View allAll Photos Tagged daimyo
Japan - Lions raised funds, purchased relief supplies and shipped the supplies to Fukushima.
Photos courtesy of Lion Shuichiro Tokunaga, Fukuoka Daimyo Lions Club in 337-A (Fukuoka)
When Hideyoshi Toyotomi let many daimyos build it as a shortest route binding Osaka-jo Castle and Fushimi Castle together (1596) for Bunroku five years of old days for 400 years, it is said.
Japan - Lions raised funds, purchased relief supplies and shipped the supplies to Fukushima.
Photos courtesy of Lion Shuichiro Tokunaga, Fukuoka Daimyo Lions Club in 337-A (Fukuoka)
Japan - Lions raised funds, purchased relief supplies and shipped the supplies to Fukushima.
Photos courtesy of Lion Shuichiro Tokunaga, Fukuoka Daimyo Lions Club in 337-A (Fukuoka)
Daimyo – Seigneurs de la guerre au Japon
Du 15 février au 13 mai 2018
Musée Guimet / Palais de Tokyo,
Paris
Daimyo Princes du Soleil Levant by Francoise Faconnet
First issue: 1991/92
Jacquard 2000-2001 : Issued 90cm cashmere/silk
平林寺にある大河内松平家一族の墓所。川越城主松平伊豆守信綱を祖とする一族の墓所。
The old graveyard for the ancestral Ohkouchi Matsudaira's who were originated from Nobutsuna, a daimyo of the early Edo period, who ruled the Kawagoe Domain.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matsudaira_Nobutsuna
Date: 1st January 2010
Location: 埼玉県新座市野火止3-1-1
3-1-1 Mobidome, Niiza, Saitama, Japan
Photo by Yoshitaka Tokusho
Plaza Dilao Monument of Takayama Ukon - (Christian Daimyo) Born 1552 in Nara, Japan, died in Manila 1615
Japan - Lions raised funds, purchased relief supplies and shipped the supplies to Fukushima.
Photos courtesy of Lion Shuichiro Tokunaga, Fukuoka Daimyo Lions Club in 337-A (Fukuoka)
邪展 2006年9月18~24日 福岡・エンジョイスペース大名
Yokoshima-exhibition
Sept.18-24
2006
enjoy-space Daimyo,Fukuoka city,Japan
This is a photo of our ryugakusei trip to Yakage! It is a nearby rural town
that holds a festival called the Daimyo Gyoretsu, which means they have a
feudal lord procession march every year. The men marching wear all of the
traditional gear, march very slowly and accurately, and yell, “したに、したに!”
which way back when, used to mean “bow down as far as you possibly can” to
all of the residents of the town which the feudal lord would pass through.
The reason I chose this photo for time is because, for the procession, the
soldiers march INCREDIBLY slow. The whole procession takes about 3 hours
because they simply march so slow. This is a part of town where you could
wait to see the procession march by, but though we waited there for a good
15 minutes, we actually had to move to where the procession was to be able
to see it because that’s how slow they were moving. It took a lot more time
than we thought to be able to see them, and there was such a large crowd of
people in front of us that it was kind of difficult to see. Nevertheless,
it was a great experience to be able to see the marchers and the tradition
of the Daimyo Gyoretsu.
Daimyo – Seigneurs de la guerre au Japon
Du 15 février au 13 mai 2018
Musée Guimet / Palais de Tokyo,
Paris
Japan - Lions raised funds, purchased relief supplies and shipped the supplies to Fukushima.
Photos courtesy of Lion Shuichiro Tokunaga, Fukuoka Daimyo Lions Club in 337-A (Fukuoka)
Sengoku hime Mobile – Android & iOS apps – Free
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Sengoku hime series appears as a tower defense game!
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