Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Emperor Jimmu" ¶ 12
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

According and Kojiki
According to the legendary account in the Kojiki, Emperor Jimmu would have been born on 13 February 711 BC ( the first day of the first month of the Chinese calendar ), and died, again according to legend, on 11 March 585 BC ( both dates according to the lunisolar traditional Japanese calendar ).
According to Nihongi, he had six wives ; but Kojiki only gives five wives, identifying the third consort to the sixth one.
According to the pseudo-historical Kojiki and Nihonshoki ( collectively known as ), Sujin was the second son of Emperor Kaika Sujin's mother was Ikagashikome no Mikoto, a stepmother of his father.
According to the Kojiki and Nihonshoki, he was the father of Emperor Ōjin.
According to the Kojiki and the Nihonshoki, Ōjin was the son of the Emperor Chūai and his consort Jingū.
According to Nihonshoki and Kojiki, Richū was the eldest son of Emperor Nintoku and Iwanohime.
According to Kojiki and Nihonshoki, he was the fourth son of Emperor Nintoku and his consort Iwanohime, and therefore a younger brother of his predecessor Emperor Hanzei.
According to Kojiki and Nihonshoki, Ankō was the second son of Emperor Ingyō.
According to the Kojiki, this emperor is said to have ruled from the Thirteenth Day of the Eleventh Month of 456 ( Heishin ) until his death on the Seventh Day of the Eight Month of 479 ( Kibi ).
According to Kojiki and Nihonshoki, Yūryaku was named Prince Ohatsuse Wakatake ( 大泊瀬 幼武 ) at birth.
According to Kojiki and Nihonshoki, he was a son of Emperor Yūryaku.
According to the Kojiki ( 712 ) and Nihon Shoki ( 720 ), Buretsu died without a successor, at which time a fifth generation grandson of Emperor Ōjin, Keitai, came and ascended the throne.
According to Kojiki and Nihon Shoki, his father was Hikoushi no Kimi and his mother was Furihime.
According to the Kojiki Ankan was the elder son of Emperor Keitai, who is considered to have ruled the country during the early-6th century, though there is a paucity of information about him.
According to the Nihon Shoki and Kojiki, a Korean scholar called Wani () was dispatched to Japan by the Kingdom of Baekje during the reign of Emperor Ōjin in the early 5th century, bringing with him knowledge of Confucianism and Chinese characters.
According to Kojiki and Nihon Shoki, the oldest record of a Silla immigrant is Amenohiboko, a legendary prince of Silla who settled to Japan at the era of Emperor Suinin, perhaps around the 3rd or 4th century.
According to Kojiki Nihon Shoki, In Emperor Ōjin's reign, Geunchogo of Baekje presented Stallions and Broodmares with Horse trainers to the Japanese emperor.
According to the Kojiki, Susanoo descended to the headwaters of the Hii River at Mount Sentsū, Okuizumo, Shimane | Okuizumo, Shimane Prefecture.
According to Kojiki, the god Susanoo encountered a grieving family of kunitsukami (" gods of the land ") headed by in Izumo province.
According to Kojiki, the oldest record of Japan, a Korean immigrant named Amenohiboko, prince of Silla came to Japan to serve the Japanese Emperor, and he lived in Tajima Province.
According to Shinto mythology as related in Kojiki, this is where the dead go to dwell and apparently rot indefinitely.
According to Kojiki, the entrance to Yomi lies in Izumo province and was sealed off by Izanagi upon his flight from Yomi, at which time he permanently blocked the entrance by placing a massive boulder ( Chibiki-no-Iwa 千引の岩 ) at the base of the slope that leads to Yomi ( Yomotsu Hirasaka 黄泉平坂 or 黄泉比良坂 ).
According to Kojiki, eight kinds Raijin was born from Izanami.
According to the Kojiki, Emperor Suinin ordered Tajima-mori to bring from the Eternal Land.

According and Jimmu
According to Shinto belief, Jimmu is regarded as a direct descendant of the sun goddess, Amaterasu.
According to records the shrine was established in the first year of Emperor Jimmu ( 神武天皇 Jimmu-tenno ) in approximately 600BC.

According and died
According to the Gospel of Matthew, at the death of Jesus tombs were opened, and at his resurrection many saints who had died emerged from their tombs and went into " the holy city ", presumably New Jerusalem.
According to a version of the Ariadne legend noted by Plutarch, Theseus abandoned Ariadne at Amathousa, where she died giving birth to her child and was buried in a sacred tomb.
According to the ship's log, Selkirk died at 8 p. m. on 13 December 1721 while serving as a lieutenant on board the Royal ship Weymouth.
According to Tacitus in his Annals, Boudica poisoned herself, though in the Agricola which was written almost twenty years prior he mentions nothing of suicide and attributes the end of the revolt to socordia (" indolence "); Dio says she fell sick and died and then was given a lavish burial ; though this may be a convenient way to remove her from the story.
According to Gesta, Unni had died in 936 ( I 64 ).
According to the New Testament Jesus was crucified, died a physical death, was buried within a tomb, and rose from the dead three days later.
According to one historical account, aboriginal tribes of Australia were " most certainly cannibals ", and would willingly eat anyone who was killed in a fight ; they would also eat men famed for their fighting ability who had died natural deaths "... out of pity and consideration for the body ".
According to Sunni beliefs, Muhammad gave no specific directions as to the choosing of his successor when he died.
According to one authority ( a legend on the 1489 map of Henricus Martellus Germanus ), Cão died off Cape Cross ; but João de Barros and others wrote of his return to the Congo, and subsequent taking of a native envoy to Portugal.
According to his figures, six times as many people have died from the inflictions of people working for governments than have died in battle.
According to his own account, each day he would walk in front of the hospital in which Giulio died until he was inured to the pain.
According to this account, Emperor Senka died in 539 at the age of 73 ; and succession passed to the third son of Emperor Keitai.
According to traditional sources, Yamato Takeru died in the 43rd year of Emperor Keiko's reign ( 景行天皇43年 ).
According to Nihonshoki, the king of the Korean Silla Kingdom grieved very much when Ingyō died.
According to archival records, at least 16, 594 people died under the guillotine or otherwise after accusations of counter-revolutionary activities.
According to Dio Cassius 72. 14. 3 – 4, in about 189 AD, under Commodus ’ reign, a pestilence occurred, the largest of which he had knowledge, in which 2, 000 people died in Rome each day.
According to a 1993 study of archival Soviet data, a total of 1, 053, 829 people died in the Gulag from 1934 to 1953.
According to UN estimates, between 500, 000 and 1. 2 million children died during the years of the sanctions.
According to the Harvard University Library, " By the late 19th century, 70 to 90 % of the urban populations of Europe and North America were infected with the TB bacillus, and about 80 % of those individuals who developed active tuberculosis died of it.
According to a version of these interpretations, Isaac died in the sacrifice and was revived.
According to German government estimates, " 65, 000 people died in those Soviet-run camps or in transportation to them.

0.209 seconds.