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Sugano no
Mamichi (菅野真道, 741 – July 23, 814),
originally known as Tsu no
Mamichi (津真道), was a ****anese
noble of the
early Heian period. He
reached the...
-
Shoki and
followed by
Nihon Kōki.
Fujiwara no
Tsugutada and
Sugano no
Mamichi served as the
primary editors. It is one of the most
important primary...
-
Baron Tsuda Mamichi (津田 真道, 25 July 1829 – 3
September 1903) was a ****anese
statesman and
legal scholar in the
Meiji period. He was one of the founding...
- Metz,
Frankish architect (b. 742) Reginfrid, King of
Denmark Sugano no
Mamichi, ****anese
nobleman (b. 741)
Triffyn ap Rhain, king of
Dyfed (approximate...
-
brought together, for example, in the work of the ****anese
reformer Tsuda Mamichi in the 1870s, who said, "Whenever we open our mouths...it is to
speak of...
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Kinen Gakkai 明治聖德記念學會.
Meikun ippanshō 明君一斑抄 (1910–1911). Ed. by
Kurokawa Mamichi 黒川真道. Tokyo: Dōbunkan 同文館.
Senior First Rank (June 27, 1903; posthumous)...
-
covering 697
through 791.
Completed by
Fujiwara no
Tsugutada and
Sugano no
Mamichi in 797.
Nihon Kōki (Later
Chronicle of ****an) – 40
volumes covering 792...
- date).
Amalberga of Temse,
Lotharingian nun and
saint (d. 772)
Sugano no
Mamichi, ****anese
nobleman (d. 814) T****ilo III, duke of
Bavaria (approximate date)...
- include:
Kenichi Sugano (菅野 賢一, born 1971), ****anese
footballer Sugano no
Mamichi (菅野 真道, 741–814), ****anese
noble Matsuo Sugano (菅野 松男, born 1939), ****anese...
- Paekche," [Emperor Akihito] told reporters.
Fujiwara no Tsugutada;
Sugano no
Mamichi, eds. (797), 続日本紀 (Shoku Nihongi) (in ****anese), vol. 40,
archived from...