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

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  1. The English word rainbow comes from the words of rain and bow.
  2. The English word rickshaw comes from the Japanese word 'rikisha.'
  3. The Enlightenment Party planed to use the support of the Japanese minister to overthrow the government led by Serving the Great Party.
  4. The Enomoto family was in the same clan as the Otomo family.
  5. The Enryaku-ji Temple spread the word that Moromichi's death was a divine punishment, and his political power ended in just five years.
  6. The Enryaku-ji Temple violently demonstrated for the monk.
  7. The Enryaku-ji and Kofuku-ji Temples were strong jisha seiryoku that were together called 'Nanto hokurei' (the powerful temples of Nara and Mt. Hiei).
  8. The Enshrined Deities
  9. The Enshrined Deities in Honden (main shrine)
  10. The Enshrined deities of the first shrine are Hinoomi no mikoto, Tsukiyomi no mikoto, and Okuninushi no Mikoto
  11. The Enshrined deities of the second shrine are Kotoshironushi no mikoto, Homudawake no mikoto, and Watatsumi no mikoto.
  12. The Enshrined deity of the third shrine is Suserihime no mikoto.
  13. The Entoku-in Temple is a tatchu (sub-temple on the site of a main temple) of the Kodai-ji Temple (Kennin-ji Temple school of the Rinzai sect) in Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City.
  14. The Entsu-ji Temple Garden is particularly well known for the beautiful, borrowed landscape.
  15. The Entsu-ji Temple was a Buddhist temple of the Myoshin-ji Temple school of the Rinzai sect, located in Iwakura Hataeda-cho, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  16. The Environment, Safety, and Health Organization, the International Innovation Center, the Organization for the Promotion of International Relations, the Institute for Information Management and Communication, and the Library Network were established.
  17. The Enya clan was a powerful clan divided from its progenitor, the Sasaki clan in Omi Province.
  18. The Epidemiology of Japanese Cedar Pollinosis
  19. The Era of Tsugaru
  20. The Era of the Emperor Junnin
  21. The Era of the Emperor Shomu
  22. The Era of the Empress Koken
  23. The Ertu?rul was stranded and water broke through into the engine room, which caused a vapor explosion and finally she sank.
  24. The Esoteric Buddhism of the Eight Japanese monks who went to China and the mantra catalogs
  25. The Establishment of Shikken (Regent of the Shogun) Politics
  26. The Establishment of Yarido (a generic term of sliding door along the groove between kamoi and the threshold) and Mairado
  27. The Establishment of a Bureaucracy
  28. The Establishment of the Shuinsen Act
  29. The Establishment of the Southern Court and Concomitant Existence of the Southern and Northern Courts
  30. The Establishment of the modern nation
  31. The Eto family purported to be the descendants of Tsunetane CHIBA, jito (manager and lord of manor) of Harukeho, Ogi District, Hizen Province.
  32. The Etsu-So Alliance (the Echigo and Sagami alliance) didn't function well and the alliance between TAKEDA, SATAKE, and SATOMI was established, making the Hojo family anxious over the defense of the Kanto region.
  33. The Eulsa Treaty
  34. The Eulsa Treaty (Dai-niji Nikkan Kyoyaku [Second Japan-Korean Treaty]) is an agreement concluded between the Empire of Japan and the Korean Empire on November 17, 1905, after the Russo-Japanese War ended.
  35. The European Royal Household differs from Japanese Imperial Household in historical backgrounds, etc., and their differences are shown below.
  36. The European and American armies that conquered Beijing looted many sacred documents but did not understand their value, so many were treated roughly and damaged.
  37. The European equestrianism had been originally developed in ancient Greece; a work by Xenophon is known as the oldest equestrian textbook; the modern equestrianism was developed in the Renaissance of Italy through appreciating Xenophon's work.
  38. The European origami was applied to childhood education by Friedrich Fr?bel and introduced to Japan when Japan was opened up to the world.
  39. The Evolution of Sashimi
  40. The Example of Gokyoka
  41. The Excavation Site Exhibition Hall: Built on the excavated remains and open for visitors
  42. The Excavation of a Large Number of Chinese Coins
  43. The Exhibition Hall in the Department of Literature at Kyoto University (co-designed with Jibei YAMAMOTO in 1914 and registered as a tangible cultural property in Sakyo-ku Ward, Kyoto City)
  44. The Exile of Izu-Oshima Island
  45. The Existence of Takeda's Cavalry
  46. The Expansion of Power
  47. The Experimental Station for Medicinal Plants
  48. The Express "Kasuga" route was shortened from Nagoya to Nara.
  49. The Express 'Daisen' (daytime train only)
  50. The Express 'Izumo (train),' running between Hamada Station/Taisha Station (on the Taisha Line) and Tokyo Station, had been operated by way of Osaka Station, but at this occasion the route was revised into one that traveled by way of Ayabe Station.
  51. The Express 'Tanba'
  52. The Expression of 'the Ezo Republic'
  53. The Expulsion Edict is a law Kanpaku TOYOTOMI Hidetsugu issued in 1592 during the Azuchi Momoyama period.
  54. The Extent of Edo
  55. The Ezo (northerners) group, that is, barbarians, who were in custody as prisoners in each region after the war for conquest of the north-east region, were first made by zuryos to be the private armies who were in charge of suppression and good at cavalry attack.
  56. The Ezo Republic' elected their president (sosai), but was soon subjugated by the Imperial army.
  57. The Ezo republic that was built in January 1869 was a familiar name of the Ezo Island Government, a political power belonging to Sabaku-ha which existed for a short time in Ezochi (inhabited area of Ainu) (Hokkaido).
  58. The FIK was established in 1970.
  59. The FUJIWARA clan produced a chancellor for the first time during his reign.
  60. The FUJIWARA-lined UENO family
  61. The Factory Acts were a series of acts designed to protect factory workers, children and women in particular, who were forced into hard work during the Industrial Revolution.
  62. The Faculty of Agriculture was based on the Kyoto Prefectural Vocational Training School of Agriculture and Forestry.
  63. The Faculty of Commerce was established at Doshisha University in 1949, and the Doshisha Technical School of Commerce merged into the Faculty of Commerce of Doshisha University, and the Doshisha Technical School of Commerce was abolished in 1952.
  64. The Faculty of Commerce, the Faculty of Economics, the Faculty of Law, and the Faculty of Letters are also planning to relocate to Imadegawa Campus in the 2010 academic year.
  65. The Faculty of Economics was established under a university with a new system in 1948.
  66. The Faculty of Education, and the Branch School of Kyoto University (Bunko), were established.
  67. The Faculty of Engineering (Department of Electricity, Department of Mechanics, and Department of Chemical Engineering) were established in Doshisha University in 1949, therefore Doshisha Engineering College was integrated into the faculty, and abolished in 1952.
  68. The Faculty of Engineering and the Department of Engineering studies, and the Science and Engineering Research Institute were merged and relocated to the Tanabe Campus.
  69. The Faculty of Human Life and Science
  70. The Faculty of Law was established as a University under a new system in 1948.
  71. The Faculty of Politics and Economics was renamed the Faculty of Law in 1919.
  72. The Faculty was established in 2005.
  73. The Fall of Muromachi Bakufu (1573)
  74. The Fall of Muromachi bakufu
  75. The Family History
  76. The Family Tree
  77. The Family business was biwa (Japanese lute).
  78. The Family business was myogyo-do (the study of Confucian classics).
  79. The Family's flight from the Capital
  80. The Father of Japanese Cinema
  81. The Fear Theory
  82. The Federation of Shinshu Temples (Shinshu Kyodan Rengo) made a protest against the corporation saying, "the expression in the ad hurts the feelings of many followers of the Shinshu sect. "
  83. The Festival Procedure
  84. The Fifteenth Volume
  85. The Fifth Demonstration and The Sixth Demonstration
  86. The Fifth Grade is the merit grade that confers a first investiture on officers below the rank of major.
  87. The Fifth National Bank (Daigo Bank) -> merged into the Naniwa Bank in 1898, and the current Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation after the Jugo Bank, the Teikoku Bank, the Mitsui Bank, and the Sakura Bank.
  88. The Fifth Volume
  89. The Fighting Act to Sakuramaru Seppuku (suicide by disembowelment) Act is performed as "ga no iwai" (rite of passage celebrated at various ages to pray for long life) in Kabuki.
  90. The Final Act - Scene at Yasui-fukuya Restaurant, Scene at Gappo's Hermitage, Scene of Revenge at Enma-do Temple
  91. The Finance Ministry at that time specially admitted the production of shochu made from brown sugar in the jurisdiction of the Oshima tax office of Kumamoto Regional Taxation Bureau on condition of using malted rice as part of its measures to promote the Amami island chain.
  92. The Fire of Angen
  93. The Fire-Deity Killed
  94. The First
  95. The First All Japan Kendo Championships were held.
  96. The First Battle of Gassan Toda-jo Castle
  97. The First Battle of Kizugawaguchi
  98. The First Battle of Kizukawaguchi
  99. The First Battle of Kizukawaguchi refers to the battle between the Mori Clan and the Oda Clan in 1576.
  100. The First Cabinet
  101. The First Council of Nicaea in Christianity agreed to establish the spring equinox on March (March 21) in 325.
  102. The First Daigokuden is currently being reconstructed to scale at the site where the Heijo-kyu Palace used to be, and is scheduled to be completed in 2010 which marks the 1300th anniversary of the founding of the Nara Heijo-kyo capital.
  103. The First Daigokuden was located directly north of Suzaku-mon Gate, the main gate of the Heijo-kyu Palace (the Imperial Palace of Heijo-kyo), and the Second Daigokuden was moved to a little to the east of Heijo-kyu.
  104. The First Demonstration - The Third Demonstration
  105. The First Educational Ordinance of Korea
  106. The First Generation
  107. The First Grade is awarded, after special investigation, to commanding officers (mainly commanders or lieutenant generals) serving as generals of forces directly under the Emperor's supervision.
  108. The First Half of His Life
  109. The First Independents was formed in about 1898 and continued until November 25, 1919.
  110. The First Ito Cabinet
  111. The First Ito Cabinet was launched when Sangi (councilor), Hirobumi ITO was assigned as the first prime minister and lasted from December 22 to April 30.
  112. The First Katsura Cabinet
  113. The First Katsura Cabinet, which was supported by the Seiyu party, weathered the Russo-Japanese War.
  114. The First Korea-Japan Agreement was an agreement signed between the Empire of Japan and the Korean Empire (Joseon Dynasty) during the Russo-Japanese War on August 22, 1904.
  115. The First Kyu certifies one to have obtained publicly recognized qualifications as an instructor.
  116. The First MATSUKATA Cabinet
  117. The First Measure
  118. The First Miho Naval Air Corps
  119. The First National Bank (Daiichi Bank) -> the Teikoku Bank (the corporate entity was disappeared once at this point) -> the Daiichi Bank (divided by establishing new corporate entity) -> the Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank -> the Mizuho bank (the corporate entity was disappeared when the bank became the Dai-Ichi Kangyo Bank.)
  120. The First National Bank (the present-day Mizuho Bank, Ltd.)
  121. The First Nihon Tamagokakegohan Symposium' (Japan rice covered with egg symposium) to discuss the appeal of tamago kake gohan was held in Unnan City, Shimane Prefecture.
  122. The First Okuma Cabinet
  123. The First Order of Merit (corresponding to Senior Third Rank,) the Second Order of Merit (Junior Third Rank,) the Third Order of Merit (Senior Fourth Rank,) the Fourth Order of Merit (Junior Fourth Rank,) the Fifth Order of Merit (Senior Fifth Rank,) and the Sixth Order of Merit (Junior Fifth Rank) were personally conferred by the emperor.
  124. The First Period
  125. The First Period:
  126. The First Princess, Imperial Princess Okiko (later called Empress Meisho) was born on January 9, 1624.
  127. The First Prize, the Japanese Ceramics Society (1977)
  128. The First Regiment: the First Battalion (Mitsutaro TAKIGAWA, four platoons, Troop of Denshu commissioned officers, Shoshogi-tai, Shinboku-tai), the Second Battalion (Hachiro IBA, seven platoons, Commando unit, Shinsengumi, Shogitai).
  129. The First Russo-Japanese Agreement
  130. The First Russo-Japanese Agreement was signed on July 30, 1907.
  131. The First Saionji's Cabinet
  132. The First Senko IKENOBO (1536-1621)
  133. The First Shogakko Rei: Shogakko Rei (Imperial Edict No. 14 of the 19th year of Meiji era)
  134. The First Tango Daibutsu
  135. The First Three Days of the New Year
  136. The First Troops of the Imperial Japanese Army under the command of General Tamemoto KUROKI landed on the Korean Peninsula and defeated the Russian army on the shores of the Oryokko River near Anton (present Tanton) in an engagement that lasted between April 30th and May 1st (Battle of the Oryokko River).
  137. The First Tunnel (Nagarayama Tunnel) for the Lake Biwa Canal, a tunnel constructed between Otsu City and Yamashina Ward in Kyoto City, has the total length of 2,436 meters, passing through Mt. Nagara.
  138. The First Tunnel (also called Nagarayama Tunnel) of the Lake Biwa Canal (the Canal No. 1) is also described in this section.
  139. The First Tunnel for the Lake Biwa Canal
  140. The First Volume
  141. The First YAMAGATA Cabinet
  142. The First is Mahito.
  143. The Five Buddhas in Womb Realm are a kind of venerable image in Buddhism.
  144. The Five Buddhas of Vajradhatu (Diamond Realm) are centered around Dainichi Nyorai and estimated to have been crafted at the time of Ansho-ji Temple's founding.
  145. The Five Classics texts of Confucianism, Buddhist scriptures, and seventy volumes of Juyi BAI's poems, all of which had been obtained from China, were possessed all over the country.'
  146. The Five Kazarimono are: jikukazari, tsubo kazari, chaire kazari, chawan kazari, and chashaku kazari.
  147. The Five Main Seasonal Festivals' Days
  148. The Five Major Kokuzo Bosatsu figures in To-ji Kanchi-in Temple, Kyoto (Important Cultural Property) were brought back from Tang by Eun, who was the disciple of one of Kukai's disciples.
  149. The Five Major Kokuzo Bosatsu is a group of figures consisting solely of Kokuzo Bosatsu.
  150. The Five Major Kokuzo Bosatsu is the Honzon of prayers for good health and prosperity.
  151. The Five Mountain System had already existed in the Kamakura bakufu with the issuance of kumon (kojo), and it was improved by Takauji ASHIKAGA, the first seii taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians") of the Muromachi bakufu, who was actively protecting the Zen sect.
  152. The Five Mountain system was introduced during the reign of Ningzong, the fourth emperor of the Southern Song Dynasty.
  153. The Five Mountains and Ten Monasteries System ('Wushan Shicha' in Chinese; 'Gozan Jissetsu Seido' in Japanese)
  154. The Five Thousand Yen Note
  155. The Five-Articles of the Imperial Covenant
  156. The Five-Storied Pagoda and Kannon-do Hall, remains of the original Gango-ji Temple, which had escaped the fire broke out in the Muromachi period, were finally burned down in 1859 in the end of the Edo period.
  157. The Fleet sailed half way round the globe and confronted the IJN Combined Fleet between May 27th and May 28th, 1905 in the Battle of Tsushima.
  158. The Flight of Kazumasa ISHIKAWA
  159. The Flow of Taisho Democracy
  160. The Flow of a Jichin-sai
  161. The Followers who got to Asake-no-kori county were OKIDA no Esaka, NANIWA no Mitsuna, KOMADA no Oshihito, YAMAHE no Yasumaro, HATSUKASHIBE no Shiki, OKIDA no Wakaomi, NE no Kanemi and NURIBE no Tomose.
  162. The Foot and Top of Mountains
  163. The Foreign Minister Shuzo AOKI in the Aritomo YAMAGATA Cabinet restarted the negotiation aiming at the perfect recovery of the legislative rights.
  164. The Foreign Office was considered to be an organization that stood above other authorities.
  165. The Forest Green Tree Frog observation club holds a 'Green Forest Concert' at 1 PM on the first Sunday in June.
  166. The Format of Performances
  167. The Former Assembly Room of the Third High School : It was built in A.D. 1911 (Meiji 44).
  168. The Former Foreign Settlement
  169. The Former Foreign Settlement 15th Building
  170. The Former Foreign Settlement 38th Building, Daimaru Kobe, Genius Gallery
  171. The Former Foreign Settlement is the section of exterritoriality for foreigners built mainly based on the Ansei Five-Power Treaties.
  172. The Former Foreign Settlements in Yokohama City Kanagawa Prefecture, in Kobe City Hyogo Prefecture, in Nagasaki City, Nagasaki Prefecture and Osaka City Osaka Prefecture are famous.
  173. The Former Imperial Audience Hall: Under restoration
  174. The Former Imperial Family
  175. The Former Maizuru Naval Arsenal Bullets and Rifles Warehouse
  176. The Former Station of Custodian in Omiya Campus
  177. The Fort of Jizogamine (Nagamasa of Sanpo-in Temple) which was located in the Yamato guchi and Yoshino Omine
  178. The Fort of Maki of Mt. Kudo (Chisogen-in [智荘厳院])
  179. The Fort of Mobara Yakushi in the east (Kaio of Kao-in Temple) and the Fort of Mt. Nishio in the west (Kakuo of Zenko-in Temple) which were located in Kamuro guchi
  180. The Fort of Mt.Ametsubo (HASHIGUCHI Hayato Shigefuji [重藤]) which was also located on Mt.Kudo
  181. The Fort of Ryumonzan Kumoji (Kakujo of Daikomyo-in Temple) which was located on the westernmost side
  182. The Fort of Terao dan (Shozan of Io-in Temple)
  183. The Fort of West Wakian (脇庵) (the commander was Kakushin of Seiho-in Temple) which referred to Chausuyama-jo Castle (Kinokawa City at present [former Naga Town])
  184. The Foundation
  185. The Founders of Nanto Rokushu and the Central Temples
  186. The Founding of Byodo-in Temple
  187. The Four Accomplishments (Zither, Chess, Calligraphy, and Painting), 22 scenes
  188. The Four Books are 'The Great Learning' and 'The Doctrine of the Mean', which came from the 'Classic of Rites', one of the Five Classics, 'The Analects of Confucius', which had been treated as a semi-Classic, and 'The Mengzi', which had ranked with 'The Xunzi'
  189. The Four Generations of the Fujiwara Clan Buried at Konjiki-do Hall
  190. The Four Gods in this case are as follows: the mountains in the back are Genbu (black warrior); Sui in front is Suzaku (a red phoenix); the left Sa with Genbu in the background is Seiryu (a blue dragon) and the right Sa is Byakko (a white tiger).
  191. The Four Gods with an 'Oryu' (yellow dragon) or Kirin at their center are called the 'Go-jin' (Five Gods).
  192. The Four Heavenly Kings of Waka
  193. The Four Heavenly Kings of Waka is the title to praise excellent poets of waka (Japanese poetry).
  194. The Four Ogres of Chikata FUJIWARA
  195. The Fourteenth Division (Imperial Japanese Army) was dispatched to the front lines on November 6, 1941 and fought at the beginning of the war in the Philippines (1941-1942), and stationed there after Manila fell.
  196. The Fourteenth Goeika (Hymn in Praise of Buddha)
  197. The Fourteenth Volume
  198. The Fourth Demonstration (the Kawamata Incident)
  199. The Fourth Grade is the merit grade that confers a first investiture on field officers.
  200. The Fourth Ito Cabinet
  201. The Fourth National Bank (Daishi Bank)
  202. The Fourth Period:
  203. The Fourth Regiment (Sakuzaemon FURUYA): the First Battalion (Kakushinsai NAGAI, five platoons, Shoho-tai), the Second Battalion (Shintaro AMANO, five platoons, Shoto-tai).
  204. The Fourth Russo-Japanese Agreement
  205. The Fourth Russo-Japanese Agreement was signed on July 3, 1916.
  206. The Fourth Senko IKENOBO
  207. The Fourth Volume
  208. The Franciscan members in the Twenty-six martyrs were the members of "the Alcantara group," one of whom, a Spanish man, St. Peter of Alcantara, arose a reform.
  209. The Franco-Japanese treaty
  210. The Franco-Japanese treaty is a treaty concluded in Paris between Japan and France on June 10, 1907.
  211. The Freedom and People's Rights Movement and Charter Oath
  212. The French born Petitjean was ordained as a priest in 1854.
  213. The French crepes of street stalls, originated from galette (crepes made with buckwheat) in the Normandy and Bretagne regions, but not all French street stalls sell buckwheat crepes.
  214. The French etcher F?lix Bracquemond chanced upon "Hokusai Manga" (Hokusai's Sketches) at a printer's workshop around 1856.
  215. The French military official who visited the army cavalry school praised Yoshifuru by claiming that "the sole purpose of Yoshifuru AKIYOSHI's life was to defeat the world strogest cavalry in Machuria;" thus, he came to be known as the father of the Japanese cavalry.
  216. The French soldiers who got involved escaped to a French ship being at anchor off Hakodate calling for protection before the fall of the Goryokaku.
  217. The Fresco supermarket
  218. The Front Gate and the Gatehouse of the Faculty of Agriculture : They were built in A.D.1924 (Taisho 13).
  219. The Front Gate of Faculty of Integrated Human Studies (formerly, the Front Gate of Third High School) : It was established in A.D.1897 (Meiji 30).
  220. The Front Gate of Main Campus (formerly, the Front Gate of Third Advanced Junior High School) : It was established in A.D.1893 (Meiji 26).
  221. The Front Shrine of Ogami-jinja Shrine
  222. The Front Square
  223. The Frontal Part
  224. The Fu or Kannagi has the power or authority to communicate with the occult, such as gods or holy spirits in the divine, spiritual, and natural worlds.
  225. The Fu or Kannagi is regarded as a person having the following abilities.
  226. The Fuchu City Board of Education, however, issued instructions for excavating and studying the remains prior to the construction of the shed.
  227. The Fudo Myoo (Acala, one of the Five Wisdom Kings) image (a painting and a national treasure) at Onjo-ji Temple is known as a hibutsu which has been handled with special care; the temple does not allow its picture to appear in books or other publications.
  228. The Fudo Myoo seated statue at the Mikage-do hall of To-ji Temple (Kyoto): it never been unveiled to the public except for the purpose of academic research.
  229. The Fudo-do Hall of Myo-o-in Temple currently stands on the site.
  230. The Fudo-gawa River (or the Ceiling River) is well known, as the torrential rainfall of 1953 in the southern part of Kyoto Prefecture caused a partial collapse of its banks and serious inundation of its environs.
  231. The Fugger family in South Germany and the Medici family in North Italy are the typical examples of the money changers who later became bankers.
  232. The Fuji type
  233. The Fujigayatsu family
  234. The Fujigayatsu family was also a clan, but the family line ended with the death of the last head of the family in the Great Hanshin Earthquake.
  235. The Fujii Saiseikai Foundation was founded in 1926 to store and exhibit the Oriental art collections of Zensuke FUJII (1873-1943) from Shiga Prefecture, who was the founder of Fujii Boseki (later, Fujii, a textile company).
  236. The Fujii Signal Station- Kawachi-Katakami section became a double-track section.
  237. The Fujii clan theory
  238. The Fujii family was a toshoke (within the hereditary lineage of court nobles allowed to enter the tenjonoma in the palace) down line of the Urabe clan.
  239. The Fujii family: The founder was the same as that of the Yoshida family.
  240. The Fujima School
  241. The Fujimon school of the Nichiren Shoshu sect (founded by Nikko)
  242. The Fujinami family
  243. The Fujinami family, which claimed to be descended from the Onakatomi clan, belonged to the Tosho-ke (the hereditary lineage of Court nobles occupying relatively high ranks).
  244. The Fujinami family: The main branch of the Onakatomi clan.
  245. The Fujinomori Daiei store
  246. The Fujinomori bus stop
  247. The Fujioka-ke Residence (the Fujioka family's residence): An important cultural property
  248. The Fujisawa clan and other families were turned out from the Nakamura clan as its branch families.
  249. The Fujita Museum of Art, located at the old Fujita Residence site in Amijima-cho, Miyakojima-ku, Osaka City, has 5,000 objects, including 9 national treasures and 45 important cultural properties collected by Denzaburo and his son, Heitaro FUJITA.
  250. The Fujita school is one of the schools of fue-kata (flute players) in Nohgaku (the art of Noh).
  251. The Fujitani Family: a side line of Mikosa
  252. The Fujito-ishi Stone was brought from the old residence of the former Kanrei Hosokawa Keicho family, literally with a fanfare.
  253. The Fujiwara Clan (two families)
  254. The Fujiwara Hokke-Kanin group
  255. The Fujiwara Hokke-Kanin group (descended from Grand Minister of State FUJIWARA no Kinsuke)
  256. The Fujiwara Hokke-Kanin group, a branch of the Saionji Family
  257. The Fujiwara Hokke-Morozane group (Kazanin group)
  258. The Fujiwara Hokke-Sekkan group
  259. The Fujiwara Palace was Chodo-in (the main administration building) remnants which boasts the largest scale in Japan, about 600 meters from north to south and 240 meters from east to west.
  260. The Fujiwara Palace which included the Imperial Palace and the government office was located slightly to the north from the center of the capital, and there was the Suzaku-oji Street, the main street running in the north-south direction from the Fujiwara Palace.
  261. The Fujiwara and Genji (Minamoto) clans
  262. The Fujiwara clan
  263. The Fujiwara clan (FUJIWARA no Sanemasa → FUJIWARA no Kinzane → Gansei, etc.) → Horikawa-Genji (Minamoto clan) MINAMOTO no Tomomi → MINAMOTO no Mototomi, etc.) → Kajima Nyudo, etc.
  264. The Fujiwara clan (the Hino line of the Northern House, eleven families)
  265. The Fujiwara clan (the Kajuji line of the Northern House, thirteen families)
  266. The Fujiwara clan caused the Anna Incident, as they did not like Imperial Prince Tamehira having an empress who was a daughter of MINAMOTO no Takaakira; so, after he lost his position, Emperor Enyu became a successor, followed by Emperor Reizei.
  267. The Fujiwara clan secured the Sessho (regent) and Kanpaku (top adviser to the emperor) posts, and was successful in making these posts inherited.
  268. The Fujiwara clan was descended from NAKATOMI no Kamatari, who had been awarded an official status title (called Uji-Kabane) 'FUJIWARA no Asomi' from Emperor Tenji for his outstanding contributions to Taika-no-kaishin (the Taika Reform).
  269. The Fujiwara clan was of the House of Kujo line, of the House of Fujiwara North
  270. The Fujiwara clan worshipped Kasuga-taisha Shrine as Uji-sha Shrine (shrine built for praying clan's glory) while Hiraoka-jinja Shrine, which is also known as 'Motokasuga, or the former Kasuga,' can be considered the predecessor of Kasuga-taisha Shrine.
  271. The Fujiwara clan's assisted government theory
  272. The Fujiwara clan.
  273. The Fujiwara clan: Descendants of FUJIWARA no Kamatari
  274. The Fujiwara were a noble clan that existed in Japan from the ancient period until the early modern period.
  275. The Fujiya HR center of Fujiya Co., Ltd.
  276. The Fukada family residence (Yonago City, Tottori Prefecture)
  277. The Fukakusa branch of the Fushimi Healthcare Center
  278. The Fukakusa branch of the Fushimi Ward office
  279. The Fukakusa bus stop for Meishin Highway buses
  280. The Fukakusa bus stop is located about a kilometer from this station but is nearest to Fujinomori Station.
  281. The Fukakusa bus stop: For Meishin Highway buses (approximately five minutes away on foot)
  282. The Fukakusa post office
  283. The Fukakusa-nishiura-cho bus stop
  284. The Fukami Tunnel is the tunnel for the National Road No. 162, running directly beneath the Fukami Pass.
  285. The Fukami Tunnel is the tunnel running between Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City and Minami-Tanba City (Kyoto Prefecture).
  286. The Fuke sect
  287. The Fukei's force received reinforcements from Mino Province and rallied, then headed to fight against the Karakuni's force.
  288. The Fuken-kai rules are a local system, but it is the starting point for the modern Japan's assembly as well as the election system.
  289. The Fuken-kai rules were revised in November 1880 and permanent commissioners were appointed.
  290. The Fukoku Mine in the Kamikawaguchi area was one of the best bismuth mines.
  291. The Fukoku and Tasshi listed by the two databases above are not the same, due to different interpretations as to which are still in effect and which are not.
  292. The Fukozu Matsudaira family around the time that Ietada celebrated his coming of age had yielded allegiance to the main house, that of Ieyasu TOKUGAWA, and were under the direction of Tadatsugu SAKAI, who had been charged with governing Higashimikawa (Yoshida-jo Castle, Mikawa Province) by Ieyasu.
  293. The Fukuchiyama - Ayabe section came into operation in 1904 as an extension of the Hankaku Railway's Hankaku Line, which connects to Maizuru.
  294. The Fukuchiyama - Wadayama - Kasumi section came into operation by 1911 as an extension of what is now the Bantan Line, which was constructed by the Sanyo Railway Company.
  295. The Fukuchiyama City Local Voluntary Operation Bus service is operated by Fukuchiyama City (Kyoto Prefecture) as a replacement for the discontinued regular bus route (No. 80 Route).
  296. The Fukuchiyama Domain was abolished under Haihan-chiken (the abolition of the feudal domains and establishment of prefectures) on July 14, 1871, becoming Fukuchiyama Prefecture.
  297. The Fukuchiyama Domain was located in Amada County in Tanba Province (present-day Naiki, Fukuchiyama City, Kyoto Prefecture).
  298. The Fukuchiyama Line features expensive fare for a JR line around Osaka because the line, including the section between Amagasaki and Takarazuka, wasn't included in the Osaka Train Specific Section in the JNR years.
  299. The Fukuchiyama Line is a (trunk) railway line operated by the West Japan Railway Company that connects Amagasaki Station in Amagasaki City, Hyogo Prefecture, and Fukuchiyama Station in Fukuchiyama City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  300. The Fukuchiyama Line isn't simply a line that connects Osaka with northern Kinki but is also a commuter line for office workers and students who commute from the cities of eastern Hyogo to Osaka.
  301. The Fukuchiyama Line merges into the Tokaido Main Line at a point between Tsukaguchi Station and Amagasaki Station, and then reaches Osaka Station.
  302. The Fukuchiyama Line starts from Fukuchiyama Station, while the Maizuru Line starts from Higashi-Maizuru Station and ends at Ayabe Station, but, Fukuchiyama Station is essentially a terminal due to its status as an end-of-line for most trains.
  303. The Fukuchiyama Line used to be operated as a single-track local line.
  304. The Fukuchiyama Line was originally established as a horse tramway by Kawabe [Kawanobe] Basha Tetsudo and connected Amagasaki (later Amagasaki-ko) and Itami.
  305. The Fukuchiyama Municipal Operation Bus is the community oriented bus operated by Fukuchiyama City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  306. The Fukuchiyama Urban Area
  307. The Fukuchiyama Urban Area includes Fukuchiyama City in Kyoto Prefecture and its surrounding area.
  308. The Fukuchiyama Urban Area, which has many commuters and shoppers from Tanba City in Hyogo Prefecture and its surrounding municipalities, has become the leading urban area in the Northern Kinki region with the Maizuru Urban Area.
  309. The Fukuchiyama clan was abolished and Fukuchiyama Prefecture was established on July 14, 1871 by Haihan-chiken.
  310. The Fukuchiyama family had an ability to attract customers, and it is said that, in the past, many customers visited the facilities, even from the areas of present Tanba City, Asago City, and Toyooka City, with some visitors waiting in line in front of the doors before they were opened.
  311. The Fukuchiyama family opened in a place very close to the north entrance/exit of Fukuchiyama Station in 1972.
  312. The Fukuchiyama family, a shopping center located in Fukuchiyam City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  313. The Fukuchiyama office
  314. The Fukuchiyama urban area has been attracting many visitors; accordingly, Fukuchiyama City has become a center of business and other fields so that the city has become deserved 'the capital of the northern Kinki region', the name it gave itself.
  315. The Fukuchiyama urban area has the population of 136,096 as of 2000, which is the largest in the Northern Kinki region.
  316. The Fukuho Bank, Higashi-Maizuru Office
  317. The Fukuho Bank, Maizuru Office
  318. The Fukui Bank, Maizuru Office
  319. The Fukui-jinja Shrine, the Bekkaku-Kanpeisha (a special government shrine), which enshrines Shungaku as a main deity, was built in 1943.
  320. The Fukujuen CHA research center of Fukujuen
  321. The Fukuo school is a school of waki-kata (supporting actors) in Nohgaku (the art of Noh).
  322. The Fukushima Incident
  323. The Fukushima family
  324. The Fukushima-jo Castle, the residential castle of Shigenaga HONJO, is now the Fukushima prefectural government office.
  325. The Fukuzawa's writing style was very simple in those days.
  326. The Funabashi Family
  327. The Funabashi family are descendants of Imperial Prince Toneri, the son of the fourtieth emperor, Emperor Tenmu.
  328. The Funabashi family: The main branch of the Kiyohara clan.
  329. The Funada Nakamichi remains
  330. The Funano type (type of Funano Remains) saisekijin core is also widely distributed from the Miyazaki-heiya Plains and the Ono-gawa River basin to the southern half of the Chubu region and the south Kanto, via the southern part of the Kinki region and Tokai region.
  331. The Funaoka Kani post office
  332. The Funaoka Taisai festival is held on October 19 in commemoration of Nobunaga ODA's arrival in Kyoto in 1568.
  333. The Funaokayama-gassen (Battle at Mt. Funaoka) refers to a battle on September 25, 1511, between Takakuni HOSOKAWA along with OUCHI Yoshioki who supported shogun Yoshitane ASHIKAGA and Sumimoto HOSOKAWA who support former shogun Yoshizumi ASHIKAGA.
  334. The Fundoshi was provided by an aunt on the mother's side; however if lacking, in principle it could also be given by a paternal aunt.
  335. The Funya clan (文室氏) is also written as "文屋氏."
  336. The Funya clan was a descendent clan of Naga no Miko (Imperial Prince Naga), a son of the Emperor Tenmu.
  337. The Furoshiki with arabesque patterns were, in fact, manufactured in large quantity from the Meiji to the Showa period.
  338. The Furuichi clan was a group of powerful kokujin (local lords) in Yamato Province, and both Ine FURUICHI, who was the founder, and Choin FURUICHI, who was the second generation head of the school (and a younger brother of Ine) were disciples of Juko MURATA.
  339. The Furuichi clan were immigrants to ancient Japan and settled in various places including Kawachi Province, so Kuromaro's place of origin is unknown.
  340. The Furuichi family
  341. The Furuichi family succeeded the position of the sado for the lord of Ogasawara for generations thereafter until the end of the Edo period, with the culmination of the school occurring around the time of Munemichi FURUICHI in the late Edo period.
  342. The Furusumida-gawa River in Kasukabe City, the Ashiya-gawa River in Ashiya City, and the Tomio-gawa River in Ikaruga-cho also have bridges called the Narihira-bashi Bridge.
  343. The Furyu school of shishimai is said to have originated from Drum Dance or Imperial Court Guards' Dance, both seen in western Japan, and a predominant theory says Furyu school of shishimai might have began when some star performers changed their headgears into "shishigashira."
  344. The Furyu school of shishimai is seen mainly in the Kanto and Tohoku regions.
  345. The Fuse family was one of these branch families.
  346. The Fusehara family branched out of the Funabashi family.
  347. The Fusehara family was a toshoke (the hereditary lineage of court nobles allowed to enter the tenjonoma in the palace) that was a branch family of the Funabashi family in direct line of descent from the Kiyohara clan.
  348. The Fusehara family: A branch line of the Funabashi family.
  349. The Fushihara family was a branch of the Kuge noble's house of the Funabashi family that had traditionally produced Confucianists serving at the Imperial Court, and the Fushihara family also hereditarily studied Confucianism.
  350. The Fushimi Domain
  351. The Fushimi Domain existed in Fushimi in the Yamashiro Province (present day Fushimi Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture).
  352. The Fushimi Kaido Road (Otsu Kaido Road)--a route extending from Higechaya-oiwake and connecting the Otsu-juku Station and Fushimi-juku Station as well as Osaka without passing through Kyoto--ran south of Yamashina Basin.
  353. The Fushimi Kyomachi-Kita post office
  354. The Fushimi Police Station of Kyoto Police,
  355. The Fushimi Sumizome post office
  356. The Fushimi Ward office has the Fukakusa Branch, the Daigo Branch, the Kamikawa Branch Office, and the Yodo Branch Office; however it has been proposed that the Fukakusa Branch and Daigo Branch be separated from Fushimi Ward.
  357. The Fushimi branch of the Kyoto District Legal Affairs Bureau
  358. The Fushimi kaido, which is said to have been built by Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI, extended from this entrance to Fushimi.
  359. The Fushimi no Miya family might have been considered the original family line of the current Imperial family, they were treated well and protected during all periods although other Miyake were eliminated.
  360. The Fushimi post office
  361. The Fushimi-Otesuji shopping area
  362. The Fushimi-inari post office
  363. The Fushimi-juku was a township for travelers on the former Kyo-kaido Road and some cited it as a Tokaido Gojusan Tsugi E6.9D.B1.E6.B5.B7.E9.81.93.E4.BA.94.E5.8D.81.E4.B8.83.E6.AC.A1.
  364. The Fushimi-juku was linked with Osaka by the Kyo-kaido Road that runs on the Bunrokutei Bank of the left bank of the Yodo-gawa River.
  365. The Fushimi-kaido Road is located on the eastern most side of this collection of roads, water channels and railways in Kyoto.
  366. The Fushimi-kaido Road linking Kyo and Fushimi has the following alternate names.
  367. The Fushimi-kaido Road seems to approach Hosshoji-Oji Street but takes a slightly eastern route.
  368. The Fushimi-kaido Road, however, is an important community road, through narrow one-way traffic toward the north for all automobiles except for two-wheeled vehicles in almost all the sections.
  369. The Fushimi-kaido also refers to a road that links Otsu-juku and Fushimi-shuku (Kyo-kaido Road).
  370. The Fushimi-kaido here refers to a road that links the Gojo-dori Street in Kyo, Capital (Kyoto) with Fushimi.
  371. The Fushiminomiya family
  372. The Fushiminomiya family, founded by Imperial Prince Yoshihito FUSHIMINOMIYA, the son of the Emperor Suko of the third Northern Court
  373. The Fushiminomiya family, the Katsuranomiya family, the Arisugawanomiya family and the Kaninnomiya family (Shodaibu [fifth and fourth rank officials] and samurai [warriors])
  374. The Fushiminomiya line of the Imperial Family were not included under this regulation, it was decided to add fictitious Imperial Princes to great-great grandchild of the Imperial Family, and to keep four generations (great-great grand child) of Imperial Princes in the ranks of the Imperial Family.
  375. The Fushiminomiya, Arisugawanomiya, Katsuranomiya and Kaninnomiya families, those four are called four Miyake (four Imperial Prince's families).
  376. The Fushin-an edition inherited by the Omotesenke school is highly regarded as one of the transcriptions written in his own hand, and is included in the Iwanami bunko edition of 'YAMANOUE no Soji ki.'
  377. The Fushu had a lifestyle that was very different from that of the public peasants in general, and their lives were mainly centered on hunting and training in the art of warfare.
  378. The Fushu were Emishi who lived in the provinces of Mutsu and Dewa and came under the control of the Imperial Court.
  379. The Fushu who had been forced to emigrate to the Japanese territory were issued with food as a Fushu allowance by kokushi and given remission from payment of Yo (tax in kind) and Cho (another type of tax) until they could earn a living by themselves.
  380. The Fusuma is also wider and various daring checkered patterns are pasted.
  381. The Futaarayama-jinja Shrine: Utsunomiya City, Tochigi Prefecture.
  382. The Futai-ji Temple in Horen-cho, Nara City, was founded by ARIWARA no Narihira at the request of Emperor Ninmyo.
  383. The Futarasan-jinja Shrine: Nikko City, Tochigi Prefecture.
  384. The Futsu no mitama sword is enshrined at the Takakura-jinja Shrine of Nishi-takakura, Iga City, Mie Prefecture (the former Ueno City), and other shrines.
  385. The GDP is the world's 3rd largest, exceeding Los Angeles in consideration of the depreciation of the yen.
  386. The GI then hit her, made Yoken step on her for some reason and right after that, remained there anxiously close beside her.
  387. The Gafusei was observed until Bunroku Keicho no Eki (The Bunroku Keicho Period Wars, 1592 - 1598).
  388. The Gakubiwa Instrument is an instrument used in Kangen music, Saibara (genre of Heian-period Japanese court music (primarily consisting of gagaku-styled folk melodies)), of gagaku (ancient Japanese court dance and music).
  389. The Gakubu Section, Shikibu-shoku Department of the Imperial Household Agency, defines it as the numbers played by the Gakubu Section, Shikibu-shoku Department of the Imperial Household Agency (except for Western music).
  390. The Gakuen Fukko Kaigi started on November 8 at the Meitoku-kan Hall of Doshisha University, and a large number of students came from all over the country.
  391. The Gakuren expanded rapidly to have 1600 members, advocated diffusion and studies of Marxism, as well as actively supported labor dispute and educational movement for laborers (Kyoto Rodo Gakko [Kyoto Labor School]) and so forth.
  392. The Galaxy' means the Milky Way, while 'galaxy' is a term used to apply generally to other similar heavenly bodies.
  393. The Gallic castle walls described in the "Gallic War" mainly comprised of wood, and stone buildings were fully introduced into Northwest Europe after being Romanized.
  394. The Gamo Clan
  395. The Gamo clan became subjects of Nobunaga ODA when Katahide GAMO was the head of the clan.
  396. The Gamo clan is a Japanese clan.
  397. The Gamo-Higashi District Police Station of the then National Rural Police Shiga Prefecture Headquarters tried to stop the demonstration in vain, and the demonstration members intruded into the town of Hino-cho.
  398. The Ganges River is very popular as for water burials.
  399. The Ganghwa Island incident is an armed conflict between Japan and Korea which occurred in the vicinity of Ganghwa Island, Joseon Dynasty on September 20, 1875.
  400. The Gangyo War
  401. The Gangyo War, which occurred in the Heian period, was a rebellion by the Ifu, or less assimilated Emishi (unassimilated northerners) under the rule of the Imperial Court.
  402. The Ganko-ji Temple pagoda stands 5.5 meters tall, while the Kairyuo-ji Temple pagoda is truly miniature at just 4 meters; despite the fact that they are both placed indoors, it was as structures, not as craft works, that they were designated national treasures.
  403. The Gapsin Coup broke out in December 1884, which is considered as a trigger for the annexation of Korea, and it is said that Inoue who was deeply involved in the coup, fled to Japan together with Ok-gyun KIM and Yonghyo PAK.
  404. The Gapsin Coup is an event which happened in Korea in December, 1884.
  405. The Garan (cathedral) was built in 1380.
  406. The Garden of Dongetsu
  407. The Garden of Heian-jingu Shrine
  408. The Garden of Hojo in Ryoan-ji Temple
  409. The Garden of Kyoto National Museum in Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  410. The Garden of Pebbles
  411. The Garden of Rakusui (the garden of the former residence of Kotaro FUJITA and currently Yu Resort Kyoto Rakusui) in Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City.
  412. The Garden of Senjo
  413. The Garden of the Hojo in Tofuku-ji Temple built in 1939 in Kyoto City.
  414. The Gardens of the Former Daijo-in Temple (sub-temple).
  415. The Gate is made of unpainted natural wood with a Kiritsuma zukuri style and Hiwadabuki style roof and is supported by four pillars that are 1.82 meters apart.
  416. The Gate is opened only for special events such as welcoming of the Emperor and foreign dignitaries as well as on the limited days for public viewing.
  417. The Gedan no ma was down one more step from the Chudan no ma and attendants or persons who met the Emperor were seated in a strict order of precedence.
  418. The Geihin-kan (State Guest House) is a facility in which the government accommodates visiting state guests, such as heads of state or ministers.
  419. The Geijutsuza had a great success with the production of Tolstoj's 'Resurrection' (in 1914) dramatized by Shimamura, and went on tour all over Japan.
  420. The Geino-jinja Shrine enshrining Amenouzume stands within the main shine precinct and is deeply revered by those in the performing and creative arts.
  421. The Geishogi Kaiho Rei is a law issued by the Meiji Government in 1872, whose main aim was to control human traffic of prostitutes.
  422. The Geishogi Kaiho Rei was announced in the process of settling the incident which involved a human rights issue.
  423. The Geishogi Kaiho Rei wasn't very effective in changing the situation directly; however, as its by-product, in some regions, opportunities for women to study and to achieve vocational skills for light industry were created with the intent of preventing poor peasants from selling their daughters into prostitution.
  424. The Geishu clan refused the order of the bakufu to dispatch the troops.
  425. The Gekka-mon Gate that stands in the present Kyoto Imperial Palace was rebuilt according to the ancient design.
  426. The Gekkin in Mingaku is a Genkan (four- or five-string Chinese lute) with a long neck.
  427. The Geku Goshoden Munamochi-bashira (the main pillars of the Geku) will be used to rebuild the Torii on the Ujibashi Oharai-machi side next time, and also for the Torii at Shichiri no Watashi at Kuwanajuku.
  428. The Gen family was more prosperous than the To family, and the Gen family produced more masters of Saibara.
  429. The Genbun currency remained stable for 80 years.
  430. The General Affairs Department is in charge of any other activities associated with the Executive Committee's activities, including financing and office work.
  431. The General Headquarters of Kwantung Army (Japanese armed forces in Manchukuo) (present day Jilin Province committee of Chinese Communist Party) (in 1934)
  432. The General Headquarters of the Allied Powers (GHQ) which occupied Japan after the Second World War worked on education reform, thinking that Japanization education, which promoted sacrificing oneself for the nation, played a big role in forming the militarism nation.
  433. The General Headquarters of the Allied Powers thought the Tennosei would be useful for their occupation policy, they let the Tennosei survive in the Constitution of Japan with the Emperor as the titular head (Emperor system with the emperor as a symbol of the unity of the people).
  434. The General's Outpost in Kamakura
  435. The General's Outpost in Mutsu (in the Ryozen machi, in Date gun of modern-day Fukushima Pref.)
  436. The Genji Shaku is a commentary on "The Tale of Genji."
  437. The Genji clan, which originated from the Emperor Uda Family, is called Uda-Genji; those who came from the Genji group of FUJIWARA no Inshi's daughter, Imperial Prince Atsumi, had the most power.
  438. The Genjina (professional names) are nomenclature named after the classic book Genji Monogatari (The Tale of Genji).
  439. The Genjina is a professional name that is assumed by or given to women and the practice owes its origins to the classic book Genji Monogatari.
  440. The Genko War and Naotsune
  441. The Genko shakusho ("Religious Volume of the Genko era," the earliest comprehensive history of Buddhism in Japan)
  442. The Genna era legend of a fire extinction
  443. The Genpei War
  444. The Genpei War (Conflict from 1180 to 1185 between two warrior leagues, one under the Taira family [Heishi or Heike], and the other under the Minamoto family [Genji])
  445. The Genpei War and the Domestic Conflicts in Hoki Province
  446. The Genpei War, held around the capital at that time in order to rule the country, affected rural areas.
  447. The Genpei War; the Taira-Minamoto War
  448. The Genroku Ako Incident has many anecdotes and oral traditions left, especially due to the dramatization of Chushingura.
  449. The Genroku Ako Incident.
  450. The German Revolution broke out in November.
  451. The German blitzkrieg operations during April to June 1940 made the Netherlands and France that had colonies in Southeast Asia surrender to Germany.
  452. The Gesaku literature in the Meiji period
  453. The Gigaku school (also called Kagura school) is seen nationwide (in particular, in western Japan), and it is categorized into three types, big lion, middle-sized lion, and small lion, according to the number of people who get into the body part of the lion costume.
  454. The Gimhae Heo clan is considered to be the descendants of King Suro-wang of Gimgwan Gaya, and treated equally with the hongan of the Gimhae Kim clan.
  455. The Gimhae Kim clan
  456. The Ginkaku (literally, silver tower) of Jisho-ji Temple
  457. The Ginkaku of Jisho-ji Temple: formally the Kannonden of Jisho-ji Temple (the hall dedicated to the Kannon in Jisho-ji Temple)
  458. The Ginkaku of the Jisho-ji Temple empitomizes Higashiyama culture.
  459. The Ginkaku-ji Temple type
  460. The Gion Festival Kuze Komagata chigo are chosen from the parishioners of Ayatokunaka-jinja Shrine.
  461. The Gion Festival is held by Yasaka-jinja Shrine and Ayatokunaka-jinja Shrine.
  462. The Gion Festival originated with a Goryoue that was held at Shinsenen in 869 when a plague had spread throughout the land, and came to be celebrated every year as this shrine's festival from around 970.
  463. The Gion Matsuri ondo was created in 1957 for the 10th anniversary of the resurgence of Gion Matsuri Festival.
  464. The Gion-kaikan Theater is a movie theater located in Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture.
  465. The Gion-matsuri Festival, which was led by townspeople, was suspended the next year.
  466. The Gion-zukuri style can be seen only at Yasaka-jinja Shrine in Gion, Kyoto, and it is considered to be the style of shrine architecture that most resembles that of Buddhist temple architecture due to the single roof that covers the separate honden (main sanctury) and rei-do hall (current haiden (worship hall)).
  467. The Gion-zukuri style is a style of Japanese shrine architecture.
  468. The Giseikan (legislative department) deliberated on the most important government matters before they were sanctioned by the emperor.
  469. The Glover Mansion, standing on a high point in Nagasaki, was built by Japanese people under instruction from Glover, but there were also some structures that were constructed by visiting foreign engineers.
  470. The Go-Hojo clan became more powerful during the late Sengoku (Warring States) period.
  471. The Go-Toba-in shows the aspect of his support for court culture in "Masukagami."
  472. The Gobosei containing a number of golden ratios, in spite of its simplicity, was considered to be representative of beautiful figures.
  473. The Gobosei was useful for ofuda (paper charm) to ward off all kinds of evils.
  474. The Gochi Nyorai, also known as Godai Nyorai, are five nyorai (tathagatas) associated with the five wisdoms of esoteric Buddhism (wisdom of the essence of the Dharma-realm, great perfect mirror wisdom, wisdom of equality, wisdom of wondrous observation, wisdom of accomplishing that which is to be done).
  475. The God is called Ame no Hoakari in the "Kojiki" (The Records of Ancient Matters), Hoakari or Amateru Kuniteruhiko Hoakari no Mikoto in "Nihonshoki" (Chronicles of Japan), and Amaterukuniteruhiko Amenohoakari Kushitama Nigihaya no Mikoto in "Sendai Kujihongi" (Ancient Japanese History).
  476. The God of the Market Place of Rakuichi-rakuza which was held by Nobunaga ODA at Misono was enshrined on the sacred tree of the Kashimori-jinja Shrine.
  477. The Goeden was drawn by Hogan JOGA's son, Enjuku and his disciple, Soshun.
  478. The Goei-do Gate is also one of the three famous gates of Kyoto.
  479. The Goei-do Hall (a hall dedicated to the sect's founder), a cultural property designated by Nara Prefecture, was constructed in 1650
  480. The Goei-do Hall built in 1636 underwent large scale renovations in 1800 and again between 1999 and December 2008.
  481. The Goei-do, which houses the statue of Shinran Shonin, is among the largest wooden buildings in the world (currently covered by scaffolding for a major restoration).
  482. The Goemon's line at the opening was originally simpler: "Someone says that a spring view is worth one thousand ryo, however, that is a small comparison; to me, it is worth ten thousand ryo."
  483. The Gofukakusa-in started a movement for Emperor Gouda to abdicate and to appoint the newest Crown Prince since 1280, finally, when Emperor Fushimi succeeded to the throne in October 1287, Gofukakusa-in began his cloistered government.
  484. The Gofuku-jaku (also known as Gofuku-zashi)
  485. The Gogenbiwa Instrument came down from China in the Nara period, but the Yongenbiwa instrument (four-stringed) was considered to have its origin in Persia.
  486. The Gohei-bon Ranteijo (the rubbed copy of the monument which the handwritings of Wang Xi-Zhi were carved on) (Tokyo National Museum)
  487. The Gohojo clan fell from the conquest started in 1590 (the Siege of Odawara) and Ieyasu was transferred to Kanto.
  488. The Gohojo clan was destroyed by the attack on the Odawara-jo Castle by Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI in 1590, and the Utsunomiya clan kept the territory of Shimotsuke Province yielding 180,000-koku (unit of volume of rice).
  489. The Goin Palace is an imperial villa built mainly for the purpose of providing a residence for the Emperor after abdication.
  490. The Gojo Family
  491. The Gojo Higashinotoin post office
  492. The Gojo business office of the Kyoto City bus
  493. The Gojo family became Sumai no tsukasa (in charge of sumo matches held in the presence of the emperor) since they were a descendant of NOMI no Sukune.
  494. The Gojo family branched out of the Takatsuji family during the Kamakura period.
  495. The Gojo family has distanced itself from the world of sumo wrestling since it last issued a yokozuna license to a sumo wrestler of Kyoto zumo, Montaro OIKARI.
  496. The Gojo family took this opportunity and independently issued yokozuna licenses to the sumo wrestlers of Osaka zumo (sumo wrestling tournament in Osaka) and Kyoto zumo (sumo wrestling tournament in Kyoto).
  497. The Gojo family was founded by Takanaga GOJO, the child of Tamenaga TAKATSUJI.
  498. The Gojo family: A branch line of the Takatsuji family.
  499. The Gojo police station (placed at the midpoint between Shijo Station and Gojo Station.)
  500. The Gojunoto is one of the styles of Buddhist pagodas.
  501. The Gokaicho of the founder of the religious sect, Nichiren's nenjibutsu (a small statue of Buddha kept beside the person), 'standing statue of Shakyamuni Butsu' in Ryuzo-do Hall is exhibited to the public twice each year, once in Manninko (early April) and again in Oeshiki (a Buddhist (memorial) service in the Nichiren sect, held on October 13).
  502. The Goko to see some woolen goods.
  503. The Gokoku-in sub-temple of Kimii-dera Temple, famous as a site of the 33 Temple Kansai Kannon Pilgrimage, is now independent from the Shingon Sect but was originally a branch temple of Kaju-ji Temple.
  504. The Gokomatsu adopted Prince Hikohito and had him ascend to the throne as Emperor Gohanazono.
  505. The Gokuraku-tei Project is a project that collects, appraises, and conserves media recordings of rakugo performances (aired in the past on the radio and other formats), and this project aims to establish a "Sound Museum" in the vaudeville world in the future.
  506. The Golden Age
  507. The Golden Age of the Otomo Clan
  508. The Golden Light of the Most Victorious Kings Sutra, Golden-Lettered Treasure-Pagoda mandala, in ink of various colors on navy blue paper (owned by Daichoju-in Hall of Chuson-ji Temple in Iwate)
  509. The Golden Teahouse: Rikyu designed it at the ordered of Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI.
  510. The Goma Ritual in the field held by the Tendaishu sect Honzan school is called '採燈護摩' (saitogoma), because it was held with the fire picked ('採取') from the saitogoma of the Shingonshu sect Tozan school, and the character is used in it.
  511. The Goma-do Hall is a hall where the goma rites take place.
  512. The Gongyo of Soka Gakkai
  513. The Gonin-gumi system consisted of groups of five members who were landholders in a village, and landlords/house owners in a town, including appointed group leaders called 'Kumigashira.'
  514. The Gonin-gumi were established among some samurai groups for military purpose; however, mostly the system was applied to peasants, tradesmen and artisans.
  515. The Goriki returns and says, 'They are guarding the barrier in great state.'
  516. The Gorin Tower (a memorial gravestone for the dead) of Hidetsugu TOYOTOMI and the graveyards of those executed are in Zuisen-ji Temple (Kyoto City) in Kyoto City.
  517. The Goryeo Army ambushed Toi because they believed that Toi would have returned from Japan soon.
  518. The Goryeo Army engaged and destroyed them, saving the Japanese caught by Toi.
  519. The Goryo Festival is said to be the oldest festival in Kyoto (city).
  520. The Goryo skirmish led to the outbreak of the Onin War in the following year and this is considered the site where the Onin War began.
  521. The Goryo-eiji members who came to pick up his body were attached by Shinsengumi members, and Todo and others were killed.
  522. The Goryoeji seem to have joined up with other followers immediately after returning from Mino.
  523. The Goryoeji went campaigning in various places such as Ise and western areas, but there is no sign that Todo was involved.
  524. The Gosankyo had their residences in the Edo-jo Castle, and they were treated as the members of shogun family.
  525. The Goshiki Gankake Daruma doll is a doll of Doi Daruma-dera Temple in Izu city, Shizuoka Prefecture.
  526. The Goshinpei (army to convoy the Emperor) under the direct command of the Meiji Government was organized based on a part of the Choshu domain's army with recruited ronin (samurai with no lord) in Kyoto.
  527. The Goshirakawa cloister government came to a complete end there.
  528. The Gosho Sendo-mairi started around July 21, 1878.
  529. The Gosho generally refers to residences of the Imperial Family or the Emperor himself.
  530. The Gosho may also refer to members of the Imperial Family, ministers, and shogun themselves as well as their residences and direct or collateral children and descendants.
  531. The Goshogo (and the name) of Imperial Princess Aiko, the oldest daughter of Imperial Prince Naruhito who is the present Crown Prince, is said to have been chosen by the Emperor by taking into consideration of the wish of the Crown Prince and Princess.
  532. The Goshu Shimazu Clan rose in Omi Province and was one of the branch families of the Shimazu Clan of Satsuma Province.
  533. The Goson Fault was designated as a national natural treasure on December 17, 1929, and today it can be observed at three spots where it is preserved.
  534. The Goson Fault was raised a maximum of 80cm on the west side and moved 270cm towards the south.
  535. The Gotairo (Council of Five Elders) system at the end of the Toyotomi government was a collective leadership system by powerful daimyo, however they were unable to prevent Ieyasu TOKUGAWA, a tozama daimyo, from usurping power.
  536. The Gotei was located in the garden, which was facing the Gozasho, and was a two-story Boro (watch tower) style building.
  537. The Goten is surrounded by an earthen wall, with Kara-mon Gate on its south side.
  538. The Goten was a large-scale building with Kokerabuki (a roof covering made with a layer of thin wooden shingles made of cypress), and was broadly divided into 'Omotemuki,' a public space and 'Okumuki' (inner part of the house), a private space.
  539. The Gothic style brick building was designed by James McDonald GARDINER, the first schoolmaster of St. Paul's school.
  540. The Goto troops and the Shimazu troops had been good friends through this war and it is said that Shimazu troops often stood by the Goto troops in battles.
  541. The Goto troops in Japan's Invasion of Korea
  542. The Goto troops in the Bunroku campaign
  543. The Goto troops in the Keicho campaign
  544. The Goto troops, which advanced on Korea on May 23, 1592, fought hard as the vanguard of the first division on May 25, and occupied Busan Metropolitan City castle on the same day.
  545. The Gotobain: patron for the middle of this period, and an ardent admirer of Toshinari who had his son Sadaie and others compose the Shin Kokin wakashu.
  546. The Government army pursued and surrounded them at Nagai.
  547. The Government army took Kobayashi on the 11th.
  548. The Government criticized and suppressed him for swing public opinion and for his outside-temple activity violating 'Soni ryo' (Regulations for Monks and Nuns) under an imperial decree dated April 23, 717 (old lunar calendar).
  549. The Government's Measures against the Mining Pollution
  550. The Governments of Japan and Corea, desiring to strengthen the principle of solidarity which unites the two Empires, have with that object in view agreed upon and concluded the following stipulations to serve until the moment arrives when it is recognized that Corea has attained national strength: -
  551. The Governor of Aki Province.
  552. The Governor of Chikugo Province, Minbu-taifu (Senior Ministerial Assistant of Popular Affairs) and Shugo (Provincial Constable) of Settsu Province.
  553. The Governor of Iyo Province.
  554. The Governor of Izu Province.
  555. The Governor of Yamato Province.
  556. The Governor-General sent officials, such as Zhang Zheng (Chang Cheng), to Wa.
  557. The Governor-General's Office
  558. The Governorate of B?ja, Tunisia is scheduled to be a friendship country of Kashihara City.
  559. The Governors-General appointed from 1919 to 1937 included Kenjiro DEN, Kakichi UCHIDA, Takio IZAWA, Mitsunoshin KAMIYAMA, Eizo ISHIZUKA, Masahiro OTA, Hiroshi MINAMI and Kenzo NAKAGAWA.
  560. The Governors-General during this period included Seizo KOBAYASHI, Kiyoshi HASEGAWA, and Rikichi ANDO, and their policies primarily focused on meeting the military demand to support the Japanese war efforts, making Taiwan into the military base.
  561. The Governors-General in the early days included Sukenori KABAYAMA, Taro KATSURA, Maresuke NOGI, Gentaro KODAMA, Samata SAKUMA, Sadami ANDO and Motojiro AKASHI.
  562. The Gozan side protested against the bakufu ruling with Shunoku Myoha resigning from the post of the resident priest, actions which crated a division between the bakufu and the Gozan faction.
  563. The Gozan system (the selection system of temples of the five highest ranks)
  564. The Gozan system was changed from Kamakura temples to Kyoto temples, becoming the Kyoto Gozan.
  565. The Gozan temples enjoyed the patronage of the bakufu, and in fact served as advisors and diplomats for Yoshimitsu ASHIKAGA in the trade between Japan and Ming China.
  566. The Gozan-Jissetsu-Shozan system was a system of jikaku (status of a Buddhist temple) established by the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  567. The Gozanha (Gozansorin) are the Zen temples (Zenrin) that were placed under the protection and control of the Gozan-Jissetsu-Shozan system (system of five great temples, ten important temples of the Rinzai sect, and Zen temples other than Gozan and Jissetsu).
  568. The Gozashi-kofun tumulus: 276m, the present Jingu ryo mausoleum, located in the northern part and constructed in the latter half of the first half of the kofun period
  569. The Graduate School of Government (Collaborative Research & Education Division), the Graduate School of Management (Research & Education Division) were established.
  570. The Graduate School of Human Life and Science
  571. The Graduate School of Psychology was also relocated to Kyotanabe Campus.
  572. The Grand Cordon of the Order is draped from the left shoulder down to the right side, and additional medals are worn along the ribcage on the left side.
  573. The Grand Cordon of the Supreme Order of the Chrysanthemum and the Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun include each order of decoration in their names, however, the order of decoration is not indicated in these cases.
  574. The Grand Council of State
  575. The Grand Council of State in Tokyo accepted the existence of 'Provisional Kyoto University,' and the school continued under the jurisdiction of Kyoto rusukan, but ended up being abolished in July in 1870, due to various reasons including headhunting of the teachers.
  576. The Grand Empress Dowager
  577. The Grand Head Temple
  578. The Grand Master.
  579. The Grand Minister SANJO fell ill because the situation became uncontrollable to him.
  580. The Grand Minister, Sanekane SAIONJI was her elder brother by the same mother.
  581. The Grand Prize at the Exposition International de Bruxelles (1958 for 'Kakiyu fukabachi' 柿釉深鉢)
  582. The Grand Steward of the Imperial Household Agency
  583. The Grand Steward of the Imperial Household Agency and the Grand Chamberlain (the head of the Board of Chamberlains) are officers certified by the Emperor.
  584. The Grand Steward's Secretariat, Imperial Household Agency, the Board of Chamberlains of the Imperial Household Agency, Imperial Household Archives, The Museum of the Imperial Collections ("Sannnomaru Shozokan" in Japanese), the Imperial Household Agency Kyoto Office and the Shosoin Office administer the imperial properties, which the nation owns.
  585. The Grateful Crane, a folktale, also has a similar plot.
  586. The Grave of OHARIDA no Yasumaro
  587. The Graveyard of Iehira
  588. The Great Britain:Ernest Satow
  589. The Great Buddha Hall constructed by Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI at Hoko-ji Temple was completed in 1595.
  590. The Great Buddha Hall reconstructed by Chogen was once again burnt to the ground by Hisahide MATSUNAGA in his conflict with the miyoshi sanninshu (three chief retainers of the Miyoshi clan) in 1567 during the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States).
  591. The Great Buddha Hall was rebuilt in 1195.
  592. The Great Buddha and Daibutsuden (the Great Buddha hall) will be described here.
  593. The Great Buddha construction plan originally started in the Shigaraki no Miya Palace, but there were several possible backgrounds.
  594. The Great Buddha had its head fallen off and spent several decades in a decrepit headless style with opening to the weather.
  595. The Great Buddha is officially called 'Rushana-butsu zazo' (the seated statue of the Birushana Buddha) and the Daibutsu-den 'Todaiji Kondo' (the main hall of Todai-ji Temple), however, they are described as 'the Great Buddha' and 'the Daibutsu-den' respectively in this section.
  596. The Great Buddha of Nara and deer are famous internationally, too, and are main objects of sightseeing in Nara, so a lot of students are seen to come here on a school trip.
  597. The Great Buddha statue hall was rebuilt in 1195.
  598. The Great Buddha was to be built here, however, a wave of natural disasters changed the plan to build it in Todai-ji Temple in Nara.
  599. The Great Buddha which blessed in a consecration ceremony in the following year and the Daibutsu-den completed in 1709 are exited today.
  600. The Great Depression in the first year of Showa weakened the economy, and ruined farming villages.
  601. The Great Famine of Kyoho
  602. The Great Fire of Jisho happened within the Heian-kyo on May 9, 1179.
  603. The Great Japan National Uniform Association, an organization for spreading the national uniform among the people, published and distributed a periodical "Kokuminfuku."
  604. The Great Kanto Earthquake and the reconstruction project of the Imperial capital, and his death
  605. The Great King at that time was thought to be responsible not only for the military aspect but also for the rituals and ceremonies.
  606. The Great Merger Movement that had once fallen apart was rekindled, this time involving Taisuke ITAGAKI, and even the insiders of the government such as Aritomo YAMAGATA, Shojiro GOTO, Hirobumi ITO, Kaoru INOUE and so on showed their will against the compromise plan.
  607. The Great Mirror is a historical tale written in the style of a biographical record.
  608. The Great Mirror' means 'an excellent mirror that reflects history clearly.'
  609. The Great Sichuan Earthquake of 2008 showed a significant impact of that.
  610. The Great Tang Dynasty Record of the Western Regions, Volume 1
  611. The Great Tang of the Western Regions painting,' a wall painting 2.2 by 49 meters (the total size of thirteen pieces), is decorating the insie of the temple, produced by a Japanese-style painter, Ikuo HIRAYAMA taking thirty years to complete.
  612. The Great Thanksgiving Service (a ceremony held after the Enthronement of an Emperor) was held on December 14, 1771.
  613. The Great Wall of China was built on the frontier to protect against invasions by northern equestrian tribes.
  614. The Great mandala Honzon based on the founding father's idea is sometimes called Monji mandala or Jikkai mandala by art lovers, but they are all branches and leaves of the tree trunk that is the Honmonkaidan-no-Daigohonzon.
  615. The Greater East Asian War
  616. The Greek Orthodox Church (Japan Orthodox Church) is believed to have some 10,000 followers in Japan, which is fewer than the number of Islamic believers.
  617. The Greek word bema refers to a speaker's platform or a podium, and the bema, in the Orthodox Church, refers to an area in which a high altar is placed, and which is divided with an iconostasis.
  618. The Gregorian calendar has followed this decision, too.
  619. The Gregorian calendar was adopted (on November 9 in accordance with the imperial edict on calendar change).
  620. The Gregorian calendar was to become effective around that time, with December 3, 1872 becoming January 1, 1873.
  621. The Gregorian reform was implemented individually in each country between 1582 (in France, Italy, Portugal and Spain) and 1924 (in Greece).
  622. The Grill
  623. The Growth of Cultivation
  624. The Grudge Theory
  625. The Guidelines for Imperial tactics' and 'the Annual operation plan' were drawn up based on the Imperial Defense Policy.
  626. The Guji family are descendants of Genzo TAKEBE.
  627. The Guji is a person responsible for the shrine rituals, and the manager of shrine administration and all staff working within the shrine.
  628. The Gujo branch post office, 100 meters southwest
  629. The Guncho was appointed by the government.
  630. The Gundo is said to have been opened in 1909, a year after the divisional headquarters were established (in 1908).
  631. The Gunkan-fu (warship section) of the Tosa Domain ordered Tosa security retainers to police the sailors and urge them to return to their ship; confused as a result of the language barrier and the congestion in the area, however, the French sailors tried to escape from the security retainers, knocking over a flag of the Tosa security group in the process.
  632. The Gunsanjikai consisted of council members (regarded as honorary position) who were appointed by Guncho and the prefectural governor.
  633. The Gurbantunggut Desert (located in Sinkiang Uigur Autonomous Region in China)
  634. The Gushikami restraint/murder case
  635. The Gushikami restraint/murder case was a lynch murder case that occurred in Gushikami magiri (currently Yaese town), Shimajiri gun, Okinawa Prefecture on May 18, 1907.
  636. The Gwanggaeto Stele, erected by the Korean Kingdom of Goguryeo, states that the Yamato Kingdom (Wakoku) began dispatching troops to the southern Korean Peninsula in collaboration with the Kingdom of Baekje.
  637. The Gyeongju Choe clan
  638. The Gyeongju Jeong clan
  639. The Gyeongju Kim clan
  640. The Gyeongju Pe clan
  641. The Gyeongju Ri clan
  642. The Gyeongju Son clan
  643. The Gyobu family's suburban residence built in Kokai, the suburb of Kumamoto, was designated as the prefectural important cultural property, and presently it has been reconstructed and open to the public at Sannomaru (outer part of the castle) of Kumamoto-jo Castle.
  644. The Gyobu-Kyo, the Secretary of Gyobu-sho, corresponded to Shoshiinoge (Senior Fourth Rank, Lower Grade).
  645. The Gyoki-zu published in Keian era (1648-1651), Shoo era (1652-1654), and Meireki era (1655-1657) now exist.
  646. The Gyoko road - Ise City, Mie Prefecture
  647. The Gyoko road - Machida City, Tokyo, from Emperor Showa's Gyoko
  648. The Gyoshi Taifu was also a new official position, which was later changed to Nagon (councilor), and was to transform the system of Kokusei sangi kan (government councilor) and Daibu (master), which had been under Daijin (minister) and Omuraji (military chief) since before the Taika Reform, into the new government-regulated system.
  649. The Gyotai
  650. The Gyotai was continued in the Song Dynasty, but it become obsolete on and after the Yuan and Ming Dynasties.
  651. The Gyotai was hung from lower right part of back (two or more Gyotai were not used at the same time).
  652. The H. M. [His Majesty] the Emperor left (shutsumon) at twelve forty one in the afternoon on twenty eighth, September, to the Diet Building to attend (Gyoko) the hundred and sixty fifth opening ceremony of the diet, and came back (Kanko) at one nineteen in the afternoon on the same day.
  653. The HASEBE mother and son mourn over his death and pass the night raising their voices in lamentation.
  654. The HATAKEYAMA Clan feud was continued by Yoshinari and Yasaburo's younger brother, Masanaga HATAKEYAMA and, together with the war of succession between the ASHIKAGA Shogun family and the Shiba (the Buei Disturbance), led to the start of the Onin War.
  655. The HATAKEYAMA clan was the shoji (sho-en estate keeper) of Hatakeyamano-sho Estate in Osato-gun since Shigetada's father, Shigeyoshi HATAKEYAMA, and Shigetada initially placed his residence within the estate.
  656. The HIJIKATA family was a wealthy farmer called "Odaijin" who had farmed on large stretches of land in the Tama region for generations.
  657. The HIJIKATA squad, a part of the Shinsen-gumi, searched Nawate Street from Yasaka Shrine, while the KONDO squad searched Kiyamachi Street across the Sanjo Bridge.
  658. The HIKI family is a descendant of an exile from the Ming.
  659. The HOJO family was a clan with TAIRA no Naokata, a Takamochi line of the Taira clan, as the supposed ancestor, and although the family was the head of the HOJO clan, whose base was the HOJO estate in Izu Province, Tokimasa himself might have represented a collateral line of the head family, according to one theory.
  660. The Hacchu-daiini-bon, which used to be considered by some to be written by Cho Suiryo following the model, is currently presumed to have been written by an unknown person during the period of Baisong Dynasty following the model.
  661. The Hacchu-daiisan-bon is said to have been written by Fu Shoso following the model.
  662. The Hachibushu statues of Kofuku-ji Temple are made by kanshitsu-zukuri, which is a technique of pasting hemp clothes in layers with lacquer were and had been placed at Saikon-do hall which was abolished later.
  663. The Hachijo Family: a side line of Shijo
  664. The Hachijo Uesugi Family
  665. The Hachijo Uesugi family is one of the many families of the Uesugi clan.
  666. The Hachijo Uesugi family was founded by Tomoaki UESUGI, the son of Tomosada UESUGI of the Futahashi Uesugi family.
  667. The Hachijo business office
  668. The Hachijo no Miya family changed their name from Tokiwai no Miya, Kyogoku no Miya, Katsura no Miya, and the family was discontinued in 1881, after that it came under the supervision of the Department of the Imperial Household from 1883.
  669. The Hachijoin manor was passed to Emperor Juntoku, Gotakakurain, Imperial Princess Hoshi, soon it became an important financial base for the Daikakuji Imperial line.
  670. The Hachijoin-ryo originated in the territory of Imperial Princess Akiko, who had inherited mainly the territory of the Anrakuju-in Temple, a temple built after a Buddhist temple in Higashi-dono Palace (East Palace) of Toba-dono Palace, an imperial palace for retired and cloistered emperors, as well as the Emperor Toba's territory and the Bifukumonin's territory.
  671. The Hachijoin-ryo was one of the groups of shoen (manor in medieval Japan) possessed by members of the imperial family under shoen koryo sei (The System of Public Lands and Private Estates) in the medieval period.
  672. The Hachiman deity
  673. The Hachiman deity is representative of that.
  674. The Hachiman-gu Shrine was transferred during Kanpyo era (889-898) of the early Heian Period, but the painting style of the picture was of an older period.
  675. The Hachiman-gu was founded as Aidono (building in which subordinate deities are enshrined) in November, 938.
  676. The Hachiman-zukuri style is one of the architectural styles of shrines in Japan.
  677. The Hachiya family
  678. The Hada (Hata) clan was immigrants to ancient Japan.
  679. The Hadong Jeong clan
  680. The Hagiwara family was a toshoke (within the hereditary lineage of court nobles allowed to enter the tenjonoma in the palace) and their original name was Urabe.
  681. The Hagiwara family: A branch line of the Yoshida family.
  682. The Hagoromo (Robe of Heavenly Feathers) Legend
  683. The Haigo named 'Basho' comes from the fact that his pupil planted a Japanese banana plant (Basho), which was rare at the time, in a hermitage of Fukagawa, and Basho loved it.
  684. The Haiku Collection
  685. The Haji clan took charge of emperors' funeral for generations, and later changed its title to the Oe clan and the Sugawara clan.
  686. The Hakama was with 'nejimachi' which was the same as Nagabakama for women, in formal style it was with Kurenai koaoi mon aya (a type of an arabesque pattern figured cloth with light pink color) on the surface and the lining was a light pink color with plain silk fabric.
  687. The Hakase family of Myogyodo almost unified it into hereditary learning as Shodo (calligraphy) (Daigakuryo) and Ondo (study of pronunciation of Chinese language).
  688. The Hakata Color Image Weaving was developed in an effort to realize the technical skills of traditional craftsmen for Hakata-ori textile in an "expert systemizing project" that was started in 1994, which involved the use of computers.
  689. The Hakata Minami line: 8.5 km between Hakata Station and Hakata Minami Station (the railway line for transporting deadheads to the railway yard is used for transporting passengers as well) (operated by JR West).
  690. The Hakata obi sash has a reputation for making silk make a satisfying squeak when tying it.
  691. The Hakata type was adopted and is still used for mass production today.
  692. The Hakka
  693. The Hakka people (Han Chinese who speak the Hakka language) have a rite wherein they pray to their ancestors on the winter solstice, placing a stand with some dumplings and other offerings on it in front of their house, lighting candles and burning incense.
  694. The Hakka people living in Qingliu County and Ninghua County of Fujian Province in China have a tradition of eating grass carp sashimi.
  695. The Hako koji method
  696. The Hakodate Court assumed the functions of Hakodate Bugyosho set up by the Edo bakufu feudal government.
  697. The Hakodate Court took over the functions of Hakodate Bugyosho (a magistrate's office) and later the Hakodate-fu administrative unit took them over.
  698. The Hakodate Court was established quickly as a local administrative organ in Hakodate (present-day, Hakodate City) in 1868 to govern Ezo (a northern island of Japan inhabited by Ainu indigenous people).
  699. The Hakodate Maru built by Toyoji was restored in 1988 and is on display in Okawa Town in Hakodate city.
  700. The Hakodate War
  701. The Hakugoku family who served in the Sendai Domain was one of famous families of this school, but they became extinct after the Meiji Restoration.
  702. The Hakuho style
  703. The Hakusan Incident
  704. The Hakushimonju (an anthology of poems by Hakkyoi (also known as BAI Juyi), a famous Chinese poet) caught the interest of Michikaze, who then penned a Kansubon that began with the first words from the poem 'Strange flowers in Nankan, Gyokusen,' giving the scroll its name.
  705. The Hall was actually to be kept under the Kyoto Federation control.
  706. The Hama Matsu zu (images of seashores and pine trees) partition paintings (12 opaque sliding screens, 4 wooden door covered with Fusuma paper, 17 images on 3 walls) have been designated Important Cultural Properties.
  707. The Hamadako freight station was abolished.
  708. The Hamaguchi Cabinet resigned on April 13.
  709. The Hamaguri Gate Incident
  710. The Hamaguri Gate is located on the west side of the modern-day Imperial gardens in Kyoto; before the Great Tenmei fire, it was known as the Shinzaike Gate
  711. The Hamaguri Rebellion
  712. The Hamaguri Rebellion (kinmon no hen) occurred on August 20, 1864 (the first year of the Genji era, July 19th in the old calendar) in the final days of the Edo period.
  713. The Hamaguri-Gomon Gate is one of the west gates of Kyoto Gyoen National Garden.
  714. The Hamasaka - Izumoimaichi (present Izumoshi Station) section came into operation in 1911 by extending, both eastward and westward, the state-operated line that had come into operation in 1909 as the first railway in the Sanin region, and connected Mikuriya Station - Yonago Station - Sakai Station (present Sakaiminato Station).
  715. The Hamazume sea-bathing beach (located in Hamazume, about five or six minutes by taxi from this station)
  716. The Hamon of Boshi (a tip of a sword) is Komaru, which shows small turning angle.
  717. The Hamon pattern (the distinct swerving line down the center of the blade) was near-straight but slightly irregular and had a taste of old Bizen.
  718. The Hamuro family
  719. The Hamuro family split into the two lines of Mitsumasa and Muneyori who were sons of Mitsuyori, but only the line of Muneyori kept family name down through the ages.
  720. The Hamuro family were kuge (court nobles) with kakaku (family status) of meike (the fourth highest status for court nobles).
  721. The Hamuro family: Kanroji branch.
  722. The Han race has a family name 'Bao', represented by the kanji (Chinese character) which represents abalone.
  723. The Hanagasa Junko parade began on behalf of the Ato no Matsuri which was originally held on July 24.
  724. The Hanagasa-odori Dance (flower-hat dance) festival is for praying Shikobuchi-jinja Shrine for a good harvest and being thankful for a good harvest of various grains.
  725. The Hanase branch office
  726. The Hanayagi School
  727. The Hanayagi school initially became popular as the buyo as a culture lesson for women and young girls from ordinary families but, thanks to its strong organizational skills, it has grown to the largest school (having approximately 15,000 accredited masters or persons having a diploma to teach buyo) in Japan.
  728. The Hanazono Family: a side line of the House of Ogimachisanjo
  729. The Handen Shuju system (a system for periodically reallocating rice land) was the basis of the Ritsuryo system and involved the creation of the ancient family registry system, the allotment of rice fields and the collection of tax/corvee, all tasks carried out by the kokushi.
  730. The Hangan HEGURI no Hironari on the third vessel was not as fortunate as others.
  731. The Haniwa are unglazed pottery characteristic of the Kofun period (tumulus period) in Japan.
  732. The Haniwa figure of men and animal-shaped Haniwa were displayed as a line or a group of statues, therefore there are theories such as that they represented funeral rites and that they recreated the political rituals before death.
  733. The Haniwa were broadly classified into two types, cylindrical Haniwa and Keisho Haniwa.
  734. The Haniwa were set on the hill or the funeral ritual site of the tumulus.
  735. The Hankyu Arashiyama Line (Hankyu Arashiyama-sen) is a railway of Hankyu Corporation that connects from Katsura Station located in Saikyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture, to Arashiyama Station (Hankyu).
  736. The Hankyu Bus has routes within the city and to neighboring towns and cities.
  737. The Hankyu Bus uses the area in front of JR Nagaokakyo Station as a bus terminal because Hankyu Nagaokatenjin Station has little space in front.
  738. The Hankyu Kyoto Main Line of Hankyu Corporation: On the Karasuma Station side
  739. The Hankyu bus company has been sub-contracted to run the operation.
  740. The Hankyu lines have very few tunnels.
  741. The Hannya-kyo Sutra at Ishigamiyama Komyo-ji Temple, which was read by Omori when a grotesque event happened, was adopted as a volume of Hannya-kyo Sutra.
  742. The Hanreki-shosha was reorganized into 'Hayashi-gumi' in 1883 when the monopoly was ended and the copy right of the calendar was transferred to the Jingu Shicho (Ise-jingu Shrine) at the same time.
  743. The Hanseong Sunbo was obliged to cease its publication.
  744. The Hanshin Main Line, which was inaugurated by Hanshin Electric Railway in 1908, suffered similar conditions, and both of them were sarcastically called 'Curve-gaisha' (company curved) as a parody of 'Kabushiki-gaisha' (company limited).
  745. The Hanwa Line's train operation management system has been introduced throughout the line.
  746. The Hanwa freight Line (11.3km of the Yao-Sugimotocho section) was abolished.
  747. The Hanzeirei was enforced in order to secure provisions for the army under the long-lasting conflict with the Northern and Southern Courts.
  748. The Harada clan originated from the Okura clan, a direct descendant of OKURA no Haruzane, who performed distinguish services to suppress the Rebellion of Johei Tengyo (FUJIWARA no Sumitomo's rebellion).
  749. The Harada clan successively inherited the posts of Dazai no Daigen and Shogen (Junior Inspector of Dazai-fu) (the third highest rank official of Dazai-fu in charge of military and police affairs in the area).
  750. The Harai-gawa River
  751. The Harakiri gene induces the death of neurons during cerebral ischemia and neurodegeneration in Altzheimers-type dementia.
  752. The Hari family.
  753. The Hasegawa clan in Mizokui, Shimashimo County, Settsu Province (present Hoshimi-cho, Ibaraki City, Osaka Prefecture) was a descendant of Moritomo HASEGAWA, a daimyo in the early Edo period.
  754. The Haseo Zoshi is one of the Japanese Emakimono (a traditional Japanese illustration/painting format developed for a narrative/storytelling purpose, produced in a narrow, horizontal scroll for representing various scenes and stories in a single scroll) remaining today.
  755. The Hasetsukabe clan, later, the Musashi clan.
  756. The Hasetsukabe clan.
  757. The Hashiba clan
  758. The Hashiba clan was a clan founded by Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI.
  759. The Hashiba troops continued to attack the Komaru section.
  760. The Hashihaka Mounded Tomb in Sakurai City, Nara Prefecture, is said to have been the earliest example of kofun.
  761. The Hashihaka Tumulus is about 160 meters in diameter, which corresponds to the Record of Japan in the History of Wei, which states, "When Himiko passed away, the Wajin made a large mound that was more than 150 meters long."
  762. The Hashihaka Tumulus, which is said to be the tomb of Yamatototohimomoso Hime no Mikoto according to the Nihonshoki, is located in the Makimuku ruins--a possible location of the Yamatai Kingdom.
  763. The Hashimoto Family
  764. The Hashimoto Family: the line of the House of Saionji
  765. The Hashimoto belonged to the court nobility and held a family status of the Urin.
  766. The Hashimoto community center
  767. The Hashimoto family
  768. The Hashimoto police station
  769. The Hashioka family
  770. The Hata (Hada) clan was descended from immigrants to ancient Japan.
  771. The Hata Clan
  772. The Hata clan are thought to have helped construct the Manda Levee as flood prevention works for the present-day Yodo-gawa River, and it has also been shown that the present-day Atsuta-jinja Shrine was built on the site of Kawachi Hata-dera Temple (now ruined) whose written records are preserved in Koryu-ji Temple.
  773. The Hata clan claimed to be a descendant of the first Qin Emperor, but it is not clear if this was true.
  774. The Hata clan had existed since ancient times.
  775. The Hata clan had resided in this area since ancient times.
  776. The Hata clan is believed to have improved the Katsura-gawa River around the fifth century, but the river is said to have been flooded repeatedly around the riverside in Nishikyo Ward.
  777. The Hata clan seems to have a relationship with Prince Shotoku; he was advised to escape to Uzumasa when Yamashiro-no-one was attacked by the Soga clan.
  778. The Hata clan was deeply related with important posts on paper making from ancient times.
  779. The Hata clan worshipped its gods at Matsuo-taisha and the Fushimiinari-taisha Shrines, which, along with Kamo-jinja Shrine founded by the Kamo clan, are the earliest-established shrines in Yamashiro Province.
  780. The Hata clan, immigrants, are believed to have played an active role in this region and founded Koryu-ji Temple as their Ujidera, or family temple.
  781. The Hata clan, who was assigned the Yamashiro Province, settled in around the lower Kamogawa River.
  782. The Hatakeyama clan (whose original family name was Taira) was the most powerful gokenin in Musashi Province, and had a close relationship with Tomomasa who was the kokushi of Musashi Province.
  783. The Hatakeyama clan did not have real power, but since it was held as a nominal head of the battle with Hideyoshi by Negoro and Saiga shu, it was attacked by the Kamigata army.
  784. The Hatakeyama clan had been frequently oppressed by Nagayoshi MIYOSHI, shugo of the neighboring Settsu Province as well as Awa Province, Awaji Province and Sanuki Province.
  785. The Hatakeyama clan had reigned as shugo (provincial military governor) of Kawachi Province since the early Muromachi Period.
  786. The Hatakeyama clan in Kii Province and the Kawachi Hatakeyama family (Kingo family [Emonfu, or the Headquarters of the Outer Palace Guards]) … The virtual main line of the Hatakeyama clan which produced many Muromachi bakufu kanrei.
  787. The Hatakeyama family had been farmer of Kamogawa and once very rich, however, at the Meiji Restoration they invested a lot of money, and later became very poor.
  788. The Hatamoto families that issued Hatamoto-satsu in Bitchu Province were descendants of powerful retainers of Sengoku daimyo, the Hatamoto families that had originally been daimyo of the Tokugawa shogunate but became Hatamoto because their territories were reduced, or branch families of daimyo families.
  789. The Hatamoto-satsu issued by the Mera clan included 500-mon, 100-mon or 48-mon Zeni-azukari-satsu (銭預札; paper money equivalent to zeni copper coins) issued by Okatte-za (御勝手座; an organization to undertake the paper money) in around 1862.
  790. The Hatamoto-satsu issued by the Tateishi Kinoshita clan included the senme-satsu issued several times by kanjosho (the organization handling financial and public affairs) or others in 1825 or later.
  791. The Hatamoto-satsu issued by the Tokieda-Ogasawara clan and by the Tateishi-Kinoshita clan included many on which the face value was expressed with senme value, as typically seen among the Han-satsu and Hatamoto-satsu issued in the northern part of Kyushu, including chigyo-chi.
  792. The Hatamoto-satsu issued by the Tokieda-Ogasawara clan included the senme-satsu issued in 1826 from Tokieda-sanbutsukaisho (the product business promotion body in Tokieda) and that issued in 1858 from Tokieda-kanjosho (the organization handling financial and public affairs in Tokieda).
  793. The Hatamoto-satsu of the Nagasawa-Matsudaira family was issued in several provinces such as Omi, Yamato, Kawachi, Izumi, Harima, and Bitchu.
  794. The Hatano and Matsuda families originally sided with the Minamoto clan, and Yoshimichi HATANO moved to Kyoto and served for MINAMOTO no Yoshitomo.
  795. The Hatano and Miyoshi allied forces marched into Kyoto on March 18 and started working on maintaining public order and pacification, and they had to wait for Harumoto HOSOKAWA to enter the capital before they could proceed with these activities.
  796. The Hatano clan defeated Kunisada NAITO, and captured Tanba in 1533, but Hidetada HATANO, allied with the Miyoshi clan, brought about the surrender of Yakami-jo Castle in 1538.
  797. The Hatano clan had been working for Nagayoshi (Chokei) MIYOSHI since the death of Hideharu's grandfather Tanemichi HATANO, and Hideharu was at first a vassal of the Miyoshi clan.
  798. The Hatenashi mountain range is neither a world heritage nor a buffering zone, but Kumano-kodo Road has an easy view of the Hatenashi mountain range.
  799. The Hatta-Kameyama section was electrified.
  800. The Hatto (lecture hall) that remains today was built during this time.
  801. The Hattori Family
  802. The Hattori clan were powerful gokenin (an immediate vassal of the shogunate in the Kamakura and Muromachi through Edo periods) with bases in Hattori-go, Ae-gun County, Iga Province (present-day Iga City, Mie Prefecture), and dominated the northern part of Iga Province, such as Ae -gun County and Yamada-gun Country (Iga Province).
  803. The Hattori family.
  804. The Hayashi (or RIN) family provided the Director of the Bureau of Education from the time of Hoko HAYASHI (grandchild of Razan and the third generation of the family), and would later provide officials for the inherited post responsible for education in the bakufu (they were also entrusted with the management of the Suruga library).
  805. The Hayashi family were descendants of the third son of HATA no Kawakatsu, tracing its roots back to the Asuka period, and served at Shitenno-ji Temple as gagaku performers for generations.
  806. The Hayashi family, who were deprived of their samurai status during the Boshin War, received the title of Baron, having been raised to the peerage from the warrior class.
  807. The Hayashiya family in Kamigata began when Shozo HAYASHIYA who studied with one of the disciples of Shozo HAYASHIYA in Edo settled in Osaka closer to his hometown Okayama.
  808. The Hayato of the Hirotsugu army stopped shooting arrows.
  809. The Hazamiyama tumulus, whose front part faces the east, is considered having been constructed in the middle era of the fifth century, while the Nonaka Miyayama tumulus, whose front part faces the west, is considered having been built in the first half of the fifth century.
  810. The Head Temple
  811. The Head of the Imagawa Family
  812. The Headquarters of the U.S. Army Forces Far East proclaimed the occupation administration in Korea (Denial of immediate independence).
  813. The Hebizuka-kofun Tumulus is often compared to the Ishibutai-kofun Tumulus in terms of the size of its stone chamber.
  814. The Heguri clan is said to be a descendant of TAKENOUCHI no Sukune and one of the ancient powerful local clans based in Heguri no go, Heguri County in Yamato Province (present Heguri Town, Ikoma County, Nara Prefecture).
  815. The Heguri clan produced government officials such as HEGURI no Hironari in the Nara period, but afterwards the clan went to ruin.
  816. The Heguri clan.
  817. The Heian Museum of Ancient History was a museum that once existed Japan.
  818. The Heian Nobles
  819. The Heian Period
  820. The Heian Period and Earlier Times
  821. The Heian Period and the Rise of Daishu (monks residing in the zendo)
  822. The Heian Prize' takes place at this velodrome as a memorial bicycle race, (ranked as a Grade 3 (G3) race in the Keirin race rating) but the race for the second term in September, 1965, which was the 15th year anniversary, was canceled due to a typhoon.
  823. The Heian cavalry started to use the Kyoto Racecourse as the base of its activities (until 1997).
  824. The Heian period
  825. The Heian period denotes a period of Japanese history spanning roughly 390 years, from 794 when Emperor Kanmu moved the capital to Heian Kyo (ancient Kyoto) to the establishment of the Kamakura Bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) in 1185.
  826. The Heian period ranged over about four centuries from A.D. 794 (the year of the national capital transfer to Heian-kyo) to around A.D. 1185.
  827. The Heian period saw the rise of a belief that reposing these souls by restoring them to their former ranks or giving them posthumous names or court ranks, and deifying them as gods would encourage them to bring peace and stability to people in return as "goryo", chingo no kami (guardian gods).
  828. The Heian period stirrups that remain at the shrine have been designated Important Cultural Properties.
  829. The Heian-jingu Shrine area is maintained as the Okazaki Park (Kyoto City) to be a cultural zone.
  830. The Heian-jingu Shrine was built to imitate the Chodoin of the Heiangu Palace, and its front shrine was designed to imitate Daigokuden on a five-eighth scale.
  831. The Heian-jingu Shrine, founded in1895, was a reconstruction of the chodoin in Heian-kyo on a smaller scale, and the main gate of the chodoin such as Oten-mon Gate and daigokuden were restored with the bright red colorant of Bengala, tiled roofs, foundation and pillars.
  832. The Heian-kyu Palace once stood here, but the palace site, known as 'Uchino,' was overgrown with weeds, and Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI, developed and improved Uchino when he built Jurakudai (Hideyoshi's residence and office in Kyoto) near the area, as the samurai residence in the Azuchi Momoyama period, creating the origin of 'Goban-cho.'
  833. The Heibei ASAOKA in 1606 that first appeared in "Nendai Yakazu Cho" (the chronicle of arrow number records, published in 1651) was the first source to record the score of Toshiya.
  834. The Heihaku and an imperial envoy (ceremonial staff) are dispatched from the Imperial Family to the Ise-jingu Shrine to service hohei no gi (ceremony for offering a wand with hemp and paper streamers to a Shinto god).
  835. The Heiji Rebellion
  836. The Heiji Rebellion (Heiji no ran), which began on January 19, 1159 in Heian period, was a coup d'etat that occurred because of antagonism among the close vassals of the retired emperor.
  837. The Heiji Rebellion is said to have been caused by the conflict between the factions of the Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa and the Emperor Nijo; the presence of members of the anti-Shinzei group in both factions; and the Cloistered Emperor Goshirakawa's inability to subdue them.
  838. The Heiji War
  839. The Heiji War ended with Kiyomori the victor.
  840. The Heiji monogatari emaki (Illustrated Handscroll of Tales of the Heiji (War))
  841. The Heijo Palace Site Museum (Nara City): The museum displays excavated artifacts or model buildings of Heijo-kyo which was Japan's ancient capital in the eighth century.
  842. The Heijo Palace Site Museum of Nara National Research Institute for Cultural Properties
  843. The Heijo Palace Site Museum: A model of the Heijo-kyu Palace Site, a model of Daigokuden-in (complex of Imperial Audience Hall), etc.
  844. The Heijo and Soraku district
  845. The Heijokyuato (former Heijo-kyo Capital site) district
  846. The Heike biwa came from the Gakubiwa and the structure of this instrument is almost the same as the Gakubiwa though smaller ones are preferred.
  847. The Heike clan placed its headquarters at Yashima, Sanuki Province (today's Kagawa Province) and then fought back to Fukuhara-kyo (the capital once the Heike clan transferred from Kyoto), Settsu Province (around today's Hyogo and Kyoto prefectures).
  848. The Heike family fell in Dannoura.
  849. The Heiminsha published the weekly "Heimin-shinbun" (Commoners' newspaper) and it was published from the 1st issue on November 15, 1903 to the 64th issue on January 29, 1905.
  850. The Heisei Period
  851. The Heisei period
  852. The Heiwado supermarket
  853. The Heizenmon Incident refers to the coup which took place in Kamakura in 1293 during the Kamakura period.
  854. The Henmi clan that was inherited by Mitsunaga is believed to have declined with the rise of the Takeda clan under Nobuyoshi, and its direct descendants remain unknown, despite evidences of activities by branch families.
  855. The Hepburn school subsequently became linked to other Protestant missionary colleges.
  856. The Heritage sites
  857. The Heungseon Daewongun group recruited others but most of them had strong 'Petit Sinocentrism' and totally rejected the West.
  858. The Hezhen (Nanai)
  859. The Hezhen (Nanai) people who live along or near the Amur River (Heilong Jiang, flowing through Russia and China) have a tradition of eating fine slices or thin slices of raw fish.
  860. The Hichiriki flute has a narrower range, but is louder than the Sho and Ryuteki flutes.
  861. The Hida clan.
  862. The Hida-soja Shrine: Takayama City, Gifu Prefecture.
  863. The Hidari Tachi technique has been handed down in the Shinkage school in the Japanese martial arts.
  864. The Hidenjo (an institution for aid and care of travelers during the early Heian period) in Musashi Province is famous due to the description of its background in the Rikkokushi (Japan's six national histories chronicling the 7th and 8h centuries).
  865. The Hidetada's troops at that time consisted of Tozama daimyo in Shinano Province and Fudai daimyo (hereditary vassal to the Tokugawa family) who had their territory along the Uesugi Nakasendo Road, according to a custom of troops which went through the road.
  866. The Hidetsugu Incident
  867. The Hideyoshi's dispatch of troops to Korea ended in failure, and in the Edo period when the Tokugawa Shogun family ruled Japan, the term 'Tenka' was used in only referring to the Japanese archipelago.
  868. The Hieizan Enryaku-ji Temple, the largest religious power in Japan, finally gave in to the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  869. The Higashi (east) Kyushu Shinkansen line: between Fukuoka City and Kagoshima City (via Oita City and Miyazaki City), approx. 390 km
  870. The Higashi Hongan-ji Temple suffered fire four times during the Edo period, and the Otani Sobyo Mausoleum was the evacuation center for goshin-ei (portrait) of Shinran each time.
  871. The Higashi Sanjoden of the FUJIWARA family, known as a typical shinden-zukuri of a very wealthy family, had a spring called 'senkan izumi,' around which rocks were arranged, and the corridors floored with boards on the north and the south sides of the spring were called izumiro.
  872. The Higashi-Honganji-mae post office
  873. The Higashi-Ikoma depot was established.
  874. The Higashi-Tonozuka tumulus as long as 175m is located in the neighborhood.
  875. The Higashibojo Family
  876. The Higashibojo Family, one of the houses of Dojo, was established by Shigenaga HIGASHIBOJO (Court Rank, Councillor, Department of Etiquette and Ceremonies, 1284-1343) who was the second son of Nagatsune GOJO (Senior Second Rank, Councillor, Department of Justice, 1242-1315).
  877. The Higashibojo family was offspring of SUGAWARA no Michizane and was a kuge family (court noble) descended from the Takatsuji family and the Gojo family.
  878. The Higashibojo family, the Kiyooka family, and the Kuwabara family later branched out from the Gojo family.
  879. The Higashibojo family: A branch line of the Gojo family.
  880. The Higashifushiminomiya Family
  881. The Higashifushiminomiya family
  882. The Higashifushiminomiya family is the Imperial family, which was founded by Imperial Prince Higashifushiminomiya Yorihito, a son of Imperial Prince Fushiminomiya Kuniie, during the late Meiji Era.
  883. The Higashiguchi Side
  884. The Higashiguchi side of the station used to be the central station of Echigo Kotsu Tochio Line (Yukyuzan Station - Nagaoka Station - Tochio Station).
  885. The Higashikujo area belonged to the former Higashikujo village, Kadono County.
  886. The Higashikuni family
  887. The Higashikuni family is also related to the Emperor's family through Emperor Meiji's Princess, sometimes comments are heard; 'the family who's blood line is the closest to the Imperial Family.'
  888. The Higashikuninomiya family
  889. The Higashikuze Family: a side line of Kuga
  890. The Higashikuze family was a Kuge who had the family grade of Urin.
  891. The Higashikuze family was a branch of the Koga family, Murakami Genji (Minamoto clan) line.
  892. The Higashikuze family was originally endowed with the rank equivalent to viscount, however, the family was raised to count for the distinguished service that Michitomi rendered.
  893. The Higashimatsuyama plateau extends to the central and northern parts of the town.
  894. The Higashinakasuji-dori Street is located along the southern extension of Ogawa-dori Street, running from Bukkoji-dori Street in the north to Kizuyabashi-dori Street in the south.
  895. The Higashinakasuji-dori Street, also known as Tenshinotsukinuke-dori Street, runs along its southern extension.
  896. The Higashinotoin-dori Street is a street which runs north-south in Kyoto City.
  897. The Higashisono Family
  898. The Higashisono Family: a side line of Jimyoin
  899. The Higashisono family was founded by Motonori HIGASHISONO (Jushiinojo - Junior Fourth Rank, Upper Grade, Headquarters of the Inner Palace Guards), the second son of Mototada SONO (or Mototo SONO).
  900. The Higashiyama Choraku-ji Temple (Higashiyama Ward, Kyoto City)
  901. The Higashiyama Kaii Memorial Hall opened adjacent to his house in Ichikawa City, Chiba Prefecture, where he lived from the time immediately after his discharge following the end of the war through to his death.
  902. The Higashiyama Police Station of Kyoto Police
  903. The Higashiyama mountain villa of Yoshimasa ASHIKAGA is especially famous (present Jisho-ji Temple, aka. Ginkaku-ji Temple).
  904. The Higashiyama-dono villa included large-scale buildings such as meeting houses or noble family residences and, although it was not as large as Yoshimitsu ASHIKAGA's Kitayama-dono villa (that later became Rokuon-ji Temple), it also had a certain political function.
  905. The Higashiyamadono built by eighth Shogun Yoshimasa ASHIKAGA had one kaisho.
  906. The Higher English Department of Doshisha Technical School and Department of Law and Economics were merged together, and the Doshisha Technical School of Foreign Affairs was established in 1944.
  907. The Higher English Department of Doshisha Technical School and the Faculty of Politics and Economics were merged to establish the Doshisha Technical School of Foreign Affairs in 1944.
  908. The Higher Faculty of Commerce established when Doshisha Technical School was reorganized in 1922 grew to become the present Faculty of Commerce.
  909. The Higher School Order that was reformed in 1918, aimed to fulfill the national morality of men and to perfect the higher ordinary education.
  910. The Highway is called Godaisan (meaning visiting in place of another)-kaido Highway because in the mid-Edo period there was a tradition among the courtiers in Kyoto to send a representative to Ise-jingu Shrine and to Taga-taisha Shrine three times a year (New Year, May and September), and the highway was used in those occasions.
  911. The Higo-koryu old school is one of the schools of tea ceremony passed on in the Kumamoto Domain.
  912. The Higuchi Family: a side line of Takakura
  913. The Hikan (low ranking clerks) were attached to bureaus within the eight ministries that existed under the Ritsuryo system and, were also attached to offices, sections and village offices in the provinces.
  914. The Hikawa-jinja Shrine in the Adachi District and the Kanasana (金佐奈)-jinja Shrine (present-day Kanasana (金鑽)-jinja Shrine) in the Kodama District are large shrines belonging to the Myojin Taisha Shrine.
  915. The Hikawa-jinja Shrine: Omiya Ward, Saitama City, Saitama Prefecture.
  916. The Hiketa family may have declined after Yasusada lost the suit, because the name of the HIKETA family including Yasusada does not appear in historical materials afterward.
  917. The Hiki and Hatakeyama clans (of Taira family) were defeated in Musashi Province.
  918. The Hiki clan took Ichiman and Wakasa no tsubone as hostage and secluded themselves in Kogosho (a building within the Imperial Palace).
  919. The Hiki family went to Ichiman's Kogosho palace.
  920. The Hiki family who exerted power as Yoriie's maternal relative was destroyed only in one day.
  921. The Hikiyama Matsuri Festival held at Nagahama every April (every October, in old days) was said to begin from the time when people were given congratulatory gold sands from Hideyoshi, who was glad to having a boy, and made a float and showed it at the festival of Nagahama Hachimangu Shrine.
  922. The Hikone-jo Castle that had taken the purpose as important defense wall toward Saigoku (western part of Japan) spent most of the time in the Tokugawa Period as a warehouse and others under the jurisdiction of organizations in the domain.
  923. The Hikuma no sho (manor) in Totomi Province (the present-day Hamamatsu City, Shizuoka Prefecture) had been the Kira clan's fief since the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan), but it was invaded by the Imagawa clan of Suruga Province.
  924. The Hime Mikoto Theory
  925. The Himeji City Museum of Art houses an album by Hoitsu SAKAI depicting scenes from Shugai Sanjurokkasen.
  926. The Himuro/Tsuda district
  927. The Hina-matsuri dolls wearl the costume of the nobles from the Heian period (costume of the Heian period).
  928. The Hinin in a broad sense is a general term for Inujinin (shrine associates), grave keeper, Kawaramono (discriminated position), Homen (ex-convicts), Gomune (vagrants or beggars), itinerant entertainers, Yasedoji (person who carried Emperor on a palanquin) and etc.
  929. The Hino Family
  930. The Hino Family is a court noble having meika, the upper rank of kuge (the status of the house) of the House of the Fujiwara North Line of the Fujiwara clan.
  931. The Hino area was formerly part of Uji County, Yamashiro Province and was the territory of the Hino family.
  932. The Hino family was a family of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan and had a rich tradition of Confucianism and poetry.
  933. The Hino family, which was a court noble family affiliated with the Jimyoin group, increased its influence among the political circles in the imperial court and the shogunate government through the marriage of Nariko and Yoshimitsu.
  934. The Hino family: main branch of the Hino Family.
  935. The Hino line of the House of Fujiwara North (one family)
  936. The Hino merchants contracted out wood masters and lacquerers, whom they had provided technical instructions, to produce Hinowan in various places.
  937. The Hinogawa signal station was abolished.
  938. The Hinokuma clan:
  939. The Hinokuma-gu Shrine, which was the spirit of miyago, had the main building destroyed and the territory seized.
  940. The Hinonishi Family: a side line of the Hirohashi Family
  941. The Hinonishi family were kuge (court nobles) with kakaku (family status) of meike (the fourth highest family status for court nobles).
  942. The Hira Mountains were located on the east of the village with the eastern edge of the Tanba Highlands located to the west.
  943. The Hiraga clan was a family of 'foot soldier' called 'ashigaru' of the Takamatsu Domain.
  944. The Hiraimaru was 375 meters tall, had an area of 1,700 square meters, and the residences of the Hirai clan were probably located in this place.
  945. The Hiraiwa clan (in the Inuyama domain, with a 120,000 koku of rice crop)
  946. The Hiraiwa school is an extinct school of fue-kata (flute players) in Nohgaku (the art of Noh).
  947. The Hirakata Yamashiro Line of Osaka Prefectural Route/Kyoto Prefectural Route 71
  948. The Hirako family.
  949. The Hirama family had served as the yonin (retainers) of the goshi (farmer-samurai) Serizawa family since the Serizawa clan had ruled from Serizawa-jo Castle.
  950. The Hiramatsu family
  951. The Hiramatsu family had a branch family called the Ishii.
  952. The Hiramatsu family was regarded as the lineage of the Konoe family, so the two families were also close.
  953. The Hiramatsu family: branch line of the Nishinotoin family.
  954. The Hirano clan - the descendant of SAKANOUE no Hirono nicknamed 'Hirano-dono' originated from SAKANOUE no Yukimatsu (Yukimasu HIRANO), the son of Akitajo no suke Gon no kami SAKANOUE no 峯盆, the three generations after Hirono.
  955. The Hirano clan and Shichimyo family
  956. The Hirano clan in Tawaramoto, Toichi County (present Tawaramoto Town, Shiki County) was a descendant of Nagayasu HIRANO, one of the seven spear soldiers at Mt. Shizugatake under Hideyoshi TOYOTOMI, and was provided with kotaiyoriai-omoteoreishu status.
  957. The Hirano clan was a Meika (important family) which is said to have developed the Hirano Sho area in Settsu Province (present-day Hirano-ward, Osaka City).
  958. The Hirano-Kudara (the second) section of freight branch line (1.4km) was opened to traffic.
  959. The Hirano-jinja and Kudo-jinja Shrines
  960. The Hirano-sha branch was inherited by Kanenaga YOSHIDA, who was adopted from the Yoshida-sha branch and his descendent called themselves the Fujii clan up from Ategai FUJII and became a toshoke (family admitted to imperial court).
  961. The Hirata Family
  962. The Hirata clan took charge of important ceremonies, such as the yabusame (horseback archery) for the Kasuga Wakamiya On-matsuri (Kasuga-Wakamiya Shrine festival in Nara -- an annual festival where prayers are made for a good harvest and protection against evil).
  963. The Hirata family had preserved Nijugobu Hisho (secret books categorized into 25 areas) as naisho (inside books) closely separated from gaisho (outside books).
  964. The Hirata family was a low ranked court official family called 'jigeke,' of the Nakahara clan line.
  965. The Hirate clan (disputed)
  966. The Hirayama clan was a family belonging to the west party of Musashi Province, with its ancestor Muneyori HIMATSURI, who was assigned to present Musashifuchu City (Tokyo Prefecture), from Kyoto as Kokushi (provincial governor).
  967. The Hirayama clan was destroyed, and remaining family members were brought to ruin.
  968. The Hirohashi family
  969. The Hirohashi family: branch family of the Hino clan.
  970. The Hirohata Family
  971. The Hirohata family was a court noble with the social standing of the Seiga family (Shinke or a newly established family, Uchiuchi or a family with close relations with Emperor).
  972. The Hirokoji Street, a sando (approach to the shrine), is a shopping street lined with many shops on both sides.
  973. The Hiroshima District Court as well as the court-martial held in Hiroshima the next year found all Japanese defendants not guilty, and MIURAand others were released.
  974. The Hiroshima daytime limited express Kyoto-go (a day bus that is operated by West Japan JR Bus Company and Chugoku JR Bus)
  975. The Hiroshima office operated a round trip and one way of the day buses and one way of the night buses.
  976. The Hirota Cabinet, which revived this system, had a conflict due to the Harakiri Mondo (the Harakiri questionaires) with the Minister of War over Gunbu Daijin Geneki Bukan sei which he formulated himself, and was driven to resign instead of commanding the assembly to dismiss.
  977. The Hirotsugu army lost the battle of Itabitsuchin and escaped.
  978. The Hiru Ukai is carried out without the bonfire.
  979. The Hisada family and the Horinouchi family are the chake (a professional master of the tea ceremony) that are related to Omote-senke and that have supported Omote-senke as tea masters for generations.
  980. The Hisada family are a "chake" (a family known as traditional masters of the tea ceremony).
  981. The Hisamatsu clan
  982. The Hisamatsu-Matsudaira family of Ieyasu's younger maternal half-brother was, needless to say, a fudai daimyo but not a shinpan.
  983. The Hisayoshi gun battery (Hisayoshi, Ainan Town) built by Choei during this period is reputed to be the crystallization of the best technology of that time.
  984. The Hishiage tumulus: 218m, the present Iwanohime ryo mausoleum, constructed in the middle era of the kofun period
  985. The Hishin Squadron which advanced from Mineyama never had the opportunity to rally before the war ended but some of the graduates did take part in battles.
  986. The Historic Monuments of Ancient Nara is the general term for temples and other historical monuments in Nara City, Nara Prefecture.
  987. The Historical Materials category
  988. The Historical Materials of Sir Tadayoshi SHIMAZU'
  989. The Historiographical Institute of Tokyo University and Keio University also owns it.
  990. The History
  991. The History and its Impact
  992. The History of Classical Japanese Literature
  993. The History of Doshisha English School
  994. The History of Enshu school
  995. The History of Fukamushi-cha
  996. The History of Iga states as follows:'
  997. The History of Katakiuchi
  998. The History of Sado
  999. The History of Sento
  1000. The History of Todai-ji Temple


326001 ~ 327000

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