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* Samurai Reincarnation ( 1981 ) as Jūbei Mitsuyoshi Yagyū
from
Wikipedia
Some Related Sentences
Samurai and Reincarnation
Samurai and 1981
Samurai, Burning Brave ( 1981 ), Shogun's Shadow ( 1989 ) and executive producer, film director at Yellow Fangs ( 1990 ).
Samurai and Jūbei
Samurai and Yagyū
Iemitsu's rivalry with his brother Tokugawa Tadanaga over the Shogunate form a part of the television series The Yagyu Conspiracy and is the basis for the film Shogun's Samurai ( at the end of the film, Shogun Iemitsu is killed and decapitated by Yagyu Jubei in an act of revenge for his father Yagyū Munenori's betrayal ).
Reincarnation and 1981
She appeared in The Carey Treatment ( 1972 ), Lady Ice ( 1973 ), The Reincarnation of Peter Proud ( 1975 ), Caravans ( 1978 ), A Force of One ( 1979 ), Scanners ( 1981 ), and The Cover Girl Murders ( 1993 made-for-television film ).
: Reincarnation Claims Investigated, 1981 ISBN 0-575-02968-4 ( Reprinted in 1982 under the title All In The Mind )
Jūbei and Mitsuyoshi
Yagyū Jūbei Mitsuyoshi (, 1607 – April 12, 1650 ) is one of the most famous and romanticized of the samurai in Japan's feudal era.
Yagyū Jūbei Mitsuyoshi ( born " Shichirō ") grew up in his family's ancestral lands, Yagyū no Sato, now in Nara.
Growing up in a poor farming village in the 1930s and early 40s, he recounted having the same interest in historical heroes such as Yagyū Jūbei Mitsuyoshi and Goto Matabe as most other Japanese boys.
The main character, Kibagami Jubei, is an homage to the famed Japanese folk hero Yagyū Jūbei Mitsuyoshi.
Soon after, Amakusa's restless spirit returns to avenge his fallen comrades and is up to Yagyū Jūbei Mitsuyoshi to put a stop to the demonic onslaught.
Jūbei and Yagyū
Records of Yagyū Jūbei, however, do not appear again until 1631, when Jūbei, by now regarded as the best swordsman from the Yagyū clan, is summarily and inexplicably dismissed by the Shōgun either due to Jūbei's boldness and brashness or his decision to embark on a Warrior's Pilgrimage (, Musha Shugyō ).
His whereabouts are then unknown over the next twelve years — even the Yagyū clan's secret chronicles, which contained lengthy passages on numerous members, has little solid information on Jūbei — until Yagyū Jūbei reappears at the age of 36 at a demonstration of swordsmanship in front of the Shōgun.
Following this exhibition, Jūbei was reinstated and serves for a short time as a government-inspector (, Gosho Inban ), taking control over his father's lands until Yagyū Tajima no Kami Munenori's death in 1646.
Jūbei was laid to rest in a small village called Ohkawahara Mura, nearby his birthplace, which was also the resting grounds for his half-brother, Yagyū Tomonori.
In keeping with tradition, Yagyū Jūbei was buried alongside his grandfather, Yagyū Muneyoshi, and was survived by two daughters and his brother Munefuyu, his successor.
Mitsuyoshi and Yagyū
Very little is known about the actual life of Yagyū Mitsuyoshi as the official records of his life are very sparse.
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