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  • ...aka castle|Mabusezaka]] and [[Takatenjin castle|Takatenjin]] castles. When the [[Tokugawa clan|Tokugawa]] and Imagawa went to war after [[1568]], he sided [[Category:Samurai]][[Category:Sengoku Period]]
    585 bytes (70 words) - 04:28, 15 January 2020
  • ...ori silver mines and gained much prestige for this. He went on to fight at the [[Battle of Miyajima]] in [[1555]] and [[Battle of Moji|Moji]] in [[1561]]. [[Category:Samurai]][[Category:Sengoku Period]]
    550 bytes (78 words) - 15:01, 10 July 2016
  • ...'' (Japantown) in the Siamese city of [[Ayutthaya]]. He may have been from the [[Arima family]] of merchants, who held a [[shuinsen|red seal license]] for Sugihiro was succeeded as head of the community by [[Kiya Kyuzaemon|Kiya Kyûzaemon]], in [[1610]].
    603 bytes (85 words) - 18:28, 25 December 2015
  • ...[Takeda clan|Takeda]], Masakuni came to serve the latter. He was killed at the [[Battle of Nagashino]] and was succeeded by his younger brother [[Yashiro [[Category:Samurai]][[Category:Sengoku Period]]
    589 bytes (77 words) - 02:06, 8 March 2016
  • ...eji han]]. Born in [[1756]], he died at the age of five, and was buried at the temple of [[Keifuku-ji]] in [[Himeji]]. [[Category:Samurai]]
    499 bytes (65 words) - 21:06, 7 May 2020
  • Mutô Nobuyoshi was a prominent military officer and official of the [[Meiji period|Meiji]] through early Shôwa periods. ...attached to the Russian Legation, and as head of the secret service during the [[Siberian Intervention]].
    2 KB (289 words) - 01:03, 29 May 2015
  • ...as ''[[Jisha bugyo|Jisha bugyô]]'' in the early 1850s, and as a member of the ''[[roju|rôjû]]'' from [[1858]] to [[1859]].
    628 bytes (84 words) - 01:12, 15 September 2020
  • .... The ''[[Shokugozenshu|Shokugozenshû]]'', compiled in [[1251]], was among the famous compilations accredited to him. *Andreas Quast, ''Okinawan Samurai: The Instructions of a Royal Official to his Only Son'', Baden-Württemberg, Ger
    531 bytes (70 words) - 02:42, 28 October 2018
  • ...ima]] in [[1811]] (not traveling to [[Edo]]), Tadakata served as proxy for the shogun in formal audiences with them.<ref>Miyake Hidetoshi 三宅英利, "R [[Category:Samurai]]
    568 bytes (73 words) - 19:57, 11 June 2022
  • ...in 1498 and forced him to commit suicide. Some older sources give 1491 as the year Chachamaru was driven from Izu. * Nagahara, K. ''The Great History of Japan'' Japan, 1975
    2 KB (264 words) - 17:55, 26 January 2016
  • ...ess warrior and at the [[Battle of Okitanawate]] he was killed fighting in the rear guard. He is sometimes ranked as one of Takanobu's ''shi-tenno''. [[Category:Samurai]][[Category:Sengoku Period]]
    563 bytes (79 words) - 03:14, 16 January 2019
  • [[File:Ikeda-seihin.jpg|right|thumb|320px|The graves of Ikeda Shigeaki and his relatives at [[Gokoku-ji (Tokyo)|Gokoku-ji ...ing at times on the board of directors of [[Mitsui Bank]], as president of the [[Bank of Japan]], and as [[Ministry of Finance|Minister of Finance]] and [
    2 KB (268 words) - 02:10, 7 January 2017
  • ...民撰議院設立建白書-->, submitted to the government; the memorial was also signed by the likes of [[Soejima Taneomi]], [[Goto Shojiro|Gotô Shôjirô]], [[Eto Shinp ...helped found the [[Liberal Party]], Japan's first modern political party. The following year, he survived an assassination attempt by a right-winger.<ref
    2 KB (332 words) - 19:04, 20 July 2017
  • ...Nikko Toshogu|Nikkô Tôshôgû]], the final such visit by any shogun prior to the [[Meiji Restoration]]. [[Category:Samurai]]
    560 bytes (75 words) - 08:30, 1 April 2020
  • The ''San Buena Ventura'' was the first ship built in Japan to cross the Pacific Ocean, doing so in [[1610]]. ...p the ''[[Liefde]]''. The shogunate's ship was then piloted in 1610 across the Pacific, to New Spain, by Iberian navigators.
    634 bytes (92 words) - 15:04, 22 December 2015
  • ...ce]]. His diary of the invasion, ''Ryûkyû tokai nichinichi ki'', is one of the chief surviving firsthand accounts of those events. [[Category:Samurai]]
    577 bytes (76 words) - 23:58, 17 February 2020
  • ...|right|thumb|320px|Monzaemon as seen in a [[Meiji period]] print depicting the seven legends of ''[[bunraku]]'']] ...helping establish or create art forms which would go on to become some of the most prominent and distinctive of Japan's traditional arts.
    3 KB (402 words) - 10:58, 31 January 2017
  • ...tsu]]. In her infancy, she was betrothed to [[Date Tadamune]], but died at the age of two. *Cecilia Segawa Seigle, “Tokugawa Tsunayoshi and the Formation of Edo Castle Rituals of Giving,” in Martha Chaiklin (ed.), ''M
    511 bytes (71 words) - 20:07, 30 September 2017
  • ...(letters or other documents) which have survived and give us insight into the European view of Japan. * Medina, Jean Ruiz de, trans. John Bridges, ''The Catholic Church in Korea: Its origins 1566-1784'' Istituto Storico S.I. - R
    629 bytes (91 words) - 20:36, 9 April 2017
  • ...e of garment often worn by samurai women in certain ceremonial contexts in the [[Edo period]]. ...tubes, which held it up creating a rectangular or wing-like effect behind the wearer.
    657 bytes (99 words) - 07:31, 9 December 2016

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