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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 tells of how Chiba Tsunetane’
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/shirahatajinjya.html 種別:html サイズ:22.572KB
shrine associated with Chiba Tsunetane, which worshipped the spring water that flowed through the Chiba clan’s territory Benitake Benzaiten is a shrine closely associated with Chiba Tsunetane. According to legend, when Tsunetane was praying for the prosperity and fortune of his descendants, the goddess Benzaiten came to him in a dream. Later, he moved the Benzaiten shrine that was located in Bengayatsu, Kamakura (currently Zaimokuza in Kamakura City, Kanagawa Prefecture) to this location. There used to be a spring in this area. It was one of the sources of the Yoshikawa River, a river which flows into the
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_benitakebenzaiten.html 種別:html サイズ:22.187KB
서의 분위기를 지금도 전하고 있습니다. Daigan-ji Temple An educational temple established by the chief vassals of the Chiba Clan, Hara Taneyoshi and his wife Daigan-ji, a temple of the Jōdo sect of Buddhism, was founded in honour of the monk Doyo Teiha during the Warring States Period of the Tenbun Era (1532-1555) by Hara Taneyoshi and his wife, who were chief vassals of the Chiba clan and lords of Oyumi Castle. It is said that Hara Taneyoshi's wife was healed of an illness, which increased
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_daigan-ji.html 種別:html サイズ:22.223KB
던 중세의 치바거리가 지하에 잠들어 있을 가능성을 보여주고 있습니다. Site of Dainichi-ji Temple (1-4 Chuo, Chuo Ward, Chiba City) This is where the Abira-san Mitsujo-in Dainichi-ji Temple (of Shingon Buddhism) was located; it was said to be in possession of the gravestones of the Chiba clan successors, known as the gorintos (five-tiered pagodas; currently Chiba City Cultural Relics). Kongoju-ji Sonko-in Temple–which worshipped Myoken, the guardian deity of the Chiba clan, currently
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_dainichiji.html 種別:html サイズ:24.394KB
Hamano Castle (Hamano-cho, Chuo Ward, Chiba City) Hamano is located on land that looks over Tokyo Bay. To the north of it flows the Hamano River (Shioda River); there is a street that runs north to south along the river, on which there was a town was formed in the north, south, and east. Excavations have proven that in the Tumulus Period (250-538 C.E) this area was already land, and a harbour was formed on solid stable ground nearby the coast. Furthermore, the legend* surrounding Sakai Sadataka, the ancestor of the Sakai clan in both Toke
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_hamanojo.html 種別:html サイズ:25.759KB
-ji Temple (1-6-14 Hon-cho, Chuo Ward) Hon’en-ji Temple is a temple of the Nichiren sect of Buddhism. It is said to be founded by Nichiju, the founder of the Kenpon Hokke Sect (Myomanji School), and Chiba Mitsutane, the shugo (military governor) of Shimosa Province, in the year 1381. Enjoji Tanehisa, a chief vassal of the Chiba clan who devoted himself to Nichiju’s disciple, Nichigi, built the dojo (Buddhist training hall) of the temple. In the Montokoji (“Ancient Records of the Disciples”), it is mentioned that Nichigi went to shugo Chibanosuke’s (thought to
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_honenji.html 種別:html サイズ:24.158KB
요한 존재였기 때문이라고 여겨집니다. 사찰의 경내에는 다네시게의 것으로 전해지는 공양탑이 있습니다. Inju-ji Temple Temple built in remembrance of Takeshi Taneshige, grandson of Chiba Tsunetane Inju-ji Temple is a temple of the Jodo sect of Buddhism, and its principal deity is the Amida Buddha. The main temple building features the Chiba clan’s family crest, the moon-and-star crest. It is thought that Ungan Shonin, a
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_inju-ji.html 種別:html サイズ:23.048KB
바“가문의 숙소는 명확하게 확인되고 있지 않습니다. Site of 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
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_inohanajo.html 種別:html サイズ:24.953KB
son of Chiba Ujitane, Hara Tanetaka, who was active during the Nanboku-chō period. While Ujitane was fighting against the Southern Court under the leadership of Ashikaga Takauji, he was also quite talented at Waka poetry and he was the only successful family head to have had his poetry published in the Imperial Collection of waka poetry, the “shin senzai wakashu”. He died at the young age of 32 in 1365, and it is said that this was the same year in which Kotoku-ji Temple was built. However, Tanetaka was still young at this time and it is
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_kotoku-ji.html 種別:html サイズ:22.371KB
사토미 씨의 화해를 기다려야만 했습니다. *지성(支城) : 본성의 보조적 역할을 하는 성 Site of Minami-Oyumi Castle A secondary castle built to protect Oyumi Castle located in the north by the retainer of the Chiba Clan, the Hara clan During the Warring States Period, there were actually two Oyumi Castles which existed in the north and south of the Oyumi region. Up until this time, it was said that the Minami-Oyumi Castle was built before the northern
https://www.city.chiba.jp/kyoiku/shogaigakushu/bunkazai/tagengo_minami-oyumijo.html 種別:html サイズ:23.531KB