Difference between revisions of "Kuni no miyatsuko"

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Mainly a 6th and 7th century position translated as "magistrate."
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*''Japanese'': 国造 ''(kuni no miyatsuko)''
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Mainly a 6th and 7th century position translated as "magistrate." William de Bary describes the ''kuni no miyatsuko'' as "the old local nobles whose power was at this time [c. [[604]] when the [[Seventeen-Article Constitution]] was written] giving way to that of the central government."<ref>William Theodore de Bary, ''Sources of Japanese Tradition'', vol 1, Second Edition, Columbia University Press (2001), 53n39.</ref>
  
 
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==References==
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[[Category:Ranks and Titles]]
 
[[Category:Ranks and Titles]]
 
[[Category:Terminology]]
 
[[Category:Terminology]]

Latest revision as of 17:04, 19 January 2015

  • Japanese: 国造 (kuni no miyatsuko)

Mainly a 6th and 7th century position translated as "magistrate." William de Bary describes the kuni no miyatsuko as "the old local nobles whose power was at this time [c. 604 when the Seventeen-Article Constitution was written] giving way to that of the central government."[1]

References

  1. William Theodore de Bary, Sources of Japanese Tradition, vol 1, Second Edition, Columbia University Press (2001), 53n39.