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・ Jōji Yanami
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Jōkyō Gimin Memorial Museum
・ Jōkyō Monogatari
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Jōkyō Gimin Memorial Museum : ウィキペディア英語版
Jōkyō Gimin Memorial Museum

The Jōkyō Gimin〔Starts with a hard pronunciation like "Gettysburg Address"〕 Memorial Museum (''Jōkyō Gimin〔a) martyr、in the non-religious sense, or b) a person who sacrifices his/her life for a cause〕 Kinen-kan'') is a museum dedicated to the Jōkyō Uprising〔 (Shimpu-tōki vol. 28 )〕 that occurred in Azumidaira, Japan in 1686 (the third year of the Jōkyō era during the Edo period). The uprising, also called the Kasuke Uprising (the leader of the peasant uprising was Tada Kasuke), is perceived to be a struggle for the right to life. Thus the founders of the memorial museum erected two plaques at the front entrance of the building. The one on the left is inscribed with the 11th and 12th articles of the Constitution of Japan. The one on the right is inscribed with the first article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Those inscribed articles clearly state the fundamental rights global citizens are entitled to: Exactly the cause which the leaders of the uprising had given their lives for.〔Tada Kasuke and his followers decided to appeal to the magistrate's office in Matsumoto even though they knew that they were risking their lives.〕
==Goals==
After the 300th anniversary of the Jōkyō Uprising, the local people decided to build a memorial museum a) to commemorate the uprising, and b) to preserve historic archives of the uprising. To that end they selected a building site of the museum right across the street from ''Jōkyō Gimin-sha'' (Jōkyō Gimin shrine) 〔The twenty-eight executed farmers, and interestingly, the lord of the Mizunos at the time of the uprising are enshrined there.〕 and the former Tada family homestead (a cultural asset of Nagano Prefecture). It is located in the former village of Nakagaya (in the Matsumoto Domain during the Edo period), where Tada Kasuke had governed in the late 17th century.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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