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is an exhibition institution in Ground Self-Defense Force Narashino Camp. Originally, the building was built for the Emperor and Imperial Family to watch horsemanship of the cavalry regiment, as . It is one of the famous places in Funabashi. == History == Once, although the graduation ceremony of Tokyo Imperial University, Army Military Academy, and Army Cavalry Implementation Academy (next Army Cavalry Academy) was held with Emperor presence, since the trooper was important in the army of those days, the Emperor was visiting Army Cavalry Implementation Academy in Komaba in Tokyo. Since Emperor Meiji was familiar with horse riding or horsemanship, it not only has an interest about a cavalry tactics, but he was surveying generally that all of the unit demonstration and the program of individual horsemanship, which was performed on the day of a graduation. At the graduation ceremony around 1887, he inspected all the programs under rain. This news was reported and disputed. As a result, it was founded for the Emperor in 1911 as Gobaken-jyo. Gobaken-jyo was also reconstructed when Army Cavalry Implementation Academy transferred to Narashino-hara in 1916. It was used as the Guest House for the Emperor and the Imperial Family to watch horsemanship and a graduation ceremony, and a billet of the Imperial Family who joined the army. After the war, it was requisitioned by the Occupation Forces (the 1st trooper army division of the United States Army), and was used also as a commander's billet. Paint at this time and the minced alphabetic character remain. Although locally called the "Guest House", "Imperial-Family hall", or "Imperial-Family billet" for a while, it was renamed with the "Kūtei-kan" (Airborne hall) in 1962, and is utilized for pavilion of data about the JGSDF 1st Airborne Brigade, the IJA paratroops and the IJA cavalry regiment. 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「Kūtei-kan」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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