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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. Ecchu fundoshi became the undergarments that spread all over the country, particularly because they are the undergarments that were provided in the army (as articles supplied at official expense).
  2. Ecchu fundoshi existed in the Edo period, and they were used by retired samurai (warriors), as well as people who were not engaged in physical labor, such as medical doctors, Shinto priests, Buddhist monks, men of culture and merchants.
  3. Ecchu fundoshi is also called T-jitai as a medical undergarment.
  4. Ecchu fundoshi took the place of Rokushaku fundoshi to be the main undergarment for Japanese adult males.
  5. Ecchu fundoshi was the main undergarment for Japanese adult males from the Taisho period up to the end of the Pacific War, and it was its prime as the word of fundoshi directly referred to this type of fundoshi, or even the word of male undergarment meant this fundoshi.
  6. Ecchu fundoshi were also manufactured and sold with the name "Classic Pants" by Angle-Miyuki Co., Ltd. and Ogran Co., Ltd. as well as Mitsukoshi.
  7. Ecchu no kami (Governor of Ecchu Province) at that time was OTOMO no Yakamochi, and so Hirotada is thought to have made a written record of waka under Yakamochi, which turned into "Manyoshu" Volume 18.
  8. Ecchu's children's dance (January 14, 1982; Imizu, Kurobe, and Toyama Cities; Kamo-jinja Shinji Denshokai [Group for the Transmission of Shinto Rituals in Kamo-jinja Shrine], etc.)
  9. Echi-gawa River (Echi-gun, Higashiomi City)
  10. Echigo Eiji Gin: a board-like piece of cupelled silver hallmarked with '榮' (Ei, prosper) and of 80 to 83 percent purity.
  11. Echigo Hoji Gin: Shikami Gin hallmarked with '宝' (Takara, treasure) and of 78 percent purity.
  12. Echigo Kanji Gin: a board-like piece of cupelled silver hallmarked with '寛' (Kan, grace) and of 92 percent purity.
  13. Echigo Kotsu Head office (third floor)
  14. Echigo Nagaoka Hanabi-zushi (Ikedaya)
  15. Echigo Otedama-zushi (Nomoto Bento-ten)
  16. Echigo Province
  17. Echigo Province: Domains of Murakami, Mitsukaichi, Kurokawa, Shibata, Muramatsu, Mineyama, Yoita, Shiiya, Takada and Itoigawa
  18. Echigo Shikami Gin: cupelled silver with deeply carved shikami, which means wrinkles and of 78 percent purity.
  19. Echigo Takada Daitokuji Gin: a board-like piece of cupelled silver hallmarked with '徳' (Toku, virtue).
  20. Echigo Toji
  21. Echigo no kami (Provincial Governor of Echigo) in Echigo no kuni (Echigo Province)
  22. Echigo no kuni (Niigata Prefecture) kamameshi
  23. Echigo-Nagaoka Domain: Nagaoka-jo Castle
  24. Echigo-Nagaoka Domain: the territory was reduced to 28 thousand goku (74 thousand goku).
  25. Echigo-Shibata Domain had supported the Ikei-ha since Shigekatsu MIZOGUCHI, the fourth lord of the domain, received instruction from Soetsu IKEI and from the time of the eighth lord, Naoyasu MIZOGUCHI, the domain had an 'osado' (tea master) who received instruction from the Isa family.
  26. Echigo-fu (primary): established on May 29 (old lunar calendar) in 1868.
  27. Echigo-fu Niigata Court: Niigata Prefecture: Takatoshi SHIJO
  28. Echigo-fu secondary Echigo-fu and primary Niigata Prefecture (secondary): February 8 (old lunar calendar) in 1869: reestablished after being separated from Niigata-fu -> abolished and incorporated to Suibara Prefecture on July 27 (old lunar calendar) in 1869.
  29. Echigo-nagaoka Domain (Echigo Province)
  30. Echigo-shugo Uesugi Family
  31. Echigoyuzawa Station
  32. Echizen City Chiko-zan Mountain Honko-ji Temple (塔頭顕正院、勇猛院、実教院、行運院 and Honjuin are located here)
  33. Echizen Main Line (currently the Katsuyama-eiheiji Line operated by the Echizen Railway)
  34. Echizen Manzai New Year's dance (December 26, 1995)
  35. Echizen Matsudaira family
  36. Echizen Province
  37. Echizen Province, the region associated with him, used to be a vast stretch of wetland, unfit for farming and human habitation.
  38. Echizen Province: Domains of Maruoka, Fukui, Echizen-katsuyama, Ono and Sabae
  39. Echizen Town (Fukui Prefecture)
  40. Echizen soba (Fukui Prefecture)
  41. Echizen soba is eaten dipped in sauce made with grated hot daikon radish and soy sauce.
  42. Echizen warosoku (Japanese candle made in Echizen, one of the Local Handicrafts of Fukui prefecture)
  43. Echizen-Omiya Station, located in Fukui City, Fukui Prefecture, is a station on the Etsumi-Hoku Line of West Japan Railway Company (JR West).
  44. Echizen-cho, Nyu-gun
  45. Echizen-manzai (Fukui Prefecture) The nation's designated cultural assets folklore cultural assets (December 26, 1995)
  46. Echizennuka Toji
  47. Eco-System and Fishing Industry
  48. Ecole Centrale de Lille
  49. Ecole Centrale de Lille, Ecole Centrale de Nantes
  50. Ecology
  51. Economic Activity Seen by Foreigners
  52. Economic Base
  53. Economic Meanings
  54. Economic Theory (First semester)
  55. Economic animal, and Japan incorporated
  56. Economic effects:
  57. Economic effects: More than 860,000 ryo (obsolete unit of currency)
  58. Economic power - In those days, when major commercial capital had not emerged yet, major temples received the biggest capital in the form of rice acquired in plenty from their vast shoen (manor in medieval Japan) as well as of abundant donation from nobles.
  59. Economic problems
  60. Economical power was also an important factor in having tenka under control.
  61. Economically, it has a strong tie with Iga City, Mie Prefecture (the former Ueno City).
  62. Economically, the system by which warriors, the de facto landowners in rural areas, could own and control land had now been legally stabilized, sparking a country-wide cultivation of land and leading to a vigorous flourishing of Kamakura culture.
  63. Economics
  64. Economics Policy (Second semester)
  65. Economies
  66. Economy
  67. Economy and academy
  68. Economy and society
  69. Economy and society of the Muromachi period
  70. Economy, trade and external relations
  71. Ecotopia Miwa (Miwa Industrial Park) (Fukuchiyama City (formerly Miwa town), Kyoto Prefecture)
  72. Eda-jinja Shrine (Miyazaki City, Miyazaki Prefecture):
  73. Edahogumi-no-kaki (fence made of branches of bamboo)
  74. Edamame (green soybeans)
  75. Edgar Julius Jung
  76. Edible Konjac (a plant often made into a gelatin):
  77. Edible Konjac:
  78. Edible chrysanthemum
  79. Edible chrysanthemums
  80. Edible uses
  81. Edible wild plants
  82. Edict (Shosho) just after the Great Kanto Earthquake (September 12th, 1923)
  83. Edict expelling Jesuit missionaries
  84. Edict for the Preservation of Antiquities and Old Items
  85. Edict on Change of Status (an edict with three articles issued in 1591)
  86. Edited by Genku (Honen)
  87. Edited by Genshin
  88. Edited by Shan-tao
  89. Edited by Shinran
  90. Edited by Tan-luan
  91. Edited by Tao-cho
  92. Editing
  93. Edition
  94. Editions
  95. Editor
  96. Editor of "Gunsho Ruiju" (Collection of Historical Documents)
  97. Editorial Department, Recruit Works Co., Ltd. "Omotenashi no Genryu: Nihon no Dento ni Service no Honshitsu wo Saguru" (Origin of 'Omotenashi' (hospitality): Exploring the essence of Service in the Japanese tradition), Eiji Press Inc.: December 25, 2007, ISBN 4862760333 (an interview in Lecture 3 'Hanamachi' - entertainment area).
  98. Editorial Work
  99. Editorials after the publication of the 'Datsu-A Ron'
  100. Editorials before and after the publication of the 'Datsu-A Ron'
  101. Editorials before the publication of the 'Datsu-A Ron'
  102. Editors and authors of the "Kojiki-den" (Commentary on the Kojiki) often miswrote Prince Oi (乎非王) as "宇非王" (also "宇斐王") in their transcription of the text, and this was incorrect.
  103. Editors of the"Kojiki" and the "Nihonshoki" tried to date the ages of these emperors using the most advanced technology at the time so as to justify the orthodoxy of their emperor, but many modern scholars doubt their dating.
  104. Edmond Alfred BASTIEN (French, 1839 - 1888)
  105. Edmund MOREL (British)
  106. Edo
  107. Edo (Impure land)
  108. Edo - the Journey begins
  109. Edo Bakufu
  110. Edo Bakufu established Honmatsu seido and tried to nullify the Honmatsu relationship between different sects in order to prevent massive political and religious conflicts.
  111. Edo Kimekomi dolls are characterized by having a slimmer body and smaller eyes and nose compared with kimekomi dolls of Kyoto.
  112. Edo Kimekomi dolls.
  113. Edo Literature adapted for film includes The Life of Oharu (Saikaku Ichidai Onna), The Story of Chikamatsu Chikamatsu Monogatari) and Chikamatsu Monogatari (Saikaku Ichidai Otoko) produced by Daiei Film Company.
  114. Edo Nagauta
  115. Edo Nagauta differ from genre in which spoken word is a core element, such as Gidayubushi and the like, in that the compositions are centered on singing.
  116. Edo Period
  117. Edo Period Daimyo
  118. Edo Period Shoshidai were set up after the pattern of Rokuhara Tandai in the Kamakura Shogunate, or the Shoshidai of the Muromachi Shogunate (under command of the Samurai-dokoro, in charge of security in Kyoto).
  119. Edo Sanjusangen-do Hall (in Fukagawa) - The full length (from edge to edge) of the hallway is 122.0m, and the height is from 5.0m to 5.6m, and the width is 2.69m.
  120. Edo Shogunate
  121. Edo Wonderland (Nikko City)
  122. Edo and its peripheral
  123. Edo and kamigata (Kyoto and Osaka area)
  124. Edo bakufu
  125. Edo bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) policies
  126. Edo bakufu maintained the system that lasted since the Sengoku period (period of warring states), with hatamoto (direct retainers of the bakufu) and gokenin (shogunal retainers), as a military power under its direct control.
  127. Edo bakufu was a samurai government established by Ieyasu TOKUGAWA.
  128. Edo bakufu(Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun)
  129. Edo bakufu, by reducing the length and the width by 1 bu while increasing the depth by 2 bu, wanted to trick the people into believing that the volume did not change, and the bakufu tried to conceal that the volume of the masu in real increased by about 3.7 percents, a theory says.
  130. Edo came to be called as the city of "eight-hundred-and-eight towns' (The number eight-hundred-and-eight is traditionally associated with innumerable.).
  131. Edo dishes, typical Japanese dishes, are closely related to koikuchi soy-sauce.
  132. Edo during the Tokugawa Period
  133. Edo had a rice-centered economy and amount of tax collected was displayed in terms of an amount of rice.
  134. Edo hatamoto (direct retainers of the Edo bakufu) of high social status called kotaiyoriai were subject to sankin-kotai like daimyo.
  135. Edo hibachi (hibachi used in Edo)
  136. Edo kabuki
  137. Edo machi-bugyo, jisha-bugyo (in charge of temples and shrines), and kanjo bugyo (in charge of finance) were generically called san (three) bugyo.
  138. Edo merchants, and merchants in Kyoto and Osaka
  139. Edo no Teki wo Nagasaki de Utsu (literally, avenge the enemy from Edo in Nagasaki).
  140. Edo period
  141. Edo period and later
  142. Edo period jiuta (a genre of traditional songs with samisen accompaniment) pieces were performed by an ensemble consisting of koto (a long Japanese zither with thirteen strings), shamisen, and kokyu (a bowed three string instrument).
  143. Edo period: 'Fujinro,' 'Enka-yusho,' and 'Shimoro' made by Mokubei AOKI, and 'Kimen-hakudei-ryoro' made by Dohachi NINNAMI.
  144. Edo period: It received the patronage of a feudal lord, Fujikake, but the number of temple buildings gradually decreased.
  145. Edo prior to the arrival of the Tokugawa clan
  146. Edo rakugo (rakugo performed in Edo) and Kamigata rakugo (that performed in the Kyoto and Osaka region) differ in terms of props and routines.
  147. Edo rose in political prominence when it became the seat of the Bakufu government when Ieyasu 's became the ruler of Japan after his victory in the Battle of Sekigahara in 1600, and was annointed "Seii taishogun" in 1603.
  148. Edo style
  149. Edo town was originally composed of only homeowners, that is townspeople, and Nanushi was a representative of a town.
  150. Edo was founded in the late Heian Period by a clan of the Chichibu party that claimed the name of Kanmu-Heishi (the Taira clan) who entered the plains along the Irumagawa River ((Saitama Prefecture) (Present-day Arakawa (Kanto)) from Kawagoe City from the Chichibu region of Musashi province.
  151. Edo was not directly affected by the Choshu Expedition and the naval blockade, but it saw the surge of the rice price just like in Osaka, although its appreciation rate was four times as high as a decade ago, and naturally the discontent of Edo citizens was mounting rapidly.
  152. Edo was the political center while Kamigata was the ancient cultural center or culturally developed area.
  153. Edo's Sato kagura dance (December 13, 1994; Tokyo; Wakayama Shachu, Mamiya Shachu, Matsumoto Shachu, and Yamamoto Shachu)
  154. Edo's drinking water was supplied by Tamagawa Josui Water Supply, but the water became warm in summer.
  155. Edo-Tokyo Open Air Architectural Museum (Koganei City, Tokyo Metropolis)
  156. Edo-bashi Bridge
  157. Edo-fu: established on May 11 (old lunar calendar) in 1868.
  158. Edo-ginza
  159. Edo-jime (Edo-style Tejime)
  160. Edo-jime consists of ippon-jime and sanbon-jime.
  161. Edo-jo Castle is the largest castle in Japan.
  162. Edo-jo Castle was renamed Tokyo-jo Castle when the Emperor visited Tokyo in 1868, and was taken up as the Kokyo in Tokyo.
  163. Edo-jo Castle, Osaka-jo Castle, Nagoya-jo Castle, and Fukuchiyama-jo Castle were also built by Tenkabushin.
  164. Edo-jo castle was build up with Honjo (the keep of castle) consisting of Honmaru (inner citadel), Ninomaru (second citadel) and Sannomaru (third citadel), Nishinomaru palace, Momiji-yama Mountain, Fukiage garden, Nishinomarushita (西丸下) (residence of the Matsudaira clans).
  165. Edo-komon
  166. Edo-komon is characterized by dyed using a paper pattern.
  167. Edo-komon' was named in order to differentiate from 'Kyo-Komon' when Kosuke KOMIYA of Tokyo was designated as the holder of Important Intangible Cultural Property (Living National Treasure) in 1955.
  168. Edo-style characters (yose-style characters): The special style of characters written on the mekuri, the originator of which is Ukon TACHIBANA.
  169. Edo-zume with a stipend of 200 koku for 15 people.
  170. Edo-zume with an estate of 100 koku.
  171. Edo: Derived from the meaning of 'whereabouts of Bakufu,' entering Edo was described as 'Nyufu,' while the town inside of Edo was described as 'Fuchu.'
  172. Edo: Kanpei changes into a light blue silk monpuku (clothing decorated with one's family crest).
  173. Edo: Kanpei dies with his hands joined and held in Okaya's arms.
  174. Edo: Kanpei is questioned closely by SENZAKI and HARA and suddenly commits seppuku during wari zerifu (divided dialogue).
  175. Edoardo CHIOSSONE (Italian)
  176. Edocho-suji Road
  177. Edohigan (Tachihigan, Azumahigan, Ubahigan) which is in bloom around the spring equinox.
  178. Edohigan group
  179. Edokko ha Gogatsu no Koi no Fukinagashi (litarally, those born in Edo move from one place to another like a cloth streamer blown by May winds)
  180. Edokko ha Yoigoshi no Kane ha Motanu (literally, those born in Edo spend all of the day's earnings before midnight)
  181. Edokko no Hatsumono Gui (those born in Edo like to eat first fruits of a season to show it off)
  182. Edokko no Nashi wo Kuu you (those born in Edo are frank)
  183. Edokko no Umare zokonai Kane wo Tame (failed children of Edo tend to save a lot of money)
  184. Edokoro (Office of Pictures)
  185. Edoma
  186. Edomae (Tokyo style)
  187. Edomae originally meant the sea in front of the Edo castle or the fish there, but later, it referred to the fish and shellfish in the Tokyo bay as well.
  188. Edomae-katsugi is seen during the festivals including Asakusa sanja-matsuri Festival, Torigoe-matsuri Festival and Kanda-myojin-matsuri Festival.
  189. Edomae-nigiri-zushi
  190. Edomae-zushi (a kind of sushi)
  191. Edomae-zushi (hand-rolled sushi)
  192. Edomae-zushi (hand-rolled sushi), representative sushi among them, is already recognized all over the world to such an extent that the term "sushi" is used as it is.
  193. Edomae-zushi (江戸前ずし, also written as 江戸前鮨, 江戸前鮓 or江戸前寿司) is haya-zushi (quick sushi), centered on nigiri-zushi (hand-shaped sushi).
  194. Edomae-zushi from the late Edo period to the early Meiji period
  195. Edomae-zushi from the late Meiji period to the early Showa period
  196. Edomae-zushi, rarely made as a home-cooked meal, is basically the work by sushi chefs.
  197. Edosenke
  198. Edosenke Soke Renge-an
  199. Edosenke Soke Renge-an has foundations called the Edosenke Chado Association and its fellow organization, the Fuhaku Association.
  200. Edosenke is a school established by Fuhaku KAWAKAMI, who was ordered by Yoshimune TOKUGAWA to become a disciple of the Omotesenke, so does not have a blood relationship to the Sansenke.
  201. Edosenke is a school of tea ceremony that was originated by Fuhaku KAWAKAMI.
  202. Edosenke: Fuhaku KAWAKAMI, the disciple of Nyoshinsai, the seventh Omotesenke
  203. Educated by Mrs. KONISHI, she is said to have had a detailed knowledge of medicinal plants, which was the original family business of the Konishi family.
  204. Educated officers shall be assigned to the Japanese army for training in the field, unless they have a strong reason to remain in the Korean army.
  205. Educated person
  206. Education
  207. Education (Shin Buddhist Otani Sect Educational Association)
  208. Education Board
  209. Education Board Mikata Office
  210. Education Department
  211. Education Facilities
  212. Education Institutes
  213. Education Program for Nurturing New Sense of Engineering-Based on Artistic Expressions' Practice and Human Science's Knowledge
  214. Education Reform by Institutionalizing Faculty Development in the Style of Mutual Study
  215. Education Unit for Global Leaders in Advanced Engineering and Pharmaceutical Science
  216. Education after the Meiji period
  217. Education and Information
  218. Education and Research
  219. Education and Study
  220. Education and lessons
  221. Education and practice
  222. Education and research
  223. Education and research institutions
  224. Education and study
  225. Education cooperation agreements with Christian high schools
  226. Education facilities
  227. Education first started with learning numbers and then went on to writing.
  228. Education for every citizen, education of nationalism, Shushin education (moral training education)
  229. Education from the Kamakura to the Muromachi period
  230. Education in the Edo period
  231. Education in the Nara and Heian periods
  232. Education ordinances, order of schools, school system
  233. Education philosophy of Kojuro NAKAGAWA
  234. Education policy
  235. Education reform
  236. Education room
  237. Education system
  238. Education was given in other places as well, such as Gogaku (schools of province) and private schools.
  239. Education, Institution of Research
  240. Educational Affairs Center, Student Support Service Center, International Center, department of facilities at Kyotanabe Campus
  241. Educational Department (with a department director, a secretary and a clerk)
  242. Educational Department - Edification Division/Education and Publicity Division/Educational Division
  243. Educational Development Center
  244. Educational History
  245. Educational Institute
  246. Educational Institution
  247. Educational Institutions
  248. Educational Research Centers
  249. Educational Society of Kyoto Prefecture issued a statement saying it opposed the abolishment of the school.
  250. Educational facilities, museums and cultural facilities
  251. Educational field
  252. Educational influence from the three teachers was strong enough to support him for life as he recalled later that "I received sprit from Mr. Tando, studies from Mr. Kikuro, and knowledge from Mr. Gesshu."
  253. Educational institutions
  254. Educational institutions affiliated with the Doshisha
  255. Educational institutions included in the Doshisha and other related schools
  256. Educational material
  257. Educator
  258. Edward S. MORSE (American, 1838 - 1925)
  259. Edward S. Morse, who was a botanist, recorded in his book that he ate shaved ice flavored with syrup around 1882.
  260. Edward SEIDENSTICKER, a scholar of Japanese literature, translated the work (1976) and corrected the flaws in WALEY's translation; he endeavored to approximate the original text by removing overly decorated translation and adjusting to the postwar literary tendency.
  261. Edward VIII (British monarch): 1922, British monarch (prince in those days).
  262. Edwin DUN (American)
  263. Eejanaika
  264. Eejanaika (never mind; frenzied dancing and chanting)
  265. Eejanaika is a social phenomenon observed from the end of the Edo period, August 1867 (表記の変更) to the beginning of the Meiji period, April 1868 (表記の変更), starting from Edo and extending to the Shikoku region with the Tokai and Kinki regions as its centers.
  266. Eel
  267. Eel (Anguilla japonica)
  268. Eel and conger eel, which are major materials of kabayaki, can also be broiled without the sauce.
  269. Eel and hatsugatsuo (the season's first bonito) are also included in Engimono, because they are eaten for the purpose of nutritional fortification according to seasons as well as in the hope of obtaining longevity and medical effects.
  270. Eel appeared in the Japanese food culture during the Neolithic Era.
  271. Eel bones
  272. Eel bones have been found among these fish bones, which proves that eels have been consumed since the prehistoric times.
  273. Eel flesh, that has been opened up and with the head and the bones removed, is skewered, basted with sauce and broiled.
  274. Eel has recently come into use as an osechi dish.
  275. Eel is fried like common white fish, and it is eaten with peppercorn sauce.
  276. Eel kabayaki
  277. Eel kabayaki is chopped into small pieces and placed on top of rice, which is served in a small ohitsu (container for cooked rice), and is eaten in 3 different ways.
  278. Eel kabayaki is served by itself or over rice; the latter is called unagi meshi (rice topped with eel).
  279. Eel kabayaki is sliced into thin strips of five to eight mm and topped over rice in an ohitsu (rice bowl) and served.
  280. Eel liver: Clear soup with eel liver is specifically called 'kimosui'.
  281. Eel pie
  282. Eel, however, is rich in Vitamin B, so one can prevent summer fatigue and loss of appetite by eating it.
  283. Eels are caught by skillfully maneuvering a pole with a hook attached to it at the tip.
  284. Eels are distributed throughout Japan.
  285. Eels are high in protein and they are also easy to digest.
  286. Eels are known as freshwater fish, but their life cycle takes on that of a 'migratory fish,' which means they lay eggs and the eggs hatch in the sea, and the young eels return to the freshwater.
  287. Eels are used in Cantonese cuisine, Fujian cuisine, and Shanghai cuisine in China, and they are also eaten in South Korea.
  288. Eels became food for the general public as presently prepared since the latter half of the Edo period.
  289. Eels began to inhabit such areas, and they became food for the laborers.
  290. Eest exit of Takeda Station
  291. Effect
  292. Effect of BSE
  293. Effect of Kyoto Protocol
  294. Effect of enforcement of the law
  295. Effect of preservation from putrefaction: Hashira-shochu during the Edo period, the origin of the process of adding alcohol at present, was a technique of adding shochu to sake to keep sake from putrefaction.
  296. Effect of the merger
  297. Effect of the reform and others
  298. Effective March 2008
  299. Effective on April 1, 2007 all coupon tickets--for the section of 180 yen, 260 yen and 310 yen--became accepted for the trains of Hanshin Electric Railway, as far as they have not expired.
  300. Effectively deputy to Juichii (Junior First Rank), Sadaijin (Minister of the Left), MINAMOTO no Toshifusa.
  301. Effectively, the issue is whether the foot soldier Kichiemon TERASAKA who suddenly disappeared after a raid on the way to visit Naganori's grave in Sengaku-ji Temple, was a deserter or left his fellow soldiers with their permission for some reason.
  302. Effectiveness
  303. Effects
  304. Effects due to having the town as a tourist site
  305. Effects of Yang Shoujing who came to Japan
  306. Effects of foreign species
  307. Effects of kosa
  308. Effects of orisage is not only to remove turbidness, but also to remove excess protein to prevent turbidness because of denaturation of protein caused by the change in temperature and aging after bottling.
  309. Effects of the Kawamata Incident
  310. Effects of the rebellion
  311. Effects on later generations
  312. Effects on postwar policies
  313. Effects on the body
  314. Effectuation condition
  315. Efficacy
  316. Efficacy of the hot spring
  317. Efficiency can be further increased by the construction of multistorey residential buildings.
  318. Effortlessly rising and falling, the poems seem to be written in four or five lines, but the use of width, height and shading is excellent.
  319. Efforts by Ichizo OKUBO and so on to persuade failed, and, on April 23, Hisamitsu ordered an attack on Teradaya in Fushimi and purged the radical sonjo party (royalists) (Teradaya Incident).
  320. Efforts in later years to reinstate the Order of the Golden Kite
  321. Efforts made by KATSU and Shungaku MATSUDAIRA encouraged the lord of the Tosa clan, Yodo YAMAUCHI, to condone Ryoma's charge of fleeing from the Tosa clan.
  322. Efforts to maintain punctuality
  323. Efforts to protect world heritage
  324. Efforts to put patterns on paper began in the period of the Northern and Southern Dynasties in China and developed further during the age of the Sui and the Tang.
  325. Efforts to reform Buddhism
  326. Efforts to streamline the end-stage JNR continued until the revision of the timetable in March of 1986 where all train series 201 at Takatsuki Depot were transferred to Akashi Depot to rationalize their operation in accordance with the policy of one line controlled by one depot.
  327. Efforts towards a religious revival of Southern capital (i.e., Nara) Buddhism
  328. Efforts were made on behalf of conservation and development through mutual cooperation with various martial arts organizations, the board members were appointed from among the private citizens, being recommended through a council elected from around the country, and the items they handled were limited to Kendo, Judo and Kyudo.
  329. Efu (Palace Guard)
  330. Efu (Security office)
  331. Efu (tag)
  332. Efu was a type of baggage tags which were attached during the Edo period to goods sent by the Imperial Court, the Edo bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun), court nobles, samurai families, temples and shrines to clarify who sent the baggage in question.
  333. Efutoneri had the right to collect tairomai (rice as food), but in the Engi era (in the 900s), the Imperial Court announced the key policies of depriving the Efutoneri of their vested rights one after another.
  334. Egara Mondo
  335. Egaraten-jinja Shrine
  336. Egawa, in particular, became a devoted disciple of Kazan and received advice from him on the naval defense policy for the shogunate government.
  337. Egen KANZAN (1277 - 1360) was his disciple.
  338. Egg noodles: Area including Morioka City, Esashi City, and Mizusawa City, Iwate Prefecture.
  339. Egg senbei (cracker) which bears a phrase of Fukuchiyama Ondo or the shape of a dancer.
  340. Egg whites with reduced allergenicities close to the raw state have been produced experimentally.
  341. Eggplant varieties: kamo, kyoyamashina, moginasu
  342. Eggs are boiled in high-temperature spring water.
  343. Eggs found inside the body of a female in early autumn are wrapped in an ivory colored sac and are called the octopus' fukurogo ("sac child"); these are eaten boiled with soy sauce and sugar.
  344. Eggs harvested at this time are not only difficult to process but even to freeze.
  345. Eginu (silk canvas): a white short-length ue no kinu (silk robe) composed of white neriginu (glossy silk) with patterns of clouds, pine trees, and Camellia and a suzushi (raw silk products that were thinly made) lining in moegiiro (a light green color).
  346. Egorai: fired at the Ming Dynasty Cizhou Kiln.
  347. Egoshu
  348. Egoshu (or Kaigoshu) (wealthy merchants who led self-governing organizations in cities from the Muromachi to the Azuchi-Momoyama period) are consultation organizations, or is a term that refers to the members of this organization which possessed a leading role in the self-government of cities from the Muromachi to the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  349. Egoshu comprised the affluent (influential merchants) in Sakai, and influential merchants such as Notoya and Beniya served as Egoshu.
  350. Egoshu owes its name to Shue (gathering) at a temple.
  351. Egyo
  352. Egyo (the year of birth and death unknown) was a Japanese monk and a poet who lived during the mid-Heian period.
  353. Ehihime
  354. Ehime Mikan
  355. Ehime Nakate
  356. Ehime Normal School (the faculty of education of Ehime University)
  357. Ehime Prefecture
  358. Ehime Prefecture has remained number one in the production volume of mikan for a long time, thus mikan and related products appear in many aspects.
  359. Ehime Prefecture is the birthplace of these dolls.
  360. Ehime Youth Normal School (the faculty of education of Ehime University)
  361. Ehime prefecture had kept the number one position in total shipment volume for 34 consecutive years since 1970, however, Wakayama Prefecture traded places with Ehime and became number one for 4 consecutive years since Fiscal Year 2004.
  362. Ehime: Iyo Province
  363. Eho changes every year.
  364. Ehomairi (visit to a shrine or a temple in the lucky direction)
  365. Ehomairi (恵方詣り) is also written as 恵方参り.
  366. Ehomairi is one of the events of the New Year from ancient times.
  367. Ehomairi means visiting a temple or a shrine in eho (lucky direction) of that year on January 1 and praying for happiness of that year.
  368. Ehomaki (a sushi roll to be eaten by people in setsubun season, making a wish and posing in the direction designated as bringing good fortune for the year)
  369. Ehomaki (literally, sushi roll of the blessing direction):
  370. Ehomaki (maki-zushi, eating on the day of Setsubun)
  371. Ehomaki (written as 恵方巻 or 恵方巻き) refers to the maki-zushi (sushi roll) eating which on the day of Setsubun (the traditional end of winter) is considered to bring good luck, or the custom centered around the Kinki region of eating the ehomaki.
  372. Ehon Gappo ga Tsuji
  373. Ehon Mushi-erami (Picture Book: Selected Insects)
  374. Ehon Taikoki (Taikoki)
  375. Ehon Taikoki (The Illustrated Chronicles of the Regent)
  376. Ehon taikoki (Japanese puppet show)
  377. Ehren WATADA
  378. Ei WADA
  379. Ei WADA is a woman who wrote 'Tomioka Diary.'
  380. Eibutsuka: The expression of seasonal features
  381. Eichi SHIBUSAWA
  382. Eichi SHIBUSAWA (March 16, 1840-November 11, 1931) was a Shogun's retainer near the end of the Edo period, a bureaucrat of the Ministry of Finance and an entrepreneur from Meiji to the early Taisho period.
  383. Eichi SHIBUSAWA was also a member of the delegation to Europe.
  384. Eichi became deeply involved in the management of Nishogakusha founded by Mishima after his death.
  385. Eicho December 27, 1096 - November 21, 1097
  386. Eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA)
  387. Eidaibashi Tsukudashima: Looking at Tsukudashima from Eidai-bashi Bridge
  388. Eiden Mototanaka (on Higashioji-dori Street, next to Mototanaka Station)
  389. Eiden-guchi of the Keihan Electric Railway, as its name indicates, is integral with the station of Eizan Electric Railway.
  390. Eien
  391. Eifuku-ji Temple (Kyoto City)
  392. Eifuku-ji Temple (Osaka City, Osaka Prefecture)
  393. Eifuku-ji Temple, Yachu-ji Temple, and Taiseishogun-ji Temple, all of which are regarded as temples connected with Shotoku Taishi, are called Kaminotaishi, Nakanotaishi, and Shimonotaishi respectively and collectively called Kawachi Santaishi.
  394. Eiga Monogatari
  395. Eiga monogatari (A Tale of Flowering Fortunes)
  396. Eigaku (永岳 or永嶽) was his imina (real name).
  397. Eigaku KANO
  398. Eigaku KANO (1790 - February 6, 1867) was a Kyoto-based painter who was active in the late Edo period.
  399. Eigaku died at the age of 79.
  400. Eigaku earnestly studied the paintings of Sanraku and Sansetsu KANO, taking the Momoyama painting style as a base for his painting.
  401. Eigaku tried to revolutionize the traditional painting style of Kyo Kano for its survival and succeeded in establishing its own distinctive style.
  402. Eigaku's father was Dogyoku KAGEYAMA (later Eisho KANO), who was a painter of Kyo Kano school.
  403. Eigan, Eikan
  404. Eigashima Shuzo Co., Ltd.
  405. Eigashima Shuzo Whisky Distillery (Akashi City, Hyogo Prefecture)
  406. Eigen-ji sect
  407. Eigetsu KITAZAWA, "Musume" (娘) (A Girl) 1935, "Meisho" (明裳) 1940, "Aruhi no Yasue-san" (ある日の安英さん) (Yasue-san on one day) 1967
  408. Eight Drinking Hermits (six-fold screen), Yusho KAIHO
  409. Eight Go within the district seen in "Wamyo Ruijusho" (dictionary of Japanese names).
  410. Eight Teachings
  411. Eight Views
  412. Eight Views exist in various places, and more concretely, in more than 400 places across Japan.
  413. Eight Views in Japan
  414. Eight Views is a manner of scenery valuation in which eight finest sceneries of the region are selected.
  415. Eight Views of Fukuura
  416. Eight Views of Gwandong
  417. Eight Views of Gwanseo
  418. Eight Views of Kai
  419. Eight Views of Kanazawa
  420. Eight Views of Korea
  421. Eight Views of Lake Biwa
  422. Eight Views of Lake Biwa is a special selection of eight views around Lake Biwa.
  423. Eight Views of Luda (present-day Dalian)
  424. Eight Views of Mount Huang
  425. Eight Views of Old Jinzhou
  426. Eight Views of Pyongyang
  427. Eight Views of Ryukyu
  428. Eight Views of Taiwan
  429. Eight Views of Xiaoxiang
  430. Eight allied western powers dispatched an army to suppress the Boxers: Great Britain, the United States of America, the Russian Empire, France, Germany, Austria-Hungary, the Kingdom of Italy, and the Empire of Japan.
  431. Eight balls of soul
  432. Eight buddhas listed in Jusanbutsu buddhas join as guardian Buddhas of the Oriental zodiac.
  433. Eight days of filming begin in Afghanistan.
  434. Eight disciples are sometimes added to Kenmon no Shitenno and are collectively referred to as Kenmon Junitaika.
  435. Eight gorinto (a gravestone in the form of a tower composed of five sections set one upon another), found outside the cemetery at the north of the temple
  436. Eight great worldly renown pictures are selected and exhibited there, of which four were originally created for The International Garden and Greenery Exposition, Osaka, Japan, in 1990 and were exhibited in the "Garden of Fine Art" pavilion designed by Tadao ANDO.
  437. Eight have been deposited at Tokyo National Museum and eight at Kyoto National Museum.
  438. Eight heavenly maidens were bathing at Hinuma-no-manai of Hiji-no-sato, Tanba-no-kori, and one of the heavenly maidens was unable to return home because an elderly couple hid Hagoromo (a feathered robe).
  439. Eight horsemen, such as Yoritomo, followed Yoshitomo heading to Togoku where they were headquartered.
  440. Eight kinds of patterns--Sun, Moon, Seven Stars, Mountain, Fire, Dragon, Kachu (pheasant), and Soi (ritual article)--out of Konben 12-Sho (symbols) are attached to the red cloth of the costume.
  441. Eight large round pillars that stand in a line at the front of the hall are a point worthy of note in this structure.
  442. Eight meters tall
  443. Eight ministries
  444. Eight of his poems were included in "Manyoshu" (Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves), the largest number of poems included among Emperor Tenmu's princes.
  445. Eight of his poems, including seven tanka (thirty-one syllables' poems) and one sedoka (an adjacent form of the waka or tanka which consists of six lines with sound units arranged as six/seven/seven, five/seven/seven), are selected in "Manyoshu" (Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves).
  446. Eight of his vassals followed him to his grave, and they are called eight wise men because the kanji for 'wisdom' is included in common in their Kaimyo (posthumous Buddhist names).
  447. Eight people including the head of the Kayanomiya family renounced their memberships in the Imperial Family.
  448. Eight persons were killed (five passengers, three staffers) and three were injured.
  449. Eight poems of Inakimi's that appear in the Manyoshu (Collection of Ten Thousand Leaves) were all sent to Ootome.
  450. Eight provinces were shown in the 'Saidaiji Matujicho' (list of all subtemples) made in the period of the Northern and Southern Courts (Japan) in 1391, and it is inferred from other historical materials of the same period that, other than those, kokubunji in ten and several provinces were subtemples of Saidai-ji Temple.
  451. Eight rank: Gon daisozu, Nil, Tsukasako, Shikyo (bishop), (college graduate)
  452. Eight scrolls of navy blue paper, of a mandala illustrated in gold and silver underpaints, showing the Buddhist stupa of the Lotus Sutra.
  453. Eight sets and three sets of automatic ticket gates are installed at the exits to the platforms of conventional lines and those of the Shinkansen, respectively.
  454. Eight taboos
  455. Eight teachings are divided into Kegi-no-shikyo (Shakamuni's four modes of instruction) and Keho-no-shikyo (Shakamuni's four kinds of teaching the content of the Truth, accommodated to the capacity of his disciples).
  456. Eight towns with prefix 'Higashi Shichijo' abolished the prefix in 1965 and have used independent town names since then.
  457. Eight volumes of the Hokke-kyo Sutra were discovered during research in 1975 and were designated as 'tsuketari' (attachments, appurtenances) of a national treasure.
  458. Eight years after Yoshimoto's death, the family was expelled from the Suruga Province by Shingen, and the Imagawa family as Sengoku daimyo disappeared.
  459. Eight years after his death, NANIWA no Tsunefusa was believed to have been killed by lightening at the Nonobiki Waterfall in Settsu Province, where he accompanied Kiyomori and was hit by a sudden thunder storm.
  460. Eight years later, the school survived with the foundation of the Kyoto Kinrosha Gakuen (Labor Gakuen).
  461. Eight years passed between the preceding chapter, 'Maboroshi' (The Wizard) (The Tale of Genji), and the following chapter, 'Niou no Miya' (His Perfumed Highness).
  462. Eight-Letter Monju Mandara
  463. Eight-car trains can wait on the sidetracks (tracks 1 and 4), but the effective lengths of the platforms are only sufficient for seven-car trains.
  464. Eight-car trains of the Series 5300 had been exclusively used until the Series 3300, which was completely equipped with renewed air-conditioning and an electric destination indicator (according to the type), started full-scale operation for the express service.
  465. Eighteen of his waka (poems) are included in waka compilations such as "Shokusenzai Wakashu"(a collection of Japanese Poems of a Thousand Years, Continued) and "Shokugoshui Wakashu"(Later Collection of Gleanings of Japanese Poems, Continued) and he is regarded as one of the Four Heavenly Kings of Waka of the Nijo family.
  466. Eighteenth Daughter: Princess Mori (1811 ? 1846), married to Naomasa NABESHIMA, lord of the Saga Domain
  467. Eighteenth Son: Yoshichiro (1818 ? 1821)
  468. Eighth Daughter: Princess Kyo (1801 ? 1802)
  469. Eighth Regional Coast Guard Headquarters
  470. Eighth Regional Info-communications Management Center (former Maizuru Info-communications Management Center)
  471. Eighth Son: Tokinosuke (1803 - 1805)
  472. Eighth Temporary Teacher Training School, Kyushu Imperial University (1913-1932)
  473. Eighth daughter: Kuniko (January 23, 1882 - September 11, 1942, married Kiko OKOCHI on May 7, 1901)
  474. Eighth rank: Gon (junior) dai sozu
  475. Eighth rank: Gon dai sozu (the provisional second-highest position, upper grade) (yellow-green)
  476. Eighth shogun: Yoshimasa ASHIKAGA (Jisho-in)
  477. Eighth son : Shokuma
  478. Eighth son, Yasushi (September 22, 1885 - July 2, 1886)
  479. Eighth volume: 上野国赤城山三所明神内覚満大菩薩事, Kagaminomiya (Shrine) no koto, Kamagami no koto (the tutelary deity of the hearth,) Fuji Sengen Daibosatsu (Fuji Sengen great bodhisattva) no koto, 群馬桃井郷上村内八ヶ権現事 and Kozuke no kuni Nahahachiro Daimyojin no koto.
  480. Eighty minutes from Kansai International Airport using JR Limited Express Haruka
  481. Eighty to ninety percent of bokuto as craft products are produced in Miyakonojo, Miyazaki Prefecture.
  482. Eigyoden: No specification for eigyoden is made in Japan.
  483. Eihei-ji Temple - Eiheiji-cho, Fukui Prefecture (the chief abbot Zen master Taiho FUKUYAMA)
  484. Eihei-ji Temple's Kagoshima branch temple, Shoryu-ji Temple - Matsubara, Aira-gun, Kagoshima Prefecture
  485. Eihei-ji Temple's Nagoya branch temple - Daikan-cho, Higashi Ward, Nagoya City, Aichi Prefecture
  486. Eihei-ji Temple's branch temple, Chokoku-ji Temple - Minato Ward, Tokyo
  487. Eiheiji Hatto (Act for Eihei-ji Temple), 1615
  488. Eihime (- March 24, 1623) was the fourth daughter of Nobunaga ODA.
  489. Eiho
  490. Eiichi KUDO
  491. Eiichi KUDO (real name)
  492. Eiichi SHIBUSAWA
  493. Eiichi SHINOHARA (the chief priest of Soto sect) 'Those who preach in secular lives' (published as the book "True stories that I would like all people to read" by Kohzansha)
  494. Eiichi and his pupil, Tomoichi YAMAMOTO, criticized the awkward literary style of Araragi, and frequently argued with 渋谷嘉次, the pupil of Bunmei TSUCHIYA, who represented Araragi.
  495. Eiichiro ISHIDA: A graduate from Kyoto Imperial University.
  496. Eiinbon (a reproduction of the manuscript)
  497. Eiji
  498. Eiji (December 7, 1141) - April 28, 1142
  499. Eiji (year of birth unknown - March 31, 623) was a Korean priest who came across the sea from Goguryeo to Japan in the Asuka period.
  500. Eiji Happo (the eight basic techniques)
  501. Eiji Happo (the eight basic techniques) is a term to express that the Chinese character '永(ei)' contains all the 八法 (happo or hachiho, eight techniques) that are required in calligraphy.
  502. Eiji July 10, 1141 - (April 28, 1142)
  503. Eiji NAKANO said as follows.
  504. Eiji YASUI served as the first Director, while concurrently holding the post of Home Minister.
  505. Eiji was deeply sorrowed to hear about the death of Prince Umayado on April 8, 622 and promised he would reunion with the Prince in the Heaven on the same day of the next year, and passed away as stated.
  506. Eijiro ONO
  507. Eijitsu
  508. Eijitsu (1201 ? January 21, 1215) was the third son of MINAMOTO no Yoriie, the second seii taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians") of the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  509. Eijitsushohin (January 1909 - March, "Asahi Shinbun"/included in "Shihen")
  510. Eijun OTANI
  511. Eijun OTANI (1890-May 23, 1973) was a priest of the Jodo Shinshu (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) of Buddhism
  512. Eijun OTANI as a politician successfully ran in the 23rd general election for the House of Representatives under the large-constituency system in 1947.
  513. Eijun's fourth son named Takeshi OTANI served as Chairman of the Japan-China Travel Service and as Adviser to the Japan-China Friendship Association.
  514. Eijuoumaru reached manhood two years later, in 1449, and was appointed to Jugoinoge (Junior Fifth Rank, Lower Grade)/the captain of the Left Division of Bureau of Horses.
  515. Eika Taigaisho
  516. Eikan
  517. Eikan-do Temple
  518. Eikan-no Shoen Seiri-rei 985 Emperor Kazan Manors after Engi Seiri-rei were consolidated.
  519. Eikando (Zenrin-ji Temple (Kyoto Prefecture))
  520. Eikando, Zenrin-ji Temple (Kyoto City)
  521. Eikando-nishi-machi (without any prefix) was established in 1958.
  522. Eiken KOBAI of the Honganji school of the Jodo Shinshu Sect disagrees with Shinrankai's argument by saying that 'The school does not preach that people seek Jiriki Shozen in order to obtain the faith of other power'
  523. Eiken KOBAI of the Honganji school of the Jodo Shinshu Sect published his article titled 'Research on different doctrines in modern times - arguments and problems of TAKAMORI Shinrankai.'
  524. Eikichi UOYA (Uoei)
  525. Eikichi WAKATA
  526. Eikichi WAKATA (February 2, 1851 - June 18, 1919) was a troop of the first squad ('ichibuntai' in Japanese) of the Hakodate Shinsengumi (the Shinsengumi in Hakodate, where the Shinsengumi which literally meant the newly selected corps referred to a special police force for the Tokugawa regime).
  527. Eikichi died on June 18, 1919.
  528. Eikichi joined the Shinsengumi after the outbreak of the Boshin Civil War.
  529. Eikichi participated in the fifth siege ('Dai go no eki' in Japanese), the Battle of Hakodate.
  530. Eikichi surrendered at Benten Daiba (Cape Benten Battery).
  531. Eikichi was a former retainer of the shogunate and was the third son of Juzaburo WAKATA.
  532. Eikichi was sent to Yakuo-in Temple (Hirosaki City, Aomori Prefecture).
  533. Eiko became a star, showing her wide-ranging hobbies of and talent in poetry, calligraphy, tenkoku (seal-engraving) and yokyoku (Noh song).
  534. Eiko gained a reputation as a beautiful geisha in Shinbashi and then got married to Makoto EGI.
  535. Eiko was adopted out and then became a maiko (apprentice geisha) in a hanamachi (geisha district) around Kobusho (military training institute) near Kanda Myojin-Shrine because her adoptive family became badly off.
  536. Eiko was born to Shinpei SEKI, the Ehime prefectural governor who had an intimate relationship with his maid, Hanako FUJITANI.
  537. Eiko-Kan
  538. Eiko-in Temple - Image of Fudo Nidoji, color on silk
  539. Eiko-ji Temple
  540. Eikoin
  541. Eikoin (1624 - November 20, 1711) was a woman in the Edo period who was a concubine of Iemitsu TOKUGAWA, the third seii taishogun (literally, "great general who subdues the barbarians") of the Edo bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  542. Eikoin - Concubine of Iemitsu
  543. Eikoin, whom Kasuga no Tsubone had fervently wanted to join the O-oku, was a daugher of the Rokujo family, a family of waka poets who were associated with the Sanjonishi family.
  544. Eiku
  545. Eiku (year of his birth is unclear - 1179) was a Buddhist monk of the Tendai Sect in the late Heian period.
  546. Eikun' Saito Sake Brewing Co., Ltd
  547. Eikyo Rebellion
  548. Eikyo September 5, 1429 - February 17, 1441
  549. Eikyo War
  550. Eikyoki
  551. Eikyu (written as 永久 or 恵久) (Azai Tanba no kami's first daughter)
  552. Eikyu July 13, 1113 - April 3, 1118
  553. Eikyu no goso
  554. Eikyu-ji Temple (Meki of Goshiki Fudo): It is considered that this temple has been Meki Fudo since as early as 1880.
  555. Eikyu-ji Temple (Minowa, Taito Ward, Tokyo)
  556. Eiman (June 5, 1165) - August 27, 1166
  557. Eiman June 5, 1165 - (August 27, 1166)
  558. Ein Kanjo
  559. Ein Kanjo means the system of teachings of Daigo-ji Temple Sanpo-in, a temple of the Tozan school of Shugendo (Japanese mountain asceticism-shamanism incorporating Shinto and Buddhism concepts), or a ritual conducted in the manner of Ein Horyu (ritual of the Ein school).
  560. Einin (July 22, 1298) - April 25, 1299
  561. Einin August 5, 1293 - (July 22, 1298)
  562. Einin no Tokuseirei (a debt cancellation order of Einin era) is considered to be the first Tokuseirei in Japan which was issued in 1927 by Sadatoki HOJO, the ninth regent of the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  563. Einin no Tokuseirei (a debt cancellation order)
  564. Eino KANO, the third school head, wrote "Honchogashi", the first book in Japan stating the theory and history of paintings, on the basis of the literary remains of Sansetsu KANO.
  565. Einosuke MORIYAMA
  566. Einosuke MORIYAMA (also referred to as Takichiro MORIYAMA, July 10, 1820 - 1871) was a Japanese interpreter in the Edo period.
  567. Eiraku-sen
  568. Eiraku-tei (Emperor Yongle) ordered Ko Ko and others to collect Do school literature and compile "The Complete Four Books," "The Complete Book of Five Classics," and "The Complete Book of Nature and the Law," which were like encyclopedias, and distribute them widely in schools.
  569. Eiraku-tsuho (bronze coins struck in the Ming dynasty)
  570. Eiraku-tsuho is a coin minted during the reign of the 3rd emperor of the Ming dynasty, Yongle.
  571. Eirakuya's tedai Yosuke: Shichisaburo SOMEMATSU
  572. Eirei
  573. Eirei (spirits of the war dead)
  574. Eirei are to be publicly honored, and it is the fact that 'they died for the emperor' that should be honored.
  575. Eirei is a 'term used to honor the spirits of dead persons who performed an outstanding act.'
  576. Eirei: Those who engage in such a battle and die will become gods.
  577. Eiri Genji monogatari
  578. Eiri Genji monogatari (Illustrated Tale of Genji) is a printed book of The Tale of Genji which was published during the Edo period.
  579. Eiri Genji monogatari consists of 60 volumes and its contents are as follows.
  580. Eiri Genji monogatari had been published many times over a long period of time, the contents being changed little by little, and the book published in 1653 circulated most widely, which is generally called 'Keian-bon, the third year of Joo era version.'
  581. Eiroku
  582. Eiroku February 28, 1558 - April 23, 1570
  583. Eiroku Incident
  584. Eiroku is one of the eras of Japan.
  585. Eiryaku January 10, 1160 - September 4, 1161
  586. Eiryo: deduction from jishi because of the expenses for cultivating mainly at the rice fields managed directly by the Department of the Imperial Household.
  587. Eiryu-ji Temple was a temple for the Otomo clan and referred as Tomo-dera Temple.
  588. Eisai
  589. Eisai (1141-1215): Founder of Japan's Rinzai Sect
  590. Eisai brought back tea from China, and tea-related dishes were generated by combining tea with kaiseki.
  591. Eisai received Injin (mystagogy certificates a Buddhist priest awards his followers) of the Shingon sect and blended in existing power and tried to make a feint.
  592. Eisai was the first to bring the Zen tradition to Japan.
  593. Eisaku WADA (1874 - 1959), an artist in the Western painting, insisted that 'the colors for the mural paintings could only be reproduced with a western painting method.'
  594. Eisan-ji Temple
  595. Eisan-ji Temple Jiryo (the fief owned by a temple) Monjo (documents): 3 volumes
  596. Eisan-ji Temple is a temple of the Hozan School of the Shingon Sect located in Gojo City, Nara Prefecture.
  597. Eisan-ji Temple was previously known as Sakiyama-dera Temple, which is said to have been erected by Muchimaro, FUJIWARA no Huhito's eldest son, in 719.
  598. Eisei Meijin
  599. Eisei Meijin and Eisei Queen
  600. Eisei Queen
  601. Eiseiroku
  602. Eiseiroku (a type of premium) was the highest ranked Shotenroku (premium) in early Meiji era, which was awarded to ones with merits for their contribution to the Boshin War and the Restoration of Imperial Rule.
  603. Eiseiroku was considered superior for its perpetuity, unlike other rewards such as Shushinroku, which only lasted for a generation, Nengenroku, which had a fixed period of grant, and a one-off payment, which was not a horoku (salary).
  604. Eiseiroku were issued three times in 1869
  605. Eisen KEISAI
  606. Eisen KEISAI or Hiroshige UTAGAWA's "Sixty-nine Stations of Kiso Road" (in actuality the Sixty-nine Stations of Nakasendo Road)
  607. Eisen KEISAI: "Mutamagawa"
  608. Eisen OKUDA
  609. Eisen OKUDA (1753 - 1811) was a ceramic artist in the mid and late Edo period.
  610. Eisen OKUDA is a very significant person in terms of pottery production techniques.
  611. Eisen art gallery
  612. Eisen as a Bijinga Eshi painter of voluptuous women gradually developed his technique in that field.
  613. Eisen as an Ukiyoe artist at first painted Bijinga of frail women as his teacher, Eizan, did but later ended up becoming popular by his unique voluptuous painting style.
  614. Eisen referred the Eiraku-tsuho coins (bronze coins struck in the Ming dynasty) that were used throughout the nation from the Muromachi period to the early Edo period when the currency system by the Edo bakufu was established.
  615. Eisen was not a professional ceramic artist but an amateur; that was the very reason why he could developed new porcelain as well as adopt the unconventional Etsuke style at that time.
  616. Eisen, a writer and Eshi painter, gave many pornographic Enpon (Koshokubon - books on love) and Shunga (erotic arts) to the public, which cannot be discussed without touching on Eisen.
  617. Eishaku (an honorable position or rank)
  618. Eishaku: Special privileges of temples, shrines or guji (chief priests)
  619. Eishi (guards)
  620. Eishi was called Kayanoin Himemiya and she received much love from Taishi, however she died young on January 26, 1148, she was only fourteen years old.
  621. Eisho (1046 - 1053)
  622. Eisho Disturbance
  623. Eisho Disturbance refers to an incident during the early Sengoku period (period of warring states) (Japan) where the kanrei (shogunal deputy) for the Muromachi bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun) named Masamoto HOSOKAWA was assassinated in 1507.
  624. Eisho-ji Temple
  625. Eisho-ji Temple is a Jodo sect temple in Kamakura City, Kanagawa Prefecture and its title prefixed to the temple name is Mt. Tokozan.
  626. Eisho-ji Temple: Kokurakita Ward, Kitakyushu City, Fukuoka Prefecture
  627. Eishoin
  628. Eishoin (December 17, 1578 - September 17, 1642) was Ieyasu TOKUGAWA's concubine.
  629. Eishoki
  630. Eishoki was the diary of the late Heian Period courtier FUJIWARA no Tametaka.
  631. Eishoki: Diary of FUJIWARA no Tametaka (1070 ? 1130)
  632. Eishu Senkyo-zu (1923)
  633. Eishun
  634. Eishun (1518 ? 1596) was a Buddhist monk who lived during the Sengoku Period (period of warring states).
  635. Eishun KANO, the eighth head of Kyo Kano, who discovered a young Eigaku's talent, adopted him and Eigaku took over as the family head at the age of 27 when Eishun died in 1816.
  636. Eishun died at the beginning of 1596.
  637. Eiso
  638. Eiso staged a coup d'etatand (Datsumonnohen) later and was coronated again.
  639. Eison
  640. Eison (1201 - October 6, 1290) was a priest of Shingon Ritsu sect during the mid Kamakura period.
  641. Eison (Koshobosatsu, 1201-1290), a priest in the Kamakura period, is the restorer of Saidai-ji Temple.
  642. Eison implemented Jukai (handing down the precepts), a procedure which was limited to what had been defined by the state, by himself with Kakujo in the Risshu sect because he criticized the degraded existing Buddhism (vow by oneself and Jukai).
  643. Eison is generally known for his achievements in the revival of the precepts of Buddhism and the Ritsu sect, but his original intention was to revive priests of the Shingon sect from corruption caused by their overly close connection to the authorities.
  644. Eison started to build a statue of Monju Bosatsu, the honzon of Hannya-ji Temple, in 1255, and he held a ceremony to consecrate a newly made Buddhist image in 1267.
  645. Eison was born in 1201 in Sonokami County, Yamato Province (present Yamatokoriyama City).
  646. Eison was the founder of Shingo Risshu sect, whose head temple was Saidai-ji Temple, and he is well known for his hard work to restore the precepts of Japanese Buddhism and his social work such as relief of the poor and the sick.
  647. Eison who established the Shingon-ritsu sect and participated in social works at many places, and his disciple Ninsho
  648. Eison who thought that he could not live longer when he turned 85 started writing an autobiography on November 14, 1285 (old calendar) to look back at his religious belief and activities and ask disciples to look after his affairs when he died.
  649. Eison worried about the state of corruption and degradation of Buddhism in Japan at that time and tried to restore the precepts of Buddhism.
  650. Eison, in the Kamakura period, was originally belonged to the Shingon Sect, but later learned the doctrines of the Ritsu Sect introduced by Jianzhen to found the Shingon Ritsu Sect by combining the doctrines of both sects.
  651. Eisuke OKUZAWA
  652. Eisuke OKUZAWA (the date of birth unknown - July 8, 1864) was a member of Shinsengumi.
  653. Eisuke OKUZAWA: Died June 5, 1864 fighting in the Ikedaya Incident
  654. Eisuke TASHIRO
  655. Eisuke TASHIRO (September 16, 1834 - May 17, 1885) was a kyokaku (professional gambler) over the Edo and Meiji periods.
  656. Eitai Kuyo (eternal memorial services)
  657. Eitai-ji Temple (Koto Ward, Tokyo)
  658. Eitai-kyo' in Jodo Shinshu Sect is sutra reciting which is conducted on shotsuki-meinichi (the anniversaries of one's death after the first anniversary) and at Higan-e in spring and autumn and its purpose is to thank the ancestors.
  659. Eitakuji soba (the buckwheat noodles of Sanda City)
  660. Eitakuji soba consists of buckwheat noodles available in and around Eitakuji area.
  661. Eitaro KOMATSUBARA, Minister of Education
  662. Eitaro NORO: A graduate of Keio University.
  663. Eiten
  664. Eiten (honor) is a generic term for treatment, positions and titles that the nation gives as a commendation to a person who has rendered distinguished service to the nation and the public.
  665. Eiten also refers to its system.
  666. Eiten in Japan
  667. Eitetsu HAYASHI, the representative from "Kodo," presented his first performance.
  668. Either both sides or single side of leather parts are beaten by hand (s) or plectrum (s) while adjusting the tone color by tightening or loosing the strap.
  669. Either from the harshness of the shock, or the suspicions of his colleagues and others, Ushimatsu felt he was driven into a corner.
  670. Either he is faithful or faithless, he will suffer from Hansen's disease in this world.
  671. Either of going first or of being left behind is the same; I consider that it is farewell because I cannot go with you.'
  672. Either of them can be reached on foot with 10 to 20 minutes.
  673. Either of them is classified with the membranophone as the musical instrument.
  674. Either way, "The Tale of Genji" ends up having fifty-four chapters.
  675. Either way, cancellation of wayo of the former kind was strictly limited, and cancellation of wayo to others of the latter kind was prohibited in any case.
  676. Either way, it can be said that she is a difficult figure to evaluate fairly.
  677. Either way, it could be sensed that he was considered as a difficult person for Tokimune to handle.
  678. Either way, it happens more often than dew dripping on the roots of vegetation and dissipating of dew on leaves.
  679. Either way, it is said that sesame, salt and water to be mixed and roasted should be equal in amount.
  680. Either way, it was one expression of the clan union of bushi.
  681. Either way, with the establishment of Gokyo hakase, Keisho of Ju-ka was taught under national approval, and Ju-kyo became the official government learning.
  682. Eitoku (April 11, 1382) - February 27, 1384
  683. Eitoku February 24, 1381 - (April 11, 1382)
  684. Eitoku KANO
  685. Eitoku KANO (1543 - 1590), the heir of Shoei, is also called Kuninobu; he is one of the most distinguished painters of the Japanese art world from the Momoyama period.
  686. Eitoku KANO (February 16, 1543 - October 12, 1590) was a painter who lived during the Azuchi-Momoyama period.
  687. Eitoku KANO (狩野永徳): The huge folding screens of "The Lions" (Karajishi-zu byobu)
  688. Eitoku KANO created a new style of painting that was a compromise between the technique of Chinese and that of traditional yamato-e paintings, as a patronized painter of the Ashikaga Shogun family.
  689. Eitoku KANO died at age 48, preceding his father Shoei (Naonobu).
  690. Eitoku KANO flexibly corresponded to the changes of the times and gained the favor of persons in power during that period, and as a result, almost all these paintings on partitions were painted by him and his pupils.
  691. Eitoku KANO painted pictures of three sovereigns and five emperors, of the most excellent ten pupils of Confucius, of the Shozan Shiko (four hermits in Shozan), and of Shichiken (Seven Sages) by orders of Nobunaga.
  692. Eitoku KANO was Shoei's son.
  693. Eitoku KANO: "Karajishi-zu byobu" (The huge folding screen of Chinese lions) in the custody of the Imperial Household Agency
  694. Eitoku KANO: Rakuchu Rakugai screens
  695. Eitoku excelled at elaborate paintings and monumental paintings, although he had no choice but to paint in the monumental painting style in order to fill a large number of orders for screen paintings.
  696. Eitoku is known for his magnificent and bold paintings (called 'Taiga') such as "Karajishi-zu Byobu" and "Hinoki-zu" (Japanese cypress tree), but he is considered to have created 'Saiga' (detailed paintings) too (described in "Honcho Gashi").
  697. Eitoku was 23 years old at the time.
  698. Eitoku was a son of Shoei KANO and was also a grandson of Motonobu KANO.
  699. Eitoku was commissioned to make 16 panels of 'Kacho-zu' (depicting flowers and birds) and 8 panels of 'Kinki Shoga-zu' (depicting the four accomplishments: the lute, the game of go, calligraphy, and painting).
  700. Eitoku was his hogo (a Buddhist name), and Genshiro and Kuninobu were his popular name and real name, respectively.
  701. Eitoku's first son Mitsunobu KANO (c. 1565 - 1608) and second son Takanobu KANO (1571 - 1618) succeeded him.
  702. Eiwa February 27, 1375 - March 22, 1379
  703. Eizaburo ABIRU
  704. Eizaburo ABIRU (born 1842, died May 23, 1863), was a soldier of the Mibu masterless warriors group.
  705. Eizaburo ABIRU: Died April 6, 1863 from illness.
  706. Eizaburo ONOE
  707. Eizaburo ONOE (I)
  708. Eizaburo ONOE (II).
  709. Eizaburo ONOE (III).
  710. Eizaburo ONOE (IV).
  711. Eizaburo ONOE (V)
  712. Eizaburo ONOE (VI)
  713. Eizaburo ONOE (VII).
  714. Eizaburo ONOE (VIII).
  715. Eizaburo ONOE is a hereditary family name for an actor of Kabuki, a Japanese traditional theatrical drama.
  716. Eizan (Main) Line, Eizan Electric Railway *starting and terminal station
  717. Eizan Electric Railway
  718. Eizan Electric Railway - Chayama Station (Kyoto Prefecture) slightly toward to north
  719. Eizan Electric Railway Co., Ltd.
  720. Eizan Electric Railway Co., Ltd. is a railway business operator managing lines between Demachiyanagi Station in Kyoto City's Sakyo Ward and Yase/Kurama.
  721. Eizan Electric Railway Eizan Line twenty minutes' walk from Shugakuin Station
  722. Eizan Electric Railway, Eizan Main Line, Demachiyanagi Station - Yase-Hieizanguchi Station: 5.6 km
  723. Eizan Electric Railway, Kurama Line, Takaragaike Station - Kurama Station: 8.8 km
  724. Eizan Main Line
  725. Eizan Main Line (currently the Eizan Main Line operated by the Eizan Electric Railway)
  726. Eizan Main Line (including trains that go directly to the Kurama Line)
  727. Eizan Main Line of Eizan Electric Railway
  728. Eizan Main Line, Eizan Electric Railway Co., Ltd.
  729. Eizan Ropeway
  730. Eizan, his teacher was like his Anideshi (senior apprentice) only four years older than him, but a popular Eshi painter for sweet Bijinga (a type of Ukiyoe portraying beautiful women).
  731. Eizan-dentetsu (Eizan Electric Railway) Ichihara-Hendensho (substation adjacent to the station)
  732. Eizan-dentetsu (Eizan Electric Railway) Kamitakano-Hendensho (substation) (Being neglected, the building remains as it used to be.)
  733. Eizan-dentetsu (Eizan Railway Line) - Shugakuin Station, Demachiyanagi Station
  734. Eizan-ji Temple
  735. Eizan-ji Temple (having Hakkakudo, a national treasure and a bonsho [temple bell])
  736. Eizan-ji Temple in Nara Prefecture
  737. Eizanhonsen Line, Eizan Electric Railway - Mototanaka Station: Higashioji-dori Street agaru
  738. Eizo INAGAKI
  739. Eizo Kyoto Film Company
  740. Eizo TANAKA who was still in the head office and Hajime MASUDA, Akira IWASAKI and Kajiro YAMAMOTO who were persons outside of Nikkatsu joined Nikkatsu Kinyo-kai.
  741. Eji (a guard) climbed the tower and cut Prince Anahobe on the shoulder.
  742. Eji ? - 623
  743. Eji brought the principles of inyo gogyo in conjunction with Buppo.
  744. Eji is considered to have been supplemented conveniently as its fixed number was not provided in the Codes.
  745. Eji looked for him with lights and killed him.
  746. Eji spread Buppo and, together with Eso who came from Goguryeo, became a manager of Hoko-ji Temple (presently Asuka-dera Temple Ango-in) as 'Sanpo no toryo' when it was built in 596.
  747. Eji was placed in Ejifu.
  748. Ejima
  749. Ejima (senior lady-in-waiting associated with Shogun Ietsugu TOKUGAWA, the 7th shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan, the mid Edo period)
  750. Ejima - Otoshiyori who had power during the Ietsugu TOKUGAWA regime.
  751. Ejo KOUN
  752. Ejo KOUN ((1198 - September 26, 1280) was a priest of the Zen Sect in the Kamakura period.
  753. Ejo belonged to the group of the Nihon Daruma sect, but since he was courteous and sincere he endeavored to achieve harmony and mediate the two groups; consequently, the conflict between the groups didn't rise to the surface.
  754. Ejo obtained Inka (Certification of spiritual achievement) from Kakuan and became his leading disciple, but in 1228 he was forced to evacuate because of a fire set by many priests of Kofuku-ji Temple.
  755. Ejo, on one hand, faithfully complied with the relic of Dogen, but on the other hand he constructed the cathedral and established the rules of Eihei-ji Temple, sending Gikai TETTSU, his priestly nephew, to Sung to collect research and documents in 1262.
  756. Eka became the second leader of the Zen sect.
  757. Ekai HYAKUJO is among those included.
  758. Ekai KAWAGUCHI
  759. Ekakibe.
  760. Ekan
  761. Ekan (date of birth and death unknown) was a Buddhist priest who came to Japan from Goguryeo in the Nara period.
  762. Ekan learned the San-lun Teachings from Yoshizo.
  763. Ekan was believed to have established Fivefold Periods and founded the origin of the Fivefold Periods Kyohan.
  764. Ekei ANKOKUJI, a monk who played the role of diplomat for the Mori clan during the period from the end of the Sengoku period to the Azuchi-Momoyama period, was the son of Nobushige Takeda (Aki-Takeda clan), a cousin of Nobuzane.
  765. Ekei ANKOKUJI, who was a monk and also acted as a diplomat for the Mori clan in the Warring States period, belonged to this school.
  766. Ekei in Ankoku-ji Temple ("Temple for National Pacification") (安国寺)
  767. Ekei, of Ankoku-ji Temple, was a Zen priest and a Japanese feudal lord from the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States) (Japan) to the Azuchi Momoyama period.
  768. Ekeko (ceramic doll of the god of good fortune in Bolivia and Andes area)
  769. Ekencho-ji Temple in Kanagawa Prefecture
  770. Eki Shrine (Somin Shorai)
  771. Ekiben
  772. Ekiben (a box lunch sold on a train or at a station)
  773. Ekiben (box lunch sold on a train or at a station)
  774. Ekiben (box lunches sold on trains or at stations) are also sold at the station.
  775. Ekiben (lunch boxes available at some stations and on some trains) used to be sold; however, in 2005 the new distributor pulled out of the station, and no Ekiben have been sold since then.
  776. Ekiben (lunch boxes available at some stations and on some trains) were available until 2005.
  777. Ekiben (train lunch)
  778. Ekiben and tea
  779. Ekiben business has changed its strategy aimed at the development as a box lunch enriched with the local color by adding local specialties, with eliminating the concept that Ekiben is a practical meal sold within station precincts.
  780. Ekiben business has found new markets, such as roadside restaurants, rest areas, department stores and mail-order system through the Internet and other methods.
  781. Ekiben delicatessens are mainly divided into two groups.
  782. Ekiben exclusively sold at the stations of private railway also exists.
  783. Ekiben is a box lunch mainly sold at a railway station.
  784. Ekiben is most commonly sold over the counter at shops managed by Ekiben delicatessens which were established outside the ticket barrier or on the platform.
  785. Ekiben is sometimes used for attracting customers to the event held by a railway company.
  786. Ekiben means "a box lunch sold within station precincts" in the broad sense.
  787. Ekiben must also compete with lunch box sold at a convenience store or kiosk and with satisfactory foods served by the restaurants established within station precincts (what is called "Eki-naka" (shops inside the station building) in Japan).
  788. Ekiben sold by 'Awajiya (Kobe Station)' in Kobe City in 1988 was a good illustration of a box lunch with a special device.
  789. Ekiben that were sold in the past
  790. Ekiben whose manufacturing had been suspended in recent years were mostly made by the producers belonging to this group, as well as most of the producers that had closed their businesses recently also belonged to this group.
  791. Ekiben' does not always mean the box lunch produced by the member companies of the Central Committee.
  792. Ekiben' exhibited in an "Ekiben fair" held at a department store, as well as 'Ekiben' mentioned in TV programs relating to travel, are box lunches that satisfy a broad range of conditions.
  793. Ekiken KAIBARA
  794. Ekiken KAIBARA (December 17, 1630 - October 5, 1714) was a herbalist and Confucianist who lived during the Edo Period.
  795. Ekiken KAIBARA suggested that 'Hotaru' came from 'Hi-ga-taru' (Sparks fly off), while Ranzan wrote that its origin was 'Hoshi-ga-taru' (Stars fall).
  796. Ekiken compiled the 'Genealogical Table of the KURODA Family' by the order of the Domain.
  797. Ekiken had liked reading since his childhood and had a wide knowledge of various matters.
  798. Ekiken learned herbalism and Neo-Confucianism in Kyoto at the expense of the Fukuoka Domain.
  799. Ekiken retired at the age of 70 and dedicated himself into writing later on.
  800. Ekiki (demon that spreads contagious diseases) was introduced during the Heian period, and it became the Japanese yokai, Yakubyogami (deity that spreads contagious illnesses).
  801. Ekimae Intersection, Aizuwakamatsu City, Fukushima Prefecture
  802. Ekirei
  803. Ekirei and Takasaka no Okimi's course of action
  804. Ekirei is a bell provided by the Imperial Court to government officials who traveled on official business, under the ritsuryo system of ancient Japan.
  805. Ekisai KARIYA positions the 10-volume book as the standard.
  806. Ekisai TOMITORI
  807. Ekisai TOMITORI (male, year of birth unknown-April 1, 1822) was a tenkokuka (artist of seal engraving) in the mid-Edo period.
  808. Ekisai went to Kyoto when he was young and lived in Takakura Street Nishi, Shijo Street.
  809. Ekitei-Shi (government office in charge of transportation and communication)
  810. Ekitei-Shi is a government office in charge of transportation and communication, formed on June 11, 1868.
  811. Eko
  812. Eko (Buddhist Thoughts of Outgoing and Returning)
  813. Eko (Buddhist memorial service, prayers for the repose of the soul) (mitsuyuri)
  814. Eko generally consists of three kinds; (1) Bodai eko (awakening eko), (2) Syujo eko (mankind eko), (3) Jissai eko (reality eko).
  815. Eko with 'gannishikudoku'
  816. Eko-hotsugan shin is the mind that desires to be born in the Pure Land by dedicating all of one's merit from good deeds to the birth in the Pure Land.
  817. Ekobun
  818. Ekottarika Agama volume 29
  819. Elaborate michi bushin (road improvement) was ordered in advance for the roads that the precession would follow, and even during the farming season rice planting was prohibited.
  820. Elaborately produced sake has a certain flavor even if it becomes kanzamashi.
  821. Elder brother of Yasumori ADACHI.
  822. Elder brother to Naoharu KATAOKA.
  823. Elder brother: Soga no Emishi
  824. Elder gokenin are said to have wondered that he quite resembled Kiyoyasu MATSUDAIRA, his grandfather.
  825. Elder sister: Kawakami no irazume (hin [imperial wife of the lowest rank] of Emperor Sushun)
  826. Elder sister: Sumi (adoptive mother of Masahiko KIMURA, shizoku (family or person with samurai ancestors) in Kochi Prefecture)
  827. Elder-care and welfare taxis
  828. Elderly Welfare
  829. Elderly Welfare - Nursing home 1, Center for social welfare for the aged 2
  830. Elderly nursing home Jiboen is on the temple's ground.
  831. Elderly people:
  832. Elderly women used their own hair that had fallen out naturally and been collected by them when they were young, but women born with thin hair used someone's hair.
  833. Eldest Daughter: Princess Toshi (1789 ? 1817), married to Naritomo TOKUGAWA, head of the Owari-Tokugawa family
  834. Eldest Son: Takechiyo (1792 - 1793)
  835. Eldest brother: Katsunori NOGI (Army Liutenant)
  836. Eldest brother: TAIRA no Narimoto (Taro YOSHIDA)
  837. Eldest daughter of the 11th Sotetsu
  838. Eldest daughter: Akiko NOGUCHI (married Prince Tadahide SHIMAZU, Head of the Shimazu Family, but she eloped with chiropractor Haruchika NOGUCHI and later married him.)
  839. Eldest daughter: Chiyohime (1756-1757)
  840. Eldest son of Daigoro MIMASU (III)
  841. Eldest son of Daigoro ONOE.
  842. Eldest son of FUJIWARA no Moromichi.
  843. Eldest son of Mototsuna WATANABE, the first domain lord
  844. Eldest son of Motoyoshi KANZE.
  845. Eldest son of Nagatane ODA, the second domain lord.
  846. Eldest son of Yukitaka OKABE, the second lord of Kishiwada Domain
  847. Eldest son of the 5th Sotetsu
  848. Eldest son of the 7th Sotetsu
  849. Eldest son of the 9th Sotetsu and the 10th Nisotetsu
  850. Eldest son, Kazutane CHIBA died in a battle before official family succession, so Ujitane took over as head of the family and succeeded the position of shugoshiki (military governor) in three provinces, Kazusa Province, Shimousa Province and Iga Province.
  851. Eldest son: Ichiro HATOYAMA (a statesman, Prime Minister)
  852. Eldest son: Iemoto TOKUGAWA (1762-1779)
  853. Eldest son: Kozo YOSHII (a Count, lieutenant commander of the Navy, and a member of the House of Peers)
  854. Eldest son: MINAMOTO no Yoshihiro (MORI jibujo (MORI, a secretary of the Civil Administration Ministry)) lived in Musashi Province.
  855. Eldest son: Nobuhiko
  856. Eldest son: Shigeie ISHIDA - After the Battle of Sekigahara, he was spared by Ieyasu TOKUGAWA and became a priest.
  857. Eldest son: Yaichi AYUKAWA (an entrepreneur)
  858. Elected as one of the Five Men of the Pear Chamber in 951, he joined the Wakadokoro (the Office of Compilers of Poems).
  859. Elected by vote.)
  860. Election districts (Fushimi Ward) for elections to be conducted under the Public Offices Election Act (Announcement of the Election Committee of Fushimi Ward No. 7, September 1, 1952) ('Announcement of the Election Committee' for short)
  861. Election interference
  862. Election interference at the 12th Lower House general election in 1915 conducted by Kanetake OURA, the prewar Home Minister of the second OKUMA cabinet
  863. Election interference at the 16th Lower Hose general election in 1928 conducted by Kisaburo SUZIKI, the prewar Home Minister of Giichi TANAKA cabinet
  864. Election interference at the second Lower House general election in 1892 conducted by Yajiro SHINAGAWA, the prewar Home Minister of the first Matsukata cabinet
  865. Election interference means interference to election made by ruling party to eliminate their opponents.
  866. Election to become Mayor of Kyoto City
  867. Electric Railcar
  868. Electric heating Takoyaki-ki
  869. Electric mochi pounding machines are used more where workers are insufficient and mochi pounding by human labor is impossible in a rice store having a rice mill which produces a large amount of mochi, a Japanese-cake store which sells mochi cakes, a farming household whose workers are already aged, etc.
  870. Electric railcars of Eizan Dentetsu DENA 21
  871. Electric railway business
  872. Electric-powered section: Entire line (DC electrification 600 V)
  873. Electrical and Electronic Engineering
  874. Electrical scoreboard (the south side stand): The left side of the board is the score board for ball games.
  875. Electrical sounds are often used nowadays.
  876. Electricity
  877. Electricity is provided to the whole area in Fukuchiyama City by the Kansai Electric Power Co., Inc.
  878. Electrification of the Suita-Suma section, though it looks like a halfway measure in hindsight, was implemented since this section was a part of the electrification plan of the Otsu Station-Akashi Station section approved by the fifty-second Imperial Diet in 1926.
  879. Electrification work was also underway on the Suma-Akashi section at that time, but its completion couldn't keep up with that of the Suita-Suma section and gasoline powered trains were operated on this section.
  880. Electrified section : Nil (whole line is not electrified)
  881. Electrified section:
  882. Electrified section: Complete line (direct current of 600 volts, overhead double wire system)
  883. Electrified section: Entire line (DC1500V)
  884. Electrified section: Entire line electrified (DC 1500V)
  885. Electrified section: Nagoya - Kameyama section, Kamo - JR Namba section (direct current 1500 V)
  886. Electrified section: The entire line (DC1500V, overhead line system)
  887. Electrified section: The entire line (direct current 1500V)
  888. Electrified section: The entire line is electrified (direct current 1500 V)
  889. Electrified section: The entire rail line is electrified (DC 1500V).
  890. Electrified section: all lines except between the Shogakuji signal station and Hirano (direct current 1500 V)
  891. Electrified section: entire line electrified (DC 1500V)
  892. Electrified section: entire line electrified (DC1500V)
  893. Electrified section: nonexistent (the entire line is non-electrified)
  894. Electrified section: the entire line (DC 1500 V)
  895. Electrified section: the entire line (DC1500V)
  896. Electrified section: the entire rail line (direct current 600V)
  897. Electrified sections: The line is fully electrified (using a 750-VDC third-rail system).
  898. Electrified sections: all (DC 1500V, overhead line system)
  899. Electrified sections: entire line (direct current 600 V).
  900. Electrified sections: entire rail line (direct current 600 V)
  901. Electrified sections: entire rail line (direct current 600 V).
  902. Electrified sections: none (no part of the line has been electrified yet)
  903. Electronic Money Payment
  904. Electronic Money function
  905. Electronic money
  906. Electronic nengajo, New Year's mail
  907. Electronics
  908. Electronics and Information Science=>Electronics =>Information Science
  909. Elegant figure and sagacity in words'
  910. Elegant trips down the Hozu-gawa River appeared in the literary works of Tsutomu MINAKAMI, Kyukin SUSUKIDA, Keigetsu OMACHI and Yukio MISHIMA, let alone "Gubijinso (The Poppy) " written by Soseki NATSUME.
  911. Element which complement and have a strengthening influence on others are called 'Sosho' and elements which control and have a weakening influence on others are called 'Sokoku.'
  912. Elementary School
  913. Elementary Schools
  914. Elementary and junior high school students:
  915. Elementary and secondary education
  916. Elementary course (one-year), secondary course (two-year) and advanced course (four-year) were established.
  917. Elementary education institutions
  918. Elementary school
  919. Elementary school pupils: \300
  920. Elementary schools
  921. Elements of a hot spring
  922. Elements of drama in Kabuki Kyogen
  923. Elements of folk religion are complicated partly due to its historical background.
  924. Elements of the shogun executive bailiwick and that of the provincial governs overlapped sometimes.
  925. Elements such as the spring, summer, autumn, and winter gardens were subplots, and were added to the main plot.
  926. Elevated station with three bay platforms and three tracks
  927. Elevation difference: 96 meters
  928. Elevation: 169.7m
  929. Elevation: 432m
  930. Elevators also take the disabled to each floor of the halls.
  931. Elevators are available from the Eizan Electric Railway station building, which is located almost on the ground level to the Eiden-guchi concourse, and from the Eiden-guchi concourse to the platform, allowing people to use a wheelchair and others.
  932. Elevators in the station building are available for disabled people, with two located on the south side of the central entrance and one each, from the concourse to street level, in the north and south station buildings.
  933. Elevators installed are all of Otis Elevator Company (Japan) manufacture except for those installed at gateway No. 4, which were manufactured by Hitachi.
  934. Elevators installed at gateway nos. 2 and 4 are of the thoroughfare type (with doors on opposite sides).
  935. Eleven "go," described in the Wamyoruiju-sho (a dictionary compiled in the Heian period)
  936. Eleven priests hold Buddhist memorial service of "nicchu" in collaboration with Todai-ji Temple from five o'clock in the evening and from seven o'clock eleven big Taimatsu torches do gyodo (the circular walk about a Buddha statue or stupa) in the temple.
  937. Eleven sections missing from the legend of ancient times
  938. Eleven statues of "standing statues of twelve protective deities, molding"
  939. Eleven years after the compilation started, enforcement was suddenly ordered in March, 1862 (the third year of the Bunkyu era).
  940. Eleven years later, Seikimonin Ieko died on March 14, 1790 at the age of seventy-five.
  941. Eleven years later, in 1823, he resigned from the family business as a fire fighter and became a full-time painter.
  942. Eleven-Faced Kannon with this kind of shakujo are called 'Hase-dera-style Eleven-Faced Kannon (Hase-style Kannon)'.
  943. Eleven-faced wooden Kannon ryuzo (wooden standing statue of Eleven-faced Kannon)
  944. Eleventh Daughter: Princess Asa (1803 ? 1843), married to Naritsugu MATSUDAIRA, lord of the Fukui Domain
  945. Eleventh Son: Nariaki TOKUGAWA (1809 ? 1827), the adopted son of the Shimizu-Tokugawa family
  946. Eleventh daughter: Hideko (March 22, 1887 - July 5, 1924, married Kuniyuki TOKUGAWA on April 29, 1911)
  947. Eleventh rank: Sho (low) sozu
  948. Eleventh rank: Sho sozu (the third-highest position, lower grade) (pale blue)
  949. Eleventh rank: Shosozu, Nil, Hoko, Nil, (in the first year of college)
  950. Eleventh shogun: Yoshitane ASHIKAGA (Keirin-in)
  951. Eleventh son : Torakichi
  952. Eleventh temporary teacher training school, Hamamatsu Higher School of Technology (1924-1930)
  953. Eligibility
  954. Eligibility for admission to take the examination
  955. Eligibility was limited to military personnels or civilian employees in the Imperial Japanese Army or the Imperial Japanese Navy.
  956. Eliminating kokyowa (Japanese people who lived in Sanpo, namely, Enbo, Pusanpo, and Naijiho or Seiho).
  957. Eliminating the root of the future evil, he secured his position as the head of the family.
  958. Elimination of Gunji
  959. Elimination of Space Restriction Clause
  960. Elites among Nobunaga's horse guards and pages were chosen as his personal bodyguards known as "red guards" and "black guards" and many of these bodyguards were promoted to the position of troop commander.
  961. Elizabeta SUZUKI
  962. Elizabeta SUZUKI, Swiss, became a pupil of Imamaru HAYASHIYA in 1980, and was given the name of Imaju HAYASHIYA in 1987.
  963. Elks shed their antlers (in China).
  964. Elks shed their antlers (in Japan).
  965. Ellison ONIZUKA
  966. Elsewhere are schools of tea ceremony using the Oribe name, including the Fusoha school, which was established by Kenchusai Beisan of Omotesenke (the house of Omotesen), who refurbished Kosho-ji Temple in Kyoto together with Nishugosan in the Meiji Era, and which continues in the Shikisei way of tea.
  967. Elucidation of human and creature intelligence and applications thereof.
  968. Elucidation of the Active Geosphere
  969. Em Rissen Hyojo tone (Fall) and Koma-ichikotsucho tone
  970. Ema
  971. Ema (a votive horse tablet)
  972. Ema (votive horse tablets) also belong in this category.
  973. Ema sold at temples and shrines for personal dedication are small with a picture of a horse, and have space in the margin or on the back to write the wish and a person's name.
  974. Ema-do hall
  975. Emaden (hall for votive horse tablets)
  976. Emaki (picture scrolls) from the end of the Heian period show lots of ordinary people in the capital wearing suikan.
  977. Emakimono
  978. Emakimono (Illustrated handscrolls)
  979. Emakimono (an illustrated scroll) is a kind of Japanese style painting composed of series of illustrated scenes or stories on a horizontally long screen made up of multiple sheets of rectangular paper (or silk cloth) connected side by side.
  980. Emakimono also shows expressions like comics and has some elements which are similar to modern comics.
  981. Emakimono are classified, according to the subjects of painted pictures, into monogatari-e (illustrated tales), setsuwa-e (didactic pictures), senki-e (illustrated tales of battles), shaji-engi-e (illustrated founding stories of shrines and temples), kosoden-e (illustrated biographies of high rank priests), kasen-e (illustrated scroll of celebrated poets) and so on.
  982. Emakimono are viewed horizontally on a desk, and so on, although other art works are mostly set up vertically for appreciation, like wall paintings, fusumae (paintings on sliding-doors panels), kakejiku (hanging scrolls), byobu (folding screens consisting of multiple and joined panels).
  983. Emakimono is attracting attention to its artistic value as well as to its documentary value as visual historical and folklore materials (pictorial material).
  984. Emakimono was originated in Chinese gakan (illustrated handscrolls), but later developed independently in Japan.
  985. Emasculated Buddhism was criticized by both religions of Shinto and Confucianism.
  986. Embarrassed as he was, he replied that he would consult with his fellows about this matter.
  987. Embassies from Korea: after an envoy and royal missive was sent to Korea by Yoshimitsu ASHIKAGA, a reply was dispatched to Yoshimitsu via an emissary from Shin (Yoshimi) in 1375, thereby opening official communications.
  988. Embedding it as a blade near the point of a spear and a harpoon increased the piercing capacity.
  989. Emblem
  990. Emblems
  991. Embodying all good acts, possessing all the roots of virtue, is the most perfect and quickest way to bring about birth.
  992. Embodying the Katsura school, 'Nanchi Kanazawatei Theater' (which became 'Nanchi Kagetsu Theater' after it was bought by Yoshimoto Kogyo) existed in the southern part of South Osaka.
  993. Emboldened, the punitive force made repeated attacks.
  994. Embossed beads like those found on a drum are incorporated into the middle of the can body for the thin-walled can body plate to resist external pressure and the can is corrugated.
  995. Embroidered Mt. Sumeru sun and moon ninth rank of the patch-robe, folding screen configuration
  996. Embroideries, brocades and other dyed or woven fabric works of Buddhist images have been handed down from generation to generation.
  997. Embroidery stand
  998. Embroidery techniques
  999. Emerald' was operated in the summer season until 1995.
  1000. Emergence


70001 ~ 71000

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