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・ Amakasu Incident
・ Amakasu Kagemochi
・ Amakasu Kagetsugu
・ Amakhosi Stadium
・ Amakhosi Theatre
・ Amakinite
・ Amaknak Island
・ Amakohia
・ Amakohia Ubi
・ Amakom
・ Amakondere
・ Amaktie Maasie
・ Amakuni
・ Amakusa
・ Amakusa (disambiguation)
Amakusa 1637
・ Amakusa 1637 (disambiguation)
・ Amakusa Airfield
・ Amakusa Airlines
・ Amakusa Christian Museum
・ Amakusa coalfield
・ Amakusa District, Kumamoto
・ Amakusa Shirō
・ Amakusa, Kumamoto
・ Amakusa, Kumamoto (town)
・ Amakusaplana
・ Amakusaplana acroporae
・ Amakye Dede
・ AMAL
・ Amal


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Amakusa 1637 : ウィキペディア英語版
Amakusa 1637


is a shōjo manga written and illustrated by Michiyo Akaishi. It is about the time-traveling adventures of six modern-day Japanese high school students from the St. Francisco Academy to the 17th century, where they take part in the Shimabara Rebellion. It was serialized in the manga magazine ''Flowers'' from 2001 to 2006 and collected in 12 tankoban volumes.
== Story ==

During a school field trip, a group of friends from the St. Francisco Academy are thrown back in time to the Japan of the early Edo period. According to history, in 1637 a revolt broke out, known as the Shimabara Rebellion. It was led by a charismatic youth known as Amakusa Shirō, but ended in the defeat of the rebels and the loss of over 37,000 lives. Hayumi Natsuki, the heroine, is mistaken as Amakusa Shirō by the villagers she met, despite the fact that the real Amakusa Shirō was male. In the story, the real Shirō died the year previously, before gaining recognition or popularity as a leader. Before long, Natsuki became famous as some-sort of heaven-sent angel and people started calling her "Shirō", believing she was the saviour prophesied 25 years before.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Amakusa 1637」の詳細全文を読む



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