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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. Takamoto ANEKOJI
  2. Takamoto ANEKOJI (1298 - April 18, 1358) was a court noble from the Kamakura period to the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  3. Takamoto ASHIKAGA
  4. Takamoto had a younger brother "Konen," who was a Buddhist priest.
  5. Takamoto initially supported the shogun, but began to lean towards the government army side after serving as a guard of the old imperial palace during the Hamaguri Rebellion, and, in January 1868, he quickly took the side of the new government with the help of Kinmochi SAIONJI.
  6. Takamoto was just as capable as his father, and committed himself to the education of the people, changing the name of Shintokukan, the clan school, to Tokushinkan and founding six local schools in the following year.
  7. Takamune's wife and children were sent to Tofuku-ji Temple.
  8. Takamura established 'Taishu Bungei Eigasha' and 'Shoei Makino' with the help of Sanjugo NAOKI, a novelist and film producer.
  9. Takamura resigned as the head of studio and Tatsugoro ABE became the head of 'Tokatsu Eiga Tojiin Studio.'
  10. Takamura strived to restore Toa Kinema, which had lost its parent company, and in 1930 a capital alliance was formed with 'Takarazuka Eiga' which had been established by Ichizo KOBAYASHI of Hankyu Railway.
  11. Takamusuhi and Amaterasu asked Yaoyorozu no kami who should be sent again, and this time they and Omohikane talked and answered, 'Amenowakahiko should be sent.'
  12. Takan Style (Multiple trunks)
  13. Takana (Leaf mustard)
  14. Takana (scientific name: Brassica juncea var. integlifolia) is a biennial grass belonging to brassica family, and a variety of Brassica juncea.
  15. Takana lightly soaked in liquid preparation without fermentation is popular in recent years.
  16. Takanabe Domain: Takanabe-jo Castle
  17. Takanabe failed on the 2nd, then the Battle of Mimitsu started on the 3rd.
  18. Takanabe-tai troop (Shukichi ISHII, Morokiyo SAKATA)
  19. Takanaga KYOGOKU
  20. Takanaga KYOGOKU (June 12, 1695 - August 5, 1769) was the fifth hereditary domain head of the Mineyama Domain in Tango Province.
  21. Takanaga YOSHIDA was his younger brother.
  22. Takanaga was born in Tanagura, Mutsu Province in June 12, 1695.
  23. Takanaga was sentenced to life in prison, and he died in prison in 1928 while he was serving his time.
  24. Takanaga was the third son (some say forth) of Kazunobu NAITO the lord of Tanagura Domain in Mutsu Province (and subsequently the lord of Murakami Domain in Echigo Province).
  25. Takanaka ITSUTSUJI
  26. Takanaka ITSUTSUJI (January 19, 1808 - June 5, 1896) was a 'kugyo' (a senior court noble of Third Rank and above) who lived from the end of the Edo period (alternatively called the Bakumatsu, meaning the last days of the Tokugawa shogunate) into the Meiji period.
  27. Takanaka KYOGOKU, Takanori's first son, was treated as the heir.
  28. Takanaka NISHIOJI.
  29. Takanaka died at the age of 80 on June 5, 1886.
  30. Takanaka had an adopted son, Tsugunaka ITSUTSUJI (whose biological father was Shigenari OHARA) and biological sons, Yasunaka ITSUTSUJI (who was adopted by Tsugunaka) and Fuminaka NISHIITSUTSUJI (the founder of the NISHIITSUTSUJI family).
  31. Takanaka was adopted by Toyonaka ITSUTSUJI who was a Junii Hisangi (an advisor at large of Junior Second Rank).
  32. Takanaka was the thirty-third head of the Itsutsuji family which was a 'hanke' ('kuge' court noble of lower rank).
  33. Takanaka's biological father was Gon Dainagon (Provisional Major Counselor) Shigeyoshi NIWATA.
  34. Takanaka's lawful wife (which was called 'seishitsu' in Japanese) was from the Yamaguchi clan, and his second wife (which was called 'keishitsu' in Japanese) was a daughter of Tadayoshi MATSUYAMA.
  35. Takanaka's official court rank was shonii hisangi (an advisor at large of Senior Second Rank).
  36. Takanao HOJO
  37. Takanao HOJO is a busho (Japanese military commander) over the end of the Kamakura period and the early period of the Northern and Southern Courts.
  38. Takanao KAWARA and Yukiyasu FUJITA, from Noriyori's army, were killed.
  39. Takanao KUKI
  40. Takanao KUKI (1687 - Sep.11, 1752) was a daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) of the Edo period.
  41. Takanao KUKI (became the lord of the domain in May, 1698, retired at the end of January, 1713)
  42. Takanao KYOGOKU
  43. Takanao KYOGOKU (January 1, 1633 - February 14, 1663) was the second lord of Tanabe Domain of Tango Province.
  44. Takanao UENO restored Manju-zan Hoon-ji Temple of the Rinzai sect in Ichiba Village, Shimotsumichi County and turned it into the family temple.
  45. Takanao did, however, manage to establish Shintokukan, a clan school.
  46. Takanao, the eldest son of Takamitsu, succeeded the father's station.
  47. Takanari NISHIOJI.
  48. Takanawa negotiation
  49. Takanawa negotiation and shift to new currency system
  50. Takanawa, Minato Ward, Tokyo, (Tokyo Prefecture)
  51. Takane nishiki
  52. Takanezakura series
  53. Takano branch shop, Izumiya - around the Higashioji-dori Street/Kawabata-dori Street
  54. Takano himself opened a synactic shop and supported the activity.
  55. Takano no Misasagi Mausoleum in Misasagi Town, Nara City, Nara Prefecture, is identified as her mausoleum while the identification of Saki Takatsuka Tumulus in the Mausoleum as the Mausoleum of Empress Koken remains questionable because it is a keyhole-shaped tomb mound composing the Sakitatenami Burial Mounds.
  56. Takano soba (Hashimoto City and Ito-gun)
  57. Takano-gawa River
  58. Takano-gawa River (Kyoto City)
  59. Takano-gawa River (Kyoto Prefecture)
  60. Takano-gawa River (Maizuru City)
  61. Takanobashi Bridge (Takano-gawa River (Kyoto City))
  62. Takanobu KUKI
  63. Takanobu KUKI (1700 to June 19, 1786) was the fourth lord of Ayabe Domain, Tanba Province.
  64. Takanobu KUKI (became the lord of the domain at the end of January, 1713, retired on March 8, 1766)
  65. Takanobu KYOGOKU
  66. Takanobu KYOGOKU (1838 - May 13, 1893) was the 12th (the last) hereditary domain head of the Mineyama Domain in Tango Province.
  67. Takanobu RYUZOJI
  68. Takanobu TAKANASHI
  69. Takanobu TAKANASHI was a samurai lived in the late Heian period.
  70. Takanobu TAKEDA (the eldest son)
  71. Takanobu became a Buddhism priest in 1202.
  72. Takanobu became a believer of Buddhism under a Buddhist priest Honen who started Jodo sect, a Buddhist faction.
  73. Takanobu group *One of the members belonged to the Hosshoji group.
  74. Takanobu had three sons--Morinobu (Tanyu 1602 - 1674), Naonobu KANO (1607 - 1650) and Yasunobu KANO(1613 - 1685)--and they respectively became the earliest ancestor of the Kajibashi Kano family, Kobikicho Kano family and Nakabashi Kano family.
  75. Takanobu sequentially fulfilled the roles of an assistant governor of Kozuke Province, the governor of Echizen Province, and the governor of Wakasa Province.
  76. Takanobu was an excellent painter of portraits and it is described in "Jingo-ji Ryakuki" (An Abbreviated Record of Jingo-ji Temple) that the portraits such as those of MINAMOTO no Yoritomo, TAIRA no Shigemori, and FUJIWARA no Mitsuyoshi which are stored in Shingo-ji temple are national treasures which were painted by Takanobu.
  77. Takanobu was born October 28, 1839.
  78. Takanobu was raised by FUJIWARA no Toshinari who was the husband from a remarriage by Takanobu's mother (FUJIWARA no Teika, a tanka poet, was a half younger brother of Takanobu with the same mother).
  79. Takanobu was the second son of Takanori KYOGOKU, who served as a kosho (shogun's page) retainer and a 500 koku allowance.
  80. Takanobu's children included FUJIWARA no Nobuzane, a portrait painter, and Juntokuin no Hyoe no Naishi, a tanka poet.
  81. Takanobu's court rank: Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade).
  82. Takanobu's father was FUJIWARA no Tametsune (Jakucho) who was the governor of Nagato Province.
  83. Takanobu's mother was a daughter of FUJIWARA no Chikatada who was the governor of Wakasa Province.
  84. Takanobu, who had entered into an alliance with the Mori clan of Aki, killed the lord of Shikano-jo Castle Toyonari YAMANA (the son of Nobumichi) in 1563 by poisoning him, and he defeated Toyokazu in the Battle of Yutokoroguchi during April of the same year.
  85. Takanoha
  86. Takanoha (also known as fern)
  87. Takanoha is a design of hawk feathers.
  88. Takanohara Station - Nanyo-koko (Kyoto Prefectural Nanyo Senior High School) - Yamadagawa Station - Kizugawadai-Jutaku residential area
  89. Takanori KOJIMA
  90. Takanori KOJIMA (dates of birth and death are unknown) was a samurai from Bizen Province who lived from the end of the Kamakura period to the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  91. Takanori KUKI
  92. Takanori KUKI (September 28, 1800 - May 30, 1853) was the eigth lord of he Ayabe Domain, Tanba Province.
  93. Takanori KUKI (became the lord of the domain on July 5, 1808, retired on January 24, 1822)
  94. Takanori KYOGOKU
  95. Takanori KYOGOKU (1352 - 1401) was a family head and a Shugo Daimyo (Japanese Territorial Lord as Military Commissioner), of the Kyogoku clan during the early years of the Muromachi period.
  96. Takanori KYOGOKU who became a peer opened a farm in Kyogoku-cho, Abuta county, Hokkaido, which later became the origin of the town's name.
  97. Takanori NISHIOJI.
  98. Takanori SHIJO, the son of Takachika, died in 1977, but the direct Shijo line is still good health, as shown in a recent Nippon Hoso Kyokai (NHK) documentary featuring the family.
  99. Takanori attacked Enshin AKAMATSU, who was on the Ashikaga side, together with Yoshisada NITTA in the following year, but they were defeated severely.
  100. Takanori reinstated the Sangatsue ritual at the Izumo-taisha Shrine that had been interrupted.
  101. Takanori served Yoshimitu ASHIKAGA, the Seii Taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians").
  102. Takanori went to Sugisaka, the border of Harima and Mimasaka Provinces, to catch up the Emperor and the escort, but they already almost reached Innosho (today's Tsuyama City, Okayama Prefecture) by that time, and his troops were dispersed like mist because of this wrong strategy.
  103. Takanori's descendants lived in this area, and there are Takanori's tomb and a monument of honor.
  104. Takanori's tomb is about 100 meters away from there.
  105. Takao (Kyoto City)
  106. Takao Branch Office
  107. Takao IWAMI (class of 1958, law): He was a political reporter for Mainichi Newspaper Co., Ltd., and took an active part in the report on the Lockheed scandal and a collusive relationship between Japan and Korea.
  108. Takao KOBAYASHI, an astronomer who lives in Oizumi town, Gunma Prefecture, named the asteroid (temporary code 1997 AY1) that he found in 1997 'Yatagarasu,' and it was registered as (9106) Yatagarasu (asteroid) on August 9, 2004.
  109. Takao Maru Warship
  110. Takao SUGIHASHI advanced a theory that Munechika MAKI, who was supposed to be Maki no kata's father or older brother, was the same person as FUJIWARA no Munechika, a brother of Ike no zenni ("Sonpi Bunmyaku" (Bloodlines of Noble and Base)).
  111. Takao tayu (Yoshiwara, Edo)
  112. Takao tayu or Agemaki tayu are known even until today as legendary courtesans.
  113. Takao-Sagano (Y course): (operated only during fall high-season) walk through Takao (Kyoto City), Arashiyama-Takao Parkway, walk through Sagano
  114. Takaoka City, Toyama Prefecture (Takaoka Tanabata Matsuri) central district of the city
  115. Takaoka City, Toyama Prefecture (Toide Tanabata Matsuri) former Toide-cho area (Toide area) July 3 to July 7
  116. Takaoka Clan was one of the clans of Japan.
  117. Takaoka Mikurumayama-matsuri Festival (February 3, 1979; Takaoka City; Takaoka Mikurumayama Hozonkai [Takaoka Mikurumayama Preservation Association])
  118. Takaoka shi (Takaoka Clan)
  119. Takaoka was stripped of his position as Crown Prince and also became a priest.
  120. Takaokami no Kami
  121. Takaokami no Kami is the enshrined deity of Kibune-jinja Shrine (Kyoto City).
  122. Takaomaru (Kenzo OGASAWARA, self-burned at the Kunohe port in March 1869)
  123. Takaosan Yakuo-in Temple (Hachioji City, Tokyo)
  124. Takaosan-ji Temple
  125. Takara
  126. Takara and his troops saw that in the distance from Takayasu-no-ki Castle, and went down to the west of Ega-no-gawa River to fight against the Karakuni's troops.
  127. Takara was from Silla and had the Japanese name of 'Ryukan' and the posthumous name of 'Kunimi no Muraji Takara.'
  128. Takarabune (treasure ship)
  129. Takarabune (treasure ship) is the sailing ship on which Shichifukujin (Seven Deities of Good Luck) and treasures are loaded, or the picture that depicts the scene.
  130. Takaragaike Driving School
  131. Takaragaike Kodomo no Rakuen: Nagareda-cho, Kamitakano, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City
  132. Takaragaike Park
  133. Takaragaike Park Sports Facility Ball Grounds, Kyoto City
  134. Takaragaike Park Sports Facility Ball Grounds, Kyoto City refers to a ball field in Takaragaike Park in Matsugasaki Nishiikenouchi-cho, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  135. Takaragaike Park Sports Facility Ball Park
  136. Takaragaike Park and Grand Prince Hotel are located nearby.
  137. Takaragaike Pond was built as an agricultural irrigation pond in the Edo period.
  138. Takaragaike Station
  139. Takaragaike Station - Hachiman-mae Station (Kyoto Prefecture) - Iwakura Station (Kyoto Prefecture) - Kino Station - Kyoto-Seikadai-mae Station - Nikenchaya Station (Kyoto Prefecture) - Ichihara Station - Ninose Station - Kibune-guchi Station - Kurama Station
  140. Takaragaike Station - Hachimanmae Station (Kyoto Prefecture)
  141. Takaragaike Station - Hachimanmae Station - Iwakura Station (Kyoto Prefecture)
  142. Takaragaike Station - Miyakehachiman Station - Yase-Hieizanguchi Station
  143. Takaragaike Station, located in the Sakyo ward of Kyoto City, is a stop on the Eizan Main Line and the Kurama Line of the Eizan-dentetsu (Eizan Electric Railway).
  144. Takaragaike bus stop
  145. Takaragaike-dori Street
  146. Takaragaike-dori Street is a primary street running east-west through Kyoto City.
  147. Takaragaike-koen Park
  148. Takaragaike-koen Park is located in Sakyo Ward in Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  149. Takaragaike-koen Park was built for the people of the city to make use of this pond for recreation.
  150. Takarakuji (lottery starting in 1945)
  151. Takaraya
  152. Takaraya joined a ramen theme park, 'Kyoto-Ramen-Koji' in Kyoto Station Building as a representative of Kyoto.
  153. Takarazuka Kinema
  154. Takarazuka Kinema Kogyo
  155. Takarazuka Kinema Kogyo (established in November of 1932, liquidated in February of 1934) was a film company that existed in Kyoto.
  156. Takarazuka Line
  157. Takarazuka Line / Mino Line
  158. Takarazuka Revue, that became renowned as one of the major entertaining groups since the establishment in 1914, has three groups: Flower, Moon, and Snow, which also derived from setsugetsuka.
  159. Takasa was a friendly person and had close relationships with a narrow circle of acquaintances including his old screenwriter Kajiro YAMAMOTO and cinematographer Saburo ISAYAMA.
  160. Takasada ENYA
  161. Takasada ENYA (Birth unknown-April 27, 1341) was the busho (Japanese military commander) who lived between the end of Kamakura to the Nanbokucho periods (the period of the Northern and Southern Courts) (Japan).
  162. Takasada KUKI
  163. Takasada KUKI (1729 - January 6, 1781 (December 12, 1780 in old lunar calendar)) was the fifth lord of the Ayabe Domain, Tanba Province.
  164. Takasada KUKI (became the lord of the domain on March 8, 1766, died on December 12, 1780)
  165. Takasada SHIJO
  166. Takasada SHIJO (unknown - January 1335 (December 1334 in old calendar)) was a kugyo (the top court officials) serving Yoshino Imperial Court (the Southern Court) in the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  167. Takasago
  168. Takasago (Noh play)
  169. Takasago Building, Kobe Bankers Association
  170. Takasago tayu
  171. Takasago tayu is a former Shimabara tayu (a high ranking courtesan of the Shimabara district in Kyoto) from Shimogyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  172. Takasago, a kind of sea fish, is called gurukun in the Okinawa dialect.
  173. Takasago: Make the people glad with Senshuraku (a dance to celebrate Thousand Autumns).
  174. Takasaka no Okimi
  175. Takasaka no Okimi (year of birth unknown - June 6, 683) lived in the Asuka period in Japan.
  176. Takasaka no Okimi and Momotari set up camp under the zelkova tree on the western side of Asuka-dera Temple (a sacred place).
  177. Takasaka no Okimi and Wakasa no Okimi also joined Fukei's army.
  178. Takasaka no Okimi and Wakasa no Okimi also supported Fukei.
  179. Takasaka no Okimi declined to hand over ekirei, but he didn't capture the envoys.
  180. Takasaka no Okimi served as a guard of the City in Yamato at the time of the outbreak of the Jinshin war.
  181. Takasaka no Okimi started to organize the army along with the envoys, Hozumi no Momotari, Hozumi no Ioe, and Monobe no Himuka.
  182. Takasaki Daruma doll
  183. Takasaki Daruma dolls are also referred to as 'Joshu Daruma,' which is not an official name (Takasaki Daruma is a registered regional organization trademark).
  184. Takasaki Daruma dolls are produced in Takasaki City, Gunma Prefecture.
  185. Takasaki Daruma dolls have a red body in the shape close to a globe with a white sunken face, on which broad beards and eyebrows are painted.
  186. Takasaki Domain: Takasaki-jo Castle
  187. Takasaki Kannon (Deity of Mercy) (in Takasaki City, Gunma Prefecture), Kongo-in Temple (in Hachioji City), Natadera Temple (in Komatsu City, Ishikawa Prefecture), Fudo-ji Temple (in Tsubata-machi, Ishikawa Prefecture)
  188. Takasaki-date
  189. Takasato KUKI
  190. Takasato KUKI (October30, 1780 - June 23, 1808) was the seventh lord of the Ayabe Domain, Tanba Province.
  191. Takasato KUKI (became the lord of the domain on April 7, 1787, died at the end of May, 1808)
  192. Takase Hosokawa family
  193. Takase was a doctor and a scholar in the Kii Domain, who participated in research on the Ming code since the days of Mitsusada.
  194. Takase-cha (Kagawa Prefecture)
  195. Takase-gawa River (Kyoto Prefecture)
  196. Takase-gawa River (Kyoto Prefecture) Ichinofunairi, Kiyamachi-dori Street
  197. Takase-gawa River Ichi no Funairi
  198. Takase-gawa River Ichi no Funairi (an artificially generated cove) is a cove in the Takase-gawa River (in Kyoto Prefecture) that provides a pier for boats.
  199. Takasebune (The Boat on the River Takase) (Novel) ("the Chuo koron," January 1916).
  200. Takasebune (The Boat on the River Takase, a novel)
  201. Takasegawa genryuteien (the garden of the source of Takasegawa River) (the former residence of Ryoi SUMIKURA and official residence of Aritomo YAMAGATA and currently Ganko Takasegawa Nijoen) in Chukyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  202. Takashi HARA (the Prime Minister) (He also left the school halfway due to the 'steward punishment incident'.)
  203. Takashi HARA was the first serving councilor of the House of Representatives who became the Prime Ministor and out of 33 Prime Ministers under the Constitution of the Empire of Japan, there were only two more such cases: Osachi HAMAGUCHI and Tsuyoshi INUKAI.
  204. Takashi HARA who took office as the Minister of Home Affairs sought to introduce a single-member constituency system to the election of members of the House of Representatives, but it was rejected due to the oppose of the House of Peers of Japan.
  205. Takashi HARA, who became a Commoner Prime Minister in the Taisho period, came from a family of high-ranking warriors.
  206. Takashi HOSOKAWA's 'Kitasakaba' (North Bar) does not fit into any categories above.
  207. Takashi HOSOKAWA, Harumi MIYAKO, and other Japanese enka singers are also accepted widely in Ethiopia.
  208. Takashi MAKINO and Takashi ITO were invited and appeared on a talk show after their works were screened.
  209. Takashi MASUDA, a businessman and a famous collector of antiques, once owned reikan which consisted of parts of the tenth and eleventh volumes, but these volumes were later divided.
  210. Takashi MATSUMOTO, Haiku poet was his older brother.
  211. Takashi NAGASE (Critic)
  212. Takashi SUGAI (the birth year unknown - 1985)
  213. Takashi TAKAHASHI opposed to his theory based on the phrase 'the law of the nation's governance legislated as Fukai-no-Joten/ Fukaijoten,' however, many of the scholars agreed with the IWAHASHI's theory.
  214. Takashi TAKAHASHI, the first person who paid attention to this point, argued that the law of the nation's governance means a law of ruling and therefore, naturally it means nothing, but the Rituryo codes, and the Ritsuryo established by Emperor Tenchi is Omi-Ryo, thus Fukai-no-Joten/ Fukaijoten is the Omi-Ryo.
  215. Takashi TANAKA assumed that it was not a law to lay down detailed regulations, but to set up the basic principle that Japan was a country that would be successively ruled by the emperors.
  216. Takashi TANAKA presented the theory that the first description and the second one are referring to different laws.
  217. Takashi TANAKA who supported the Kokoku Shikan kept his interest in the issue of the Imperial Throne and picked up the issue of succession after the war.
  218. Takashi TANEMURA (nine times in total; eight terms since 1985, and 1995)
  219. Takashi YAMAMOTO
  220. Takashi YAMAMOTO (September 18, 1936 -) is a Nohgakushi (Noh actor) playing stick drums of Okura-ryu school.
  221. Takashi YOSHIMATSU, 'Chomu Mai' (dream dance of a bird)
  222. Takashige ARAI explains that this major renovation period enabled Todai-ji Temple to develop into a medieval temple in Japan with transition to a manorial economy.
  223. Takashige MAKINO
  224. Takashige MAKINO was the ninth head of Tanabe Domain of Tango Province.
  225. Takashige supported opening the country, and was said to be a open and liberal lord.
  226. Takashige's grandson, Nobukado ODA became Koke, and thereafter, the family continued as Koke Hatamoto (direct retainers of the bakufu, who were in a privileged family under Tokugawa Shogunate) to the end of Edo period.
  227. Takashima City
  228. Takashima City (Shiga Prefecture)
  229. Takashima City Hall
  230. Takashima City Shin-asahi Kita Elementary School
  231. Takashima City Taishi-yama Mountain Sakuraen Garden
  232. Takashima City in Shiga Prefecture
  233. Takashima City, Shiga Prefecture
  234. Takashima County was given to Nobusumi TSUDA who was of the Oda family.
  235. Takashima Domain: Takashima-jo Castle
  236. Takashimada (Late Edo Period; Worn by, originally, the girls and young women of the samurai families, and now modern brides)
  237. Takashimaya
  238. Takashina Clan (the clan of which the first son of Emperor Tenmu, Prince Takechi [Takechi no Miko] was the ancestor)
  239. Takashina clan
  240. Takashina clan is the clan of which the first son of Emperor Tenmu, Prince Takechi, was the ancestor.
  241. Takashiro castle, which in Japanese is written with the same characters as Taka-jo Castle, is a castle that existed in Takaku District, Hizen Province.
  242. Takasu Domain (Mino Province)
  243. Takasu, Saijo and Takamatsu Domains were renshi of the Owari, Kishu and Mito families, respectively, and their family names were all Matsudaira; even in Gosanke, only the family heads and their heirs were privileged to use the name of Tokugawa as the names of others were Matsudaira.
  244. Takasue KUKI
  245. Takasue KUKI (1608 - Jul.18, 1678) was the first lord of Ayabe Domain in Tanba Province.
  246. Takasue KUKI (became the lord of the domain on March 5, 1633, retired on November 16, 1674)
  247. Takasue SHIJO, the 13th generation of Uona, took the name Shijo at the end of the Heian period.
  248. Takasue allocated 500 koku to his younger brother Takashige KUKI on March 28, 1661 and founded a branch family.
  249. Takasue also created a castle town and implemented a land survey to strengthen the administrative base of the domain.
  250. Takasue attempted to maintain his status by forming an amicable relationship with the Taira clan.
  251. Takasue became the retired Emperor Takakura's Shitsuji-betto (chief officer), and he accompanied him on the Emperor's visit Itsukushima in March.
  252. Takasue's younger sister was the wife of Kiyomori's biological son, TAIRA no Shigemori, and Takasue himself also took Kiyomori's daughter as the wife of his own biological son, Takafusa.
  253. Takasugi accepted almost all terms proposed, but persistently refused this "lease of territory" and finally succeeded in eliminating it.
  254. Takasugi also joined the Sonno Joi movement with Kogoro KATSURA (Takayoshi KIDO) and Yoshisuke KUSAKA (Genzui KUSAKA) and launched a campaign in Kyoto espousing loyalty to the Emperor, nullification of treaties and the expelling of foreigners, in cooperation with royalists from other clans.
  255. Takasugi also transferred the remains of Shoin, who had been executed as a rebel against the shogunate, from Odawara to Setagaya in broad daylight, and held a funeral service.
  256. Takasugi returned home in December 1860 and married the second daughter of Yamaguchi town magistrate Heiemon INOUE, Masa, who was said to be the most beautiful lady in Suo and Nagato Provinces.
  257. Takasugi then pressed for the opening of Shimonoseki Port to foreigners, which led both the reformist and moderate factions to try to kill him, and in April he escaped to the Shikoku region with his mistress Ono (later called Baishoni), relying on the support of Enseki KUSANAGI there.
  258. Takasugi undertook military reforms such as the creation of the Kiheitai (irregular militia) and adopting a Western-style military, asking Omura to train them.
  259. Takasugi was in put charge of the defense of Shimonoseki.
  260. Takasugi's tomb is in Shimonoseki City, Yamaguchi Prefecture.
  261. Takasugi, having seen the situation of the Qing dynasty, understood that the "fixed-term lease of territory" was a method of colonization.
  262. Takasugi, who organized a militia group adopting a Western-style military system named Kiheitai and consolidated the existing military units in the Choshu Domain, carried out a military reform by appointing Masujiro OMURA, equipping the army with the latest weapons like Gewehr rifles and Minie rifles changing tactics.
  263. Takasuke MITOYA, the legitimate son of Hisasuke, served the Mori clan and fought in Korea in the Mori's force during the Bunroku-Keicho War.
  264. Takasuke SHIJO
  265. Takasuke SHIJO (1292 - June 30, 1352) was a noble man who served the Yoshino Court during the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  266. Takasuke SHIJO (tonin for the Nankaido and Saikaido regions)
  267. Takasuke SHIJO was his father.
  268. Takasuke SHIJO was killed in this skirmish.
  269. Takasuke fortunately escaped from the pursuit by the bakufu army, he was sheltered by Imperial Prince Morinaga and Masashige KUSUNOKI, but defeated by the attack of the bakufu army, and ran away again to Kii Province to enter into priesthood.
  270. Takasuke was short of recovering his fief Mitoya, and left the Mori clan to be a vassal of the Hosokawa clan; during the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, he joined the army locking itself up in Tanabejo Castle in Tango Province and where he provided exemplary service.
  271. Takasumi Onsen Hot Spring (Shimohirano district): Take Nara Prefectural Road No.28 Yoshino-Muroji-Hari Route to the north from around Deai, Higashiyoshino Village.
  272. Takasumi Onsen Hot Spring: weak alkaline salt spring
  273. Takata no himemiko (Imperial Princess Takata)
  274. Takata-go
  275. Takatada TAGA
  276. Takatada TAGA (1425?September 23, 1486) was a busho (military commander) during the Muromachi Period.
  277. Takatada TAKAYA, the steward of Myoho-in Temple, and his descendents handed down the tea ceremony, which is called the Sekishuan or Ouchi-ha branch.
  278. Takatada had an active career as the right-hand man of his lord and also his biological cousin Mochikiyo KYOGOKU.
  279. Takatada twice served as a member of Samurai dokoro (the Board of Retainers) and was known as a fine shoshidai (representative of the Governor of the Board of Retainers).
  280. Takatada was one of intellectuals of those days being also acquainted with waka and renga (linked verse).
  281. Takatada was the child of Takanaga TAGA.
  282. Takatada was well-versed in Buke-kojitsu (regulations governing the customs of the samurai class) studying archery under Mochinaga OGASAWARA and writing "Takatada kikigaki."
  283. Takatada's mnemonic name was Daigen.
  284. Takatane TAKAHASHI
  285. Takatane TAKAHASHI (year of birth unknown - 1535) was a daimyo who ruled Chikugo Province in the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  286. Takatane died in 1535.
  287. Takatane's father was Munetane TAKAHASHI.
  288. Takatane's second son Ujitaka TAKAHASHI took over as head of the family on the grounds that the eldest son Tsunataka HOJO had already been adopted by Ujitsuna HOJO (N.B. opinion varies on the subject).
  289. Takatane's younger brother was Nagatane TAKAHASHI, and his children included Tsunataka HOJO and Ujitaka TAKAHASHI.
  290. Takato Domain: Takato-jo Castle
  291. Takato KYOGOKU
  292. Takato KYOGOKU (1741 - June 16, 1762) was an heir to Marugame Domain of Sanuki Province.
  293. Takato OKI
  294. Takato OKI (1872 - 1873)
  295. Takato OKI (April 23, 1832 - June 26, 1899) was a feudal retainer of the Saga clan in the late Edo period and a statesman in the Meiji period.
  296. Takato OKI December, 1885 ? December, 1889
  297. Takato OKI February, 1880 ? October, 1881
  298. Takato OKI: Established a modern educational system as Monbukyo (chief of Ministry of Education).
  299. Takato OSHIMA
  300. Takato OSHIMA (1826 - 1901) was a mining scientist of the Meiji period.
  301. Takato era
  302. Takato soba (buckwheat noodles of Ouchijuku in South Aizu region) (Ina City, Nagano Prefecture)
  303. Takato soba (buckwheat noodles of Ouchijuku, Shimogo-machi in South Aizu region)
  304. Takato's official court rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade), Nakatsukasa no Shoyu (Junior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Central Affairs).
  305. Takato-jo Castle fell.
  306. Takato-jo Castle where Morinobu NISHINA, Katsuyori's younger brother took refuge was the only one that resisted at all.
  307. Takatoki HOJO
  308. Takatoki HOJO (the third son of Sadatoki HOJO; the fourteenth Shikken)
  309. Takatoki HOJO and his family killed themselves in Tosho-ji Temple.
  310. Takatoki HOJO and his vassals committed suicide at Tosho-ji Temple.
  311. Takatoki HOJO was the 14th regent to Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) (office between 1316 - 1326).
  312. Takatoki HOJO, Yoshisada NITTA, the ninth generation, Danjuro ICHIKAWA
  313. Takatoki fainted after Tengu (long-nosed goblin) teased and bullied him.
  314. Takatoki ordered Nichiro, who was a disciple of the late Nichiren, to hold dialogue confrontation against Shoshu (various religious schools) at denchu (shogunal residence).
  315. Takatoki ordered to kill ADACHI.
  316. Takatoki, who didn't know that, started to dance, asking them to teach him Dengaku Mai (Dengaku Dance).
  317. Takatoki, who had reached adulthood and become engaged in government affairs, inherited this attitude and attempted to suppress the movements in various areas with an iron fist.
  318. Takatoku Domain (Shimotsuke Province)
  319. Takatoku had an influential voice, calling himself Takatoku MIMURA according to Bicchu Heiranki (Record on disturbance in the Bicchu area).
  320. Takatomi KYOGOKU
  321. Takatomi KYOGOKU (January 7, 1836 - February 9, 1889) was the 11th hereditary domain head of the Mineyama Domain in Tango Province.
  322. Takatomi NISHIOJI.
  323. Takatomi succeeded his father as domain lord on Mar 30, 1849 upon the father's retirement.
  324. Takatomo DATE
  325. Takatomo KUKI (became the lord of the domain on June 10, 1861, discharged the governor of the domain in 1871)
  326. Takatomo KYOGOKU
  327. Takatomo KYOGOKU (1572 - September 17, 1622) was a daimyo (Japanese territorial lord) in the Sengoku Period from the Sengoku period active from the Azuchi-Momoyama period to the Edo period.
  328. Takatomo KYOGOKU (February 23, 1623 - April 4, 1674) was the second feudal lord of Mineyama Domain, Tango Province.
  329. Takatomo KYOGOKU ordered his heir Takahiro KYOGOKU to move to the Miyazu domain, Takamitsu KYOGOKU to move to the Maizuru domain (the Tanabe domain), and Takamichi KYOGOKU to move to the Mineyama domain, and Tango Province was divided into three domains to govern.
  330. Takatomo KYOGOKU, the lord of Tango province, divided Tango into three and each of his three children inherited one of them and Takamichi, 10,000 goku (approximately 1.8 million liters in crop yield) in the Mineyama region.
  331. Takatomo ODA
  332. Takatomo ODA (1337 - July 3, 1414) is a busho (Japanese military commander) from the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan) to the early Muromachi period.
  333. Takatomo divided Tango into three: the main domain Miyazu Domain, a branch domain Tango-Tanabe Domain, and a branch domain Mineyama Domain.
  334. Takatomo line (Tango-Kyogoku family)
  335. Takatomo, in his later years, again moved the center of Tango from Maizuru-jo Castle to Miyazu-jo Castle, which he completely renovated.
  336. Takatora TODO
  337. Takatora TODO and Satoru WATANABE, both of whom were military commanders, also served as a vassal of the Atsuji clan for a short period of time.
  338. Takatora TODO arranged its walls and buildings, and it was completed in the summer of 1610, with a five-story Soto type (integrated castle tower design in the Edo period) Tenshu (main keep) in the Honmaru (the main area of the castle).
  339. Takatora TODO versus Won Gyun
  340. Takatora TODO versus Yi Sun-sin
  341. Takatora TODO worked under ten master families in his life.
  342. Takatora ordered him to serve Gamo clan in Aizu (related by marriage) if he wanted to serve but he never agreed to it.
  343. Takatora's son Takatsugu TODO continued a policy of hokokamae that was imposed by his father after Takatora's death and as a result there was no chance for him to serve a master again, and he lived through the rest of his life as "Suian" on meager alms from Tadaoki HOSOKAWA and Yoshinao TOKUGAWA who valued his talent.
  344. Takatori Domain
  345. Takatori Domain was a feudal domain what was located in Yamato Province (present-day Takatori-cho, Takaichi-gun, Nara Prefecture).
  346. Takatori Domain was a small domain where the crop yields were 25,000 koku; against Tenchu-gumi with more than 1,000 soldiers, the military power was around 200 people; however, Takatori Domain knew the geography well.
  347. Takatori Domain: Takatori-jo Castle
  348. Takatori claimed that he saw Yoshio, Nakatsune, and Toyokiyo, the Zoshiki (low-level functionary) run away from the front of the Otenmon gate, which went up in flames directly after.
  349. Takatori factory building (Kobe City, about 1900, not in existance today)
  350. Takatori ware was made in Nogata City, Fukuoka Prefecture and in Fukuoka City.
  351. Takatori was handed over to the kebiishi (office of police and judicial chief).
  352. Takatori-jo Castle site
  353. Takatoshi KYOGOKU
  354. Takatoshi KYOGOKU (1799 - April 7, 1830) was an heir to Mineyama Domain in Tango Province.
  355. Takatoshi MITSUI
  356. Takatoshi MITSUI (1622- May 29, 1694) was a merchant who lived during the Edo Period.
  357. Takatoshi MITSUI (a purveyor to the Edo bakufu [Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun])
  358. Takatoshi MITSUI of the Mitsui family, the founder of Mitsukoshi (a venerable department store chain in Japan) was one merchant who Ujisato called upon to shift from Hino to Matsuzaka and later to Aizu, but he resisted going to Aizu and his family remained in Matsuzaka.
  359. Takatoshi devoted great energy into building the foundation of domain rule but died at age 38 in September 1638.
  360. Takatoshi did not have heirs, leading to temporary closure of the family heritage, but the family domain was restored with inheritance by Katsumoto's younger brother Tamemoto KATAGIRI, in honor of the great accomplishments of the late Katsumoto.
  361. Takatoshi left kakun (family percept) for his descendants.
  362. Takatoyo KUSAKABE
  363. Takatoyo REIZEI
  364. Takatoyo REIZEI (1513 - 1551) was jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) Saemon no shojo (Jr. Lieutenant of the Left Division of Outer Palace Guards).
  365. Takatsu Station (Kyoto Prefecture)
  366. Takatsu Station (Kyoto Prefecture) - Isa Station - Fukuchiyama Station
  367. Takatsu Station is a ground station having a pair of platforms facing each other with two railroad tracks running in between.
  368. Takatsu Station, located in Ayabe City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Sanin Main Line, which is operated by the West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
  369. Takatsugu KYOGOKU governed Wakasa Province with 92,000 koku.
  370. Takatsugu KYOGOKU is presumed to have owed a great deal to his sister Tatsuko and his primary wife Hatsu for his successful career.
  371. Takatsugu KYOGOKU was her elder brother (some argue that he was her younger brother).
  372. Takatsugu Line (Wakasa-Kyogoku family)
  373. Takatsugu and other Kyogoku forces fought to the last, but eventually became exhausted and surrendered the castle on October 21st.
  374. Takatsugu defended fiercely, but a spearhead convoy led by Kichiemon TACHIBANA from the Tachibana force reached the castle walls.
  375. Takatsugu served Nagamasa AZAI, but became a vassal of Nobunaga ODA because the Azai clan was ruined by Nobunaga in 1573.
  376. Takatsugu's life was spared and he entered into priesthood at the Koyasan (Mt. Koya) temple.
  377. Takatsugu's younger brother Takatomo KYOGOKU served Hideyoshi from the beginning, and his koku was increased to 5,000 koku of Gamo County in Omi Province in 1591, 60,000 koku of Ina County in Shinano Province in 1593, and 100,000 koku the following year.
  378. Takatsuji-dori Street
  379. Takatsuki City Transportation Division
  380. Takatsuki City, Osaka Prefecture
  381. Takatsuki Domain
  382. Takatsuki Domain is one of the domains which existed in Settsu Province.
  383. Takatsuki Domain: Takatsuki-jo Castle
  384. Takatsuki Kyoto Hotel (Takatsuki City): Initially, it was run by 'Takatsuki Hotel Jitsugyo Corporation' founded by the Kyoto Hotel in 1988.
  385. Takatsuki domain in Settsu Province - 20,000 koku (approximately 3.6 million liters of crop yield)
  386. Takatsuki was governed by Ukon TAKAYAMA who served Nobunaga ODA and Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI in the Sengoku period (Japan), and who also was well-known for a Christian daimyo (Christian feudal lord).
  387. Takatsuki-cho
  388. Takatsukishi Station - Nagaokatenjin Station - Katsura Station
  389. Takatsuna NAGASAKI (whose homyo was Enki) who famously held the reins of power was Mitsutsuna's son.
  390. Takatsuna NAGASAKI, Uchi-Kanrei (head of Tokuso Family), who was appointed as the guardian of a young Takatoki in accordance with Sadatoki's will, and Tokiaki ADACHI, who was Takatoki's father-in-law and a relative on his mother's side, held real power over the affairs of state.
  391. Takatsuna SASAKI
  392. Takatsuna SASAKI (kabuki) written by Kido OKAMOTO
  393. Takatsuna SASAKI was a busho (Japanese military commander) from the end of Heian period to the early Kamakura period.
  394. Takatsuna advised, 'the girth is loose, you had better tighten it.'
  395. Takatsune KUKI
  396. Takatsune KUKI (1646 - May 10, 1698) was the second lord of Ayabe Domain in Tanba Province.
  397. Takatsune KUKI (became the lord of the domain on November 16, 1674, died on April 1, 1698)
  398. Takatsune KYOGOKU
  399. Takatsune KYOGOKU (1810-July 29, 1834) was the ninth lord of Mineyama Domain of Tango Province.
  400. Takatsune SHIBA
  401. Takatsune SHIBA (1305 - August 17, 1367) was a busho (Japanese military commander) and provincial military governor in the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  402. Takatsune SHIBA and his eldest son, Ienaga SHIBA, followed Takauji ASHIKAGA and flourished.
  403. Takatsune SHIBA further recommended his son Yoshitane SHIBA and grandson Yoshitaka SHIBA to the post of kozamurai-dokoro (an office of officers to guard shogun in attendance) and hikitsukeshu (Coadjustor of the High Court) respectively.
  404. Takatsune got the real power of the bakufu, but his uncompromising political style triggered protests by territorial lords and temple and shrine groups.
  405. Takatsune had Yoshisada's younger brother Yoshisuke WAKIYA as the court's side commander before him from 1339 and faced an uphill battle, meaning he had to run away from Echizen to Kaga Province for a time.
  406. Takatsune joined the Battle of Minato-gawa River between Yoshisada NITTA and Masashige KUSUNOKI in 1336 too.
  407. Takatsune struggled to conquer the Kanegasaki-jo Castle which had a strong defense, and he started to starve them out.
  408. Takatsune, however, died in Edo in the sixth month of his reign, on July 29, 1834.
  409. Takatsune, on his part, forfeited Doyo's Tada no sho estate in Settsu Province on the ground of the arrears in one-twentieth tax and as a result, Doyo, etc. and Takatsune were locked in serious confrontation.
  410. Takatsune, who acknowledged that he couldn't resist, burnt down his residence in the morning of the following fourteenth day and escaped to Echizen Province along with his family and retainers including his son Yoshimasa and Yoshitane.
  411. Takauji (ASHIKAGA) restored Zenrin-ji Temple's (Kyoto City) Kumano Nyakuoji-sha Shrine and newly constructed Jyojyoin Temple's as its bettojiin (a temple attached to a shrine).
  412. Takauji (ASHIKAGA) who had been sent to suppress the war, made Kamakura his foothold after he drifted away from the Kenmu Government following the war.
  413. Takauji ASHIKAGA
  414. Takauji ASHIKAGA (1305-58) was a general from the late Kamakura period to the Northern and Southern Courts period.
  415. Takauji ASHIKAGA (January 1909), with the reprinted edition published by Iwanami Bunko in 1991.
  416. Takauji ASHIKAGA - Matataro
  417. Takauji ASHIKAGA - Motouji ASHIKAGA - Ujimitsu ASHIKAGA -Mitsukane ASHIKAGA - Mochiuji ASHIKAGA - Shigeuji ASHIKAGA --- to Kogakubo (descendants of one of the Ashikaga families that held the office of the Kanto district administrator)
  418. Takauji ASHIKAGA and his fellows, however, declined appointments to the posts in the Onshogata.
  419. Takauji ASHIKAGA and his younger brother Tadayoshi ASHIKAGA saw the ganmon with their own eyes and so did Sadayo (Ryoshun) IMAGAWA according to "Nan-Taiheiki" (a critique of the historical epic "Taiheiki") written by himself.
  420. Takauji ASHIKAGA constructed Toji-ji Temple in 1341 in the area now known as Oike, Yanaginobanba, Nakagyo Ward, Kyoto City and, two years later, in 1343, built the Kita Toji-ji branch temple in the area now known as Toji-in Kitamachi, Kita Ward, Kyoto City.
  421. Takauji ASHIKAGA established a bakufu in Kyoto (Muromachi).
  422. Takauji ASHIKAGA granted Sanzan Kengyo's wish and gave a practical support by newly creating a post, Kumano Sanzan Bugyo (magistrate), to manage practical business in a local land.
  423. Takauji ASHIKAGA is the person who opposed the Kemmu Restoration initiated by Emperor Godaigo and rose in revolt against the emperor, and the emperor decreed that Takauji be hunted down and executed.
  424. Takauji ASHIKAGA of the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) built Tenryu-ji Temple in Sagano on hearing of the death of his opponent Emperor Godaigo (belonging to Daikakuji-to) during the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan), due to Sagano's association with Daikakuji-to.
  425. Takauji ASHIKAGA prohibited the act of basara in "Kenmu-Shikimoku", which was issued as the basic policy of the government.
  426. Takauji ASHIKAGA regained Kyoto, and Emperor Godaigo and his followers fled to Yoshino and established the Southern Court.
  427. Takauji ASHIKAGA restoring their power in Kyushu region begun invading Kyoto again.
  428. Takauji ASHIKAGA rose in revolt against the bakufu at Shinomura-Hachimangu Shrine in the Tanba Province, which was a shoryo (territory).
  429. Takauji ASHIKAGA took up arms at the Shinomura-Hachimangu Shrine in Shino-cho, making the Kameoka area a base for the Minamoto clan through the Kamakura period and the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  430. Takauji ASHIKAGA was against the Southern Court, and opened the Muromachi bakufu supporting the Northern Court.
  431. Takauji ASHIKAGA who also shared Kawachi-Genji origins backed the Northern Dynasty and, served as seii taishogun at the opening of the Muromachi bakufu that went on to see a revival in the Genji Shoguns for around the next 120 years.
  432. Takauji ASHIKAGA, the head of the distinguished Ashikaga clan from Seiwa-Genji who stood above others during the confusion at the end of Kamakura bakufu, defeated the counterforce, and was appointed seii taishogun as the head of the samurai family in 1338 and established the Muromachi bakufu.
  433. Takauji ASHIKAGA, the top gokenin, acted in concert with the Emperor and destroyed Rokuhara Tandai in Kyoto, and Yoshisada NITTA in the Kozuke Province also followed them in raising an army.
  434. Takauji ASHIKAGA, who at first stood for the Bakufu to thwart an Emperor Godaigo's plan, gradually began to conceal his intention to overthrow the Shogunate, and after he consulted Sadayoshi KIRA, a grand person of the family, he went over to the side of the Imperial Court.
  435. Takauji ASHIKAGA, who destroyed the Kamakura bakufu, was his sister's husband.
  436. Takauji ASHIKAGA, who established the Muromachi bakufu in Kyoto in the first half of the 14th century, gave shugo a stronger authority to benefit himself from conflicts in the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan) period.
  437. Takauji ASHIKAGA, who killed his brother Naoyoshi and was victorious in the Kanno Disturbance, held back the expedition into the Kinai region by Ou-gun Army from Ryozan, at Shirakawa, and recaptured Taga-jo Castle.
  438. Takauji ASHIKAGA, who was born into the head family, later established bakufu in Muromachi, Kyoto.
  439. Takauji ASHIKAGA, who was dispatched by the Shogunate, however, stood by the Emperor and attacked Rokuhara Tandai.
  440. Takauji ASIKAGA, who broke away from the Kenmu Restoration under Emperor Godaigo, won the Battle of Minatogawa and entered Kyoto in 1336, Emperor Godaigo escaped to Mt. Hiei's Enryaku-ji Temple at this time.
  441. Takauji accepted the advice and escaped to Kyushu.
  442. Takauji advanced on Kyoto again, leaving Noriuji ISSHIKI and Yoshinaga NIKI behind to protect Kyushu, and defeated Yoshisada NITTA in the Battle of Minatogawa in Settsu Province.
  443. Takauji again took over Kyoto causing the Emperor Godaigo to flee to Yoshino, and the period of the Northern and Southern Courts started.
  444. Takauji also erected Tenryu-ji Temple and became its kaisan.
  445. Takauji and Naoyoshi reconciled, but a flashpoint between them remained and the situation returned to the previous three-way struggle among the Takauji group, the Naoyoshi group, and the Southern Court.
  446. Takauji and Tadayoshi, who were descendants of three generations after Ietoki, conquered the Kamakura bakufu and made significant contributions to establish the Kenmu government of Emperor Godaigo.
  447. Takauji and Yorikane fled to Kyushu during the period of the Northern and Southern Courts.
  448. Takauji and Yoshiakira marched to Harima Province on the ostensible purpose to put down the revolt plotted by Doyo SASAKI and Sokuyu (Norisuke) AKAMATSU, but in reality they attempted a reconciliation with the Southern Court, conspiring to kill Tadayoshi and Tadafuyu.
  449. Takauji attempted a reconciliation with Emperor Go-Daigo, who had been at Mt. Hiei, to save face for the emperor.
  450. Takauji backed up Emperor Komyo, established the Kenmu Code and founded a bakufu but the establishment of the code is thought to have been mainly the idea of Tadayoshi.
  451. Takauji became Seii taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians") in 1338.
  452. Takauji became a Chinju-fu shogun (Commander-in-Chief in Defense of the North).
  453. Takauji continued to move his forces, and Tadayoshi gained the support of Kunikiyo HATAKEYAMA, Tadatsune MOMONOI, Yorifusa ISHIDO, Akiuji HOSOKAWA, Tokiuji YAMANA, and Takatsune SHIBA, and in Kanto, Noriaki UESUGI chased away KO no Morofuyu of the KO clan in December.
  454. Takauji defeated the Nitta army in fighting at battles in Hakone, Takeshita, and the like, and entered Kyoto; however, he was defeated in Kyoto by Akiie KITABATAKE, who had come down from Oshu Province, and then escaped to Kyushu via Hyogo, temporarily.
  455. Takauji defected from the Kenmu Government and the Imperial army was dispatched.
  456. Takauji departed Hakata with KO no Moronao, passed through Tomonoura of Bingo Province, joined forces with fleets commanded by the Hosokawa clan, Toki clan and Kono clan, and proceeded east by sea.
  457. Takauji fled to Kyushu, but after reconstructing his army, he again approached to Kyoto in the following year, with a decree previously obtained from the abducted Emperor Kogon.
  458. Takauji gathered forces from various provinces, and entered Kyoto followed by vassals such as Doyo SASAKI from Omi Province, and then succeeded in destroying Rokuhara Tandai on May 7th, 1333.
  459. Takauji gave shugo approval for Karita-rozeki (to reap rice illegally) and the right to delegate judical authority to others besides Taibon Sankajo in the Kamakura period.
  460. Takauji kept the position as the family head of the Ashikaga and the military command, and held the mandokoro (The Administrative Board) and samurai dokoro (The Board of Retainers) under his control.
  461. Takauji later departed for Kyushu.
  462. Takauji later won the Minatogawa War.
  463. Takauji negotiated with the Southern Court and suggested peace talks and requested an order to attack Tadayoshi and Tadafuyu ASHIKAGA.
  464. Takauji not only appointed Jyojyoin Temple's betto Ryokai to Sanzan Kengyo but also supported Jyojyoin Temple financially by donating private estates.
  465. Takauji proposed that Godaigo search and destroy Yoshisada on the grounds that he was a wily vassal surrounding the Emperor.
  466. Takauji raising an army worked and it led to the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  467. Takauji refused to accept the title of Kubo, saying that he could not put on armor if he got it; however, once the title was bestowed on him, it was diffiicult to recall it; thus, the title was tentatively left to Takauji.
  468. Takauji remained at Kamakura and broke away from the Kenmu administration.
  469. Takauji remained in Kamakura after its recapture and conferred honors upon his officers and men but this thought to have been mainly the idea of Tadayoshi.
  470. Takauji requested Norikuni to become Hikitsuke tonin (chairman of the court of justice) in the Ashikaga bakufu when Tadayoshi ASHIKAGA died.
  471. Takauji requested from Emperor Godaigo that he be appointed Seii taishogun and sotsui hoshi (Inspector General) in order to suppress Tokiyuki's rebellion, but Emperor Godaigo side-stepped these requests and appointed Imperial Prince Narinaga Seii taishogun.
  472. Takauji requested that Emperor Go-Daigo appoint him Seii Taishogun only to be rejected, so he marched to Kamakura without emperor's permission on August 2nd of the same year, which made Emperor Go-Daigo reluctantly appoint him as Seito Taishogun.
  473. Takauji retook Kyoto and Emperor Go-Daigo fled to Yoshino.
  474. Takauji returned his forces from Bingo and the Ko brothers joined him.
  475. Takauji returned to Kyoto by sea after conquering Kyushu, but Yoshisada wasted time after encountering trouble attacking Akamatsu's troops that were besieged in Shirahata-jo Castle.
  476. Takauji seized the Three Sacred Treasures of the Imperial Family from Godaigo, had Emperor Komyo accede to the throne, and 2 years later in 1338, he was appointed as seii taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians") and formally established a warrior government.
  477. Takauji set up his headquarters in Kamakura and started to realize the establishment of a military government.
  478. Takauji sought reconciliation with Emperor Godaigo, and having regained control over the three Imperial Regalia, he became the principal support for Emperor Komyo of the Gofukakusa (Jimyoin) lineage (the Northern Court).
  479. Takauji sought reconciliation with Tadayoshi on condition that the KO brothers would become priests, and they came to an agreement in 1351.
  480. Takauji started to establish a samurai government, but Emperor Godaigo escaped to Mt. Hiei and continued to rebel, and the accession to the throne of Imperial Prince Toyohito (Emperor Komyo) in September and October was performed without the Three Sacred Treasures of the Imperial Family.
  481. Takauji strongly trusted Nobutake; in Takauji's plan to construct Tenryu-ji Temple, Nobutake cooperated in the construction together with Ogasawara clan who was Shinano Shugo.
  482. Takauji then turned against the Kemmu Restoration which started after the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) fell.
  483. Takauji tried to take a third-party attitude, but was gradually taken in by the Moronao group.
  484. Takauji was a descendant of the Genji clan.
  485. Takauji was born in 1305.
  486. Takauji was given the courtly title of the Second Rank.
  487. Takauji was offended badly when he found out the truth.
  488. Takauji was ordered to reenter Kyoto with Takaie NAGOE to put down the rebellion in the west.
  489. Takauji was the same.
  490. Takauji was welcomed by the provincial governer of Hizen Province, Yorinao SHONI, and some other people who sided with Ashikaga.
  491. Takauji was willing to allot lands to his military commanders, which is considered one of the reasons why he was always supported by them when he was in difficult situations.
  492. Takauji went to the front without obtaining the emperor's authorization, but Emperor Godaigo later conferred the title of seii taishogun on Takauji.
  493. Takauji's army pursued Yoshisada's army and collided with each other on Setanokara-hashi Bridge in Omi Province on February 23, 1336.
  494. Takauji's army removed Tokiyuki's army from Kamakura, then Tokiyuki disappeared and his revolt was quashed.
  495. Takauji's army whose morale was boosted by Takauji's participation in the war took the lead and on the following day, Sadatoshi (Sadanori) OTOMO and Takasada ENYA sold out to Takauji's army, thus Yoshisuke's army suffered a debacle and took flight.
  496. Takauji's army won in Uji City located at the rear and the court's side withdrew, then it plunged into the battle over Kyoto.
  497. Takauji's close friend Soseki MUSO described Takauji as a man of virtue in his writing.
  498. Takauji's father Sadauji and his official wife Shakado, daughter of Akitoki HOJO, had the first son Takayoshi ASHIKAGA, but he died early and Takauji succeeded to his father.
  499. Takauji's forces moved off to Kyushu, and having regained their momentum with victory in the battle of Tatarahama, the following year they regrouped and marched east again under the Imperial edict of Emperor Kogon of the Gofukakusa (Jimyoin) lineage.
  500. Takauji's younger brother Tadayoshi ASHIKAGA became furious when he was informed of this event, and ordered the arrest of Yorito.
  501. Takauji's younger brother Tadayoshi was appointed Leader of the Horsemen of the Left.
  502. Takauji, after entering the capital, had Kogon's younger brother Komyo installed on the throne, creating the Northern Dynasty (of Japan).
  503. Takauji, however, did not assume an official post in the new government, despite being rewarded, due to Emperor Godaigo's policy of valuing merit and distinguished service above all.
  504. Takauji, regaining his power, moved eastward to recapture Kyoto, while Yorikane, as Shugo (provincial constable) of Iwami Province, put his emphasis on the extension of the Northern Court's and the Muromachi bakufu's influence and the elimination of the Southern Court's influence in western part of Japan.
  505. Takauta SHIJO
  506. Takauta SHIJO (October 17, 1828 - November 24, 1898) was a Japanese noble and soldier of the late Edo period to the Meiji period.
  507. Takauta SHIJO: He was in the position from February 12, 1881 to December 25, 1888.
  508. Takaya KOTOFUJI had only one opportunity to participate in soroibumi in the September sumo tournament of 1991, but he failed to do so because he was injured in a bout on the fourteenth day and lost the bout on the next day by default.
  509. Takayama
  510. Takayama Chikurin Park (a bamboo grove park in Ikoma City, Nara Prefecture)
  511. Takayama Chikurin Park is a garden located in Ikoma City, Nara Prefecture.
  512. Takayama City (Takayama shihaisho)
  513. Takayama Dam
  514. Takayama Dam is located a short distance upstream from the confluence point of the Yodo-gawa River System stretch of the Kizu-gawa River and its arm Nabari-gawa River in Oaza Takao, Minami Yamashiro-mura, Soraku-gun, Kyoto Prefecture.
  515. Takayama Dam was completed in 1969, and the Satsuki River Valley was replaced by Lake Tsukigase.
  516. Takayama Jinya (Takayama City, Gifu Prefecture) is the only remaining jinya which functioned as an office of Hida gundai (the magistrate of Hida region) and the jinya of tenryo.
  517. Takayama Main Line
  518. Takayama-jinja Shrine was dedicated to Hikokuro in Ota City, Gunma Prefecture.
  519. Takayama-matsuri Festival (February 3, 1979)
  520. Takayasu (Ramen store)
  521. Takayasu Castle in Yamato region, Yashima Castle in Sanuki region (in Shikoku) and Kaneda Castle in Tsushima island were also built.
  522. Takayasu Style (16), Shimogakari-hosho Style (24), Fukuo Style (20)
  523. Takayasu moat settlement (Ikaruga-cho, Nara Prefecture)
  524. Takayasu school
  525. Takayo MOZUME
  526. Takayo MOZUME (March 18, 1817 - January 2, 1883) was a scholar of Japanese classical literature from Bungo Province.
  527. Takayo NAITO, a grandson of Okimori, committed seppuku at the downfall of the Ouchi clan, ending the main line of the family, but Takaharu NAITO, Okimori's fifth son, served the Mori clan.
  528. Takayo's life is said to have been of honorable poverty like those of TACHIBANA no Akemi and Masazumi KAMOCHI.
  529. Takayori ROKKAKU and his Hikan (low-level bureaucrat) were furious about the decision, rebuilt Kannonji-jo Castle, which had burned down, and barricaded them selves in it for a third time.
  530. Takayori ROKKAKU deployed Masatsuna YAMANOUCHI, Sadataka IBA and Yukitaka IBA to Kannonji-jo Castle, the subsidiary castles and surrounding fortresses to resist.
  531. Takayori ROKKAKU: Half of Omi Province
  532. Takayori fought back against the invasion twice and further won the conflict with the Iba clan, which was the shugodai (delegated guard), thus becoming a warlord.
  533. Takayori temporarily abandoned Kannonji-jo Castle, and conducted a guerrilla warfare in a mountainous area in Koga County.
  534. Takayoshi ICHIJO
  535. Takayoshi ICHIJO (1176 - October 26, 1198) was a kugyo (top court official) and politician during early days of the Kamakura period.
  536. Takayoshi ICHIJO, Nobuyoshi ICHIJO, and Sanemasa ICHIJO numbered among his paternal half-brothers.
  537. Takayoshi ICHIJO, a wife of Yoshitsune KUJO (born in 1167), a wife of Kintsune SAIONJI (Zenshi), Yasuko who was menoto (a woman providing breast-feed) to Emperor Gotoba and Dainagon (a chief councilor of state) at the rank of Sanmi (Third Rank) were her children.
  538. Takayoshi KIDO
  539. Takayoshi KIDO (August 11, 1833 - May 26, 1877) was a Japanese samurai and statesman who had a distinguished career from the end of the Edo period to the early Meiji period.
  540. Takayoshi KIDO (Kogoro KATSURA):vice-envoy
  541. Takayoshi KIDO said 'That's right. That happened. Do you still remember the Charter Oath?' and seemed to have forgotten the existence.
  542. Takayoshi KIDO was given a copy of Charter Oath at that time and on the next day he said 'I read that Charter Oath carefully more than once and found it remarkable. The main idea shouldn't be changed. I support it with my life as long as I'm alive.'
  543. Takayoshi KIDO's anniversary of the death is May 26,1877, Takamori SAIGO's September 24,1877, and Toshimichi OKUBO's May 14, 1878, as in order of when they became virtual saisho, and they died almost around the same time.
  544. Takayoshi KIDO, who was not in Tokyo because he was resting because of illness, was the one who saved this crisis.
  545. Takayoshi KIRA
  546. Takayoshi KIRA (1348 - the year of death unknown) was a busho (Japanese military commander) during the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  547. Takayoshi KUKI (became the lord of the domain on March 12, 1781, died at the end of January, 1787)
  548. Takayoshi KUKI, the 13th and the last head, changed the system of their army to western style by conducting reformation of domain duties.
  549. Takayoshi KYOGOKU
  550. Takayoshi KYOGOKU (May 16, 1818 - August 18, 1845) was an heir to Marugame Domain of Sanuki Province.
  551. Takayoshi MATSUO (a Japanese historian) argues that Taisho Democracy, starting with the Taisho Seihen, was not a vulnerable foreign idea superficially scooped by some urban intellectuals but a widespread popular movement that had some characteristic directly reflected in the Japanese democracy after World War Ⅱ.
  552. Takayoshi MATSUO explains such two-sidedness of Taisho Democracy with the phrase, 'inward constitutionalism, and outward imperialism.'
  553. Takayoshi NISHIOJI.
  554. Takayoshi TODO, who was born as the third son of Nagahide NIWA and later adopted by Hidenaga TOYOTOMI, was adopted by Takatora TODO, but he was disinherited after Takatsugu TODO, the biological child of Takatora TODO, was born.
  555. Takayoshi gave a grand 13th Buddhist memorial service to his father Mitsuyoshi at Tofuku-ji Temple in 1368.
  556. Takayoshi was a child of Hisatada KUJO and the last Daijo-in monzeki.
  557. Takayoshi was born after that and the Kano Disturbance erupted soon after.
  558. Takayoshi's son Takatsugu KYOGOKU first served Nobunaga ODA, but in 1582 when Nobunaga was killed by Mitsuhide AKECHI in Honnoji Incident Takatsugu belonged to Mitsuhide, and Takatsugu was expelled by Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI who killed Mitsuhide at the battle of Yamazaki.
  559. Takayoshi, the seventh son of Okitsugu TANUMA, senior councilor to the shogun, was adopted subsequently and became the heir as Takayoshi KUKI.
  560. Takayuki HARADA "Koi no Jubaku" (the Spell of the Throne) (Sobunsha, 2006) ISBN 4794705360
  561. Takayuki KYOGOKU
  562. Takayuki KYOGOKU (June 3, 1678 - March 8, 1723) was the forth hereditary domain head of the Mineyama Domain in Tango Province.
  563. Takayuki KYOGOKU was the eldest son of Takaaki KYOGOKU (the 3rd hereditary domain head).
  564. Takayuki SASAKI
  565. Takayuki SASAKI (November 26, 1830-March 2, 1910) was a samurai of the Tosa Domain, a official in the Meiji government, and also a representative of political conservatives.
  566. Takayuki SASAKI March, 1880 ? October, 1881
  567. Takayuki SASAKI:resident
  568. Takayuki's mother was the daughter of Yorisada KUMAGAI..
  569. Take (丈)
  570. Take Biwako nishi jukan road, get off at Minami-Shiga Ramp, and go south for 0.4 km.
  571. Take Chihaya Line of Kongo motor Co., Ltd. at the Tondabayashi Station of Kintetsu Nagano Line.
  572. Take Daisu
  573. Take JR Sakurai line or Kintetsu Tenri line and get off at Tenri Station, take Nara Kotsu bus and get off at Kamitakimoto, then walk on the mountain path for 20 minutes.
  574. Take Keihan Bus route 22, 22A, 24, or 24A from Rokujizo Station (Keihan, JR, Subway), and get off at Daigo Sanboin.
  575. Take Keihan Bus route 22, 22A, 24, or 24A from Yamashina Station (JR, Keihan, Subway) and get off at Daigo Sanboin.
  576. Take Kintetsu Kashihara line and get off at "Kintetsu Koriyama Station," then walk 7 minutes.
  577. Take Kintetsu Osaka line to Miminashi Station, then walk about 2 kilometres southwards.
  578. Take Kitakinki Tango Railway from there and get off at Amanohashidate Station.
  579. Take Kyoto City Bus Number 3, 28, 29, 67 or 71 to "Umenomiya-jinja mae" bus stop and walk for 3 minutes.
  580. Take Me to an Inn (April 2001)
  581. Take Nankai Bus bound for 'Inunakiyama' from Nankai Dentetsu Izumisano Station or Hanwa Line Hineno Station to 'Tojo'; for eight minutes.
  582. Take Nara Kotsu Bus bound for Narazaka or Aoyama Jutaku from Kakunara Station, and get off at 'Imakoji' or 'Tegai-cho.'
  583. Take Nara Kotsu Bus from Sakurai Station (Nara Prefecture) on Sakurai Line, West Japan Railway Company or on Kintetsu Corporation Osaka Line, get off at the bus stop Sagarioguchi, and five minutes on foot.
  584. Take Nara Kotsu Bus to 'Hisoguchi' from the Muda Station of the Kintetsu Yoshino Line and walk for 15 minutes.
  585. Take National Route 9 to Kasuga-jinja Shrine from the Yagi Higashi Interchange of the Kyoto Jukan Expressway.
  586. Take Shigi-Ikoma Skyline (via which Kintetsu Bus used to operate regular bus service to Skyland Ikoma, though it was suspended around 1995).
  587. Take Yoshino Ropeway from Yoshino Station of the Kintetsu Yoshino Line (Nara Prefecture) to 'Yoshinoyama' (Mt. Yoshino) stop and walk about 30 minutes.
  588. Take a Keihan bus at Shintanabe Station of the Kintetsu Kyoto Line, exit at the "Ikkyuji-michi" bus stop of Keihan Bus, and take a five-minute walk from the bus stop.
  589. Take a Kyoto bus for Koke-dera Temple/Suzumushi-dera Temple at Kyoto Station, exit the bus at the last stop, and walk for three minutes.
  590. Take a Nara Kotsu Bus (bound for JR Nara Station and Shiratsuchi-cho) from Yamato-Saidaiji Station of Kinki Nippon Railway and get off at 'Hokke-ji' (Temple).
  591. Take a Nara Kotsu Bus (bound for Saidaiji Station and Koku-jieitai [Japan Air Self-Defense Force]) from Nara Station of JR Kansai Main Line or Nara Station of Kintetsu Line and get off at 'Hokke-ji' (Temple).
  592. Take a Nara Kotsu Bus Line bus (for Gakken Kita-Ikoma Station) at Gakuen-mae Station (Nara Prefecture) of Kinki Nippon Railway, get off at "Mayumi 4-chome," and walk 15 minutes.
  593. Take a Nara Kotsu Bus Line bus (for Takayama) at Tomio Station of Kinki Nippon Railway, get off at "Ikoma Kamimachi", and walk ten minutes (Not so frequent bus services).
  594. Take a Nara Kotsu Bus from JR Nara Station or Kintetsu Nara Station and get off at Hannyaji.
  595. Take a Nara Kotsu Bus from Kamo Station of JR Yamato Line (Kyoto Prefecture) to 'Joruriji-mae' bus stop.
  596. Take a Nara Kotsu Bus from Nara Station of JR Yamato Line or Kintetsu Nara Station to 'Joruriji-mae' bus stop.
  597. Take a Nara Kotsu bus (bound for Tonomine, Tanzan-jinja Shrine) at 'Sakurai Station' (Nara Prefecture) on West Japan Railway Company Sakurai Line or Kintetsu Osaka Line, get off at 'Shorin-ji mae,' and walk for 5 minutes.
  598. Take a Nara Kotsu bus (for Ouda) from Haibara Station on the Kintetsu Osaka Line, get off at the last stop, 'Ouda,' and walk about five kilometers.
  599. Take a Nara Kotsu bus at Gojo Bus Center at JR Gojo Station (Nara Prefecture) and get off at 'Eisan-ji Temple'.
  600. Take a Nara Kotsu bus or Sakurai Community bus of Asuka Line (available on Saturdays, Sundays and National Holidays in March-June and August-November) at Sakurai Station (Nara Prefecture) on West Japan Railway Company Sakurai Line and Kintetsu Osaka Line, and get off at 'Abemonjuin Mae'
  601. Take a bus at Tomio Station on Kintetsu Nara Line and get off at 'Degaito'.
  602. Take a bus at Uji Station (JR West), Keihan Uji Station (Keihan), or Kinki Nippon Railway Okubo Station (Kyoto Prefecture) and get off at Shokubutu Koen (the botanical park) stop after an approximately ten minute ride.
  603. Take a bus bound for Maitani-cho from Nara Station (JR Line/ Kintetsu Line) and get off at 'Takahi-cho' after 25-minute ride, and walk 5 minutes.
  604. Take a bus for Arashiyama or a bus that passes through Arashiyama and get off at 'Arashiyama' or 'Arashiyama Koen' bus stop.
  605. Take a bus of the Princess Line (from Hachijoguchi) and get off at "Higashiyama Shichijo"; the site is a minute away on foot.
  606. Take a bus of the following bus lines of Nara Kotsu Bus Lines Co., Ltd. at the bus stop No. 2 at the east exit of Kashiharajingu-mae Station, Kinki Nippon Railway Company.
  607. Take a bus of the following bus lines of Nara Kotsu Bus Lines Co., Ltd. at the bus stop in front of Kintetsu Asuka Station.
  608. Take a bus of the following lines of Nara Kotsu Bus Lines Co., Ltd. at the bus stop No.2 at the south exit of Sakurai Station.
  609. Take a leisurely pace with calm mind, while economize in every cases to save money for preparation.
  610. Take a little of this and put on a different plate, then add some water to dissolve further and dilute before painting.
  611. Take a small amount of sake (around 4 ml) in the mouth and let it swirl around on your tongue to taste.
  612. Take a train on Eizan Main Line of Eizan Electric Railway Co., Ltd. and get off at Yase-Hieizan-guchi Station.
  613. Take a train on Keihan Electric Railway Keihan Ishiyama Sakamoto Line, get off at Omi-jinja-Mae Station and walk north west for 0.6 km.
  614. Take any of the City Bus routes 100, 206, 208 (at gates D1, D2, Karasumaguchi) and get off at "Museum, Sanjusangendo Mae"; the site is just a short walk away.
  615. Take is the height of people and objects.
  616. Take my daughter, Mihotsu-hime, as your wife, and lead the Yaoyorozu no kami to eternally surrender your soul to the imperial descendants.
  617. Take ni suzume (bamboo and sparrow): this crest was a modified version of the original one that was given by Sadazane UESUGI as a gift, when the Date clan adopted a child of the Uesugi clan.
  618. Take no Ma (Audience Room)
  619. Take out the internal organs and wash the fish meat.
  620. Take the "Ofumi" out of the Ofumi-bako (box for the Ofumi) then do chodai.
  621. Take the Enoshima Electric Railway to 'Meigetsu-in' and walk for five minutes.
  622. Take the Hankyu Arashiyama Line to Matsunoo Station (Kyoto Prefecture) and walk for 10 minutes.
  623. Take the Hankyu Railway Hankyu Kyoto Main Line to Oyamazaki Station and walk for 12 minutes.
  624. Take the JR Biwako line to Omihachiman, and then take Omi Bus (bound for Hino) transferring to Kokoku Bus at Sakuragawa-eki, and get off the bus at Ishitoguchi followed by 15-minute walk.
  625. Take the JR Kyoto Line at Mukomachi Station, transfer to the Kyoto Municipal Subway Karasuma Line at Kyoto Station, and get off at Marutamachi Station as mentioned above.
  626. Take the JR Nara Line to 'Tofukuji Station' and walk.
  627. Take the JR Sagano Line to 'Hanazono Station' (Kyoto Prefecture) and walk.
  628. Take the JR West Maizuru Line or Kita-Kinki Tango Railway Miyazu Line to Nishi-Maizuru Station and walk for 10 minutes
  629. Take the JR West Mine Line to Nagato-Yumoto Station and walk for 20 minutes.
  630. Take the JR West Sagano Line to 'Saga Arashiyama Station' and walk for 20 minutes.
  631. Take the JR West Tokaido Main Line to Yamazaki Station (Kyoto Prefecture) and walk for 12 minutes.
  632. Take the Karasuma Line of the Kyoto City Subway to Imadegawa Station and walk for 5 minutes.
  633. Take the Keifuku Electric Railroad Kitano Line to 'Myoshin-ji station' and walk.
  634. Take the Keihan Bus for 'Hino Tanjoin' from Rokujizo Station on the Keihan Uji Line to the terminal stop.
  635. Take the Keihan Bus to Gojizaka bus stop.
  636. Take the Keihan Bus to Ichigonji
  637. Take the Keihan Electric Railway Keihan Oto Line to Marutamachi Station and walk for seven minutes.
  638. Take the Keihan Koto Line to Demachiyanagi Station or Marutamachi Station (Keihan) and walk for 10 minutes.
  639. Take the Keihan Kyoto Kotsu bus for Miyamae
  640. Take the Keihan Main Line, alight at 'Tobakaido Station' or 'Tofukuji Station' and walk.
  641. Take the Keihan Uji Bus for Ichu-mae from JR Ishiyama Station and get off at Zenjo-ji Temple (two round trip services a day).
  642. Take the Keihan Uji Bus for Rokuenzaka/Industrial complexes from Keihan Uji Station or Kintetsu Shintanabe Station, and get off at Ichu-mae.
  643. Take the Kintetsu Ikoma Cable Line from Kintetsu Ikoma Station to Ikoma Sanjo Station
  644. Take the Kintetsu Kyoto Line or the Keihan Main Line of the Keihan Electric Railway: Get off at Tanbabashi Station and walk for approx. 1 km to the east.
  645. Take the Kintetsu Osaka line and get off at Masuga Station.
  646. Take the Kintetsu Yoshino line and get off at Yoshino Station, then change to the Yoshino Ropeway, get off at 'Yoshinoyama' and walk about 10 minutes.
  647. Take the Kyoto Bus Takano Branch Office Kumogahata Line and get off at Kounjimae stop.
  648. Take the Kyoto Bus for 'Kiyotaki' to 'Torii-moto' bus stop and walk for 5 minutes.
  649. Take the Kyoto Bus for Hirogawara from the Eizan Electric Railway Demachiyanagi Station for 1.5 hours and alight at Daihizan-guchi bus stop (four round trips daily).
  650. Take the Kyoto Bus or Kyoto City Bus to Arashiyama bus stop and walk for three minutes.
  651. Take the Kyoto Bus route 19 'for Ohara, Kodeishi' from 'Kokusai Kaikan mae Station' on the Kyoto City Subway Karasuma Line for approximately 25 minutes to 'Kochidani-dera mae' bus stop and walk for approximately 15 minutes.
  652. Take the Kyoto Bus to Kiyotaki bus stop and walk for approximately 1.5 hours.
  653. Take the Kyoto City Bus No. 206 from JR Kyoto Station for 5 minutes and alight at Hakubutsukan Sanjusangendo-mae bus stop where the temple can soon be reached on foot.
  654. Take the Kyoto City Bus No. 26 to 'Narutaki-honcho' and walk for three minutes.
  655. Take the Kyoto City Bus No. 5, extra service No. 5, No. 27, No. 32 or No. 46 to 'Kyotokaikan Bijutsukan-mae'.
  656. Take the Kyoto City Bus and get off at "Shokubutsuen Mae" bus stop, which is close to the gate.
  657. Take the Kyoto City Bus for Gentaku to "Takagamine Genkoan-mae" bus stop and walk for approximately 3 minutes.
  658. Take the Kyoto City Bus from JR Kyoto Station to "Daitoku-ji mae" bus stop (approximately 30 minutes) and walk.
  659. Take the Kyoto City Bus from JR Kyoto Station to 'Daitoku-ji mae' bus stop (approximately 30 minutes) and 10 minutes walk.
  660. Take the Kyoto City Bus from JR Kyoto Station to 'Daitoku-ji mae' bus stop (approximately 30 minutes) and walk.
  661. Take the Kyoto City Bus from JR Kyoto Station to 'Hakubutsukan Sanjusangendo mae' bus stop and walk.
  662. Take the Kyoto City Bus from JR Kyoto Station to 'Myoshin-ji Temple Kitamon-mae' bus stop (approximately 40 minutes) and walk.
  663. Take the Kyoto City Bus from JR Kyoto Station to Daitoku-ji mae bus stop (approximately 30 minutes) and walk for approximately 10 minutes.
  664. Take the Kyoto City Bus from JR Kyoto station to 'Daitoku-ji mae' bus stop (about 30 minutes) and walk.
  665. Take the Kyoto City Bus from JR West Kyoto Station to 'Daitoku-ji mae' bus stop (approximately 30 minutes) and walk.
  666. Take the Kyoto City Bus from the Kyoto Bus Terminal at Kyoto Station to 'Myoshin-ji Kita-mon mae' (approximately 40 minutes) and walk.
  667. Take the Kyoto City Bus or Kyoto Bus to 'Furitsu-Idai Byoin mae' bus stop and walk for 3 minutes.
  668. Take the Kyoto City Bus or Kyoto Bus to 'Saga Shogakko' (Saga Elementary School) bus stop and walk for 15 minutes.
  669. Take the Kyoto City Bus or Kyoto Bus toward 'Daikakuji,' alight at 'Sagashakado-mae' bus stop and walk for three minutes.
  670. Take the Kyoto City Bus route no. 206 etc. to 'Kenryuko-mae' bus stop and walk for 2 minutes.
  671. Take the Kyoto City Bus to "Gokogu-mae" bus stop.
  672. Take the Kyoto City Bus to "Kenkun-jinja mae" bus stop and walk.
  673. Take the Kyoto City Bus to 'Higashiyama-nijo' or 'Higashiyama Niomon' bus stop and walk for three minutes.
  674. Take the Kyoto City Bus to 'Sennyuji-michi' bus stop and walk for ten minutes.
  675. Take the Kyoto City Bus to Imadegawa Jofukuji bus stop and walk.
  676. Take the Kyoto City Bus to Kiyomizu Michi bus stop and walk westward.
  677. Take the Kyoto City Bus to the Shinnyodo-mae bus stop or Kinrinshako-mae bus stop and walk for eight minutes.
  678. Take the Kyoto City Bus, alight at Sennyuji-michi Stop and walk for about 5 minutes to Somon Gate or about 10 minutes to Daimon Gate.
  679. Take the Kyoto City Bus/Kyoto Bus to Daikakuji and walk for 2 minutes.
  680. Take the Kyoto City Subway Karasuma Line to Gojo Station.
  681. Take the Kyoto City Subway Tozai Line to Higashiyama Station, and walk for 10 minutes
  682. Take the Kyoto City Subway to Gojo Station
  683. Take the Kyoto City Subway to Kujo Station (Kyoto Prefecture) or take the Kyoto City Bus to Oishi bus stop.
  684. Take the Kyoto City Transportation Bureau number 75 bus for Yamagoe Nakacho for 35-40 minutes, alight at 'Uzumasa Eigamura-michi' and walk for 3 minutes.
  685. Take the Kyoto City bus and alight at Daitokuji-mae Stop
  686. Take the Limited Express Maizuru train, and you will arrive at Nishimaizuru Station in approximately 90 minutes.
  687. Take the Maizuru Sightseeing Bus and get off at 'Michi no Eki Maizuru Port Toretore Center Mae' bus stop, which is very close to the center.
  688. Take the Muro line bus from the Nara Kotsu Haibara office from Muroguchiono Station of Kintetsu Railways, get off at Muroji-mae bus stop and walk.
  689. Take the Nara Kotsu Bus 'Naka-junkan' from Kintetsu Nara Station to 'Wariishi-cho' and walk eastwards for 10 minutes.
  690. Take the Nara Kotsu Bus 'Shinai-junkan' or 'Naka-junkan' from the JR Nara Station to 'Wariishi-cho' and walk eastwards for 10 minutes.
  691. Take the Nara Kotsu Bus (bound for Hirahata Station) to 'Koryo-cho Yakubamae' from Yamato Takada Station of the Kintetsu Osaka Line or Takada Station of the JR West Sakurai Line (Nara Prefecture) and walk.
  692. Take the Nara Kotsu Bus (for Dorogawa Onsen) from Shimoichiguchi Station on the Kintetsu Yoshino Line, alight at the terminal stop and walk for 4 hours (3 hours from Omine Ohashi bridge at the start of the mountain trail).
  693. Take the Nara Kotsu Bus (towards Gakken-Kita-Ikoma Station) from Gakuenmae Station (Nara Prefecture) on the Kintetsu Nara Line to 'Mayumi yon-chome' and walk for 15 minutes.
  694. Take the Nara Kotsu Bus (towards Takayama) from Tomio Station on the Kintetsu Nara Line to 'Ikomakamimachi' and walk for 10 minutes.
  695. Take the Nara Kotsu Bus from JR Kamo Station for 'Wazuka-cho Kosugi' for 3 minutes, alight at 'Okazaki' and walk for 30 minutes.
  696. Take the Nara Kotsu Bus from JR Yamatoji Line Nara Station or Kintetsu Nara Station, alight at 'Gansenji Guchi' bus stop and walk for 25 minutes.
  697. Take the Nara Kotsu Bus from the JR Nara Station or the Kintetsu Nara Station to Sakahara.
  698. Take the Nara Kotsu Bus from the JR Yamatoji Line Kamo Station (Kyoto Prefecture) and alight at 'Gansenji' bus stop.
  699. Take the Nara Kotsu city loop bus from JR Nara Station to "Daibutsuden Kasuga-taisha mae".
  700. Take the Nara Line of JR West: Get off at Momoyama Station and walk for approx. 1 km to the north-east.
  701. Take the National Route 171 via the Kujo-dori Street in Kyoto City and the Horikawa-dori Street up north, and turn right at the Shimotachiuri-dori Street eastward; this is the common route, which takes about 40 minutes.
  702. Take the Nishi-Meihan Highway, then turn onto National Route 168 at Kashiba Interchange.
  703. Take the Ohmi Railway Corporation Main line, and get off at Minakuchi-Jonan Station, and walk north for four minutes.
  704. Take the Oyodo-cho Fureai Bus (Nakamashi - Kamiichi route) to 'Sesonji' (before the parking).
  705. Take the Sagano Scenic Line of the Sagano Scenic Railway to Torokko Arashiyama Station and walk for five minutes.
  706. Take the Tango Kairiku Kotsu Bus or Kyotango City Bus from the station for 'Inaba-honke' (old Doi bus stop).
  707. Take the Tozai Line Kyoto City Subway: Get off at Keage Station and you will find it immediately.
  708. Take the West Japan Railway Maizuru Line to Higashi-Maizuru Station, from here take the Kyoto Kotsu Bus (Maizuru) Takahama-Shiratori route for 16 minutes to the Kawara Bus Stop and walk for 5 minutes.
  709. Take the Yoshino Ropeway from Yoshino Station on the Kintetsu Yoshino Line (Nara Prefecture), get off at 'Yoshinoyama' and walk for about 40 minutes.
  710. Take the Zentan Bus for 'Doi.'
  711. Take the bachi (beater, also called "rin bo"(stick for the bell)) out of the bell.
  712. Take the bus for Okadera-mae for ten minutes
  713. Take the case of Ame no uzume no mikoto, for example.
  714. Take the community bus "Mahoroba" and get off at 'Dazai-fu Seicho Mae' bus stop.
  715. Take the local bus from either of the above-mentioned stations and get off at 'Tanaka-cho' or 'Kitakyobatecho' and head north.
  716. Take the number 72 Kyoto Bus for Kiyotaki for 60 minutes from Kyoto Station on the JR Kyoto Line to 'Otagi-dera mae' bus stop.
  717. Take the pork out of the pot now, because excessive boiling will toughen it.
  718. Take the sightseeing boat to Ichinomiya Sanbashi pier, then a cable-car or lift to Kasamatsu Park on the mountainside from where the temple gate can be reached by a mountain bus operated by Tango Kairiku Kotsu.
  719. Take the train bound for "Nara Kotsu Bus Lines Katsuragi Ropeway mae" from Kintetsu Gosho Station of the Kintetsu Gosho-line, and get off at "Kintetsu Katsuragi Ropeway Line Katsuragi Ropeway mae."
  720. Take the train to JR Saga-Arashiyama Station and walk for 15 minutes.
  721. Take the train to Kita-Kamakura Station on the JR Yokosuka Line and walk for 10 minutes.
  722. Take the train to Narutaki Station on the Kitano Line Keifuku Electric Railroad or take the Kyoto City bus to 'Fukuoji' bus stop.
  723. Take them out from the water, drain, and dry in the air for about a day.
  724. Take this into account, the palace name 'Asuka no Kiyomihara no Miya' was named in 686.
  725. Take was once a jargon when there were only short pants and longs, but with the advent of half pants the term came to be used at the stores to describe the subtle difference in the length of pants to the consumers.
  726. Take-jizai-ten is expressed as a figure with a bow, and it is a god that controls everything in this world at will, makes others enjoy and enjoys by itself.
  727. Take-no-Michi (Bamboo Road)
  728. Takeaki ENOMOTO
  729. Takeaki ENOMOTO (December 5, 1936 [August 25, 1936 according to the old calender] ? December 26, 1908) was a samurai, shogun's retainer and statesman during the end of Edo period and Meiji period.
  730. Takeaki ENOMOTO : 156
  731. Takeaki ENOMOTO as well as others surrendered to the new government's forces, and the Boshin War ended.
  732. Takeaki ENOMOTO, former vice president of the naval force of the bakufu, assembled people who lost those hard-fought battles across the country, using the bakufu's battleship, and occupied Goryokaku in Hakodate.
  733. Takebe Taisha Homotsuden (treasure house)
  734. Takebe Taisha Shrine
  735. Takebe-jinja Shrine (present-day Takebe-taisha Shrine)
  736. Takebegenzo
  737. Takebeyama-jo Castle
  738. Takebeyama-jo Castle existed in Kasa County, Tango Province (now Shimofukui, Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture) during the Muromachi and Sengoku periods (period of warring states).
  739. Takebeyama-jo Castle today
  740. Takebishi Corporation
  741. Takechi no Miko (Prince Takechi) is coming from Fuwa, and many armed people are following him.'
  742. Takechi no Miko reported on the capture of Fumi and Oshisaka to Oama no Miko next day.
  743. Takechi-daiji Temple was the predecessor of Daian-ji Temple.
  744. TakechiJujiro as a son of Mitsuhide
  745. Takechidai-ji Temple and Daikandai-ji Temple
  746. Takechimaro was born as the son of OMIWA no Toshikane who belonged to one of the families of the Miwa clan (a well-established clan from the old days) that used the Nara Basin as their base.
  747. Takechiyo (then known as Motoyasu) played an important role in the Battle of Okehazama as the spearhead of the IMAGAWA army.
  748. Takechiyo, who was the last family head of SHIONOYA clan of the MINAMOTO family and was adopted by Tomoyoshi, went through genpuku (a celebration of one's coming of age), identified himself as Tomonari and succeeded to the family, which started a history of the SHIONOYA family of the Fujiwara family ('Family Tree of the Akita SHIONOYA Family').
  749. Takecho Shichimise scene
  750. Takeda Elementary School, Kyoto City
  751. Takeda Healthcare Products Co., Ltd.
  752. Takeda Shako train depot
  753. Takeda Shingen Zo (portrait of Shingen TAKEDA) (Seikei-in Temple, Mt. Koya) Important Cultural Property
  754. Takeda Station (Kyoto Prefecture)
  755. Takeda Station (Kyoto Prefecture) - Fushimi Station - Kintetsu-Tambabashi Station
  756. Takeda Station (Kyoto Prefecture) - Kintetsu-Tanbabashi Station - Momoyamagoryomae Station
  757. Takeda Station, located in Fushimi Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on Kyoto Municipal Subway and Kintetsu Railways.
  758. Takeda army's attacks suddenly ceased.
  759. Takeda bishi (the crest of the Takeda family)
  760. Takeda bishi (the crest of the Takeda family) is a family crest of the Takeda family in Koshu.
  761. Takeda clan scholars agree that although Yoshinobu was disinherited due to his involvement in a plot to assassinate Shingen in 1565, there had already been some conflict between Yoshinobu and Shingen.
  762. Takeda force made a great sacrifice.
  763. Takeda forces, smaller in number, fought a good fight but soldiers including Masakage YAMAGATA and Masatsugu TSUCHIYA fell victim to the defense troops of the allied forces.
  764. Takeda no miko (date of birth and death unknown) was a member of the Imperial Family in the Asuka period.
  765. Takeda no miko (the Imperial Prince Takeda)
  766. Takeda no miko joined Umako side at the battle between SOGA no Umako and MONONOBE no Moriya, fought with the Emperor Sushun, the Prince Umayado (Prince Shotoku), the Prince Naniwa and Kasuga no Miko.
  767. Takeda offered to save his life if he falsely told the soldiers in the castle that 'reinforcements would not come' to lower their morale, and Torii agreed.
  768. Takeda school Nakamura group aikido and Nihonden Mugen school aikido, which are said to be successors of Takeda school Aiki no jutsu.
  769. Takeda village did not include any Oaza, and the village area was reorganized into 23 towns prefixing the name 'Takeda' in 1931.
  770. Takeda village, Kii County was integrated into Kyoto City and became a part of Fushimi Ward in 1931.
  771. Takeda's Akazonae
  772. Takeda's cavalry which was outnumbered drew lines of battle in the shape of two flanking wings that surrounded the enemy.
  773. Takeda's forces attempted a night attack to Arato-jo Castle to cut off the retreat path of Nagao's forces, and therefore, Kagetora made his forces retreat to Hachiman.
  774. Takeda's separate troops routed Amakasu's troops, which brought up the rear of Uesugi's forces, and reached Hachimanbara before the noon (around 12 AM).
  775. Takeda's troops retreated to Kai.
  776. Takeda's troops stayed in the year end and new year period on the northern shore of Lake Hamana and started moving towards Mikawa Province again, and in February, Noda-jo Castle in Shitara County of Mikawa Province was seized and Sadamitsu SUGANUMA, the lord of the castle, was taken into custody.
  777. Takeda, Gunjo City (abolished after the war)
  778. Takeda, who had lost his position in the group, approached Kashitaro ITO with the intention to leave the group, and also attempted to contact the anti-Bakufu Satsuma clan.
  779. Takeda-bishi
  780. Takeda-bishi is the crest of the Koshu (Kai province) Takeda family.
  781. Takeda-jo Castle
  782. Takeda-kaido Road
  783. Takeda-kaido Road and National Highway Route No. 24
  784. Takeda-kaido Road runs as if it extends on the opposite side--northern side-- of Kyoto Station.
  785. Takeda-ryu Kisha Yabusame Preservation Society (Kumamoto Prefecture)
  786. Takeda-ryu Kisha Yabusame: the school to transmit ancient practices of the Aki-Takeda and Wakasa-Takeda clans.
  787. Takeda-ryu Kyubado (Kamakura City) insists 'Yusai's younger sister married Nobushige from the Aki Takeda clan' (considered a father of Mitsuhiro and Ekei ANKOKUJI), 'Nobunao could be a younger brother of Mitsuhiro.'
  788. Takeda-ryu is one of the schools of the Kyuba-gunrei Kojitsu (Japanese ancient practices of customs about archery, equestrian and military etiquette).
  789. Takeda-ryu school
  790. Takeda-sen: This coin was minted in Takeda City, Bungo Province.
  791. Takeda-shi jinchu (Takeda saumurai family at the front) kamameshi (first sold in 1967)
  792. Takedaguchi
  793. Takedanomiya
  794. Takedanomiya (the descendants of Takedanomiya Prince Tsunehisa)
  795. Takedanomiya Palace: This place exists as a distinguished guest house in the (Grand) Takanawa Prince Hotel.
  796. Takedanomiya Prince Tsunehisa
  797. Takedanomiya Prince Tsuneyoshi (Tsuneyoshi TAKEDA)
  798. Takedanomiya is a Miyake (family allowed to have the status of Imperial family) created by Takedanomiya Prince Tsunehisa, who was a prince of Imperial Prince Kitashirakawanomiya Yoshihisa, in the late Meiji period.
  799. Takedao Station, Dojo Station and Sanda Station began operating.
  800. Takefu Riot
  801. Takefu riot was a rebellion that occurred in Echizen City, Fukui Prefecture in 1870 after the Meiji Restoration.
  802. Takefurukuma no mikoto
  803. Takefurukuma no mikoto (武振熊命) was a figure in the Kofun period (tumulus period), whose name was also written as 建振熊命(Takefurukuma no mikoto) and who was also called Naniwanekotakefurukuma (難波根子建振熊).
  804. Takefusa KIKUCHI
  805. Takefusa KIKUCHI (1245 ? May 2, 1285) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the middle of the Kamakura period.
  806. Takegaki
  807. Takegaki (or Takagaki) is a term used to refer to fences made of bamboo.
  808. Takehachiro KAZURAYAMA
  809. Takehachiro KAZURAYAMA (Year of birth unknown - October 6, 1864) was a corporal of the Shinsengumi (a special force that guarded Kyoto during the end of Tokugawa Shogunate).
  810. Takehara City, Hiroshima Prefecture
  811. Takehara Tomb: The later 6th century; Wakamiya City, Fukuoka Prefecture
  812. Takehara, Takehara City, 1982, salt industry town
  813. Takehiko FURUTA, who advocated the Kyushu Dynasty theory, claimed that there was a strong possibility that the ancestor of Tsukushi no Kimi, "Mikayori Hime," (Princess Mikayori) whose name was written in "Chikugo no Kuni Fudoki Itsubun" (a surviving fragment of the topography of Chikugo Province), was "Himika."
  814. Takehiko FURUTA, who insisted that the theory of the Kyushu Dynasty said with certainty as follows:
  815. Takehiko KUMESHIMA, a writer of children's stories, thought that HIEDA no Are deserved to be called a god of tales like Hans Christian Andersen, and he started the festival backed up by children's story writers throughout Japan in 1930.
  816. Takehimukahitoyojihinewake: Hi Province
  817. Takehinadori no mikoto.
  818. Takehiratori no Mikoto
  819. Takehiratori no Mikoto is a male deity (Shinto) in Japanese mythology.
  820. Takehiratori no Mikoto is described as the soshin (ancestor honored as god) in Izumo no kuninomiyatsuko (provincial governor), Musashi no kuninomiyatsuko, Kamitsuunakami no kuniomiyatsuko, Shimotsuunakami no kuninomiyatsuko, Ijimu no kuninomiyatsuko, Tsushimanoagata no atai, Totomi no kuninomiyatsuko, etc.
  821. Takehiratori no mikoto.
  822. Takehiwake: Kumaso Province
  823. Takehiyodori no mikoto.
  824. Takeho-gaki
  825. Takei Pro' was established in 1929 in the Narabigaoka Studio, operated by KAWAI and TANAKA, and produced the three silent films "Adauchi Futari Roku" (literally, "two persons' record of vengeance"), "Kongo Jumon" and a sequel, all of which became failures.
  826. Takei Ryuzo Productions
  827. Takei Ryuzo Productions (Ryuzo TAKEI, became independent from Chie Pro)
  828. Takei Ryuzo Productions (established and dissolved in February 1929) was a film company located in Kyoto.
  829. Takei, who appeared in nine films produced by Chie Puro, became independent in February and established Takei Ryuzo Productions at Narabigaoka Studio (liquidated the same year).
  830. Takeichi NISHI, Colonel of the Army, Colonel of the 21st tank regiment and gold medal winner in Equestrianism in the 1932 Los Angeles Olympic Games.
  831. Takeie no Okimi
  832. Takeie no Okimi (year of birth and death unknown) was a person from the Asuka period, Japan.
  833. Takeinadane no mikoto
  834. Takeinadane no mikoto is a Japanese god.
  835. Takeinadane no mikoto served two emperors, Emperor Keiko and Emperor Seimu, and he distinguished himself in the military expedition to the east lead by Yamato Takeru (a legendary hero and a son of Emperor Keiko), taking command of the army as vice shogun.
  836. Takeisao-jinja Shrine
  837. Takeisao-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located halfway up of Mt. Funaoka in Kita Ward, Kyoto City.
  838. Takeiwa means a huge rock (there is a record that it fell into a crater lake).
  839. Takeiwa tatsuno-mikoto is believed to be a child of Kamuyaimimi no mikoto.
  840. Takeji FUJISHIMA
  841. Takeji FUJISHIMA, "Kobe Ko no Asahi"(神戸港の朝陽) (The Morning Sun at Kobe Port), 1935
  842. Takekawa (Bamboo River)
  843. Takekawa is a chapter title of "Genji Monogatari "(The Tale of Genji) which has fifty four chapters.
  844. Takekiri danuki (raccoon dog cutting bamboo)
  845. Takekirieshiki (2p.m. of June 20th)
  846. Takeko KUJO
  847. Takeko KUJO (October 20, 1887 - February 7, 1928) was an educator and tanka poet, also actively engaged in the social movement in her later years.
  848. Takeko was praised for her intelligence and beauty, and was known as one of the 'Taisho san bijin' (three beautiful women of the Taisho period) along with Byakuren YANAGIHARA (niece of Emperor Taisho's mother, Aiko YANAGIHARA) and Kinkin EGI.
  849. Takekoma-jinja Shrine (Iwanuma City, Miyagi Prefecture): Fushimi and Kasama
  850. Takekoro no mikoto.
  851. Takekoshi advocated as: 'The primary cause that moves the history consists of the economic factor.'
  852. Takekunikoriwake no mikoto
  853. Takekunikoriwake no mikoto was a member of the Imperial Family in the Kofun period (tumulus period), and he was written about in "A Record of Ancient Matters," "Chronicles of Japan," and so on.
  854. Takekurabe (January 1895 - January 1896, 'Bungakukai')
  855. Takekuyo (comforting the soul of bamboo) at Daian-ji Temple (June)
  856. Takemaro SUEHIRO assumed a place of executive on the Board of Directors as a real brother of Kinmochi SAIONJI, since he had endeavored to manage the school since the Kyoto Hosei School was established.
  857. Takemasa KIKUCHI
  858. Takemasa KIKUCHI (1342-July 14, 1374) was a busho (Japanese military commander), who lived in the period of Northern and Southern Courts.
  859. Takemichi KOGA
  860. Takemichi KOGA (March 11, 1815 - September 26, 1903) was an aristocrat of the Edo period.
  861. Takemichi KOGA, the son adopted from the Ichijo family, inherited the line of the Koga family.
  862. Takemichi claimed that he was the central figure in Demonstration of Eighty-eight Imperial Court Retainers at the start of the Meiji era (the empress of Emperor Komei) but the 'Diary of Kimizane IWAKURA' pointed to Tomomi IWAKURA instead and uncertainties remain.
  863. Takemikatsuchi-no-mikoto immediately built a wall on the very large area of land which the god of Enomoto owned.
  864. Takemikatsuchi-no-mikoto thought out a plan to set up very large god's place in the Kasugano area and said to the god of Enomoto who was a landowner that 'I want you to hand over the whole land of the mountain.'
  865. Takemikazuchi
  866. Takemikazuchi and Amenotorifune descended on the beach of Inasa no Ohama, Izumo Province, and drew the totsuka no tsurugi sword, stabbing in the ground upside down, and sat on the edge with his legs crossed.
  867. Takemikazuchi answered, "Instead, I will provide the sword that I used in pacification."
  868. Takemikazuchi changed his hand into icicle, and then into a sword.
  869. Takemikazuchi chased Takeminakata down to the sea of Suwa (Lake Suwa) in Shinano Province.
  870. Takemikazuchi finished pacifying Ashihara no nakatsukuni, and reported for Takamanohara.
  871. Takemikazuchi is a god that appears in Japanese mythology.
  872. Takemikazuchi no Kami (The god Takemikazuchi) used this sword to pacify Ashihara no Nakatsukuni (the Central Land of Reed Plains).
  873. Takemikazuchi no Onokami
  874. Takemikazuchi no kami is a god of war or the god of dagger so that the spirit is often compared to a dagger.
  875. Takemikazuchi returned to Izumo, and visited Okuninushi again.
  876. Takemikazuchi-no-mikoto (Kasuga-no-kami), Futsunushi-no-kami (Iwainushi-no-mikoto), Ama-no-koyane-no-mikoto, and Hime-no-kami are enshrined.
  877. Takemikazuchi-no-mikoto is enshrined in the first honden, Futsunushi-no-mikoto in the second, Amenokoyane-no-mikoto in the third, and Hime-no-kami in the fourth.
  878. Takeminakata could not grab Takemikazuchi's arm eventually because Takemikazuchi changed his arm into an icicle and then a sword.
  879. Takeminakata no kami
  880. Takeminakata no kami is a god who appeared in the Japanese mythology (Shinto religion).
  881. Takeminakata no kami is enshrined at Suwa-jinja Shrines throughout Japan, including Suwa-taisha Shrine (Suwa City, Nagano Prefecture).
  882. Takeminakata no kami offered a contest of strength to Takemikazuchi no kami, whereupon he grabbed the hand of Takemikazuchi no kami.
  883. Takeminakata no kami was said to be the ancestor of the Miwa clan; thus he is the ujigami of Suwashinto (Suwa shintoist group), such as the Suwa and Hoshina clans, who are descendants of the Miwa clan.
  884. Takeminakata no kami was scared by that; he ran away but was finally cornered at Lake Suwa, in Shinano Province.
  885. Takeminakata thought he could not run away any more and said, 'I will not get out of this land. Please do not kill me, and I will offer Ashihara no kuni to the child of god, as Okuninushi and Kotoshironushi told.'
  886. Takemitsu KIKUCHI
  887. Takemitsu KIKUCHI (1319? - January 6, 1374) was a busho (Japanese military commander) from the late Kamakura Period to the period of Southern and Northern Courts (Japan).
  888. Takemori was executed for entrapping Hironori by making an ungrounded story.
  889. Takemoto
  890. Takemoto has been used as backstage accompaniment to Kabuki plays for a long time, but it now appears in external performance events, as well.
  891. Takemoto is also referred to as Chobo or Kabuki Gidayu.
  892. Takemoto is the surname of Gidayu TAKEMOTO (stage name), the founder of Gidayu-bushi (musical narrative of the puppet theatre).
  893. Taken aback by the size and breadth of this lake he drained it of water and turned the land into fields it is thought.
  894. Taken from "Kikigaki Shinsengumi" written by Akira SATO.
  895. Taken from "Rakuyojonaigaranki", a record on the prosperity of shrines and temples in Rakuyo under the Northern Wei Dynasty, Vol. I (Chapter on Einei-ji Temple).
  896. Taken from "Shinsen-gumi Yowa" written by Masataka KOJIMA.
  897. Taken from "Taizo HIJIKATA told by his descendants" written by Meguji HIJIKATA.
  898. Taken from these examples of opinions of Saigo and Okubo, the object of 'the expeditionary force to the east' was not only to seize Edo-jo Castle, but also in punishing Yoshinobu TOKUGAWA (and his supporters, Katamori MATSUDAIRA, and Sadaaki MATSUDAIRA).
  899. Taken into Buddhism, Ashura was added in Hachi Bushu as a Buddhist guardian.
  900. Taken under the wing of book collector Tokuro NAKAGAWA and visiting him frequently, MIMURA began to associate with Kyoko YAMANAKA, Wakaki HAYASHI, Roan UCHIDA, Shigetomo KODA, and Shachiku ONO.
  901. Takenaka Corporation
  902. Takenaka Mokuhan (a Japanese woodblock printing craft center)
  903. Takenaka Mokuhan is a craft center of Japanese woodblock printings, inaugurated in 1884, with a workshop located in Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  904. Takenaka Mokuhan is one of the few printers that are engaged in reprinting and restoring those old printing blocks.
  905. Takenaka-inari-jinja Shrine (Deities: Uka-no-Mitama, Sarutahiko, Ame-no-Uzume)
  906. Takeno Coast
  907. Takeno Onsen Hot Spring
  908. Takeno-gawa Bridge, one of three existing lattice bridges in Japan, is located in this section and Tagimi-gawa Bridge, near to Hamasaka Station, also has lattice bridge girders.
  909. Takeno-jinja Shrine in Takeno-gun (Kyotango City)
  910. Takenoko (bamboo shoots)
  911. Takenori AKASHI disappeared never to be found, however, his son, Shozaburo AKASHI, was captured in Satsuma in 1633.
  912. Takenori AKASHI troop of 300 men as an independent troop and Harunaga ONO's nanategumi (seven groups) troop of 15,000 men as a rear-guard troop of the whole army were positioned.
  913. Takenori AKASHI, a commander famed for his bravery, was leading the vanguard of 8,000 men of Hideie Ukita's army, and the Fukushima army was pushed backwards for 500 meters and was on the threshold of total collapse at one point.
  914. Takenori KASUYA
  915. Takenori KASUYA (1562 - 1607)
  916. Takenori KASUYA was a feudal warlord who lived between the Azuchi Momoyama and Edo periods.
  917. Takenori also had other names (corresponding to Christian name for westerners) as 数正, 宗重, 真安, 宗孝 and so force, each of which was said to have been used by Takenori as an alias depending on the period; thus there is confusion as to whether certain usages refer to Takenori or one of his children.
  918. Takenori piled three Japanese battle helmets on top of a tree branch.
  919. Takenori was greatly surprised and said, 'this must be a god transformed.
  920. Takenosuke SAMEJIMA (the House of Peers [Japan])
  921. Takenouchi Kango Shuraku (circular moat)
  922. Takenouchi moat settlement (Tenri City, Nara Prefecture)
  923. Takenouchi village had originally enshrined Hakusan-jinja Shrine (Hakusan Gongen-sha Shrine) as Ubusunagami that was merged with Juni-jinja Shrine in the Meiji period.
  924. Takenouchi-kaido Road
  925. Takenouchi-kaido Road ran through its south side.
  926. Takenouchi-kaido Road route (facilities, etc. along the road)
  927. Takenouchi-kaido Road, which is known as the first Kando (a road that is improved, managed, and maintained by the Japanese nation), was constructed in the south of Mt. Nijo.
  928. Takenunakawa wake no mikoto is enshrined in Tsu-jinja Shrine (Gifu City, Gifu Prefecture), Takedasuga-jinja Shrine (Yuki City, Ibaraki Prefecture) and other Shrines.
  929. Takenunakawa wake no mikoto was a son of Obiko no mikoto.
  930. Takenunakawa wake no mikoto was also written about in the "Hitachi no kuni fudoki" (the topography of Hitachi Province), as well as Hikoimasu no miko, father of Tanbamichi nushi no mikoto, who was referred to in "Tango no kuni fudoki" (the topography of Tango Province).
  931. Takeo BANDO admitted that a theory advocated by TAKADA was commonly accepted, but both theories had no conclusive evidences and he pointed out that it would be difficult to deny the possibility of revising the work for the eight years until the book was published.
  932. Takeo HATTORI
  933. Takeo HATTORI (1832 - December 13, 1867) was a member of Shinsengumi and Goryo-eji (guards of Imperial mausoleums).
  934. Takeo HATTORI was famous as being skillful in using two swords at once, and his bloodcurdling presence of fighting alone overwhelmed the men he fought against; however, he was killed by Sanosuke HARADA's spear when his sword broke.
  935. Takeo HIROSE
  936. Takeo IDA
  937. Takeo IDA (November, 1851 - 1933) was a Japanese doctor and businessman.
  938. Takeo KUWABARA
  939. Takeo MATSUDAIRA (Chief priest of Isasumi-jinja Shrine)
  940. Takeo NAKAJIMA
  941. Takeo NAKAJIMA (1947 -) is a Japanese environmental designer.
  942. Takeo OGAWA hypothesized that Prince Songa was the son of Imperial Prince Iwakuranomiya Tadafusa and was adopted by Imperial Prince Yoshimune.
  943. Takeo was born on November 1851 in Nakahama Village, Saihaku County, Tottori Prefecture.
  944. Takeo's Ara-odori warrior dance (May 17, 1977; Takeo City)
  945. Takeohirokunioshitate no Sumeramikoto, the Emperor Senka
  946. Takeohirokunioshitate no mikoto settled in the palace of Iorino at Hinokuma, and governed the country (Takaichi-gun, Nara Prefecture).
  947. Takeoka no kimi went to Mt. Hanashika in Mino Province, to practice ukei (pledge), wearing a kazura (chaplet) (hair accessory) made by herself with branches of sakaki (Cleyera ochnacea), and said, 'the deity can be found where this kazura (chaplet) falls to land.'
  948. Takeomi KIKUCHI, Yorisada GOJO, Nagayasu NAWA, Yukiyoshi NANBU, Toshizumi NITTA were also raised to the peerage and given the title of Baron as the descendants of meritorious retainers of the Southern Court (Japan).
  949. Takeomi NAGAYAMA (president of entertainment firm Shochiku) achieved commercial success by following a policy of 'Finding kabuki productions staged around stage `name` succession announcements and career-end performances for the predecessors.'
  950. Takeout, home-delivery service shop.
  951. Takeover of Postal Service by Japan
  952. Takeri
  953. Takeru no miko
  954. Takeru no miko (651 - 658) was a member of the Imperial Family in the Asuka period.
  955. Takes the lead role.
  956. Takes the name "Sansai souryu."
  957. Takesada SHIGEOKA
  958. Takesada TOKUGAWA (the founder of the "Matsudo Tokugawa family," a branch family of the Mito Tokugawa family; a viscount; a vice-admiral in the shipbuilding division of the Imperial Japanese Navy)
  959. Takeshi & Machami's Why Not Get Surprised With World-class Japanese Technology? Special
  960. Takeshi AMEMIYA
  961. Takeshi HAYASHI: "Kushikezuru Onna" (Woman Combing)
  962. Takeshi IZUMI
  963. Takeshi KAGAMIYAMA, who later became professor of Kyushu University, was the first person who supposed in 1937 that there had been jobosei in Dazai-fu.
  964. Takeshi KAWADA
  965. Takeshi KAWADA (October 10, 1842 - January 4, 1920) was a Japanese geographer.
  966. Takeshi MUROTA (class of 1967, science): After graduation, he studied economics, served as a professor at Hitotsubashi University and Doshisha University, and advocated 'economics of ecology.'
  967. Takeshi TOKUDA
  968. Takeshi TOYODA summarizes the 'common characteristic of To' into following four points.
  969. Takeshi UMEHARA's Critique
  970. Takeshi UMEHARA's theory that Prince Shotoku was an onryo, as discussed in his book, "Kakusareta Jujika" ("Hidden Crucifix"), is not backed by much credible evidence.
  971. Takeshi YAMAGUCHI advocated a theory that it was based on the Yokyoku "Rain and Moon" in which Saigyo appears as a waki, but Hiroaki NAGASHIMA denied it because it had little to do with the contents of 'Shiramine.'
  972. Takeshi YORO, an anatomist who is known as the author of "The Wall of Fools" and others, serves as a part-time Executive Director.
  973. Takeshiba ran away to the fields and mountains, requesting the restoration of his property in writing; however, Prince Okiyo not only refused his request but also threatened Takeshiba by showing him the battle preparations that had been made.
  974. Takeshige KIKUCHI
  975. Takeshige KIKUCHI (1307? - 1338?) was a busho (Japanese military commander) who lived from the late Kamakura period to the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  976. Takeshige MATSUDAIRA (3rd Chief of the Hamada-han Clan)
  977. Takeshiro MATSUURA
  978. Takeshiro MATSUURA (March 12 1818-February 10 1888) was a Japanese explorer who was active from the end of the Edo period to the Meiji period.
  979. Takeshiro NAGAYAMA
  980. Takeshiro NAGAYAMA (May 28, 1837 - May 27, 1904) was a military man of the Japanese Army and a nobleman.
  981. Takeshiro NAGAYAMA served as Tondenhei Director-general, Tondenhei Commander, and the later-established Dainana Shidan (Seventh Division) Chief.
  982. Takeshiro NAGAYAMA, the director-general, examined the Cossac soldier system in Russia, and set up concrete measures of the tondenhei expansion on this model.
  983. Takeshiro is enshrined at Nagayama-jinja Shrine and Kaitaku-jinja Shrine which is a subordinate shrine of Hokkaido-jingu Shrine.
  984. Takeshiro participated in Boshin War, and in July of 1871, after the Meiji Restoration, he was appointed as Taii (Captain) of the Army and assigned to the second battalion.
  985. Takeshiro was a warrior, who was always concerned about Hokkaido all his life and dedicated his life to Hokkaido.
  986. Takeshiro's eldest son Taketoshi NAGAYAMA succeeded to him.
  987. Takeshiro's third son Takeyoshi NAGAYAMA was the third president of the Jikei University School of Medicine.
  988. Takeshiro, as Director General of the Hokkaido government, focused particularly on development of inland areas in Hokkaido.
  989. Takeshiro, born in 1837, as the fourth son of Morihiro NAGAYAMA who was a retainer of Kagoshima Domain, was adopted by Kihachiro NAGAYAMA who was also a retainer of Kagoshima Domain.
  990. Takesuke Shirane was his nephew.
  991. Takesumaki structure: The kaya ridge is wound around by woven bamboo.
  992. Taketamayorihiko no Mikoto and Taketamayoribime no Mikoto are shusaijin (main enshrined deities) and Toyotamahiko no Mikado and Toyotama-hime are enshrined as associate gods.
  993. Taketamayorihiko no Mikoto is said to be the same as Kamotamayorihiko no Mikoto, who is enshrined at Hajio-sha Shrine, a sessha (auxiliary shrine [dedicated to a deity close-related to that of a main shrine]) of Kamowakeikazuchi-jinja Shrine (also known as Kamigamo-jinja Shrine), and Kikanowakamiya Shrine, a sessha of Hiyoshi-taisha Shrine.
  994. Taketamayorihiko no mikoto later becomes Kamo no Agatanushi.
  995. Taketo, Totsukawa village, Nara Prefecture
  996. Taketo, Totsukawa village, Nara Prefecture (downstream)
  997. Taketoki KIKUCHI
  998. Taketoki KIKUCHI was a busho (Japanese military commander) at the end of Kamakura period.
  999. Taketoki and Yoshiaki got lost in 'Kumode no Mori' (Spider hand Forest), when they hurried themselves in a storm, called by Kuniharu.
  1000. Taketoki became the lord of Kumonosu-jo Castle formally, and he tried to adopt Yoshiteru, Yoshiaki's heir because he had no child.


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