; 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. TAIRA no Tokizane
  2. TAIRA no Tokizane (1151 - February 21, 1213) was a Court noble during the late Heian Period and the early Kamakura Period.
  3. TAIRA no Tokuko, Chugu (Empress), became pregnant in 1178.
  4. TAIRA no Tokuko/Tokushi/Noriko
  5. TAIRA no Tokuko/Tokushi/Noriko (1155 - January 25, 1214) was the Chugu (the second consort of an emperor) of Emperor Takakura and Nyoin (the respective title given to emperor's mother or Sanko or Princesses by the Imperial Palace) during the late Heian period.
  6. TAIRA no Tomoakira
  7. TAIRA no Tomoakira (1169 - March 20, 1184) was the oldest son of TAIRA no Tomomori.
  8. TAIRA no Tomoakira, TAIRA no Tomotada, and Chunagon no tsubone (the wife of Norishige TAKAKURA) were her children.
  9. TAIRA no Tomomori
  10. TAIRA no Tomomori was a warlord in the late Heian period.
  11. TAIRA no Tomomune
  12. TAIRA no Tomomune (1184- August 15, 1255) was a defeated soldier of the Taira family in the Kamakura period.
  13. TAIRA no Tomonobu Asonki
  14. TAIRA no Tomonori
  15. TAIRA no Tomonori (date of birth unknown - June 2, 1183) was a busho (a Japanese military commander) who lived during the late Heian period.
  16. TAIRA no Tomonori looked for a strong archer on the Taira family side and an Iyo Province resident Chikakiyo NII spectacularly threw them back and laughed at Yoshimori's boastfulness.
  17. TAIRA no Tomonori was Kokushi (governor) of Musashi Province in that year.
  18. TAIRA no Tomotada
  19. TAIRA no Tomotada (1180 - July 29, 1196) was a member of the Taira Clan at the end of Heian period.
  20. TAIRA no Tomotada, who rose in insurrection after the destruction of the Taira clan, was Tomomori's son.
  21. TAIRA no Tomoyasu
  22. TAIRA no Tomoyasu was a noble who lived in the late Heian period (years of his birth and death, not known).
  23. TAIRA no Tsunemasa
  24. TAIRA no Tsunemasa (birth year unknown to March 27, 1184) was a busho (Japanese military commander) and a kajin (waka poet) in the end of Heian period.
  25. TAIRA no Tsunemori
  26. TAIRA no Tsunemori (1124 - May 2, 1185) was a warlord in the late Heian era.
  27. TAIRA no Tsunemori was Geshi taikotaigogu no suke (minor official of the internal palace of the Grand Empress Dowager).
  28. TAIRA no Tsunetaka
  29. TAIRA no Tsunetaka (1180-July 1255) was Kugyo (the top court officials) in the middle of the Kamakura period.
  30. TAIRA no Tsunetaka was his son.
  31. TAIRA no Tsunetaka, who was at Kintsune's death, called Kintsune 'the world's most cunning, wicked minister' in his writings.
  32. TAIRA no Tsunetoshi
  33. TAIRA no Tsunetoshi (1166 - March 27, 1184) was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived during the late Heian period.
  34. TAIRA no Yasuhiro
  35. TAIRA no Yasumori
  36. TAIRA no Yasumori was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived during the late Heian period.
  37. TAIRA no Yasuyori
  38. TAIRA no Yasuyori (Hei Hangan Yasuyori)
  39. TAIRA no Yasuyori (c. 1146 - 1220) was a member of the noble class in the Heian period.
  40. TAIRA no Yasuyori did not die in the district and therefore had no connection with the grave.'
  41. TAIRA no Yorihiro
  42. TAIRA no Yorimori
  43. TAIRA no Yorimori was Iemori's younger brother.
  44. TAIRA no Yorimori was a military commander in the late Heian period.
  45. TAIRA no Yorimori, who had been scrambling to act as an intermediary between Goshirakawa and Yoritomo, had already escaped ("Hyakuren sho" and "Gyokuyo," entry of December 13), and pro-shogunate Yoshiyasu ICHIJO and Motoie JIMYOIN defected to Kamakura one after another.
  46. TAIRA no Yorimori, who possessed the title of Uemon no Kami.
  47. TAIRA no Yoritsuna
  48. TAIRA no Yoritsuna (year of birth unknown - May 29, 1293) was a private vassal of the Tokuso family of the Hojo clan (miuchibito), serving as a butler for the Eighth Regent Tokimune HOJO and the Ninth Regent Sadatoki HOJO of the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  49. TAIRA no Yoritsuna supported the young Sadatoki HOJO, who succeeded Tokimune, and tried hard to strengthen the Tokuso autocracy.
  50. TAIRA no Yoritsuna was a male nurse of Tokimune and the under secretary of the head of Tokuso family and he was in a position to embody the authority of Tokuso.
  51. TAIRA no Yoritsuna, well-known in the Heizenmon Incident, is said to have been his son or grandchild.
  52. TAIRA no Yoshifumi was called Goro MURAOKA and was based in the Soma country, Shimousa Province and extended power with his son TAIRA no Tadayori and grandson Tadatsune over three generations.
  53. TAIRA no Yoshifumi, a son of Takamochi's concubine, also left Kyoto for Bando, and his descendants formed samurai clans such as the Miura, Doi, Chichibu and Chiba in various locations across Bando.
  54. TAIRA no Yoshikado
  55. TAIRA no Yoshikado (year of birth and death unknown) was legendary busho (Japanese military commander) said to have lived in the mid-Heian period, or a specter.
  56. TAIRA no Yoshikado was his elder brother.
  57. TAIRA no Yoshikane
  58. TAIRA no Yoshikane was a warlord who lived during the mid-Heian period.
  59. TAIRA no Yoshikaze
  60. TAIRA no Yoshikaze (year of birth and death unknown) was a man in the mid Heian period.
  61. TAIRA no Yoshimasa
  62. TAIRA no Yoshimasa (year of birth and death unknown) was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived during the mid Heian period.
  63. TAIRA no Yoshimune
  64. TAIRA no Yoshimune (Prince Yoshimune) (year of birth unknown - July 30, 829) was a member of the Imperial family in the early Heian period who became a subject of the state.
  65. TAIRA no Yoshimune (c. 1178 - June 13, 1185) was a warrior during the late Heian period.
  66. TAIRA no Yoshimune and Prince Takami, there is an opinion that he never existed, were his younger brothers.
  67. TAIRA no Yoshimune was his brother.
  68. TAIRA no Yukimori
  69. TAIRA no Yukimori (Year of birth unknown - April 25, 1185) was a military commander who lived during the late Heian Period.
  70. TAJIHI no Agatamori went on an expedition.
  71. TAJIHI no Hironari
  72. TAJIHI no Hironari (Echizen no kuni no kami [Governor of Echizen Province], Shogoinoge [Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade]) administered three provinces, namely Noto Province, Ecchu Province, and Echigo Province.
  73. TAJIHI no Hironari (date of birth unknown - May 22, 739) is a court noble from the Asuka Period through until the Nara Period.
  74. TAJIHI no Hironari, a younger brother of TAJIHI no Agatamori who was the previous ambassador to Tang China, was appointed the ambassador to Tang China this time.
  75. TAJIHI no Miyakemaro in the Konin era was the last case to use Dazai no sochi as a stepping stone to a higher position.
  76. TAJIHI no Shima
  77. TAJIHI no Shima (624-September 2, 701) was a noble in the Asuka period.
  78. TAJIHI no Shima died on September 2 of the same year.
  79. TAJIHI no Shima died on the same day and his Sadaijin post became vacant; as a result, Udaijin Miushi became the top of all the vassals.
  80. TAKAHASHI and his colleagues cooperated with a former Tenmongata (Toshitsugu YAMAJI and others) to complete a new calendar in 1797.
  81. TAKAHASHI introduced experimental pharmacology to Japan: the study of changes on a living organism induced by the ingestion of a chemical agent.
  82. TAKAHASHI no Asomi Misaka ? - ?
  83. TAKAHASHI no Mushimaro
  84. TAKAHASHI no Mushimaro (year of birth and death unknown) was a contributor to Manyoshu during the Nara Period.
  85. TAKAHASHI was from the royal family.
  86. TAKAKURA no Fukushin
  87. TAKAKURA no Fukushin (709 - November 3, 789) was a court noble who lived during the Nara period.
  88. TAKAKURA no Tonotsugu
  89. TAKAKURA no Tonotsugu (year of birth and death unknown) was a government official who lived during the Nara period toward the early Heian period.
  90. TAKAMATSU no MIYA ke bon
  91. TAKAMI Yasujiro (1940) estimated that there were 9,500 households and approximately 43,500 people inhabiting the dense residential area.
  92. TAKAMUKO no Kuromaro
  93. TAKAMUKO no Kuromaro (year of birth unknown - 654) was a scholar in the Asuka period.
  94. TAKAMURA's new company worked at Omuro Studio.
  95. TAKANO no Niigasa
  96. TAKANO no Niigasa (? - January 21, 790) was the birth mother of Emperor Kanmu.
  97. TAKANO no Niigasa was also a foreign settler.
  98. TAKARA HOLDINGS INC., Kyowa Hakko Kirin Co., Ltd. and Kohara Honten Corporation have their own original technology for fermenting kelp.
  99. TAKASAGO who got angry expelled him and, after that, he moved to Isenoumi (Sogoro KASHIWADO [the fifth]).
  100. TAKASHINA no Eishi
  101. TAKASHINA no Eishi (1151-1216) was a female politician, who lived between the end of Heian period to early Kamakura period.
  102. TAKASHINA no Kishi/Takako
  103. TAKASHINA no Kishi/Takako (date of birth unknown -October 966) was a female poet who lived in the Heian period.
  104. TAKASHINA no Nakayuki
  105. TAKASHINA no Nakayuki (1121 - 1179) was a retainer of the Imperial Court at the end of Heian period.
  106. TAKASHINA no Nakayuki transcribed it.
  107. TAKASHINA no Naritada
  108. TAKASHINA no Naritada (923 - July, 998) was a Kugyo (top court official) who lived during the mid Heian period.
  109. TAKASHINA no Tsunenaka was his child.
  110. TAKASHINA no Tsunenaka, who possessed the titles of Uemon no suke (provisional captain of the Right Division of Outer Palace Guards), togu-gonnodaishin (official post of the affairs related to the imperial prince), and Hitachi no suke (the assistant governor of Hitachi Province).
  111. TAKASHINA no Tuneshige
  112. TAKASHINA no Tuneshige (year of birth and death unknown) was an official serving the Imperial Court in the Heian period.
  113. TAKASHINA no Yasutsune
  114. TAKASHINA no Yasutsune (1130 ? December 20, 1201) was a court noble between the late Heian period and the early Kamakura period.
  115. TAKASHINA no Yasutsune stated as follows.
  116. TAKASHINA no Yasutsune, who possessed the titles of Okurakyo, Ukyo no daibu (chief of Ukyoshiki government agency), and Iyo no kami (governor of Iyo Province).
  117. TAKASUGI was believed to have thought that those officers of Kiheitai Army having spirit could be more military power than those samurais fallen in the peaceful world.
  118. TAKASUGI was replaced as the governor-general due to the responsibility for the Incident at Kyoho-ji Temple occurred in the same year in which the member of Kiheitai Army had clashed with a spearhead troop.
  119. TAKASUGI who had been in exile returned to Choshu Domain after the domain was defeated in the first Baku-cho War.
  120. TAKATA no Iwanari
  121. TAKATA no Iwanari (his age of birth and death are unkown) was from the Asuka period.
  122. TAKATA no Niinomi
  123. TAKATA no Niinomi (year of birth unknown - September 12, 703?) is a historical figure who lived during Japan's Asuka period.
  124. TAKATA no Niinomi accompanied Prince Oama to Mino Province.
  125. TAKAYAMA no Taroshiro
  126. TAKAYAMA no Tarozaemon
  127. TAKAYASU no Okimi (Iyo no kuni no kami [Governor of Iyo Province], Jugoinojo) administered three provinces, namely Awa Province, Sanuki Province, and Tosa Province.
  128. TAKE no Gosho
  129. TAKE no Gosho (1202- August 23, 1234) was a woman in the early Kamakura period.
  130. TAKECHI no Kome
  131. TAKECHI no Kome was active in the Asuka period (his age of birth and death are unknown).
  132. TAKEDA no Daitoku
  133. TAKEDA no Daitoku (or TAKEDA no Daitoko, date of birth and death unknown) lived during Japan's Asuka period.
  134. TAKEI is confirmed as living until circa 1585 however, he disappears from subsequent records.
  135. TAKEI joined 'Kataoka Chiezo Productions' (Chie Pro) established in May of 1928.
  136. TAKEIWATATSU no Mikoto
  137. TAKEIWATATSU no Mikoto is a person that appears in Japanese myths as the major enshrined deity at Aso-jinja Shrine.
  138. TAKEIWATATSU no Mikoto is part of the imperial line (as a child of Kamuyai no Mikoto who in turn was a child of Emperor Jimmu) however, is viewed as the deity (Shinto) of Mt. Aso who was worshiped at Aso.
  139. TAKEIWATATSU no Mikoto who was ordered by his grandfather (Emperor Jimmu) to come to Mt. Aso looked out from the rim of the crater and viewed a lake spreading out below him.
  140. TAKENOUCHI no Sukune The 4th grandchild of the Emperor Kogen
  141. TAKENOUCHI no Sukune is considered the founder of Omi, a powerful family in ancient times, and led Emperor Ojin's military expedition to the east.
  142. TAKENOUCHI no Sukune was previously alleged to be a fiction created by subsequent generations, and there are also those who view Soganoishikawa no Sukune to be a creation of descendents of the Ishikawa clan.
  143. TAKENOUCHI no Sukune was the patriarch of Omi, an ancient local ruling family.
  144. TAKENOUCHI no Sukune, the founder of the Soga clan, worked as a loyal subject to Emperor Jingu, the mother of Emperor Ojin, while Empress Jingu was strongly connected to the sea god of Toyo and created a stronghold at 'Toyura no miya.'
  145. TAKENOUCHI no Sukune: led Emperor Ojin's expedition to the east.
  146. TAKENUNA Kawawake no Mikoto
  147. TAKEUCHI Kiyomaro (or TAKENOUCHI Kiyomaro), who professed himself to be an adopted child of the Takeuchi family which is said to be a descendant of HEGURI no Matori, announced the existence of monjo (documents) to the public on March 29, 1928.
  148. TAKEUCHI no Sukune
  149. TAKII
  150. TAMATSUKURI Maro
  151. TAMI no Ohi
  152. TAMI no Ohi (year of birth unknown - September 12, 703?) was a person of the Asuka era.
  153. TAMI no Oshibi
  154. TAMI no Oshibi (year of birth and death unknown) was a person from the Asuka Period in Japan.
  155. TAMURA advocated that an unwritten code that set up the assisted government by Fujiwara clan was Fukai-no-Joten/ Fukaijoten.
  156. TAMURA no Ootome
  157. TAMURA no Ootome (dates of birth and death unknown) was a daughter of OTOMO no Sukunamaro.
  158. TANABE no Sakimaro
  159. TANABE no Sakimaro (year of birth and death unknown) was a contributor to Manyoshu during the Nara Period.
  160. TANAHE no Osumi
  161. TANAHE no Osumi (year of birth and death unknown) is a historical figure in Asuka period.
  162. TANAHE no Osumi moved forward secretly and stormed into Tanaka's position in the nighttime.
  163. TANAKA Seizo sho (TANAKA manufacturing factory) which he founded was called TOSHIBA CORPORATION later.
  164. TANAKA also made an effort to publish "Komeiroku" and had it published from 1885 to 1890.
  165. TANAKA became an adviser of the company in July, 1885, and a president in 1893.
  166. TANAKA became an auditor in 1894, and a president in 1895.
  167. TANAKA built the foundations of the company's inaugural period, and in October, 1898, he resigned from the presidency in favor of Jiemon TAKEO.
  168. TANAKA developed his business on the basis of this bank.
  169. TANAKA no Asomi Tarimaro died on August 13, 698.
  170. TANAKA no Tarimaro
  171. TANAKA no Tarimaro (date of birth unknown - August 13, 698) lived during the Asuka period of Japan.
  172. TANAKA no Tarimaro was given the position to guard the path of Kurafu that connected Omi to Iga.
  173. TANAKA overwhelmed the business world in the Kansai region with the success of these two businesses.
  174. TANAKA showed his enthusiasm into the business not only for protecting his family business, but he also did for establishing Forty Second National Bank at 3-chome, Edobori along with Jinbee KANAZAWA, and he became president of it and showed leadership.
  175. TANAKA, who returned from Hokkaido, had an idea that the future Japan would need a port in or near Osaka, the economic center, to trade with foreign countries.
  176. TANBA no Tadamori
  177. TANBA no Tadamori (1270? - August 9, 1344) was a doctor, a government official, and a kajin (waka poet) from the latter half of the Kamakura period until the early period of the Northern and Southern Courts.
  178. TANBA no Yasuyori
  179. TANBA no Yasuyori (912-995) was a physician during the Heian period.
  180. TANGO KAIRIKU KOTSU Co., Ltd.
  181. TANGO KAIRIKU KOTSU Co., Ltd. (Tankai Bus, headquartered in Yosano-cho, Kyoto Prefecture)
  182. TANGO no Naishi
  183. TANI no Ne Maro
  184. TANI no Ne Maro (year of birth and death unknown) was a person from the Asuka Period in Japan.
  185. TANI no Ne Maro was believed to have continued fighting for OTOMO no Fukei after this battle, but nothing was mentioned about him in "Nihonshoki" (Chronicles of Japan).
  186. TANI no Shiote
  187. TANI no Shiote (year of birth unknown-August 24, 672) was a person from the Asuka Period in Japan.
  188. TANIZAKI published his debut drama piece 'Tanjo' (literally, 'The Birth'), and the work brought him recognition in the liberary circle, the novel 'Shisei' (Tattooer).
  189. TAO Yuan Ming, a poet in the Eastern Jin, was a representative Bunjin in the Six Dynasties Period.
  190. TARACO (Akitoshi ONODERA)
  191. TARAKO
  192. TATTO BURST "Taidan Sandaime Horiyoshi x Tenmyouya Hisashi (Talk between Horiyoshi III x Hisashi TENMYOUYA)"
  193. TAWAWA (a restaurant featuring Kyoto vegetables)
  194. TBS (a Japanese broadcasting company) gave him a fixed slot and he produced many television dramas such as the "Kinoshita Keisuke Theater" and the "Kinoshita Keisuke Hour."
  195. TEL: 075-432-1181 (the main switchboard number)
  196. TEL: 075-741-2002
  197. TEL: 075-744-2020
  198. TEL: 075-746-0215
  199. TEL: 075-748-2020
  200. TEL: 075-771-4211 (the main switchboard number)
  201. TEL: 075-781-3898
  202. TEL: 075-781-5091
  203. TEL:075-406-2001
  204. TEL:075-406-2004
  205. TEL:075-406-2340
  206. TEL:075-571-0003 (the main switchboard number)
  207. TEL:075-611-1101 (the main switchboard number)
  208. TEL:075-642-3101 (the main switchboard number)
  209. TEL:075-861-0006
  210. TEL:075-861-0153
  211. TEL:075-861-1101 (the main switchboard number)
  212. TEL:0771-44-0314
  213. TEL:0771-52-0300 (the main switchboard number)
  214. TEN.TEN.CAFE (under the management of the wife Eigo KAWASHIMA, a singer)
  215. TENMYOUYA HISASHI' the reed spase (New York, USA)
  216. TERAMOTO focused on the descriptions in some books, which state that 'Kaodori' (h) is a name for Narabi no Kan, and he revealed that 'Kaodori' was the latter part or the ending of the present 'Yadorigi,' and made a supposition that 'Morokazura' was also part of 'Wakana' (e).
  217. TERAUCHI offered his resignation to Aritomo YAMAGATA on August 31 and submitted his letter of resignation officially on September 21.
  218. THE JAPAN RECORD AWARD (affiliated with TBS Television), which aired on New Year's Eve until 2005.
  219. THE MOMOTAROH
  220. TIB KAMAYATSU
  221. TMC 100-Type Motorcar: Stationary but assembled properly and maintained ready to work
  222. TODA and IDO explained, however, that the Shogun was ill and could not make a decision and requested one year of postponement for their answer, and in response, Perry agreed that he would return after one year.
  223. TOGO was born in Nihonmatsu Umaba in Kajiyacho near Kagoshima Castle in Satsuma Province (Shimokajiyacho Katagiri), as the forth son of Satsuma feudal retainer Sanetomo TOGO and Mashuko (益子), the third daughter of Yomizaemon HORI (堀与三左衛門).
  224. TOICA Area
  225. TOICA, JR Central's ticket card, and ICOCA, JR West's ticket card, are usable in the Nagoya - Yokkaichi section and the Kamo -JR Namba section respectively (concerning the mutual use of each company's card, refer to the articles of respective cards).
  226. TOJO Bakufu' (Japanese feudal government)
  227. TOKEN Gonbei… Chusha ICHIKAWA (the seventh)
  228. TOKIHARA no Harukaze
  229. TOKIHARA no Harukaze (year of birth and death unknown) was a distinguished calligrapher in the early Heian period.
  230. TOKUGAWA Kuniyuki, the grandson of the tenth family head, TOKUGAWA Yoshiatsu, completed it in 1906 and its completion took 250 years (Honki and retsuden were almost completed while Mitsukuni was alive and they published it several times since the end of the Edo period.).
  231. TOKUGAWA Mitsukuni, head of the Mito Tokugawa family, one of the three branches of the Tokugawa clan, started to compile it during the Edo period as an enterprise of the Mito Domain and it was completed during the Meiji period.
  232. TOKUHO is known by the title of "restoration founder" within the temple due to his involvement in the rebuilding of Ryoan-ji Temple.
  233. TOMI no Ichii
  234. TOMI no Ichii (Tansui)
  235. TOMI no Ichii (year of birth and death unknown) was a toneri (palace servant) during the Asuka Period.
  236. TOMI no Ichii found Moriya up on this big tree and was able to successfully shoot him with an arrow that killed him.
  237. TOMII took charge as principal of Kyoto Hosei School as well as the president of Ritsumeikan University (private) until August 31, 1927.
  238. TOMO no Kowamine
  239. TOMO no Kowamine (birth and death year unknown) was a government officer (especially one of low to medium rank) of the early Heian Period.
  240. TOMO no Kowamine was exiled to Oki Province (later, he was relegated to Izumo Province), while TACHIBANA no Hayanari was exiled to Izu Province (on the way to Izu Province, he died at Hozuki, Totomi Province).
  241. TOMO no Kowamine, the Togu-bo Tachihaki no Toneri (guard of the crown prince's Quarters), and his friend TACHIBANA no Hayanari, the Tajima no kuni Kokushi (the governor of Tajima Province), both of whom were serving the crown prince, perceived the critical atmosphere due to the retired emperor's illness.
  242. TOMO no Kunimichi
  243. TOMO no Kunimichi (768 - 828) was a court noble, who lived during the early Heian Period.
  244. TOMO no Sadamichi, Gidairyo (Deputy Administrator) of the gunji (district government official) in Mogami-gun, died in the battle on 19th.
  245. TOMO no Yoshio
  246. TOMO no Yoshio (811 - 868) was a noble in the early part of the Heian period.
  247. TOMO no Yoshio was sent to Izu Province, TOMO no Nakatsune to Oki Province, KI no Toyoki to Awa Province, TOMO no Akimi to Iki Province, TOMO no Kiyotada to Sado Province, and KI no Natsui and others who were implicated were also punished.
  248. TOMO no Yoshio, TOMO no Nakatsune, IKUE no Tsuneyama, and TOMO no Kiyotada were arrested and interrogated (possibly tortured by continuous whipping), however, they denied having committed the crime.
  249. TOMO no Yoshio, son of Kunimichi, began to distinguish himself in politics in the days of Emperor Seiwa, and a Dainagon (Chief Councilor of State) was chosen from the Otomo clan in 864 for the first time in years.
  250. TOMO no Yoshio, the Dainagon (chief councilor of state), was on bad terms with MINAMOTO no Makoto, the Sadaijin (minister of the left).
  251. TOMY Company, Ltd. and Konami Corporation have sold the Origami Wars and the Ori-glide: THE SUPER PAPER AIRPLANE, respectively.
  252. TONERI no Nukamushi
  253. TONERI no Nukamushi (year of birth unknown ? March 682) was from the Asuka period.
  254. TOYO no Tokiyoshi
  255. TOYO no Tokiyoshi (July 14,1873 - April 24, 1951) was gagakushi (court musician) and the member of the Japan Art Academy.
  256. TOYOHARA no Tokiaki
  257. TOYOTA Comfort, Nissan CREW, etc.
  258. TOYOTA Crown Sedan, TOYOTA Crown Comfort, Nissan CEDRIC commercial vehicle, etc.
  259. TOYOTA MOTOR CORPORATION
  260. TOYOTOMI 'no' Hideyori
  261. TOYOTOMI administration and capture of Kii, Shikoku and Ecchu
  262. TOYOTOMI no Sadako
  263. TOYOTOMI no Sadako (Sadako HASHIBA) (1592 - 1658) was a personality in the Azuchi-Momoyama and Edo periods.
  264. TOYOTOMI no Sadako - Michifusa KUJO - 九条待姫 - Sukezane KUJO - Yukinori KUJO - Munemoto NIJO - Harutaka NIJO ? Hisatada KUJO - Michitaka KUJO - Empress Teimei - Emperor Showa
  265. TSUDA was born in Shitaya, Toshima District, Musashi Province, the son of a samurai from Ueno, Tsu Domain, Iga Province.
  266. TSUKASA Tayu
  267. TSUKASA Tayu, whose real name was Yukie NAKAGAWA, was Shimabara Tayu (a high ranking courtesan of Shimabara District of Kyoto).
  268. TSUKI no Afumi' is the reading of his name in the old Japanese syllabary characters.
  269. TSUKI no Obito Omi was among the toneris.
  270. TSUKI no Omi
  271. TSUKI no Omi (year of birth and death unknown) was a person who lived during the Asuka Period in Japan.
  272. TSUKIGATA began with a transfer of his family register from Fukuoka to Kabado, and took the initiative for reclamation.
  273. TSUKIGATA was appointed as the 1st Tengoku (director of prison) of Kabato Shujikan where construction had just completed, and two thousands prisoners were detained.
  274. TSUMORI Toru (TSUMORI no Muraji Toru) ? - ?
  275. TSUMORI no Kunimoto
  276. TSUMORI no Kunimoto (1023 - August 29, 1102) was a waka poet in the late Heian period.
  277. TSUMORI received the Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade), Kunimori (Official of a province) of the Mimasaka Province, October 714.
  278. TSUMORI received the Jugoinojo (Junior Fifth Rank, Upper Grade) in October 724.
  279. TSUMORI was an Onmyoji from the toraijin lineage in the early Nara Period.
  280. TSUMORI was given a responsible position by Emperor Jito and Prince Kusakabe, he divined and publicly exposed a secret meeting of the rival Prince Otsu.
  281. TTR stands for Tatsushi, Tetsuya, and Revolution.
  282. TUKI no Ikina was from Nanba.
  283. TV
  284. TV Animation
  285. TV Animation Program. (broadcast 1975-1982). Ikkyu-san (Toei Doga), wherein Yoshimitsu appears as Shogun. Voice Actor: Keaton Yamada.
  286. TV Asahi Sunday Western Movie Theater Special Edition "Nobunaga no Yakata" (2006 Mitsuhide: Fumiyo KOHINATA).
  287. TV Asahi Sunday Western Movie Theater Special Edition "Teki wa Honno-ji ni ari" (2007 Mitsuhide: Baijaku NAKAMURA).
  288. TV Asahi's Saturday Wide Theater production "Onsen wakaokami no satsujin suiri" (Murder mystery of a young proprietress of an onsen inn) (he played Detective Yusaku NAKAGAWA, the husband of Chizuru AZUMA.)
  289. TV Commercials
  290. TV Dramas
  291. TV Series
  292. TV Tokyo New Spring Wide Samurai Drama "Kunitori Monogatari Shinshun waido jidaigeki ban," (2005, Mitsuhide: Atsuro WATABE).
  293. TV and movie shooting
  294. TV drama
  295. TV drama series
  296. TV drama, "Shinsengumi Keppuroku" (1965 - 1966) (1965-1966, NET channels).
  297. TV drama, "Shinsengumi Keppuroku" (1988) (1988, TV Asahi)
  298. TV dramas
  299. TV programs on the Imperial Family
  300. TV relay station and radio transmitting station
  301. TV serials on Komon are still running today.
  302. TV shopping programs sometimes use phrases such as 'Japan boasting the world's best techniques in the production of cutting tools.'
  303. TV song programs were made separately for young people and middle-aged and elderly people, leading to the time when it was difficult to create hit songs that everyone of all ages knew.
  304. TV stations
  305. TWINKLE JOYO: a light pageant illuminated with 200,000 lights
  306. Ta (rice paddy field) fushin:
  307. Ta bushin and shinden bushin are fushin related to river improvement, water use for large rice paddy fields, and building new rice fields, that can not be covered by jifushin.
  308. Ta bushin, Shinden (new rice paddy field) bushin:
  309. Ta-a-pu-po-po, ta-a-pu-po-po, chiri kara chiri kara, tsuttappo, tappo tappo iccho dako (octopus).
  310. Ta-geta (farming clogs)
  311. Taa
  312. Taa (1237 - February 18, 1319) was a Ji Sect Buddhist monk who lived during the latter part of the Kamakura period.
  313. Tabane noshi are used as ornaments for betrothal gifts.
  314. Tabanegami (Meiji Period; Worn by young women and married women)
  315. Tabanegami (western hairdo) styles
  316. Tabanegami: It became popular at intervals at the Meiji Period and after.
  317. Tabasami (literally putting between hands): unknown.
  318. Tabby Cat
  319. Tabe (a group of peasants set for cultivation of miyake, Imperial-controlled territory in ancient times)
  320. Tabe was one of the systems that were established during the Kofun period (tumulus period) to control people and land, which also referred to people who cultivated miyake under the direct control of Yamato sovereignty (the ancient Japan sovereignty).
  321. Tabi (Japanese digitated socks): Only white tabi socks can be worn for this Montsuki Haori Hakama style.
  322. Tabi (a kind of split-toe-socks specific to Japan)
  323. Tabi (split-toe socks), and Jika-tabi (work tabi, split-toed heavy cloth shoes with rubber soles)
  324. Tabi are generally made of cotton.
  325. Tabi are made of cloths of three kinds: a surface cloth, a back cloth, and a sole cloth.
  326. Tabi can generally be used if permission is obtained.
  327. Tabi were initially provided with laces in the ankle, and the laces were fastened to prevent the tabi from slipping off.
  328. Tabi were originally made of the leather obtained by tanning hide, and no cotton-made tabi existed until the early Edo period.
  329. Table of Japanese Shitokan
  330. Table of Shitokan at the principal government bodies in the Tang
  331. Table of Shitokan based on the Yoro-rei (Kanirei [court ranking law])
  332. Table of Shitokan in the Tang
  333. Table of emergence
  334. Table tennis
  335. Tables : sutra table, upper table, front table
  336. Tablet: 2 pieces; created during the Kamakura period
  337. Tablets such as Ema (wooden plaques on which people write their prayers and wishes) or Sangaku (wooden plaques containing geometrical puzzles) are also occasionally offered as hono.
  338. Tableware
  339. Tableware of many types, such as lacquer-ware, earthenware, and porcelain, are used.
  340. Tableware such as coffee cups and accessories are offered in addition to coffee through their own shops and an online mail order system.
  341. Taboo.
  342. Tabuchiyama-cho, Saga Ogurayama, Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture
  343. Tacchu
  344. Tacchu' as well as the word 'toin' later came to refer to a sub-temple built within the grounds of another temple to serve as the residence of a high priest in his retirement.
  345. Tacchu-in of Kanshin-ji Temple, which is said to have been reconstructed by Masashige's great-grandfather, Shigeuji KUSUNOKI, is an ancestral temple of the Kusunoki clan.
  346. Tachi (Long Swords)
  347. Tachi (a sword)
  348. Tachi (long sword) where Nakago (core) also functions as a Tsuka (handle).
  349. Tachi (太刀) was carried by hanging on the waist.
  350. Tachi (打刀) was carried by thrusting through the sash.
  351. Tachi Sword inscribed Bishu Osafune Moromitsu, the year 9 in the Oei era (rest unclear)
  352. Tachi Sword inscribed Sukemori
  353. Tachi Sword inscribed Tsunetsugu
  354. Tachi Sword inscribed Yasutsuna (Onikiri)
  355. Tachi soba (cut buckwheat noodles) (Aizu Region)
  356. Tachi sword decorated with a gold paste: Believed to have been forged by Nagamitsu BIZEN
  357. Tachi sword: Inscribed 'Bizen no Kuni Ukainogo Unsho, Hachiman Daibosatsu' (Hachiman Daibosatsu, Unsho, Ukai-go, Bizen Province)
  358. Tachi sword: Inscribed 'Hidechika'
  359. Tachi sword: Inscribed 'Nagamitsu'
  360. Tachiai
  361. Tachiai is a play performed in earnest by players.
  362. Tachiai is unique to Japan and no other countries start their matches in this way.
  363. Tachiai was a trial day, and the Sobayonin and those who stayed in Edo on business, such as Kyoto shoshidai, Osaka jodai, and the Ongoku-bugyo, sometimes attended as well.
  364. Tachiai-mono (Pieces of Tachiai Noh, or Noh Performance Competitions)
  365. Tachiai-mono include Yumiya no Tachiai (Tachiai of bows and arrows), Fune no Tachiai (Tachiai of the boat), and Junitsuki Orai (the comings and goings of months).
  366. Tachibana (mandarin orange tree) in the circle
  367. Tachibana Tree at the Right Side and Cherry Tree at the Left Side of the Main Palace of the Heian Imperial Court
  368. Tachibana area, Mino City (Oze ukai)
  369. Tachibana became a senior managing director and Bando became a director; however, Shochiku had almost complete control over the management of the company, holding most of the important positions including the president.
  370. Tachibana clan
  371. Tachibana clan (in Chikugo)
  372. Tachibana died in this battle, and posthumously he was promoted to the Lieutenant Colonel of the Infantry Regiment of Army and conferred the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold Rays with Rosette and the Order of Golden Kite, Fourth Class.
  373. Tachibana no Maetsukimi (TACHIBANA no Hayanari)
  374. Tachibana no Toyohi no mikoto (the term mikoto is an honorific for gods and persons of great importance in ancient Japan), who was a paternal younger brother of Emperor Bidatsu, ascended the throne at Ikenohe (or Ikenobe) no miya Imperial palace to govern the whole country when he was 3 years old.
  375. Tachibana no toyohi no Sumeramikoto, the Emperor Yomei
  376. Tachibana no toyohi no mikoto settled in the palace of Ikenobe, and governed the country at the age of three (Shiki-gun, Nara Prefecture).
  377. Tachibana was famous for collecting money like a trickster, using distribution rights as a tool for deceiving people.
  378. Tachibana's interpretation also claims that Haretoyo's words 'should be the Shogun' in an article on May 4 (old calendar) were the official intention of the Imperial Court, and Nobunaga intentionally expressed his false embarrassment concealing his true meaning by having 'Oran' (Naritoshi MORI) meet the envoy.
  379. Tachibana-dera Temple
  380. Tachibana-no-Taibu (TACHIBANA no Hayanari)
  381. Tachibana: Kawasaki City and the northern part of Yokohama City in Kanagawa Prefecture
  382. Tachibanaya, where he stayed, was an important family from where Ryokan was born.
  383. Tachihaki no toneri (guard of the crown prince) when Emperor Nijo was the crown prince.
  384. Tachikata: Performers specialized in dancing
  385. Tachikawa Fudoson Kyokai' seceded from the Shingon sect and established 'Makoto religious organization,' a nonaligned and independent organization whose authority is the Nirvana Sutra.
  386. Tachikawa School (Esoteric Buddhism)
  387. Tachikawa soba (the buckwheat noodles of Otoyo-cho)
  388. Tachikawa suffered air raids every time Shinjo visited them.
  389. Tachikawa-ryu school (a school of Esoteric Buddhism founded by Ninkan)
  390. Tachikawa-ryu school regards the state of male and female copulation as the state of sokushinjobutsu and a figure of male and female copulation is drawn in the form of a mandala.
  391. Tachikawa-ryu school uses the special vajra, of which an end has three blades and the other two blades.
  392. Tachiki Ongakudo music hall
  393. Tachikisan-ji Temple (commonly known as Tachiki Kannon)
  394. Tachimawari
  395. Tachite harukanaru yori chudo ni raiyusu
  396. Tachiwaku (also referred as tatewaku)
  397. Tachiwaku, shippo and kikko patterns are provided all over the clothes such as the hagoromo (feather-robe), johaku (a cloth placed from a shoulder crossly) and the skirt.
  398. Tachiyaku
  399. Tachiyaku covers a wide range of classes from samurai to the townspeople.
  400. Tachiyaku include these types of roles.
  401. Tachiyaku means the role in Kabuki (traditional performing act) of a normal adult male, and it also stands for the actor who plays the role.
  402. Tachiyiaku actors played the leading role in Kabuki, and were considered to be in a higher class than actors in other positions.
  403. Tachiyu (standing bathing)
  404. Tactics (cartoon by Sakura KINOSHITA and Kazuko HIGASHIYAMA)
  405. Tad FUJIKAWA
  406. Tada Genji is the name of the line which originated from MINAMOTO no Mitsunaka (Mitsunaka TADA) among Seiwa-Genji (Minamoto clan) branches and was based in Tada.
  407. Tada TOCHI (1497 - 1545) was a busho (Japanese military commander), who lived between the Muromachi and Sengoku period (Period of Warring States) (Japan).
  408. Tada ari (a tasteful story)
  409. Tada began to be used by MINAMOTO no Mitsunaka, who formed a samurai group in Tada, Kawabe County Settsu Province, in the middle of the Heian period.
  410. Tada is where MINAMOTO no Tsunemoto's son MINAMOTO no Mitsunaka formed the Genji Samurai Corps and is the place in which the Seiwa-Genji originated.
  411. Tada no sho estate in later years
  412. Tada-Genji (Minamoto clan)
  413. Tada-Genji took action as kyobushi (literally, samurai in Kyoto), maintained a strong connection with the Imperial Court, and possessed significant power in the Kinai region (provinces surrounding Kyoto and Nara.)
  414. Tada-Genji, Mino-Genji and others were descended from Settu Province-based Settsu-Genji and they were a branch of Seiwa-Genji and the so-called 'military Genji.'
  415. Tada-jinja Shrine (Tada, Kawanishi City, Hyogo Prefecture)
  416. Tada-jinja Shrine, located in Komatsu City, Ishikawa Prefecture, owns the warrior helmet Sanemtomo used; and in this Shrine, a memorial service has been held regularly up to now every time a new generation of the high priest was appointed in the Shrine.
  417. Tada-no-sho: estate of Sekkan-ke.
  418. Tadaaki CHIGUSA
  419. Tadaaki CHIGUSA (Date of birth unknown - July 21, 1336) was a kuge (court noble) and busho (Japanese military commander) during the Kamakura period and the period of the Northern and Southern Courts.
  420. Tadaaki MATSUDAIRA (the Fujii-Matsudaira family) [Jugoinoge Iga no kami, Governor of Iga Province, (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  421. Tadaaki MATSUDAIRA (the Ogyu-Matsudaira family) [Jugoinoge Shinano no kami, Governor of Shinano Province, (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  422. Tadaaki ONO (Mikogamitenzen) who served the Tokugawa clan in the same period as Munenori, was an instructor of swordsmanship as well and founded Ono-ha Itto-ryu School, however, he was given rice stipend only 600 koku (108.234 cubic meters).
  423. Tadaaki OTSUKA was elected to be a successor president however due to his health reason, it was necessary to select an early successor and he was involved in that process.
  424. Tadaaki SAKAI (August 4, 1813 - December 5, 1873) was a daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) in the end of the Edo period.
  425. Tadaaki SAKAI (Leader of the Obama Clan, Wakasa District) (1858-1862).
  426. Tadaaki SAKAI (Leader of the Obama-han Clan, Wakasa District) (1843-1850)
  427. Tadaaki SAKAI (the Lord of Obama domain of Wakasa Province)
  428. Tadaaki fought with Takauji, who had returned to Kyoto with an army he had formed in Kyushu, but was defeated and killed by Tadayoshi ASHIKAGA's forces in Nishi Sakamoto, Omi Province (Otsu City, Shiga Prefecture).
  429. Tadaaki preferred the military arts to the skills of a court noble, which led his father, Aritada, to disown him.
  430. Tadaaki served the Emperor Godaigo and was appointed to a responsible post in the Kenmu government.
  431. Tadaakira ISHII
  432. Tadaakira ISHII: Genroin gikan, (councillor of Chamber of Elders or Senate) the Prefectural governor of Wakayama Prefecture
  433. Tadaakira ISHII: He was a councilor of Chamber of Elders, Wakayama Prefectural Governor and Kinkei-no-ma shiko.
  434. Tadaakira ISII (male, August 4, 1840 - January 1, 1901) was a high ranking government official who lived during the Meiji period.
  435. Tadaakira MATSUDAIRA
  436. Tadaakira MATSUDAIRA was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived in the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  437. Tadaakira MATSUDAIRA was a daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) who lived from the Azuchi-Momoyama period to the early Edo period.
  438. Tadaakira officially approved of bribery--a practice previously banned by Sadanobu and Nobuaki--and encouraged the acceptance of bribes.
  439. Tadaakira was an ex-feudal retainer of the Saga clan, and was an instructor in the Saga clan-operated Mietsu Navy school with Kuranosuke NAKAMUTA and others.
  440. Tadaakira was born in Edo in 1762 as Tomosato OKANO's son.
  441. Tadaaya HIROHATA
  442. Tadaaya HIROHATA (July 24, 1824 - February 18, 1897) was a court noble during the late Edo Period and a politician during the Meiji Period.
  443. Tadabumi TORI: student studying in America
  444. Tadachika KUWATA 'Wondering Shogun Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA' (Kodan-sha Press, 1985) ISBN 4642051821
  445. Tadachika KUWATA advocated, in his book entitled Akechi Mitsuhide, a "Grudge Theory of Honno-ji no Hen," based on his own research.
  446. Tadachika KUWATA insists that these letters were written by a maidservant.
  447. Tadachika MATSUDAIRA
  448. Tadachika MATSUDAIRA (1717-1724)
  449. Tadachika MATSUDAIRA (or Tadanori MATSUDAIRA) was a feudal lord who lived in the mid-Edo period.
  450. Tadachika MATSUDAIRA [Jugoinoge Iga no kami, Governor of Iga Province, (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  451. Tadachika NAKAYAMA
  452. Tadachika NAKAYAMA (around 1131 - April 30, 1195) was a court noble who lived in the Heian period, was commonly called Nakayama Naidaijin (Nakayama, the minister of the center) and was the founder of the Nakayama family.
  453. Tadachika OKUBO
  454. Tadachika OKUBO was a busho (Japanese military commander) and fudai daimyo (a daimyo in hereditary vassal to the Tokugawa family) in the Sengoku period (period of warring states) to the early Edo period.
  455. Tadachika OKUBO: 10,000-koku (or 20,000-koku) Hanyu Domain
  456. Tadachika UENO
  457. Tadachika UENO (1684 - June 18, 1755) was a feudal retainer of Tottori Domain of the middle of the Edo period.
  458. Tadachika enjoyed studying from an early age and many books written by him still remain.
  459. Tadachika was born in Edo in 1673.
  460. Tadachika was given important posts by Goshirakawa-in (the Retired Emperor Goshirakawa) and MINAMOTO no Yoritomo, and the diary's existent period stretches from the Taira clan's rise, through its golden days, to its fall.
  461. Tadachika, his predecessor, was surprised and recorded 'extremely rare case' ("Sankaiki" (diary by Tadachika NAKAYAMA)), and Kanezane KUJO was bitter with blame, saying 'This is crazy. It cannot be an act of a subject.' ("Gyokuyo").
  462. Tadae KAWAKAMI
  463. Tadae KAWAKAMI (1559 - May 3, 1622) was a busho (Japanese military commander) from the Sengoku period (period of warring states) to the Edo period
  464. Tadafumi departed the imperial capital under imperial order, and he should be awarded."
  465. Tadafusa ISHIKAWA moved from the Sakura Domain in Shimosa Province.
  466. Tadafusa ISHIKAWA, the lord of Zeze Domain was a good friend with Enshu KOBORI, a master of tea ceremony.
  467. Tadafusa KONOE
  468. Tadafusa KONOE (September 24, 1838-July 16, 1873) was Kugyo (the top court officials) in the end of the Edo period.
  469. Tadafusa KONOE was his son.
  470. Tadafusa MATSUDAIRA (the lord of the Shimabara Domain) <Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)
  471. Tadafusa MATSUDAIRA implemented Kenchi (a land survey) in the domain.
  472. Tadafusa MATSUDONO
  473. Tadafusa MATSUDONO (松殿 忠房, 1193 - year of death unknown) was a Kugyo (high court noble) in the Kamakura period.
  474. Tadafusa celebrated his coming of age at 14 in 1549 and conferred Shogoinoge (Senior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) Sakone no shosho (Minor Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  475. Tadafusa, the second generation of the Naizen family became the first President of Jishukan school of a hanko (a domain school), and his younger brother served as the position of Karo (chief retainers) in the Kumamoto domain.
  476. Tadafuyu ASHIKAGA
  477. Tadafuyu ASHIKAGA was a military commander during the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  478. Tadafuyu TAKATSUKASA
  479. Tadafuyu TAKATSUKASA (1509 - May 21, 1546) was a Kuge (court noble) who lived during the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  480. Tadafuyu TAKATSUKASA (1509 to 1546)
  481. Tadafuyu escaped to Kyushu and was welcomed by the various forces there, such as the Shoni clan.
  482. Tadafuyu was attacked by Moronao's troops at Tomonotsu (Fukuyama City, Hiroshima Prefecture) in October, and fled to the Kyushu region.
  483. Tadafuyu, who had grown in strength, drove out the Isshiki clan from Hakata.
  484. Tadaharu HORIO
  485. Tadaharu HORIO (1599 - October 26, 1633) was a tozama daimyo (nonhereditary feudal lord) who lived in the Edo period.
  486. Tadaharu HORIO, the third head of the Horio family, made a name for himself by allying with the Tokugawa Shogunate during the Siege of Osaka and received the attention of the government of the domain, but the family line came to an end due to the lack of a legitimate heir after Tadaharu died due to illness in 1633.
  487. Tadaharu INA
  488. Tadaharu MATSUDAIRA
  489. Tadaharu MATSUDAIRA (1598-April 23, 1669) was a lord of the Tanaka Domain in Suruga Province.
  490. Tadaharu MATSUDAIRA [Jugoinoge Iga no kami, Governor of Iga Province, (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  491. Tadaharu MATSUDAIRA of the Fujii-Matsudaira family then took over Kameyama with assigned revenues of 38,000 koku, but the family was transferred to the Iwatsuki Domain in Musashi Province in the era of Tadachika MATSUDAIRA.
  492. Tadaharu presented gift to the Shogun family and Roju (senior councillors) as an expression of gratitude.
  493. Tadaharu was born in Edo in 1641.
  494. Tadaharu was both a wise ruler and a great commander, who inherited such a dual character from his grandfather who had been called 'Hotoke no Mosuke' (Saintly Mosuke) and 'Oni Mosuke' (Devilish Mosuke), thus being more of a warrior.
  495. Tadaharu was given an official rank of Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade), being the Yamashiro no kuni no kami (the Governor of Yamashiro Province).
  496. Tadaharu's childhood name was Sannosuke.
  497. Tadaharu's daughters included the lawful wife of Kadokatsu ISHIKAWA.
  498. Tadaharu's grave: Enjo-ji Temple (円成寺) in Sendagi, Bunkyo Ward, Tokyo Prefecture.
  499. Tadaharu's lawful wife was Bin hime (Lady Bin), who was an adopted daughter of Hidetada TOKUGAWA (a daughter of Iemasa OKUDAIRA).
  500. Tadaharu's masculinity might have been relied upon by the shogunate that in 1619 when Masanori FUKUSHIMA was transferred from Hiroshima to a smaller domain of Kawanakajima (Takaino Domain) in Shinano Province due to the shogunal order, Tadaharu attended the handover of Hiroshima-jo Castle to be the recipient.
  501. Tadahide MATSUDAIRA (1640 - year of death unknown) lived in the Edo period.
  502. Tadahide MATSUDAIRA (the heir of Kameyama Domain)
  503. Tadahide TORII, who was transferred in 1712 from Minakuchi Domain in Omi province to Mibu Domain in Shimotsuke Province (Mibu-machi, Shimotsuga County, Tochigi Prefecture), encouraged the production of Kanpyo and it led to the rise of Kanpyo production in Tochigi Prefecture.
  504. Tadahide was appointed to the Kanpaku (chief adviser to the Emperor) on January 31, 1609, and Sadako became Jusanmi Kita no Mandokoro (the legal wife of a regent or chief adviser to the Emperor).
  505. Tadahiko IIDA
  506. Tadahiko IIDA (January 23, 1799 - July 15, 1860) was a scholar of Japanese classical literature and historian who was from the Tokuyama Domain and lived during the end of Edo period.
  507. Tadahiko OTOWA of the Asakanomiya family (Tadahiko OTOWA, April 1, 1936)
  508. Tadahiko TAKATORI (garden designer) 'Garden making for temples'
  509. Tadahiko had no involvement in this matter and responded with dignity to the questions by the magistrate's office; nevertheless, the magistrate's office imprisoned him in a nearby inn as 'someone in the middle of interrogation.'
  510. Tadahiko was enshrined at Kyoto Ryozen Gokoku-jinja Shrine as one of martyrs at the end of Edo period, and in 1888 he was enshrined at Yasukuni-jinja Shrine as well; three years later he was raised to Jushii (Junior Fourth Rank) after his death.
  511. Tadahiko was furious about being captured for a false charge and being treated in this way, and on July 10, 1860 he stubbed his throat with a short sword he had kept.
  512. Tadahira succeeded to the direct line of descent as the head of the Fujiwara clan, pushing aside his other older brother, Nakahira.
  513. Tadahira was not in favor of a return to the Ritsuryo system, and promoted the land-based tax system.
  514. Tadahira's administration period is usually considered the time during which the regency was established.
  515. Tadahira's policies on agriculture and other areas, along with his brother Tokihira's administrative policies, are referred to collectively as 'Engi no chi.'
  516. Tadahiro AOYAMA
  517. Tadahiro AOYAMA (June 22, 1768 - May 12, 1836) was daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) and roju (member of shogun's council of elders) in Edo period.
  518. Tadahiro KONOE
  519. Tadahiro KONOE (1808 to 1898)
  520. Tadahiro KONOE (September 4, 1808 - March 18, 1898) was a court noble in the end of Edo period.
  521. Tadahiro OKUBO (additionally a Metsuke officer)
  522. Tadahiro SHIMAZU: court, the Prefectural governor of Sadowara domain
  523. Tadahiro originated Mount Oji ceramic as a local specialty.
  524. Tadahiro was born in 1807 as Tadatsugu MIZUNO's son.
  525. Tadahiro was born in 1856.
  526. Tadahiro was grouchy during the sumo tournament every year because the sumo wrestlers of the Sasayama Domain promptly lost from the very beginning.
  527. Tadahiro was so pleased that he was going to reward them, but they were gone.
  528. Tadahisa SHIMAZU: an ancestor of the Shimazu clan
  529. Tadahisa SUGANUMA
  530. Tadaichi KONGO
  531. Tadaichi KONGO (1815 to 1884) was a Noh actor of the shite-kata Kongo school (one of the five schools of shite-kata [main roles]).
  532. Tadaichi KONGO was a great performer of the school who had been active from the end of the Edo period to the Meiji period, and he was well known for his special device of spider threads made of Japanese paper for the play "Tsuchigumo" (The Ground Spider).
  533. Tadaie KUJO
  534. Tadaie KUJO (July or August 1229 - July 3, 1275) was a Court noble of the highest rank in the Kamakura period.
  535. Tadaka ICHIJO
  536. Tadaka ICHIJO (March 25, 1812 - December 17, 1863) was a Kugyo (high court noble) who lived in the late Edo period.
  537. Tadaka KAINOSHO, graduated from Kyoto University, founder of Takasago International Corporation
  538. Tadaka's son, Masaoki KAINOSHO
  539. Tadakage SHIMAZU
  540. Tadakage SHIMAZU (1241 - 1300) was busho (Japanese military commander) and kajin (waka poet) in the Kamakura period.
  541. Tadakane was born in 1744 in Hiroshima as Munetsune ASANO's son.
  542. Tadakata ANEGAKOJI
  543. Tadakata ANEGAKOJI (1241 - January 19, 1283) was a Court noble who lived during the mid Kamakura period.
  544. Tadakata HAYASHI
  545. Tadakata HAYASHI (1845 - July 25, 1867) was the second lord of the Jozai Domain, Kazusa Province.
  546. Tadakata HOSOKAWA
  547. Tadakata HOSOKAWA defected to Harumoto's side.
  548. Tadakata TSUKINOWA → Tokifusa MADENOKOJI, etc.
  549. Tadakata YONEKITSU was a younger brother of Masatake YONEKITSU, the lord of the Kuki Domain, but he removed himself from the family and set up a new branch family, and became a hatamoto in 4,000 koku.
  550. Tadakata felt indignant because he was not getting well with Tsunetada, and he felt that the Retired Emperor Gosaga designated not Tadakata who was Akitomo's bereaved child but Tsunetada as the most trustworthy retainer after his father, Akitomo, died.
  551. Tadakata found out the detail of Takakuni in Daimotsu kuzure (the Battle of Daimotsu), and tried to switch side to Harumoto HOSOKAWA, but was not forgiven and killed.
  552. Tadakatsu FUKUSHIMA
  553. Tadakatsu FUKUSHIMA (1598-October 9, 1620) was a tozama daimyo (nonhereditary feudal lord) in the Edo period.
  554. Tadakatsu HONDA
  555. Tadakatsu HONDA was a busho (Japanese military commander) and daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) who lived from the Azuchi-Momoyama period to the early Edo period.
  556. Tadakatsu HONDA: 100,000-koku Okita Domain
  557. Tadakatsu UTSUMI
  558. Tadakatsu UTSUMI (September 12, 1843 - January 20, 1905) was samurai as well as a government official and a statesman in Japan.
  559. Tadakatsu UTSUMI:attache
  560. Tadakatsu also participated in the Battle of Anegawa in 1570 and took charge of the Dengun (the rear troop) at the Battle of Hitokotozaka as a preliminary skirmish of the Battle of Futamata-jo Castle in 1572.
  561. Tadakatsu contrasted himself with Naomasa II, criticizing his heavy armor and how he was covered with wounds.
  562. Tadakatsu fought in the Battle of Mikatagahara in December (old calender).
  563. Tadakatsu himself sent detailed instructions to an old retainer at the local level of domain from Edo several dozens times when painting the hawk pictures.
  564. Tadakatsu responded by defiantly declaring, 'If you do not grant this request then I will fight you,' stunning Ieyasu.
  565. Tadakatsu was a Honda clan member as the oldest Anjo fudai (a fudai daimyo who had been serving Ieyasu since he was in Anjo) for the Anjo-Matsudaira family (the head family of the Tokugawa), born the first son of Tadataka HONDA in Kuramae, Mikawa Province (present Okazaki City, Aichi Prefecture) in 1548.
  566. Tadakatsu was a great commander, not only brave but also good at strategies, and he tried to break up the busho of the Western Army by issuing countless numbers of written oath with Naomasa II at the Battle of Sekigahara.
  567. Tadakatsu was for the former and Naomasa for the latter.
  568. Tadakatsu's symbol was a Kazuno wakidate kabuto (a helmet with an ornament in the shape of deer horns) (It still exists as an Important Cultural Property), and Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI praised him as the best warrior in Togoku (the eastern part of Japan, particularly Kanto region) for his performance at the Battle of Komaki and Nagakute in 1584.
  569. Tadakazu MATSUDAIRA (1791 - May 23, 1828) was active in the Edo period.
  570. Tadakazu MATSUDAIRA (the heir of Ueda Domain)
  571. Tadakazu became an adopted child of Tadasato in 1828; however, he died at the early age without taking over as head of the family.
  572. Tadakiyo 'gave logical explanations and repeatedly taught lessons' to persuade Koremori, who was hesitant to retreat, according to "Gyokuyo" a diary of Kanezane KUJO.
  573. Tadakiyo BOMON
  574. Tadakiyo BOMON was a kuge (a court noble) in the early Kamakura period.
  575. Tadakiyo MAKINO
  576. Tadakiyo MAKINO (1798-1801)
  577. Tadakiyo MAKINO (November 26, 1760 - August 17, 1831) was a daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) and a politician who lived in the late Edo period.
  578. Tadakiyo MIZUNO, the first lord of the Matsumoto Domain, Shinano Province (present-day Matsumoto City, Nagano Prefecture) was real younger brother of Katsunari.
  579. Tadakiyo clapped his hands, further impressed with and surprised at Tadamasa's outstanding capability, and went back.
  580. Tadakiyo talked about this to his colleagues, never stopped praising Tadamasa.
  581. Tadakiyo was born in 1832.
  582. Tadakiyo was nervous about the movements of Yoritomo, who was then an exile in Izu, after he received reports from Kagechika OBA.
  583. Tadakiyo, who was in priesthood by then, did not accompany the Taira clan when they fled from Kyoto in July, 1183, and stayed in the Kinai region (provinces surrounding Kyoto and Nara), and he tried to reconcile with MINAMOTO no Yoshinaka in his own way, according to "Gyokuyo."
  584. Tadako KAJUJI
  585. Tadako KAJUJI (December 1, 1780 ? April 20, 1843) was Naishi no suke (handmaid) for Emperor Kokaku, and the real mother of Emperor Ninko.
  586. Tadako KASHUJI (Higashikyogokuin), the biological mother of Emperor Ninko, was her older sister.
  587. Tadakoso
  588. Tadakuni IJUIN
  589. Tadakuni IJUIN (date of birth and death unknown) is a person of Satsuma Province from the end of Kamakura period to the early Muromachi period.
  590. Tadakuni MIZUNO
  591. Tadakuni MIZUNO (1826-1828)
  592. Tadakuni MIZUNO was a daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) and roju (senior councilor of the Tokugawa shogunate) who lived during the Edo Period.
  593. Tadakuni MIZUNO, who took up a post as a Roju (member of shogun's council of elders), paid attentions to this group and attempted to pick their brains in order to take measures against the West.
  594. Tadakuni died on February 10, 1851.
  595. Tadakuni embarked on the financial reconstruction of the bakufu to develop reforms, but did not gain public support because he completely controlled the luxury and introduce austerity measures.
  596. Tadakuni promoted practical bureaucrats, such as Hidetatsu EGAWA, Kagemoto TOYAMA, and Yozo TORII, but the very contents of the reforms could be said just the revival of Kansei Reforms after the Tanuma period, so they lacked novelty.
  597. Tadakuni raised an army to save Ishiku no in, but abandoned the castle two month later.
  598. Tadakuni took control of Matsuo-jo Castle in Koriyama and put the areas south of Koriyama under the control of the Southern Court in 1350.
  599. Tadakuni was appointed as shikibu shoyu (Junior Assistant of the Ministry of Ceremonial) and was conferred the rank of Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  600. Tadakuni was born as the second son to the third lord of the Karatsu Domain, Tadaaki MIZUNO, on June 23, 1794.
  601. Tadakuni was placed under house arrest and ordered to retire,then later transferred to the Yamagata Domain of Dewa Province, after Tadakiyo MIZUNO, his eldest son, was allowed to succeed the family reigns.
  602. Tadakuni who firstly hesitated to attack Gisho fell under both pressures of the repeated orders of Yoshinori and subordinates who were discontent with Tadakuni's disobedience to the shogunate, Tadakuni finally ordered his senior vassals, including Tadahisa YAMADA and Tadaomi NIIRO to put Gisho down.
  603. Tadakuni's major reforms were, for example, control of people's consumption through tightening public morals and implementing a sumptuary decree strictly, issuance of "Hitogaeshi-rei" (the decree to force peasants dwelling in urban areas to return to their hometowns), an order on "kabu nakama" to disband itself, and issuance of "Kien-rei."
  604. Tadakuni, who opposed to the Shimiazu Soke family, was described as 'vicious clique' or 'bandit' in "the archives of the House of Shimazu", but after the Meiji period he was given the rank of Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) for his loyalty to the Southern Court.
  605. Tadamaro ONO
  606. Tadamaro ONO (December 5, 1933 to December 19, 1994) was a gagakushi (court musician), and a member of the Japan Art Academy.
  607. Tadamasa DAN: Iwamura-jo Castle, Mino Province (former residential castle of Hidetaka)
  608. Tadamasa HAYASHI
  609. Tadamasa HAYASHI (December 7, 1853 - April 10, 1906) is an art dealer and an art collector in Japan.
  610. Tadamasa HAYASHI a Library Sales Catalogue' is left in "Shigeo SORIMACHI Sales Catalogue Selection of Old Books Collection, vol. 3, March 1, 1928 - April 11" edited by Mitsuhiko SHIBATA (a reprinted edition, Yumani Shobo Publisher, 2000).
  611. Tadamasa IJUIN besieged
  612. Tadamasa KAZANIN, Daijo-daijin (grand minister of state), was his elder brother from the same mother.
  613. Tadamasa MAKINO
  614. Tadamasa MAKINO (1840-1843)
  615. Tadamasa MAKINO (December 2, 1799 - November 30, 1858) was a daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) and a roju (member of shogun's council of elders) who lived in the Edo period.
  616. Tadamasa MORI
  617. Tadamasa MORI (1570 - July 31, 1634) is a military commander of the Warring States period in Japan.
  618. Tadamasa MORI who had owned 70,000-koku Kanayama in Mino Province was moved to a bigger territory of 137,000-koku Kawanakajima in Shinano Province.
  619. Tadamasa MURAKAMI, TACHIBNA no Akemi, Nomura moto-ni, Shikibu TAKABATAKE, Chikako UEDA and Sakuragi tayu were her friends in waka circle.
  620. Tadamasa OGURI (Oguri Kozuke no suke [Assistant Governor of Kozuke Province])
  621. Tadamasa OGURI, a Kanjo Bugyo (commissioner of finance) also was assigned as a Rikugun Bugyo (commissioner of the bakufu army) ranking position, and Takeaki ENOMOTO, the chief ranking official of the bakufu navy, insisted upon a war advocacy policy.
  622. Tadamasa OSUGA: 30,000-koku Kururi Domain
  623. Tadamasa TANAKA: the forth son
  624. Tadamasa TODA
  625. Tadamasa TODA (1632 - October 2, 1699) was a feudal lord who lived in the early Edo period.
  626. Tadamasa TODA (1678-1681)
  627. Tadamasa WADA
  628. Tadamasa WADA (1615 - April 23, 1624) was a samurai of the early Edo period.
  629. Tadamasa died in 1634.
  630. Tadamasa expects his nephew Kiyomori will save him, but Kiyomori kills his uncle, thinking if he kills his uncle, Yoshitomo also has to kill his father.
  631. Tadamasa joined up with the eastern army of Hidetada TOKUGAWA in the Battle of Sekigahara of the same year, and participated in the attacks against Ueda-jo Castle which was the base for Masayuki SANADA of the western army.
  632. Tadamasa lost his father while he was very young and he was took on and brought up by his maternal uncle, FUJIWARA no Ienari.
  633. Tadamasa replied that "Inheritance is quite an important matter even if the successors are children. That is why I refuse to say anything on that matter."
  634. Tadamasa's protection of Christianity is considered to have contributed to this.
  635. Tadamasa's words from the stories in "Meisho Genkoroku" (the collections of anecdotes of great commanders in Japanese history)
  636. Tadamasu was born in 1625.
  637. Tadami's death in agony
  638. Tadamichi EDO, Michimasa EDO and Shigemichi EDO formed an alliance with Yoshishige SATAKE (the 18th family head) and the Satake clan extended its influence to the deep south and the Edo clan to the southern areas of Hitachi.
  639. Tadamichi adopted Teishi, and advised the Cloistered Emperor saying `a daughter of someone who is other than the clan is not able to be enthroned.'
  640. Tadamichi and the Bifukumonin Temple said that this was the work of Yorinaga. Believing this, the Cloistered Emperor lost all confidence in Yorinaga, ceased private audiences with him, and in effect Yorinaga was overthrown.
  641. Tadamichi was at odds with Tadazane and Yorinaga regarding the inner palace (harem) of Emperor Konoe.
  642. Tadamichi's being 23 years older than Yorinaga meant that at one stage Yorinaga was just like Tadamichi's adopted son.
  643. Tadamitsu HIROHASHI served as the Governor of Chiba Prefecture.
  644. Tadamitsu NAKAYAMA
  645. Tadamitsu NAKAYAMA (1845 May 18 - December 13, 1864) is a court noble in the end of Edo period.
  646. Tadamitsu NAKAYAMA had a narrow escape from enemy's heavy siege and arrived at Osaka on November 8; soon after he was sheltered in a residence of Choshu Domain.
  647. Tadamitsu NAKAYAMA was going to fight a decisive battle relying on a mountain fortress, but the Imperial Court gave an Imperial address to Totsukawa Village declaring Tadamitsu as an insurgent; samurai in Totsukawa Village changed their mind, and called for withdrawal to Tadamitsu.
  648. Tadamitsu NAKAYAMA was his son.
  649. Tadamitsu NAKAYAMA, who was a jiju (chamberlain) took part in this execution of joi by the Choshu clan, and Nakayama's flight from Kyoto was guided by Yoshimura.
  650. Tadamitsu NAKAYAMA, who was the seventh son of Tadayasu was a vanguard of sonno joi (19th century slogan advocating reverence for the Emperor and the expulsion of foreigners) and he was made the head of the Tenchu-gumi (literally, Heavenly Avenging Force) but, later, he was assassinated by a member of the Choshu clan (the Tenchu-gumi incident).
  651. Tadamitsu commanded ASAHINA that Sayama Domain also go to the forefront and join the act of justice.
  652. Tadamitsu escaped to Osaka, then to Choshu.
  653. Tadamitsu was born in 1792.
  654. Tadamitsu was born in Edo in 1662.
  655. Tadamitsu, the commander-in-chief, escaped from the battle, Keido killed himself, and most of the others were killed in the battle or arrested and Tenchu-gumi fell apart.
  656. Tadamochi SAKAI (1752-1756)
  657. Tadamori became Gyobukyo (Minister of Justice) in 1151.
  658. Tadamori caught pirates and accepted some of the pirates who surrendered as retainers.
  659. Tadamori developed a close relationship with Ienari because his wife Muneko was Ienari's cousin.
  660. Tadamori held positions such as Uma no gon no kami and Sama no gon no kami; and, was involved in the Meryo (Bureau of Horses), which managed horses in the imperial palace.
  661. Tadamori prevented the violent demonstrations of the armed priests of Kofuku-ji Temple from coming into Kyoto.
  662. Tadamori served as Shi-i Betto (chief administrator of fourth rank) in the Toba cloistered rule.
  663. Tadamori was also involved as an officer in making shoens and held managerial positions at the Cloistered Emperor's shoens.
  664. Tadamori was deeply aggrieved at the loss of his son; Kiyomori, however, was reassured of his position as the successor due to death of the only rival candidate.
  665. Tadamori was permitted to visit the cloistered emperor's palace in 1121.
  666. Tadamori was rewarded Jushiinoge (Junior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade) in 1127 and also became the Govenor of Bizen Province and was appointed for the position of Sama no gon no kami (Provisional Captain of Samaryo, Left Division of Bureau of Horses).
  667. Tadamori's father, Masamori served for the Emperor Shirakawa and also married off his daughter to MINAMOTO no Yoshitada - a leader of Kawachi-Genji.
  668. Tadamoto (The tenth)
  669. Tadamoto (also known as Uchimoto) ICHIJO (1548 - August 9, 1611) was a kuge (court noble) living from the late Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States) to the early Edo period.
  670. Tadamoto HONDA
  671. Tadamoto HONDA (1857-1858)
  672. Tadamoto HONDA (April 12, 1817 - January 29, 1883) was a daimyo (feudal lord), statesman and Roju (senior councilor) at the end of the Edo period.
  673. Tadamoto ICHIJO
  674. Tadamoto INA, Yasutsugu's son, served Hirotada MATSUDAIRA and his son Ieyasu TOKUGAWA, residing at Kojima-jo Castle in Mikawa Province (the present-day Nishio City, Aichi Prefecture).
  675. Tadamoto KUJO
  676. Tadamoto KUJO (1345-January 16, 1398) was a Kugyo (the top court officials) in the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  677. Tadamoto KUJO, Noritsugu KUJO, Koen, Doson, Koshin, and Kyogaku were his brothers.
  678. Tadamoto became the heir of the Ichijo family because his 19-year-elder brother Kanefuyu died.
  679. Tadamoto was adopted by Tadanaka HONDA, the Lord of Okazaki Domain.
  680. Tadamoto was born as a son of Tadamori MIZUNO, the lord of Ogawa-jo Castle in Owari Province in 1574.
  681. Tadamoto was born in Edo in 1618.
  682. Tadamoto was born in Edo in 1699.
  683. Tadamune DATE, a younger brother by the same mother, also relied on her for her intelligence.
  684. Tadamune IJUIN was Yoshihisa SHIMAZU's chief vassal and an important follower who worked for the Shimazu clan in the conquest of Kyushu.
  685. Tadamune OSADA
  686. Tadamune OSADA (date of birth unknown, died in 1190) was a busho (a Japanese military commander) at the end of the Heian period.
  687. Tadamune SHIMAZU
  688. Tadamune SHIMAZU (1251 ? December 17, 1325) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the middle and late Kamakura period.
  689. Tadamune didn't go to Korea, so he was blamed for the insufficient supplies for Tadatsune and was borne a grudge against by the other vassals of the Shimazu clan.
  690. Tadamune received direct orders from Hideyoshi and became the manager for the enfeoffment distribution after the survey.
  691. Tadanaga KAZANIN
  692. Tadanaga KAZANIN (1588 - November 6, 1662) was a court noble in the early Edo period.
  693. Tadanaga SAKAKIBARA
  694. Tadanaga SAKAKIBARA (1585 - March 15, 1604) was the second son of Yasumasa SAKAKIBARA, the first lord of the Tatebayashi Domain in Kozuke Province.
  695. Tadanaga SHIMAZU
  696. Tadanaga TOKUGAWA, who was of the Suruga-Tokugawa family, and Suruga Dainagon (Major Counselor), and his lineage was extinct after his seppuku.
  697. Tadanaga misbehaved himself after the death of his mother and was scolded by his father and brothers, resulting in a forfeit of his rank and properties, and was forced to kill himself in the end.
  698. Tadanaga was born in 1834 as the Dewa no kami, Tadayoshi's son.
  699. Tadanaga's wife was a granddaughter of Nobukatsu ODA, the second son of Nobunaga ODA, and it is evident that his mother Go valued the genealogy with the ODA family.
  700. Tadanaga/Tadatake SHIMAZU (August 28, 1551 - December 23, 1610) was a Busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku period (period of warring states) (Japan).
  701. Tadanaka (The ninth)
  702. Tadanao DAIGO, the son of Tadaosa DAIGO, filled the posts of shikibukan (official responsible for court ceremonies), shotenjicho (the deputy chief of shotenshoku, the section of the Imperial Household Agency handling court rituals)
  703. Tadanao MATSUDAIRA was the first son of Hideyasu YUKI (Hideyasu MATSUDAIRA), who was the second son of her father-in-law Ieyasu and the second eldest brother of Hidetada.
  704. Tadanao MATSUDAIRA, Ieyasu's grandson (a son of Ieyasu's second son, Hideyasu YUKI), was rewarded with Hatsuhana for his distinguished military service in the Siege of Osaka.
  705. Tadanao MATSUDAIRA, the second lord of Echizen Domain, was exiled because he tried to kill his wife, who married from the Shogun family into the MATSUDAIRA family.
  706. Tadanao was born in Edo in 1652.
  707. Tadanari IWASE
  708. Tadanari IWASE (additionally (a Metsuke officer and a Kattegakari (a post in charge of finance) officer)
  709. Tadanari OE
  710. Tadanari OE was a samurai in the Kamakura period.
  711. Tadanari was given Kaito-sho estate in Mikawa Province from Hiromoto, and settled down.
  712. Tadanobu KITSUNE
  713. Tadanobu Rihei
  714. Tadanobu SATO
  715. Tadanobu SATO (1161 ? November 4, 1186) was a Busho in the end of Heian period and a vassal of MINAMOTO no Yoshitsune.
  716. Tadanobu SATO visits Yoshitsune there, and says that he does not know about Shizuka since he has just come back from his hometown.
  717. Tadanobu SATO: one of the Yoshitsune's four heavenly kings in "Genpei Seisuiki"
  718. Tadanobu left Yoshitsune around Uji City, and hid in Kyoto.
  719. Tadanobu was born as Tadataka HONDA's son in 1834.
  720. Tadanori (Heike Monogatari)
  721. Tadanori ISHIGURO, feeling responsibility, contacted the head of the bureau upon Ginko's request, and asked for acceptance of her application, but his petition was rejected on the ground that women could not be applicable.
  722. Tadanori KUJO
  723. Tadanori KUJO (1248 - January 1, 1333) was a court noble of the Kamakura period, reaching the position of Kanpaku (chief advisor to the emperor) and Juichii (Junior First Rank); he was commonly called Hoonin-dono.
  724. Tadanori KUJO and Tadatugu KUJO numbered among his children.
  725. Tadanori MIZUNO (additionally a kanjo-bugyo (a post in charge of finance) officer)
  726. Tadanori UENO
  727. Tadanori UENO (1581 - year of death unknown) was a military commander from the Azuchi-Momoyama to Edo periods.
  728. Tadanori YOKOO painted "Kesareta Kioku" (Erased memories) after seeing "Gunsen-zu" and "Niga Byakudo-zu" (White path to paradise across two rivers) after being inspired by "Sessen Doji-zu" (Boy in snowy mountains, which depicts Buddha Shakamuni in austerity in the Himalayas).
  729. Tadanori and Sakasegawa held a post of construction magistrate in Yamada-jo Castle until Tadazane IJUIN gave in.
  730. Tadanori built present-day Anraku-ji Temple (in Nagahama City) on the site of FUJIWARA no Fuhito's villa in Omi Province.
  731. Tadanori celebrated his attainment of manhood before Yoshihiro SHIMAZU on December 10, 1594, and assumed the name Hikokuro UENO.
  732. Tadanori performed a meritorious deed of killing the enemy general Yasuke KARIYAHARA in cooperation with Shigemasa MURAO.
  733. Tadanori rendered distinguished military service at the time of penetrating into the castle.
  734. Tadanori then prepared himself, sat upright, chanted nenbutsu (Buddhist invocation), and was beheaded.
  735. Tadanori took the field at the time of 'the Battle of Shonai' (1599) accompanying Shigeari MURAO and his son Shigemasa MURAO.
  736. Tadanori was a poet, so there was an anecdote that he wrote in a waka (a traditional Japanese poem of thirty-one syllables) on an arrow quiver.
  737. Tadanori was born as Tadaaki MIZUNO's son in 1851.
  738. Tadanori wrote 'Ueno Hayato Oboegaki' (Notes of Hayato UENO) in 1653 when he was 73.
  739. Tadanori, who was under guard at the Nishikido fortress, was tackled by Tadazumi OKABE and subsequently injured when he was about to escape.
  740. Tadao ARAI
  741. Tadao ARAI (March 5, 1835 - February 15, 1891) was Shoshi shirabeyaku ken kansatsu (Shinsengumi's organizational post for investigating movements of the opponents and keeping the Shinsengumi members under control) of the Shinsengumi.
  742. Tadao KAMEI is currently serving as the deputy head of the family.
  743. Tadao NIIMURA
  744. Tadao NIIMURA (April 26, 1887 - January 24, 1911) was a socialist.
  745. Tadao SHITSUKI
  746. Tadao SHITSUKI (1760 - August 16, 1806) was a Dutch scholar and Dutch interpreter in Nagasaki in the Edo period.
  747. Tadao SHITSUKI translated the title to 'Sakoku-ron.'
  748. Tadao SHITSUKI, a Rangakusha (one who studied Western sciences through the Dutch language) in the Edo period, first used the term 'Sakoku' in the book "Sakoku-ron" (literally: "theory of national isolation") written in 1801.
  749. Tadaoki (Sansai) HOSOKAWA
  750. Tadaoki (The sixth)
  751. Tadaoki (by another name, Sansai) also had a profound knowledge of the tea ceremony, and became one of Rikyu's leading pupils.
  752. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA
  753. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA (Sansai)
  754. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA (lord of Miyazu-jo Castle in Tango Province)
  755. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA and Hidekazu HASEGAWA versus Kim Si-min and Kwoak Che-u
  756. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA in Miyazu, Tango Province, was moved to a bigger territory of 60,000-koku Kitsuki in Bungo Province.
  757. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA mourned over Garasha's death and in 1601, asked Organtino to perform a funeral service for Garasha at the church, which he attended; later, he reburied her remains at Sozen-ji Temple (Osaka City).
  758. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA was extremely fond of this lantern and it is said that he selected it to serve as his grave marker.
  759. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA was his son and heir.
  760. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA was one of the Budanha (Budan factions) of the Toyotomi clan and had been taking sides against Mitsunari ISHIDA.
  761. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA's wife
  762. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA, a head of the Hosokawa family, succeeded to Tanabe-jo Castle, and while Tadaoki was absent during the Aizu seibatsu (an expedition to punish and conquer Aizu), Mitsunari ISHIDA announced he would overthrow Ieyasu TOKUGAWA who was behaving in defiance of Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI's last will.
  763. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA, the lord of the Kumamoto Domain, was his stepbrother.
  764. Tadaoki HOSOKAWA/Tadaoki NAGAOKA was a military leader and Daimyo (feudal lord) from the Sengoku period (Warring States period) through to the Edo period in Japan.
  765. Tadaoki also excelled in information warfare, something which may be linked to his being one of the most cultured men of his day and having frequent interaction with a great number of intellectuals and court nobles.
  766. Tadaoki and Tama had 3 boys and 2 girls but it was his 3rd son, Tadatoshi HOSOKAWA who succeeded him as feudal lord of the Kumamoto Domain.
  767. Tadaoki blamed Chiyo and ordered Tadataka to divorce her and to sever all connections with Toshiie MAEDA and the Maeda clan.
  768. Tadaoki collaborated with Yoshiaki ASHIKAGA, Nobunaga ODA, Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI, and Ieyasu TOKUGAWA, the powerful people of the era, and is built the foundations of the HOSOKAWA clan which still survives today.
  769. Tadaoki had his fourth son Tatsutaka HOSOKAWA live in the main keep of Yatsushiro Castle and seemed to desire him to inherit the retirement gratuity of 95,000 koku and establish his own domain, but he died young in May 1645 and Tadaoki followed him in January 18, 1646.
  770. Tadaoki served Nobutada ODA, the eldest son of Nobunaga.
  771. Tadaoki showed a will of vassalage to the Tokugawa family by disinherit Tadataka who opposed the order, and made his third son Naiki (Tadatoshi), who had been presented at Ieyasu as a hostage, the successor.
  772. Tadaoki was born in Kyoto on December 8, 1563, as the eldest son of Yusai HOSOKAWA, a vassal in the service of the shogun Yoshiteru ASHIKAGA.
  773. Tadaoki was promoted to Shosanmi (Senior Court Rank) on February 11, 1924.
  774. Tadaoki was skillful in battle and an excellent politician as well.
  775. Tadaoki wrote an enormous number of letters during his lifetime, including approximately 2,000 after the Battle of Sekigahara.
  776. Tadaoki's 3rd son Tadatoshi succeeded because he disinherited his eldest son Tadataka HOSOKAWA.
  777. Tadaoki's actual father Yusai HOSOKAWA was a vassal, his adoptive father was a relative of Terutsune HOSOKAWA (Hosokawa-Oshu family), and he married Mitsuhide AKECHI's daughter Tamako (also known as "Gracia HOSOKAWA").
  778. Tadaoki's name borrows one kanji character from the name of Nobunaga ODA's eldest son, Nobutada ODA.
  779. Tadaoki's name is also linked with the invention of the celebrated Higo-koshirae (Higo style) form of Japanese sword.
  780. Tadaoki's second son was Okiaki HOSOKAWA who sided with the Toyotomi in 1615 during the Siege of Osaka and was subsequently and unavoidably ordered by his father to commit ritual suicide.
  781. Tadaoki's successor and lord of the Kumamoto Domain Tadatoshi HOSOKAWA was the 3rd son of Garacha, but the blood relation was broken until Morihiro HOSOKAWA because of adoption.
  782. Tadaoki, furious at the fact that all the maids in the house had converted to Catholicism, cut off their noses and threw them out.
  783. Tadaoki, the son of Fujitaka of the Shugo family of upper Izumi Province, became an adopted child to Terutsune HOSOKAWA, the family head in the end of Sengoku Period, and inherited the Oshu family.
  784. Tadaomi became a monjosho (student of literary studies in the Imperial University) in 854, studying under SUGAWARA no Koreyoshi, a Monjo hakase (professor of literature) at that time.
  785. Tadaosa DAIGO
  786. Tadaosa DAIGO (April 9, 1830 - July 4, 1900) was a Kogyo (a Court noble) and a retainer of the Imperial Court during the end of the Edo period.
  787. Tadaosa DAIGO, the family head at the time of the Meiji Restoration, filled various posts including the governor of Osaka Prefecture after the Restoration and the peerage of marquis was conferred on him.
  788. Tadaosa's daughter, Yoshiko, married Prince Kayanomiya Kuninori and became a Princess.
  789. Tadaoto KAINOSHO (1894 - 1978), a renowned Japanese painter during the the Taisho and Showa period.
  790. Tadaoto KAINOSHO, "Seii no Onna" (青衣の女) (A Woman in Blue) 1919, "Haha" (母) (Mother) 1927
  791. Tadasaburo SASAKI
  792. Tadasaburo SASAKI (1833 - February 5, 1868) was a samurai that was a direct vassal of the shogun and member of Kyoto Mimawarigumi in Japan.
  793. Tadasaburo SASAKI, who was Kumigashira (the leader) of the Sagami no kami brigade, and Kichitaro WATANABE, Yasujiro TAKAHASHI, Hayanosuke KATSURA, Nakazo DOHI, Daizaburo SAKURAI, and Nobuo IMAI are regarded as likely perpetrators of the assassination of Ryoma SAKAMOTO.
  794. Tadasada ICHIJO
  795. Tadasada ICHIJO (May [the old calendar] [between May and June], 1862 - unknown) was a Kuge (court noble) who lived in the late Edo period.
  796. Tadasada KAZANIN
  797. Tadasada KAZANIN (November 22, 1379 - September 15, 1416) was a kugyo (court noble) who lived during the Muromachi period.
  798. Tadasato MATSUDAIRA
  799. Tadashi ASAI and other students were members of the inaugural class.
  800. Tadashi IMAFUKU compared the existing manuscripts.
  801. Tadashi IMAI
  802. Tadashi IMAI (January 8, 1912 - November 22, 1991) was a film director in Japan during the Showa period.
  803. Tadashi SATO (Incipient period of the Japanese Army)
  804. Tadashi SATO (July 20, 1849 - April 27, 1920) was a military man of the Imperial Japanese Army in the Meiji Period.
  805. Tadashi SEKINO
  806. Tadashi YOSHIMURA (Deputy chairman. He attended all the meetings. February 11.)
  807. Tadashichi Takashige TAKEBAYASHI
  808. Tadashifukisho
  809. Tadashige AOYAMA [Jugoinoge Inba no kami, Governor of Inba Province, (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  810. Tadashige DAIGO, who was the family head during the Showa Period, joined the navy and was promoted to vice admiral, filling various post including military attach? to the palace, commander of the Fifth Submarine Fleet, commander-in-chief of the Sixth Fleet, but he was designated a war criminal after the war.
  811. Tadashige OKUBO
  812. Tadashige SAKAI
  813. Tadashige SAKAI was a Daimyo (Japanese feudal lord), Roju (member of shogun's council of elders) and Tairo (chief minister) in the later Edo Period.
  814. Tadashige SUZUKI
  815. Tadashige SUZUKI (1574 - 1658) was a chief retainer of Matsushiro Domain.
  816. Tadashige was in charge of the job for 4 months until Tadayuki MAKINO was officially approved as Kyoto Shoshidai at the end of September.
  817. Tadashige was the first son of Tadanori SAKAI, a hatamoto (direct retainer of the bakufu, which is a form of Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) with 5000 koku from the Himeji Domain branch family, but became the main branch's foster child because the lord of Himeji Domain Tadateru SAKAI did not have any biological children.
  818. Tadashige went to Kyoto at the orders of the bakufu in 1862.
  819. Tadashige, however, secretly paid nengu for fear of the deputy-chief of Izu Province, Shigemitsu Kudo, administrator of the Izu Island chain, but when Tametomo found this out, he was furious and chopped off three fingers from Tadashige's hands.
  820. Tadasu WATANABE
  821. Tadasu WATANABE (year of birth unknown - June 3, 1615) was a vassal of the Toyotomi clan.
  822. Tadasu-no-Mori forest
  823. Tadasue TSUTSUMI
  824. Tadasue TSUTSUMI (year of birth unknown - July 27, 1221) was gokenin (an immediate vassal of the shogunate in the Kamakura and Muromachi through Edo periods)in the early Kamakura period.
  825. Tadasue's son, Chujin became the tendai-zasu (the head of Tendai Sect.) and daisojo (the chief priest), and contributed to development of the Tendai Sect.
  826. Tadasuke ICHIJO
  827. Tadasuke ICHIJO (year of birth and death unknown) was kuge (court noble) in the Kamakura period.
  828. Tadasuke KAZANIN
  829. Tadasuke KAZANIN (March 27, 1483 - February 14, 1542) was a kugyo (court noble) who lived during the latter half of the Muromachi period.
  830. Tadasuke ONO, belonging to the Gagakubu (Music Department) of the Imperial Household Ministry, set "Yoimachi-gusa" to music and presented it at a concert at the Geijutsuza (Arts Theatre).
  831. Tadasuke OOKA (Echizen no kami [Governor of Echizen Province], Yamada-bugyo, machi-bugyo [town magistrate], and jisha-bugyo [magistrate of temples and shrines].
  832. Tadasumi left behind a memorial tower at Seishin-ji Temple in Fukaya City, Saitama Prefecture to pray for Tadanori 's departed soul after the battle.
  833. Tadataka HIROHATA entered Teishinsho (Ministry of Communication) and became Todai Kyokucho (Chief of Lighthouse Bureau) and Kansen Kyokucho (Chief of Ship Bureau); he then served at Court as Kogogu daibu (Master of the Empress's Household) and concurrently Jiju jicho (Deputy Grand Chamberlain of the Imperial Household Agency).
  834. Tadataka HIROHATA: He was a marquis.
  835. Tadataka HOSOKAWA
  836. Tadataka HOSOKAWA - Tadaoki HOSOKAWA's 1st son.
  837. Tadataka HOSOKAWA, or Kyumu NAGAOKA, was a busho (Japanese military commander) from the Azuchi-momoyama period to the Edo period.
  838. Tadataka INO (1745 - 1818), a merchant from Kazusa Province, started to study in earnest after retiring from the business and studied measurement and astronomical observation in Edo under Yoshitoki TAKAHASHI (1764 - 1804) of Tenmonkata (Astronomical Institute) of the Edo Bakufu.
  839. Tadataka INO conducted a survey to precisely describe terrain, but information such as who lives where was not included in his map.
  840. Tadataka INO offered a counterargument to him in "Bukkoku Rekishohen Sekimo" (literally, "to eliminate the wrong idea of Bukkoku Rekishohen") and Shingen TAKEDA in Osaka engaged in a battle of words with Entsu, who was visiting Osaka, and argued Entsu down.
  841. Tadataka OKUBO
  842. Tadataka OKUBO (1560 - April 2, 1639) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku period (period of warring states) and the early Edo period.
  843. Tadataka OKUBO (Hikozaemon)
  844. Tadataka OKUBO says in "Mikawa Monogatari" that Kiyoyasu MATSUDAIRA shot guns from all directions when Sanenaga KUMAGAI's force surged the castle.
  845. Tadataka YAMADA
  846. Tadataka did not agree to the divorce and visited the MAEDA family to ask for help.
  847. Tadataka in Kodan storytelling or Koshaku narration
  848. Tadataka kept a close relation with the court nobles who had also been his relatives, and spent a lot of time becoming intimate with a book on poetry entitled "Gumonkenchu"(Answer and question about poetry), Noh, Utai (the chanting of a Noh text), Chanoyu (the tea ceremony) and so forth in Kyoto.
  849. Tadataka was buried in Kotoin of Daitokuji-Temple, Kita Ward, Kyoto City, and a part of his ashes were buried in Saionji family-associated Hojusan Chikurin-in Temple, Kamigyo Ward as well as in a graveyard of the Naizen family at the site of Zuigan-ji Temple, Chiharadai, 3-24, Shimazaki, Kumamoto City.
  850. Tadataka was the eldest son of Tadaoki HOSOKAWA and his mother was Tama whose baptismal name was Gracia HOSOKAWA, a daughter of Tadaoki HOSOKAWA.
  851. Tadataka's livelihood in Kyoto after the disinheritance was supported by his grandfather, Yusai HOSOKAWA who had retired and lived in Kyoto with 6000 koku of his own shoryo (territory).
  852. Tadataka's wife Chiyo, was daughter of Toshiie MAEDA, escaped and survived during the Battle of Sekigahara while Tadaoki's wife committed suicide in the residence at Osaka.
  853. Tadataka's wife, Eiko was the nanny to the Retired Emperor Sutoku, and Tadamori's wife, Muneko, was the nanny to the first son of the Retired Emperor Sutoku, Imperial Prince Shigehito.
  854. Tadatake was born in 1824.
  855. Tadataru DAIGO
  856. Tadataru DAIGO (1819 - 1820) was a retainer of the Imperial Court during the latter half of Edo period.
  857. Tadateru KONOE (1939 to)
  858. Tadateru MATSUDAIRA
  859. Tadateru Matsudaira was a Japanese feudal lord from the Azuchi-Momoyama period to the middle of the Edo period.
  860. Tadateru TORII, hereditary daimyo, entered into the Minakuchi Domain with 20,000 koku of rice from the Notoshimomura Domain in Noto Province.
  861. Tadateru apparently had a coarse side to himself.
  862. Tadateru departed in a hurry to come to Sunpu and asked the chief vassal how Ieyasu was doing.'
  863. Tadateru showed an interest in commerce with other countries and was a man of culture who became acquainted with Japanese tea ceremony, paintings and pharmaceutical sciences as well as martial arts, and also he apparently believed in Christianity and was christened.
  864. Tadateru was disliked by his father throughout his entire life, the same as his second brother Hideyasu YUKI.
  865. Tadateru was promoted to wakadoshiyori from jisha-bugyo in 1711, and transferred to the Mibu Domain in Shimotsuke Province.
  866. Tadateru's properties were confiscated due to his misconducts on August 17, 1616.
  867. Tadato TODA
  868. Tadato TODA (1784-1789)
  869. Tadato TODA (October 17, 1739 - March 14, 1801) was a daimyo (feudal lord) in the middle of the Edo period.
  870. Tadato was born in 1734 as Morimitsu MIZUNO's son.
  871. Tadatoki SHIMAZU
  872. Tadatoki SHIMAZU (1202 ? May 8, 1272) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the early and middle Kamakura period.
  873. Tadatoki SHIMAZU abandoned Takada and withdrew to Izumi.
  874. Tadatomo AOYAMA
  875. Tadatomo AOYAMA [Jugoinoge Inba no kami, Governor of Inba Province, (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)]
  876. Tadatomo AOYAMA was a daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) of the Edo Period and was Osaka jodai (the keeper of Osaka-jo Castle).
  877. Tadatomo GAMO
  878. Tadatomo GAMO was the lord of Kaminoyama Domain in Dewa Province.
  879. Tadatomo HIROHATA and Yorimasa IKEDA were his sons, and Yukiyoshi AOYAMA's wife and Nagatsune TAKAKURA's wife were his daughters.
  880. Tadatomo HIROHATA served as Jiju (Chamberlain).
  881. Tadatomo HIROHATA: He was a captain of the Army and he also had a title of marquis.
  882. Tadatomo HOIDA "Maijinhakko" Inbu 1840
  883. Tadatomo HONDA troop was deployed at Tennoji-guchi and the headquarters of 15,000 soldiers of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA was positioned in its back.
  884. Tadatomo KAWAKAMI
  885. Tadatomo KAWAKAMI (year of birth unknown - 1607) was a warrior during the Warring States period and Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  886. Tadatomo was born in Edo in 1731.
  887. Tadatomo's death resulted in the end of the line of the Omi-Gamo clan, which is said to be caused by a curse.
  888. Tadatoshi HOSOKAWA - Tadaoki HOSOKAWA's 3rd son
  889. Tadatoshi MATSUDAIRA
  890. Tadatoshi MATSUDAIRA (year of birth unknown - January 29, 1646) lived in the Edo period.
  891. Tadatoshi MATSUDAIRA, Kyuo UDONO, Jibuemon KUBOTA, Tesshu YAMAOKA, Kinnosuke NAKAJO, Tadazaburo SASAKI and others were assigned as Roshi Torishimari-yaku.
  892. Tadatoshi NAITO
  893. Tadatoshi OOKA
  894. Tadatoshi OOKA (1572 - September 8, 1600) was a Japanese military commander who lived in the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  895. Tadatoshi invited Yoshitatsu to his new villa at Yamaga Onsen along with his guest Musashi MIYAMOTO.
  896. Tadatsugu INA
  897. Tadatsugu INA: 10,000-koku Musashi-komuro Domain
  898. Tadatsugu MATSUI first served Ieyasu TOKUGAWA, and later he was given the surname "Matsudaira" and called himself Yasuchika Suo-no-kami MATSUDAIRA.
  899. Tadatsugu SAKAI
  900. Tadatsugu SAKAI was a Japanese military commander in Mikawa Province who was active from the Sengoku period (Japan) to the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  901. Tadatsugu SAKAI was born in Ida Castle in Mikawa Province in 1527 as a child of Tadachika SAKAI, a hereditary vassal of the Matsudaira Clan, which was the predecessor of the Tokugawa Clan.
  902. Tadatsugu SAKAI, Yasutada MATSUDAIRA, Koretada MATSUDAIRA, Ietada MATSUDAIRA, Kiyomune MATSUDAIRA, Hirotaka HONDA, Sadayoshi OKUDAIRA, Sadamitsu SUGANUMA, Iekazu SAIGO, Hidemochi KONDO, and Sadamichi SHITARA (who was on standby in Toida)
  903. Tadatsugu first served Hirotada MATSUDAIRA, the father of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA, and he used the name of Kogoro SAKAI and later Saemon no jo.
  904. Tadatsugu joined Ieyasu's troops in major battles including the Battle of Anegawa in 1570, the Battle of Mikatagahara in 1572, the Battle of Nagashino in 1575 and the Battle of Komaki-Nagakute in 1584 and performed distinguished services in these battles.
  905. Tadatsugu objected to the significant discrepancy between the treatment he received and the favorable treatment of 100,000 koku for the other Shitenno members, that is, Tadakatsu HONDA, Yasumasa SAKAKIBARA and Naomasa II (Naomasa alone receiving 120,000 koku).
  906. Tadatsugu reprimanded Yasumasa for that out of jealousy when Naomasa had just become the head of an army.
  907. Tadatsugu was blessed with children by his wife, including Ietsugu SAKAI and Yasutoshi HONDA.
  908. Tadatsugu was good at a dance called Ebisukui (shrimp scooping) and it is said that despite his position of senior vassal, Tadatsugu showed his dance to warlords, lifting their spirits.
  909. Tadatsugu's past achievements were not taken into consideration and Ietsugu was given only 30,000 koku.
  910. Tadatsuna ASHIKAGA
  911. Tadatsuna ASHIKAGA (1164? - date of death unknown) was a military commander who lived towards the end of the Heian period.
  912. Tadatsuna had three sons, FUJIWARA no Nagakane, FUJIWARA no Motokane, and Shingaku.
  913. Tadatsuna immediately led his troops to the capital to fight Yorimasa.
  914. Tadatsuna lost the Battle of Nogimiya, and he stayed in Tatsuoki, Yamagami Village, Kozuke Province.
  915. Tadatsuna successively held various posts, including Tajima no kuni no kami (Governor of Tajima Province), Omi no kuni no kami (Governor of Omi Province), and Togubo (Crown Prince's Quarters), and eventually rose to the rank of Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  916. Tadatsuna was said to be only 17 years old at that time.
  917. Tadatsuna's retainer Rokuro was his only attendant and they hid for several days, but Rokuro admonished Tadatsuna to go along the Sanin-do Highway towards Kyushu (March, 27, 1183).
  918. Tadatsune HONDA
  919. Tadatsune HONDA (1661-May 26, 1709) was the second lord of Koriyama Domain in Yamato Province.
  920. Tadatsune KAZANIN
  921. Tadatsune KAZANIN (January 1173 (by the old calendar) - August 25, 1229) was a kugyo (court noble) who lived in the Kamakura period.
  922. Tadatsune MATSUDAIRA
  923. Tadatsune MATSUDAIRA (February 22, 1790 - May 12, 1810) was the heir of Ueda Domain, Shinano Province.
  924. Tadatsune NAGAOKA and Tadaharu NAGAOKA, who were born between Kyumu and his second wife Kiku, were invited to Kumamoto, Higo by Mitsunao HOSOKAWA after the death of Kyumu and became the Nagaoka-naizen family, a vassal of the Kumamoto clan.
  925. Tadatsune NITTA was killed by the Hojo clan.
  926. Tadatsune SHIMAZU
  927. Tadatsune SHIMAZU (the Shimazu clan didn't join this battle, but he told the following, presuming Nobushige's hard fight based on hearsay).
  928. Tadatsune SHIMAZU initially gave Chui 1000 koku but, for some reason, Chui returned 600 koku.
  929. Tadatsune SHIMAZU was the third son of Yoshihiro SHIMAZU, who was a younger brother of Yoshihisa SHIMAZU, the head of the main family of the Shimazu clan.
  930. Tadatsune behaved outrageously with backing of the mighty military power and it is said he did not pay his taxes and disobeyed kokushi (provincial governor).
  931. Tadatsune captured Yamada-jo Castle in the beginning of a war.
  932. Tadatsune caused an event that he attacked kokufu (provincial office) in Awa Province in June, 1028 and burned to murder Awa no kami (Governor of Awa Province) TAIRA no Koretada.
  933. Tadatsune holed up in a military fortress in Ishimi, Isumi County, Kazusa Province and continued resistance.
  934. Tadatsune obtained permission from Ieyasu TOKUGAWA and returned to his province in order to quell the rebellion by himself.
  935. Tadatsune owned a large territory in Kazusa Province, Shimousa Province and Hitachi Province, behaved outrageously and did not obey orders of the Kokushi (provincial governor) nor fulfill his obligations to pay taxes.
  936. Tadatsune put up stubborn resistance to the government army.
  937. Tadatsune served Yorinobu when he was appointed as Hitachi no suke and Yorinobu thought that he was best suited to settling the situation peacefully.
  938. Tadatsune subsequently occupied the kokuga (provincial government office compounds) in the Kazusa province.
  939. Tadatsune surrendered to MINAMOTO no Yoshinobu immediately because his troops were devastated in the protracted war with Naokata.
  940. Tadatsune took over the sphere of influence built by his grandfather and father and possessed vast shoryo in Hitachi Province, Kazusa Province and Shimousa Province.
  941. Tadatsune was born in 1701 as the son of Tadachika MIZUNO, Dewa no kami.
  942. Tadatsune was under suspension at Jingo-ji Temple on Mt. Takao.
  943. Tadatsune's descendants remained as powerful samurai in Boso Peninsula and formed the Kazusa clan and the Chiba clan which became gokenin (an immediate vasal of the shogunate) in the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) afterwards.
  944. Tadatsune's gravestone has been designated as a cultural property of Yamatokoriyama City, on which a biography of Tadatsune was inscribed by Nobuatsu HAYASHI.
  945. Tadatsune's head was exposed, but it was returned to his followers since the head of Koin (person of surrender) should not be exposed and the sins of Tadatsune's children TAIRA no Tsunemasa and TAIRA no Tsunechika were forgiven.
  946. Tadatsune's lawful wife was Tsunaakira ASANO's daughter.
  947. Tadatsune, regarded as a rebel by the state, was forced to resist to the bitter end.
  948. Tadatsura was born in Edo in 1655.
  949. Tadauji KISHIDA
  950. Tadauji KISHIDA (? - January 20, 1616) was a feudal warlord in the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  951. Tadayasu AOYAMA (1802-1804)
  952. Tadayasu MAENO (He fought for the spearhead convoy of the Ishida squad, and died during the battle, together with his son.)
  953. Tadayasu MAENO (Ronin [masterless samurai])
  954. Tadayasu NAKAYAMA
  955. Tadayasu NAKAYAMA (December 17, 1809-June 12, 1888) was a kuge (court noble) and a politician who lived from the end of the Edo period to the early part of the Meiji period.
  956. Tadayasu NAKAYAMA (court noble)
  957. Tadayasu NAKAYAMA, who was a great-grandchild of Naruchika, was the father of Yasuko NAKAYAMA, who was the biological mother of the Emperor Meiji.
  958. Tadayasu NAKAYAMA: juichii, (Junior First Court Rank) supreme order, Marquis, Jingihaku (administrator of the institution for dedicating to religious ceremony)
  959. Tadayasu SONOBE, an inhabitant of Kii Province, joined forces with Tadakage AMA, but Noritsune also defeated them, slaying over 200 warriors, and Tadayasu and Tadakage fled to the Capital of Kyoto.
  960. Tadayasu played an active role during the period from the end of the Edo period to the Meiji Restoration and he was opposed to joyaku chokkyo (literally, the imperial approval of the treaty) and promoted koka (the marriage of an Imperial Princess to a subject) of Imperial Princess Kazunomiya Chikako.
  961. Tadayo FUKUO is his third son (soccer player).
  962. Tadayo OKUBO: 45,000-koku Odawara Domain
  963. Tadayo said to Naomasa, 'All your comrades eat the same food.
  964. Tadayori ICHIJO, Kanenobu ITAGAKI and Nobumitsu TAKEDA were his brothers.
  965. Tadayori MATSUDAIRA was his brother who succeeded to the Sakurai Matsudaira clan.
  966. Tadayori MATSUDAIRA, the commissioner of temples and shrines, was perplexed and asked Kanei-ji Temple (the Tandaishu sect) and Zojo-ji Temple (the Jodoshu sect), family temples belonging to the Tokugawa shogun's family, for their opinions about the proposal.
  967. Tadayori was born in 1824.
  968. Tadayosh and others intercepted Yoshisada in Tegoshigawara, Suruga Province (modern-day Suruga Ward, Shizuoka City, Shizuoka Prefecture) but his forces were defeated.
  969. Tadayoshi ASHIKAGA
  970. Tadayoshi ASHIKAGA accepted Takauji's request to send Akiuji HOSOKAWA to attack the Southern Court forces, but it ended in failure.
  971. Tadayoshi ASHIKAGA escaped from Kyoto again and opposed to Takauji, and Yoshinori was defeated by Takauji's troop at Kanbara, Suruga Province.
  972. Tadayoshi ASHIKAGA seized real power instead of a very young prince, and it later became the local office of the Muromachi bakufu in the Kanto region.
  973. Tadayoshi ASHIKAGA was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived during the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  974. Tadayoshi AWATAGUCHI
  975. Tadayoshi HONDA died on September 26, 1676.
  976. Tadayoshi HONGO
  977. Tadayoshi HONGO (March 11, 1590 - March 7, 1631) was a military commander in Kyushu from the Azuchi-Momoyama period to the early Edo period.
  978. Tadayoshi ICHIJO
  979. Tadayoshi ICHIJO (May 2, 1774 - July 5, 1837) was a Court noble who lived during the Edo period.
  980. Tadayoshi MATSUDAIRA was the fourth son of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA and had been given 490 thousand koku crop yields in Owari Province.
  981. Tadayoshi SAKAI (the lord of Obama Domain in Wakasa Province), who had been appointed as Kyoto Shoshidai during the Ansei no Taigoku (suppression of extremists by the Shogunate) period, stayed at the post even after the assassination of Naosuke II and his dismissal was being requested by the Imperial court.
  982. Tadayoshi SHIMAZU (lord of Satsuma Domain)
  983. Tadayoshi SHIMAZU, the twenty-ninth family head, was Hisamitsu's first son.
  984. Tadayoshi advanced westward with troops of Noriaki UESUGI, Yoshifusa ISHIDO and Yorifusa ISHIDO.
  985. Tadayoshi became Yoshiakira's assistant and got involved in political affairs again.
  986. Tadayoshi became a priest and lost his power, but it is said that Moronao and Takauji made an arrangement to exclude Tadayoshi.
  987. Tadayoshi chased Moronao and defeated Takauji at Settsu and they made their peace.
  988. Tadayoshi died in 1352 and the Kanno Disturbance came to an end, however warlords in the country defected from Noriaki, and he was eventually exiled to Shinano Province.
  989. Tadayoshi died on April 1, 1607, and because he had no heir, his properties was confiscated.
  990. Tadayoshi died suddenly in February, 1352.
  991. Tadayoshi fled Kyoto and after passing through the Hokuriku region and Shinano Province, he rallied an anti-Takauji force with Kamakura serving as a base.
  992. Tadayoshi had managed the shomusata by establishing the Hikitsukekata (adjudication office) based on an old system adopted by the Kamakura bakufu, however the business became gradually complicated.
  993. Tadayoshi originally used one character from the name of Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) regent Takatoki HOJO and took the name Takakuni but subsequently changed his name to Tadayoshi (直義) and then to Tadayoshi (直義).
  994. Tadayoshi requested an Imperial order to attack Moronao from Emperor Kogon of the Southern Court to kill Moronao, but on August 12, Moronao gathered troops together with Moroyasu KO who came to the capital from Kawachi and made a preemptive strike against Tadayoshi.
  995. Tadayoshi returned to the administration in a position to support Yoshiakira.
  996. Tadayoshi returned to the political world, and Tadafuyu was named Kyushu tandai in April.
  997. Tadayoshi understood that only authority from the Retired Emperor Kogon as Chiten, would have proved the legitimate political power of the Muromachi bakufu.
  998. Tadayoshi was Takauji's younger brother by one year and the brothers were originally extremely close, with Takauji having immense trust in Tadayoshi.
  999. Tadayoshi was born in 1707 as the son of Tadachika, Dewa no kami.
  1000. Tadayoshi was born in 1792.


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