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・ Fusain
・ Fusajiro Yamauchi
・ Fusakichi Omori
・ Fusako
・ Fusako Kitashirakawa
・ Fusako Kodama
・ Fusako Kuramochi
・ Fusako Kōno
・ Fusako Masuda
・ Fusako Sano
・ Fusako Shigenobu
・ Fusamoto Station
・ Fusang
・ Fusanishiki Katsuhiko
・ Fusanosuke
Fusanosuke Gotō
・ Fusanosuke Kuhara
・ Fusanosuke Natsume
・ Fusao Sekiguchi
・ Fusari
・ Fusaric acid
・ Fusarinine-C ornithinesterase
・ Fusariosis
・ Fusarium
・ Fusarium affine
・ Fusarium arthrosporioides
・ Fusarium circinatum
・ Fusarium crookwellense
・ Fusarium crown rot of wheat
・ Fusarium culmorum


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Fusanosuke Gotō : ウィキペディア英語版
Fusanosuke Gotō

was a soldier in the Imperial Japanese Army memorialized by the Memorial Statue of the Hakkoda Death March in Aomori, Japan.
In January 1902 several soldiers in the 5th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Battalion became trapped on the Hakkōda Mountains; this was the start of the Hakkōda Mountains incident. Search parties discovered Gotō. The discovery led to the rescue of the other soldiers.〔"(Sightseeing Spots )." ''City of Aomori''. Retrieved on November 10, 2008.〕 His arms and legs were amputated as a result of frostbite.
After the incident, he retired from the army, returned to his hometown, became a member of the village assembly, and later died from cerebral hemorrhage.
In Jirō Nitta's ''Death March on Mount Hakkōda: A Documentary Novel'', a semi-fictional account of the disaster, Gotō is portrayed by the character Corporal Etō.〔Nitta, Jirō. Translated by James Westerhoven. ''(Death March on Mount Hakkōda )''. ''Google Books''. via Stone Bridge Press, LLC. 1992. 193.〕
== References ==



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「Fusanosuke Gotō」の詳細全文を読む



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