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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Harima Province 11 found (214 total)
alternate case: harima Province
Kushihashi Teru
(718 words)
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the daughter of Kushihashi Koresada, the lord of Shikata Castle in Harima Province , and later became the foster daughter of Kodera Masamoto. She had brothers
Fujiwara Seika
(197 words)
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most well-known student was Hayashi Razan (1583–1657). He was born in Harima Province (now Miki City, Hyogo Prefecture) on February 8, 1561 to the Reizei
Ōtaki Domain
(656 words)
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Tennōji and his son, Honda Masatomo was reassigned to Tatsuno Domain in Harima Province . The Honda were replaced by the Abe Masatsugu, a hero of the Siege
Kikkawa clan
(567 words)
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seizure of Kajiwara Kagetoki and gained a territory in Fukui no sho, in Harima Province . He then distinguished himself in the Jokyu War and became the jito
Ashikaga Yoshinori
(1,469 words)
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territory; Mitsusuke burned down his own residence in Kyoto and went to own Harima province , and gathered his family and retainer to prepare for the battle. This
Hōjutsu
(706 words)
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Founder: Inoue Masatsugu - 井上正継 Era: Keicho (1596-1615) Place of Origin: Harima Province Parent School: Ise-no-Kami-ryu[5] Ise-no-Kami-ryū (伊勢守流) Founder: Mouri
The Top 100 Historical Persons in Japan
(1,495 words)
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Revolution Ōishi Kuranosuke (1659–1703) (karō) of the Akō Domain in Harima Province Ikariya Chosuke (1931–2004) comedian and film actor Wright Brothers
Akechi Mitsuhide
(4,488 words)
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of 550,000 koku.[citation needed] On June 4, Mitsuhide was sent to Harima Province as reinforcements for Hideyoshi, who was attacking the Mōri clan, where
Famous Views of the Sixty-odd Provinces
(723 words)
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Province 45 Harima (播磨) Maiko Beach (舞子の濱, Maiko no hama) 1853 / 12 Harima Province 46 Mimasaka (美作) Yamabushi Valley (山伏谷, Yamabushidani) 1853 / 12 Mimasaka
Ōuchi Yoshioki
(2,914 words)
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drew further support from Akamatsu Yoshimura, shugo of neighboring Harima Province and Hosokawa Yukimochi, his older brother and shugo of Awa Province
Kōji (food)
(2,150 words)
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Japanese book Harima no Kuni Fudoki ('Geography and Culture of the Harima Province ') first mentioned kōji outside of China and described that the Japanese