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- Tokyo (4,111 bytes)
5: ...ars until the Meiji Restoration in 1868, when the Tokugawa Shogunate ended and imperial rule was restored. T...
- Adachi-ku (2,900 bytes)
4: ...the [[Great Senju Bridge]] finished. During the [[Tokugawa Shogunate]], parts of the ward were controlled by...
- Arakawa-ku (2,121 bytes)
3: ... starting in 1651, Arakawa was also home to the [[Tokugawa Shogunate]]’s largest execution grounds. During...
- Japanese History (9,218 bytes)
41: ...t as the sides fought over succession. However, [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] emerged at the [[Battle of Sekigahara]] ...
45: ...rious samurai clans. For fifteen generations, the Tokugawa clan held the role of shogunate and moved the adm...
- Kita-ku (2,966 bytes)
8: Since being opened to the public by Tokugawa Yoshumune, Asukayama Park has been a popular dest...
- Hamamatsu (3,267 bytes)
6: In 1570 Shogun [[Leyasu Tokugawa]], who established a line of Shogun, built the [[...
- Kochi (3,086 bytes)
10: ...ivity in rice production. Yamanouchi's loyalty to Tokugawa Ieyasu earned him a 240,000 koku domain of Tosa. ...
- Kumamoto (2,495 bytes)
10: ... [[feudalism]] was ended by the corruption of the Tokugawa regime.
- Kushiro (2,362 bytes)
6: ...clan]] dispatched ships to trade with Ainu in the Tokugawa Shougunate over 370 years ago. In 1869 this area ...
- Matsumoto (2,810 bytes)
8: ... the government to collapse and in [[1867]] the [[Tokugawa Shogunat]]e collapsed and full sovereignty was re...
- Basilisk (3,102 bytes)
5: ... centuries, until they were united in battle by [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]]. Ieyasu becomes the Shogun and is able t...
- Kagemusha (2,989 bytes)
5: ... time for him to die as his clan is in a war with Tokugawa Ieyasu. Shingen’s brother brings before the cou...
9: Eventually Tokugawa comes to find and kill Shingen, and when his army...
- Kyoko Kishida (6,385 bytes)
29: * [[Tokugawa Yoshinobu]] (1998) TV Series
- Masahiro Motoki (3,543 bytes)
36: * [[Tokugawa Yoshinobu]] (T.V. series)—1998
- Yokohama (4,937 bytes)
6: ...merce. A treaty was signed in [[1854]] with the [[Tokugawa Shogunate]] and the port village of Yokohama was ...
- Ueno (3,218 bytes)
4: ...] Shoguns, and the [[Toshogu Shinto Shrine]] to [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]].
14: ...u Shrine, dedicated to the first Shogunate of the Tokugawa Era was completed in 1651 and sits just outside t...
- Marunouchi (4,414 bytes)
8: Before the movement of the [[Tokugawa Shogunate]] to [[Edo Castle]] in [[1590]], the ar...
- Tokyo Imperial Palace (2,407 bytes)
4: ...al Palace in Tokyo was actually the home of the [[Tokugawa Shogunate]] until the [[Meiji Restoration]] when ...
- Kichijoji (3,118 bytes)
14: ...to be opened to the public. Various prints show [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] using the water in the park for tea cere...
- Suginami-ku (3,882 bytes)
20: ... is named for this temple, a favorite location of Tokugawa Shoguns.
- Koishikawa-Korakuen (2,526 bytes)
15: ...ikawa-Korakuen Garden was originally crafted by [[Tokugawa Yorifusa]] around the year [[1629]]. While his id...
- Nagaoka (2,691 bytes)
10: ...arted out as a [[Castle Town]] in [[1616]] when [[Tokugawa Shogunate]] deemed the lord of the [[Nagaoka Clan...
- Shiodome (2,289 bytes)
10: ...erely a marshland and was primarily the site of [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]]’s castle. The theory is that this rule...
- Takamatsu (2,431 bytes)
14: ...[[1868]] the city of Takamatsu was ruled by the [[Tokugawa]] family. This family took over the Takamatsu Cas...
- Okinawa Prefecture (4,740 bytes)
9: ...ed and formed a tributary role with Satsuma and [[Tokugawa]] in turn. Ryukyu’s sovereign status was mainta...
- Chiba Prefecture (2,988 bytes)
5: ...ely agricultural and industrial areas under the [[Tokugawa Shogunate]]. Consolidation occurred on June 15, 1...
- Nagasaki Prefecture (3,000 bytes)
5: ...ovinces of Tsushima, Iki, and Hizen. During the [[Tokugawa Shogunate]], the region was directly facing both ...
7: ...ough, the missionaries were pushed out and when [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] came to power, Christianity was banned u...
50: ...rado Castle and Shimabara Castle date back to the Tokugawa Period.
- Ibaraki Prefecture (2,755 bytes)
5: ... [[Hitachi Province]] – which was a prominent [[Tokugawa]] era province – during the [[Meiji Restoration...
- Ehime Prefecture (2,758 bytes)
7: The [[Tokugawa Shogunate]], following the [[Battle of Sekigahara...
- Hiroshima Prefecture (2,421 bytes)
46: ...ng call for peace. Hiroshima Castle is a relic of Tokugawa era Japan, while temples and shrines such as [[Mi...
- Kyoto Prefecture (3,724 bytes)
11: ...truction of much of Kyoto during the time. When [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] took power in 1603, he moved the shoguna...
- Hyogo Prefecture (2,981 bytes)
7: Later, during the [[Tokugawa Shognuate]], the [[Himeji Castle]] was built and ...
- Nara Prefecture (4,468 bytes)
5: ...n]] and was known as Yamato Province during the [[Tokugawa]] period. However, it is best known for its role ...
13: During the Tokugawa Period, The shogunate eventually took full contro...
- Shiga Prefecture (2,767 bytes)
52: ...eriod castle that housed Ii Naosuke, a well known Tokugawa politician who was instrumental in opening Japan ...
- Kanagawa Prefecture (3,075 bytes)
7: ...ver to the [[daimyo]] of [[Odawara Castle]] while Tokugawa himself governed the eastern half.
- Tokyo History (3,786 bytes)
3: ...okan]] in 1457 during the [[Marumachi Period]]. [[Tokugawa Ieyasu]] moved into [[Edo Castle]] in 1590 and es...
6: Starting in 1603 when Tokugawa Ieyasu was named [[Shogun]], Edo became the gover...
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