「北畠」に関連した動画の一覧

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「北畠」に関連した動画の一覧

 

Taiheiki Kitabatake Chikafusa北畠親房 1Taiheiki Kitabatake Chikafusa北畠親房 1 
Sorry, the first upload did not take. Anyway, this episode began with Akamatsu complaining about how unfair his reward was after the Kamakura's end. Samurais were sidelined and the court nobles, meaning the emperor's extended family, took over the government. But the court nobles did not have the grass root understanding of Japan and had not governing skills to keep people happy. Akamatus was just the mouthpiece of thousands and thousands of samurais. Thanks for watching.
2011年02月06日再生回数 5184
Taiheiki Kitabatake Chikafusa北畠親房 2Taiheiki Kitabatake Chikafusa北畠親房 2 
As the story evolved, Kitabatake had obviousy become more of a pivotal figure in the downfall of Go Daigo's new dynasty. Kitabatake was incompetent, arrogant, and unsophisticated in administration, politic, government affairs and in almost every aspect. But he thought he was the God-sent gift to Japan What a joke. He inevitably killed his son by sending his son to the battlefield. He ruined the emperor's administration. In today's term, he is an idiot. Kitabatake, in his writings, held a strong distaste for the Ashikaga clan, the ruling family at the time who held the position of Shogun and maintained a rival Imperial court known as the Northern Court. This disdain came not only because they were warriors rather than nobles, who were clumsy and uncouth at Court, but because they were of a less distinguished branch of the famous Minamoto clan than Kitabatake's own Murakami branch. In particular, he disliked Ashikaga Takauji, the first Ashikaga shogun, who had originally supported Go-Daigo's claim to the Throne, but who ultimately headed the Northern Court and sought to destroy all who supported the Emperor's Southern Court. Kitabatake also wrote of Nitta Yoshisada, one of the greatest military supporters of Go-Daigo, in a bad light. He saw Nitta as a warrior, little different from the Shoguns, but also accused him of never being available when the Emperor called upon him. Had Nitta been more available in the south of the country, instead of fighting his own battles in the ...
2011年02月04日再生回数 2943
Taiheiki Kitabatake Chikafusa北畠親房 3Taiheiki Kitabatake Chikafusa北畠親房 3 
Japan under Chikafusa's 北畠親房rule was even much worse than the ousted Kamakura. People were starving in great numbers and the anti-Kamarua samurais were not rewarded accordingly. Instead, the court nobles such as Chikafusa北畠親房confisticated most of the land ownership in Japan. Takauji found himself yet in another revolution in progress. When Go-Daigo died in 1339, Chikafusa was under siege in his stronghold in Hitachi Province. He sent copies of his major works to the new emperor, twelve-year-old Emperor Go-Murakami, advising him and his advisors. Though he is most well-known for his writings and his role as Imperial advisor, Kitabatake was also a competent commander in battle, and held off the superior forces of the shogunate on many occasions. The siege of Hitachi lasted four years, and though his fortress ultimately fell to the supporters of the shogunate, Kitabatake escaped to Yoshino, the capital of the Southern Court, where he advised the Emperor until his own death in 1354. Chikafusa is considered one of the greatest men of his time, along with his rival Ashikaga Takauji. Though his works are heavily colored by his personal bias and political motives, they are some of the most detailed accounts available on the history of Japan's feudal government and Imperial line.
2011年02月04日再生回数 3672
Taiheiki Kitabatake Chikafusa北畠親房 4Taiheiki Kitabatake Chikafusa北畠親房 4 
Chikafusa was a pro-Emperor court offial with a bitter taste of powerlessness under the rule of bushi, namely the samurais. He played Nitta against Ashikaga Takauji but failed. He sent his son to fight Takauji and failed. To sum it up, his whole life was a big failure. Works In his writings on the legitimate imperial lineage, Kitabatake delved into the subject of land ownership. In one document he denounces the Provincial Shugo and Jitō (Constables and Stewards) as land-hungry, and writes that the creation of this system in 1190 altered the traditional state of the country, and caused it to lose the art of government. Though the full details of his ideas for reform are unknown, it is likely that Kitabatake sought a return to the governmental structures set down during the Taihō Era, in 702, before the rise of feudalism and military rule. He recognized that certain privileges gained by the bushi (great warrior families) and kuge (Court nobility) in that time would not be relinquished, but he did seek to abolish the systems of land tenure and tax collection that supported the power of the bushi. Kitabatake viewed the bushi, and by extension the bakufu (shogunate), the military government, as enemies of the Throne.
2011年02月04日再生回数 2538
TOKYO FM インテグラル・ステーション ロードスター/北畠美枝TOKYO FM インテグラル・ステーション ロードスター/北畠美枝 
東京FM インテグラル・ステーション パート1 1993年夏。パーソナリティ藤原麻衣子さん極めてレア北畠さんのシングルロードスター」がかかっていたので、ご一緒に。
2010年07月18日再生回数 4155
北畠美枝「Seaside Moon」北畠美枝「Seaside Moon」 
北畠さん「Seaside Moon」(アルバムRemix)、1992年ブレイクすることはなかったですが、ほんわかした雰囲気の素晴らしいボーカリストです。作詞作曲山梨鐐平編曲小野澤 篤。 この曲は他に、シングルB面バージョンミニアルバム収録された英語バージョンあります
2010年07月19日再生回数 672
Taiheiki Kitabatake Chikafusa北畠親房 5Taiheiki Kitabatake Chikafusa北畠親房 5 
Returning to Kyōto, Emperor Go-Daigo took the throne from Emperor Kōgon and began the Kemmu Restoration. The Restoration was ostensibly a revival of the older ways, but, in fact, the emperor had his eye set on an imperial dictatorship like that of the emperor of China. He wanted to imitate the Chinese in all their ways and become the most powerful ruler in the East. Impatient reforms, litigation over land rights, rewards, and the exclusion of the samurai from the political order caused much complaining, and his political order began to fall apart. In 1335, Ashikaga Takauji, who had travelled to eastern Japan without obtaining an imperial edict in order to suppress the Nakasendai Rebellion, became disaffected with the Restoration. Emperor Go-Daigo ordered Nitta Yoshisada to track down and destroy Ashikaga. Ashikaga defeated Nitta Yoshisada at the Battle of Takenoshita, Hakone. Kusunoki Masashige and Kitabatake Akiie, in communication with Kyoto, smashed the Ashikaga army. Takauji fled to Kyūshū, but the following year, after restructuring his army in Kyūshū, he again approached Kyōto. Kusunoki Masashige proposed a reconciliation with Ashikaga Takauji to the emperor, but Go-Daigo rejected this. He ordered Masashige and Yoshisada to destroy Takauji. Kusunoki's army was defeated at the Battle of Minatogawa (湊川の戦い). When Ashikaga's army entered Kyōto, Emperor Go-Daigo resisted, fleeing to Mount Hiei, but seeking reconciliation, he sent the Sacred Treasures to the Ashikaga ...
2011年02月05日再生回数 3946
北畠神社北畠神社 
三重県津市の「北畠神社」です。 (ハイビジョン撮影
2008年04月24日再生回数 575
上町線 姫松駅~北畠駅 帝塚山併用軌道上町線 姫松駅~北畠駅 帝塚山併用軌道 
姫松から北畠駅までの併用軌道巡りながら、沿線にある帝塚山らしい風景建物撮影しました。帝塚山でもアパート賃貸住宅多く、その気になれば誰でも入居できる物件あります家賃そんなに高くないようです。アパート清潔感があり、デザインも大変良いです。貧乏性抜け切れない俺には多少抵抗感ありますが、一度住んでみたい。
2008年10月20日再生回数 1238
阪堺電車上町線北畠駅阪堺電車上町線北畠 
の上町線北畠駅の様子です。
2008年09月06日再生回数 2032



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