c1850, Japanese original Ukiyo-e Woodblock print, Sadahide, The Battle of the Minamoto and Taira Clans at Yashima, Edo-period.
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@japrints
c1850, Japanese original Ukiyo-e Woodblock print, Sadahide, The Battle of the Minamoto and Taira Clans at Yashima, Edo-period.
The New fighting the Old in early Meiji Japan 1870
Sojo Henjo 1835
Tôkaidô saishikizuri gojûsan tsugi, zen
Omae in the midst of the snow Part II
Evening Snow on Mt. Fuji 1832
Snow at the Silver Pavilion
Japanese Ukiyoe, Woodblock print, antique, Hiroshige, “Moon Over Ryogoku, Summer”
Very fresh water for swimming
Samurai reading letter 1854
An Actor stands out 1881
The Humane Great Japanese Red Cross Medical Corps Tending to the Injured in the Russo-Japanese War - Hakuai naru dai Nihon Sekijûji eiseitai Nichiro sentôchû fushôsha kyûgo no zu
Japanese Ukiyoe, Woodblock print, antique, Hiroshige, “Evening Snow at Asakusa (left)”
Japanese Ukiyo-e, Woodcut print, Hiroshige, “The Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō, Miya”
The historical basis for the narrative begins in 1701. The ruling shogun Tokugawa Tsunayoshi placed Asano Takumi-no-kami Naganori, the daimyo of Akō, in charge of a reception of envoys from the Imperial Court in Kyoto. He also appointed the protocol official (kōke) Kira Kōzuke-no-suke Yoshinakato instruct Asano in the ceremonies. On the day of the reception, at Edo Castle, Asano drew his short sword and attempted to kill Kira. His reasons are not known, but many purport that insult was involved. For this, he was sentenced to commit seppuku, but Kira went without punishment. The shogunate confiscated Asano’s lands (the Akō Domain) and dismissed the samurai who had served him, making them rōnin.
Nearly two years later, Ōishi Kuranosuke Yoshio, who had been a high-ranking samurai in the service of Asano, led a group of forty-six/forty-seven of the ronin (some discount the membership of one for various reasons). They broke into Kira’s mansion in Edo, captured and executed Kira, and laid his head at the grave of Asano at Sengaku-ji. Then they turned themselves in to the authorities, and were sentenced to commit seppuku, which they all did on the same day that year. Ōishi is the protagonist in most retellings of the fictionalized form of what became known as the Akō incident, or, in its fictionalized form, the Treasury of Loyal Retainers (Chūshingura)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ch%C5%ABshingura
1933, Japanese vintage original woodblock print book, Hattori Torazo, “Yamato-e Monyo Four Seasons, Spring vol.1”
糞尿地獄 a excreta hell