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Stoic and serious, he often acts as the straight man to Tsurumi's and Koito's eccentric personalities. He grew up on the island of Sado where he was persecuted because of his violent and brutal father. He loved a woman called Igogusa, so named because of her seaweed-like hair, but when he returned from the Sino-Japanese War, he found that his ...
Back in Otaru, Tsurumi reveals to Nikaidou that Kiroranke was a teenage member of the group responsible for the assassination of Emperor Alexander II in Russia, and he leaked information to the Russians that Kiroranke was on his way into Russian Sakhalin. Just as Kiroranke's group cross the border disguised as Uilta, a Russian sniper shoots the ...
Golden Kamuy (Japanese: ゴールデンカムイ, Hepburn: Gōruden Kamui) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Satoru Noda.It was serialized in Shueisha's seinen manga magazine Weekly Young Jump from August 2014 to April 2022, with its chapters collected in thirty-one tankōbon volumes.
Ayaka Tsurumi (鶴見綾香, born 1994), a Japanese female soccer player Kiyohiko Tsurumi (鶴見清彦, 1917-1976), a Japanese diplomat Ken Tsurumi (鶴見憲, 1895-1984), a Japanese politician
Tsurumi was connected to Yokohama and Tokyo by train in 1872, and the area rapidly urbanized. Sōji-ji, the head temple of the Sōtō sect of Zen Buddhism relocated to Tsurumi from Ishikawa Prefecture in 1911. Tsurumi suffered severe damage from the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake. In April 1924, Tsurumi became a town within Tachibana District.
Robert M. (Bob) Cunningham (July 1, 1919 – April 15, 2008) was an American cloud physicist.He specialized in the study of fog, running a weather research station on Kent Island in the Bay of Fundy for over 60 years.
Freight services started on 1 April 1898. The Keihin Line began operations to Tsurumi from 20 December 1914. On 23 December 1934, the Tsurumi Rinkō Railway (present-day Tsurumi Line) connected to Tsurumi Station. The station was the location of a major railway accident, the Tsurumi Accident on 9 November 1963. It was one of the five major post ...
Tsurumi-Ichiba Station opened on December 24, 1905, as Ichiba Station (市場駅, Ichiba-eki). It was renamed to its present name in April 1927. It was renamed to its present name in April 1927. A new station building was completed in April 1984, at which time the platforms were lengthened to accommodate 8-car trains.