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  • The Jinshin War was a succession dispute which took place in [[672]] between [[Emperor Tenj
    531 bytes (69 words) - 15:46, 6 October 2014
  • 44 bytes (5 words) - 13:47, 31 March 2018
  • The Second Opium War, also known as the Arrow War, was a war fought between the [[Qing Empire]] and a number of Western powers from [[18 Before the end of the war, British and French armies would invade [[Beijing]], and infamously sacked
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  • The Genpei War, fought between the [[Minamoto clan|Minamoto]] and [[Taira clan|Taira]] sam The war takes its name from the ''on-yomi'' or "Chinese-style" readings of the name
    27 KB (4,509 words) - 12:18, 18 August 2021
  • The Boshin war was the civil war in which the new Meiji government finished off the last of the Pro-[[Tokuga [[Enomoto Takeaki]] and former Bakufu retainers took Bakufu's fleet to Ezo, occupied [[Goryokaku|Goryôkak
    4 KB (512 words) - 10:45, 18 December 2021
  • ...out international war fought by the Meiji state. Like the [[Russo-Japanese War]] of ten years later, it was fought chiefly in Korea, and over which countr ...ition of [[Taiwan]] as a colony as part of the treaty agreement ending the war is similarly often cited as marking the beginning of Japan's imperialist/co
    8 KB (1,289 words) - 12:21, 18 August 2021
  • 38 bytes (4 words) - 18:48, 17 July 2014
  • ...ptych by [[Kobayashi Kiyochika]] depicting a scene from the Russo-Japanese War]] ...al Korea|Korea]], which became a Japanese protectorate as a result of this war.
    8 KB (1,205 words) - 10:51, 16 December 2021
  • [[File:Nahatugofwar-rope.jpg|right|thumb|400px|The tug-of-war rope on display in Kibôgaoka Park, Naha]] ...r towns (''yumachi'') of [[Naha]] competed against one another. The Tug-of-War has been officially recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as fea
    2 KB (260 words) - 09:20, 12 March 2017

Page text matches

  • The Second Opium War, also known as the Arrow War, was a war fought between the [[Qing Empire]] and a number of Western powers from [[18 Before the end of the war, British and French armies would invade [[Beijing]], and infamously sacked
    1 KB (209 words) - 02:30, 16 April 2020
  • #REDIRECT [[Genpei War]]
    24 bytes (3 words) - 18:48, 21 November 2015
  • ...o-Japanese War]] ([[1894]]-[[1895]]), and again after the [[Russo-Japanese War]] ([[1904]]-[[1905]]). Over 150 remain active or at least extant today.
    835 bytes (104 words) - 23:20, 31 March 2015
  • ...to Commander-in-Chief of the Combined Fleet, prior to the [[Russo-Japanese War]].
    882 bytes (118 words) - 10:57, 4 April 2017
  • ...aha]], [[Okinawa prefecture]], dedicated to the spirits of those killed in war. Though established originally, and still operated today, as a Japanese Shi ...as a ''[[shokonsha|shôkonsha]]'' (a shrine dedicated to the spirits of the war dead), and was renamed Gokoku Shrine ("shrine for the protection of the nat
    2 KB (300 words) - 09:43, 28 June 2017
  • ...gi Kenshin|Uesugi Kenshin's]] chief retainers, having supported him in his war for control of [[Echigo province|Echigo]]. ...agao Harukage|Harukage]] and led troops for him during the resulting civil war. In [[1564]] he is reputed to have murdered [[Nagao Masakage]] on Kenshin's
    1 KB (174 words) - 16:26, 20 July 2014
  • ...nd that of [[Emperor Antoku]] played a major role in sparking the [[Genpei War]]. ...r clash between Minamoto and Taira. Mochihito died in that battle, but the war between Minamoto and Taira would continue for five years, ending only in [[
    1 KB (198 words) - 04:46, 21 February 2018
  • ...] in [[1462]], and sided with the [[Hosokawa clan]] in the [[Onin War|Ônin War]] but did not actually send any forces to fight in the conflict. It was not
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  • ...astise the [[Abe clan]] and force their submission to the Imperial Court. (War lasts until [[1063]])
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  • ...ced to flee from [[Kyoto]] in [[1183]] amidst the violence of the [[Genpei War]]. Go-Toba took the throne in that year, though it is unclear whether Antok ...Oki Islands]], and never returned to the capital. In the wake of the Jôkyû War, the shogunate took a number of steps to expand its power, and to weaken th
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  • ...rful daimyô family in [[Shinano province]]. They became involved in a long war with the [[Takeda clan|Takeda]] and had by [[1553]] been driven from their
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  • ..., Takakiyo was a direct great-grandson of Kiyomori. Surviving the [[Genpei War]], he took the tonsure, and devoted himself to Buddhist practice at [[Mt. T ...th Oyler, “Time and History in The Tale of the Heike: Narrating the Genpei War (1180-1185).” Talk given at UC Santa Barbara, 26 Oct 2015.
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  • ...of the [[Taira clan]]. Antoku was perhaps the only emperor to ever die in war, and perhaps the only one whose official mausoleum is located far from the ...rt <i>his</i> claim to the throne over Antoku's, thus beginning the Genpei War. Takakura and Kiyomori both died the following year, in [[1181]], but the T
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  • ...ol of Echigo]] with [[Uesugi Kagetora]] and was afterwards involved in the war with [[Shibata Katsuie]] (of the [[Oda clan|Oda]]).
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  • [[File:Nahatugofwar-rope.jpg|right|thumb|400px|The tug-of-war rope on display in Kibôgaoka Park, Naha]] ...r towns (''yumachi'') of [[Naha]] competed against one another. The Tug-of-War has been officially recognized by the Guinness Book of World Records as fea
    2 KB (260 words) - 09:20, 12 March 2017
  • The collection suffered considerable damage during the [[Onin War|Ônin War]], but became larger and more well-maintained beginning in the early [[Edo
    2 KB (230 words) - 12:09, 21 February 2018
  • ...rtsmouth Naval Yard in Maine (USA), marked the end of the [[Russo-Japanese War]]. President Theodore Roosevelt of the United States served as the primary ...e Second Sino-Japanese War, the Chinese/continental portion of the Pacific War).
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  • ===[[Onin War|Ônin War]]===
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  • ...]]; Kagekiyo has been exiled from the capital for his participation in the war opposing the [[Minamoto clan]]. His daughter now comes around looking for h
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  • ...reunion with her fellow soldiers, who had never known, for twelve years of war, that she was a woman, and are thus surprised to see her made-up, and dress
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  • ===[[Gempei War]] (1180-1185)=== ...thers, and [[Taira Munemori]] is captured and later executed. The [[Gempei War]] ends.
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  • ...on]], he was captured once again in [[1331]], during the [[Genko War|Genkô War]]. Sent as a prisoner to [[Kamakura]], he was brought to [[Kuzuharaoka Shri
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  • ...Taiwanese) who died in service of Japan, Japanese civilians killed in the war, etc. ...great offense at these visits, associating such visits with the worship of war criminals.
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  • ...|Statue of Commissioner Lin in New York Chinatown, labeled "Pioneer in the War Against Drugs."]] ...are generally said to have played a major role in spurring the outbreak of war with Britain.
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  • *The Seven Years' War begins (ends [[1763]]).
    787 bytes (106 words) - 20:06, 14 July 2017
  • ...ardment of Kagoshima|Satsuma-England War]] of [[1863]] and in the [[Boshin War]] of [[1868]]. In [[1877]], however, he stood opposed to his cousin [[Saigo ...was active in the [[Sino-Japanese War|Sino-Japanese]] and [[Russo-Japanese War]]s. He also later served as Superintendent General<!--警視総監-->, [[Mi
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  • ===[[Genpei War]]===
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  • ...aveled to Washington DC as a staffer of the British Foreign Office. As the war neared its end, he applied for a special position at the London Times, and
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  • ...s initially a disagreement eventually escalated into a small internal clan war. Though Tanemune had the advantage for some time, Harumune gained the supp
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  • ...to such a degree that one might even think it was Japan that had lost the war. Still, he argued that such costs were unavoidable if Japan was to follow t ...ulture]] the following year. Following World War II, Sohô was suspected of war crimes, and was blacklisted from government service by the Occupation autho
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  • During the [[Sino-Japanese War|Sino-Japanese]] and [[Russo-Japanese War]]s, she became known for her close association with the Japanese Red Cross,
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  • Ikenoue Sadakata was a [[Satsuma han]] warrior who fought in the [[Boshin War]] and the [[Satsuma Rebellion]]. Following the Boshin War, Sadakata joined the [[Imperial Japanese Army]]. In [[1871]], he was promot
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  • This action prompted war with China, a war which ended with a treaty agreement in [[1044]].
    1 KB (152 words) - 18:16, 9 March 2017
  • ...ptych by [[Kobayashi Kiyochika]] depicting a scene from the Russo-Japanese War]] ...al Korea|Korea]], which became a Japanese protectorate as a result of this war.
    8 KB (1,205 words) - 10:51, 16 December 2021
  • ...to [[China]] in [[1840]]. After residing in Singapore two years during the war between England and China, went up to China and resided about three years i
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  • *A motion picture, "The Spanish-American War," is shown in Okinawa for the first time.
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  • ...an University]]. He also served as translator and interpreter at the Tokyo War Crimes trials.
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  • ...te for training Zen monks. The temple was destroyed in the [[Onin War|Ônin War]] ([[1467]]-[[1477]]), but was rebuilt in [[1499]], and expanded a century ...970 in memory of the abbot's comrades who died in battle in Burma in World War II.
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  • ...a-ryû, which embraced his style, remained strong until the [[Onin War|Ônin War]], after which the Yasaka-ryû declined, and the tradition based on Kakuich
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  • ...d was discharged in November, [[1865]], at the close of the American civil war. After the war he attended school at Rural Seminary and Washington Academy, and afterward
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  • ...tely, Nagamasa betrayed his alliance with Nobunaga in [[1570]] and went to war with him on behalf of the Asakura family. The fighting continued for three ...owing Nobunaga's death, Shibata Katsuie and [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]] went to war over the issue of succession. Katsuie's army was crushed at [[Battle of Shi
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  • ...treet which is also home to several [[Edo period]] samurai homes; Kodama's former residence is identified by wooden plaques, but unlike the samurai homes, it ...sometime later by collaborator [[Gu Xianrong]]. He served as [[Minister of War]], and [[Naimusho|Minister of Home Affairs]] around the same time.
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  • The temple was rebuilt following World War II. The facade of the main worship hall today bears a pair of large golden ...ll-war-booty-to-go-back-to-okinawa.html?pagewanted=all&src=pm A 1465 Bell, War Booty, To Go Back To Okinawa]." New York Times. 6 April 1991.
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  • ...vy]] (IJN) to victory over that of Imperial Russia in the [[Russo-Japanese War]] of [[1904]]-[[1905]]. The following year, he participated in the [[Sino-Japanese War]], still as commander of the ''Naniwa''. He was then promoted to rear admir
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  • ...]] by [[Ikkyu Sojun|Ikkyû Sôjun]], it was destroyed in the [[Onin War|Ônin War]] and rebuilt in [[1491]] with the support of [[Owa Sorin|Owa Sôrin]], a w
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  • ...d the nickname ‘Hachimantaro’, or ‘First son (or First born) of the God of War (Hachiman)’. Abe Sadato comes across as an altogether more impressive man ...and gave him an opponent worthy in both warfare and culture. In fact, the war was nearly over. Sadato continued his flight until he reached another fort,
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  • ...lready resident in the city, most of whom were descendants of prisoners of war, were to be incorporated into the banners and encouraged to learn Chinese.
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  • This castle was totally destroyed during the [[Boshin War]]. The site is now Nagaoka Station and there is no trace of the castle.
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  • ===[[Gempei War]] (1180-1185)=== ...l [[Prince Mochihito]] issues a call to arms against the Taira. The Gempei War begins.
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  • ...ces opposing the [[Northern Alliance]] in the later stages of the [[Boshin War]]. In [[1869]], Susumu traveled to Germany for study, and became the first ...t position in the [[Sino-Japanese War|Sino-Japanese]] and [[Russo-Japanese War]]s. He was named a Baron (''[[kazoku|danshaku]]'') in [[1905]], and died in
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  • *War begins in earnest between the [[Trinh lords|Trinh]] and [[Nguyen lords]] in
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  • ...hogun]] have claimed descent. Defeating the [[Taira clan]] in the [[Genpei War]] (1180-1185) and uniting Japan, the Minamoto established the first shoguna ...leading a similar campaign against the [[Kiyowara clan]] in the [[Gosannen War]] of [[1083]] to [[1087]]. In both conflicts, the Minamoto fought on behalf
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  • ...those of Americans killed in the Battle of Okinawa, Korean War, or Vietnam War, or those regularly resident in Okinawa at the time of their death. The cem ==Individuals buried at Tomari prior to World War II==
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  • ...st Asia in conjunction with the military campaigns, painting images of the war. Following the war, he began studying the production of religious paintings. He died in 1974.
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  • The shrine lost its territory during the [[Onin War|Ônin War]] ([[1467]]-[[1477]]) which ravaged Kyoto, and so it was moved to within th
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  • ...of the [[1905]] [[Treaty of Portsmouth]] which ended the [[Russo-Japanese War]]
    369 bytes (52 words) - 03:05, 3 May 2020
  • ...ir power. Unfortunately, the situation was to change rapidly. The [[Genpei War]] began and in 1181 both Takakura and Kiyomori died, the latter's passing l ...th Oyler, “Time and History in The Tale of the Heike: Narrating the Genpei War (1180-1185).” Talk given at UC Santa Barbara, 26 Oct 2015.</ref>
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  • ...toki]], against the forces of [[Emperor Go-Toba]] in the [[Jokyu War|Jôkyû War]] of [[1221]].
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  • ...the postwar era, he worked to help bring back Japanese nationals from the former Empire. He served as head of the Japanese Red Cross from 1946 through 1965.
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  • ...[[1860]], however, by British and French forces during the [[Second Opium War]].)
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  • ==Post-war and today==
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  • ...kage initially supported the [[Yamana clan|Yamana]] in the [[Onin War|Ônin War]] but switched his loyalties to the [[Hosokawa clan|Hosokawa]] in [[1471]],
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  • ...themselves with ruling the vast tracts of land earned through 60 years of war and toil. ...da's relationship was more complex, ranging from relative peace to all-out war. In [[1562]] The Hôjô and Takeda made an alliance and Takeda Shingen adop
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  • ...ô Hospital in [[Sakura (city)|Sakura]] City, [[Chiba prefecture]],<ref>The former site of the hospital is today the Sakura Citizens' Gymnasium (''Sakura shim *Plaque at former site of Saiseidô Hospital, Sakura, Chiba.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/to
    2 KB (224 words) - 12:58, 19 April 2015
  • ...Onin War''. New York: Columbia University Press, 1967</ref> and the [[Onin War]] began. * Varley, H. Paul. ''The Onin War''. New York: Columbia University Press, 1967
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  • ...s later, the governor of Taifang, Wang Qi, was informed that Himiko was at war with Himikoko, king of Kuna (another polity in southern Japan), and was hav
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  • *The [[Peace of Westphalia]] ends the Thirty Years' War, and marks the emergence of the modern/Western concept of the nation-state.
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  • *The Seven Years' War comes to an end.
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  • ...wn as the "Chronicle of Great Peace," is among the most famous of Japanese war tales, or ''[[gunkimono]]''. It relates events of the 1330s, from the battl
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  • ...e stonework away to help build airfields. The road was widened in the post-war period, destroying further a portion of the property, but some remains of t *Plaque on-site at the former site of Sai On's mansion at Shuri Akahira-chô 1-45.
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  • ...[Yoshida Kenko|Yoshida Kenkô]] related in his ''[[Tsurezuregusa]]'' that a former [[Shinano province]] official by the name of Yukinaga composed the ''Tale'' ...real high point of the ''biwa hôshi'' tradition, until the [[Onin War|Ônin War]] broke out in the 1460s.
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  • ...uards to her palace as well. He was exiled following the [[Jokyu War|Jôkyû War]] in [[1221]].
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  • ===[[Russo-Japanese War]]=== *1904/2/8 Russo-Japanese War begins - [[Battle of Port Arthur]]
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  • ...Company]] arrive at [[Nagasaki]] and inform of the outbreak of the [[Opium War]]. *The [[Opium War]] begins in China (~1842).
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  • ...ra clan]] warrior who fought against the [[Minamoto clan]] in the [[Genpei War]] of [[1180]]-[[1185]]. He was the second son of [[Taira no Tadakiyo]]. ...'' and [[kabuki]] plays derived from them, he is said to have survived the war and to have gone into retirement (or into hiding) near [[Atsuta Shrine]] in
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  • ...[[Shanxi province]] in the year of its founding, in [[1038]], beginning a war with the Song which was to last until [[1044]]. During this time, the Song War with the Song broke out again in [[1080]]-[[1081]], and the Xi Xia continue
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  • Following World War II, in 1949, the institute took over custody of a collection of documents r
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  • ===[[Genko War|Genkô War]] & [[Kemmu Restoration]]===
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  • He fought against the Tokugawa [[Bakufu]] in the [[Boshin War]].
    655 bytes (80 words) - 14:16, 29 July 2014
  • ...these versions of the story, his father was a warrior who, as a result of war, ended up fleeing or being forced south, into the Ryûkyû Islands; there,
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  • ..., for power. Along with the [[Heiji Disturbance]] of [[1159]] and [[Genpei War]] of [[1180]]-[[1185]], it represents the beginning of the rise of the [[sa The famous ''[[Hogen monogatari|Hôgen monogatari]]'' war tale (''[[gunkimono]]''), while romanticizing and lionizing in its approach
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  • ...arried a sister of [[Uesugi Kagekatsu]]. In [[1578]], Kagekatsu provoked a war with him over inheritance issues and at length forced him to commit suicide
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  • The Jôkyû War, or Jôkyû Disturbance, was fought between the forces of [[Emperor Go-Toba ..., and other enemies of the [[Minamoto clan]] - the victors in the [[Genpei War]], and clan of the [[shogun]]s.
    5 KB (700 words) - 13:25, 8 October 2013
  • The so-called Iwai Rebellion of the mid-6th century was a war waged between the kingdom of [[Iwai (kingdom)|Iwai]], on northern Kyushu, a
    504 bytes (69 words) - 23:40, 22 August 2013
  • ...he results of peace negotiations following the end of the [[Russo-Japanese War]]. This marks possibly the first major urban riots of the modern period. ===Russo-Japanese War===
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  • ==Imjin War== ...Press (2016), 76-78.</ref> Throughout the war, for seven years, Yi kept a war diary, entitled ''Nanjung ilgi'' (亂中日記). He is also known for a num
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  • ...ovement as a ''[[shishi]]'', and fought for Satsuma domain in the [[Boshin War]].
    2 KB (255 words) - 09:17, 24 February 2020
  • ...ng the [[Kamakura period]]. For their contributions in the [[Hoji War|Hôji War]] of [[1247]], the Shibuya were then named ''[[jito|jitô]]'' of a territor
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  • ...out international war fought by the Meiji state. Like the [[Russo-Japanese War]] of ten years later, it was fought chiefly in Korea, and over which countr ...ition of [[Taiwan]] as a colony as part of the treaty agreement ending the war is similarly often cited as marking the beginning of Japan's imperialist/co
    8 KB (1,289 words) - 12:21, 18 August 2021
  • ...th century, knowledge of the source of the materials was lost during World War II. Recent research suggests that the source of ''tonbyan'' fibers is likel
    640 bytes (84 words) - 08:02, 14 June 2022
  • ...atenjin]] castles. When the [[Tokugawa clan|Tokugawa]] and Imagawa went to war after [[1568]], he sided with Tokugawa.
    585 bytes (70 words) - 04:28, 15 January 2020
  • *[[Onin War|Ônin War]] comes to an end.
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  • * 1500/6/7 The first [[Gion Matsuri]] takes place since the [[Onin War|Ônin War]].
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  • The Jinshin War was a succession dispute which took place in [[672]] between [[Emperor Tenj
    531 bytes (69 words) - 15:46, 6 October 2014
  • *Having defeated [[Prince Otomo|Prince Ôtomo]] in the [[Jinshin War]], Prince Ôama takes the throne as [[Emperor Temmu]].
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  • ...nor with the remote [[Iwo Jima]] far to the east, and famous for the World War II battle which took place there. ...n]] fleeing [[Minamoto clan]] persecution in the aftermath of the [[Genpei War]] made their way to Iôshima. A [[torii]] gate at the Iôshima [[Kumano gon
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  • ...[[Bombardment of Kagoshima|Satsuma-England War]] and the [[1868]] [[Boshin War]]. After the [[Meiji Restoration]], he was appointed a general of the Imper ...[1885]], and became an admiral in [[1894]], serving in the [[Sino-Japanese War]]. He became a fleet admiral in [[1898]]. Tsugumichi also served as [[Home
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  • ...], and platoon chief of the 23rd infantry regiment in the [[Russo-Japanese War]], later serving as military officer attached to the Russian Legation, and
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  • ...ct erupted between Burma and Qing China, resulting in a devastating border war for the Chinese. Numerous Chinese were felled in battle, and by disease, an ...tries to fall under Japanese control. Following its independence after the war, Burma pursued a friendly relationship with the Communist People's Republic
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  • ...d, and he somehow managed to avoid the chaos and troubles of the [[Jinshin War]] of [[672]], which took a toll on the power of the [[Nakatomi Clan|Nakatom
    3 KB (557 words) - 07:42, 16 July 2020

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