翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Kunhing
・ Kunhing Township
・ Kunhippalli
・ Kunhiraman Palat Candeth
・ Kunhome
・ Kunhsaw Kyaunghpyu
・ Kuni
・ KUNI (FM)
・ Kuni (woreda)
・ Kuni Kawachi
・ Kuni language
・ Kuni Mulgi Deta Ka Mulgi
・ Kuni no miyatsuko
・ Kuni Takahashi
・ Kuni, Gunma
Kuni-kyō
・ Kuni-Muktar Mountain Nyala Sanctuary
・ Kuni-no-miya
・ Kunia Camp, Hawaii
・ Kunia Regional SIGINT Operations Center
・ Kuniaki
・ Kuniaki Asomura
・ Kuniaki Haishima
・ Kuniaki Kobayashi
・ Kuniaki Koiso
・ Kuniaki Shibata
・ Kunibert Raffer
・ Kunibidji people
・ Kunica
・ Kunice


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Kuni-kyō : ウィキペディア英語版
Kuni-kyō

Kuni-kyō (恭仁京, or ''Kuni no miyako''), was the capital city of Japan between 740 and 744, whose imperial palace (恭仁宮 ''Kuni-kyū'' or ''Kuni no miya'') was built in the present-day city of Kizugawa in Kyoto Prefecture by the order of Emperor Shōmu.
==History==
The city of Kuni-kyō was never completed, as the capital was moved once again to in 744, only four years later. In 745 Emperor Shōmu moved the capital yet again to Naniwa-kyō (Osaka),〔 and before the year was out, reverted the capital back to Heijō-kyō in Nara.
The Kuni area was a power base for Tachibana no Moroe, who was then the minister with de facto power over the cabinet, known as the "dajō-kan" or "Great Council". The later preference of Shigaraki as the capital possibly points to the rival Fujiwara clan mounting a comeback,〔 since their influence extended around the Shigaraki area in Ōmi Province. The subsequent move to Naniwa may have been a compromise.〔
Emperor Shōmu moved the capital yet again Naniwa-kyō (Osaka) in 745, which may have been a spot the two factions could compromise on,〔 but that same year reverted the capital back to Heijō-kyō in Nara.〔

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「Kuni-kyō」の詳細全文を読む



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