Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Suguokamoto Site (須玖岡本遺跡) is a Yayoi period cemetery and associated village, located in the Okamoto neighborhood of the city of Kasuga, Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan. The site was designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 1951 as the "Okamoto Site", with the area under protection expanded in 2000 and the name changed to its ...
The Domain of the Crown (Vietnamese: Hoàng triều Cương thổ; Chữ Hán: 皇朝疆土; French: Domaine de la Couronne; Modern Vietnamese: Đất của vua) was originally the Nguyễn dynasty's geopolitical concept for its protectorates and principalities where the ethnic Kinh did not make up the majority, later it became a type of administrative unit of the State of Vietnam. [1]
1文, 2文, 3文, 5文: 1355–1366: Han Lin’er (韓林兒) Early Red Turban rebellion: Tianyou Tongbao: 天祐通寶: 天祐通宝: 1文, 2文, 3文, 5文: 1354–1357: Zhang Shicheng (張士誠) Kingdom of Great(er) Zhou (大周) Tianqi Tongbao: 天啟通寶: 天启通宝: 1文, 2文, 3文: 1358: Xu Shouhui (徐壽輝) Tianwan (天完 ...
The seals of the Nguyễn dynasty can refer to a collection of seals (印篆, Ấn triện or 印章, Ấn chương) specifically made for the emperors of the Nguyễn dynasty (chữ Hán: 寶璽朝阮 / 寶璽茹阮), who reigned over Vietnam between the years 1802 and 1945 (under French protectorates since 1883, as Annam and Tonkin), or to seals produced during this period in Vietnamese ...
A 2-8-8-4 steam locomotive, under the Whyte notation, has two leading wheels, two sets of eight driving wheels, and a four-wheel trailing truck. The type was generally named the Yellowstone , a name given it by the first owner, the Northern Pacific Railway , whose lines ran near Yellowstone National Park .
Between 1951 and 1956, 78 Class D60 2-8-4 locomotives were rebuilt from Class D50 at the JNR's Hamamatsu, Nagano and Tsuchizaki Works. In 1959 and 1960, six Class D61 2-8-4 locomotives were rebuilt from Class D51 at the JNR's Hamamatsu and Kōriyama Works. Some of these locomotives survived in service up to the end of steam traction on the JNR ...
Created Date: 8/30/2012 4:52:52 PM
EPOC was developed in 1999 by T. Okamoto, S. Uchiyama and E. Fujisaki of NTT Labs in Japan. It is based on the random oracle model, in which a primitive public-key encryption function is converted to a secure encryption scheme by use of a truly random hash function; the resulting scheme is designed to be semantically secure against a chosen ...