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The grave of Hosokawa Gracia and Hosokawa Tadaoki, Kōtō-in, Daitoku-ji, Kyoto. Akechi Tama (明智たま, Akechi Tama), usually referred to as Hosokawa Gracia (細川ガラシャ, Hosokawa Garasha), (1563 – 25 August 1600) was a member of the aristocratic Akechi family from the Sengoku period. [1]
"Sun-tama-tama" (a pun on "Santama", lit. "third Tama") was a calico cat sent for training in Okayama. Sun-tama-tama was considered as a candidate for Tama's successor, but the Okayama Public Relations representative who had been caring for Sun-tama-tama refused to give the cat up, writing, "I will not let go of this child, she will stay in ...
Honmichi sources claim that Tama was born on the 24th day of the 10th lunar month, the same day that Nakayama Miki was born. [n 1] [2] In 1962, after Aijirō's death in 1958, Ōnishi Tama seceded from the Honmichi religion and set up her own new religious group, called Honbushin. It was formally incorporated as a religious organization in 1966.
Tama (cat), a cat who was a stationmaster of a Japanese railway station; TAMA 300, a gravitational wave detector; Tama Art University, a Japanese private art school; Tama edwardsi, a genus of spiders; Tama Toshi Monorail Line (多摩都市モノレール線), in Tokyo, Japan; Tama Electric Car Company, a car manufacturer which became Prince ...
Tamahime (珠姫) or Tama (1599-1622) was a Japanese noble lady, member of the aristocrat Tokugawa family during the Edo period. She was the second daughter of the shogun Tokugawa Hidetada , and her mother was Oeyo , both important figures who stabilized and ruled the Tokugawa shogunate .
Akechi Mitsuhide (明智 光秀, March 10, 1528 – July 2, 1582), [1] first called Jūbei from his clan and later Koretō Hyūga no Kami (惟任日向守) from his title, was a Japanese samurai general of the Sengoku period.
The Japanese word mitama (御魂・御霊・神霊, 'honorable spirit') refers to the spirit of a kami or the soul of a dead person. [1] It is composed of two characters, the first of which, mi (御, honorable), is simply an honorific. The second, tama (魂・霊) means "spirit".
Tama and Yūgorō's only child, a son named Kondō Hisatarō, was born in 1883. Kondō Tama died three years later in 1886 and Yūgorō later remarried at least twice. In 1905, Kondō Hisatarō was killed in action in the Russo-Japanese War at the age of 22. This marked the end of the Kondō Isami bloodline. [31]