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

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

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  1. Remains Gon-dainagon
  2. Remains Sangi, Sakonoechujo
  3. Remains in the vicinity
  4. Remains main temple: Jingo-ji Temple (Ukyo Ward, Kyoto City), Kanshin-ji Temple (Osaka Prefecture)
  5. Remains of Akita-jo Castle: Shibocho Document No. 16
  6. Remains of Ano Imperial Palace
  7. Remains of Benkei's Sumo Stage (Suttsu-cho, Hokkaido)
  8. Remains of Emperor Godaigo's Angu (temporary lodging built to accommodate an Imperial visit)
  9. Remains of Fujiwara Palace
  10. Remains of Gardens in the Asuka Imperial Palace and Heijo-kyo (the capital of old Japan during the Nara era) are being excavated and knowledge that was not found in literature, has been added.
  11. Remains of Hana no gosho
  12. Remains of Heiankyu Buraku-den Palace
  13. Remains of Heiankyu Daigoku-den Palace
  14. Remains of Honno-ji Temple, from Takoyakushi-dori Street to Nishikikoji-dori Street
  15. Remains of Kokusei-ji Temple
  16. Remains of Masuda Pond Embankment
  17. Remains of Nagaoka-kyo (the ancient capital of Nagaoka): Shibocho in 790
  18. Remains of Nagaoka-kyo Daigokuden
  19. Remains of Nagaoka-kyo: Muko City Culture Museum
  20. Remains of Nagaoka-kyo: Shibocho in 790
  21. Remains of Oyamazaki tile kiln (nationally designated historic site)
  22. Remains of Prince Nagaya's mansion were excavated at the Heijo Palace Site.
  23. Remains of Saikon-do Hall
  24. Remains of Sainoo abandoned temple
  25. Remains of Sakurai Station
  26. Remains of Tamonyama-jo Castle: Hisahide MATSUNAGA's castle
  27. Remains of Yamashina Hongan-ji Temple
  28. Remains of Yamashiro Kokubun-ji Temple (remains of Kuni-kyo City)
  29. Remains of a gun battery of the Imperial Army of Japan on the mountaintop tell a bit of Japan's modern history.
  30. Remains of a large-size building in the early middle Yayoi period were discovered.
  31. Remains of a large-size building in the early middle Yayoi period, which can be seen as remains of dotaku workshop were discovered.
  32. Remains of areas with big circular moats
  33. Remains of chiwari based on the plan of jori are called jori remains.
  34. Remains of his Hoiro are preserved inside, and placed at the Tokonoma (a traditional Japanese style alcove) in the back is a part of an old tea tree which is said to be from the time of Soen.
  35. Remains of rice fields before the middle of the middle Yayoi period were also found.
  36. Remains of roughly the medieval period or earlier are covered in principle.
  37. Remains of some of the main buildings, called "Ninomaru" (the second fortress tower) and "Sannomaru" (the third fortress tower), exist on the ridge extending to the north from the "Honmaru."
  38. Remains of the Asakura clan at Ichijodani (located in Fukui City, Fukui Prefecture)
  39. Remains of the Musashi Kokubun-ji Temple
  40. Remains of the Odoi Mound
  41. Remains of the Oyamazaki tile kiln (a national historic site)
  42. Remains of the early modern period, which are necessary for the region, can be covered.
  43. Remains of the management building of the manor have been found at the Kamo-jinja Shrine (Imizu City) (Kamochubu, Imizu City).
  44. Remains of the modern times and the present day, which are of significant importance for the region, can be covered.
  45. Remains of the old Tokaido Line Yamashina Station
  46. Remains of the religious festival can be found on the day when forestry cooperatives hold a festival of worship, a year-end party, or a new-year party.
  47. Remains of water conveyance facility have been discovered.
  48. Remains of water well and series of tombs have been discovered from the site.
  49. Remains of wells
  50. Remains of whales, centered on small-sized odontoceti, were unearthed from shell mounds originated in the Paleolithic period, including the Jomon period and from remains originated in the Yayoi period.
  51. Remains related to Saigyo no musume
  52. Remains related to the coffin
  53. Remains today
  54. Remakes
  55. Remarkable points
  56. Remarks
  57. Remarks concerning the open letter are seen in this novel.
  58. Remarks for reference
  59. Remarks in historical materials reveal that descendants of Kuniyoshi had also worked as gokenin in Kyoto.
  60. Remarks:
  61. Remarks: Kyoin which supervised both Sakyo and Ukyo by itself was established under FUJIWARA no Nakamaro's government.
  62. Remarks: The three buildings of the western style building, the Japanese style building and the entrance hall were designated as tangible national cultural properties (registered in 1977).
  63. Remarriage and children
  64. Remembering that Japan had once experienced such stressful days ahead of the last World War II, the Japanese should create the future of Japan in which they would never been tormented by those stress, I sincerely hope.'
  65. Remembering the Abe clan which collapsed at Kuriyagawa no saku (Kuriyagawa no ki) and associating the school with the same historical event, the Morioka Municipal Kuriyagawa Junior High School uses the 'plum blossom' for the school's emblem.
  66. Remind of Oban (guard)
  67. Reminiscing about her mother in her essay "Seibisho," Shoen wrote as follows.
  68. Remission
  69. Remnants of Koshinto can still be seen today, many of which can be termed "folk belief", but in fact Koshinto is the very origin and essence of Shrine Shinto, and as such is inseparable from it.
  70. Remnants of Koshinto that have survived to the present day, and the sacredness of hard work
  71. Remnants of Tenchu-gumi walked a rough road in the mountain and tried to escape, but Torataro YOSHIMURA, who bore a serious wound, dropped out of the party.
  72. Remnants of ink writing and red ink are found on the oracle bones of ancient China.
  73. Remnants of scrolls detailing the history of Shitenno-ji Temple
  74. Remnants of the funicular line also exist, including the remaining site of Kiyotakigawa Station, the disused railway tracks, and the Atago Station building.
  75. Remonkai
  76. Remonkai is a Cantonese dish prepared by pouring sauce made from lemon juice, sugar and soy sauce etc., on fried chicken.
  77. Remonstrance by Kazutsune
  78. Remote area bus
  79. Removal of the Taira clan government
  80. Remove ashes by tapping the kiseru lightly on the edge of haifuki (tobacco ash receptacle) when the tobacco burns out and smoking is stopped.
  81. Remove him now.'
  82. Remove it from the barrel, and then place it in a large, flat-bottom tub filled with fresh water.
  83. Remove the scales from a carp and cut in round slices.
  84. Remove two packages from the remaining 12, leaving 10 packages and then burn them at random, and guess which Kokoromi-ko (try incense) emits the same incense.
  85. Remove' means removing plague and Candari and Matangi are the female names of a clan that was engaged in slaughter work, but originally they were the names of goddesses that were worshipped by people of lower class.
  86. Removed from Bicchu Gon no Suke.
  87. Removed from Bicchu no kami.
  88. Removed from Shinano no kami.
  89. Removed from the Kebiishi no Betto, Kurodo no To and Saemon no kami.
  90. Removed from the Sahyoe no kami.
  91. Removing himself from the government post and entering the priesthood at the age of 38, Tomomi IWAKURA was given an old house from a local carpenter and lived there for over five years.
  92. Removing soft, downy hair
  93. Removing the bamboo stick from the paste, one can see the current form of chikuwa (fish sausage in the form of a bamboo cylinder).
  94. Removing the stems and leaves of the parent potatoes, makes the tips of their leaves curved, preventing them from spreading too much will have a beneficial effect on the growth of smaller potatoes.
  95. Remuneration
  96. Remuneration was basically paid according to their Ikai.
  97. Ren IWAKURA: The second daughter of Heikichi MINAMI who was from the old family in Takaoka of Toyama Prefecture and served as the second chairman of Toyama prefectural assembly and Setsuko, a younger sister of Jokichi TAKAMINE who was a world-famous chemist.
  98. Ren NAKASHOJI, the minister of Agriculture and Commerce, who took the matter seriously, issued the 'Bori (Excessive profits) act' against cornering and speculative stocking of rice, iron, coal, cotton, paper, dye and medicines on September 1, 1917 but it was not successful.
  99. Ren'an SHEN, a Chinese scholar, verified the reliability of Nihonshoki, and as a result, he has pointed out that it is not wrong to correct the descriptions of Nihonshoki with Samguk Sagi (History of the Three Kingdoms) which is the official history of Korea.
  100. Rena INOUE
  101. Renamed 'Shiga Kogen Hotel, Ltd.'
  102. Renamed August 7 (old lunar calendar) in 1869 to Izuhara Domain
  103. Renamed Chiba School of Foreign Affairs in January 1947.
  104. Renamed Doshisha Technical School of Commerce in 1944.
  105. Renamed Nagoya College of Foreign Languages in August 1947.
  106. Renamed Osaka English Language School, sequentially restructured into Osaka Technical College (1879), Osaka Junior High School (1880), university branch campus (1885), and Daisan Higher Middle School (1886) and then Daisan Senior High School (old education system) in 1894.
  107. Renamed Osaka Foreign Affairs College in April 1944.
  108. Renamed Tenri Foreign Language College (while Tenri Girls' Vocational School renamed Tenri Girls' Foreign Language College) in April 1944.
  109. Renamed Toa School of Foreign Affairs in January 1944.
  110. Renamed Tokyo Foreign Affairs College in April 1944.
  111. Renamed Tokyo School of Foreign Languages and became independent (third national vocational school) in April 1899.
  112. Renamed Zenrin Foreign Affairs College in April 1944.
  113. Renamed Zenrin Higher Commercial School in April 1939.
  114. Renamed Zenrin Vocational School in April 1947.
  115. Renamed as the Takahashi clan later.
  116. Renamed from Newspaper Studies Major, Department of Sociology, Faculty of Letters in April 2004.
  117. Renamed himself from Ryogen to Ryozan, and reaffirmed his determination to found a sacred ground again.
  118. Renamed on August 7 in 1869 to Shizuoka Domain
  119. Renamed on August 7 in 1869 to Toyohashi Domain
  120. Renamed on August 7 in 1869 to Toyoura Domain
  121. Renamed on January 12 (old lunar calendar) in 1871 to Akita Domain
  122. Renamed on July 4 (lunar calendar) in 1869 to Mashima Domain
  123. Renamed on March 23 (old lunar calendar) in 1870 to Mariyama Domain
  124. Renamed on November 2 (old lunar calendar) in 1869 to Takahashi Domain
  125. Renamed on October 29 (old lunar calendar) in 1870 to Mineoka Domain
  126. Renamed on September 13 (lunar calendar) in 1869 to Oizumi Domain
  127. Renamed the 'Tokyo detached office of the Hokkaido Development Commission' on Leap October 9, 1870.
  128. Renamed to Hachinohe Prefecture on September 13 (old lunar calendar) in 1869.
  129. Renamed to Inba Prefecture on January 13 (old lunar calendar) in 1869. ->X
  130. Renamed to Kameoka Domain on June 19 (old lunar calendar) in 1869
  131. Renamed to Kanagawa Prefecture on September 21 (old lunar calendar) in 1868. ->X
  132. Renamed to Kofu Prefecture on July 20 (old lunar calendar) in 1869.
  133. Renamed to Kosuge Prefecture on January 13 (old lunar calendar) in 1869. ->X
  134. Renamed to Maizuru Domain on June 20 (old lunar calendar) in 1869
  135. Renamed to Miyazaku Prefecture on February 9 (old lunar calendar) in 1869. ->X
  136. Renamed to Nagasaki Prefecture on June 20 (old lunar calendar) in 1869. ->X
  137. Renamed to Nara Prefecture on July 17 (old lunar calendar) in 1869. ->X
  138. Renamed to Nara-fu on July 29 (old lunar calendar) in 1868.
  139. Renamed to Omiya Prefecture on January 28 (old lunar calendar) in 1869.
  140. Renamed to Shinagawa Prefecture on February 9 (old lunar calendar) in 1869. ->X
  141. Renamed to Takayama Prefecture on June 2 (old lunar calendar) in 1868. ->X
  142. Renamed to Tokyo-fu on July 17 (old lunar calendar) in 1868. ->X
  143. Renamed to Toyosaki Prefecture on May 10 (old lunar calendar) in 1868 -> abolished and incorporated to Hyogo Prefecture on August 2 (old lunar calendar) in 1869.
  144. Renamed to Wakamori Prefecture on February 9 (old lunar calendar) in 1869.->X
  145. Renamed to Watarai Prefecture on July 17 (old lunar calendar) in 1869 ->X
  146. Renbomono (a group of songs that have 'renbo' in their titles; they're songs that cheerfully describe love)
  147. Renboshiki-noborigama is Noborigama in the narrow sense, that is a kiln for baking modern ceramics => refer to "Renboshiki-noborigama"
  148. Renchi Suikin-zu (Waterfowl in Lotus Pond) - Tokyo National Museum
  149. Renchi-zu Fusuma (sliding partition painting of lotus pond) (Saifuku-ji Temple, Osaka) Important Cultural Property
  150. Rendai-ji Temple in Kumamoto Prefecture is said to be a site where she made a thatched hut, and there remains a 'Higaki sekito' (stone pagoda) in the precincts of the shrine.
  151. Rendo (Multiple Bolt Crossbow)
  152. Renga
  153. Renga (linked verse)
  154. Renga (linked verse) was extremely popular among the warrior class; some linked-verse poets like Sogi wandered throughout the country, from Kyushu to the eastern part of Japan.
  155. Renga (linked verse): Haikai renga (the origin of haiku), kyoka (comic or satirical tanka) and haikai (today also called renku)
  156. Renga (linked verses)
  157. Renga (linked-verse) poets and so on including Sogi IO came over in consideration of Yoshitane ASHIKAGA's stay at Hojozu.
  158. Renga and the tea ceremony
  159. Renga eventually spread from the nobility down into the general (commoner) public.
  160. Renga is a traditional form of poetry, and the kaminoku (the first part of a poem) and shimonoku (the latter part of a poem) are linked together by several people.
  161. Renga is considered one of the games that represent the Muromachi culture, along with Nogaku.
  162. Renga masters like Sogi, Yoshimoto NIJO, Socho and Shinkei appeared, and daimyo as well as nobles began to gather at temples and shrines for renga parties.
  163. Renga poetry, a form of waka where the first and last stanzas of the poem are linked together, had been growing in popularity beginning in the Kamakura period, but in the Muromachi period it entered a golden age.
  164. Renga, a poem composed by a group, developed in relation to the ko (meeting for a lecture on Buddhist scriptures).
  165. Renga, which was popular during the Muromachi period, evolved to include more word play and was popularized among the commoner, and this marked the beginning of the new form of poetry known as haikai.
  166. Renge Emai lotus dance ceremony in Oki-kokubunji Temple (May 17, 1977; Okinoshima-cho, Oki-gun)
  167. Renge Kokuzo (west, red)
  168. Renge kesho means to be reincarnated surrounded by lotus (renge) flowers in the Pure Land of Amitabha.
  169. Renge-in of Tanjo-ji Temple (bell tower) in Kumamoto Prefecture, the largest Bonsho in the world in terms of both weight and size.
  170. Renge-ji Temple (Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City)
  171. Renge-ji Temple (Sakyo-ku Ward, Kyoto City)
  172. Renge-ji Temple belongs to the Tendai Sect but Obaku Sect monks were also involved in its construction and the main hall is of a completely Obaku Sect style.
  173. Renge-ji Temple is a Tendai Sect Buddhist temple located in Sakyo-ku Ward, Kyoto City.
  174. Renge-ji Temple is situated on the bank of the Takano-gawa River (Kyoto City), one of the sources of the Kamo-gawa River (the Yodo-gawa River system), beside Saba Kaido (Mackerel Road, now National Highway Route 367) which leads into Kyoto City.
  175. Renge-ji Temple was subsequently made the head temple of Ikkoshu, and its teachings were propagated in Tohoku, Northern Kanto, Owari, and Omi by building branch temples in the areas, forming an independent Buddhist sect.
  176. Rengein Tanjo-ji Temple (Tamana City, Kumamoto Prefecture): Built in 1997; 33.0 m tall; wooden structure
  177. Rengein garden
  178. Rengeji toro lanterns are defined as 'A unique shape characterized by a hexagonal base with lotus petals and a column that is circular with an expanded center section.
  179. Rengeko-in Temple
  180. Rengemon Gate
  181. Rengemon Gate (National Treasure)
  182. Rengeo-in Hondo (the main hall of Rengeo-in Temple) was built within the extensive precinct of Hojuji-dono Temple and this now goes by the name 'Sanjusangen-do Temple.'
  183. Rengeo-in Temple Main Hall (commonly called Sanjusangen-do Hall) in which to put 1,001 statues of Senju Kannon (Thousand Armed Avalokiteshwara) elongated sideways, and it is not the Amida-do Hall, but it can be regarded as one in larger Kutai-do Hall types.
  184. Rengetsu
  185. Rengetsu OTAGAKI
  186. Rengetsu OTAGAKI (February 10, 1791 - December 10, 1875) was a nun cum woman waka poet in the late Edo period.
  187. Rengeza (padmasana, lotus base)
  188. Rengezo Sekai
  189. Rengo
  190. Rengo (1468 - August 26, 1543) was a priest of Jodo Shinshu sect (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) over the middle of the Muromachi period and the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States).
  191. Rengo barely survived because Shonyo and Renjun hesitated to intervene in Sakai City.
  192. Rengo was barely able to escape into Sakai City, Izumi Province, which was an autonomous city.
  193. Rengo was believed to have been adopted as infants by his older brother who moved from Kaga to Etchu Provinces with Rengo.
  194. Rengyoshu (the eleven priests participate in Shuni-e (Omizutori, Water-Drawing Festival) held at Nigatsudo hall of Todaiji Temple)
  195. Rengyoshu are supported by Doji, Chugen and so on as well as Sanyaku (Dodoji (the assistant of Rengyoshu maintains raido and gaijin), Shoko and Komori (the assistant of Rengyoshu, accountant) and Kushi (the assistant of Rengyoshu manages yuya (bathhouse)), and they carry out the events.
  196. Rengyoshu go through purifying themselves (religiously) by abstaining from eating meat and do the residential training in the kuri (priest's kitchen and living room) (Bekka-bo) of Kaidan-in.
  197. Renichi TAKENAKA
  198. Renin HAIGO
  199. Renin HAIGO (1807-1892) was a scholar of Japanese classical literature in the late Edo period and the early Meiji period.
  200. Renin KIZAWA is known from the period of Mochikuni HATAKEYAMA.
  201. Renji-koshi
  202. Renjimado (a window with vertical or horizontal wooden laths or bamboo) above nijiriguchi (small door which leads into a tea ceremony hut) is especially famous for it makes a shadow like a rainbow.
  203. Renjishi (a string of lions)
  204. Renjishi has become a massive piece of work including ai kyogen (comic interludes).
  205. Renjo
  206. Renjo (1446 - March 17, 1504) was a monk of Jodo Shinshu (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) during the middle of Muromachi period and up to the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States) (Japan).
  207. Renjo-ji Temple (Yasu City)
  208. Renjo-ji Temple is a temple of the Tendai Shinseishu sect located in Yasu City, Shiga Prefecture (former Chozu-cho, Yasu county).
  209. Renjuku and the former Chazan KAN's residence' were designated as National Special Sites in 1953.
  210. Renjun
  211. Renjun (1464 - October 8, 1550) was a priest in the Muromachi period and the Sengoku period (period of warring states).
  212. Renjun accepted the situation where "a religious community participated in a mere war between samurai families."
  213. Renjun based in Kinai region unlike others of his brothers who had their footholds in Hokuriku region and he was a younger maternal half-brother of Jitsunyo, so Renjun naturally became Jitsunyo's adviser and accepted Ennyo, who had been intended to be Jitsunyo's successor, as a son-in-law married to his daughter.
  214. Renjun's order was faithfully carried out and Sanenori, Rengo's beloved legitimate son, was poisoned to death on March 12, 1532, the following year, in Echizen Province where Rengo and Sanenori have hidden.
  215. Renjun, who gained a victory against Honpuku-ji Temple, started to look toward the center of the politics again.
  216. Renjun, who was responsible for the religious community in Kinai, had strong resentment against Motonaga, who was a pious follower of the Hokke sect (Nichiren sect).
  217. Renkaku style
  218. Renkamon Gate of Kyoogokoku-ji Temple
  219. Renkan-ki (Memoir of Chained Rings)
  220. Renko
  221. Renko (1450 - December 6, 1531) was a priest of Jodo Shinshu sect (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) from the mid Muromachi period to the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States).
  222. Renko's real name was Kenyu and his childhood name Koyo.
  223. Renkon (lotus root)
  224. Renkon (lotus root):
  225. Renkon has been eaten to pray for a life without obstacles. because lotus roots have many through-holes which allow one to see through to the other side without obstacles.
  226. Renku
  227. Renku refers to haikai no renga (humorous linked poem).
  228. Renkyo
  229. Renkyo (1451 - July 5, 1492) was a priest of Jodo Shinshu (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) (the Koshoji School of Jodo Shinshu Sect) in the Sengoku period (period of warring states) (Japan).
  230. Renkyo put great effort into preaching their nenbutsu teachings with Rennyo of Hongan-ji Temple, but in August, 1532, both Yamashina Hongan-ji Temple and Kosho-ji Temple were burned down by fires of war.
  231. Renmin University of China
  232. Rennyo
  233. Rennyo (April 4, 1415 to May 5, 1499) was a priest of Jodoshin-shu sect (True Pure Land Sect) of Buddhism during the Muromachi Period.
  234. Rennyo Shonin says.
  235. Rennyo and Junnyo then worked to restore Hongan-ji Temple in Yamashina Ward.
  236. Rennyo built Yoshizaki gobo in Yoshizaki after receiving Kyokaku's advice and Renko's support, and he then worked to actively spread the religion there.
  237. Rennyo described that this book was 'the important shogyo (Buddhist sutra) for this sect,' houwver, it should not be easily shown to a person who 'had no shukuzen (good from the past lives).'
  238. Rennyo founded this temple in Iigai in 1476.
  239. Rennyo got worse.
  240. Rennyo mentioned in "Ofumi (Gobunsho)";
  241. Rennyo remonstrated against the uprising by sending 'Words of Punishment (Words of Admonishment).'
  242. Rennyo responded to this social situation quickly, and he energetically undertook missionary work.
  243. Rennyo reverently carried the statue of the founder and drifted from Kanamori, Katada and Otsu in Omi.
  244. Rennyo scattered the remains of Shinran to far Oshu for worship, and civilized lay follower groups.
  245. Rennyo severely rejected the teachings of kakushi nenbutsu that the believers have to meet with zen chishiki in order to gain salvation.
  246. Rennyo wanted the solidarity among his families which were the direct descendants of Shinran and also wanted his children who became chief priests at various places, especially Jitsunyo who succeeded to hoshu, to protect the religious community as the guarding walls.
  247. Rennyo's retirement and removal of his eldest son, Junnyo, as a successor were included.
  248. Rennyo's son 兼継 entered the temple and became its patron in 1495.
  249. Rennyo, supported by Zenjin-shu, became so influential that he built a power called 'Katada-monto' (followers).
  250. Rennyo, the 8th head-priest of Hongan-ji Temple, stated in "Ofumi" as follows.
  251. Rennyo-do Hall
  252. Renouncing the cloth to join the Onin War
  253. Renown Incorporated can be the most notable example, and that sells Ecchu fundoshi wrapped by a cellophane film, on which a large kanji character "褌" (fundoshi) is written in a writing brush font.
  254. Renown as a master in the west, he actively performed mainly in the Kansai region.
  255. Renowned Remains of Soto
  256. Renowned clans of this line include the Kiso clan who claimed to be descendants of Yoshinaka.
  257. Renowned depictions include statues at the lecture hall of To-ji Temple (Kyoo Gokoku-ji Temple) and Kyoto's Ansho-ji Temple.
  258. Renowned for her beauty, she carried on many affairs and did wrongs.
  259. Rensei
  260. Rensei (1455 - September 17, 1521) was a priest of Jodo Shinshu (the True Pure Land Sect of Buddhism) who lived from the mid Muromachi period to the Sengoku Period (Period of Warring States).
  261. Renshi (or gorenshi) of each family
  262. Renshi (relatives of noble families)
  263. Renshi (the fourth-grade martial artist):
  264. Renshi ANO (阿野廉子), who was in Emperor Godaigo's favor and gave birth to Emperor Gomurakami, was a descendant of the Ano clan.
  265. Renshi has a grade of 5dan or higher (more than 6dan in Zennippon Iaido Renmei).
  266. Renshi of the Kishu Tokugawa family
  267. Renshi of the Mito Tokugawa family
  268. Renshi of the Owari Tokugawa family
  269. Renshi: The children and brothers of a hoshu.
  270. Rensho
  271. Rensho (the priest name of Naozane KUMAGAI) visited Mimasaka in 1193 during his pilgrimage, and built Tanjo-ji Temple at the former residence of Tokikuni URUMA (the father of Honen), Honen' birthplace.
  272. Rensho ANDO
  273. Rensho ANDO (1239 - February 18, 1329) was a busho (Japanese military commander) in the late Kamakura period who was a low-level bureaucrat (Miuchibito (private vassals) of the Tokuso family of the regent Hojo clan of the Kamakura bakufu (Japanese feudal government headed by a shogun).
  274. Rensho Monogatari
  275. Rensho and Shikken
  276. Rensho graveyard: Rensho's body in Kumagaya. which was predictive of his birth in the Pure Land on September 27, 1207, was enshrined at Nenbutsu Zanmai-do Temple according to his will.
  277. Rensho was his homyo (a name given to a person who enters the Buddhist priesthood) as a priest of Ritsu sect, and was written in Kanji characters as 蓮聖 or 蓮性.
  278. Renso no Gi
  279. Renso no gi is a funeral of an imperial member.
  280. Rensui dining room
  281. Rent-A-Car Japaren, Higashi-Maizuru Sales Office
  282. Rental car
  283. Rental oshibori
  284. Rental oshibori are served in thin, transparent plastic bags (made of polyethylene film) and are collected by rental companies after they have been used.
  285. Rental rooms
  286. Rentaro TAKI
  287. Rentaro TAKI (August 24, 1879 - June 29, 1903) was a Japanese musician and composer.
  288. Renzaburo SUZUKI
  289. Renzaburo Suzuki (1848 - October 6, 1868) was a member of Shinsengumi (a group who guarded Kyoto during the end of Tokugawa Shogunate) from Himeji, Harima Province.
  290. Renzo KOGA
  291. Reopening Cloister Government by Goshirakawa
  292. Reopening of Cloister Government and Continuing Search-and-Destroy Tactics
  293. Reopening of contact with Europe and America
  294. Reorganization and ending of the Dynastic polity
  295. Reorganization in the early Meiji period
  296. Reorganization of international order in East Asia
  297. Reorganize the tax system.
  298. Reorganized into Kyoto University of Foreign Studies in 1959.
  299. Reorganized into the regular police system, the Kenpei police was abolished, but numbers of police officers were dispatched from Japan, which made the number of the police officers increase from 6,387 in 1919 to 20,134 in 1920.
  300. Reorganized to Fukuoka University in 1956.
  301. Reorganized to Reitaku University in 1959.
  302. Repair and mending proceeded further under orders from the Imperial Court in 1096.
  303. Repair and sales of daily commodities
  304. Repair of Juzu
  305. Repair services of umbrellas, pans, pots and shoes by peddlers started to be provided later.
  306. Repair work was done in 1490 and 1681.
  307. Repairing in Bunkyu era
  308. Repairs are undertaken by shops specializing in nenju or Buddhist altar stores which deal with the repair of juzu.
  309. Repairs were done on the damaged areas, but the Edo Period ended without the destroyed buildings rebuilt.
  310. Repatriation Memorial Park was created on a hill overlooking the Taira district, where landing bridges for repatriates had been placed, and the Memorial Museum was built in a corner of the park.
  311. Repay an obligation
  312. Repeal of Shorui-Awaremi-no-rei (ordinances of animal protection)
  313. Repeat coating with the sauce being careful not to scorch it, so that it becomes glossy.
  314. Repeat the above process of 1 to 6, unless satisfied with a bowl of tobacco.
  315. Repeat the above process on the following day (third addition).
  316. Repeat the above processes five times.
  317. Repeat the name of Buddha for 90 days while going round Amitabha.
  318. Repeat this process from two to four times.
  319. Repeat two or three times again with the pigment using a sieve and print by rubbing with one's palm, and complete by printing massively and in a embossed manner.
  320. Repeated conflicts concerning inmyodenju at the time of enthronement were a sign of its importance.
  321. Repeated large-scale cultural transformations had occurred in Western Europe since around the 14th century.
  322. Repeated prints make the object jet black, and most of the monuments in China are stained for this reason.
  323. Repeated repairs have enabled the structure to remain at original site.
  324. Repeatedly ousting and appointing Noh performers, and moving them from school to school.
  325. Repeatedly overlapping short lines and the technique for catching the trace of the the main constituent are his characteristics.
  326. Repel the enemy.'
  327. Repertoire is not limited to lively pieces that are evocative of children's songs 'village fairs.'
  328. Repertoire relates to the aims, character and performance space at each festival.
  329. Repetition of easy performances, and lack of efforts by people in the business to foster capable successors, were the large bill that came due.
  330. Repetition, couplets, rhyming, anastrophe and rhetorical questions
  331. Replacement driver service
  332. Replacement of cars for "Rapid Yamatoji" with JR West Surburban Trains Series 221 started (replacement was completed in July).
  333. Replacing "Motonobu"
  334. Replacing Nobutomo AKIYAMA, the chamberlain, Katsuyori became the lord of Takato-jo Castle, and according to "Gunkan," Nobuharu BABA had the castle repaired for Katsuyori to enter.
  335. Replacing Takamori, the general manager of military affairs then, he became Kyoto shugoshoku (Military governor of Kyoto) on February 15, 1864 and changed his post from Echizen no kami (Governor of Echizen Province) to Okura no taifu (a senior assistant minister of the Ministry of Treasury) the following day.
  336. Replacing it, Onmyodo integrated Dokyo techniques, called Dojutsu, to create a unique Japanese version of Onmyodo.
  337. Replacing the aristocrats who were on the wane, samurai families became powerful after the Kamakura period and the priests visited the great and powerful such as temples, shrines and samurai families.
  338. Replicas (Tsukurimono) and small properties (Kodogu)
  339. Replicas are mostly comparatively big things such as boat, car, tomb, or a stall.
  340. Replicas of meals that common people ate at that time are displayed.
  341. Reponding to the request for the military power by Takauji ASHIKAGA who had defected from Emperor Godaigo's Kenmu government established after the fall of the Kamakura bakufu, Nobutake raised an army in 1335 and offended Yano-jo Castle (Hiroshima City) which was the headquarters of Rengaku KUMAGAI who hoisted the opposition banner.
  342. Report from the rice field inspector of Echizen Province (Nos. 2 and 3 on Kuwabara-no-sho estate)
  343. Report on the delegation of American education
  344. Reported to have been founded in 703, it is the stamp office for temple number 6 of Saigoku Sanjusankasho (the 33 temples that are visited during the Kansai Kannon Pilgrimage).
  345. Reportedly Shuhei visited Isami's wife Tsune accompanied by a woman in 1868.
  346. Reportedly a similar mention was made in "Nurigome-bon" (the manuscript of "The Tales of Ise" in the possession of Emperor Suzaku).
  347. Reportedly the oldest temple in Kamakura, the three principal images are Juichimen Kannon-zo (the statue of Eleven-faced Kannon).
  348. Reportedly, Daijokan (Grand Council of State) granted temple land to SAKANOUE no Tamuramaro by issuing Daijokanpu (official documents issued by Daijokan) in 805.
  349. Reportedly, Eikoin changed internal affairs of ooku that had been established by Kasuga no tsubone after the simple and sturdy spirit of the samurai into the ornate and luxurious way of court nobles in Kyoto.
  350. Reportedly, Goshirakawa openly showed displeasure against that measure (Article for February 26 in "Gyokuyo").
  351. Reportedly, Ingen then gave it the name 'Kanten.'
  352. Reportedly, Masanobu and Kaneie, who was the father of Michinaga, were astonished by this.
  353. Reportedly, Moronaka, who saw the situation, held in his hand Yata no Kagami (the eight-span mirror), which was one of the three sacred emblems of the imperial family as a measure for self-protection taking surrender into consideration.
  354. Reportedly, Munesuke was a honest person who was well versed in kanseki (books in classical Chinese) and yosoku kojitsu (well-versed in usages or practices of the court or military households (practices)), but, at the same time, he was carefree and hasty.
  355. Reportedly, Rokuzaemon TANAKA could avoid death penalty as the vassal of the Kyogoku family, but he voluntarily submitted to be executed at the same time.
  356. Reportedly, Yorinaga often reported to the Cloistered Emperor Toba, and on this front Munesuke was an exemplary person who diligently carried out his job and it was unreasonable not to promote him to a Daijin.
  357. Reportedly, after the defeat of the Taira family, Munemori admitted this and pleaded for his life using the reasoning that he was not a blood member of the Taira family.
  358. Reportedly, although the name "Gyokuyo" was not used by the Nijo family, "Gyokukai" was used.
  359. Reportedly, because Munemori was fat like his first son, TAIRA no Kiyomune, he easily floated.
  360. Reportedly, he protected a daughter of Mitsuhide AKECHI after the Battle of Yamazaki.
  361. Reportedly, he was intimate with his younger sister, Kenreimonin Tokuko, their child was the Emperor Antoku.
  362. Reportedly, in the family register of deaths of his descendants, the Yoshimura family, it is written that he died on February 15, 1870.
  363. Reportedly, it is because "Iyayotsugi," which was a historical tale written by FUJIWARA no Takanobu (a son of Jakucho before Jakucho became a priest) and does not exist any more, treated the period in question.
  364. Reportedly, it originated in the yukatabira (a light garment for bathing) of the Heian period.
  365. Reportedly, it used to be a center for modern Kyoto painters in old days, and a large number of human resources were furnished to be located among industries such as ceramics, lacquer craftworks, and dyeing and weaving to invigorate industry.
  366. Reportedly, it was clear on the day of the battle, albeit in July, the middle of the rainy season, except the area around the headquarters of the Takeda forces.
  367. Reportedly, it was observed that sand was flung up to a height of seven to eight kilometers by shachenbao sandstorm.
  368. Reportedly, it was stated in the briefing by Kyoto City and JR West that the official name of the new station was not decided.
  369. Reportedly, live shots were fired toward the sea in Fukuoka City until the early Showa period.
  370. Reportedly, on the occasion of his funeral, it was said "Everybody lamented his death as if it were their own father which had died."
  371. Reportedly, on the occasion of jimoku (ceremony for appointment of court officials) in 1129, he made a document in which the position to which MINAMOTO no Moroyori was appointed was erroneously transcribed and the jimoku was held again (Moroyori was Munesuke's maternal uncle).
  372. Reportedly, on this occasion all the buildings of Tanabe-jo Castle were destroyed (Ikkoku Ichijyo Rei).
  373. Reportedly, people rumored that, as Kiyotsura took part in the purge of SUGAWARA no Michizane, he was revenged by a vengeful spirit.
  374. Reportedly, she was pregnant, but, as Kuranosuke was determined to go down to Edo, Kuranosuke gave her money and let her return to her parent home in Nijo and sent Genkei TERAI who was a doctor of the Asano family, to her.
  375. Reportedly, the models for 'Mushi Mezuru Himegimi' (The Lady Who Admired Vermin) in "Tsutsumi Chunagon Monogatari" (The Riverside Counselor's Tales), were Munesuke and Wakagozen.
  376. Reportedly, the reason why Kaneie resigned as udaisho and became sessho without the title of any daijin was that he intended to hold a superior political position by being released from the position of the gijokan that was lower than the sadaijin held by Masanobu.
  377. Reportedly, the temple was founded by Imperial Prince Toneri.
  378. Reportedly, they originated in a Western-style restaurant in Ikebukuro, whose disciples have spread the recipe.
  379. Reportedly, this was the origin of 'yuzen-zome.'
  380. Reporters in the room stirred since it was the unprecedented press conference where both the wrongdoer and the victim attended.
  381. Reporting Method
  382. Reporting the status of extraordinary astronomical events and the good omens they contained in sosho (reports to the Emperor) to the Emperor, conducted through the Onmyoryo (Bureau of Divination) or Kurododokoro (the Chamberlain's Office), was called tenmon misso.
  383. Reports by people visiting Japan in the Meiji period after opening the country to the world, insistences of people visiting Europe, and impressions and understanding spread as a result of seeing Japan which won the Japanese-Sino and Japanese-Russo Wars
  384. Reports for surveillance of remote domains submitted by the Oniwaban (intelligence officers) show findings of the behavior of the junkenshi during their inspections at feudal domains.
  385. Repose of souls
  386. Repose of souls ("chinkon", or "tamashizume") refers to the quieting of a persons soul.
  387. Repose of souls ceremony
  388. Representation of lands by sections called jo, ri, and tsubo (jori naming method)
  389. Representations
  390. Representations of the goddess are generally classified into those with two arms and those with eight arms.
  391. Representative Buddhist scriptures that preach 'Yakushi Nyorai are Yakushi ruriko nyorai hongan kudokukyo (Yakushikyo),' which was translated by Genjo, and 'Yakushi ruriko shichibutsu hongan kudokukyo (Shichibutsu yakushikyo),' which was translated by Gijo.
  392. Representative Buildings
  393. Representative Examples of Hachiman-zukuri Style
  394. Representative Family Heads
  395. Representative Figures
  396. Representative Kofun mounds in the final stage of the Kofun period
  397. Representative Pickles
  398. Representative Poem
  399. Representative Poems
  400. Representative Senju Kannon Statues in Japan
  401. Representative Tenmokujawan are products called Kensan, which were produced at Ken kiln located in Jianou City (former Jianou Prefecture), Fujian Province, and those called Taihisan/Bessan, which were produced at Kisshu kiln located in Jian Prefecture, Jiangxi Province.
  402. Representative Work
  403. Representative Works
  404. Representative Works (China):
  405. Representative Works (Japan):
  406. Representative Works of Yomihon
  407. Representative buildings
  408. Representative catalogs at that time were "日本書目志" (1898), "増版東西学書録" (1902年), "訳書経眼録" (1934) and so on, and we can find in such catalogs a large number of books related to international law.
  409. Representative circles include All Japan Karatedo Federation Renbukai, All Japan Koshiki Karatedo Organization, All-Japan Shorinji-ryu Karatedo Federation Renshin-kan, Chito-kai Federation, Seishin-ryu, All-Japan Kakuto Dageki Federation, Japan Bogu Karatedo Federation, National Bogu Karatedo Federation, etc.
  410. Representative circles include Sato Juku, which can be traced back to Kyokushin karate; and Kansuiryu Karate founded by Antonio INOKI and Yukio MIZUTANI, a karate expert known for serving as the prototype of a character in "Killer Martial Art in Tokai," a novel authored by Noboru SATO.
  411. Representative crest: Agehacho (swallowtail)
  412. Representative crest: Gokanigokenkarahana
  413. Representative crest: Hidarimitsutomoe
  414. Representative crest: Hikone tachibana
  415. Representative crest: Katabami family crest (katabami in a circle)
  416. Representative crest: Marunihosomitsukashiwa/Tosakashiwa
  417. Representative crest: Marunimitsubaaoi
  418. Representative crest: Mutsumeyui
  419. Representative crest: Sasa rindo
  420. Representative crest: Tsugaru botan (tree peony of Tsugaru)
  421. Representative crest: Uwajima sasa (Uwajima bamboo leaves)
  422. Representative crest: Yotsumeyui
  423. Representative example of use is Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, the mother of Elizabeth II, the queen of England.
  424. Representative examples are Kiboku TAKASE (real name: Tadaatsu, 1668 - 1749) and Hokkei OGYU (real name: Kan, 1669 - 1754).
  425. Representative examples are Ko Sogi, Ko Enbu, and O Fushi.
  426. Representative examples are as follows:
  427. Representative examples include 'Tekka shamisen,' 'Tekka bugyo,' 'Zatoichi Tekka tabi,' 'Tekka botan,' and 'Tekka no Hanamichi.'
  428. Representative examples include Mitsui-gumi House (later First National Bank main office) in Tokyo built in 1872, Kaichi Gakko Primary School in Matsumoto City built in 1876, and Seika-tei in Sapporo City in 1881.
  429. Representative examples include the 'Koshokujinyu' (Tiger devouring human) at Sen-oku Hakuko Kan and many "Yongle Encyclopedias" stored at the Toyo Bunko (Oriental Library).
  430. Representative examples included the Echigo riot by the Takada clan and the Date riot by the Sendai clan.
  431. Representative examples of Jinaicho included those in Ishiyama of Settsu Province (modern-day Osaka Prefecture), in Yoshizaki Mibo of Echizen Province (Fukui Prefecture today), and in the city of Tondabayashi (present-day Tondabayashi City, Osaka).
  432. Representative examples of such 'houses with diaries' include the Onomiya line of the Northern House of the Fujiwara clan, which had the "Chuyuki" (especially noteworthy is its entry for Novenber 12, 1091), and the TAIRA no Takamune line of the Taira clan (particularly the entry "Suberagi no moto" [Under the Emperor] in their "Imakagami").
  433. Representative families
  434. Representative iemoto (the head family of a school) of kouta
  435. Representative individuals known as typical examples of the ranpeki daimyo include the lord of the Satsuma clan, Shigehide SHIMAZU.
  436. Representative kaisho
  437. Representative natsumatsuri festivals
  438. Representative new words were "kenri (rights)," "shuken (sovereign rights)," and "minshu (republic)" and so on.
  439. Representative of fucha ryori are shojin unagi (vegetarian dish which looks like broiled eel) and sesame tofu.
  440. Representative of hafu.
  441. Representative of the Ryokusen-kai (party) of the Kanze school
  442. Representative poem
  443. Representative poems
  444. Representative poets of these periods are Shushin GIDO, Chushin ZEKKAI or Sojun IKKYU ("Kyounshu" Mad Cloud Collection).
  445. Representative products were metalware (mirrors, swords, etc.), kanji (Chinese characters) and Buddhism.
  446. Representative rakugoka
  447. Representative relics
  448. Representative soybean miso is Haccho miso.
  449. Representative texts
  450. Representative tumulus
  451. Representative white miso made from rice are Shinshu miso (made in Nagano Prefecture) and Saikyo miso (made in Kyoto), and the representative red miso made from rice are Tsugaru miso (made in Aomori Prefecture) and Sendai miso (made in Miyagi Prefecture).
  452. Representative widespread texts that have additional punctuation marks are as follows:
  453. Representative work
  454. Representative work is "Shabake" (story of ghosts).
  455. Representative work, "Gazu Hyakki Yagyo."
  456. Representative work, "Ge Ge Ge no Kitaro."
  457. Representative work, "Kaidan" (ghost stories).
  458. Representative work, "Ugetsu Monogatari" (The Tales of Moon and Rain)
  459. Representative works
  460. Representative works include 'Kiunhiu,' 'Momiji-kan' (紅葉館) (stored at the Saga Prefectural Art Museum).
  461. Representative works include: Long Landscape Scroll, Summer and Winter Landscape, View of Amanohashidate, Broken Ink Landscape, Portrait of Ekadanpi, Fall and Winter Landscape, and Folding Screen of Birds and Flowers of the 4 Seasons.
  462. Representative works:
  463. Representative: Isuke TANAKA
  464. Representative: Masahiro YOSHIMURA
  465. Representatives
  466. Representatives of Japanese embroidery
  467. Representatives of the Shimazu family from Kagoshima also attend the service.
  468. Representatives of what are referred to as tsuma
  469. Represented in some of these materials were: Appreciation of the art of flower arrangement, poetry, small pieces of song, manners for writing, business know-how, penmanship, brushwork, and synonyms for the names of the months.
  470. Representing a Zen koan (a paradoxical question for Zen meditation) about how to catch a catfish with a gourd, it was commissioned by Seii Taishogun of the Muromachi shogunate, Yoshimochi ASHIKAGA, and was created before 1415.
  471. Representing a concept that inherited Kyowarabe (Kyoto's young people) and the like in the Heian period, Machi-shu was to be evolved into Chonin (townspeople) in the early-modern and Edo periods.
  472. Represents crying.
  473. Reprint
  474. Reprinting was included in 'Nihon Shiso Taikei' (A collection of philosophical thoughts in Japan).
  475. Reprints of the original have been published.
  476. Reproduction
  477. Reproduction of Original Works
  478. Reproductions have been made at regular intervals since 2006, and the original paintings will be housed in Kyoto National Museum.
  479. Reproductions of the Rokujo estate include those by Takuya TAMAGAMI (with the cooperation of The Obayashi corporation), Seiroku OTA and Kozo IKE.
  480. Reptiles and amphibians
  481. Republic of China
  482. Republic of Formosa
  483. Republic of Korea
  484. Republic of Korea (South Korea) and Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea) (in Korean)
  485. Republic of Korea also has a culture of ordinarily eating somen.
  486. Republican Speech Affair
  487. Reputation
  488. Reputation as a Calligrapher
  489. Reputation as a novelist
  490. Reputation as a poet
  491. Reputation in Later Generations
  492. Reputation of Ryoma by his contemporaries
  493. Reputed burial place: Kanehira's tumulus in Kawanakajima, Nagano City
  494. Reputed in the Edo period that this part was effective as a medicine.
  495. Reputed to be brilliant from an early age, he entered Kennin-ji Temple in Kyoto to study Buddhism in 1595, but refused to enter the priesthood and returned to his family.
  496. Reputed to be the most beautiful woman in Japan, Lady Ro was on good terms the wife of FUJIWARA no Kanemasa, the Minister of the Left (who was also the eldest daughter of Kiyomori) and was therefore able to become a high ranking lady and later the mistress of Kanemasa, by whom she had a daughter.
  497. Reputed to have been built by Rikyu.
  498. Reputedly, this temple was founded by Kukai (Kobo Daishi) in 824 at the imperial order of Emperor Junna as a jingu-ji temple (a temple associated with a shrine) of Oyamato-jinja Shrine.
  499. Request of the consolidation of Korea and Japan
  500. Requested from Kakusai UNNO, Housai KAMEDA inscribed on Unzen's tombstone, carved as 'Unzen sanjin bomei' (epitaph on tombstone of Unzen, a hermit).
  501. Requested from Tang to support their army to conquer Goguryeo immediately, King Munmu ordered Kim Yushin and other fellows to supply food to the Tang army staying in Pyongyang, in order to show their intention of total backup.
  502. Requests for 'sake produced in this prefecture with rice unique to the prefecture' had been accumulated among breweries in Yamagata Prefecture.
  503. Requests for licenses to publish books on creeds were required to be submitted to the Kyobusho.
  504. Required courses (licenses, certifications, liberal arts)
  505. Required qualifications for application are a minimum of a junior high school degree, no experience required, and un upper age limit, and the training period is six years.
  506. Required time: approximately five minutes.
  507. Requirement information for Uneme was:
  508. Requirement of an apology for the Ganghwa Island incident.
  509. Requirements for priesthood and chief priest
  510. Requirements for sakana
  511. Requirements for special grade by Japan Agricultural Standard contain the item of 'it must be honjozo,' which means the special grade soy-sauce must be 'honjozo' soy-sauce.
  512. Requirements to be tenka-bito
  513. Rescript on Imperial Funeral Ceremonial (No. 11 of the Imperial family's Act in 1926) states that Minister of the Imperial Households shall announce the death of a grand empress dowager and decide her posthumous title and that the emperor shall host her funeral.
  514. Rescue effort
  515. Research
  516. Research Center for Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, attached to the Institute
  517. Research Center for Advanced Policy Studies, attached to the Institute
  518. Research Center for Disaster Reduction Systems, attached to the Institute
  519. Research Center for Earthquake Prediction, attached to the Institute
  520. Research Center for Economics of Complex Systems, attached to the Institute
  521. Research Center for Environmental Quality Management (Otsu City, Shiga Prefecture)
  522. Research Center for Financial Engineering, attached to the Institute
  523. Research Center for Fluvial and Coastal Disasters, attached to the Institute
  524. Research Center for Geophysics attached to the Department of Science at Kyoto University (registered tangible cultural properties, Beppu City, Oita Prefecture, 1924)
  525. Research Center for Human Security
  526. Research Center for Inflammation and Regenerative Medicine
  527. Research Center for Intelligent Information Science
  528. Research Center for Interfacial Phenomena
  529. Research Center for Low Temperature and Materials Sciences
  530. Research Center for Nano Medical Engineering
  531. Research Center for Nuclear Physics (RCNP), Osaka University
  532. Research Center for Safe Nuclear System, attached to the Institute
  533. Research Center for Social Common Capital
  534. Research Center for Telecommunications Systems (in fiscal Heisei 18)
  535. Research Center for World Wide Business, Research Center for Human Security, Research Center for Social Common Capital, International Center (International Division), Center for Japanese Language and Culture (International Education Division), co-op bookshop
  536. Research Center for Worldwide Business
  537. Research Center for Worldwide Business, Research Center for Human Security, Research Center for Social Common Capital, International Center (International Department), Japanese and Japanese Cultural Education Center (Department of International Education), Department of books in co-op
  538. Research Center on Landslides, attached to the Institute
  539. Research Department of Applied Mathematical Science
  540. Research Department of Basic Mathematical Science
  541. Research Department of Behavioral and Brain Sciences
  542. Research Department of Biological Responses
  543. Research Department of Cell Biology
  544. Research Department of Cellular and Molecular Biology
  545. Research Department of Ecology and Social Behavior
  546. Research Department of Evolution and Phylogeny
  547. Research Department of Genetics and Molecular Biology
  548. Research Department of Infinite Analysis
  549. Research Department of Material Science
  550. Research Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering
  551. Research Department of Radiation Life Science and Radiation Medical Science
  552. Research Department of Viral Oncology
  553. Research Division for Core Curriculum Design
  554. Research Division for Information and Media Study Design
  555. Research Division for Studies in Higher Education
  556. Research Division of Atmospheric and Hydrospheric Disasters
  557. Research Division of Biochemistry
  558. Research Division of Creative Research and Development of Humanosphere
  559. Research Division of Cultural Composition
  560. Research Division of Cultural Interrelationship
  561. Research Division of Cultural Processes
  562. Research Division of Cultural Representation
  563. Research Division of Cultural Research Methodologies
  564. Research Division of Diagnostics and Control of Humanosphere
  565. Research Division of Disaster Management for Safe and Secure Society
  566. Research Division of Earthquake Disaster Prevention
  567. Research Division of Earthquake Hazards
  568. Research Division of Economic & Political Dynamics
  569. Research Division of Economic Information Analysis
  570. Research Division of Economic Institution
  571. Research Division of Environmental Chemistry
  572. Research Division of Fundamental Physics
  573. Research Division of Geohazards
  574. Research Division of Human-Nature Dynamics
  575. Research Division of Integrated Area Studies
  576. Research Division of Materials Chemistry
  577. Research Division of Materials Structure
  578. Research Division of Multidisciplinary Chemistry
  579. Research Division of Physics under Extreme Conditions
  580. Research Division of Public Policy
  581. Research Division of Socio-Cultural Dynamics
  582. Research Division of Synthetic Chemistry
  583. Research Facilities
  584. Research Field of Biological Function
  585. Research Field of Clinical Application
  586. Research Field of Regeneration Control
  587. Research Field of Tissue Engineering
  588. Research Institute for Buddhist Culture
  589. Research Institute for Humanity and Nature
  590. Research Institute for Mathematical Sciences
  591. Research Institute for Social Sciences
  592. Research Institute for Sustainable Humanosphere
  593. Research Institute of Bukkyo University
  594. Research Institute of Innovative Technology for the Earth
  595. Research Institution
  596. Research Organization for Total Humancare Support
  597. Research Reactor Institute (Kumatori-cho, Osaka Prefecture)
  598. Research about operating high-speed trains in such a section in winter was not able to be sufficiently completed before starting operation.
  599. Research also found that silicon dioxide, which causes inflammation when taken into lungs, and β glucan, one configuration of the mycelium mold, were included in kosa.
  600. Research and Commentary on Soujun IKKYUU
  601. Research and Development Center for Bamboo Resources
  602. Research and Development Center for Composite Materials
  603. Research and Education on Complex Functional Mechanical Systems
  604. Research and Information Center for Asian Religious Culture of Bukkyo University
  605. Research and historical materials
  606. Research and introduction
  607. Research and study of the 'Jinno Shotoki' experienced a resurgence a few years after the end of World War II, once the Imperial house had been barred from active involvement in governing.
  608. Research based on dust-falling frequencies in the last 1,000 years (between 1000 to 1999, roughly the last 1,000 years) showed that an increase in the dust-falling frequency was inversely proportional to an increase in the temperature, supporting this theory.
  609. Research center
  610. Research done by Engyo MITAMURA has spread a theory that she was the same person as Hananoi, a sister of Anekoji, who is said to have wielded power over O-oku.
  611. Research done on bone from his skull analyzing the musculature of the temple and under jaw has revealed that his facial structure was like that of most people.
  612. Research excavation prior to any construction work was mandatory for certain areas in Fuchu City which used to be the seat of the provincial office of Musashi Province.
  613. Research expenses
  614. Research for documentation about Reigaku later became part of the study of old documents.
  615. Research has found that there is crossability between Japanese cedar pollen and Japanese cypress pollen.
  616. Research history
  617. Research in Korea.
  618. Research in Mythology
  619. Research in Recent Years
  620. Research in Taiwan
  621. Research in manga
  622. Research in recent years has shown a below-mentioned assumption.
  623. Research in recent years suggests that the Biwajima clan, which appeared during the Sengoku Period, may be none other than the Hachijo Uesugi clan.
  624. Research in schools
  625. Research institutes
  626. Research into Japanese Cedar Pollinosis
  627. Research into both Chinese literature and neo-Confucianism was conducted mainly in the Gozan (the five great Zen temples) of Kyoto, leading to the appellation "Gozan literary scholarship."
  628. Research into seppuku
  629. Research laboratory of Gunze Limited
  630. Research of ancient documents conducted by Kiyomizu-dera Temple shows that 234 people actually jumped down from the Butai from 1694 to 1864 and 85.4% of them survived.
  631. Research of the inside of the stone chamber had been made several times from the Edo period to the Meiji period.
  632. Research on Zeami has progressed and has since identified, at present, 21 kinds of Densho from Zeami.
  633. Research on applied technology of nano hybrid structure
  634. Research on evaluation of physical properties which appear by controlling the fine structure of interfaces.
  635. Research on grain impressions on earthware progressed and it is known that rice-cropping techniques were introduced to Japan Archipelago by the end of the Jomon period at the latest.
  636. Research on the Konshu-ji and Fukuju-ji Temples has been going on with the study of literature and the excavation of the sites in order to clarify their relationships with Todai-ji Temple built later.
  637. Research on the effects of anti-obesity medicine and anti-obesity aspects of food made of carpels is in progress (patent publication number 2005-040107.)
  638. Research papers
  639. Research project for Total Humancare Support
  640. Research project in Taiwan
  641. Research results in the Kamonomiya section were used effectively for the development of 0 series Shinkansen electric train-cars, the first generation Shinkansen electric train-cars, and for that of railway facilities.
  642. Research results of this group was gathered as a report titled "The Administrative System of the Qing Dynasty," and its exhaustive study content became the essential material for studying the modern history of China.
  643. Research was also conducted.
  644. Research with regard to government, nation, and corporation, legal research with regard to corporate behavior of worldwide business, economic research with regard to corporate behavior of worldwide business, and research on new trends of strategic management for worldwide business.
  645. Research, preservation and exhibitions are mainly managed by the Nara National Research Institute for Cultural Properties.
  646. Research, reports and books handed down in gyoji families.
  647. Researchers advocating that the mirror was produced in Japan point out the following questions while those advocating Himiko's mirror disagree.
  648. Researchers have nearly reached consensus on the identification of 'Sai', 'Ko' and 'Bu' in the above theory, but 'San' and 'Chin' are yet to be confirmed due to discrepancy between the traditions written in Sungshu (Book of the Sung dynasty) and Kiki (Kojiki [Record of Ancient Matter] and Nihonshoki).
  649. Researchers including Masayoshi ISOGAI, Haruo UENO, Shoji SASAMOTO, Shunroku SHIBATSUJI, Yu HIRAYAMA, Takashi AKIYAMA appeared, and published documents on the empirical study or the Takeda clan related materials.
  650. Researchers of "Hakkenden" are as follows:
  651. Researchers of Japanese architectural history
  652. Researchers on history and archaeology regarded the Kyushu dynasty theory as a theory which is worth investigating because basic procedures on history such as historical material criticism had not been conducted and it was inconsistent with the results of archaeological material analysis.
  653. Researchers on theories of Japanese cultural and racial uniqueness consider that the existence of such wording to express discrepancy between personal feelings and social view is an element of austerity of Japanese people in their courtesy and culture.
  654. Researchers who consider Ju-kyo as a religion are a minority, but it was Ryuji YAMASHITA and Nobuyuki KAJI who opened the way to view the essence of Ju-kyo as religion in terms of academic research.
  655. Researchers' analysis and comments
  656. Researches about the vibration of train-cars in high-speed running conditions and about air force characteristics were advanced significantly by the existence of engineers who had belonged to the former Japanese forces.
  657. Researches and international activities
  658. Researches and studies of reports and books handed down in the leading families in sumo, the Yoshida family and the Gojo family.
  659. Researches conducted by a group including Satoshi TSUKITAKU, a performer of the fue-kata (flute players) Morita school, recently revealed su-utai from the Shindo school had been handed down in the Matsue region.
  660. Resembles the kamishimo (an Edo-period ceremonial dress of the warrior class).
  661. Resembling the bakufu, in many han (domains), as their vassals' appanage generally changed from chigyo (grant) to kuramai (payment by rice from warehouses), gundai (intendant of a region or administrator of a town) and daikan who were appointed by their han came to administer vassals' territories together.
  662. Reservation can be made by telephone or via the Internet.
  663. Reservation is requested by the previous day (reservation by phone is accepted).
  664. Reservation is required for boarding due to the reserved-seat system on entire services.
  665. Reservation required, and chef's choices are available only during lunch and dinner.
  666. Reservations are said to be necessary because it takes time for the room arrangement and preparing the cuisine.
  667. Reserve corps
  668. Reserve funds were sometimes used for acquiring farm lands and other properties belonging to the 'ko.'
  669. Reserved seats are available.
  670. Resided castles of Masamune
  671. Residence
  672. Residence in Edo
  673. Residence of Etsuzo YOSHIDA, one of the founders of Omi Brotherhood Co., Ltd.
  674. Residence of Prince Nagaya
  675. Residence of the monarch
  676. Residence site: Kamitachiuri-agaru-nishigawa, Karasuma-dori Street, Kamigyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture (historic site of Kyoto City)
  677. Residences
  678. Residences mainly line Tonodan-dori Street with a few stores as well.
  679. Residences of people in high classes
  680. Residences of the Karako, Karakominami, and Karakohigashi clans were built.
  681. Residences, trading houses and churches for foreign residents were built in the foreign settlements which were established in the final days of the Tokugawa shogunate.
  682. Resident areas were formed on low hills to the north/west/south of the ruins.
  683. Residential alleys are built to provide access to small corners within the block.
  684. Residential areas and rural zones spread as if they surround Mt.Otoko; in particular the western side is an densely populate area called Otokoyama housing complex.
  685. Residential areas for nobles were established mainly in Sakyo, excepting the northern Ukyo which was close to Daidairi.
  686. Residential danchi are very often constructed by the Japan Housing Corporation (now the Urban Renaissance Agency) or local governments.
  687. Residential district (Hashimoto Kibogaoka)
  688. Residential house of Isa family (Kozuya-hachioji, Yawata City)[Yawata City]
  689. Residential house of Ishida family (Miyama-cho, Kitakuwata County, Kyoto Prefecture) [Nantan City]
  690. Residential house of Kobayashi family (Miyama-cho, Kitakuwata County, Kyoto Prefecture)[Nantan City]
  691. Residential house of Kobayashi family [Kizugawa City]
  692. Residential house of Ogawa family
  693. Residential house of Ogawa family (Omiyadori Oike-sagaru, Nakagyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture) [Sanbo Daiku-cho, Omiyadori Oike-sagaru, Nakagyo Ward, Kyoto City]
  694. Residential house of Reizei family (Imadegawadori Karasuma Higashi-iru, Kamigyo Ward, Kyoto City) [Genbu-cho, Imadegawadori Karasuma Higashi-iru, Kamigyo Ward, Kyoto City]
  695. Residential house of Sawai family (Tanabe-cho, Tsuzuki County, Kyoto Prefecture (present Kyotanabe City))[Kyotanabe City]
  696. Residential house of Takizawa family (Kurama Hon-machi, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City, Kyoto Prefecture) [Kurama Hon-machi, Sakyo Ward, Kyoto City]
  697. Residential house of Toyama family (Kawarabayashi-cho, Kameoka City, Kyoto Prefecture) [Kameoka City]
  698. Residential house of Urasenke family (Honpojimae-cho, Ogawadori Teranouchi-agaru, Kamigyo Ward, Kyoto City) [Honpojimae-cho, Honpojimae-cho, Ogawadori Teranouchi-agaru, Kamigyo Ward, Kyoto City]
  699. Residential house of Watanabe family (Tanba-cho, Funai County, Kyoto Prefecture) [Kyotanba-cho, Funai County,]
  700. Residential house of Yukinaga family (Ogura, Maizuru City, Kyoto Prefecture) [Maizuru City]
  701. Residential land and parks were also allotted but not confiscated, and selling and buying at the owner's discretion were permitted.
  702. Residents in those areas were forcibly ordered to move out of their homes.
  703. Residents of Hino City do not eat eels.
  704. Residents of Kyoto for many generations, the family has performed mainly in the Kansai area, but in recent years, they have enjoyed an increasing amount of exposure in the media and expanded their sphere of activities across the country.
  705. Residents of the association learned this fact through a communication from Gunma Prefecture.
  706. Residents taking turns cleaning a garbage site may also be considered a newly established form of fushin (or yui).
  707. Residents were forcibly ordered to move out of their homes.
  708. Residents were strongly opposed to this but the measurement was implemented and hokora were abolished.
  709. Residents who had failed to apply for compensation submitted applications to the Pollution Coordinating Committee.
  710. Resignation - Seinan War
  711. Resignation from the Shinchogumi - as a patriot of the restoration
  712. Resigned as Bingo gon no suke (provisional assistant governor of Bingo Province).
  713. Resigned as Iyo no Gon no kami.
  714. Resigned as Kebiishi no betto and Sahyoe no kami (Captain of the Left Division of Middle Palace Guards).
  715. Resigned as Kurodo no to and Udaiben
  716. Resigned as Nakatsukasa-no-taifu
  717. Resigned as Okura-kyo and Harima no Gon no kami.
  718. Resigned as Tanba no gon no kami
  719. Resigned as Uhyoe no kami.
  720. Resigned as kurodo and shonagon
  721. Resigned as the Mino-shojo within the same year.
  722. Resigned from Sahyoe no kami.
  723. Resigned from Sama no kami (even though there was no request, he passed on the position to MINAMOTO no Yoshitomo).
  724. Resigned from giji teisai torishirabesho sosai.
  725. Resigned from his position as Echigo no suke.
  726. Resigned from posts of Sadaiben, Danjodaihitsu, and Danjodaihitsu
  727. Resigned from the office of Sakone no shosho.
  728. Resigned from the position of Azechi.
  729. Resigned from the position of Jiju.
  730. Resigned from the position of Minbukyo.
  731. Resigned from the post of Bizen Gonno Kami
  732. Resigned from the post of Gonno Uchuben
  733. Resigned from the post of Kageyu no kami in January of 936.
  734. Resigned from the post of Sadaiben
  735. Resigned from the post of Sanuki Gonno Kami
  736. Resigned from the posts of Sadaiben and Saemon no kami.
  737. Resigned in September 1876.
  738. Resigning from the post of Kyoto Shoshidai and Roju was Kawai's advice.
  739. Resistance among provincial governors and the lords of shoen was fierce, however, so the following year this authority was revoked.
  740. Resistance to cold
  741. Resistance to disease
  742. Resistance to lodging, stem length and quality of stem and ear length
  743. Resistant strain
  744. Resisting brother-in-law Kumaji's support of the Shogitai (former Tokugawa retainers opposed to the Meiji government) following the collapse of the shogunate and beginning of the Meiji Restoration, the Takguchi family escaped to Yokohama and started a business.
  745. Resolution of traffic problems.
  746. Resolving the grudge can be interpreted as good.
  747. Resolving to repair the Imperial tombs: A godfather of zenpokoen-hun (keyhole-shaped tomb mounds)
  748. Resona Bank, Limited, Nagaoka Branch
  749. Resorting to his favourite stratagem, Motonari contrived to divide and weaken the Ouchi clan.
  750. Resourttrust XIV Yase Rikyu
  751. Respect for Ryoma SAKAMOTO
  752. Respect yourself
  753. Respect-for-the-Aged Day (the third Monday in September): Chigomai (Teine-jinja Shrine, Teine Ward, Sapporo City)
  754. Respectful Languages
  755. Respectful language in komonjo
  756. Respecting a more liberal collegial system, he firmly rejected the request.
  757. Respecting and believing Buddhism, Emperor Shomu built Todai-ji in Nara and other temples, trying to promote Buddhism as a national project.
  758. Respectively supported by the Miyoshi and Asakura clans, Yoshihide and Yoshiaki were expected soon to proceed to Kyoto to be proclaimed as the new Shogun.
  759. Respectively, there are costumes only for a certain number (Betsu-shozoku costumes) and those commonly used for more than one number (Tsune-shozoku costumes, etc.).
  760. Respond to the request of SASAKI in Tokyo, he and Tetsu HARA tried to undermine ITAGAKI's cause and, at the same time, organize the anti-ITAGAKI force in Kochi Prefecture.
  761. Responding such demands, poems were classified and arranged by themes of roei.
  762. Responding to a request by a temple in Mt. Tendai, China for Enryaku-ji Temple to send a hand-written copy of Tendai Kyoshaku (doctrine book) which had been dispersed and lost in China, he went across the sea to Goetsu (Wuyue) as Soshi (delivering envoy) in 953.
  763. Responding to intentions of the two, he executed an action to let the emperor Nijyo who had been confined in the dairi (Imperial Palace) by Nobuyori escape and transfer the emperor to the Rokuhara residence of Kiyomori.
  764. Responding to it, Fumimaro KONOE described Kenkyukai as 'eternally-official party in the House of Peers.'
  765. Responding to such demand, Kikkoman Corporation constructed soy-sauce factories in the United States, and soy-sauce has been loved as an international seasoning.
  766. Responding to that, Katsuyori TAKEDA in Kai Province invaded Higashi Mino Province.
  767. Responding to the question posed to Goso Konin (fifth leader Konin)'s apprentices, the leading apprentice Shenxiu wrote a poem on a new white wall including the phrase "Bakushisenjinai" (do not let it be in the dust).
  768. Responding to the request from the Tsushima Domain, the Shogunate ordered Ginza (an organization in charge of casting and appraising of silver coins during the Edo period) to mint silver coins which had the same grade as that of Keichogin, exclusively for the ginseng trade, in 1710.
  769. Responding to these activities, a course to train the guides for the Ashiu forest for research was opened in 1997, producing 16 guides in the same year.
  770. Responding to this in 1414, Mitsumasa KITABATAKE expressed his dissatisfaction with accession of Emperor Shoko in 1412, and raised a revolt to demand for abiding by the agreement of the alternate enthronement, but reconciled soon.
  771. Responding to this situation, to preserve the remaining parts of Odoi, the government designated eight sites as National Historic Spots in 1930.
  772. Responding to this, Emperor Shomu sent out an ordinance of summons to Hirotsugu.
  773. Responding to this, Monto rose in revolt around the nation, and the uprising by Gansho-ji Temple in Nagashima in Ise Province (Nagashima Ikko-Ikki) brought down Kokie Castle in Owari Province.
  774. Response of the Qing Dynasty
  775. Response to a result of philology
  776. Responses by bakufu, however, confused and the punitive force to attack the Akamatsu clan was not easily organized.
  777. Responses of the bakufu
  778. Responsible for governing gokenin.
  779. Responsible for practices concerning lawsuits filed with bakufu.
  780. Responsible for the trial lawsuits filed with the bakufu.
  781. Responsible for those artistic fields that are not included in the abovementioned courses.
  782. Resshi had with her a daughter.
  783. Rest and Wash
  784. Rest houses for travelers where tea, simple meals, and alcohol were sold.
  785. Rest of His Life (His Later Years)
  786. Rest rooms (all available 24 hours)
  787. Rest station teahouse located near a shrine.
  788. Restaurant
  789. Restaurant 'Calm' is located at ground level.
  790. Restaurant Takasago(れすとらん高砂)
  791. Restaurant: it is an ordinary staff's dining room that staff of the Imperial Household Agency, persons concerned, press club members can use, and in this room, there is an vending machine to sell milk produced in Goryo Farm (farm of imperial property) and anyone who can use the dinning room can buy it.
  792. Restaurants
  793. Restaurants and general stores that were the refurbished machiya to offer modern features while maintaining their original form, public cultural facilities, temples and shrines began to dot various areas of the town.
  794. Restaurants and other facilities that use oshibori in large quantities sometimes use rental oshibori services instead of making oshibori by themselves.
  795. Restaurants and shops that provide a 'demae' service without the need for preordering offer foods such as sushi, soba (buckwheat noodles), udon (wheat noodles), donburimono (rice dishes), ramen (Japanese noodles which originated in China), Chinese dishes, curry and rice, pizza and Western dishes.
  796. Restaurants in China sell not only the Shunde style 'yu sang' dishes which are served with a sauce and condiments but also commonly serve dishes including Japanese spiny lobster and salmon with soy sauce mixed with plenty of wasabi paste.
  797. Restaurants in the country side often serve "tanin-don" under tha name of "oyako-don" in which pork used in stir-fried dishes is used instead of chicken to save preparing time and effort.
  798. Restaurants mainly offering teishoku (set menus) are generally called 'teishoku-ya' (teishoku restaurant) or local eating places.
  799. Restaurants make their own kaeshi, and the recipe and preparation method are often kept secret because it defines a restaurant's taste more than stock.
  800. Restaurants offering teishoku (set menus).
  801. Restaurants on the west bank of the Kamogawa River build wooden terraces above the riverside between the Nijo Ohashi and Gojo Ohashi Bridges form May to September.
  802. Restaurants or teahouses may set tables and offer cuisine near rivers or outdoors so that the river can be seen well.
  803. Restaurants specializing in tonkatsu have signs with 'Tonkatsu' (pork cutlet) in Hiragana and their atmosphere and dishes are usually in the Japanese style.
  804. Restaurants that mainly serve curries may refer to a curry katsudon as 'katsu curry don' (curry rice with a cutlet served in a bowl of rice).
  805. Restaurants that serve katsudon other than tamagotoji katsudon often sell a set of katsudon in the form of the coupling of a tamagotoji katsudon with another.
  806. Restaurants that specialize in kabayaki are called 'unagiya,' highly reputed of which can be found in various localities.
  807. Restaurants which serve yakitori as Japanese cuisine have been increasing overseas as well.
  808. Restaurants with streambeds
  809. Restaurants: 11:00 to 23:00
  810. Restitution of the Soma-go village to the Chiba clan was '且被裁免畢' and realized, but the Tachibana-go village was not brought back.
  811. Restoration
  812. Restoration as Vocational Schools (old education system)
  813. Restoration based on historical investigation
  814. Restoration by Eisai and Gyoyu
  815. Restoration of Charter Oath
  816. Restoration of Imperial Rule (Japan)
  817. Restoration of Jingikan
  818. Restoration of Order in Kanto and Realization of a Centralized Administrative System
  819. Restoration of Ritsuryo Code and notes on the restoration process
  820. Restoration of Todai-ji Temple and construction of Jodo-ji Temple (Ono City) (Daibutsu-yo [Buddhist architectural style] which is also known as Tenjiku-yo [India style], Chogen SHUNJOBO)
  821. Restoration of an abolished Ie.
  822. Restoration of an abolished family must be reported to a chief of local authority (the Old Civil Codes, Article 164).
  823. Restoration of merged shrines
  824. Restoration of the family and conflict with Edo radical faction.
  825. Restoration to a Leading Figure
  826. Restoration was easier for the shrines that were nominally merged but their main building and other facilities remained.
  827. Restoration work began in October and filming resumed using a temporary stage.
  828. Restoration:
  829. Restored Taiho-ryo (Taiho Code)
  830. Restored Tenshu (復元天守) (also written as 復原天守)
  831. Restored during the Tensho era (1573-1591).
  832. Restored gigaku-men masks
  833. Restored to working conditions in 2002 in commemmoration of the 30th anniversary of the museum.
  834. Restored wooden Tenshu refers to Tenshu which were accurately restored to their original state with the same materials (kinds of wood), configuration type, and construction methods on the basis of then-surviving drawings, written records, ancient structural remnants, and so on around that time.
  835. Restoring public order and controlling violence were entrusted to Yoshinaka.
  836. Restraint.
  837. Restriction in the number of syllables and lines
  838. Restriction on staging
  839. Restriction on the entry to the mountain
  840. Restrictions on allowing women and firearms to pass were strict, particularly at the barrier checkpoints along the Tokaido Road from Edo on westwards.
  841. Restrictions on rights were based on the idea 'Reservation of the law' which indicated 'when the law is defined so' and 'within the limits of the law,' or the idea 'public peace and order.'
  842. Restroom
  843. Restrooms are located in the number one and four cars when two four-car sets of the 221 series are combined to make an eight-car set
  844. Restrooms are located near the stairway leading to the platform for Chushojima.
  845. Restrooms are located on the platform for Kyoto.
  846. Restrooms in the number one and number four car
  847. Restructuring the English Education-CALL, the Autonomous Study System, and Nurture of International Human Resources
  848. Result
  849. Result was that disciple of Nichiren, Nichiin (Nichiin's disciple was Nichijo, and second-generation pupils were Nichijin [Jinmon lineage of Hokke sect] and Nichiden [Nichiren sect Rokujo monryu] [the Rokujo Lineage]) defeated Shoshu in all arguments therefore Takatoki permitted propagation of Daimoku sect (Nichiren sect).
  850. Resultantly, Ieyasu left a vast amount of assets to the next generation.
  851. Resultantly, Kazumasa left the Tokugawa family to support the Toyotomi side, forcing Ieyasu into a corner.
  852. Resultantly, many stores were forced to move to other places or to be closed, and the place, which had once been a symbol of the commercial city of Fukuchiyama, was going to be closed.
  853. Resultantly, recently developed train-cars are considerably lighter than those developed in the era of JNR.
  854. Resultantly, the Toyotomi family was forced to become merely a 650,000-koku daimyo owning the three provinces of Settsu, of Kawachi, and of Izumi, and Ieyasu came to dominate the nation as virtual Tenkabito (the ruler of the nation).
  855. Resultantly, those who protested with force were suppressed as rebels.
  856. Resulting from his love of women, his life is threatened by Rigoletto, but he escapes with the devil's luck.
  857. Resulting from this achievement, an exceptional Tenmonkata nomination for the two generations, the Yamaji father and son, occured in 1846.
  858. Resultingly, those among the front-line troops who rendered extraordinary service were awarded army swords, letters of commendation, and other mementos 'as a firm promise of receiving the Order of the Golden Kite,' and among the army it was treated as an emblem of great military exploits.
  859. Results
  860. Results of Oshirogo
  861. Results of actual verification revealed that this length of time was enough for her to unseal them using saliva, paste them again and dry them with her body temperature.
  862. Results of investigation show that people who often drink miso soup have low death rate from stomach cancer.
  863. Results of the submission
  864. Results of this land survey were not used for the original purpose, because Ieyasu's territories were changed to the Kanto area immediately after the survey was conducted, but were effectively used to govern the new territories.
  865. Results of university examinations
  866. Resume
  867. Resumption to use official copper currencies cast by the government happened more than 600 years after the period of Kocho-Junisen, when Keicho-tsuho and Kanei-tsuho appeared in the market in 1608 and in 1627, respectively.
  868. Resuscitation period: Establishment of Kamakura bakufu (feudal government headed by a shogun) in the period of MINAMOTO no Yoritomo ~ Death of MINAMOTO no Yoritomo in the period of MINAMOTO no Yoritomo
  869. Retail
  870. Retail Outlet
  871. Retail sales
  872. Retail shops as a minor business style
  873. Retailer established in 1666 and represents Kitakinki.
  874. Retained his position as Assigned additional post of Ukone no chujo.
  875. Retained his position as Awaji no kami.
  876. Retained his position as Bizen Gon no kami.
  877. Retained his position as Chugu Gon no daibu (Provisional Master of the Consort's Household) and Shikibu gon no taifu (Provisional Senior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Ceremonial).
  878. Retained his position as Chunagon.
  879. Retained his position as Gon Ushoben (Provisional Minor Controller of the Right).
  880. Retained his position as Governor of Musashi Province.
  881. Retained his position as Governor of Sagami Province.
  882. Retained his position as Governor of Tajima Province.
  883. Retained his position as Head of the Bureau of Horses.
  884. Retained his position as Head of the Left Department of Military Affairs.
  885. Retained his position as Hyobu gonno-shobu(Assistant Minister of the Ministry of War).
  886. Retained his position as Iga no kami.
  887. Retained his position as Jusangu, Nairan and Dajodaijin.
  888. Retained his position as Kanpaku and Fujiwarashi choja.
  889. Retained his position as Kawachi no kami.
  890. Retained his position as Kotaigogu no suke.
  891. Retained his position as Kurodo no to (Head Chamberlain) and Shuri no daibu.
  892. Retained his position as Kurodo no to (Head Chamberlain), Shuri no daibu and Iyo no Kami.
  893. Retained his position as Kurodo no to.
  894. Retained his position as Mikawa no Kami.
  895. Retained his position as Mimasaka no kami.
  896. Retained his position as Minbu shoyu (Junior Assistant Minister of Popular Affairs).
  897. Retained his position as Minbukyo and Chugu no daibu.
  898. Retained his position as Minbukyo and Kotaigogu no daibu.
  899. Retained his position as Nairan.
  900. Retained his position as Nakatsukasa no Shoyu (Junior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Central Affairs).
  901. Retained his position as Sachujo (Middle Captain of the Left Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  902. Retained his position as Sadaijin and Sakone no daisho.
  903. Retained his position as Sadaijin.
  904. Retained his position as Saemon no kami.
  905. Retained his position as Sagami no kami.
  906. Retained his position as Sahyoe no kami.
  907. Retained his position as Sakone gon no shosho and Togu no suke.
  908. Retained his position as Sakone gon no shosho.
  909. Retained his position as Sakone no shogen.
  910. Retained his position as Sakone no shosho.
  911. Retained his position as Sakonoe no Gon no chujo and Chugu no Gon no suke.
  912. Retained his position as Sakonoe no taisho.
  913. Retained his position as Sakyo no gon no daibu.
  914. Retained his position as Sama no kami.
  915. Retained his position as Sangi and Dazai Gon no Sochi.
  916. Retained his position as Sangi, Sahyoe no kami and Bicchu no kami.
  917. Retained his position as Sangi.
  918. Retained his position as Sashoben (third-ranked officer of the left).
  919. Retained his position as Sashoben.
  920. Retained his position as Senior Third-Rank Provisional Vice-Councilor of State.
  921. Retained his position as Sessho.
  922. Retained his position as Settsu gonno kami.
  923. Retained his position as Shikibu shojo (Junior Secretary of the Ministry of Ceremonial).
  924. Retained his position as Shinano no kami.
  925. Retained his position as Shonagon.
  926. Retained his position as Suke of Bizen Province.
  927. Retained his position as Suo no Gonnosuke (supernumerary vice governor of Suo Province).
  928. Retained his position as Togu Gon no Daibu.
  929. Retained his position as Togu no Daishin and Governor of Musashi Province.
  930. Retained his position as Togu no fu.
  931. Retained his position as Togu no suke.
  932. Retained his position as Toshi choja.
  933. Retained his position as Udaiben (Major Controller of the Right) and Shuri no daibu (Master of the Office of Palace Repairs).
  934. Retained his position as Udaiben and Kageyu no kami.
  935. Retained his position as Udaiben.
  936. Retained his position as Udaijin and Togu no fu.
  937. Retained his position as Udaijin and Togufu.
  938. Retained his position as Uemon Gon no suke.
  939. Retained his position as Uemon no kami
  940. Retained his position as Uemon no kami.
  941. Retained his position as Uhyoe no kami and Kebiishi no betto.
  942. Retained his position as Uhyoe-gonnosuke.
  943. Retained his position as Ukon e no chujo.
  944. Retained his position as Ukon e no taisho.
  945. Retained his position as Ukone no Daisho.
  946. Retained his position as Ukone no Gon no chujo.
  947. Retained his position as Ukone no Gon no shosho (Provisional Minor Captain of the Right Division of Inner Palace Guards).
  948. Retained his position as Ukone no chujo.
  949. Retained his position as Ukonoe no Gon no Chujo.
  950. Retained his position as Ukonoe no chujo.
  951. Retained his position as Uma no gon no kami (Provisional Captain of the Right Division of Bureau of Horses).
  952. Retained his position as Uma no gon no kami.
  953. Retained his position as Ushoben and Chugu Gon no taijo.
  954. Retained his position as kurodo no to.
  955. Retained his position as naidaijin and Sakone no daisho.
  956. Retained his position as regent.
  957. Retained his position as sadaijin (minister of the Left).
  958. Retained his position as shuri no daibu (Master of the Office of Palace Repairs) and Iyo no Kami (Governor of Iyo Province).
  959. Retained his position as the Gonnoshojo of Shimotsuke Province.
  960. Retained his positions as Chunagon, Sahyoe no kami and Mutsu Dewa Azechi.
  961. Retained his positions as Daigaku no Kami, Monjo Hakase and Bizen no Kami.
  962. Retained his positions as Daijo-daijin and Ichiza.
  963. Retained his positions as Gon Chunagon and Chugu Gon no daibu.
  964. Retained his positions as Gon Chunagon, Chugu daibu, and Saemon no kami.
  965. Retained his positions as Kotaigogu no suke and Bizen gon no suke.
  966. Retained his positions as Kotaigogu no suke, Shikibu no taifu (Senior Assistant Minister of the Ministry of Ceremonial), danjo-daihitsu (senior assistant President of the Board of Censors), and Higo no Gon no kami (Provisional Governor of Higo Province).
  967. Retained his positions as Okura-kyo (Minister of the Treasury).
  968. Retained his positions as Sadaijin and Sakone no daisho.
  969. Retained his positions as Saemon no kami and Kebiishi no betto
  970. Retained his positions as Sangi and Saemon no kami.
  971. Retained his positions as Sangi, Kebiishi no betto, and Uemon no kami.
  972. Retained his positions as Sangi, Okura-kyo, and Harima no Gon no kami (Provisional Governor of Harima Province).
  973. Retained his positions as Shuri sagujo shi, kebiishi, Uchuben, and Saemon no gon no suke.
  974. Retained his positions as Udaiben and Saemon no kami.
  975. Retained his positions as kebiishi, Ushoben, and Uemon Gon no suke.
  976. Retained his positions as the Kurodonoto, Shikibu-shoyu, and Sachuben.
  977. Retained his positions as the Shikibu-shoyu and Monjo Hakase.
  978. Retained his positon as Sessho.
  979. Retained position as Naidaijin.
  980. Retained position as Sadaijin.
  981. Retained position of Monjo hakase
  982. Retained positions of Kebiishi no betto and Uemon no kami.
  983. Retained the position of Minbukyo.
  984. Retained the position of Sachuben.
  985. Retained the position of Shuriukyujoshi.
  986. Retained the position of Ukone no Gon no chujo.
  987. Retained the post of Kanpaku and status as head of Fujiwara clan.
  988. Retained the post of Kurodo
  989. Retained the post of Naidaijin (minister).
  990. Retained the post of Okurakyo
  991. Retained the post of Sagami no kami
  992. Retained the post of Sangi Sakone no Chusho
  993. Retained the post of Sesho.
  994. Retained the post of Ukonoe no Daisho
  995. Retained the posts of Chunagon and Mutsu Dewa Azechi.
  996. Retained the posts of Sadaiben and Izumo Gonno Kami
  997. Retained the posts of Sangi, Okurakyo, Sadaiben, Danjo-daihitsu, and Izumo Gonno Kami
  998. Retainer's Rooms and Carriage Porch
  999. Retainers
  1000. Retainers always watched outside at the gate of the town, some of which were equipped with a simple Yagura-mon Gate (turret-styled entrance).


285001 ~ 286000

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