enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Hachi: A Dog's Tale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hachi:_A_Dog's_Tale

    Hachi: A Dog's Tale is a 2009 American drama film and a remake of Kaneto Shindo 's 1987 Japanese film Hachikō Monogatari. The original film told the true story of the Akita dog named Hachikō who lived in Japan 1923–1935. Hachi: A Dog's Tale is an updated American adaptation based on the Japanese film. This version, which places it in a ...

  3. Hachikō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hachikō

    Hachikō is also the subject of a 2004 children's book entitled Hachikō: The True Story of a Loyal Dog, written by Pamela S. Turner and illustrated by Yan Nascimbene. [39] Another children's book, a short novel for readers of all ages called Hachiko Waits , written by Lesléa Newman [ 40 ] and illustrated by Machiyo Kodaira , was published by ...

  4. Statue of Hachikō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Statue_of_Hachikō

    In April 1934, a bronze statue based in his likeness sculpted by Teru Andō [ ja ] was erected at Shibuya Station, and Hachikō himself was present at its unveiling. The statue was recycled for the war effort during World War II. In 1948, the Society for Recreating the Hachikō Statue commissioned [citation needed] Takeshi Andō, son of the ...

  5. Hidesaburō Ueno - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hidesaburō_Ueno

    Hidesaburō Ueno. Hidesaburō Ueno, pictured c. 1923. Hidesaburō Ueno (Japanese: 上野 英三郎, Hepburn: Ueno Hidesaburō, January 19, 1872 – May 21, 1925)[1] was a Japanese agricultural scientist, famous in Japan as the guardian of Hachikō, a devoted Akita dog.

  6. National Museum of Nature and Science - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Museum_of_Nature...

    The National Museum of Nature and Science (国立科学博物館, Kokuritsu Kagaku Hakubutsukan) is in the northeast corner of Ueno Park in Tokyo. The museum has exhibitions on pre- Meiji science in Japan. It is the venue of the taxidermied bodies of the legendary dogs Hachikō and Taro and Jiro. A life-size blue whale model and a steam ...

  7. Taro and Jiro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taro_and_Jiro

    Statues of Taro and Jiro in Nagoya. The dogs' survival was a national news story at the time. Jiro continued working as a sled dog in Antarctica and died there in 1960; his remains were stuffed and moved to the National Science Museum of Japan, the same museum where Hachiko is displayed.

  8. A Dog of Flanders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Dog_of_Flanders

    A Dog of Flanders is an 1872 novel by English author Marie Louise de la Ramée published under her pseudonym "Ouida". It is about a Flemish boy named Nello and his dog, Patrasche, and is set in Antwerp. In Japan, Korea, Russia, Ukraine and the Philippines, the novel has been a popular children's classic for decades and has been adapted into ...

  9. Three Mountains of Dewa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Mountains_of_Dewa

    The mountains were first opened as a religious centre over 1400 years ago in 593 by prince Hachiko, who was the first-born son of Emperor Sushun, the 32nd emperor of Japan and reigning emperor at the time. Prince Hachiko arrived in Dewa province in 593 after fleeing the Soga clan upon the assassination of his father. He then devoted the rest of ...