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Eishō or
Eisho may
refer to:
Eishō (Heian period) (永承), ****anese era from 1046 to 1053
Eishō (Muromachi period) (永正), ****anese era from 1504 to 1521 Empress...
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Eishō (永正) was a ****anese era name (年号, nengō, "year name")
after Bunki and
before Daiei. The
period spanned the
years from
February 1504
through August...
- 1835 – 11
January 1897),
posthumously honoured as
Empress Dowager Eishō (英照皇太后,
Eishō-kōtaigō), was the
consort of
Emperor Kōmei of ****an. As the daughter...
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Eisho-ji (英勝寺) is a Jōdo-shū
temple in Ogi****atsu, Kamakura, Kanagawa, ****an, and is the sole
nunnery in Kamakura. The
mountain name is Tokozan. Okaji...
-
David Eisho Uehara is a ****anese
Anglican bishop.
Since 2013, he has been
bishop of Okinawa, and
since 2024, he has been the 20th
primate of the Nippon...
- (1503):
There was a
great drought in the
summer of this year.
Eishō 1 (1504): A
great famine.
Eishō 5, in the 1st
month (1508): A new
revolt in
Miyako and the...
- Chōkōsai
Eishō (鳥高斎 栄昌, fl. 1790s) was a ****anese ukiyo-e artist. He also used the name Shōeidō (昌栄堂).
Eishō's personal details are unknown. His works...
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Kobashigawa Eishō (小橋川永昌, 1909–1978) was a
potter born in Tsuboya, a
district within the
Okinawan capital of Naha, ****an. He is
considered one of the...
-
throwing techniques). In
February 1882, Kano
founded a
school and dōjō at the
Eisho-ji (永昌寺), a
Buddhist temple in what was then the ****aya ward of
Tokyo (now...
-
Masamoto was
killed by
Sumiyuki in 1507. This
incident is
called Eishō no
sakuran (永正の錯乱,
Eishō delirium). This
triggered a
struggle for the
succession of the...