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  • [[Image:Tokyo_After_Six.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Japan's capital, [[Tokyo]], comprises cities of packed streets, [[neon]] logos an ...brought mainly from China. Having chosen isolation for hundreds of years, Japan awoke with a new, international outlook in the nineteenth century, bringing
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  • A list of recent [[natural disaster]]s in [[Japan]] from March 2005 to March 2007; this gives an idea of the range and severi ''Return to [[Japan]].
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  • * Huffman, James L., ed. ''Modern Japan: An Encyclopedia of History, Culture, and Nationalism.'' Garland, 1998. 316 * Itasaka, Gen, ed. ''Japan Encyclopedia,'' 9 vols. Tokyo: Kodansha, 19 83.
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  • #REDIRECT [[History of Japan]]
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  • <div style="border: none; width:300px;"><div class="thumbcaption">Japan's capital, [[Tokyo]], is a city of packed streets, [[neon]] logos and the a |valign=top rowspan=2|[[Image:Japan.gif|300px]]
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  • ...parsely-populated northern island of Hokkaido is its own prefecture (see [[Japan/Related Articles#Prefectures|below]]), others are split into smaller politi Administrative divisions or 'prefectures' of Japan are known as ''todōfuken'' (都道府県) in Japanese. Typically ''-ken''
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  • | title = Racing the Enemy: Stalin, Truman and the Surrender of Japan ...the decision rather than consulted, although strategic air warfare against Japan was also outside their control; the JCS commanded it directly through the T
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  • The '''surrender of Japan''' ended [[World War Two in the Pacific]], but getting to that endpoint was | title = The Invasion of Japan: Alternative to the Bomb
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  • #REDIRECT [[Foreign national residency management system (Japan)]]
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  • ...[Asia]], connected with the [[Pacific Ocean]] and bordered by [[Korea]], [[Japan]] and [[Russia]].
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  • .... Its two chambers are the more powerful lower [[House of Representatives (Japan)|House of Representatives]] and the upper [[House of Councillors]]; the lat ...the most influential model for the process of modernization undertaken in Japan during the [[Meiji period]]. <ref>{{citation
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  • Depending on the time and government structure, the '''Emperor of [[Japan]]''' has been principally a religious figure, a ceremonial Head of State, o | title = Japan's Imperial Conspiracy
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  • The '''history of Japan''', the [[Japan|large island nation off the coast of China and Korea]], is comprised of mai ==Early Japan==
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  • ...rch 2016 through the merger of the [[Democratic Party of Japan]] and the [[Japan Innovation Party]]. Its [[Japanese language|Japanese]] name means 'Democrat
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  • ...given the shared origins of the peoples who came to inhabit the islands of Japan and the [[Korean peninsula]]. Both cultures also developed from much that i *[[Japan]]
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  • ...founded in 1925 and is based in [[Tokyo]].<ref>'[http://www.sumo.or.jp/En/ Japan Sumo Association]'. Accessed 29th September 2020.</ref>
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  • ...the [[Emperor of Japan|Emperor]] ({{Japan/headofstate}} since {{Emperor of Japan/enteredoffice}}). ...merged with the [[Japan Innovation Party]] to form the [[Democratic Party (Japan)|Democratic Party]].
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  • ...CO [[World Heritage site]]; its defences and gardens showcase two sides of Japan's history and culture.]] ...vy importation of [[Culture of China|Chinese culture]], the inhabitants of Japan experienced a long period of relative isolation from the outside world unde
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  • #REDIRECT [[History of Japan/Approval]]
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  • ...[[Himeji Castle]] is a [[UNESCO]] [[World Heritage site]]; unusually for [[Japan]], the castle is built of wood rather than stone. In the foreground is one '''[[Castle]]s in [[Japan]]''', as in other countries, were built as defensible fortifications, usual
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  • ...the late [[Tokugawa Shogunate]]. It does not include the postwar growth of Japan into a great economic power. ...a]] (personal name [[Hirohito]], 1926-1945) [[Emperor of Japan|Emperors of Japan]].
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  • #REDIRECT [[History of Japan/Bibliography]]
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  • ...was intended to be a body to give independent advice to the [[Emperor of Japan]]. The 1889 Constitution assigned it to "“deliberate upon important matte ...tomo Yamagata]] both rotated several times between the [[Prime Minister of Japan|prime
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  • {{Image|Two-bullet-trains-japan.jpg|right|350px|[[Japan]]ese bullet [[train (transport)|train]]s come in a variety of designs, such ...arry spectators, athletes and the media to events in [[Osaka]] to showcase Japan's emergence from its post-[[World War II|war]] malaise. As of March 2010, t
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  • ...//lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/jptoc.html Library of Congress, ''A Country Study: Japan'' (1994)] - highly detailed factual report commissioned by the U.S. governm
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  • ...c expression, use of language, belief systems and so on that distinguishes Japan from other nations.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A senior advisory body to the [[Emperor of Japan]], 1889-1945; originally roughly coequal to the Cabinet and Diet but declin
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  • Defensible fortifications in Japan, historically for the protection of the interests of local lords.
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  • ...use nuclear weapons at all, and future plans had not [[surrender of Japan|Japan surrendered]]
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  • ...great danger. While in the Pacific, by the time the strategic bombing of Japan could begin, air superiority had been achieved. ...lying fortresses will be dispatched immediately to set the paper cities of Japan on fire. There won't be any hesitation about bombing civilians&emsp;it will
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  • The '''Prime Minister of Japan''' is the modern [[head of government]] of Japan, part of the cabinet system established in 1885 under the [[Meiji Restorati
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  • #REDIRECT [[Culture of Japan/External Links]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Foreign national residency management system (Japan)/Definition]]
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  • ...at the [[Yalta Conference]], the [[Soviet Union]] attacked the [[Empire of Japan]], using 1.5 million troops on a 2730 mile front. <ref name=Hastings>{{cita | title = Retribution: The Battle for Japan, 1944-1945
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  • A sea that lies between Korea and Japan, connected to the Pacific Ocean through several channels, including the Kor
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  • #REDIRECT [[Foreign national residency management system (Japan)/Bibliography]]
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  • ...in March 2016 through the merger of the Democratic Party of Japan and the Japan Innovation Party.
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  • |Two-bullet-trains-japan.jpg|[[Japan]]ese [[bullet train (Japan)|bullet train]]s provide high-speed services and come in a variety of desig ...o analyse the overhead wires. Each train is [[nickname]]d '[[Bullet train (Japan)/Catalogs/Dr. Yellow|Dr. Yellow]]'.
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  • == Maps with "Sea of Japan" == ...Italian missionary in China. It is the first map in which the term "Sea of Japan" appears.
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  • ''Works cited in the [[Bullet train (Japan)]] article'' *Hood, C.P. (2006). ''Shinkansen: From Bullet Train to Symbol of Modern Japan''. Oxford: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415320528.
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  • #REDIRECT [[History of Japan/Related Articles]]
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Head of State]] of [[Japan]], with a lineage into antiquity but certainly beginning in the 5th century
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  • The '''Liberal Democratic Party of [[Japan]]''' (自由民主党 ''Jiyuu-Minshutoo'', usually shortened to 自民党 '
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  • ...nment]] with the [[People's New Party]] and the [[Social Democratic Party (Japan)|Social Democratic Party]] (SDP) headed by then-DPJ leader [[Yukio Hatoyama ...ther proved unsuccessful, to the consternation of many local people.<ref>''Japan Times:'' '[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20100529a4.html New acc
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  • * Beasley, W. G. ''The Modern History of Japan'' (1963) [http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=10327723 online edition] ...[http://books.google.com/books?id=mOoTAAAAIAAJ&dq=intitle:History+intitle:Japan&num=30&as_brr=1 online edition]
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  • |caption=Culture of Japan gallery ...CO [[World Heritage site]]; its defences and gardens showcase two sides of Japan's history and culture.
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  • Bicameral parliament of [[Japan]] from the [[Meiji Restoration]] to the present time, although significantl
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  • The U.S. strategic approach to the physical invasion and occupation of Japan, of which [[Operation Downfall]], and its two main phases, [[Operation Olym
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  • ''Texts cited in the [[Culture of Japan]] article.'' | title = Dogs and Demons: the Fall of Modern Japan
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  • {{Japan Subgroup}}
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  • ...'Shinkansen' (新幹線); Japan's fastest train, inaugurated in 1964 and run by Japan Railways.
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  • ...litary means, roughly from the [[Meiji Restoration]] to the [[Surrender of Japan]]
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  • ...ka.go.jp/english/index.html Agency for Cultural Affairs] - [[Government of Japan|Japanese government]] *[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/jptoc.html A Country Study: Japan] - [[Library of Congress]]
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  • {{r|Japan}} {{r|Government of Japan}}
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  • {{r|History of Japan}} {{r|Emperor of Japan}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[National Diet (Japan)/Definition]]
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  • ...series of media, political and legal events from the 1980s to the 1990s in Japan, resulting from the infection of up to 2,000 hameophilia patients with HIV,
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  • {{r|Japan}}
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  • {{r|Japan Railways}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[Foreign national residency management system (Japan)/Related Articles]]
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Sea of Japan]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Japan}}
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  • ...ics/english/kokkaiannai_e.pdf/$File/kokkaiannai_e.pdf The National Diet of Japan] - official English-language guide to the Diet. .pdf file.
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  • *[http://www.jreast.co.jp/train/shinkan 新幹線] - an official site from [[Japan Railways]] about the bullet train (in [[Japanese language|Japanese]], with ...elates spotters]' - ''[[Japan Times]]'' article about the '[[Bullet train (Japan)/Catalogs/Dr. Yellow|Dr. Yellow]]' test bullet trains, 11th March 2010.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Head of government]] of Japan; not an immensely powerful executive, influenced by the monarchy prior to 1
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  • #REDIRECT [[Foreign national residency management system (Japan)/External Links]]
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  • {{r|Japan}} *[[Politics of Japan]]
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Massive Soviet attack on Japan, in according with agreements at the [[Yalta Conference]], on 8-9 January 1
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  • {{r|Japan}} *[[Politics of Japan]]
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  • {{r|Japan}}
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  • ...interactive map in English which displays information about castles across Japan.
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  • [[International relations]] between both the independent nations of [[Japan]] and [[South Korea]], as well as issues related to the Japanese occupation
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  • {{r|Japan}} {{r|Emperor of Japan}}
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  • {{r|Japan}} {{r|Culture of Japan}}
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  • {{r|Arata Hamao}} President of the [[Privy Council (Japan)]], 13 January 1924 – 25 September 1925 {{r|Yoshimichi Hara}} President of the [[Privy Council (Japan)]], 24 June 1940 – 7 August 1944
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  • ...d a fatal accident since its inauguration in 1964. This is partly due to [[Japan Railways]]'s extensive safety procedures which include the use of test [[tr ...that the sighting of a 'Dr. Yellow' brings the spotter good fortune.<ref>''Japan Times'': '[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20100311f1.html 'Dr. Ye
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  • {{r|Japan}} *[[Politics of Japan]]
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  • ...ce (Japan)|Ministry of Justice]]. All foreign nationals legally present in Japan except for temporary visitors (such as [[tourism|tourists]]) are enrolled o ...f residence.<ref>See the ''[[Foreign national residency management system (Japan)/Video|Video]]'' subpage of this article for an interview giving more infor
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  • #REDIRECT [[National Diet (Japan)/Related Articles]]
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  • {{r|Politics of Japan}} {{r|Democratic Party of Japan}}
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  • {{r|Japan}}
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  • {{main|Invasion of Japan}} While the actual [[nuclear attacks against Japan]] in [[World War Two in the Pacific]] were strategic bombing of military an
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  • {{r|Japan}} *[[Politics of Japan]]
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  • ''Works cited in the [[Alien registration (Japan)]] article'' ...cholarship.org/uc/item/9bq66424 Diaspora Without Homeland: Being Korean in Japan]''. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-09863-3.
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  • *Interview with Steve Burson of H&R Group, Japan, on the changes to the foreign national residency management system from Ju
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  • ...een anecdotal reports of another planned U.S. strategic nuclear attacks on Japan, bomb production and planned use was actually committed for use in tactical
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  • ...information in English on the changes to foreign national registration in Japan as of July 2012. ...questions and answers about the new residency system published by the ''[[Japan Times]]'', 7th July 2012.
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  • {{r|Japan}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[House of Representatives (Japan)/Definition]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[House of Representatives (Japan)]]
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Page text matches

  • ...apan, who served as [[U.S. Ambassador to Japan|Ambassador to Japan]] up to Japan's 1941 attack, and who remained a key State Department adviser
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  • ...'Shinkansen' (新幹線); Japan's fastest train, inaugurated in 1964 and run by Japan Railways.
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  • {{r|Japan}} *[[Politics of Japan]]
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  • {{r|Japan}} *[[Politics of Japan]]
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  • {{r|Japan}} *[[Politics of Japan]]
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  • {{r|Japan}} *[[Politics of Japan]]
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  • {{r|Japan}} *[[Politics of Japan]]
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  • {{r|Japan}} {{r|Culture of Japan}}
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  • ...the late [[Tokugawa Shogunate]]. It does not include the postwar growth of Japan into a great economic power. ...a]] (personal name [[Hirohito]], 1926-1945) [[Emperor of Japan|Emperors of Japan]].
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  • {{r|Japan}} *[[Politics of Japan]]
    909 bytes (118 words) - 08:19, 27 December 2012
  • {{r|Japan}} *[[Politics of Japan]]
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  • ...{Subpages}}</noinclude>Counterpart to the American [[Operation Downfall]], Japan's overall plan for defense against invasion of Home Islands.
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  • {{r|Democratic Party (Japan)}} {{r|Democratic Party of Japan}}
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  • '''Sumo''' (相撲 ''Sumoo'') is the traditional [[Japan]]ese form of heavyweight [[wrestling (sports)|wrestling]]. It incorporates ...ng body is the [[Japan Sumo Association]].<ref>'[http://www.sumo.or.jp/En/ Japan Sumo Association]'. Accessed 29th September 2020.</ref>
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  • {{r|Japan}} *[[Politics of Japan]]
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  • [[Imperial Japanese Army]] general, leader of the [[Control faction]] in Japan's pre-WWII militarization, and a cabinet officer
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  • ...include>Japanese and non-Japanese citizens who trace their origins back to Japan's colonial period.
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  • ==Japan== ...interactive map in English which displays information about castles across Japan.
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  • {{r|Japan}} {{r|Emperor of Japan}}
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  • ...y Council (Japan)]], 8 February 1922 – 7 January 1924; [[Prime Minister of Japan]], 1924
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  • ...t|thumb|300px|At the heart of Kyushu lies [[Mount Aso]] (阿蘇山 ''Aso-san''), Japan's largest active [[volcano]].]] ...d on the island of [[Kyushu]]. Its population was 1,836,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000
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  • ...]]ese [[History of Japan|history]] professor at [[Kanagawa University]] in Japan. His scholarship, which focused on [[Korea]]'s history and society, contras
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  • ...aiti]], [[Ethiopia]] and [[Japan]]; if they define a civilization, such as Japan, they are also [[core state]]s
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  • ...the [[Emperor of Japan|Emperor]] ({{Japan/headofstate}} since {{Emperor of Japan/enteredoffice}}). ...merged with the [[Japan Innovation Party]] to form the [[Democratic Party (Japan)|Democratic Party]].
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  • * Chamberlain, Basil Hall ''A Handbook for Travellers in Japan'' (1901) [http://books.google.com/books?id=qMmP9eQQohwC&pg=RA4-PA444&dq=Shi * Ravina, Mark. "State-building and Political Economy in Early-modern Japan." ''Journal of Asian Studies'' 1995 54(4): 997-1022. Issn: 0021-9118 [http:
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  • ...by [[Qing Dynasty]] China and [[Meiji Restoration]] [[Japan]] (1894-1895); Japan gained control of Korea
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  • ...o, after the war and war crimes investigations, became [[Prime Minister of Japan]]
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  • ...tml Japanese Only: The Otaru Hot Springs Case and Racial Discrimination in Japan]''. Tokyo: Akashi Shoten Inc. ISBN 4-7503-9018-6. ...ebito.org/handbook.html Handbook for Newcomers, Migrants and Immigrants to Japan]''. Tokyo: Akashi Shoten Inc. In English and Japanese. ISBN 978-4-7503-2741
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  • ...rial Japanese Army]]; last [[Army Minister (Japan)]] before [[surrender of Japan]], (7 Apr 1945 - 15 Aug 1945); committed [[seppuku]] rather than see surren
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  • The succession of [[Emperor of Japan|Emperors of Japan]], from the legendary and semi-divine [[Jimmu]], through more than seventy
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  • ...litary means, roughly from the [[Meiji Restoration]] to the [[Surrender of Japan]]
    203 bytes (29 words) - 16:59, 12 September 2010
  • ...hat all Chinese territory seized by Japan would be restored to China, that Japan would lose all Pacific islands seized after 1941, and that Korea would beco
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  • {{r|Japan}} {{r|Culture of Japan}}
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  • | '''1992 Barcelona''' || Cuba || Chinese Taipei || Japan | '''1996 Atlanta''' || Cuba || Japan || United States
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  • ...ter and negotiator with the U.S. in the last talks before war; earlier led Japan's walkout from the [[League of Nations]]; also president of [[South Manchur
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  • ''Works cited in the [[Bullet train (Japan)]] article'' *Hood, C.P. (2006). ''Shinkansen: From Bullet Train to Symbol of Modern Japan''. Oxford: Routledge. ISBN 978-0415320528.
    205 bytes (26 words) - 02:35, 13 March 2010
  • ''Works cited in the [[Alien registration (Japan)]] article'' ...cholarship.org/uc/item/9bq66424 Diaspora Without Homeland: Being Korean in Japan]''. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-09863-3.
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  • ...in March 2016 through the merger of the Democratic Party of Japan and the Japan Innovation Party.
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  • {{r|Japan}} {{r|Emperor of Japan}}
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>The extension of border clashes between Japan's [[Kwangtung Army]] and China, into full-scale war, beginning in 1937 and
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  • * Inoguchi, Rikihei, Tadashi Nakajima, and Roger Pineau. ''The Divine Wind: Japan's Kamikaze Force in World War II'' (1994) [http://www.amazon.com/Divine-Win * Lamont-Brown, Raymond. ''Kamikaze: Japan's Suicide Samurai'' (2000) [http://www.amazon.com/Kamikaze-Japans-Suicide-S
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  • {{r|Japan}} {{r|Culture of Japan}}
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  • Japan's first-line [[carrier-capable|carrier based]] fighter, codenamed '''Zero''
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  • ...landings in the southern island of [[Kyushu]], probably in November 1945; Japan expected it and planned its major resistance there
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  • ...rch 2016 through the merger of the [[Democratic Party of Japan]] and the [[Japan Innovation Party]]. Its [[Japanese language|Japanese]] name means 'Democrat
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  • ...ka.go.jp/english/index.html Agency for Cultural Affairs] - [[Government of Japan|Japanese government]] *[http://lcweb2.loc.gov/frd/cs/jptoc.html A Country Study: Japan] - [[Library of Congress]]
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  • ...u]] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 880,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 *[[Japan]]
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 7,308,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 *[[Japan]]
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  • ...[Asia]], connected with the [[Pacific Ocean]] and bordered by [[Korea]], [[Japan]] and [[Russia]].
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  • *[http://www.jreast.co.jp/train/shinkan 新幹線] - an official site from [[Japan Railways]] about the bullet train (in [[Japanese language|Japanese]], with ...elates spotters]' - ''[[Japan Times]]'' article about the '[[Bullet train (Japan)/Catalogs/Dr. Yellow|Dr. Yellow]]' test bullet trains, 11th March 2010.
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 1,110,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 *[[Japan]]
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  • ...imane]]: a group of islets controlled by South Korea and claimed by Japan. Japan registers the islets as a part of the Shimane Prefecture.
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 2,972,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 *[[Japan]]
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  • * Hawley, Samuel. ''The Imjin War: Japan's Sixteenth-Century Invasion of Korea And Attempt To Conquer China'' (2005)
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 1,134,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 *[[Japan]]
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 2,418,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 *[[Japan]]
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 3,797,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 *[[Japan]]
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  • ...n" for the shogun was disagreeable to the Japanese because it implied that Japan was subservient to the Chinese emperor as a part of the [[Chinese tributary
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  • ...olcanic islets in the Sea of Japan, occupied by South Korea and claimed by Japan. The ecology consists of a moderate maritime climate with a diverse marine
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  • Japan controlled the '''Kwangtung Leasehold''', an area in [[Manchuria]], contain ..., which then leased it to Russia. The [[Russo-Japanese War]], however, let Japan reoccupy it, and then obtain a 99-year lease in 1915. The South Manchurian
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  • ...panese War''', between [[Qing Dynasty]] China and [[Meiji Restoration]] [[Japan]], also affected the power balance in East Asia. It was fought between 1894 Japan gained control of Korea, but not the indemnification it wanted.
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  • ...US President [[Theodore Roosevelt]]. In this treaty, Russia acknowledged Japan's "predominant political, military, and economic interests in [[Korea]]" an Japan would annex Korea in 1910.
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 2,105,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 *[[Japan]]
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  • ...') former Prime Minister of Japan and ex-leader of the Democratic Party of Japan (2009-2010); led the party to its first election victory, ousting the Liber
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  • ...founded in 1925 and is based in [[Tokyo]].<ref>'[http://www.sumo.or.jp/En/ Japan Sumo Association]'. Accessed 29th September 2020.</ref>
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  • |Japan |Japan
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  • ...ble/3557753 50 Years from San Francisco: Re-Examining the Peace Treaty and Japan's Territorial Problems]," ''Pacific Affairs'', Vol. 74, No. 3 (Autumn, 2001
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  • ...hat all three nations had already been involved in armed conflict, such as Japan in China, Germany in Poland, and Italy in Ethiopia.
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  • |Two-bullet-trains-japan.jpg|[[Japan]]ese [[bullet train (Japan)|bullet train]]s provide high-speed services and come in a variety of desig ...o analyse the overhead wires. Each train is [[nickname]]d '[[Bullet train (Japan)/Catalogs/Dr. Yellow|Dr. Yellow]]'.
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  • ===In Japan===
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  • |Mount-Aso.jpg|At the heart of Kyushu lies [[Mount Aso]] (阿蘇山 ''Aso-san''), Japan's largest active [[volcano]]. ...[Nagasaki]] is a little piece of [[People's Republic of China|China]] in [[Japan]].
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  • ...d on the island of [[Kyushu]]. Its population was 1,466,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 ...foreign communities remaining in the city, such as Glover Garden. Outside Japan, however, Nagasaki is better known for the 1945 atomic bomb in which over 7
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  • ...Shotoo'' 'Southwest Islands'). Its population was 1,743,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 ...'[http://www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?name=JP Ethnologue Report for Japan]'.</ref>
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  • ...n the history and culture of Obama, from the Kawagoe International Center, Japan. ...balvoicesonline.org/2008/03/16/japan-obama-gets-support-from-japanese-city Japan: Obama gets support from Japanese city] - summary of [[blog]] postings rega
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  • *''[http://www.japantimes.co.jp Japan Times]'' - Japanese news exclusively in English. *[http://www.japanmediareview.com Japan Media Review] - U.S.-based on-line journal covering the Japanese media indu
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  • .... Its two chambers are the more powerful lower [[House of Representatives (Japan)|House of Representatives]] and the upper [[House of Councillors]]; the lat ...the most influential model for the process of modernization undertaken in Japan during the [[Meiji period]]. <ref>{{citation
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  • ...55 years of near-uninterrupted rule, would work with any new party.<ref>''Japan Times'': '[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20100316a1.html Hatoyam ...reditary politician' due to his family's record of political office;<ref>''Japan Times'': '[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20090913a3.html Hatoyam
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 2,643,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 ...ity, [[Kyoto (city)|Kyoto]] (京都府 ''Kyooto-shi''), which was the capital of Japan from 794 to 1868. It was originally known as [[Heian-kyo]] (平安京 ''Hee
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  • ...on]] to Japan, and a secret agreement for the Soviets to go to war against Japan
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  • ...their influence in East Asia, the war resulted in a decisive victory for Japan; culturally significant as the first defeat of an European power by an Asia
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  • ...how the alien registration card. 27th July 2004. Other articles in the ''[[Japan Times]]'' are listed [http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/JTsearch5.cgi?
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  • ...key to the [[Empire of Japan]]. After the staged [[Manchurian Incident]], Japan made of it, in 1932, a nominal country called [[Manchukuo]], with [[Henry P
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  • ...East Asia, the '''Russo-Japanese War''' resulted in a decisive victory for Japan. It was culturally significant as the first defeat of an European military ...the causes of the war, specifically the forced lease of [[Port Arthur]] to Japan.
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  • ...Shotoo'' 'Southwest Islands'). Its population was 1,368,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 ...'[http://www.ethnologue.com/show_country.asp?name=JP Ethnologue Report for Japan]'.</ref>
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  • ...ecture]] of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 1,483,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000
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  • ...up [[Japan]]. Many of the most important cultural and economic centres of Japan lie within Honshu, which is also home to most of the country's population. ...are located in Honshu. The total population was 103,423,000 in 2006;<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000
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  • ...on the island of [[Shikoku]]. Its population was 1,460,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000
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  • ...ted on the island of [[Kyushu]]. Its population was 863,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000
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  • | '''2000 Sydney''' || United States || Japan || Australia | '''2004 Athens''' || United States || Australia || Japan
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  • ...ludes Saitama (incorporated in 2001, so the GTA is actually larger). See ''Japan Statistics Bureau'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/kokusei/2000/final/zuhyou *[[Japan]]
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  • ...Akira Higuchi (2008). ''Handbook for Newcomers, Migrants and Immigrants to Japan''. Tokyo: Akashi. ISBN 978-4750327419. ...cholarship.org/uc/item/9bq66424 Diaspora Without Homeland: Being Korean in Japan]''. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-09863-3.
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  • ...ma-joo'') in Okayama prefecture is the highest castle above sea level in [[Japan]]. It sits at 1,575 feet (480m), above the town of Takahashi (高梁).<ref> ...hin the southerly San-yo area. Its population was 1,955,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000
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  • '''Okinawa Island''' (沖縄本島 ''Okinawa-hontoo'') is the largest island of the [[Japan]]ese [[Ryukyu Islands]] (南西諸島 ''Nansai Shotoo'' 'Southwest Islands' ...ther proved unsuccessful, to the consternation of many local people.<ref>''Japan Times:'' '[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20100529a4.html New acc
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  • ...in elections to the [[House of Councillors|upper house]] of the [[Diet of Japan|Japanese parliament]] in 2007.}} ...to the [[House of Councillors]], the upper chamber of the [[National Diet (Japan)|Japanese parliament]], in 2007 as an [[independent (politician)|independen
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  • ...val aviator, he was highly regarded for his combat record in China. During Japan's early victories, he was optimistic but seemed to have no sense of the log | title = Hirohito and the making of modern Japan
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 1,028,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000
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  • ...(Japan)]], (16 June 1930&mdash;10 December 1930) [[Prime Minister of Japan]] (30 August 1939&mdash;16 January 1940) succeeding [[Kiichi Hiranuma]] an
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  • ..., graves of many foreigners who lived and died at this historic gateway to Japan, and [[Christianity|Christians]] who were martyred there. ...pan-guide.com'': '[http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e2298.html Christianity in Japan]'.</ref>
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(明仁) Emperor of Japan since 1989 (born 1933).
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 8,815,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000
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  • *[[Languages of Japan]] {{r|Japan}}
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  • == Japan ==
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  • [[Japan|Japanese]] [[animation|animated]] cartoons, sometimes based on [[manga]].
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  • A higher education institution in [[Mie prefecture]], [[Japan]].
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  • #REDIRECT [[Foreign national residency management system (Japan)/Related Articles]]
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  • A [[Japan|Japanese]] [[cryptographer]] best known for discovering [[linear cryptanaly
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  • |Japan |Japan
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  • {{r|Culture of Japan}} {{r|Japan Times}}
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  • ...nment]] with the [[People's New Party]] and the [[Social Democratic Party (Japan)|Social Democratic Party]] (SDP) headed by then-DPJ leader [[Yukio Hatoyama ...ther proved unsuccessful, to the consternation of many local people.<ref>''Japan Times:'' '[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20100529a4.html New acc
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  • One of the leading [[Japan]]ese national [[newspaper]]s.
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  • The XXXII Summer Olympic Games, held in Tokyo, Japan.
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  • Two-time [[Prime Minister of Japan]]; government financial official
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  • Newspapers, magazines, television, radio and internet sites in Japan.
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  • Codename of the first atomic bomb used against Japan in August 1945.
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  • The XI Winter Olympic Games, held in Sapporo, Japan.
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  • The '''Ryukyu Islands''' are a subtropical [[Japan]]ese island chain in the [[East China Sea]], running southwesterly for abou ...rist]] destination, particular for visitors from more northerly islands of Japan.
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 8,830,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 *[[Japan]]
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  • ...) was a Japanese publisher, politician, and eventually [[Prime Minister of Japan]]. He was the last of the [[genro]], or senior statesmen, from the Meiji er ...gain occupied in the second Ito cabinet, having been [[Foreign Minister of Japan]] in the interval. "
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  • ...''' of 1918-1922 was an effort, by the [[World War I]] Western Allies plus Japan, in response to the [[Bolshevik Revolution]], Russia's separate surrender t ...as 1917, and British and French encouragement to Japan, from 1915 on, that Japan move east from Vladivostok. In 1915, [[Giichi Tanaka]] became vice-chief of
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  • {{r|Japan}} ''See also [[Japan/Related_Articles#Prefectures|prefectures]]''
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 7,071,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 *[[Japan]]
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 6,074,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 *[[Japan]]
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  • The 124th and longest-reigning Emperor of Japan, 1926-89.
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  • Indigenous people of northern Japan and the Russian Far East.
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  • == Maps with "Sea of Japan" == ...Italian missionary in China. It is the first map in which the term "Sea of Japan" appears.
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  • ...) and several smaller islands, mostly uninhabited. They form part of the [[Japan]]ese [[Ryukyu Islands]] (南西諸島 ''Nansai Shotoo'' 'Southwest Islands' ...number of high-profile sexual offences committed by U.S. personnel.<ref>''Japan Times:'' '[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20080221a2.html U.S. im
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  • ...hin the southerly San-yo area. Its population was 2,875,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 ...ontents_e/08higai_1_e.html Damage from the Atomic Bombing]'.''</ref><ref>''Japan Times'': '[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20071024a1.html 270,000
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  • ====Japan==== In '''Japan''' railways were part of the stunningly successful industrial transformatio
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1867-1916) [[Japan]]ese [[novel]]ist; wrote ''[[Botchan]]'', ''[[The Wayfarer]]'', and ''[[Kok
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  • ...interactive map in English which displays information about castles across Japan.
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  • (人形 ''ningyoo'' or 雛 ''hina'') traditional and modern dolls in Japan.
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  • ...d on the island of [[Kyushu]]. Its population was 5,054,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 1,416,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 ...al city, [[Nara (city)|Nara]] (奈良市 ''Nara-shi''), which was the capital of Japan from 710 to 784. That time is referred to as the [[Nara period]].
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  • {{r|Japan}} ''See also [[Japan/Related_Articles#Prefectures|prefectures]]''
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  • ...inary party members, while voting by party members in the [[National Diet (Japan)]] and local assemblies produced a comfortable margin of victory. ...early career was marked by involvement in [[grassroots]] movements.<ref>''Japan Times'': '[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20100605a4.html All thi
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  • ...located on [[Honshu]] island. It consists of five administrative areas ([[Japan/Related_Articles#Prefectures|prefectures]]), and is home to the cities of [ {{Image|Chugoku-Japan-map.png|right|180px|Location of Chugoku.}}
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  • |Japan |Japan
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1898-1993) [[Japan]]ese [[novel]]ist and [[short story]] writer; wrote ''[[Black Rain]]''.
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  • ...ond World War]] standards, that carried out U.S. strategic bombing against Japan
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  • U.S. headquarters for the [[Occupation of Japan]], initially headed by [[Douglas MacArthur]]
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  • *''[http://www.japantimes.co.jp Japan Times]'' - Japanese news exclusively in English. *[http://www.japanmediareview.com Japan Media Review] - U.S.-based on-line journal covering the Japanese media indu
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  • ...home to the city of [[Nagoya]], among others, and is also the place where Japan's highest [[mountain]], [[Mount Fuji]] (富士山 ''Fuji-san'') can be foun {{Image|Chubu-map-Japan.png|right|180px|Location of Chubu (map excludes [[Mie prefecture]] and incl
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  • ...at the [[Yalta Conference]], the [[Soviet Union]] attacked the [[Empire of Japan]], using 1.5 million troops on a 2730 mile front. <ref name=Hastings>{{cita | title = Retribution: The Battle for Japan, 1944-1945
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  • ...them to use the [[RIM-161 Standard SM-3]] missile, which, from the Sea of Japan, could intercept North Korean offensive missiles. Japan also has land-based [[MIM-104 Patriot]] missiles, developed by the [[U.S. A
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  • ...ude>[[Imperial Japanese Army]] general who was briefly [[Prime Minister of Japan]] in 1937
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  • (高知市 ''Koochi-shi'') Capital city of Kochi prefecture, Shikoku, Japan; population about 343,000.
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  • ...e Navy battleships which were the last class of capital ships not built in Japan itself.
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  • Called Dairen after being ceded to Japan after the [[Russo-Japanese War]], a port in southern [[Manchuria]]
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  • An American victory over Japan during World War II and the largest naval battle in history.
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  • A [[role-playing video game]] series made in [[Japan]] by the company [[Square-Enix]].
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  • (鈴鹿市 ''Suzuka-shi'') city in Mie prefecture, Japan, known for hosting Formula One motor racing.
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  • |Whale-meat-dish.jpg|Whale meat is considered a delicacy in [[Japan]]. Here, a strip of the meat has been sliced into 'whale bacon'. |Whale-shop.jpg|Specialist shops sell whale meat in Japan. Look out for signs labelled '鯨肉' (''gei niku'' 'whale meat') or 'く�
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  • ...]. ''Book of Five Rings''. Book of strategy expressed as swordsmanship, by Japan's greatest swordmaster
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  • ...top Army officers differed from many other countries. The [[Army Minister (Japan)]], also called the '''War Minister''', also was a general or field marshal ...were more informal command networks. In addition, a [[Supreme War Council (Japan)]] of non-operational senior officers would review plans.
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  • [[Imperial Japanese Army]] officer and pubic official; [[Prime Minister of Japan]]; senior in [[Chosu Clan]].
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1935- ) [[Nobel prize]] winning [[Japan]]ese [[novel]]ist; wrote ''[[A Personal Matter]]'' and ''[[The Silent Cry]]
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  • {{r|Japan}} ''See also [[Japan/Related_Articles#Prefectures|prefectures]]''
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  • ...tory, between 1921 and 1923, at [[Princeton University]], then returned to Japan and graduated from the Staff College in 1924. ...Japanese delgation to the [[1930 London Naval Conference]], and then was Japan's last naval attaché to the United States (1834-1937). [[Ellis Zacharias]]
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  • ...es}}</noinclude>Asian citrus originating in China but mostly cultivated in Japan.
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  • ...re to pass an anti-[[terrorism]] law and ill health led him to quit.<ref>''Japan Times'': '[http://www.japantimes.co.jp/text/nn20070913a1.html Abe announces ...uly of 2022 while campaigning for his party in [[Nara (city)|Nara]].<ref>''Japan Times'': '[https://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2022/07/08/national/shinzo-abe
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  • ...n]] during [[World War Two in the Pacific]], who signed the [[Surrender of Japan|Instrument of Surrender]]. Generally considered opposed to the war, he stil
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  • ''Texts cited in the [[Culture of Japan]] article.'' | title = Dogs and Demons: the Fall of Modern Japan
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A set of demands sent to China by Japan, in January 1915, which established Japanese dominance over Mongolia and Ma
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  • ...nese publisher, politician, and eventually Prince and [[Prime Minister of Japan]]
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  • * Hawley, Samuel. ''The Imjin War: Japan's Sixteenth-Century Invasion of Korea And Attempt To Conquer China'' (2005)
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1924-1993) [[Japan]]ese [[novel]]ist and [[drama]]tist; wrote ''[[The Woman in the Dunes]]''.
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  • ...[[World War Two in the Pacific]], who became a postwar [[Prime Minister of Japan]]
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Sea of Japan]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Japan}}
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  • ...on]] to Japan, and a secret agreement for the Soviets to go to war against Japan.
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  • ...e in [[Japanese language|Japanese]]. As Confucian thought spread through [[Japan]], many of these shrines appeared to commemorate Confucian philosophers: th *[[Culture of Japan]]
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  • ...<ref>Literally 'little beach'.</ref>) is a city in [[Fukui prefecture]], [[Japan]], famous for its historical connections to China and for sharing its name ...o the rapids at Unose (鵜の瀬). The water is believed to reach [[Nara]] (奈良), Japan's capital in ancient times, ten days later. Nara holds a 'water-drawing cer
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  • {{r|Democratic Party of Japan||**}} {{r|Liberal Democratic Party (Japan)||**}}
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  • (高知県 ''Koochi-ken'') area of Japan located on the island of Shikoku; population about 800,000.
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  • ...clude>Former Japanese Prime Minister and leader of the Democratic Party of Japan from June 2010 until August 2011.
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  • (佐賀県 ''Saga-ken'') area of Japan located on the island of Kyushu; population about 850,000.
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  • (徳島県 ''Tokushima-ken'') area of Japan located on the island of Shikoku; population about 850,000.
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  • ...included [[Prime Minister of Japan]] and president of the [[Privy Council (Japan)]]. He co-founded the extreme nationalist [[Kokuhonsha]] movement, which dr | title = Hirohito and the making of modern Japan
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  • ...authority on German constitutional law; President of the [[Privy Council (Japan)]], 1 October 1925 – 8 April 1926
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Traditional [[Japan]]ese garment, worn by both men and women, consisting of a long, ankle-lengt
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  • ...ond-largest city on Okinawa Island, located in the Ryukyu Islands chain of Japan.
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  • (熊本県 ''Kumamoto-ken'') area of Japan located on the island of Kyushu; population about 1,800,000.
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  • (大分県 ''Ooita-ken'') area of Japan located on the island of Kyushu; population about 1,200,000.
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  • (香川県 ''Kagawa-ken'') area of Japan located on the island of Shikoku; population about 1,050,000.
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  • ...information in English on the changes to foreign national registration in Japan as of July 2012. ...questions and answers about the new residency system published by the ''[[Japan Times]]'', 7th July 2012.
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  • (関東地方 ''Kantoo-chihoo''), region of Japan on Honshu island, divided into seven prefectures and including the capital,
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  • ...parsely-populated northern island of Hokkaido is its own prefecture (see [[Japan/Related Articles#Prefectures|below]]), others are split into smaller politi Administrative divisions or 'prefectures' of Japan are known as ''todōfuken'' (都道府県) in Japanese. Typically ''-ken''
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  • * Hauser, William B. "Osaka: a Commercial City in Tokugawa Japan." ''Urbanism past and Present'' 1977-1978 (5): 23-36. ...ola; Diefendorf, Jeffry M.; and Yorifusa, Ishida, eds. ''Rebuilding Urban Japan after 1945.'' (2003). 274 pp.
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  • (野田佳彦) Japanese Prime Minister and leader of the Democratic Party of Japan from August 2011 to December 2012.
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  • (島根県 ''Shimane-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chugoku region of Honshu island; population about 720,000.
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  • *[http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/japan/word-of-the-day BBC - Hidden Japan - Japanese Word of the Day] - videos featuring explanations for various pop
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  • (山梨県 ''Yamanashi-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chubu region of Honshu island; population about 880,000.
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  • (福井県 ''Fukui-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chubu region of Honshu island; population about 819,000.
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  • ...c expression, use of language, belief systems and so on that distinguishes Japan from other nations.
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  • ...ce Mikasa''' (December 2, 1915 - October 27, 2016), was the uncle of the [[Japan]]ese [[Head of State]], [[Akihito|Emperor Akihito]], and the younger brothe ...known that he met with some of the final rebels against the [[surrender of Japan]], but it is not clear if he was an Imperial emissary or whether his role w
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  • ...ed popular new words in Japanese as recognised in an annual competition in Japan.
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  • (和歌山県 ''Wakayama-ken'') area of Japan located in the Kansai region of Honshu island; population about 1,100,000.
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  • (岐阜県 ''Gifu-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chubu region of Honshu island; population about 2,110,000.
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  • (神奈川県 ''Kanagawa-ken'') area of Japan located in the Kanto region of Honshu island; population about 8,850,000.
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  • (京都府 ''Kyooto-fu'') area of Japan located in the Kansai region of Honshu island; population about 2,700,000.
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  • (石川県 ''Ishikawa-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chubu region of Honshu island; population about 1,175,000.
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  • (埼玉県 ''Saitama-ken'') area of Japan located in the Kanto region of Honshu island; population about 7,100,000.
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  • (長野県 ''Nagano-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chubu region of Honshu island; population about 2,200,000.
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  • (栃木県 ''Tochigi-ken'') Area of Japan located in the Kanto region of Honshu island; population about 2,020,000.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1886-1965) [[Japan]]ese [[novel]]ist, [[short story]] writer, and [[drama]]tist; wrote ''[[The
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  • (新潟県 ''Niigata-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chubu region of Honshu island; population about 2,420,000.
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  • (静岡県 ''Shizuoka-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chubu region of Honshu island; population about 3,800,000.
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  • (岡山県 ''Okayama-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chugoku region of Honshu island; population about 1,900,000.
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  • (富山県 ''Toyama-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chubu region of Honshu island; population about 1,110,000.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1644-94) [[Japan]]ese [[haiku]] [[poetry|poet]], widely considered to be the most accomplish
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  • (兵庫県 ''Hyoogo-ken'') area of Japan located in the Kansai region of Honshu island; population about 5,600,000.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(山口県 ''Yamaguchi-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chugoku region of Honshu island; population about 1,450,000.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(奈良県 ''Nara-ken'') area of Japan located in the Kansai region of Honshu island; population about 1,500,000.
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  • (千葉県 ''Chiba-ken'') area of Japan located in the Kanto region of Honshu island; population about 6,100,000.
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  • (群馬県 ''Gunma-ken'') area of Japan located in the Kanto region of Honshu island; population about 2,020,000.
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  • (滋賀県 ''Shiga-ken'') area of Japan located in the Kansai region of Honshu island; population about 1,500,000.
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  • (愛知県 ''Aichi-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chubu region of Honshu island; population about 7,310,000.
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  • (青森県 ''Aomori-ken'') area of Japan located in the northern Tohoku region of Honshu island; population about 1,
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  • ...ed by the United States of America, the British Empire, France, Italy, and Japan at Washington, February 6, 1922.
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  • (岩手県 ''Iwate-ken'') area of Japan located in the northern Tohoku region of Honshu island; population about 1,
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  • (山形県 ''Yamagata-ken'') area of Japan located in the northern Tohoku region of Honshu island; population about 1,
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  • (鳥取県 ''Tottori-ken'') least-populated administrative area of Japan, located in the Chugoku region of Honshu island; population about 600,000.
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  • ...last Army Minister (Japan)|War Minister. While he personally did not want Japan to surrender, he was obedient to Hirohito |Emperor Hirohito's decisions, th
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  • [[Japan]]ese [[superhero]] [[television series|series]] and [[franchise]] (1975-);
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  • ===Japan=== {{r|History of Japan/Related Articles}}
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  • Japan, in 1915, issued '''Twenty-One Demands''' to China, which established regio | title = '21 Demands' Made by Japan to China, 18 January 1915
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  • {{r|Culture of Japan}} {{r|Japan}}
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  • [[Canada]], [[France]], [[Germany]], [[Italy]], [[Japan]], the [[United Kingdom]] and the [[United States of America]].
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  • Defensible fortifications in Japan, historically for the protection of the interests of local lords.
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  • ...in 1945, the '''Imperial Japanese Army''' was the land forces military of Japan. In a culture that regarded its military highly, the Army and [[Imperial Ja Its three principal leaders were the [[Army Minister (Japan)]], [[Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Army)]], and the [[Inspector Genera
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  • ...ction arcade game designed by Tōru Iwatani for Namco and first released in Japan in May 1980 under the name Pakkuman (パックマン ).
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  • Terrestrial Old World monkey species native to Japan, distinguished by their brown-gray fur, a red face, and a short tail.
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  • Second phase of the [[Operation Downfall]] invasion of Japan, to be launched against the Kanto Plain in 1946
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  • (福岡県 ''Fukuoka-ken'') area of Japan located on the island of Kyushu; population about 5,000,000.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A noble house in pre-1945 Japan, known for providing wives to Emperors as well as Regents for them
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  • Count '''Nobuaki Makino''' (1862-1949), a member of Japan's [[Satsuma Clan]], was a principal adviser to Emperor [[Hirohito]], accomp | title= Japan's Imperial Conspiracy
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  • ...nclude>Endangered language of the Ainu people, spoken in parts of northern Japan and the Russian Far East.
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  • ...eptember 27, 1940, created the [[Second World War]] '''Axis''' of Germany, Japan, and Italy.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Final Foreign Minister of Japan during World War Two in the Pacific, who signed the Instrument of Surrender
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  • ...ronics, especially [[video game]]s and [[video game console]]s; based in [[Japan]].
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  • '''Sushi''' (寿司, 鮓 or 鮨 ''sushi'') is any food in [[Japan]]ese cuisine made with [[vinegar]]ed [[rice]]. It may include raw or cooked *[[Culture of Japan]]
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  • {{r|Japan}} ''See also [[Japan/Related_Articles#Prefectures|prefectures]]''
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  • *Interview with Steve Burson of H&R Group, Japan, on the changes to the foreign national residency management system from Ju
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  • ...mans [[Koi]]", the Shubunkin is a breed of [[goldfish]] first developed in Japan in the 1900's.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(大阪府 ''Oosaka-fu'') area of Japan located in the Kansai region of Honshu island; population about 9,000,000.
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  • (三重県 ''Mie-ken'') area of Japan located in the Kansai region of Honshu island; population about 2,000,000.
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  • (福島県 ''Fukushima-ken'') area of Japan located in the northern Tohoku region of Honshu island; population about 2,
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  • A [[video game]] franchise owned by [[Japan]]ese electronics manufacturer [[Nintendo]] featuring a fictional gorilla in
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  • * Hawley, Samuel. ''The Imjin War: Japan's Sixteenth-Century Invasion of Korea And Attempt To Conquer China'' (2005) * Rockstein, Edward D., Ph.D. ''Strategic And Operational Aspects of Japan's Invasions of Korea 1592-1598'', 1993-6-18. Naval War College, Newport, R.
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  • ...ventually halting aggressive expansion by the "Axis" ([[Nazi Germany]] and Japan).
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Head of State]] of [[Japan]], with a lineage into antiquity but certainly beginning in the 5th century
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  • ...ormation that initially garrisoned the [[Kwangtung Leasehold]], and, after Japan took control of Manchuria, was their major force there and fighting China. | title = JAPAN: Murder, Muto & Manchuria
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  • *[http://www.whaling.jp/english/index.html Japan Whaling Association] - official English site. ...whaling around the world courtesy of [[Fukuoka Prefectural University]], [[Japan]].
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  • ...-1946) was a Japanese diplomat, most known for being [[Foreign Minister of Japan]] and, with [[Japanese Ambassador to the U.S.]] [[Kichisaburo Nomura]], was ...of 12 to 22, and graduated from [[Oregon State University]]. Returning to Japan in 1902, he passed the Foreign Service examination in 1904, he went to Shan
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  • {{r|Japan}} {{r|Navy Ministry (Japan)}}
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  • ...n]], the last of whom died in 1940, who privately advised the [[Emperor of Japan]]
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  • ...{Subpages}}</noinclude>(安倍晋三 ''Abe Shinzoo''; 1954-2022) Prime Minister of Japan (2012–2020; 2006–2007) and former leader of the Liberal Democratic Part
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  • ...logically encompass the wars and political changes of the modern Empire of Japan (1868-1945), leading to WWII. These include:
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  • *Dudden, Alexis. (2008) ''Troubled Apologies Among Japan, Korea, and the United States'' New York: Columbia University Press. ...okdo or Takeshima? The International Law of Territorial Acquisition in the Japan-Korea Island Dispute]," ''Stanford Journal of East Asian Affairs'', Vol. 5,
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  • ...defense of the home islands against American [[amphibious warfare]]. Given Japan's shortages in resources and technology, it was not intended to throw back Like the corresponding U.S. [[Operation Downfall]], it broadly split Japan into two defense zones, one for Kyushu and one for the Kanto Plain. There w
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  • A sixth generation videogame console released by [[Sega]] in 1998 in Japan and 1999 in North America and Europe.
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  • '''Asahi Shimbun''' (朝日新聞, ''Asahi Shinbun'') is a [[Japan]]ese national newspaper. It is also the second most widely circulated newsp ...culation went over 30,000 copies a day, making it the largest newspaper in Japan. In 1888, an office was opened in Tokyo, and the first Asahi Shimbun Tokyo
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  • (小浜市 ''Obama-shi'') city in Fukui prefecture, Japan, famous for its historical connections to China and sharing its name with a
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  • Fine arts painting, exhibited widely in U.S. and Japan with works owned by numerous private and public collections; Trustee of [[A
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  • * Trewartha, Glenn T. ''Japan: A Geography'' (1965)
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  • Human viral infection epidemic in Japan, transmitted by the common house mosquito (''Culex pipiens'') and character
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  • The largest naval battle in history, fought in October 1944 as Japan tried to interfere with U.S. amphibious landings in the [[Philippines]]
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  • ...'''Tokugawa shogunate''' ended a period of civil war and warlord rule in [[Japan]], with consolidation under [[Ieyasu Tokugawa]] and his descendants. Some d Effectively, the shogun was the head of government, with the [[Emperor of Japan]] relegated to a spiritual and figurehead position.
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  • ...nshu]] island, capital of [[Nara prefecture]]. The city was the capital of Japan from 710 to 784 - the [[Nara period]] - and today is an important [[Buddhis
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A senior advisory body to the [[Emperor of Japan]], 1889-1945; originally roughly coequal to the Cabinet and Diet but declin
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  • A society's accepting neither Westernization nor modernization, such as Japan in the [[Edo Period]] before the [[Meiji restoration]], or the [[Taliban]]
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  • ...}}</noinclude>(1879-1926) the personal name of the [[Taisho]] [[Emperor of Japan]], father of [[Hirohito]] and son of [[Mutsohito]]
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  • ...November 7, 1944) A Soviet human-source intelligence officer operating in Japan, under cover as a German journalist, until his eventual discovery, arrest a
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  • [[Japan|Japanese]] [[spirituality|spiritual]] [[spiritual healing|healing]] process
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  • * [http://www.japantimes.co.jp/ ''The Japan Times''] daily newspaper in English
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  • Fought on the Korean peninsula from 1592 to 1598 between Japan and the Chinese tributary alliance (Korea, China, Ryukyus, Java, etc.), and
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  • (中部地方 ''Chuubu-chihoo''), region of Japan on Honshu island, divided into nine prefectures and including the city of N
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  • ...nted to install the head of the [[Control faction]] as [[Prime Minister of Japan]]
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  • ...alizing in U.S.-Japan relations in the 20th century. Born in [[Tokyo]], [[Japan]] in 1934, he graduated from a Tokyo high school in 1953. Four years later, ...luding the [[Yoshida Shigeru Prize]] for “best book in public history,” in Japan, a [[Woodrow Wilson fellowship]], and a [[Guggenheim fellowship]].
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  • ...d of advisors, [[Center for a New American Security]]; Senior Advisor and Japan Chair, [[Center for Strategic and International Studies]]
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  • (鹿児島県 ''Kagoshima-ken'') area of Japan located on the island of Kyushu and including some of the southerly Ryukyu
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  • ...ult of the ongoing [[Recession of 2009|worldwide financial crisis]].<ref>''Japan Times'': '[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20090128a1.html Extra b ...Japanese financial year (from 1st April) would be coming to an end.<ref>''Japan Times'': '[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20081117a5.html Cash ha
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  • {{r|Empire of Japan}} {{r|Surrender of Japan||**}}
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  • ...specialist. He became Navy Minister in 1937-1939, then [[Prime Minister of Japan]] between January and July 1940, opposing war with the United States. He r ...Navy Ministry, not dealing with the lessons of battle but how to extricate Japan from the war. <ref>{{citation
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Prime Minister of Japan]] and Admiral in the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] who, while serving as Lord
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  • (東北地方 ''Toohoku-chihoo''), northerly region of Japan on Honshu island, divided into six prefectures and including the cities of
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 2,080,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000
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  • | title = The Yamato Dynasty: the secret history of Japan's imperial family ...ety of Japan. Prince Chichibu was also widely renowned among the people of Japan as the "sporting Prince" due to his efforts to promote skiing, rugby and ot
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  • ...are]] ship type in the [[United States Navy]]; homeported at [[Sasebo]], [[Japan]] and assigned to [[Expeditionary Strike Group TWO]]
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  • ...he organized [[kamikaze]]s; committed [[seppuku]] after the [[surrender of Japan]]
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  • *[http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2006-04-22-asia-water-dispute_x.htm Japan, South Korea defuse standoff over disputed waters] - an article from the '' ...conomic Dependence and the Dokdo/Takeshima Dispute Between South Korea and Japan] - an article from the ''Harvard Asia Quarterly''<nowiki>'s</nowiki> (Volum
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  • ...) &mdash; capital of the [[Miyagi province]] in the [[Tohoku]] region of [[Japan]]'s [[Honshu]] island; founded in 1600, current population about 1 million.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Final [[Foreign Minister of Japan]] during [[World War Two in the Pacific]]; received a war crimes sentence;
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  • {{r|Japan}} ''See also [[Japan/Related_Articles#Prefectures|prefectures]]''
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  • ...s eventual discovery, arrest, and execution. Providing information on both Japan and Germany, he is considered one of the most effective spies and espionage
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  • A Confucius shrine in the south of Nagasaki, Japan; sovereign territory of the People's Republic of China.
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  • ...mes; cooperated with U.S. anticommunist efforts during the [[Occupation of Japan]]; later rehabilitated and became a member of the Diet
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  • ...ion of Honshu island; capital of Nara prefecture and the former capital of Japan (710–784).
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  • ...over the centuries, and today the population is about 1.2 million. Within Japan, the city is well-known for its ''[[okonomiyaki]]'' (お好み焼き) - [[e ...ontents_e/08higai_1_e.html Damage from the Atomic Bombing]'.''</ref><ref>''Japan Times'': '[http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20071024a1.html 270,000
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  • ...art of World War II (1937-45) fought in Asia and the Pacific Ocean between Japan and the U.S., China, Britain, Australia, and other Allies.
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  • *[http://www.nintendo.co.jp Nintendo Japan]
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  • | title = Japan's Imperial Conspiracy | title = The Yamato Dynasty: the secret history of Japan's imperial family
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  • [[International relations]] between both the independent nations of [[Japan]] and [[South Korea]], as well as issues related to the Japanese occupation
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  • ...rier forces supporting operations on Guadalcanal; U.S. lost more ships but Japan lost more aircraft; helped hold back Japanese land attack
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  • *'''1988 7" promo single''' (US: Geffen 27821DJ, Canada: Geffen PRO78217, Japan: Warner P-2414) *'''1988 CD single''' (Japan: Warner 10SW-60)
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  • (北海道 ''Hokkaidoo'') second-largest and northernmost of the main islands of Japan, including the cities of Sapporo, Hakodate and Asahikawa; population about
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(東京 ''Tookyoo'') capital of Japan, a densely-populated metropolitan region of many cities in the Kanto region
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  • ...rack used for Formula One motor racing and other events in Mie prefecture, Japan, and named after the city where it is located (鈴鹿市 ''Suzuka-shi'').
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  • ...ormation that initially garrisoned the [[Kwangtung Leasehold]], and, after Japan took control of Manchuria, was their major force there and fighting China;
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  • ...ment scheme to distribute at least ¥12,000 each to every legal resident in Japan; intended to stimulate the recession-hit Japanese economy.
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  • ..., naval, and submarine operations, including the [[nuclear attacks against Japan]], led to a Japanese surrender, making DOWNFALL unnecessary. ...would have massive air support, and [[Planned tactical nuclear attacks on Japan|tactical use of nuclear weapons]] was being consivered.
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  • {{rpl|Nuclear attacks against Japan}}
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  • ...s time, there was a change of government, from that of [[Prime Minister of Japan]] of [[Reijiro Wakatsuki]] to that of [[Giichi Tanaka]]. Japan blamed Communists, not the more moderate faction under [[Chiang Kai-shek]],
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Massive Soviet attack on Japan, in according with agreements at the [[Yalta Conference]], on 8-9 January 1
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  • ...decisions at the [[Yalta Conference]] but now disputed between Russia and Japan
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  • (雛祭り 'Doll Festival') event held on 3rd March in Japan to ensure the future happiness of girls; also known as Girls' Day, with ela
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  • ...Hard Times in the Kanto: Economic Change and Village Life in Late Tokugawa Japan]'. ''Modern Asian Studies'' 23(2): 349-371. *Hardacre, Helen. ''Religion and Society in Nineteenth-Century Japan: A Study of the Southern Kanto Region, Using late Edo and Early Meiji Gazet
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  • ...f history specializing in 20th century [[United States of America|U.S.]]-[[Japan]] relations; Past President, American Historical Association; advisory boar
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  • ...Navy Minister during the [[Russo-Japanese War]]; twice [[Prime Minister of Japan]]
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  • President of the [[Privy Council (Japan)]], 13 January 1924 – 25 September 1925; President of Tokyo Imperial Univ
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  • ...was a 1936 treaty of alliance between [[Nazi Germany]] and the [[Empire of Japan]].
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  • (b. November 16, 1952) [[Japan]]ese [[game designer|video game designer]] and producer at [[Nintendo]], re
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  • ...[Nagasaki]] is a little piece of [[People's Republic of China|China]] in [[Japan]].]] ...gold, with white marble flagstones, in contrast to more sober [[Culture of Japan|Japanese decoration]], and the grounds also house a [[museum]] of [[Culture
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  • ...nese diplomat, government official and educator; twice [[Prime Minister of Japan]]; founder of [[Waseda University]]; cofounder of [[Kenseito]] (Constitutio
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  • ...]]; field marshal, [[Imperial Japanese Army]]; briefly [[Prime Minister of Japan]] for the "surrender cabinet"
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  • .... ''[http://books.google.com/books?id=NJ3uIXixGqQC Language and Society in Japan]''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-53284-6.
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  • ...; board of directors, Nuclear Threat Initiative; formerly President of the Japan Institute of International Affairs and Japanese Vice Minister for Foreign A
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  • ====''Japan Podshow'', 2009====
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Head of government]] of Japan; not an immensely powerful executive, influenced by the monarchy prior to 1
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  • ...1948) Japanese diplomat, foreign minister, and briefly [[Prime Minister of Japan]] after the [[February 26, 1936 Incident]]; only civilian official sentence
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  • (沖縄県 ''Okinawa-ken'') Area of Japan consisting of many southerly islands of the Ryukyu Islands chain, with Okin
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  • ...] and supporting the [[Strike-South Movement]]; became [[Prime Minister of Japan]] and was wounded in the [[February 26, 1936 Incident]]
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  • ...es}}</noinclude>A 1936 treaty between [[Nazi Germany]] and the [[Empire of Japan]], not specifically of mutual defense against the [[Soviet Union]], but of
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  • (本州 ''Honshuu'') largest of the islands of Japan, divided into five regions and including the cities of Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka
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  • ...nclude>(1880-1950) [[Imperial Japanese Army]] general, [[Prime Minister of Japan]] between July 1944 and April 1945, and a Major War Criminal sentenced to l
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  • (関西地方 ''Kansai-chihoo''), region of Japan also known as Kinki (近畿地方 Kinki-chihoo) on Honshu island, divided i
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  • ...e>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>An area of southern [[Manchuria]], controlled by Japan under a 99-year lease obtained in 1915, which was the base of Japanese stre
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  • {{r|Japan}}
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  • .... .xls document.</ref> This is approximately 3% of the total population of Japan. {{Image|Shikoku-Japan-map.png|left|180px|Location of Shikoku.}}
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  • ...mbined Fleet]] 1936-1937; briefly Prime Minister in 1940; [[Navy Minister (Japan)|Navy Minister]] and associated with peace faction July 1944 to surrender
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>An 11th century [[Japan]]ese [[literature|literary]] masterpiece, one of the world's earliest [[nov
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  • ...antic 70102, France/Holland: Swan Song SS 19402, Italy: Swan Song K 19402, Japan: Warner Pioneer P-1361A, Mexico: Swan Song G-1514, Portugal: Atlantic ATL N '''1975 7" promo''' (Japan: Atlantic P-1361N)
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  • Region comprising China, Japan, North Korea, South Korea and Taiwan; also defined in cultural terms, with
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  • The '''Prime Minister of Japan''' is the modern [[head of government]] of Japan, part of the cabinet system established in 1885 under the [[Meiji Restorati
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  • Densely-populated metropolitan area of Japan located in the Kanto region of Honshu island, including Tokyo and the surro
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  • ...Assassination, on 15 May 1932, of [[Tsuyoshi Inukai]], [[Prime Minister of Japan]], by junior officers of the [[Imperial Japanese Army]] and [[Imperial Japa
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  • The former capital and cultural center of Japan located in the central part of Honshu island. Is one of the country's large
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  • {{rpl|Social Democratic Party (Japan)}}
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  • ...e, fought in February 1945, which solidified the U.S. strategic bombing of Japan by providing a closer island base, which both could support [[P-51]] escort
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  • (広島県 ''Hiroshima-ken'') area of Japan located in the Chugoku region of Honshu island, whose capital was struck by
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  • (四国) smallest and least populated of the four main islands of Japan, divided into four prefectures and including the cities of Takamatsu, Matsu
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  • ...f many issues that led to declining foreign relations between the U.S. and Japan during the 1930s and 1940s. In 1946, the region was returned to the contro ...ndently and in concert with the [[League of Nations]], exerted pressure on Japan. Foreign protests were ignored by the Japanese military, and the civilian
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  • (九州 ''Kyuushuu'') third-largest and westernmost of the main islands of Japan, divided into seven regions and including the cities of Fukuoka, Nagasaki,
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  • ...[[Himeji Castle]] is a [[UNESCO]] [[World Heritage site]]; unusually for [[Japan]], the castle is built of wood rather than stone. In the foreground is one '''[[Castle]]s in [[Japan]]''', as in other countries, were built as defensible fortifications, usual
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  • ...The influence of military officers on the governance and foreign policy of Japan, principally prior to and including [[World War Two in the Pacific]], but p
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  • ...he used use of Chinese characters to write Vietnamese, similar to kanji in Japan or hanja in Korea.
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  • '''The Daiei, Inc.''' is a large [[supermarket]] chain based in [[Japan]]. Daiei was founded in 1957 in [[Osaka]] by Isao Nakauchi. Daiei, now base ...004 for assistance from the IRCJ (Industrial Revitalization Corporation of Japan), a quasi-governmental assets restructuring company which acts as bailout o
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  • ...eation of the Japanese Constitution. He also chaired the [[Privy Council (Japan)]] and was President of the House of Peers.
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  • ...[Imperial Japanese Navy]].<ref>{{citation |title=Mitsubishi A6M Zero-Sen : Japan |author=Larry Dwyer |url=http://www.aviation-history.com/mitsubishi/zero.ht
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  • ...tional and [[counterintelligence]] duty, reporting to the [[Army Minister (Japan)]] rather than to the Army General Staff, a group that expanded its role in
    334 bytes (43 words) - 05:23, 2 September 2010
  • ...hern spur of Chinese Eastern Railway (Changchun to Port Arthur), ceded to Japan by Russia after the [[Russo-Japanese War]]. The company itself was formed i It was one of the first [[multinational corporation]]s that Japan used in Asia, although it also had attributes of nationally chartered firms
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  • ...na, rich in natural resources, control of which was key to the [[Empire of Japan]]; when under Japanese control, it was run as a nominal country called [[Ma
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  • A sea that lies between Korea and Japan, connected to the Pacific Ocean through several channels, including the Kor
    211 bytes (32 words) - 18:24, 17 December 2008
  • ...st, whose studies, as early as February 1944, projected a poor outcome for Japan in [[World War Two in the Pacific]]
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  • The '''Yamato people''' are an ethnic group native to Japan. Also known as the '''Wajin''' (Japanese people), they are estimated to com
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  • ...] region of [[Honshu]] island. Its population was 1,873,000 in 2006.<ref>''Japan Statistical Yearbook'': '[http://www.stat.go.jp/data/nenkan/zuhyou/y0203000 ...occur for the sixty-second time in 2013.<ref>''Japan Guide'': '[http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e4300.html Ise Shrines]'.</ref>
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  • ...as the 'Ise Shrine' (伊勢神宮 ''Ise-jinguu'') and are considered the centre of Japan's native [[religion]]. ...occur for the sixty-second time in 2013.<ref>''Japan Guide'': '[http://www.japan-guide.com/e/e4300.html Ise Shrines]'.</ref>
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  • ...group that was created by 21 nations, including the United States, China, Japan, Australia, Canada, Mexico, Singapore and others; representing more than tw
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  • ...located on [[Honshu]] island. It consists of seven administrative areas ([[Japan/Related_Articles#Prefectures|prefectures]]), and is home to the cities of [ {{Image|Kansa-Japan-map.png|right|180px|Location of Kansai.}}
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  • ...Urbanization Prospects: The 2007 Revision Population Database]'. ''Select 'Japan' in the right hand column and click 'Display'.''</ref><ref>The 'Greater Tok {{Image|Kanto-Japan-map.png|right|180px|Location of Kanto.}}
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  • ...t|thumb|300px|At the heart of Kyushu lies [[Mount Aso]] (阿蘇山 ''Aso-san''), Japan's largest active [[volcano]].]] ....xls document.</ref> This is approximately 11% of the total population of Japan.<ref>Some of the [[Ryukyu Islands]] are part of Kagoshima prefecture; howev
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(長崎県 ''Nagasaki-ken'') area of Japan located on the island of Kyushu, once a gateway for foreign trade during th
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  • ...tween the United States of America, the British Empire, France, Italy, and Japan, which was signed at Washington, February 6, 1922, at a "Conference on the
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  • <div style="border: none; width:300px;"><div class="thumbcaption">Japan's capital, [[Tokyo]], is a city of packed streets, [[neon]] logos and the a |valign=top rowspan=2|[[Image:Japan.gif|300px]]
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  • ...ale-meat-dish.jpg/credit}}<br/>|}}Whale meat is considered a delicacy in [[Japan]]. Here, the meat has been sliced into a strip of 'whale bacon'.]] ...and eaten in various ways, and for example forms one part of traditional [[Japan]]ese cuisine (鯨肉 ''gei niku'' 'whale meat'). Servings also appear on me
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  • {{rpl|National Diet (Japan)}}
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  • ...a second strike against [[Nagasaki (city)|Nagasaki]] three days later and Japan surrended on 14 August.
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  • ...hough they are the norm in most [[Europe]]an countries and are common in [[Japan]] even when one party has a [[working majority]]. ...ernment with the [[People's New Party]] and the [[Social Democratic Party (Japan)|Social Democratic Party]] in 2009, partly because the DPJ lacked a firm ma
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  • ...ociation of Southeast Asian Nations]], as well as [[Bangladesh]], China, [[Japan]], [[South Korea]], [[India]] and [[Sri Lanka]]
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Prime Minister of Japan]] and cofounder of the [[Kokuhonsha]] nationalist and fascist organization;
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  • ...rmed the first Japanese political party, and was later [[Prime Minister of Japan]].
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  • Navy Minister of Japan in 1940; resigned with the Konoe government's replacement by the Tojo cabin
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