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Tsurumi deduces that Koito was captured by Russians who intend to immobilize the Japanese Oominato Torpedo Group and Fort Hakodate. After locating the kidnappers at the abandoned army base of Goryoukaku some kilometers away, Commander Heiji and Tsurumi race there and manage to free him, with Tsurumi killing his captors.
Years later, Tsukishima attacked Tsurumi when he discovered that his commander had lied to him about Igogusa. However, Tsukishima still risked his life to save Tsurumi during a Russian artillery bombardment when Tsurumi lost part of his forehead which is now covered by a ceramic plate.
Under the guise of quelling a prison riot, Tsurumi leads an assault on Abashiri Prison. Tsurumi corners Sugimoto in Nopperabo's cell, but Kadokura releases the master prison lock to save himself, freeing all of the prison's inmates. Hijikata and Anji take Asirpa and follow Inudou to a chapel where Wilk is being held, but Asirpa flees.
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.
Hisui Tsurumi (蔓深 ひすい, Tsurumi Hisui) Voiced by: Kanon Takao [3] A very shy girl who wears glasses. She is actually a kappa and is the granddaughter of the chairman of Japan's kappa association. She comes from a wealthy family. Shiu (しう) Voiced by: Misaki Kuno [4] A young angel who visited Earth to see Towa.
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-ryokuchi Station (鶴見緑地駅, Tsurumi-ryokuchi-eki, Station Number: N26) is a train station on the Osaka Metro Nagahori Tsurumi-ryokuchi Line in Tsurumi-ku, Osaka, Japan. [1] The line was opened to provide access to Tsurumi-ryokuchi Park during the 1990 International Garden and Greenery Exposition .
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.