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was a Japanese pioneer of otorhinolaryngology and professor at Fukuoka Medical School (now part of Kyushu University). He graduated from in 1900, and went on an overseas study program to Gustav Killian in Freiburg (Breisgau, Germany) in 1903. Four years later he returned to Japan, where he took up the post of professor at Fukuoka Medical School. His wife, , was a ''haiku'' poet from Matsuyama. As Kubo was a well-known poet too, their home in Fukuoka soon became the social center for poets in Northern Kyushu. He was attending doctor of Setsu Nagatsuka.〔(「久保猪之吉、より江年表」ふるさと歴史シリーズ「博多に強くなろう」(西日本シティ銀行) ) 〕 Kubo was one of the pioneers of otorhinolaryngology in Japan, and was selected as a representative of his country for the first International Congress of Oto-Rhino-Laryngology at Copenhagen (1913). In 1934 he was awarded the Légion d'honneur. Kubo was famous for his Haiku- and Waka-poetry, and became a pupil of Naobumi Ochiai. As a poet he found a mentor in Naobumi Ochiai, with Saishu Onoe formed ''Ikazuchi kai'', and created friendship with Byakuren Yanagihara. After it he started the study of Haiku and was a pupil of Kyoshi Takahama. There is a small museum at Kyushu University honouring his achievements. ==References== * (Biography published by Nishi-Nippon City Bank ) Retrieved 30 May 2010. * (Biography published by Nihonmatsu City ) Retrieved 30 May 2010. * (Kyushu University information ) Retrieved 30 May 2010. * W Michel, ( The Kubo Memorial Building - The first Japanese Museum for Medical History, Centennial Publication of the Department for Otorhinolaryngology, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, 2009, pp. 143-149.(pdf Kyushu University Institutional Repository) ) 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「Inokichi Kubo」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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