; オンラインWikipedia日英京都関連文書対訳コーパス(英和) 見出し単語一覧

オンラインWikipedia日英京都関連文書対訳コーパス(英和) 見出し単語一覧

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  1. Taketoki surged into the Chinzei tandai, and went into a battle with the subordinates of the tanadai, however, he was defeated and killed along with the Kikuchi family, including his son, Yoritaka KIKUCHI.
  2. Taketoki told about the prediction of the old woman to the officers and soldiers, who were still disturbed, to boost their morale.
  3. Taketoki's will was succeeded by his legitimate son, the 13th head Takeshige KIKUCHI, and Takeshige was appointed to Shugo of Higo Province due to Masashige KUSUNOKI's recommendation, after the Kenmu Restoration was established.
  4. Taketoki, being angry, killed the assassin on the spot.
  5. Taketoki, frustrated with the commanders who lost their spirit and had no plan, remembered the old woman in the forest when roaring thunders called it back, and rode to Kumode no Mori alone.
  6. Taketoki, who made his decision, pierced Kuniharu with a spear.
  7. Taketomi-jima Island, Taketomi-cho, 1987, agricultural village
  8. Taketomi-jima Island, Taketomi-cho, Okinawa Prefecture, agricultural village
  9. Taketomi-jima Island: 842 itsms (Kihoin-shushukan, Okinawa Prefecture) registration date: March 7, 2007
  10. Taketomijima's Tanedori seed harvesting festival (May 17, 1977; Aza Taketomi, Taketomi-cho, Yaeyama-gun)
  11. Taketomo KIKUCHI
  12. Taketomo KIKUCHI (1363-1407) was a busho (Japanese military commander), who lived from the period of Northern and Southern Courts to the early Muromachi Period.
  13. Taketori Monogatari (The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter)
  14. Taketori Monogatari (The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter): The oldest existing Japanese narrative written in kana.
  15. Taketori Monogatari (the Tale of Bamboo Cutter)
  16. Taketori Monogatari has basically the same structure as Robe of Feathers Legend, in which a main character from the supernatural world makes a poor man flourish and returns where she comes from.
  17. Taketori no Okina was once called 'Sanuki no Miyatsuko' in the tale.
  18. Taketoshi KIKUCHI
  19. Taketoshi KIKUCHI (year of birth unknown - 1341) is a Southern Court (Japan) busho (Japanese military commander) from the end of Kamakura period into the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  20. Taketoshi became Colonel of the Army, was awarded with the court rank of Senior Second Grade and the third Order of the Golden Pheasant, Fifth Class, and became a member of the House of Peers.
  21. Taketsune HORIBE
  22. Taketsune HORIBE (1670 - March 20, 1703) was a member of the Forty-seven Ronin of Ako (lordless samurai of Ako Domain).
  23. Taketsuru had learned the distillation technique in Scotland and came back to Japan in the early 1920's with the knowledge acquired there.
  24. Takeuchi Monjo
  25. Takeuchi bunken' (Takeuchi literature) is often used to cover not only books, but also shinpo (sacred treasure) as described below.
  26. Takeuchi family
  27. Takeuchi monjo are also considered as the scriptures of Amatsukyo, a new organized religion.
  28. Takeuchi-monjo
  29. Takeuchi-monjo (an ancient text which recorded the lineage of ancient kami and a dynasty preceding Emperor Jinmu)
  30. Takeuchi-monjo (an ancient text which recorded the lineage of ancient kami and a dynasty preceding Emperor Jinmu) wrote Hida Province as "日玉国" or "日霊国," indicating that Hida was Takamanohara (plain of high heaven) and Kuraiyama Mountain was the Pyramid.
  31. Takeuchi-ryu school
  32. Takeuchi-sha Shrine, Amaterasu Kotai-jinja Shrine, Ebisu-jinja Shrine, Kashima-jinja Shrine, Kehinomiya Shrine,
  33. Takeyamachi-dori Street
  34. Takeyasu MIYAMOTO, who was the president of Myochikai Kyodan (religious group), said so in the paper of "Chugai Nippo," when Shinjo, the head of the organization, died.
  35. Takeyoriwake: Tosa Province
  36. Takezaiku (artisan of bamboo work) and hishakushi
  37. Takezakikanzeon-ji Temple's Shushoe New Year's service ogre festival (January 12, 1985)
  38. Takezo SHIMURA
  39. Takezo SHIMURA (1833 - date of death unknown), from Soshu, was a member of the Shinsengumi.
  40. Takezumi KIKUCHI
  41. Takezumi KIKUCHI (year of birth unknown - July 27, 1356) is a busho (Japanese military commander) from the end of Kamakura period into the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan).
  42. Taki District (Sasayama city)
  43. Taki District, Mino Province
  44. Taki can be said to have been the first composer to respond to that demand.
  45. Taki entered Tokyo Music School (present-day Tokyo University of the Arts) in 1894 at the age of 15.
  46. Taki mountain range (a mountain range extending from Kyoto Prefecture to Sasayama City and Tanba City)
  47. Taki mountain range is the generic name for the mountains extending from Kyoto Prefecture to Sasayama City and Tanba City in the shape of high quay wall, which are 500 meters to 700 meters high; it is also called the Taki Alps after former Taki County.
  48. Taki mountain range prospered as the practice place of the mountaineering asceticism from the end of Heian period to the Medieval period, but in 1482, all the temples there were burned to ashes in the attack by armed priests from Mt. Omine (Yamato Shugendo [the ascetic and shamanistic practice in Mt. Omine]).
  49. Taki no himemiko (Princess Taki)
  50. Taki no himemiko (before 686? - March 1, 751) was a member of the imperial Family who lived from the Asuka peirod to the Nara period.
  51. Taki-gun, Ise Province: Ise-jingu Shrine
  52. Taki-ishi: stones part of which is reminiscent of a waterfall
  53. Taki-no-sho Manor (多芸荘) was a shoen (manor in medieval Japan) existed in Mino Province in the Heian period or during the Kamakura and Muromachi periods.
  54. Taki-no-sho: estate of Imperial family.
  55. Takiboshi is the common method of cooking rice that is practiced in modern-day Japan.
  56. Takichi MIYASHITA
  57. Takichi MIYASHITA (September 30, 1875 - January 24, 1911) was an anarchist.
  58. Takidani Fudomyoo-ji Temple in Osaka: The wooden statue of Fudo Myoo with two youths (Heian period, an important cultural property)
  59. Takigami Park (cherry blossom viewing spot)
  60. Takigawa Incident
  61. Takigawa hinted that the three staff members could be fired and repeatedly criticized them in public, and in the end, all three declined the position of special lawyer.
  62. Takigayu
  63. Takigi Noh (Noh performance played at night) (May)
  64. Takigi-Onoh (Noh performance played at night in the light of firewood) (May 11, 12)
  65. Takigi-noh (Noh play performed at night by a fire)
  66. Takigi-noh (Noh play performed at night by a fire) is a Noh play that is especially chosen and performed in Noh Theater or on a Noh stage with a beacon fire around which is temporarily installed outside mainly on summer nights.
  67. Takigiono (outdoor nighttime Noh performance) - May 11-12
  68. Takiguchi no musha (Takiguchi samurai)
  69. Takiguchi no musha (Takiguchi samurai) were bushi (samurai warriors) who guarded the dairi (imperial palace) under the command of the Kurodo dokoro (imperial secretariat) from the end of the ninth century.
  70. Takiguchi no musha (samurai guards of the Imperial Residence)
  71. Takiguchi no musha (the Imperial Palace Guards under the command of Kurododokoro [the Chamberlain's Office])
  72. Takiguchi-dera Temple
  73. Takiguchi-tai troop (Daishiro NAKATSU)
  74. Takiji KOBAYASHI adored Naoya SHIGA and asked for SHIGA's opinion of his work.
  75. Takikomi gohan
  76. Takikomi gohan (seasoned rice boiled with other ingredients), kuri-meshi (rice boiled with chestnuts), Fukagawa-meshi (rice boiled with clams), tai-meshi (boiled rice with (minced) sea bream), gomoku-meshi (rice boiled with various kinds of ingredients in seasoned stock), matsutake-meshi (rice boiled with matsutake mushrooms), sansai-meshi (rice boiled with edible wild plants), imo-meshi (rice boiled with sweet potatoes)
  77. Takikomi-gohan (boiled rice seasoned with soy sauce and mixed with meat or seafood and savory vegetables)
  78. Taking 'Gishiwajinden' by itself, it can be inferred that Yamatai existed to the south of the states in northern Kyushu, such as Ito and Na.
  79. Taking C7512 as an example (in this case it belongs to 7012F and is the second car toward Umeda Station), let's see how it woks:
  80. Taking Chikauji MATSUDAIRA as the first generation, Ieyasu emerges as the 9th Matsudaira generation (6th generation of the Yasuyoshi MATSUDAIRA family) who founded the Tokugawa shogun family dynasty (eldest son lineage of the Chikauji branch of the Matsudaira clan) who in turn formed the head family of the clan.
  81. Taking Himeji-jo Castle as an example, only two structures, the four-roof donjon and the connected four-roof watari-yagura (the roofed-passage turret), have been designated national treasures; the other turrets, gates, walls and so forth of the castle complex have been designated important cultural properties.
  82. Taking Kaizu-jo Castle, Kenshin could have fought the battle advantageously but did not take it.
  83. Taking Tokyo as an example, the average year value in 2006 was essentially equal to the previously mentioned four year period from 2000 to 2003.
  84. Taking Tsunetoki's death as a good opportunity, Mitsutoki NAGOE allied with Yoritsune, and anti-regent gokenin, such as Yoritsune's close advisers and hyojoshu (members of Council of State), Mototsuna GOTO, Hidetane CHIBA, and Yasumochi MIYOSHI, and planned the overthrow of Tokiyori, but Tokiyori's side forestalled it.
  85. Taking William Shakespeare as an example, it has long been advocated that Shakespeare were different individuals, but even those people who take this viewpoint do not consider his works to be gisho.
  86. Taking a couple of examples, the negative auxiliary verbs '-nafu' and the sentence-ending particle '-ro' that follows the imperative base form can be associated with '-nai' and '-ro' in the modern dialects of eastern Japan.
  87. Taking a dim view of having the surname of a rebel, Yoshitaka returned to his original family name of KURODA.
  88. Taking a leading part, Koin TAKADA known as an odd chief abbot, promoted the Hakuho Garan (the Buddhist temple of Hakuho culture) Reconstruction Project through Shakyo-Kanjin (soliciting for contribution in exchange for copying a sutra) since the 1960s.
  89. Taking a look at the text, you can see that it was written in a kind of verse, so it must have been written by someone who was familiar with Chinese poetry and waka poems.
  90. Taking a position of regent or chief advisor to the Emperor from the family other than Sekke
  91. Taking a rest by bathing is a unique Japanese culture which reflects its humid climate (Japanese-style bathing is spread exceptionally in some regions in Asia).
  92. Taking advantage of Kyoto Kokutai (National Sports Festival) held in 1988, the overall renovation of this park had started in 1982 and its redevelopment was completed in 1989.
  93. Taking advantage of Motomori KOZAI's ignorance, Tadakata HOSOKAWA forwarded a falsified letter of rebellion to Takakuni HOSOKAWA, who, astonished at the letter, murdered Motomori KOZAI on Autust 30 of the same year (1526).
  94. Taking advantage of a strong wind, the shogunal forces were able to set fires within the castle, and they pressed their assault furiously, knocking down all the watchtowers they could.
  95. Taking advantage of a succession dispute within the Jodo Shinshu sect, which was the largest Buddhist sect at the time, he made it split into 'east' and 'west', which resulted in the weakening of the sect.
  96. Taking advantage of allyl isothiocyanate's action of killing bacteria as well as controlling the emission of ethylene gas, which promotes the aging of plants, wasabi is also used for antibacterial goods and deodorants, and in freshness-preserving agents for food/vegetables kept in refrigerators.
  97. Taking advantage of beautiful wood grain of the material characterizes Edo-sashimono.
  98. Taking advantage of disorder by this Coup, the Ouchi clan began invading Takeda's territories.
  99. Taking advantage of his family background that his father Norimori was a younger brother of TAIRA no Kiyomori, he succeeded in life by being appointed as a court official despite his young age amid the golden age of the Taira clan government.
  100. Taking advantage of its humid climate, another option available in Japan is to store water emitted from a dehumidifier and sprinkle it.
  101. Taking advantage of military expertise which they had acquired over many generations, they formed military forces in the provinces.
  102. Taking advantage of such a situation, Yoshioki OUCHI of the Suo Province came up to the capital accompanied by the former seii taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians"), Yoshitane ASHIKAGA (former Yoshiki ASHIKAGA, and later changed again to Yoshitane ASHIKAGA) in 1509.
  103. Taking advantage of such situations, Moritoki ISE (Soun HOJO) subverted Horikoshi kubo in Izu and Soun's descendants proclaimed themselves the Gohojo clan.
  104. Taking advantage of such situations, the Ryuzoji clan that rose from the rebellion of the Shoni clan expanded its power in Hizen and, for a short period in the age of Takanobu RYUZOJI, grew to compete with the Otomo clan and the Shimazu clan.
  105. Taking advantage of that, the companies of the Middle troop of the government army were reinforced and started counterattack.
  106. Taking advantage of the Japanese dish boom, many Chinese restaurants and Korean restaurants have changed to Japanese restaurants.
  107. Taking advantage of the Kyotoku War (series of battles between the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) and the Kanto kanrei (shogun's deputy for the Kanto area), he attacked and destroyed the head family of the Chiba clan, and became the 19th head of the clan.
  108. Taking advantage of the Nakasendai War, Takauji seceded from the new government and established a military government in Kyoto after beating the imperial court forces.
  109. Taking advantage of the Oriental boom at that time, she toured various places in Europe.
  110. Taking advantage of the boom in modern sukiya buildings, the plantation of cedar for polished logs was spread to Keihoku-cho, Yagi-cho, and Hiyoshi-cho of Kyoto Prefecture around that time.
  111. Taking advantage of the boom in municipal mergers, known as the big merger of Heisei, the surrounding municipalities of Miwa-cho, Oe-cho and Yakuno-cho were merged together.
  112. Taking advantage of the chaotic situations, Yokota of Nikkatsu led a move to oust independent film productions such as Makino's, encouraging other major filmmakers to join the move.
  113. Taking advantage of the conflict in Hitachi Province in November, he plotted to kill Masakado only to fail again and hid himself again along with FUJIWARA no Tamenori.
  114. Taking advantage of the confused Mori family, Motoshige TAKEDA, lord of Sato-Kanayama Castle, attacked Arita Castle in Kikkawa territory.
  115. Taking advantage of the death of Yoshisuke WAKIYA, who supported the Yoshino Imperial Court (Southern Court), Yoriharu attacked Iyo Province (currently Ehime Prefecture) to drive the Odachi clan out of power and stood in opposition to the Kono clan, which held political power in Iyo.
  116. Taking advantage of the disturbance, Motochika captured Nakamura in the name of suppression of the rebellion.
  117. Taking advantage of the fact that Harenaga TSUCHIMIKADO, the heir of Haruo, was a little child, Onmyoryo was abolished and Onmyodo was eliminated from public authority in 1870, followed by the transfer of tenmon and rekizan to navy, universities and astronomical observatory.
  118. Taking advantage of the fact that the Fujiwara clan, who were starting to dominate politics as maternal relatives of the imperial court, did not have any influential members at that time, Emperor Uda used Michizane to restrain the Fujiwara clan.
  119. Taking advantage of the fact that the capital, Kyoto, lay in ruins as a result of Onin War, culture began to spread out into the provinces, and even disseminated down to the commoners, who had been advancing socially thanks to the development and growth of soson (peasant villages) and new urban areas in the provinces.
  120. Taking advantage of the recent onmyoji boom, a self-proclaimed onmyoji by the name of Chihiro ISHIDA has appeared on television shows and the like but his style indisputably conforms to Koshinto and one can hardly say that it is based on Onmyodo.
  121. Taking advantage of the situation, the troops of Todo marched to crush the troops of Chosokabe, but Morichika took up a position beside an embankment of the river and made the warriors hold spears in their hands, rushed at once when the troops of Todo came close to them.
  122. Taking advantage of the spread of Japonism, Japanese art dealers like Tadamasa HAYASHI started to do business in Paris.
  123. Taking advantage of the timetable revision made in March of 2001 to have the train stop at Kyuhoji Station, the required time between Osaka and Nara was extended to forty-four minutes at the fastest.
  124. Taking advantage of the use of the Washi, words or statements can be written on a reverse side of the Sensu.
  125. Taking advantage of the war boom that occurred when World War I broke out, Joeki cleared off his debts laying the foundation for rebuilding the Nakagawa family.
  126. Taking advantage of these victories, Ninagawa forwarded the administrative and financial reforms immediately and streamlined the prefectural administrative office.
  127. Taking advantage of this chance, the Southern Court occupied Kyoto in 1352.
  128. Taking advantage of this difference in flavor, Japanese mustard is specifically used for sandwiches and hamburgers in Japan.
  129. Taking advantage of this incident, Mototsune made people realize the strong power of the Fujiwara clan.
  130. Taking advantage of this momentum, Soun also captured Sumiyoshi-jo Castle, and Yoshiatsu escaped to Misaki-jo Castle, where Yoshioki resided.
  131. Taking advantage of this opportunity, in April in the same year, Nagatoki OGASAWARA invaded Suwa.
  132. Taking advantage of this situation, Japan believed that it could get out of the critical situation if she could make Southeast Asia a part of the country
  133. Taking advantage of this situation, Kitano koji za approached the bakufu in exchange for tax paid to the bakufu.
  134. Taking advantage of this system, land stewards came to establish effective control of manors and imperial territories.
  135. Taking advantage of this void, soldiers rose in rebellion in 783 and occupied Chang'an, supporting a former setsudoshi named Zhu Ci as their leader.
  136. Taking advantage of this, Yoshiyori MITSUKI, a vassal in the Kyogoku clan, had the Imperial Court accept his assumption of the Anegakoji name.
  137. Taking an army of some 7,000 horsemen, Sanehira advanced to the west of Ichinotani.
  138. Taking command of thirty thousand mounted warriors together with TAIRA no Tomomori, Michimori marched to suppress rebels in Noto Province.
  139. Taking encouragement from such circumstances, Li Ru-song advanced south and closed in on Hansong.
  140. Taking his other name of Toyokunino no mikoto as an example, "Kojikiden" (Commentaries on the Kojiki) describes that the name symbolizes an abundant profitable country.
  141. Taking into account a scale of Jikifu (a vassal household allotted to courtier, shrines and temples) under the later Ritsuryo system, Tomokuyu at that time seems to have not been a part of Ahachimanokoori but a whole district, and range of the district included later Ikeda District, possibly wider.
  142. Taking into account that one reading of a character never conveniently refers to one thing and that a character has a variety of meanings, eirei can be seen as a perfect word.
  143. Taking into account the problem of the recommendation of Nobunaga for the three positions, it would seem that the Emperor saw a crisis in Nobunaga's series of actions.
  144. Taking into account their implication on the other religions, since the rituals of Onmyodo are still under investigation, it is difficult to discuss them in specific terms.
  145. Taking into consideration the descriptions including engi and Izuna-koshiki, it can be assumed that a systematic Izuna belief was already formed in the beginning of the Middle Ages.
  146. Taking into consideration the fact that he had been serving the Taira family since he was young, his father Sueto was probably gokenin of the Taira family, too.
  147. Taking into consideration the relationship with the above-mentioned Matsuo-taisha Shrine, this shrine is believed to have been founded in the course of the area development in the upstream direction by the Hata clan.
  148. Taking into consideration what was known of the 'Kofun period' as a view point into the establishment of the Japanese Nation, historians and other experts came to this conclusion; that ancient Japan was formed during the early and middle portions of the 'Kofun period,' then to be fully developed and established during the late and final periods of the 'Kofun.'
  149. Taking it as a good example that Tadayoshi ASHIKAGA was appointed to Sama no kami, Sama no kami in the Muromachi period was regarded as a government post taken by Kokenshoku (post of guardian) of Shogun (existence like vice-shogun) or by Shogun-in-waiting.
  150. Taking it as a part of underwear, haneri is an exceptional one among various ethnic costumes in the world, because a part of haneri falls into someone's eye when it is formally dressed.
  151. Taking it as a turning point, he afterward pursued his own expression, seeking subject matter in the scenery.
  152. Taking it before a meal prevents one from absorbing fat contained in food.
  153. Taking it home, she put it on the eaves of her hermitage, and she got pregnant and gave birth to a boy baby.
  154. Taking its scale, such as the budget and teaching staff, into account, Kyoto University, as a whole, can be ranked the second in Japan, but actually, it can be equal to Tokyo University, No. 1 university, in the quality of its very best students and teaching staff, who tackles the cutting-edge research.
  155. Taking note of his crisp performance and skilful 'keren' (playing to the gallery), Makino offered him a part in a movie.
  156. Taking on the Eastern Camp during the Onin War, he was later named Shugo in the Tango Province and ordered to conquer the Isshiki clan of the Western Camp, but the fighting did not go well and he was often attacked in Wakasa.
  157. Taking over after his father, he was appointed to Sagami Province.
  158. Taking over his father's post, he first became hatamoto with 3,000 koku.
  159. Taking over the work of Susanoo, Okuninushi worked with Sukunabikona to control the country, taught kinen (incantations) and medicine, and completed the creation of Ashihara no Nakatsukuni (a word to express the country or a location in Japan).
  160. Taking pity on him, Odani urged him to transfer to famous dojos of Chiba, Momonoi or Saito which was nearer to his house and hence more convenient to commute.
  161. Taking pity on the Japanese envoy because of the long journey he had had to make, Taiso (Tang tai zong) ordered the office in charge not to request tributes from Japan every year.
  162. Taking pity on the Japanese envoy because of the long journey he had had to make, the emperor ordered the office in charge not to request tributes from Japan every year.
  163. Taking pleasure in decoration is a clean mental state of Bosatsu.
  164. Taking root in this note on lotus-viewing, preservation of the lotus species in Ogura-ike Pond and the lotus-viewing event are continued by volunteers who have been growing lotus from lotus seeds of bygone days in their homes.
  165. Taking shelter at the foot of the little pine that has lived a thousand years, we wait to be welcomed by the Immeasurably Eternal Buddha'
  166. Taking sides with Nagayoshi, Sadataka often fought against 'anti-Nagayoshi' Harumoto HOSOKAWA and his party.
  167. Taking soup stock
  168. Taking that into consideration, his funeral was also carried out with Shinto rites by volunteers of Koten Kokyusho as 'Koten Kokyusho funeral'.
  169. Taking the cut head of the enemy general
  170. Taking the death of Kazumasa SOGO who was a younger brother of Nagayoshi as an opportunity, Takamasa attacked the Kishiwada-jo Castle along with Munefusa YASUMI and Norimitsu YUSA.
  171. Taking the deceased to a burial place like the cemetery is sometimes called Nobeokuri (procession).
  172. Taking the name of Jisshin-bo Rensho, he went into seclusion in Kyoto and then established an Utsunomiya poetry circle.
  173. Taking the opportunity as the Ichijo army became divided, Motochika CHOSOKABE ordered the rest of his army to cross the river.
  174. Taking the opportunity of becoming an adopted child of the Shigetomi family, he moved to the Shigetomi residence in the castle town from the Kagoshima Castle.
  175. Taking the opportunity of the completion of treaty revision, the cabinet decided to hand over the reigns of government to Saionji and resigned en masse.
  176. Taking the opportunity presented by Ieyasu leaving to attack Aizu, Mitsunari ISHIDA rallied anti-Ieyasu daimyos (feudal lords) such as Yoshitsugu OTANI and Terumoto MORI and took up arms.
  177. Taking the opportunity when Yoshimasa KISO, the husband of Shingen's daughter, came to belong to the Oda clan side, Nobunaga started invading Takeda's territories in February (in the old calendar) of 1582.
  178. Taking the performance of matchlocks and bullets of that time into consideration, he was an extremely excellent gunman.
  179. Taking the responsibility of defeating Gozoku (local ruling families) in Awaji that took the side of Mitsuhide Akechi, Hidehisa contributed to suppressing Awaji.
  180. Taking the situation into consideration, Takashi HARA, the president of Seiyu-kai Party, established his own cabinet and appointed members of Kenkyukai to cabinet positions and important posts.
  181. Taking these into consideration, there is a high possibility that this transfer may have been a play aiming to become independent from the Rokkaku family.
  182. Taking these situations into account, many ideas have been considered, such as raising the level to which tourists are allowed to select their courses more freely.
  183. Taking these situations into consideration, it could be concluded that the attractive force of the organization symbolised by Nobunaga ODA was stronger than the centripetal force of Mitsuhide AKECHI.
  184. Taking these things into consideration, Hidematsu WADA claimed in 'A Study on Old Manuscripts of Azuma Kagami' that a manuscript in the Kanazawa Library, the source of Hojobon and Kurokawabon, is a simplified book, and Yoshikawabon would have been based on the version which was being edited before it.
  185. Taking this as an opportunity, Amagase Dam was constructed that was completed in 1964.
  186. Taking this as an opportunity, Takemitsu KIKUCHI eliminated his younger brother Takehito KIKUCHI and became the family head himself.
  187. Taking this into account, Hisamasa seems to have had superior ability in diplomacy.
  188. Taking this into account, the reason Hisamasa abandoned the Oda clan to choose the coalition with the Asakura clan seems to not have been his reactionary emotion, but the result of his strategic perception as a feudal lord.
  189. Taking this into consideration, it is possible that with a comparison to 'a branch of pine,' the Komatsu clan, which had been brought under MINAMOTO no Arimitsu's umbrella, was engaged in the construction of the Miyoshi-jo Castle.
  190. Taking this occasion, Ieyasu TOKUGAWA was ordered to write and submit a letter of awareness stating that the sansho (three norms to be used for discrimination between right and wrong in religion) in the Four Dictums (of Nichiren Buddhism) did not exist.
  191. Taking this opportunity, Ieyasu declared a war with the Toyotomi clan for the reason that the Toyotomi clan increased forces by recruiting ronin (master-less samurai).
  192. Taking this opportunity, KIRINO led a troop of the best fighters who were ready to die, ran down to the fighting field, and attacked the enemy.
  193. Taking this opportunity, Kataoka resigned from Makino Productions in April and established 'Kataoka Chiezo Productions' on May 10.
  194. Taking this opportunity, Soemon picked the stick and fled with it.
  195. Taking this opportunity, Viscount Mishima presented the villa to the Imperial Family in 1904 and it came to be called 'Shiobara Goyotei' and used mainly for summer exodus of the Imperial Family.
  196. Taking this opportunity, he asked for Mabuchi's instruction regarding the commentaries of Kojiki, which he had decided to study.
  197. Taking this opportunity, he convinced 20-odd Togoku Monto to admit that he was the legitimate inheritor of sect's doctrine as well as the successor of Hoto and got them to sign their names.
  198. Taking this opportunity, he entered the priesthood under Honen.
  199. Taking this opportunity, the amount of nengajo being handled increased dramatically.
  200. Taking this opportunity, the detached 4th brigade succeeded in entering Miyakonojo.
  201. Taking this opportunity, the government began in earnest discarding the sonjo party.
  202. Taking this opportunity, the government repeatedly submitted the bill of railway public ponds and acquisition of private railways to the Diet, but every time the bill was not passed.
  203. Taking this opportunity, the three kugyo (court nobles) or government officers, who were relatives of the Kujo family, returned to the national political world.
  204. Taking transportation condition at that time in consideration, however, arrival of the seventh version in Asia was very late compared to the year of publication, it is understood that the reference to the seventh version was difficult.
  205. Taking up a residence in Kyoto (Marutamachi-dori Agaru, Nishinotoin Street, Kamigyo Ward, Kyoto City), he lived a life absorbed in poetry, calligraphy and paintings as a literati, while continuing the study and learning as a scholar out of power.
  206. Taking up the influence of the Soetsu school, the notation does not use the letters Ro, Tsu, Re and Chi, but Hu, Ho, U, Eh, Ya and Ee, which is referred to as the HuHoU system.
  207. Takino HAYASHI
  208. Takino HAYASHI was Tekkan YOSANO's and later Oyo MASATOMI's wife.
  209. Takino-o-jinja Shrine
  210. Takinomiya's Nenbutsu-odori Buddhist invocation dance (May 17, 1977; Ayagawa-cho, Ayauta-gun)
  211. Takinoyashiro Interchange/Hojo/Yamazaki Interchange/Sakuto/Mimasaka Interchange/Chugoku Katsumada (Chugoku Expressway): It operates both boarding and alighting only when there are vacant seats.
  212. Takiri bime no mikoto:
  213. Takiri-bime
  214. Takiri-bime (also known as Tagiri-hime) is a Shinto goddesses from Japanese mythology and one of the 'Munakata-Sanjoshin' (the three goddesses enshrined in Munakata-taisha Shrine).
  215. Takiri-bime, also known as Okitsushima-hime
  216. Takiribime no mikoto
  217. Takitsu hime no mikoto:
  218. Takitsuhime no mikoto
  219. Takiyama
  220. Takiyama (senior lady-in-waiting for Iesada TOKUGAWA, the 13th Shogun and Iemochi TOKUGAWA, the 14th Shogun)
  221. Takiyama - Otoshiyori between Iesada TOKUGAWA and the 14th Shogun Ieshige TOKUGAWA.
  222. Takko water and Goganseki stone (a stone on which prayers are carved) (near Tokko water, the statue of Shugyo-Daishi (a high monk pursuing knowledge) is placed)
  223. Tako no Tametomo
  224. Tako to Ama (The Dream of the Fisherman's Wife)
  225. Tako-raisu: Dishes in which the ingredients usually wrapped in a taco are placed on gohan.
  226. Takokushu
  227. Takokushu is a territory of Sengoku daimyo (Japanese territorial lord in the Sengoku period [period of Warring States]).
  228. Takoyaki (octopus dumplings)
  229. Takoyaki (octopus dumplings): originated in the Kansai region as okonomi-yaki
  230. Takoyaki Overseas
  231. Takoyaki became more popular with the success of this song, and food wagons dealing in takoyaki spread all over Seoul.
  232. Takoyaki began to be sold in Lotte World, an amusement park, in 2003 and gained popularity along with 'The Song of Takoyaki,' which was translated into Korean.
  233. Takoyaki is a baked ball of wheat flour of three to five centimeters in diameter, into which a small piece of octopus is put, a dish originated in Osaka.
  234. Takoyaki is also sold in the name of 'Baked Octopus.'
  235. Takoyaki is sold outside Japan, but people except for the Mediterranean population (in southern Europe) or Mexicans have no custom of eating octopus, and sometimes takoyaki without octopus or with alternative ingredients acceptable to local people is offered.
  236. Takoyaki-ki for professional use is much larger.
  237. Takoyaki-ki is either square or round-shaped, as shown in the photographs.
  238. Takoyakushi-dori Street
  239. Taku' means fiber of kozo, paper mulberry and 'hata' means a weaving machine.
  240. Takuan Soho Osho (high priest) metaphorically spoke as follows.
  241. Takuan did not want to stay in Edo but he could not return to his birthplace because of Iemitsu's strong request.
  242. Takuan is often connected with Musashi in fiction.
  243. Takuan then studied under Sochu.
  244. Takuan then went to Edo and joined Kanda Kotoku-ji Temple.
  245. Takuan's words and deeds in his later years could be interpreted as his apostasy or the fact that he was won over to Iemitsu's side.
  246. Takuan, however, was not allowed to return immediately to Kyoto and in the winter of the same year, he moved to Naoyori HORI's second house located in Komagome and stayed there until the summer of 1634.
  247. Takuan, who opposed bakufu's decision, went up to Kyoto in a hurry, organized monks of Daitoku-ji Temple in cooperation with Sohaku, a former chief priest, and launched a campaign against it together with Tanden and Togen of Myoshin-ji Temple.
  248. Takuan-zuke
  249. Takuan-zuke is a pickle and is referred to as daikon radish preserved in rice-bran and salt.
  250. Takuan-zuke, heshiko (pickled blue-backed fish), pickled ovary from blowfish (picked globefish ovary) and sardines boiled with rice bran.
  251. Takuanzuke (pickled daikon)
  252. Takuanzuke (yellow pickled radish)
  253. Takuanzuke (yellow pickled radish) similar to bettarazuke is different in that daikon is well-pickled without air-drying it.
  254. Takube binds Hachibe with a rope and drags him away.
  255. Takuboku ISHIKAWA was involved in proofreading them.
  256. Takuboku believed his economic problems were caused by society, developed an interest in the socialist ideology and would immerse himself in books that had been banned by the state.
  257. Takuhatachijihime Shrine (Takuhatachijihime-no-mikoto)
  258. Takuhatachijihime no Mikoto
  259. Takuhatachijihime no Mikoto is a female deity (Shinto) in Japanese mythology.
  260. Takuhatsu
  261. Takuhatsu in Buddhism
  262. Takuhatsu in India
  263. Takuhatsu in Japan
  264. Takuhatsu in present days practices in two manners; that of visiting homes of supporters of the sect in groups, and that of begging for almsgiving by standing without moving in front of gates of temples and on the crossings of busy streets by individuals.
  265. Takuhatsu in this kind of situation also had the meaning of publicity along with the collection of funds, so it was practiced not only in their neighborhood but also in distant places.
  266. Takuhatsu is still practiced in the present day, in the year 2006, in Theravada Buddhism of Southeast Asia.
  267. Takuhatsu was also introduced into Buddhism, which is one of the Ancient Indian religions.
  268. Takuhatsu was also introduced to Japan from China and the Korean Peninsula along with Buddhism.
  269. Takuhatsuso (begging monks) of Enryaku-ji Temple are often seen on this bridge.
  270. Takuji ASHIKAGA (also known as MINAMOTO no Takuji), who established the Muromachi bakufu was the descendant of the second son of Yoshiie's third son, Yoshiyasu ASHIKAGA (also known as MINAMOTO no Yoshiyasu).
  271. Takuma DAN: student studying in America
  272. Takuma Uesugi Family
  273. Takumi ASAGAWA
  274. Takumi HOSOKAWA
  275. Takumi HOSOKAWA (years of birth and death unknown) was a member of the Miburoshigumi (Mibu masterless warriors group) which was the forerunner of the Shinsengumi (literally, the newly selected corps, referring to a special police force for the Tokugawa regime).
  276. Takumi HOSOKAWA: Left the group by July 1863
  277. Takumi joined the Miburoshigumi in around June or July, 1863, as his name appeared in a 'List of Signers for Official Documents Submitted to the Shogunate' ('Bakufu Teishutsu Josho Shomeisha Ichiran' in Japanese) which was dated July 10, 1863.
  278. Takumi no Sato (Craft Village)
  279. Takumi no kami left Ako for Edo to participate in Sankinkotai (a system under which feudal lords in the Edo period were required to spend every other year in residence in Edo) in June 1700.
  280. Takumi no kami's Ninjo and the extinction of the Asano family line.
  281. Takumi-ryo (Bureau of skilled artisans) - Ryoge no kan (a post outside the original Ritsuryo code created by Imperial edicts)
  282. Takumibe was equivalent to tomo no miyatsuko working as a chief of construction work.
  283. Takumiryo (the Bureau of Skilled Artisans) built it in the Tentoku era, and later Mokuryo (Bureau of Carpentry) took charge.
  284. Takumiryo Shisho (low-ranking scribes in the Bureau of Skilled Artisans), Okura-sho (Ministry of the Treasury), Mokuryo (Bureau of Carpentry), Tonomoryo (Bureau of Grounds) and others
  285. Takunyo
  286. Takunyo (1625 - May 22, 1671) was a Jodo Shinshu (True Pure Land Sect Buddhism) priest and the 14th Hoshu (high priest) of the Higashi Hongan-ji Temple.
  287. Takuto AIBA
  288. Takutori-tenno
  289. Takuwanzuke
  290. Takuya MUGURUMA (Soccer Player, Tokushima Vortis)
  291. Takuya TAMAGAMI, ed., Genji Monogatari Hyoshaku (Annotated Tale of Genji), Kadokawa Shoten.
  292. Talc (powdered talcum)
  293. Talc is used for removing fat and oil stuck to hakuban, bamboo swords or bamboo scissors.
  294. Tale literature
  295. Tale literature during the Insei period was created under the overwhelming reputation and influence of "Genji Monogatari."
  296. Tale of China
  297. Tale of Genji Museum
  298. Tale of Heiji
  299. Tale of the Heike
  300. Tale of the birth of Akaru-hime in "Kojiki" is a type of Ransei mythology where a woman receives sunlight and lays an egg, and a person is born from there.
  301. Tale told at a later date
  302. Talented female poets who were actively involved in the Imperial Court before and after the reign of Emperor Ichijo ranked high, and up to 30 percent of the poets in the collection were female.
  303. Talented staff such as Kazuo MIYAGAWA (camera operator), Yoshikata YODA (screenwriter), Hiroshi MIZUTANI (art director) and Fumio HAYASAKA (musical Director) had joined Mizoguchi's group.
  304. Tales about yurei have been handed down in the form of kaidan (ghost stories) since before the Edo Period.
  305. Tales and Anthologies of Waka Poems
  306. Tales and narratives
  307. Tales of special animals acting on behalf of god to transmit the divine will are seen in Japanese Mythology.
  308. Tales of the Distant Past
  309. Tales of the Fujiwara
  310. Tales were selected by the scholar MINAMOTO no Tamenori (? - 1011) and dedicated to Imperial Princess Sonshi (966 - 985) of nihon (the second court rank).
  311. Tales: Furu monogatari (old stories, especially tales before the Tale of Genji), tsukuri monogatari (fictional tales), uta-monogatari (poem-tales), giko monogatari (archaistic fiction, referring especially to fictional writing during the Kamakura and Muromachi periods in imitation of the Heian tales) and gunki monogatari (martial tales)
  312. Talking' which was an advertising statement of play had a phrase meaning that 'this was a story about chivalrous robber which was shaped into Kabuki as shown in Toyokuni's preliminary sketch.
  313. Talks on Science and Humans (1982, Kyodo News) ISBN 4764101149
  314. Tall cans
  315. Tall evergreen trees such as pine trees, holly, and Cleyera Japonica are used.
  316. Tall trees: Forty three species
  317. Tall trees: Twenty four hundred trees of a hundred species
  318. Tally
  319. Tally (saifu or wappu) was a certificate stamp used to settle money transactions between distant lands in medieval Japan, and it became the origin of currency exchange.
  320. Tama HOSOKAWA (later Garasha, or Gratia) settled in Shoryuji-jo Castle.
  321. Tama KONDO
  322. Tama KONDO (March 15, 1862 - June 28, 1886) was a general woman in the Meiji era.
  323. Tama Mausoleum Regional Office (Hachioji City, Tokyo, Musashi Imperial mausoleum=Mausoleum of Emperor Taisho and Emperor Showa, jurisdiction=Yamagata, Nigata, Tochigi, Tokyo, Kanagawa, and Nagano Prefectures),
  324. Tama musubi: A hairstyle of mid-class women in the Azuchi-momoyama Period.
  325. Tama no Dan (Column of Tama)
  326. Tama no dan' (column of Tama), the climax of this play, is filled with realism and is frequently performed as an independent shimai (Noh dance in plain costume).
  327. Tama was beautiful and on good terms with Tadaoki, their first daughter being born in 1579 and their first son (Tadataka HOSOKAWA, later Kyumu NAGAOKA) being born in 1580.
  328. Tama was six years old when her father died.
  329. Tama-Udon
  330. Tama-Udon is boiled again for a short period in hot water immediately before eating, and served after draining the water off.
  331. Tama-Udon is made as follows: Fresh Udon noodles are boiled in hot water, soon after they are shaped to prevent further maturing, and then divided into smaller bunches adequate for one meal.
  332. Tama-gawa River
  333. Tama-gawa River (Ide-cho), a tributary of the Kizu-gawa River (Kyoto Prefecture), flows east-west through the town.
  334. Tama-gawa River in Noda of Mutsu Province (present Shiogama City, Miyagi Prefecture) and Gyotoku in Shimosa Province (present Ichikawa City, Chiba Prefecture) as well as Suma no ura and Sashide no iso in Chidori no Kyoku were famous for plovers.
  335. Tama-hashi bridge
  336. Tama-kanzashi: Kanzashi with an ear pick and a ball and the most popular types.
  337. Tama/Shiei-kan
  338. Tamaawa becomes the smallest and, then, disappears.
  339. Tamaawa: After two more days and after approximately two weeks in total from tomezoe
  340. Tamada no sukune
  341. Tamada no sukune (year of birth unknown - 416) was a member of local ruling family belonging to the Katsuragi clan in around the fifth century A.D.
  342. Tamadana (also known as Bondana and Mizudana) is an altar to greet spirits of the newly dead and ancestors of each family during the Bon festival.
  343. Tamadeyori Matsurikitaru Sakatoke-jinja Shrine
  344. Tamadeyori Matsurikitaru Sakatoke-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located in Oyamazaki-cho, Otokuni-gun, Kyoto Prefecture.
  345. Tamafuri no gi (ritual ceremony for the repose of a soul)
  346. Tamagaki
  347. Tamagaki (also known as Tamakaki, year of birth and death unknown) was the younger sister of Moriyoshi FUKUMOTO, who had the title of shokan (an officer governing shoen (manor)) of the estate of Niiminosho (Niimi City, Okayama Prefecture) of the Kyoto Kyoogokoku-ji Temple and Sotsuibushi (government post in charge of police and military roles).
  348. Tamagaki comes in a variety of forms such as ita tamagaki (board fence) which is made up of thick boards, kuroki no tamagaki (unbarked lumber fence) which uses unpeeled timber, suigaki (see-through fence) which is widely spaced.
  349. Tamagaki is a fence around a shrine or shiniki (the holy precincts of a shrine).
  350. Tamagaki may carry the name of its donator.
  351. Tamagawa Enshu-ryu School (A school of Tea and Green Tea Ceremony)
  352. Tamagawa Noh Stage (Tamagawa-no-butai) was an example of such an exchange type Noh stage at the time (The building was moved and reconstructed as Tessenkai Noh Theatre [Tessenkai Nohgaku Kenkyujo] now).
  353. Tamagawa Sengen-jinja Shrine
  354. Tamagawa-Enshu School: Zansai OMORI, the disciple of Enshu KOBORI
  355. Tamagawa-onsen Hot Spring (Akita Prefecture) (Akita Prefecture)
  356. Tamago Dofu (Egg Tofu)
  357. Tamago Kake Gohan (egg-sauce over rice consisting of boiled rice topped or mixed with raw egg and optionally soy sauce)
  358. Tamago dofu (egg tofu)
  359. Tamago dofu is a Japanese culinary dish.
  360. Tamago dofu is a dish using dashi broth and chicken eggs, and although its name includes the word "tofu," it does not contain soy beans.
  361. Tamago kake gohan and health
  362. Tamago kake gohan containing these nutritions may be an excellent dish for easy breakfast.
  363. Tamago kake gohan in the form of eating a raw egg, especially using a whole egg containing more nutritions, provides the severest condition to those who are allergic to hen's egg.
  364. Tamago kake gohan is a rice food prepared by mixing a raw hen's egg and rice and seasoning it with a small amount of soy sauce.
  365. Tamago kake gohan ni kakeru shoyu (literally, "soy sauce for tamago kake gohan") (developed by Hamada shoyu in Kumamoto City)
  366. Tamago maki (egg wrapped with fried fish cake) (bakudan [bomb])
  367. Tamago-de: high-quality komogai bowls with a beautiful porcelain glaze.
  368. Tamago-maki (vinergared rice rolled up in a thick slice of egg omelet with various ingredients in the center) and date-maki (a rolled omelet mixed with fish paste) were popular in the prewar era, but they are becoming less popular recently.
  369. Tamagotoji Katsudon (bowl of rice topped with deep-fried pork cutlet with egg-drop sauce)
  370. Tamagoyaki (Japanese omelette)
  371. Tamagoyaki is a general term for Japanese egg dishes in which eggs are beaten and cooked in a pan.
  372. Tamagoyaki remains a popular food among children even today, and a favorite choice of foods used in school lunch boxes.
  373. Tamagushi
  374. Tamagushi is offered in the following manner.
  375. Tamagushi means a branch of sakaki tree decorated with shide (paper cascade) and yu (strips of cloth) and offered before the gods by Shinto priests and visitors during Shinto rituals.
  376. Tamagushi-hoten (the offering of a tamagushi)
  377. Tamahagane is made using the 'Tatara-buki method,' an original Japanese steel making process.
  378. Tamaishi-sha Shrine (enshrined deity: Okuninushi)
  379. Tamakaeshisunaya
  380. Tamakawa Nursery School
  381. Tamakazari differ from region to region in Japan however, zigzag paper talisman, bitter orange (Citrus aurantium) and fern with white-backed leaves (Sorbus japonica) are often used together in decorations.
  382. Tamakazura
  383. Tamakazura (The Jeweled Chaplet)
  384. Tamakazura (The Tale of Genji)
  385. Tamakazura decided to make Oigimi marry Emperor Reizei.
  386. Tamakazura handed over her position of Naishi no tsukasa (female palace attendant) to Naka no Kimi, marrying her to Kinjo no Mikado.
  387. Tamakazura in "The Tale of Genji" is also at the mercy of her fate due to the incidents triggered by her hapless fate and beauty.
  388. Tamakazura is one of the fifty-four chapters of "The Tale of Genji."
  389. Tamakazura is so attractive that even Genji confesses his love for her jokingly.
  390. Tamakazura is taken to Dazaifu by her wet nurse and grows up to be a beautiful lady.
  391. Tamakazura is the daughter between Tono Chujo (the first secretary's captain) and Yugao, and her childhood name was Rurigimi.
  392. Tamakazura saw her father, To no Chujo (the first secretary's captain), for the first time, but she was more fascinated by the beauty of Emperor Reizei, who looked exactly like Genji.
  393. Tamakazura' is an eulogistic name for hair.
  394. Tamakazura's aversion to him triggered her return to the capital.
  395. Tamakazura, Hatsune, Kocho, Hotaru, Tokonatsu, Kagaribi, Nowaki, Miyuki, Fujibakama, and Makibashira are called the Ten Quires of Tamakazura.
  396. Tamakazura, who heard of their discord, was caught in the middle, worrying about when she could meet her real father, while Genji, who was teaching her to play the wagon (Japanese harp), became more and more attracted to her.
  397. Tamakazura: The daughter of To no Chujo (Minister of the Palace) and Yugao.
  398. Tamakeyaki (literally, Ball-like Zelkova) (March 1892, 'Musashino')
  399. Tamaki KISHI
  400. Tamaki KISHI (July 28, 1882 to July 9, 1945; from Kanazawa City, Ishikawa Prefecture; real name was Tamaki) was the only woman who was officially registered as his wife.
  401. Tamaki MIURA
  402. Tamaki MIURA (February 22, 1884 in Tokyo-fu [Tokyo Prefecture] - May 26, 1946) was an opera singer who was probably the first to gain the international reputation in Japan.
  403. Tamaki SHISHIDO
  404. Tamaki SHISHIDO (April 18, 1829 - October 1, 1901) was a statesman and bureaucrat active from the end of the Edo period into the Meiji period.
  405. Tamaki SHISHIDO: Viscount, Genroin gikan, (councillor of Chamber of Elders or Senate) the member of Kizokuin (the House of Peers)
  406. Tamaki died in October 1901 at the age of 73.
  407. Tamaki studied in the private school of Bunnoshin TAMAKI (Shokason-juku) together with Shoin YOSHIDA and others, and also studied in the domain school Meirinkan.
  408. Tamaki tried to travel across only Hatenashi Pass, however a group including a mountaineer Masaichiro NAKANISHI, a local history researcher Koichiro SUGINAKA and a writer/forester Toshikatsu UE walked the whole route and reported on relics, folk customs and legends along the road (1982).
  409. Tamaki was born the third son of Naotsugu YASUDA, who was a feudal retainer of the Choshu clan in 1829.
  410. Tamaki's childhood name was Tatsunosuke.
  411. Tamaki, however, loved Yumeji throughout her life, even after he died.
  412. Tamaki-jinja Shrine
  413. Tamaki-jinja Shrine (Totsukawa-mura, Yoshino-gun, Nara Prefecture)
  414. Tamaki-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine located in Yoshino County, Nara Prefecture.
  415. Tamakichi IIZUKA, age 27
  416. Tamakon,' short for Tamakonnyaku, is a registered trademark of Hiranoya Company (Yamagata Prefecture) ("registration number of brand name"No. 762418).
  417. Tamakonnyaku (ball-shaped konnyaku)
  418. Tamakonnyaku is often served with mustard.
  419. Tamakonnyaku is the one that a few bite-sized pieces of tamakonnyaku are skewered on a disposal wooden chopstick, and the tamakonnyaku-on-skewers are simmered in a soy sauce based broth in a large pot.
  420. Tamakura (Pillowed upon His Arm) by Norinaga MOTOORI (1763, one volume in all)
  421. Tamakushi-meigu Shrine (present Tsuhara-jinja Shrine) was built in the place where the Kushige drifted to, and the surrounding area came to be called Tamagushi.
  422. Tamakushige (Jeweled Comb Box) (sangen, koto, and kokyu)
  423. Tamamitsuinarisha (Ukanomitama-no-kami)
  424. Tamamizu Station
  425. Tamamizu Station - Kizu Station - Nara Station
  426. Tamamizu Station - Tanakura Station - Kamikoma Station
  427. Tamamizu Station, located in Ide-cho, Tsuzuki-gun of Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Nara Line of the West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
  428. Tamamo no Mae
  429. Tamamo no Mae (may be written with a few different sets of Chinese characters) was an imaginary woman of great beauty which was the transformed figure of the Hakumenkinmokyubi no kitsune (white-faced, golden-haired, and nine-tailed fox) that served Emperor Toba at the end of the Heian period.
  430. Tamamonomae (The Beautiful Fox-Witch)
  431. Tamamonomae (The beautiful Fox Witch)
  432. Tamamori Reizei (1265 - December 9, 1328) was a Kuge (a court noble) and a Kajin (a waka poet) lived in the late Kamakura period.
  433. Tamamushi (jewel beetle)
  434. Tamamushi no Zushi (a miniature temple owned by Horyu-ji Temple, with beetles' wings used as parts of its decoration) is considered as the oldest butsudan in existence in Japan.
  435. Tamamushi no zushi (The Beetle Wing Shrine) owned by Horyu-ji Temple/Tenjukoku-shucho (Embroidery of Long Life in Heaven) owned by Chugu-ji Temple
  436. Tamamushi-no-Zushi
  437. Tamamushi-no-Zushi (the "Beetle Shrine") (dating from the first half of the Nara period) at Horyu-ji Temple is regarded as the one of the oldest buildings with a Shikoroyane roof.
  438. Tamamushi-no-Zushi (the "Beetle Shrine")(Horyu-ji Temple), Asuka period
  439. Tamamushi-no-Zushi is a piece of furniture for storing a Buddha statue.
  440. Tamano "o" yo "tae" nabataene "nagaraheba" shinoburukoto no "yowari" mozosuru (Let the "cord" of my life be "snapped" if it has to be; Were it "prolonged," it would "fray" as I would not be able to hide this love any longer [In this poem, the "o" refers to both a "cord" and "life," "tae" means to "die out"])
  441. Tamanohikari' Tamanohikari Sake Brewing Co., Ltd.
  442. Tamanooya is the patriarchal deity of Tamanooya no Muraji.
  443. Tamanooya no Mikoto
  444. Tamanooya no Mikoto was a god (Shinto) appearing in Japanese mythology.
  445. Tamari (dark sauce) from this miso was used as a seasoning and it is regarded as the original seasoning leading to the tamari soy-sauce today.
  446. Tamari soy-sauce
  447. Tamari/Mizutamari: stones which have a dent so as to store water like a pond
  448. Tamarizuke
  449. Tamaryokucha
  450. Tamasakae
  451. Tamasawa (玉沢) - Otoshiyori who had power during the regime of the 10th Shogun, Ieharu TOKUGAWA.
  452. Tamashii or "Mitama" are terms used to describe the life(force) of human beings or their spiritual state.
  453. Tamashiki-jinja Shrine kagura dance (March 13, 2008; Kisai-machi, Kitasaitama-gun; Tamashiki-jinja Kagura Hozonkai [Tamashiki jinja-Shrine Kagura Preservation Association])
  454. Tamasumi KONO
  455. Tamasumi KONO was a Japanese military commander around the 7th century.
  456. Tamatsu-shima Island
  457. Tamatsukuri (jewel making), one of the ritual implements manufacturing businesses, had gone downhill after the Kofun period (tumulus period), which led to the decline of the Inbe clan.
  458. Tamatsukuri Inari-jinja Shrine (Chuo Ward, Osaka City)
  459. Tamatsukuri is a family name of the Emishi who had sided with the Imperial government during the Gangyo War, and accordingly it is pointed out that the family might have connected with the site buried by the eruption of the volcano in Lake Towada-ko in 915.
  460. Tamatsukuri no Ki, about 737, unknown, Tamatsukuri gun, possibly Kodera Ruins, later relocated to Tamatsukuri no Ki or possibly Miyazawa Ruins
  461. Tamatsukuri-jinja
  462. Tamatsukurionsen - Kimachi section
  463. Tamatsumemusubi (玉積産日神) and Tamatsumemusubi (魂留産霊) described in "Kogo-shui" (History of the Inbe clan) are the same god, and the word 'tamatsume (tamatome)' has the meaning of 'to fix a spirit to the body (repose of souls).'
  464. Tamatsuoka-jinja Shrine
  465. Tamatsura-jinja Shrine
  466. Tamatsushima-jinja Shrine is called the three gods of waka along with Sumiyoshi-taisha Shrine and Kakinomono-okami (Akashi).
  467. Tamaya (mausoleum) (Hoshun-in Temple), tamaya (Zuiryu-in Temple), shodo (Donkokaku), Tagetsu-kyo Bridge, front gate, Bosan-mon Gate (Kita Ward, Kyoto City) *Designated in 2001.
  468. Tamaya, Kagiya
  469. Tamayama-date
  470. Tamayoribime
  471. Tamayoribime is the daughter of Watatsumi (the god of the sea) and a younger sister of the goddess Toyotamabime.
  472. Tamayoribime, also known as Tamayorihime, is a Shinto goddess from Japanese mythology.
  473. Tamayorihime and her father Kamotaketsunumi-no-mikoto are enshrined within Shimogamo-jinja Shrine.
  474. Tamazusa Jizo was moved from Komachi dera, which was at Shibutanigoe in Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City in 1875, and it is said that it carries a love letter addressed to ONO no Komachi.
  475. Tamba City has asked West Japan Railway Company to double-track the section between Sasayamaguchi and Fukuchiyama, which is currently single-tracked.
  476. Tamba City has been helping users who are party travelers with their group rates, and Hyogo Prefecture has implemented a pilot program in which fares for limited express trains were subsidized.
  477. Tambabashi Station - Fushimi-inari Station - Shichijo Station
  478. Tambabashi Station - Sumizome Station - Fujinomori Station
  479. Tambadiang
  480. Tambaguchi Station - Nijo Station - Emmachi Station
  481. Tambaji Rapid Service' is a nickname for rapid trains that use the JR (West) Suburban Train Series 221 and are operated between Osaka and Sasayamaguchi during the daytime.
  482. Tameakira ANDO proposed in "Shika Seven Reviews" the view that 'most of The Tale of Genji was written for three or four years when she became a widow and began to serve at the Imperial Court,' which was consistent with various facts and became a dominant opinion.
  483. Tamechika REIZEI
  484. Tamechika REIZEI (October 20, 1823-June 8, 1864) was a painter of reactionary Yamato-e painting (a traditional Japanese style painting of the late Heian and Kamakura periods dealing with Japanese themes) employed by kuge (court noble) and Kugyo (the top court officials) in the end of the Edo period.
  485. Tamefumi REIZEI
  486. Tamefumi REIZEI (June 9, 1752 - May 10, 1822) was a Kuge (court noble) and Kajin (waka poet) in the late Edo period.
  487. Tamefumi was appointed to Jusanmi (Junior Third Rank) on January 27, 1773.
  488. Tamefusa-kyo Ki
  489. Tamefusa-kyo Ki, also called 'Daiki,' 'Daigyoki' and 'Daifuki,' is a diary written by FUJIWARA no Tamefusa, who served as Kurodo (chamberlain) and Kurodo no to (head chamberlain) and was active as Okura-kyo (Minister of the Treasury) and Sangi (councilor) for Emperors Gosanjo, Shirakawa, Horikawa and Toba.
  490. Tamehide REIZEI
  491. Tamehide REIZEI (year of birth unknown - July 20, 1372) was a poet who lived from the late Kamakura period to the early Muromachi period.
  492. Tamehide REIZEI served as a judge and Yoshimoto NIJO took charge of writing hanshi (judgments in poetry contest).
  493. Tamehiro REIZEI
  494. Tamehiro REIZEI (1450-August 30, 1526) was a Japanese waka poet.
  495. Tamehisa ISHIDA, a grandson of Yoshitsugu MIURA, was granted Ishida-mura village in Omi Province in reward for having slain MINAMOTO no Yoshinaka, and moved to the village with his clan.
  496. Tamehisa REIZEI
  497. Tamehisa REIZEI (February 3, 1686 - October 8, 1741) was a Japanese poet.
  498. Tamehito is a leading expert in modern Kyoto painters, and is currently a guest professor of Doshisha Women's College, having also held a chair at Otemae Women's University and served as the president of Ikenobo College.
  499. Tamehito was originally called Katsuhiko MATSUO but, on marrying Kimiko REIZEI, Tameto's daughter, changed his name through the family courts to become the twenty-fifth head of the Reizei family.
  500. Tameie was important poet at the poetry circle of retired Emperor Gosaga.
  501. Tamekane KYOGOKU
  502. Tamekane KYOGOKU (1254 - April 16, 1332) was a late Kamakura-period waka poet.
  503. Tamekane was trusted by Fushimi and was the leader of the leading tanka (short poem) circle other than the Nijo school, and was also heavily involved in government affairs.
  504. Tamekane wrote an essay on waka known as the "Excerpts on waka by Lord Tamekane."
  505. Tamekata FUJITANI
  506. Tamekata FUJITANI (September 8, 1593 - September 2, 1653) was Kuge (court noble) of the early Edo period.
  507. Tamekatsu REIZEI, Seika FUJIWARA and Tamemasa REIZEI were his sons.
  508. Tamekazu REIZEI
  509. Tamekazu REIZEI (1486 - August 13, 1549) was a kugyo (high court noble) and a poet who lived in the Muromachi period.
  510. Tamekazu SAWA
  511. Tamekazu SAWA (1812-1889) was Kugyo (a Court noble) who lived from the end of the Edo period to the beginning of the Meiji period.
  512. Tamekazu inserted his tanka, which he made on October 4, 1522 while he was in the Tojo-jo Castle, into his book "Tamekazukyo-ki".
  513. Tamekiyo MISAWA, a successor of Tameyuki MISAWA, was subordinate to the Ouchi clan, but, in the Battle of Gassan Todajo Castle, the Misawa and Yoshikawa clans jointly defected to the enemy, the Amago clan, and contributed to the defeat of Ouchi.
  514. Tamemasa NAKAMIKADO
  515. Tamemasa NAKAMIKADO (1255 - January 15, 1307) was a court noble in the Kamakura period.
  516. Tamemasa REIZEI
  517. Tamemasa REIZEI (1362 - February 10, 1417) was a kugyo (court noble) and a poet who lived in the Muromachi period.
  518. Tamemasu REIZEI
  519. Tamemasu REIZEI (1516 - October 2, 1570) was a kugyo (high court noble) and a poet who lived in the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  520. Tamemitsu MISAWA was awarded the Misawa manor in Izumo Province after his distinguished military service in the Jokyu War in 1221.
  521. Tamemitsu REIZEI
  522. Tamemitsu REIZEI (June 10, 1559 - March 29, 1619) was a kugyo (high court noble) and a poet who lived from the late Sengoku period (period of warring states) to the early Edo period.
  523. Tamemitsu REIZEI's daughter was his concubine.
  524. Tamemitsu is also known for his building Hoju-ji Temple (in the present Kyoto City).
  525. Tamemitsu rejected his worldly fame and resigned himself to a life at the temple absorbed in a prayer to Amitabha.
  526. Tamemitsu was then apponited as Sachuben (Middle Controller of the Left) in 968, and after holding Kurodo no to (Head Chamberlain) at the enthronement of Emperor Enyu & other positions, he rose to Sangi (the Royal Adviser) in 970.
  527. Tamemori REIZEI
  528. Tamemoto KATAGIRI
  529. Tamemoto KATAGIRI (1611 to June 25, 1654) was the third lord of Tatsuta Domain in Yamato Province.
  530. Tamemoto KUROKI
  531. Tamemoto KUROKI (May 3, 1844 - February 3, 1923) was a military man of the Imperial Japanese Army in Japan.
  532. Tamemoto MISAWA, a son of Tametora MISAWA, vanished from the Chofu Domain to be retained by the Date clan of Sendai Domain.
  533. Tamemoto REIZEI
  534. Tamemoto REIZEI (1854-1905) was a Japanese kajin (waka poet).
  535. Tamemoto SHO killed Izu no kami and took over Mt. Taisho.'
  536. Tamemoto TOKITO: December 1877 -
  537. Tamemoto died in June 1654 at age 44 and was succeeded by his son Tametsugu KATAGIRI.
  538. Tamemoto had a son named Tametsugi REIZEI.
  539. Tamemoto served as Daiguji (the supreme priest) of Ise-jingu Shrine from 1898 to his death.
  540. Tamemoto was the 21st head of the Kami-Reizei family.
  541. Tamemoto's father was Tametada REIZEI.
  542. Tamemoto's third son Kiyoshi KURODA (count) became the adopted heir of Count Kiyonaka KURODA, the son of Lieutenant General (army) and Count Kiyotaka KURODA who was the prime minister, then succeeded the peerage of count.
  543. Tamemune ISA
  544. Tamemune ISA (year of birth unknown, died in 1221 [?]) was a gokenin (an immediate vassal of the shogunate in the Kamakura and Muromachi through Edo periods) who lived in the early Kamakura Period.
  545. Tamemune was a son of Hitachi nyudo Nensai, who was from the FUJIWARA no Yamakage line of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan, also considered to be the founder of the Date clan.
  546. Tamemune's younger sister Daishin no Tsubone became a concubine of MINAMOTO no Yoritomo, and gave birth to a son (Jogyo).
  547. Tamemura REIZEI
  548. Tamemura REIZEI (March 5, 1712 - September 4, 1774) was a court noble and a poet of the mid Edo period.
  549. Tamenaga was the first Sangi in 226 years after SUGAWARA no Sukemasa and it was a much bigger incident than the fact that he was given the rank of Jusanmi, thus it caused much controversy.
  550. Tamenari REIZEI and Tamehide REIZEI were his sons.
  551. Tamenobu OURA
  552. Tamenobu TSUGARU
  553. Tamenobu TSUGARU (January 28, 1550 - January 22, 1608) was a military commander in the period of warring states and a feudal lord in the early Edo period.
  554. Tamenobu in the period after the death of Hideyoshi
  555. Tamenobu remained close to Mitsunari thereafter, and some say that he later protected Mitsunari's second son Shigenari after the Battle of Sekigahara, and took Mitsunari's third daughterTatsuhime, who had been an adopted daughter of Kodaiin, as the wife of his son Nobuhira TSUGARU, as a token of gratitude.
  556. Tamenobu's legitimate son Nobutake, who served as his father's representative and considered to succeed his father, died before his father in November of 1607.
  557. Tamenobu's origin
  558. Tamenori KYOGOKU
  559. Tamenori KYOGOKU (May 7, 1227 to July 4, 1279) was a poet in the mid Kamakura period.
  560. Tamenori for the first time took part in the poetry contest in Tadasu no yashiro Shrine in 1243 where Tameie was the judge, and he participated in 1247 as a composer in the poetry contest of the temple.
  561. Tamenori had an official court rank of jugoi (Junior Fifth Rank) and was Kokushi (Provincial Governor) of Totoumi Province.
  562. Tamenori held prominent positions such as Provisional Governors (Gon no kami) of Izu, Suruga, Kai and Totoumi Provinces.
  563. Tamenori joined Sadamori and Hidesato and, on Februrary 14, the battle between the allied forces and Masakado's army began.
  564. Tamenori took the second name Kudo-daibu (literally, Master Kudo, which name derives from his office of Mokunosuke which was a forestry officer).
  565. Tamenori was a cousin to both TAIRA no Masakado and TAIRA no Sadamori, thus being a blood relative of both the Fujiwara clan and the Kanmu-Heishi (the Taira clan descended from Emperor Kanmu).
  566. Tamenori was a son of Hitachi no kuni no suke (the Lord of Hitachi Province) FUJIWARA no Korechika.
  567. Tamenori was descended from FUJIWARA no Muchimaro of the Fujiwara Nanke (the Southern House of the Fujiwara clan).
  568. Tamenori was the founder of a family crest known as "Iori Mokko."
  569. Tamenori was the founder of the Kudo, Ito (which was written as "伊藤" in Japanese), Ito (which was written as "伊東" in Japanese) and Nikaido clans.
  570. Tameomi REIZEI, the first son of the twenty-second head of the family Tametsugi REIZEI, was killed in the war in 1944 before having a child, so that in 1946 Fumiko REIZEI, a daughter of Tametsugi, married him and brought him into her family from the Nishiyotsutsuji family.
  571. Tamesaburo YAGI said of Genzaburo that 'Inoue was about 40 years old at the time, very quiet but a good-natured person.'
  572. Tamesaburo YAGI who remembered Serizawa and Kondo well, didn't remember Niimi at all and said that Niimi disappeared without his noticing it.
  573. Tamesaburo YAGI, the second son of the Yagi family, is said to have witnessed the scene.
  574. Tamesaburo YAMAMOTO
  575. Tamesaburo and his younger brother were frightened to see her, and let their mother know about it.
  576. Tamesaburo saw Akesato leaving in tears.
  577. Tamesaburo went out of the gate to see what was going on, he saw Akesato passing in front of him in a big rush.
  578. Tamesada NIJO
  579. Tamesada NIJO (c. 1293 - April 8, 1360) was a poet from the end of Kamakura period to the beginning of the Northern and Southern Courts period.
  580. Tamesuke REIZEI
  581. Tamesuke REIZEI (1263 -August 22, 1328) was a Kugyo (court noble) and kajin (waka poet) in the mid and late Kamakura period.
  582. Tamesuke REIZEI was also called Tamesuke FUJIGAYATSU.
  583. Tamesuke REIZEI was close to the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) and came to be known as Fujigaya Komon for setting up a long-term home at Fujigayatsu in Kamakura.
  584. Tamesuke REIZEI, who inherited his grandfather FUJIWARA no Teika's "Meigetsuki," moved to Kamakura around this time to file suit for land, living in Fujigaya and undertaking the teaching of poet circles in Kamakura.
  585. Tamesuke was called Fujigaya Komon by other court nobles in Kyoto; he had very close relationship with the bakufu although he was a court noble.
  586. Tamesuke, founder of the Reizei family, was a child born to his father Tameie and Abutsuni, the wife he took in his later years.
  587. Tametada MISAWA, the head of Misawa clan, died in battle during the Meitoku War.
  588. Tametada REIZEI
  589. Tametada REIZEI (July 26, 1824 - April 25, 1885) was a Japanese poet.
  590. Tameto REIZEI
  591. Tameto REIZEI (September 1846-August 1894) was a son of Tameyuki REIZEI.
  592. Tameto REIZEI, the twenty-fourth family head, established the Reizei Shigure-tei Library Foundation, and Tamehito REIZEI, who married Tameto's daughter and became the twenty-fifth (and current) head of the Kami Reizei family, is now the head director of this organization.
  593. Tametomo MISAWA, a son of Tametora MISAWA, founded the Inaba Misawa clan when he served the Ikeda clan of the Tottori Domain.
  594. Tametomo Ron fu Yoshitsune Ron (On Tametomo, with On Yoshitsune) (June 1913)
  595. Tametomo alone is disappointed to hear this.
  596. Tametomo can't resist the torture by fire, and Sutoku and his followers escape out of the Shirakawadono.
  597. Tametomo carried a sword that was over one meter long as well as a mighty bow which is said to have taken five men to string; he stationed himself to hold the gate facing Nishigawara.
  598. Tametomo continued his flight, hiding in Sakata in Omi Province (present-day Sakata County in Shiga Prefecture).
  599. Tametomo could kill Yoshitomo and Ietada if he wants to do so, but he doesn't on purpose because of consideration for his older brother and sympathy toward the brave warriors.
  600. Tametomo did not budge, and responded, "unworthy as you are to be my foe, I will give you the honor of your life," and let loose with an arrow of about 23 cm long.
  601. Tametomo escaped but was later captured and was allegedly banished to Izu-oshima Island after his arm tendon was removed to keep him from ever drawing a bow (his claim to fame).
  602. Tametomo fights desperately, sinking a boat with a single arrow, but he sees the futility of contending against heavy odds, so he cuts off his son's head and commits hara-kiri.
  603. Tametomo gained control over seven islands of Izu, including this Ashi-jima Island.
  604. Tametomo is depicted as the de facto main character of "Hogen Monogatari," yet his superhuman achievements, as depicted in this story, certainly cannot be taken as genuine historical facts.
  605. Tametomo is described as having been a huge man, nearly seven feet tall, and both a powerful physique and, thanks to his long-slit eyes, a formidable look.
  606. Tametomo is to be given the death sentence, but his punishment is reduced so his arm muscle is torn so as to prevent him from drawing a bow, and he is exiled to Izu.
  607. Tametomo married the daughter of the local governor of the island, Saburodayu Shigetada, and began subduing the entire Izu Island chain, and even stopped paying the nengu (yearly land tax).
  608. Tametomo refused to obey this order, but then in 1155, his father was dismissed from his governmental post.
  609. Tametomo remains popular on Oshima Island even today.
  610. Tametomo said to him: "Begone, you who dare to stand against your own lord," but Masakiyo replied, "You were my lord once, but now you are just a thug who opposes the Emperor's will," and shot an arrow which hit Tametomo's helmet.
  611. Tametomo styled himself the Chinzei So-tsuibushi and acted violently, fighting dozens of battles with the local lords of Kyushu like the Kikuchi and Harada clans and, by repeatedly assaulting their castles came to control all of Kyushu within three years.
  612. Tametomo suggests that all they can do to ensure their victory is make a night attack, set a fire and take the Emperor away, but Yorinaga treats it as the idea of an inexperienced person.
  613. Tametomo was a master of the bow; as he earned infamy in Chinzei (Kyushu) for his violent exploits, he started to be called Chinzei Hachiro.
  614. Tametomo was greatly chagrined to hear this, as he predicted that his older brother Yoshitomo was certain to try a night attack.
  615. Tametomo was infuriated by this, saying, "I will not waste an arrow on one such as you; I will kill you with my own hands," and charged into the midst of Masakiyo's forces leading his 28 strong warriors of Chinzei (Kyushu).
  616. Tametomo's arrow flew straight and true, piercing the star on Yoshitomo's helmet.
  617. Tametomo's head is severed by Kagetaka KATO and sent to the capital.
  618. Tametomo, the only survivor among Tameyoshi's sons, is found and captured by TAIRA no Iesada while he is recuperating at a hot spring without a sword.
  619. Tametora MISAWA might have suffered less than the Mitoya clan only because he was not exiled due to his talent being appreciated by Mori clan.
  620. Tametou REIZEI
  621. Tametou REIZEI (March 4, 1914 - July 8, 1986) was a Japanese poet.
  622. Tametsugi REIZEI
  623. Tametsugi REIZEI (1881 - 1946) was a Japanese poet.
  624. Tametsuna ODA
  625. Tametsuna ODA (1839 - 1901) was a scholar and educator and statesman coming from Ube Village, Kunohe County (present Ube-cho, Kuji City), Iwate Prefecture.
  626. Tametsune REIZEI
  627. Tametsune REIZEI (October 31, 1654 to November 12, 1722) was a kuge (court noble) in Edo period.
  628. Tameuji NIJO
  629. Tameuji NIJO (1222-October 3, 1286) was a Court noble and poet in the mid Kamakura period.
  630. Tameuji NIJO (the founder of the Nijo school of poetry) and Tamenori KYOGOKU (the founder of the Kyogoku school of poetry) were his half brothers, and Tamemori REIZEI was his younger brother whose mother was same as his.
  631. Tameuji-bon manuscript group
  632. Tameyasu KATAGIRI
  633. Tameyasu KATAGIRI (year of birth and death unknown) was a samurai in the closing years of the Heian period.
  634. Tameyasu MIYOSHI left a number of important works as a scholar of Sando (mathematics) and Kidendo (history).
  635. Tameyasu was the head of the Katagiri clan, a local ruling family whose home ground was Katagiri-go, Ina-gun, Shinano Province.
  636. Tameyasu's descendant Nagahira MIYOSHI served as Keishi (household superintendent) for the Saionji family and it became a hereditary position.
  637. Tameyo NIJO
  638. Tameyo NIJO (1250-September 26, 1338) was a Kajin (poet for Japanese poetry), who lived from the end of Kamakura to the beginning of the Northern and Southern Courts periods.
  639. Tameyo claimed that being a legitimate heir of the Nijo style of waka poetry, he had inherited the books of poetics handed down from father to son in the family and studied the authentic tradition with his father and grandfather to embody it.
  640. Tameyo reported to the emperor his second rebuttals against Tamekane, whose excerpts were prepared by an official.
  641. Tameyori REIZEI was his older brother.
  642. Tameyoshi IKEDA, age 28
  643. Tameyoshi KUBO of directors' department was transferred to J.O Studio, Sadatsugu MATSUDA, Goro HIROSE, Hiroshi SEIMARU and Fumio MIYAGI were transferred to Shinko Kinema Kyoto Studio led by Masaichi NAGATA, and the members of technical department were also transferred to Shinko Kinema.
  644. Tameyoshi had another setback after Emperor Goshirakawa took office, when he was dismissed from the hard-won post of Nairan-shoku (high-ranking official who inspected documents to be presented to the Emperor).
  645. Tameyoshi himself was also treated coldly and was not rewarded with an estate during his lifetime.
  646. Tameyoshi hoped that "Yoshitomo will help his father and brothers even if it means forfeiting his distinguished service," but Tametomo opposed this surrender plan, insisting instead that they fall back to the eastern provinces.
  647. Tameyoshi initially planned to fight another battle alongside his sons, this time in the Kanto, but having grown both old and fainthearted, he decided to enter the Buddhist priesthood and surrender.
  648. Tameyoshi is in tears.
  649. Tameyoshi succeeded to the Minamoto clan but he did not get along with his other brothers.
  650. Tameyoshi succeeded to the family headship but the Minamoto clan lost traction and Ise-Heishi (Taira clan) gained power.
  651. Tameyoshi was named to attack Yoshitsuna, killed Yoshitsuna's children after a battle and had Yoshitsuna surrender.
  652. Tameyoshi's third son, Yorikata, prevents the Yoshitomo's army from making a sortie, and inflicts damage upon them.
  653. Tameyoshi, Tametomo's father, was invited to serve as Taisho (general) by the Retired Emperor Sutoku, and although he initially tried to refuse, citing his advanced age, he was forced to accept the invitation and presented himself with six of his sons, including Yorikata and Tametomo, at Retired Emperor Sutoku's Shirakawakita-dono Palace.
  654. Tameyoshi, who fought on the side of the retired Emperor, was executed after the War and his son, MINAMOTO no Tametomo was banished.
  655. Tameyoshi, who has been fleeing from Sakamoto, Omi Province (Otsu City) to Minoura, catches a fever and ascends Mt. Tendai to become a priest.
  656. Tameyuki NAKAMIKADO
  657. Tameyuki NAKAMIKADO (1276 - September 30, 1332) was a kugyo (a court noble) during the late Kamakura period.
  658. Tamezumi REIZEI
  659. Tamezumi REIZEI (1530 - May 17, 1578) was a court noble and military commander in the Sengoku period (period of warring states) and the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  660. Tami YABUNOUCHI: Married into the Yabunouchi family, a farmer in Ishikawa Prefecture.
  661. Tami no Oshibi was believed to have continued fighting for OTOMO no Fukei after this battle, but nothing was mentioned about him in "Nihonshoki" (Chronicles of Japan).
  662. Tamichika ONDA (A Karo Officer of the Matsushiro domain. He made efforts to rebuild domain finance.)
  663. Tamizo MIYAZAKI, and Toshihiko SAKAI and Unpei MORICHIKA who later established Japan Socialist Party, visited Yamanashi Prefecture in 1906 to introduce socialism and anarchism.
  664. Tamizo ONOE
  665. Tamizo ONOE the First
  666. Tamizo ONOE the Second
  667. Tamizo ONOE the Third
  668. Tamlyn TOMITA
  669. Tamna is thought to have worked with Japan to back Baekje at the time because 'Japanese Envoys to Tamna' are included in the list of capitulants of Battle of Hakusukinoe.
  670. Tamna seems to have paid tributes to Baekje and have become its subject from the fifth to sixth century as written in Samguk Sagi (History of the Three Kingdoms).
  671. Tamon (多門) is a row-house-like building and it is said that it was written as "多聞" more often after Meiji period.
  672. Tamon yagura
  673. Tamonin Nikki
  674. Tamonin Nikki is a diary with notes mainly on the lives of people in the temple and daily activities.
  675. Tamonin nikki
  676. Tamonin nikki diary alone reported it as "an iron ship that no bullets of a gun can pass through", which part can be interpreted that it was a ship whose hull was iron-covered in the light ofdocuments of the same period.
  677. Tamonyama-jo Castle which commands a panoramic view of the town was built by Hisahide MATSUNAGA in the middle of the16th century, and has the four-layered tenshu (main keep or tower of a castle) which became a model for modern castles.
  678. Tamori (field administrator)
  679. Tamori was a position in charge of managing fields on public lands, which was set up by the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  680. Tamoto' has a pronunciation close to 'temoto' in modern Japanese.
  681. Tamoto: The parts that look like bags at the bottom of sleeves.
  682. Tamoto: Unlike the meaning in the modern Japanese, Tamoto meant the part from the elbow to the wrist of the sleeve, which is called Sodesaki, in Japan before the Edo period.
  683. Tamotsu AOKI (1990) classified such changes in the Nihonjin-ron which were written after the war into four periods.
  684. Tamotsu AOKI, the Director General of the Agency for Cultural Affairs, has taken office as a special advisor.
  685. Tamotsu URYU and Yoshiharu organized reinforcements for relief, but in vain.
  686. Tamozawa Goyotei (located in Nikko City, Tochigi Prefecture)
  687. Tamukeyama Hachiman-gu Shrine
  688. Tamukeyama Hachimangu Shrine
  689. Tamukeyama Hachimangu Shrine is located in Nara City, Nara Prefecture.
  690. Tamura clan
  691. Tamura mastered the technique of Shingaku (Qing-era Chinese music) and regarded the worldly music originated in Japan as low-grade music, so he invented Chikkin in order to change the bad habit.
  692. Tamura no Miko (the Emperor Jomei)
  693. Tamura of the black stones had to perform Ate (doing above Watari) with 'e' and throw away upper three stones, and white five stones which were in a trouble could proudly return.
  694. Tamura school
  695. Tamura taught it in Kanda Kamakura-cho in Tokyo.
  696. Tamura-do Hall (or Kaizan-do Hall) including a body of Zushi
  697. Tamura-jinja Shrine (Koga City)
  698. Tamura-jinja Shrine (Takamatsu City): Ichinomiya (the supreme shrine) in Sanuki Province
  699. Tamura-jinja Shrine is a Shinto shrine in Tsuchiyama-cho, Koka City, Shiga Prefecture.
  700. Tamura-jinja Shrine mae (30minutes from Kibukawa Station)
  701. Tamuramaro brought Aterui, of the Ezo of Isawa, who had fought stubbornly until then, back to the capital, thereby conquering that land.
  702. Tamuramaro is also reported to have constructed Kiyomizu-dera Temple in Kyoto.
  703. Tamuramaro participated in the preparations for the next military expedition, and upon being appointed as a Seito fukushi (Vice Commander) to assist OTOMO no Otomaro in 791, he embarked on the military expedition.
  704. Tamuramaro seems to have played a central role in the expedition.
  705. Tamuramaro served as an officer in the Imperial Guards.
  706. Tamuramaro told Kenshin that he came to the mountain to obtain blood of a living deer for his sick wife.
  707. Tamuramaro was born as the second (according to the 'Genealogical Chart of the Sakanoue Clan') or third ('Biography of Tamuramaro') son of SAKANOUE no Karitamaro in 758.
  708. Tamuramaro's descendents lived in Kyoto and served as Myobo hakase (teacher of the law in the Ritsuryo system) and Kebiishi police officers.
  709. Tamuramaru died of illness at the age of 54 on June 21, 811.
  710. Tamuro-go (多無良)
  711. Tan (a unit of area in old Japanese system of weights and measures)
  712. Tan (red lead): Lead
  713. Tan (the letter 擔 was used in Yuan) was a unit of weight (mass) under the Chinese shakkanho (the system of measuring length by the shaku and weight by the kan) (shakusekiho, Chinese traditional system of measurement [unit system], Taiwanese traditional system of measurement).
  714. Tan (反 or 段)
  715. Tan (反 or 段) is a unit of area belongs to old Japanese system of weights and measures.
  716. Tan (担) (a unit of weight)
  717. Tan SHIDEHARA
  718. Tan SHIDEHARA (October 12, 1870 - June 29, 1953) was a historian and an education administrator.
  719. Tan as a unit of land area is a unit of multiples for tsubo (unit of land measurement; 1 tsubo is 3.31 square meters) which is the standard unit of area, and is now defined as 10 se (unit of area, 1 se is equal to 30 tsubo, about 99.174 square meters; 300 bu [歩; unit of land measurement; 1 bu is equal to 3.31 square meters]; 991.74 square meters).
  720. Tan studied Japanese history in the department of literature at the University of Tokyo after graduating from the Yamanashi Prefectural Kofu Daiichi High School and other schools.
  721. Tan was originally defined as the weight which a single laborer could carry (to shoulder) at one time.
  722. Tan which is used in Hong Kong today derived from the above definition.
  723. Tan zaemon no jo Motoyasu
  724. Tan' of 'Tango' meant the edge, in other words 'commencement,' and 'go' of 'Tango' meant a horse.
  725. Tan's second daughter, Sumie, was married to Yoshimasa KOZAI who was the oldest son of Yoshinao KOZAI, an agronomist.
  726. Tan's younger brother was Kijuro SHIDEHARA, a politician who was a diplomatic, and Kijuro's wife, Masako, was the fourth daughter of Yataro IWASAKI, the founder of Mitsubishi Zaibatsu (a financial clique or group, or company syndicate).
  727. Tan, a unit of area (a tan is approximately 10.6 meters in length and 34 centimeters in width), was originally defined an area of rice fields that brings in 1 koku of rice.
  728. Tan,' 'mu' and 'ji' mean 'sweet,' 'daikon radish' and 'pickle,' respectively.
  729. Tan-goto
  730. Tan-luan
  731. Tan-luan was a Buddhist monk who lived during the period of the Northern and Southern Dynasties in China.
  732. Tan-luan: "Muryojukyo ubadaisha ganshoge-chu" (Commentary of a discourse on the Pure Land); "San Amida Butsu Ge" (hymns praising Amida Buddha)
  733. Tan-sen and munabechi-sen were originally accounted among land taxes uniformly imposed on people nationwide, which were collected by shugo under the instruction of the Imperial Court and bakufu aiming at raising extra money.
  734. Tana kara Botamochi (a botamochi falls down from a shelf)
  735. Tanabata (Shichiseki) is one of the days of sekku/sechinichi (a day of the turn of the season) in Japan, China, Taiwan, Vietnam, and Korea.
  736. Tanabata (Star Festival)
  737. Tanabata Festival Kasagake
  738. Tanabata Matsuri in Japan
  739. Tanabata Nasu (literally, Nasu of Tanabata Festival [Star Festival]).
  740. Tanabata based on the old calendar
  741. Tanabata festival (July 7)
  742. Tanabata festival (the 7th), and Shochumimai (summer greeting card)
  743. Tanabata was an event which was held just prior to Obon (a Japanese Buddhist festival, July 15 under the old calendar) following midsummer.
  744. Tanabata was originally an event celebrated in China and was introduced into Japan during the Nara period.
  745. Tanabata was originally written as 棚幡 and it is also a part of Bon festival even at present.
  746. Tanabe Central Hospital
  747. Tanabe Country Club
  748. Tanabe Kita IC - Tanabe Nishi IC: 16,423
  749. Tanabe Miyamaki post office
  750. Tanabe Nishi IC - Seika Shimokoma IC: 16,100
  751. Tanabe North Interchange
  752. Tanabe Station was changed to Kyotanabe Station and Kamitanabe Station to JR Miyamaki Station.
  753. Tanabe West Interchange
  754. Tanabe conducted the investigation and directed the construction of the section between Sorachibuto (present day Takikawa City) and Asahikawa City in Kamikawa Line (a part of present-day Hakodate Main Line) in the beginning, and also other sections which later became parts of Soya Main Line and Nemuro Main Line.
  755. Tanabe domain was one of the domains in Tango Province during the Edo period.
  756. Tanabe station, Housono station and Shin-Kizu station opened.
  757. Tanabe's disciples included Koichi TSUJIMURA, Iwao KOYAMA, Junzo KARAKI and Torakazu DOI.
  758. Tanabe-jo Castle (Tango Province)
  759. Tanabe-jo Castle (Tango Province) (four-minute walk from the station)
  760. Tanabe-jo Castle (Tango Province), (Also known as Maizuru-jo Castle)
  761. Tanabe-jo Castle, located in Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture, was build between Sengoku Period and Edo Period.
  762. Tanabe-kita Interchange - Keinawa Expressway
  763. Tanabe-mura became Tanabe-cho according to the enforcement of municipal organization.
  764. Tanabu Matsuri Festival (Mutsu City Aomori Prefecture): In recent years women have been permitted to pull floats, but basically it adopts nyonin kinsei so that women are not permitted to ride on floats.
  765. Tanada
  766. Tanada (terraced fields)
  767. Tanada has so small a cultivated area that it is difficult to introduce 'large' agricultural machines.
  768. Tanada in Japan
  769. Tanada in Nishihata-cho, Ikoma City.
  770. Tanada is called rice terraces in English.
  771. Tanada means a rice-producing area located on a slope.
  772. Tanada throughout the world
  773. Tanagura Domain: the territory was reduced to 60 thousand goku (100 thousand goku).
  774. Tanagura domain: Tanagura-jo Castle
  775. Tanaka (name of an area in Kyoto City) togarashi
  776. Tanaka Domain: Tanaka-jo Castle
  777. Tanaka Monzen Cho 103, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture; tel: 075-781-9171
  778. Tanaka Yoshimasa Graveyard
  779. Tanaka became independent from Takakazu SEKI.
  780. Tanaka branch, Kyoto Hokuto Shinkin Bank
  781. Tanaka domain in Suruga Province - 35,000 koku (approximately 6.3 million liters of crop yield).
  782. Tanaka family continued to serve as goyo-shonin (a chartered merchant) for Kameyama Domain of Tanba Province and became a successful merchant.
  783. Tanaka joined Shinsengumi in October 1864.
  784. Tanaka memorial to the Emperor (Tanaka memorandum)
  785. Tanaka no Omi was given the kabane of Asomi (Ason) on December 15, 684.
  786. Tanaka published a thesis that denied the theory that 'Chutenno' was Yamatohime no Okimi, which was the basis of argument of the Yamatohime no Okimi enthronement theory and got the issue back to where it was at the start.
  787. Tanaka tried to join the guard team for the Imperial mausoleum led by Kinoenetaro ITO to be rejected and he hid himself in Honman-ji temple, only to be found and was ordered to commit Seppuku on May 18, 1867.
  788. Tanaka village had Oaza (large section of village), namely Oaza Tanaka and Oaza Takanokawara, of which the former was divided into 17 towns prefixed by 'Tanaka' in 1918.
  789. Tanaka was born in Kaga Province.
  790. Tanaka's farewell tanka
  791. Tanaka's grave is located in Koen-ji Temple.
  792. Tanaka, who had previously dissuaded peasants from going for the demonstration, was now agreeable to their plan and decided to put questions to the National Diet session on the day of the demonstration.
  793. Tanaka, who then was a member of the ruling party, thought he would be able to settle down this problem through discussion with the Minster of Agriculture and Commerce.
  794. Tanaka-dono had Kongoshin-in (built by Retired Emperor Toba).
  795. Tanaka-jinja Shrine
  796. Tanaka-jinja Shrine (Yokooji Tennogo, Fushimi Ward, Kyoto City)
  797. Tanakami Mineral Museum
  798. Tanakami Regional Museum
  799. Tanakura Nursery Site: Site of a nursery managed and based on a disposed Kyoto City tram reminiscent of "Totto-chan: The Little Girl by the Window."
  800. Tanakura Post Office
  801. Tanakura Station
  802. Tanakura Station - Kamikoma Station - Kizu Station (Kyoto Prefecture)
  803. Tanakura Station is the only station on the Nara Line located in front of an individual's private home.
  804. Tanakura Station, located in Satoyashiki, Hirao, Yamashiro-cho, Kizu City in Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Nara Line of West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
  805. Tanakura and Kizu stations were opened.
  806. Tanakurahiko-jinja Shrine (Oaza Tanabe, Kyotanabe City) Grand Shrine, Monthly Niiname
  807. Tanao-sha Shrine (Kushiiwamado-no-kami, Toyoiwamado-no-kami)
  808. Tanawa (a hand rope), a rope to tie cormorant, is made by plying hinoki (Japanese cypress) fiber and is 303cm long.
  809. Tanba
  810. Tanba (Hyogo-Tanba) Tanba city, Sasayama city
  811. Tanba (train)
  812. Tanba Ayabe Road
  813. Tanba Beef
  814. Tanba Black Soybean (especially 'Wachikuro' produced in the former Wachi-cho has a high reputation).
  815. Tanba Chestnut
  816. Tanba City -- Tanba City, Hyogo Prefecture
  817. Tanba Daimonji no Okuribi (the Tanba Bonfire Festival)
  818. Tanba Fabric Museum - Clothes from the Showa period to modern times are on display here.
  819. Tanba Highland is located at the center of Tanba region, while the southern part of former Tanba-cho divides the Yodo-gawa and Yura-gawa River systems.
  820. Tanba IC - Ayabe JCT: National Highway 478 Ayabe Road
  821. Tanba IC - Kyotanba-wachi IC: Fiscal year 2014
  822. Tanba Interchange
  823. Tanba Kameyama-jo Castle Site: Omoto's spiritual center, Tenon-kyo
  824. Tanba MOMOCHI
  825. Tanba MOMOCHI (1512-1581?) was a Ninja (a secret agent in feudal Japan highly skilled in stealth and secrecy), who is considered to be the founder of Iga style Ninjutsu (the art of a ninja) in the Sengoku period (Japan).
  826. Tanba MOMOCHI in Hoojiro
  827. Tanba Markesu located along the National Route 9 is a large commercial complex containing grocery and other stores, which are filled with shoppers.
  828. Tanba Matsui clan: They served Kanrei (shogunal deputy) the Hosokawa clan as a chief retainer.
  829. Tanba Matsutake (mushroom noted for its nice aroma)
  830. Tanba Mitsuhide Kikyo Matsuri (Japanese bellflower festival) (early October)
  831. Tanba Parking Area (tentative name)
  832. Tanba Province
  833. Tanba Province (that separated Tajima and Tango Provinces)
  834. Tanba Province was one of the old provinces of Japan, located in San'indo.
  835. Tanba Province was then under the control of Hideyoshi, and Ietsugu SUGIHARA and Shigetsugu ONOGI (Court Noble) took over Fukuchiyama.
  836. Tanba Province was under the overlordship of Mitsuhide AKECHI, and so Toshimitsu SAITO, as his vassal, was enfeoffed on that territory by Mitsuhide.
  837. Tanba Province: Domains of Tanba-kameyama, Sonobe, Ayabe, Yamaga, Fukuchiyama, Sasayama, and Tanba-kaibara
  838. Tanba Provincial Monastery
  839. Tanba Shichifukujin-meguri (a tour of the Seven Deities of Good Fortune in Tanba): Chitose area
  840. Tanba Shizen Undo Koen Park (Tanba Nature Exercise Park)
  841. Tanba Tachikui Pottery
  842. Tanba Takeda Station - Fukuchiyama Station
  843. Tanba Toji
  844. Tanba Traditional Yarn-Dyed Fabric Museum(丹波生活衣館)
  845. Tanba Wine
  846. Tanba Wine House
  847. Tanba and Tango together are called "Ryo-Tan" (the two "Tan"s), Tanba and Tajima are called "Tan-Tan," and Tanba, Tango and Tajima are called "San-Tan" (the three "Tan"s) all together.
  848. Tanba and Tango/Tajima
  849. Tanba beef
  850. Tanba black bean and sweet smelt were introduced through media such as the manga "Oishinbo."
  851. Tanba black bean produced in Kyoto Prefecture were nicknamed 'Murasaki Zukin,' or purple hood, by the then governor of Kyoto Prefecture, Teiichi ARAMAKI
  852. Tanba chestnut
  853. Tanba guri (Tanba chestnuts)
  854. Tanba kurodaizu (black soybeans)
  855. Tanba lacquer
  856. Tanba matsutake mushroom have long been known for their high quality.
  857. Tanba no Kuni Cho (Tanba Administrative Document) (9th of the ninth month, second year of Shohei)
  858. Tanba no kami (the governor of Tanba Province)
  859. Tanba no kuni no miyatsuko - The Kaifu family that is the priestly family of the Kono-jinja Shrine in Miyazu City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  860. Tanba region in Kyoto Prefecture
  861. Tanba region, extending from the Mid Kyoto Prefecture to the Mid Hyogo Prefecture, and Tango region, centering on Maizuru City and Miyazu City in northern Kyoto Prefecture, have been deeply connected in terms of history and economy.
  862. Tanba subsequently suffered an onslaight from Nobunaga ODA, who had secured control of Kinai (area near Kyoto) centered on Kyoto, however, the Akai clan including Naomasa continued to resist in tandem with the Hatano clan, and, succeeded in repulsing Oda's army, which was led by Mitsuhide AKECHI, several times.
  863. Tanba tachikui ware (Konda-cho, Sasayama City, Hyogo Prefecture)
  864. Tanba was called "Taniwa" at first, and was formerly written "田庭/谷端/旦波."
  865. Tanba was originally from Nabari City and his public face was a Dogo (powerful local clan), who was responsible for the whole Iga Province, but he was a Jonin of Iga Ninja behind the scenes, and one of three rulers of the Iga Ninja.
  866. Tanba' (丹波) -- an express train operated until 1986 by the Japan National Railways from Osaka Station and Shin-Osaka Station to the northeast of Hyogo Prefecture and the north of Kyoto Prefecture via the Fukuchiyama Line
  867. Tanba, Mineyama-cho was called Tanba-sato, Tanba County, Tanba Province in the beginning of the eighth century, and is thought to have been the center of Tanba Province.
  868. Tanba-Kameyama Domain
  869. Tanba-cha, Moshi-cha, Yashiro-cha, Asagiri-cha and Asagomidori (Hyogo Prefecture)
  870. Tanba-cho
  871. Tanba-cho -- Tanba-cho, Funai-gun, Kyoto Prefecture (the present-day Kyotanba-cho)
  872. Tanba-cho was a town that existed on the border between the central part of Kyoto Prefecture and Hyogo Prefecture.
  873. Tanba-cho, Mizuho-cho and Wachi-cho, in Kyoto Prefecture were consolidated and Kyotanba-cho came into being.
  874. Tanba-go
  875. Tanba-gun (later Naka-gun) is believed to have been the center of the kingdom when, in the seventh century, Tamba Province was established as one of the provinces administered by the Ryo-sei.
  876. Tanba-kameyama Domain (Tanba Province)
  877. Tanba-mura -- Tanba-mura (Kyoto Prefecture), Naka-gun, Kyoto Prefecture (the present-day Kyotango City)
  878. Tanba-no-Kuni Shoshogo Hosoden Sucho Mokuroku (a catalogue of the areas and the proprietors of manors, temples and shrines in Tango Province)
  879. Tanbabashi
  880. Tanbabashi Station
  881. Tanbabashi Station - Shichijo Station - Shijo Station (Keihan)
  882. Tanbabashi Station, located in Momoyama Tsutsui Iga Nishi-machi, Fushimi Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Keihan Main Line of the Keihan Electric Railway.
  883. Tanbaguchi
  884. Tanbaguchi Station
  885. Tanbaguchi Station was relocated.
  886. Tanbaguchi Station, located in Chudoji Minami-machi, Shimogyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, is a stop on the Sanin Main Line (Sagano Line) of the West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
  887. Tanbakameyama Domain: Kameyama-jo Castle (Tanba Province)
  888. Tanbamichi nushi no mikoto is enshrined in Kamitani-jinja Shrine (Kyotango City, Kyoto Prefecture) and so on.
  889. Tanbanomichinoushi no mikoto
  890. Tanbanomichinoushi no mikoto (丹波道主王:year of birth and death unknown) was a member of the Imperial family (Royal family), who appears in "Kojiki" (The Records of Ancient Matters) and "Nihonshoki" (Chronicles of Japan).
  891. Tanchi established a stream based on a new form of music theory.
  892. Tancho
  893. Tandai
  894. Tandai was an important position set within the Kamakura and Muromachi bakufu to make decisions on government affairs.
  895. Tane-ji Temple
  896. Tane-ji Temple - there is a Statue of Kongo-rikishi (designated as an important cultural asset) created during the Kamakura Period.
  897. Tane-jinja Shrine
  898. Taneatsu HIRATA (a scholar of Japanese classical literature in the late Edo period) read a number of proscribed books concerning Christianity and was strongly influenced by its idea of god as the creator of all nature.
  899. Tanegashima arquebus
  900. Taneharu KUTSUKI
  901. Taneharu KUTSUKI <Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)
  902. Taneharu KUTSUKI is the fourth lord of the Fukuchiyama Domain in Tanba Province.
  903. Tanehiko RYUTEI (his real name was Hikoshiro Tomohisa TAKAYA.
  904. Tanehiko RYUTEI's work "Nise Murasaki Inaka Genji" (Imposter Murasaki and Bumpkin Genji) are viewed as representative works in the genre.
  905. Tanehiko recognized its value and bought it, and let his fellow men of literature copy it by handwriting.
  906. Tanehikobon (the Tanehiko version)
  907. Taneie KONOE
  908. Taneie KONOE (1503 to August 5, 1566) was a court noble who served as Kanpaku (Chief Adviser to the Emperor) during the Sengoku period (Period of Warring States).
  909. Taneie KONOE was his brother.
  910. Taneki took office as a magistrate of Kobusho (military training institute), and he played an active part in the Choshu Expeditions.
  911. Tanekiyo KASAI
  912. Tanekuni HOSOKAWA
  913. Tanekuni HOSOKAWA was his biological son and Ujitsuna HOSOKAWA was his adopted son.
  914. Tanemasa KUTSUKI
  915. Tanemasa KUTSUKI <Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)
  916. Tanemasa KUTSUKI is the second lord of the Tsuchiura Domain in Hitachi Province.
  917. Tanemichi AOYAMA
  918. Tanemichi AOYAMA (June 15, 1859 - December 23, 1917) was a medical scientist and doctor of medicine.
  919. Tanemichi AOYAMA, principal of Tokyo Imperial Medical University
  920. Tanemichi HATANO
  921. Tanemichi HATANO, who did not have a favorable view towards this behavior, was informed that his younger brother Motomori KOZAI was forced to kill himself without being sufficiently investigated, and became so furious that he led a rebellion in Tanba Province.
  922. Tanemichi KUJO
  923. Tanemichi KUJO (March 4, 1507 - February 24, 1594) was a Kanpaku and classical scholar who lived during the Sengoku period (Japan) and the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  924. Tanemitsu KOKUBUN
  925. Tanemitsu KOKUBUN (1241? - May 29 1304) was a samurai who is said to have lived in Miyagi County, Mutsu Province in the Kamakura period.
  926. Tanemochi KOKUBUN
  927. Tanemochi KOKUBUN (c.1197 to December 22, 1242) was a samurai, who is said to have been in Miyagi County, Mutsu Province (later Rikuzen Province) in the Kamakura period.
  928. Tanemoto KUJO and Munemoto NIJO were his sons.
  929. Tanemoto KUTSUKI
  930. Tanemoto KUTSUKI <Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)
  931. Tanemoto KUTSUKI was the second lord of the Fukuchiyama Domain in Tango Province.
  932. Tanemune DATE
  933. Tanemune DATE sought to organize an even larger Utsuro by integrating the Ashina clan, the Mogami clan, the Tamura clan, the Shirakawa Yuki clan, the Iwaki clan and the Soma clan through marriage and/or adoption.
  934. Tanenaga HATAKEYAMA
  935. Tanenaga Hatakeyama returned as the head of the family by eventually repairing his relationship with Nagori Yusa.
  936. Tanenaga KOKUBUN
  937. Tanenaga KOKUBUN (c. 1178 to June 3, 1200) is a samurai, who is said to have been in Miyagi County, Mutsu Province during the Kamakura period.
  938. Tanenaga WADA
  939. Tanenaga WADA (1183 - May 30, 1213) was gokenin (an immediate vassal of the shogunate in the Kamakura and Muromachi through Edo periods) of Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  940. Tanenaga was executed at the place of banishment after the Battle of WADA.
  941. Tanenaga was sent to Mutsu Province and his residence in Kamakura was confiscated.
  942. Tanenao CHIBA, the head of the Chiba clan, set out to defeat Shigeuji to comply with the bakufu's request, but Tanenao's uncle Yasutane opposed it, insisting that they should send military reinforcements to Shigeuji.
  943. Tanenao HARADA
  944. Tanenao HARADA (dates of birth and death unknown) was a Japanese military commander and Dazai gonno Shoni (Junior Assistant Governor-General of Dazai-fu [local government office in Kyushu region]) in the late Heian period.
  945. Tanenobu KASAI
  946. Taneomi SOEJIMA
  947. Taneomi SOEJIMA (October 17 1828 - January 31 1905) was a Japanese samurai, feudal retainer of the Saga clan, bureaucrat and statesman.
  948. Taneomi SOEJIMA and Takachika FUKUOKA drafted 'The Constitution of 1868' mainly referencing 'The Constitution of the United States of America' and "Seiyo jijo" (affairs in the Western countries).
  949. Taneomi SOEJIMA the Calligrapher
  950. Taneomi SOEJIMA, Shizoku of Saga Prefecture
  951. Taneshige (胤重) KOKUBUN and Mochiharu (茂晴) KOKUBUN were the sons.
  952. Taneshige KOKUBUN
  953. Taneshige KOKUBUN in the genealogical table of the Kokubun family of Mutsu Province
  954. Taneshige KOKUBUN was a samurai and Gokenin (Shogunal retainer of the Kamakura bakufu) of the Kamakura period.
  955. Taneshige called himself Jiro, and his official rank was Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade) and Shuri no suke (Assistant officer of the Office of Palace Repairs).
  956. Tanetatsu AKIZUKI
  957. Tanetatsu AKIZUKI (November 28, 1833-October 17, 1904) was a Japanese politician at the end of the Edo period and in the Meiji period.
  958. Tanetsuna CHIBA
  959. Tanetsuna CHIBA (November 14, 1208 ? July 1, 1228) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the early Kamakura period.
  960. Tanetsuna KUTSUKI (1498 - 1546) was a busho in the Sengoku period (period of Warring States).
  961. Tanetsuna KUTSUKI (1605 - January 13, 1661) was a daimyo (Japanese feudal lord) in the early Edo period.
  962. Tanetsuna KUTSUKI (Busho (Japanese military commander) in the Sengoku period)
  963. Tanetsuna KUTSUKI (Japanese military commander in the Sengoku period)
  964. Tanetsuna KUTSUKI (the lord of Fukuchiyama Domain)
  965. Tanetsuna KUTSUKI (the lord of Tsuchiura Domain)
  966. Tanetsuna KUTSUKI (the lord of the Fukuchiyama Domain) <Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)
  967. Tanetsuna KUTSUKI was the third lord of Fukuchiyama Domain in Tanba Province.
  968. Tanetsune NAGAO
  969. Taneya main shop has in the tea room on the second floor a ceramic scale model of the Yokangai during the times when the Vories residence was still standing, offering a glimpse of the past.
  970. Taneyasu TOGASHI
  971. Taneyasu TOGASHI (1474? - 1535) was the 16th family head of Togashi clan (number of generations since Takaie TOGASHI).
  972. Taneyori HARADA
  973. Taneyori HARADA (dates of birth and death unknown) was a person who lived in the middle of the 11th century, the mid Heian period, and he was the founder of Togo clan (Harada clan) that was born in Kawamura county, Hoki Province.
  974. Taneyori originally belonged to the Harada clan which was the direct descendant of Okura clan and he had lived in the Chikuzen Province before he came to Hoki Province.
  975. Taneyoshi MIURA
  976. Taneyoshi MIURA (date of birth unknown - July 13, 1221) was a samurai during the Kamakura period.
  977. Taneyoshi TAKAGI
  978. Taneyoshi TAKAGI (1484 or 1501? - March 24, 1565) was a vassal of the Chiba clan during the (Japanese) Warring States period.
  979. Taneyoshi and the remaining samurai of the Kyoto side barricaded themselves in To-ji Temple, but being under attack by Yoshimura's army, after fighting bravely along with his sons Tanetsura and Keneyoshi, Taneyoshi killed himself in Nishiyama Kijima (Uzumasa, Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City).
  980. Taneyoshi attempted to put up one last fight at the palace of the Retired Emperor, but was turned away with the palace gate being closed and, instead, an inzen (a decree from the Retired Emperor) was issued to arrest the tactician Taneyoshi who set off a war.
  981. Taneyoshi had many children including Tanetsura MIURA and Kaneyoshi MIURA.
  982. Taneyoshi sent a secret message to Yoshimura in Kamakura, but Yoshimura turned the messenger away, but delivered that message to the shogunate whereby expectations of the Kyoto side fell short.
  983. Taneyoshi was defeated and killed.
  984. Taneyoshi's family was the Miura clan, the powerful gokenin (an immediate vassal of the shogunate in the Kamakura and Muromachi through Edo periods), and he departed for the front with his older brother Yoshimura during the Shigetada HATAKEYAMA Rebellion and the Makishi Incident in 1205.
  985. Taneyoshi's wife was the daughter of Shokan.
  986. Taneyoshi's young children who remained in Togoku (the eastern part of Japan, particularly the Kanto region) were also executed.
  987. Tang
  988. Tang Dynast - Gaozong
  989. Tang Dynast - Ruizong
  990. Tang Dynast - Taizong
  991. Tang Dynast - Wu Zetian
  992. Tang Dynast - Xuanzong
  993. Tang Dynast - Zhongzong
  994. Tang Dynasty - Gaozu
  995. Tang Dynasty China dispatched Gao Biaoren and they sent back INUKAMI no Mitasuki and others.
  996. Tang Lu Shuyi
  997. Tang name was not used in a formal Iki (a letter of appointment) in Jimoku (ceremony for appointing officials) of Chotei (Imperial Court) and the like, however, often used in private documents such as letters, diaries, and Chinese-style poems.
  998. Tang names (tomei, tomyo, or karana) are Chinese names of government posts or departments each of which corresponds to a Japanese name of a government post or department whose official duties were similar to those of Tang under the ritsuryo system (a system of centralized government based on the ritsuryo code) in Japan.
  999. Tang names are Kingo choshi,
  1000. Tang names are Kingo shogun,


319001 ~ 320000

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