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ます。 City flowering tree― the Oleander The Oleander is a tree indigenous to India,and bears beautiful red and white flower which blossom in the summer. The tree is called "kyochikuto" in Chineese due to its narrow leaves and flowers which resemble those of a peach tree. The Japanese name is also based on this similarity. (平成5年4月29日制定/ハス科・多年草) 市内検見川で発掘された古代ハスの実を故大賀一郎博士が発
https://www.city.chiba.jp/sogoseisaku/shichokoshitsu/kohokocho/prfindex.html 種別:html サイズ:23.584KB
all,I would like to talk about the Kasori Shell Mounds Museum. Have you ever heard of shell mounds? I work at Kasori Shell Mounds Museum now. It is embarrassing but I didn’t know about shell mounds until I was assigned here. Of course, I knew the name, but I didn't know the value at all. The lives of people who existed over a period of 2,000 years are recorded.Traces of life from between approximately 5,000 years ago until 3,000 years ago can be found here. We call the age between approximately 17,
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kasori/infomation/curaterdiary_o.html 種別:html サイズ:80.029KB
깝게 관련되어 있음을 엿볼 수 있을 것입니다. Shirahata Shrine The site where Chiba Tsunetane’s grandson defeated the Heike Clan According to legend, Yūki Inari was originally enshrined at Shirahata Shrine. It is said that the name of Shirahata Shrine came about in 1180, when Minamoto Yoritomo raised the white flag of the Minamoto Clan there after regaining power in the Boso Peninsula. This area was once known as “Yūki”. The “Genpei War Chronicles” were a record of the battles which occurred during the Nanboku-chō Period and legend
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/shirahatajinjya.html 種別:html サイズ:22.43KB
/Evergreen shrub of the Apocynaceae family) The oleander is a tree indigenous to India which bears beautiful red and white flowers that blossom in the summer. The tree is called ‘kyochikuto’ in Chinese due to its narrow leaves and flowers, which resemble those of a peach tree. The Japanese name is also based on this similarity. (Established April 29th 1993/Perennial of the genus Nelumbo) The Oga lotus is an ancient variety of lotus that was germinated and cultivated from seeds excavated at an archaeological site on the Hanamigawa River by the late Dr. Ichiro Oga. As a source
https://www.city.chiba.jp/shimin/shimin/kokusai/prfindex-en.html 種別:html サイズ:24.674KB
year 1962, but excavations on this site discovered evidence of people that had gathered together in groups, interred human bones dating back to the middle Jōmon period (approximately 5,000 years ago), as well as large amounts of relics that gave glimpses into how people lived at the time. The name “Kasori shell mounds” thus become well-known, and many people called for the preservation of these remains. Here, pit-dwellings and small storage pits from the Jōmon era, as well as cross-sections of the layer of shells that cover them are preserved in the condition as when
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kasori/infomation/r3_field-museum_honyaku.html 種別:html サイズ:21.986KB
city at that time. The Chiba Clan became followers of the Jishū Sect and Raikou-ji Temple became a prominent temple for the sect in the Kanto area. During the Edo Period, the temple converted to the Jōdo Sect and then became Raikou-ji Temple (the kanji characters for the name changed slightly). It was damaged during the war in 1945, which led to it being relocated to its current location. Within the grounds are a row of five stone memorial towers (designated cultural properties belonging to Chiba City) for Sadatane's son Ujitane, his son Mitsutane and Ujitane'
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/raikouji.html 種別:html サイズ:22.547KB
of Tsunetane praying for the prosperity of the Chiba Estate to mind. According to old records, Tsunetane and his heir, Tanemasa, were referred to as “Bengayatsu dono” (Lord Bengayatsu) and it was believed that they had a mansion in Bengayatsu in Kamakura (Sengakushubassui, Kamakurashi). It is said that the name “Bengayatsu” came from “Betsugayatsu,” the valley that Tsunetane resided in, which had its name come from the Chinese appellation of Tsunetane’s administrative position, suke (“assistant director”; its Chinese equivalent was biejia, which is read in Japanese as betsuga). Additionally, “Bengayatsu” (弁谷) can also be written as紅
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_benitakebenzaiten.html 種別:html サイズ:22.044KB
spirit of Taneshige, who was the grandson of Chiba Tsunetane. Tsunetane had six sons known as the Chiba Riku-to (“six parties of Chiba”), of which the third eldest was named Tanemori. Tanemori was granted a region known as Takeshi Township (currently Takeishi-cho, Hanamigawa Ward), and took on the name Takeshi from that region. Taneshige is Tanemori’s son. In the Genpei Tojo-roku (“Records of the Genpei Battles,” a variant of the Tale of the Heike), written between the end of the Kamakura Period and the beginning of the Period of the Northern and Southern Courts, it
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_inju-ji.html 種別:html サイズ:22.905KB
Inohana Castle (1 Inohana, Chuo Ward, Chiba City) Inohana Castle is said to have been the castle of the Chiba Clan since the Kamakura era. In 1126, Tsuneshige, the son of Taira no Tsunekane, moved his base from Oji, Kazusa Province (Midori Ward, Chiba City) to Chiba, assumed the name of the area Chiba as his last name, and called himself Chiba Tsuneshige. His son, Tsunetane, assisted Minamoto no Yoritomo and contributed greatly to the formation of the Kamakura shogunate. Those accomplishments resulted in Tsunetane gaining territory from the northeast of Japan down to the Kyushu in the south.
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_inohanajo.html 種別:html サイズ:24.811KB
theory is a legend surrounding Tokugawa Ieyasu. It is said that in 1614, Tokugawa Ieyasu stopped in Chiba on his way to Togane to hunt eagles, and drank tea that was made with water from this spring. Sixty years later, in 1674, Tokugawa Mitsukuni (grandson of Ieyasu, known by the name Mito Komon), who visited the region, left behind writings saying “There is water at the base of an old castle known as the ‘ochanomizu of Tosho-gu’ [Tosho-gu is Tokugawa Ieyasu’s deity title]. To the right, there is a forest of pine trees, where it is
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_ochanomizu.html 種別:html サイズ:24.075KB