head priest Jien.
  658. Said to express the enormity of nature in which the water that flows from a mountain stream eventually returns to the ocean.
  659. Said to have been constructed between 1624 and 1631 using funds donated by Tenshinin-ni, who was connected to the Kujo family (the roots of Tenshinin-ni have not been determined).
  660. Said to have been constructed in 1702.
  661. Said to have been constructed in 521 and was previous named Oi-sha Shrine after the harai-gami of Oi-gawa River (Katsura-gawa River (Yodo-gawa River system)) but was renamed Ayato-sha Shrine in the year 995.
  662. Said to have been excavated from the ruins of Jobodaiin at Toba Rikyu during the Edo period.
  663. Said to have been relocated from Hinomikado, the old imperial palace in 1641.
  664. Said to have been used by Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI and Ieyasu TOKUGAWA.
  665. Said to have once been the place of study of Retired Emperor Gotoba and bestowed to the temple, but others claim it to be the remains of Myoe's dwelling.
  666. Said to have predicted the 'Great Kanto earthquake,' the 'Greater East Asian War' and its defeat, etc.
  667. Said to originally have been part of Fushimi-jo Castle that was granted by Iemitsu TOKUGAWA to Suden and relocated to the temple in 1611.
  668. Said written by Prince Shotoku at the age of 41 or 42, these are the oldest calligraphic samples except for kinseki-bun (words written on metal or stones)
  669. Said, sending ekiba (horses for transportation of official travelers) to Tsukushi Shogun' in the section for the year 593.
  670. Said-to-be Atsutane's letter came out in Kaiun! Nandemo Kanteidan that broadcasted on August 22, 2006, but it was confirmed to be a letter of Kanetane as a result of appraisal.
  671. Saida
  672. Saida is a Japanese term used to refer to alcohol-free, transparent and colorless soda which tastes sweet and sour.
  673. Saidai-Mon Gate
  674. Saidai-ji Temple (Nara City)
  675. Saidai-ji Temple (Nara City) - Grand head temple of the Shingon Risshu sect (真言律宗大本山)
  676. Saidai-ji Temple (Nara City, Nara Prefecture): This statue of Aizen Myoo (an important cultural property) was made by Zenen.
  677. Saidai-ji Temple (located in Nara City)
  678. Saidai-ji Temple is a temple which is located in Saidaiji Shibamachi, Nara City, Nara Prefecture and the grand head temple of Shingon Risshu sect.
  679. Saidai-ji Temple is a temple which was established in 765 at the imperial order of the Empress Shotoku (Empress Koken).
  680. Saidai-ji Temple left Shingon sect and says that it belongs to Shingon Risshu sect.
  681. Saidai-ji Temple suffered a serious damage in the Muromachi period in 1502 and all of buildings existing today were rebuilt in the Edo period and later.
  682. Saiden
  683. Saido-ji Temple
  684. Saifuku are worn during mid-level festivals like Saitansai (a Shinto ritual that marks the new year), Kigensai (a ceremony commemorating the founding of Japan), and Tenchosai (a festival in honor of the Emperor).
  685. Saifuku-ji Temple
  686. Saifuku-ji Temple (Kagoshima City) - Japan's largest wooden Buddha statue
  687. Saiga Ikki
  688. Saiga shu
  689. Saiga shu (Ikko groups), which were reinforcement troops, were not good at close combat and totally wiped out.
  690. Saiga shu (Ikko groups, who raised a riot called the Saiga riot)
  691. Saiga shu greatly troubled Nobunaga, but later yielded to him by giving him their written oath.
  692. Saiga shu was attacked and almost killed completely by Nobunaga but barely escaped due to the Honnoji Incident.
  693. Saiga shu, Nagaharu BESSHO and Murashige ARAKI, who had promised to work for Nobunaga, broke the promise and stood up against Nobunaga.
  694. Saigato (Saiga group) Suzuki clan
  695. Saigi no Chojo
  696. Saigi no Chojo included Zohitsushu and Zobokushu at Zushiryo, and Tenri at Okurasho.
  697. Saigo again left Kyoto for Edo, carrying on him the revisions and confirmation to the conditions of Seven Articles.
  698. Saigo agreed to the disadvantage of those counter conditions, presented in the watered-down response by the Tokugawa side, there for terminating the general attack.
  699. Saigo also may have changed his mind because he ascertained that the personnel representing the Tokugawa side were trustworthy persons, such as Ichio OKUBO and Kaishu KATSU.
  700. Saigo and Kuroda adopted tolerant policy, and allowed the Yonezawa Domain and Shonai to submit.
  701. Saigo and Okubo visited Kido and had a meeting there on the 8th.
  702. Saigo and others kept maintaining the reform of the system of bureaucracy from 1871, the system of military, and also system of police, in February 1872, they abolished the Ministry of Hyobu and installed the Ministry of War and Ministry of the Navy, and in March the Goshimpei was abolished and installed guardee.
  703. Saigo and others who were captured were transported to Kagoshima on the 10th.
  704. Saigo argued that what was necessary for the new government was a strong military power based on samurai and an agriculture-oriented nation management.
  705. Saigo arrived at Yotsugi-no-miya Shrine in the afternoon.
  706. Saigo arrived in Kyoto and was condemned by both the Sabaku and the Joi group (group of adherence to the shogunate and expulsion of the foreigners), and he was surprised that his reputation was very bad with both groups, not only with the patriot of Joi (principle of excluding foreigners) group.
  707. Saigo came to Tokyo in January 1871, and immediately understood the plan to appoint the persons of Satsuma etc. who rendered meritorious service in the Restoration to Governments posts.
  708. Saigo changed and softened his attitude abruptly because of the continuous petitions by Princess Kazunomiya and others.
  709. Saigo confirmed that circumstances surrounding the were becoming advantageous after inspecting the Fushimi battle line on 3rd, and the Yawata battle line on 5th.
  710. Saigo destroyed the Edo shogunate, and he tried have 'Tohoku War' with North Government, which was established with domain of Sendai (Date clan) as a leader.
  711. Saigo did not yield to these threats from the shogunate, and on June 11, he told Okubo not to help shogunate with the punitive re-expedition to Choshu, and proceeded to maneuver within the Imperial Court to that end.
  712. Saigo encouraged Iwakura, saying 'One short sword alone can finish it.'
  713. Saigo group arrived in Tosa and held a conference with the governor of the domain Toyonori YAMAUCHI and Taisuke ITAGAKI on the 17th.
  714. Saigo had large dark eyes, as is seen in a portraits.
  715. Saigo had learnt Neo-Confucianism since he was young, and also he was a Korikata (tax officer), so he was familiar with the system from holding that job.
  716. Saigo had no more descendants after his grandchildren's generation.
  717. Saigo heard about the movement to rise up and go into action at Nitto hot spring in November.
  718. Saigo heard the response from Kawamura that Yamanoda brought back, and read a letter from Sangun Yamagata recommending suicide, but he did not reply to the letter on the 23rd.
  719. Saigo himself said.
  720. Saigo issued a command of dissolution of the army on the 16th, and burned the documents and his full general military uniform.
  721. Saigo issued an exhortation to desperate battle at Shiroyama on the 22nd.
  722. Saigo learned Yomeigaku Neo-Confucianism from Moemon ITO, although it was just for a short time.
  723. Saigo left Sunp on March 11th as if he were pursuing Yamaoka and entered the residence of the Satsuma clan in Edo on March 13th.
  724. Saigo left a message to rally the Satsu-gun on the 6th.
  725. Saigo liked hunting and fishing (sunadori), and when he had time he enjoyed those activities.
  726. Saigo married three times.
  727. Saigo moved to Honkoji, Mushika to Sasakubi, Nagai-mura starting on the 10th, and arrived at Nagai-mura on the 14th, after that he stayed there ("Daisaigo Totsui Senki (war chronicles of the Great Saigo breaking through the besieging armies))".
  728. Saigo no Tsubone
  729. Saigo no tsubone (1562 - July 1, 1589) was a woman in the Sengoku period (period of warring states) and Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  730. Saigo proposed to discuss the new conditions for the Tokugawa side which were presented by Katsu.
  731. Saigo re-visited Edo and continued to discuss the final conditions with Katsu and Okubo.
  732. Saigo read the "Kinshiroku, a book of Chinese thought" by Chu His after Oyura-sodo (Takasaki-Kuzure), and was strongly inspired by it.
  733. Saigo remained alive even after the Seinan War
  734. Saigo returned to Edo, and on April 4, he marched into Edo castle with Imperial envoy Saneyana HASHIMOTO, and announced the document from the Emperor to Yoshiyori TOKUGAWA, and on April 11, Edo Castle was surrendered.
  735. Saigo returned to Kagoshima a half year later, but a girl who was taking care of him and who had been on intimate terms with him in Nampo-o delivered a boy before long.
  736. Saigo set sail with Gessho and Kuniomi, and cast himself into the sea with Gessho who also despaired for his future.
  737. Saigo started to think that Okubo also agreed to stab him from the deposition.
  738. Saigo survived even though he had a high fever for three days, but he gave up Bujutsu (martial arts) because he couldn't hold a sword, and decided to pursue scholarship.
  739. Saigo then proposed to him that Taisuke ITAGAKI from Tosa should also become sangi.
  740. Saigo then understood Yamaoka's point of view and compromised on the conditions, keeping article number one in his hand; so, a compromise was made and article number one was withheld.
  741. Saigo thought of Shinsuke BEPPU and said 'Shin-don, Shin-don, enough, here is good' and while the commanders dropped to their knees and watched him, and with propriety he dropped on his knees facing the far east and prayed.
  742. Saigo visited the residence owned by the Satsuma Domain in Takanawa on April 5 and afterwards, negotiated the surrender of Edo Castle with Katsu.
  743. Saigo was appointed to the rank of Shosanmi once more.
  744. Saigo was asked to take command because the war was not progressin well, and on July 23 he was appointed the Sosasihiki commander of the Satsuma Domain army going to Hokuriku, and on August 2, he sailed from Kagoshima and arrived at Kashiwazaki, Echigo Province on 10th.
  745. Saigo was deeply impressed by the earnest attitude of Yamaoka and was agreeable to negotiations with him.
  746. Saigo was guarded by Shiro IKEGAMI and arrived at the army office (the Government branch office of Miyazaki) where Toshiaki KIRINO was based on May 31.
  747. Saigo was made to start maneuvering with regard to the issue of the Oseifukko no Daigorei (Imperial Court's declaration of Restoration of monarchy) while negotiating to send soldiers to other domains.
  748. Saigo was relaxing at home or went hunting and rest at hot spring most of the time from 1875 to 1876.
  749. Saigo who had known it, wrote a 'prospectus of Shaso storage' to his brother-in-law Masateru TUSHIMOCHI, who was a Magiri-yokome (similar to officer for province).
  750. Saigo's 'prospectus of shaso storage' was put into practice after Tsuchimochi became a high ranked officer on Oki-no-erabu-jima island in 1870, and Oki-no-erabu shaso Storage was built.
  751. Saigo's corpse was covered with a blanket and put into a wooden container, then buried at remains of Jokomyo-ji Temple (the Nanshu-jinja Shrine, around the present day front guard frame).
  752. Saigo's forces found that the guard of the government army on the north side from there was not strong, and therefore, went down the mountain en masse and attacked the government army with HENMI as the spearhead.
  753. Saigo's head was discovered after the end of the war, and after the inspection by Aritomo YAMAGATA, who took charge of the matter, it was buried with all the proper honors.
  754. Saigo's head was probably buried in front of the gate of Shosuke ORITA's due to the fears that someone would take it (the most reliable theory is it was in front of the gate of Orita residence.
  755. Saigo's ideology was structured on two pillars, moralsity and Chu His, and he believed in the founding principles of Neo-Confucianism throughout his life.
  756. Saigo, Okubo, Kido and Ikegami sailed from Mitajiri to Tosa on the 16th.
  757. Saigo, Okubo, Kido, Itagaki and Ikegami arrived in Kobe and had a conference with Aritomo YAMAGATA, then sailed from Osaka to Tokyo together on the 22nd.
  758. Saigo, however, was dissatisfied with the government's policy of national enrichment and the bureaucrats of Okurasho (Ministry of Treasury), including Okuma, who led this policy.
  759. Saigo, who brought a secret Imperial command, put together the report of the domain which worked with Hisatake KATSURA and others, on November 13, he obeyed the lord of the domain Tadayoshi SHIMAZU and left Kagoshima with three thousand soldiers.
  760. Saigo, who resigned, returned to Kagoshima on November 10, 1873, had spent most of time since then at home in Takemura.
  761. Saigo, who was in Kagoshima, drafted a petition against the punitive re-expedition to Choshu, and made them submit to the document on July 9, which stipulated that the lord of the domain can refuse to send soldiers.
  762. Saigo, who withdrew from Miyazaki, arrived in Onuki-mura, Nobeoka on the 2nd, and stayed there until the 9th.
  763. Saigo-date
  764. Saigoku 33 Kannon Pilgrimage
  765. Saigoku 33 Kannon Pilgrimage 20th Temple: Yoshimine-dera Temple (Shiawase Jizo (Happiness Buddha)) is accessible by bus (Hankyu Bus Co., Ltd.) or taxi from the station.
  766. Saigoku Aizen Junana Reijo (a term relating to reijo sacred places)
  767. Saigoku Aizen Junana Reijo is the comprehensive name for seventeen reijo (sacred places) that enshrine Aizen Myoo (Ragaraja) in Osaka, Hyogo, Okayama, Kyoto, Shiga, Mie, Nara, and Wakayama Prefectures.
  768. Saigoku Kaido Road
  769. Saigoku Kaido Road: Ichimon-bashi Bridge
  770. Saigoku Risshihen
  771. Saigoku Risshihen as a textbook
  772. Saigoku Risshihen sold over one million copies by the end of the Meiji era.
  773. Saigoku Sanjusankasho
  774. Saigoku Sanjusankasho (the 33 temples that are visited during the Kansai Kannon Pilgrimage)
  775. Saigoku-kaido Road: The route from Kyo to Shimonoseki bypassing Osaka.
  776. Saigokusuji-gundai (a magistrate of Kyushu region)
  777. Saigokusuji-gundai was one of the gundai set in four places in the Edo period.
  778. Saigokusuji-gundai was regarded as the higher position than other regular gundai because it had close relationship with tozama yuhan (outside feudal lord of powerful domain), such as the Shimazu clan, the Hosokawa clan, the Nabeshima clan, and the Kuroda clan.
  779. Saigokusuji-gundai, an administrative officer as well as a local governor who managed the affairs of Kyushu region which was the territory under the direct control of the Tokugawa shogunate, had a fief of 162,000 koku.
  780. Saigu (Imperial Princess appointed to serve the deities of the Ise-jingu Shrine), later became her real younger brother, Emperor Horikawa's Junbo (Equivalent rank as Emperor's mother), Chugu.
  781. Saigu (a vestal virgin princess serving at the Ise-jingu Shrine and her residence)
  782. Saigu (the ancient imperial princesses serving at Ise-jingu Shrine).
  783. Saigu after returning to Kyoto
  784. Saigu departs from Nonomiya and performs her ablutions in September of the third year from Bokujo and after Shosaiin and Nonomiya.
  785. Saigu lived in the innermost house of the Saiguryo office, which was placed in Taki County in Ise Province.
  786. Saigu prepared for leaving the capital and going down to Ise until next September, living a purification life in Nonomiya immediately after Shosaiin.
  787. Saiguryo (Bureau of the High Priestess of Ise Shrine): worked for Saigu (imperial princess appointed to serve Ise Shrine) and was in charge of clerical work concerning the affairs of the shrine and the shrine estate.
  788. Saiguryo (Independent)
  789. Saiguryo (a public office that governs the affairs of Saigu) and Religious Services
  790. Saiguryo (the Office of the High Priestess [of the Ise-jingu Shrine])
  791. Saiguryo looked after the dairy life of maiden Imperial princesses Saigu (Ise Saio), who served as priestesses of the Ise-jingu Shrine.
  792. Saiguryo was an extra statutory office established under the ritsuryo system, placed in Ise Province.
  793. Saiguryo was divided into three areas: the innermost area was Saigu's residence; the middle area was the residence of the head and other leading members; and the outer area was the residence and working place of the lower-level officials.
  794. Saigusa-matsuri Festival ? Yuri-matsuri Festival - at Isagawa-jinja Shrine (June)
  795. Saigyo
  796. Saigyo (1118 - March 23, 1190) was a monk and poet during the period between the cloister government and the Kamakura period.
  797. Saigyo Hoshi (Buddhist priest Saigyo), an author of the poem 'I hope to die under the cherry blossoms in spring, around the time of full moon in April,' is one of the most famous poets found in Shinkokin Wakashu and frequently visited Yoshino where he wrote many excellent poems.
  798. Saigyo Hoshi Gyojo Ekotoba - Idemitsu Museum of Arts
  799. Saigyo Modori-bashi Bridge' in Chichibu
  800. Saigyo Modori-ishi Rock' in Nikko
  801. Saigyo argues from the viewpoint of the rule of right, citing examples of Emperor Nintoku appearing in 'Nintokugi' of "Nihon Shoki" (Chronicles of Japan) and Iratsuko UJINOWAKI, who abdicated the Imperial Throne, while In argues from the Ekisei revolution (an old Chinese political thought).
  802. Saigyo composed a poem, expressing that the beauty of the cherry blossoms attracts people, and that is the sin of the flowers.
  803. Saigyo grieves at the shameful In, and makes a poem.
  804. Saigyo holds a memorial service for a book of Kongo kyo Buddhist scriptures, and then descends the mountain.
  805. Saigyo no Musume (the Daughter of Saigyo)
  806. Saigyo no musume (estimated year of her birth and death 1137 - 1199) was a Buddhist nun in the end of the Heian period and the early Kamakura period.
  807. Saigyo no musume appeared in "Saigyo Monogatari" (a story of Saigyo)
  808. Saigyo no musume as a real person
  809. Saigyo no musume is known for an episode depicted in Saigyo Monogatari saying that when becoming a monk, Saigyo left home after shaking off his daughter who was clinging to him.
  810. Saigyo visits Shiramine to pray for the repose of the soul of his old master Emperor Sutoku, chants Buddhist sutras and makes a poem.
  811. Saigyo was a hermit roaming around the country, so he made many lyric poems about the nature and scenery, as well as reminiscences based on his generous view of life.
  812. Saigyo who was enjoying the cherry blossoms invited people because he couldn't turn away the visitors who traveled great distances.
  813. Saigyo wrote the following poems in life and it is said that he died on February 16 (by the lunar calendar) which was the day Buddha died as written in his poems.
  814. Saigyo's hermitage in Kyoto.
  815. Saigyo's style of poems was direct in expressing strong emotions while being straightforward and simple, showing a particular talent with poems about love and general matters in addition to the various seasons.
  816. Saigyo, along with FUJIWARA no Toshinari, was a poet who had a major impact on the development of a new style of poetry which is reflected in Shinkokin Wakashu.
  817. Saigyo-an Hermitage site is also found at the top of the mountain.
  818. Saigyo-zakura
  819. Saigyo-zakura (Saigyo's Cherry Blossoms)
  820. Saigyo-zakura is a Noh play written by Zeami.
  821. Saigyo: a waka poet who was highly praised both by the father Toshinari and his son Sadaie.
  822. Saigyodo,' which is believed to have been reconstructed after the hermitage of Saigyo's wife and daughter.
  823. Saihei HIROSE
  824. Saihei HIROSE (June 16, 1828-January 31, 1914) was the first administrative director of Sumitomo family.
  825. Saihei HIROSE was born as the second son of the old Kitawaki family in Yabu Village, Yasu County, Omi Province (now, Yasu City, Shiga Prefecture).
  826. Saihei HIROSE, as the sorinin (general manager) was in charge of actual operations, but Tomoito made an inspection tour to Besshi dozan copper mine, making on-site inspections of each company and acquired the Shoji Tanko coal mine.
  827. Saihei promoted to the general manager of Besshidozan Copper mine in 1865.
  828. Saihei, takusen (oracle), Kannushi (Shinto priest), and harai (exorcism) related to shrines
  829. Saiho Gokuraku Jodo (The West Pure Land) should be meditated on with mental absorption and gokuraku ojo should be wished for.
  830. Saiho Shochishi (an investigating commissioner)
  831. Saiho Shochishi (an investigating commissioner) was a title of the government official in Tang dynasty of China.
  832. Saiho Yoketsu (Essentials for Birth in the Western Land)
  833. Saiho is also referred to as 'shitate.'
  834. Saiho-ji Temple
  835. Saiho-ji Temple (Koke-dera Temple)
  836. Saiho-ji Temple (Ukyo-ku Ward, Kyoto City)
  837. Saiho-ji Temple Enma-do (official name is 'Gappo-ga-tsuji Enma-do Saiho-ji Temple') located in Naniwa Ward, Osaka City enshrines Enma.
  838. Saiho-ji Temple Garden (Special Place of Scenic Beauty, Special Historic Site): Created by Muso Soseki and comprised of the upper dry landscape garden and the lower pond-centered garden.
  839. Saiho-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple belonging to Jodo (Pure Land) Sect located in Tokiwadeguchi-cho, Ukyo-ku Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  840. Saiho-ji Temple is a Rinzai Sect temple located in Matsuo, Nishikyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  841. Saiho-ji Temple was destroyed by fire during the Onin War (1467-1477).
  842. Saihoshochishi was a government officer who placed an administrative office in a province within the territory, and additionally, he served as governor of the province.
  843. Saihoshochishi was later changed to kansatsushochishi (abbreviated as kansatsushi) by changing its name.
  844. Saiichi MARUYA advocated dividing the history of Japanese literature into categories based on historical periods using the chokusenshu (anthologies of Japanese waka poetry compiled by Imperial command).
  845. Saiichi MARUYA was one of SHIGA's ardent critics.
  846. Saiin (an unmarried princess who, in former times, was sent by the emperor to serve at Kamo Shrine)
  847. Saiin (the Priestess or the residence of the Priestess)
  848. Saiin Garan (Western Precinct) of Horyu-ji Temple is famous as the oldest wooden construction of all existing in the world.
  849. Saiin Garan of Horyu-ji Temple was once believed to have been built in the age of Prince Shotoku, but it is now considered, thanks to the development of research in the modern times, that the complex was destroyed by fire in 670 and rebuilt sometime between the late seventh and early eighth century.
  850. Saiin Garan of Horyu-ji Temple/Three-story Pagoda of Hokki-ji Temple
  851. Saiin Kasuga-jinja Shrine
  852. Saiin Kasuga-jinja Shrine (Ukyo-ku, Kyoto City)
  853. Saiin Kasuga-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located in Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  854. Saiin Kasuga-jinja Shrine was founded in 833 as a guardian shrine for the Junna-in Villa (also named "Sai-in" and the origin of the name of the local area) into which the Emperor Junna moved when he ascended to the throne.
  855. Saiin Station (Hankyu) /Sai Station (Keifuku)
  856. Saiin Station - Omiya Station - Karasuma Station
  857. Saiin Station is an underground facility with two platforms serving two tracks; the platforms are just under Shijo-dori Street.
  858. Saiin and Saigu Priestesses, or princesses who were former Saiin or Saigu Priestesses often appear in "The Tale of Sagoromo," which may suggest that this book was probably written by Rokujo Saiin no Senji, a court lady serving Imperial Princess Baishi.
  859. Saiin and literature
  860. Saiin, (an unmarried princess who, in former times, was sent by the emperor to serve Kamo Shrine) later became high ranking lady in the court of sixty-fourth Emperor Enyu.
  861. Saiin-Kasuga-jinja Shrine
  862. Saiinshi (having a higher court rank than the others and different names of Shitokan from the others.)
  863. Saijarin 2 Pictures in One Book
  864. Saiji
  865. Saiji Kon Komyo Saisho-O kyo (Golden Light of the Most Victorious Kings Sutra in small writings): Vols. 6 to 10
  866. Saiji means different times in a year, or occasions in all seasons.
  867. Saijiki (a catalog of season-specific words used in composing haiku)
  868. Saijiki (literary calendar)
  869. Saijiki are books on the matters related with annual events by the national and local, or various organizations, and scenery and customs.
  870. Saijin
  871. Saijin is a Shinto term that signifies a deity enshrined in a Shinto shrine.
  872. Saijiro TAKEUCHI, as a boy, must have seen it when he was looking down from a tree at the examination of corpses stripped of clothes in the ruins of Komyo-ji Temple ("Memories Before and After the Seinan War" by Saijiro TAKEUCHI).
  873. Saijo Butokuden (Ehime Prefecture)
  874. Saijo City, Ehime Prefecture is a production area of Bo Yubeshi.
  875. Saijo Inari, Myogyo-ji Temple, the Headquarters of Saijo Inari-kyo (Okayama City, Okayama Prefecture): Fushimi and Toyokawa
  876. Saijo-San Mountain is a tactically disadvantageous place (being difficult to move soldiers and to get supplies, and to be enclosed easily by enemy forces).
  877. Saijo-ji Temple (Minami-Ashigara City, Kanagawa Prefecture)
  878. Saijo-ji Temple (Shimohiraya, Miyama-cho) - Honzon (principal image of Buddha) is designated as one of the national important cultural properties.
  879. Saijo-ji Temple (Yamazoe-mura, Nara Prefecture) - Standing Statue of Amida Nyorai, Important Cultural Property
  880. Saijo-ji Temple changed its religious affiliation from Shingon-shu Sect to Jodoshin-shu Sect.
  881. Saijosho Daigengu (Deity: Amatsukami-kunitsukami-yaoyorozu-no-kami)
  882. Saijosho Daigengu of Yoshida-jinja Shrine [Yoshida Kaguraoka-cho, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City]
  883. Saiju-ji Temple
  884. Saiju-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple belonging to the Jodo Sect (the Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) located in Narutaki Izumitaki-cho, Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  885. Saika theory
  886. Saikachihama Swimming Area
  887. Saikachihama Swimming Area is a swimming area operated by Nagahama City which is located in Takahashi-cho and Tamura-cho in Nagahama City, Shiga Prefecture facing Lake Biwa.
  888. Saikai
  889. Saikai No.134 and Saikai No.135 are famous.
  890. Saikaido
  891. Saikaido shoro
  892. Saikaku IHARA
  893. Saikaku IHARA wrote in Nihon Eitaigura as follows: 'if there isn't Maruyama in Nagasaki, silver will safely arrive at Kamigata (Kyoto and Osaka area), so the business of 爰通ひ, concerns at sea and unpredictable love wind are feared.'
  894. Saikaku ichidai onna (The Life of Oharu): 'International Prize' at the Venice Film Festival in 1952, and 'THE BBC 100' selected by BBC
  895. Saikaku's "Koshoku ichidai otoko (Life of a Amorous Man)" (published in 1682) describes that Ukiyoe was drawn on a folding fan with 12 ribs, and this is the oldest literature in which the word "Ukiyoe" can be found.
  896. Saikan no sanyu (the three friends of winter)
  897. Saikashu (Saika group)
  898. Saikashu appeared in history around the 15th century, and after the Onin War they fought in various battles in the Kinki region responding to requests from the Hatakeyama clan, which had provided the military governor and feudal lord of Kii and Kawachi Provinces for generations.
  899. Saikashu can be considered to be a group of believers of the Jodo Shinshu sect (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) as its members, including Shigehide SUZUKI and Morishige TSUCHIBASHI, were besieged in Ishiyama Gobo (Ishiyama Hongan-ji Temple).
  900. Saikashu gradually grew into a group of mercenary soldiers.
  901. Saikashu grew as an eminent military force by producing skilled shooters and designing tactics which made use of guns most efficiently.
  902. Saikashu is also known as Saikato, and 'Saika' can also be read 'Saiga.'
  903. Saikashu is thought to be a grouping of many powerful local clans who were based in the whole area of present day Wakayama City and a part of Kainan City, and closely attached to the local community,
  904. Saikashu members were armed with thousands of matchlock guns, which was considered a huge number for that time, the 16th century.
  905. Saikashu was a group (ikki) of combined local lords, powerful local clans and local samurai who resided in private estates in the center of Saikasho in the north west part of Kii Province (present day Saikazaki, Wakayama City) during the Sengoku period (Warring States period).
  906. Saikashu, following the Negoroshu, adopted the use of guns as soon as the manufacturing of guns was introduced into Tanegashima.
  907. Saikashu, led by Magoichi SUZUKI (a.k.a Magoichi SAIKA) and others, fought with the army of Miyoshi Sanninshu as a mercenary command.
  908. Saiki
  909. Saiki City (Oita Prefecture)
  910. Saiki SAKAKIBARA
  911. Saikiko (storehouse for equipment used in rituals)
  912. Saiko
  913. Saiko (year of birth unknown - July 7, 1177) was a monk and a the Retired emperor Goshirakawa's trusted vassal who lived in the late Heian era.
  914. Saiko Shunkei Sento Kancho-zu (a pair of six fold screens) (Tokyo National Museum) Important Cultural Property
  915. Saiko and Narichika were killed and other associated people were all rounded up.
  916. Saiko joined a conspiracy by FUJIWARA no Narichika, Shunkan, and Yukitsuna TADA to beat the Taira clan, and became the mastermind of the closed discussion at the lodge in Shishigatani (the Shishigatani plot).
  917. Saiko sought refuge with the Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa but was captured.
  918. Saiko, in revenge, insisted the head priest of the Tendai sect, Myoun to be punished.
  919. Saiko-ji Temple
  920. Saiko-ji Temple in Fukuoka Prefecture
  921. Saikoku thirty-three sacred places (Kansai Kannon Pilgrimage)
  922. Saikon-do Hall
  923. Saikon-do Hall was constructed in 734 as a temple to enshrine Shaka Sanzon statues by Empress Komyo on the first anniversary of the death of her mother TACHIBANA no Michiyo.
  924. Saiku kamaboko (ornamental kamanoko)
  925. Saiku kamoboko in the Oyashiro region of Shimane Prefecture has a long tradition and is famous for the 'hikidemono' used for weddings.
  926. Saikudokoro (or called Saikusho) refers to an institution or craft center for handicraft industry which was permanently or temporarily established by Kenmon (an influential family) in the medieval period.
  927. Saikudokoro (tooling office)
  928. Saikudokoro appeared after the mid Heian period when a craft center under government management which was established under the ritsuryo system declined.
  929. Saikyo (Nishikyo)
  930. Saikyo (Nishikyo) is defined as the 'Nishi no Kyo' (Western Kyo (Capital)), or 'Kyo no Nishi' (West of Kyo).
  931. Saikyo Bank and Yamaguchi Municipal Saikyo High School exist even to the present day.
  932. Saikyo Miso
  933. Saikyo University was the former name of Kyoto Prefectural University.
  934. Saikyo miso is the common name for a whitish yellow sweet miso containing a high proportion of malted rice made mainly around the Kinki region; and the main characteristic of this miso is that while miso usually used for miso soup contains 12% salt, Saikyo miso contains only about 5% salt.
  935. Saikyo miso is very sweet, and Sendai miso is very salty.
  936. Saikyo pickles made by pickling seasonal fish and meat in saikyo miso extended with mirin are widely enjoyed.
  937. Saikyo-ji Temple
  938. Saikyo-yaki (grilling a fish with Saikyo miso sauce)
  939. Saikyuki
  940. Saikyuki (Saiguki) was a book on Yusoku kojitsu (court and samurai rules of ceremony and etiquette) and rites, which was compiled by MINAMOTO no Takaakira during the Heian period.
  941. Sail: an evening scene in which ships go back to the port all at once.
  942. Sailing between Japan and Yuan had been suspended.
  943. Sailing the rivers of foreign countries without permission is a violation of the international laws, and in this case, it was assumed that the Japanese army's act was provocation against Korea, because they were going to the capital.
  944. Saimatsukonshi
  945. Saimei-ji Temple (Kora-cho)
  946. Saimei-ji Temple (Kyoto City)
  947. Saimei-ji Temple in Kora-cho, Shiga: The standing statue of wooden Fudo Myoo (Heian period, an important cultural property)
  948. Saimen no Bushi (group of warriors guarding west side of imperial palace)
  949. Saimen no bushi (the Imperial Palace Guards for the west side) was established as well in the era of Emperor Gotoba.
  950. Saimon SAKAKIBARA
  951. Saimyo-ji Temple
  952. Saimyo-ji Temple (Kyoto City)
  953. Saimyo-ji Temple Sanjunoto: Kora-cho, Inukami-gun, Shiga Prefecture; Kamakura period
  954. Saimyo-ji Temple is a temple belonging to the Daikaku-ji school of the Shingon Sect located in Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  955. Sain (Council of the Left)
  956. Sainen-ji Temple (Kasama City, Ibaraki Prefecture) - which has Inada Soan, associated with Shinran, as its origin
  957. Sainenji Hakabasoto scene
  958. Sainin KUSUBA
  959. Sainin KUSUBA (1395 - March 18, 1486) was a merchant who lived in the Muromachi Period.
  960. Sainin later took Kuzuha as his surname because it was where his mother was born and raised.
  961. Sainojo KURODA, Kaemon's younger brother and adopted child became a professor in place of Denzo YAMAMOTO during the Kinshiroku Kuzure (a family quarrel) and was appointed Jito of Chosa-go after his older brother's death.
  962. Sainokami-jo (place of guardian deity) is generally a space with a width of a few tatami, without ornaments.
  963. Sainokami-jo and the belief in material benefits are outstanding features of Korean Temple.
  964. Sainokami-jo is a place where the belief in material benefits like Shamanism is carried on, and miko (shrine maiden or male attendant) holds a ceremony dedicated to gods or Buddha to pray for devotees' benefits of this world.
  965. Sainshunei-cho, Ukyo Ward: 17,432
  966. Saint Fran?ois Xavier des Missions ?trang?res (Paris)
  967. Saint Francis Xavier Church (Nasugbu, Batangas Province)
  968. Saint Francis Xavier Monument (Ote-machi, Oita City)
  969. Saint Fukuko's begging for a Buddhist stole
  970. Saint Helena Island (from January 10 to January 11, 1853),
  971. Saint Narukami prayed for the birth of a prince in exchange for making then emperor build a temple, and succeeds.
  972. Saint Tokudo persuaded people to make the Sanjusankasho junrei (pilgrimage), but it did not become popular due to the lack of trust towards him among the public; thus, he decided to wait for the right time and placed the hoin he had received from Enma Daio in a stone urn at the Nakayama-dera Temple in Settsu Province.
  973. Saio (the High priestess) is an imperial princess or queen from the Imperial family who served as miko (a shrine maiden) at Kamo-jinja Shrine.
  974. Saio (the Priestess)
  975. Saio attends the second day of the Sansetsu-sai Festival, which is held on the sixteenth and the seventeenth in the Inner Shrine of Ise and the fifteenth and the sixteenth in the Outer Shrine of Ise.
  976. Saio of the Ise-jingu and Kamo-jinja Shrines were called Saigu, and Saiin respectively; the former lasted from ancient times (the time of Emperor Tenmu) to the period of the Northern and the Southern Courts (Japan); the latter from the Heian to the Kamakura periods.
  977. Saio or Itsuki no miko (the Priestess) was an unmarried princess of the blood or female relative of the Emperor who served as a shrine maiden at the Ise-jingu Shrine and the Kamo-jinja Shrine.
  978. Saio-dai
  979. Saiodai (the heroine of Aoi-matsuri Festival, Kyoto City) (Depending on the age, there are also cases where tooth blackening is not practiced.)
  980. Saion-ji Temple
  981. Saion-ji Temple is a Buddhist temple belonging to Jodo (Pure Land) Sect located in Kamigyo-ku Ward, Kyoto City.
  982. Saion-ji Temple originated with a villa built in Kitayama (present-day around Rokuon-ji Temple) by Kintsune SAIONJI in 1224.
  983. Saionji Former Grand Minister priest Kintsune (Kintsune SAIONJI)
  984. Saionji and Education
  985. Saionji announced his resignation from the presidency of the Seiyukai with the pretext that 'he violated the edict' (it was his fault that he was not able to stop political disputes following the imperial edict).
  986. Saionji as a Politician
  987. Saionji clan
  988. Saionji clan was a Sengoku daimyo (Japanese territorial lord in the Sengoku period), who ruled the western area of Iyo Province.
  989. Saionji considered the British constitutional government was ideal, and relatively liked the party cabinet system.
  990. Saionji consulted with Aritomo YAMAGATA, who was an influential figure in the Army, about the succeeding Army officer, but once he figured out that Yamagata had no intention of recommending a succeeding Army officer Saionji took the preemptive measure of having all the cabinet members resign.
  991. Saionji ideologically proclaimed liberalism, and he established the constitutional practice of the majority party in the House of Representatives forming the Parliament.
  992. Saionji is often viewed as having lacked political power, however this is incorrect because, after Aritomo YAMAGATA died, there was no one surpassing him in terms of political power in Japan.
  993. Saionji suspected that the Army had a hand in the incident, and went to the capital from Okitsu, summoned Prime Minister Giichi TANAKA, and advised him that the government must thoroughly investigate this affair, and if the guilty party was Japanese, a harsh punishment should be exacted.
  994. Saionji was later summoned by Emperor Taisho, and he was told by the Emperor directly about the Minister of Army's submission of his letter of resignation.
  995. Saionji was not listed as a Genkun (oligarch with merit) of Meiji, but as a Genro one generation later when Emperor Taisho was enthroned.
  996. Saionji was very disappointed about the closure of Ritsumeikan Private School, and made a promise to reopen the school.
  997. Saionji's political career began when he accompanied Hirofumi ITO to visit Europe in order to study the constitution in 1882.
  998. Saionji, whose talent was recognized by Ito in Europe, participated in the launching of the Rikken Seiyu-kai Party in 1900.
  999. Saionji-Temple, Kamigoryo-agaru Teramachi-dori Street
  1000. Saipan


289001 ~ 290000

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