Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. The Imperial Japanese Naval College (海軍兵学校, Kaigun Heigakkō, Short form: 海兵 Kaihei) was a school established to train line officers for the Imperial Japanese Navy. It was originally located in Nagasaki , moved to Yokohama in 1866, and was relocated to Tsukiji , Tokyo in 1869.

  2. The predecessor of the Etajima base was the branch officer training system of the Imperial Japanese Naval Academy. The Naval Academy moved to Etajima from Tsukiji, Tokyo in 1888. The current academy was re-established in 1956. Before World War II, the Britannia Royal Naval College and United States Naval Academy were called the ...

  3. Looking into the Japanese Naval Academy at Etajima, we can uncover the Substance of which the Japanese naval leader is made, and something of his methods. It was upon the dissolution of the feudal System in Japan in 1867, the overthrow of its enforcement body, the Shogunate, and the commencement of the Meiji era that Japan entered upon a period ...

  4. A visit to the Museum of Naval History includes a tour of the buildings of the former Imperial Japanese Naval Academy, which was established in Etajima in 1888. The museum itself was constructed in 1936 using donations from former Naval Academy graduates "in order to preserve the history and traditions of the Imperial Japanese navy."

    • Imperial Japanese Naval Academy1
    • Imperial Japanese Naval Academy2
    • Imperial Japanese Naval Academy3
    • Imperial Japanese Naval Academy4
    • Imperial Japanese Naval Academy5
  5. The Naval War College (海軍大学校, Kaigun Daigakkō), Short form: 海大 Kaidai) was the staff college of the Imperial Japanese Navy, responsible for training officers for command positions either on warships, or in staff roles.

  6. The Etajima Museum, on the grounds of the former Imperial Japanese Naval Academy, highlights contributions of Japan's historical warriors. This Type A midget submarine was one of five used in the attack against Pearl Harbor.

  7. On the island of Eta Jima in the Inland Sea opposite Hiroshima and Kure is located the former Japanese Naval Academy, an institution about which little was known before World War II and regarding which little has been written.