Yahoo Search Busca da Web

  1. Incluindo resultados de

    Katsu Kaishū
    Buscar somente Katsu Kaishu

Resultado da Busca

  1. Military theorist. Count Katsu Yasuyoshi (勝 安芳) (born Katsu Yoshikuni (勝 義邦); March 12, 1823—January 21, 1899, best known by his nickname Katsu Kaishū (勝 海舟)) was a Japanese statesman, naval engineer and military commander during the late Tokugawa shogunate and early Meiji period. [1]

  2. Katsu Kaishu is an important historical figure and supporting character in Rurouni Kenshin. Kaishu is an old man with grey hair that is brushed back, long thin eyebrows, a goatee, and wrinkles around his face. Kaishu wears a light blue shirt under a black haori, and brown pants. Kaishu, as he is...

  3. Katsu Kaishu (勝 海舟 Awa Katsu; Kaishū; Rintaro; Yoshikuni 1823-1899) foi um oficial naval japonês e estadista durante o Xogunato Tokugawa Tardio e durante o Período Meiji. [ 1] Carreira. Kaishū era um apelido que ele tirou de um pedaço de caligrafia (Kaishū Shooku海舟書屋) de Sakuma Shōzan.

  4. 13 de jan. de 2012 · Learn about Katsu Kaishu, a Tokugawa retainer, Meiji politician and naval engineer who studied Western technologies and culture. He commanded Japan's first steam corvette, surrendered Edo to the Imperial forces, and became a high-ranking Meiji official.

    • Katsu Kaishu1
    • Katsu Kaishu2
    • Katsu Kaishu3
    • Katsu Kaishu4
  5. 5 de mai. de 2021 · Learn about Katsu Kaishu, a former samurai who negotiated the surrender of Edo Castle to the new Meiji government in 1868. The Ota City Katsu Kaishu Memorial Museum displays his letters, quotes, and a replica of his villa.

  6. Katsu Kaishuu is an important historical figure and supporting character in Rurouni Kenshin. He was a samurai, born Katsu Rintarou, in January 1823, in Edo (present day Tokyo) to a low-ranking retainer of the Tokugawa Shogun.

  7. The Man Who Saved Early Modern Japan. By Romulus Hillsborough. Katsu Kaishu in San Francisco, 1860. Editor's Note: This is the second article on Japanese Samurai leaders who, at the end of Japan’s feudal period, defied death and personal safety to help forge a new Japan. The first article was “ Sakamoto Ryoma: The Indispensable “Nobody.”