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・ Matsuo Station (Chiba)
・ Matsuo Station (Mie)
・ Matsuo Sugano
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・ Matsuo, Chiba
・ Matsuo, Iwate
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・ Matsuo-taisha Station
・ Matsuoka
・ Matsuoka Hoyoen Sanatorium
・ Matsuoka Station
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Matsura Sayohime
・ Matsura Seizan
・ Matsura Takanobu
・ Matsura Takanobu (1592–1637)
・ Matsuri (disambiguation)
・ Matsuri Akino
・ Matsuri Con
・ Matsuri Hino
・ Matsuri Mizuguchi
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・ Matsuri, Estonia
・ Matsuricon
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・ Matsusaka beef
・ Matsusaka Castle


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Matsura Sayohime : ウィキペディア英語版
Matsura Sayohime

Matsura Sayohime (松浦佐用姫) was a legendary heroine in Japanese Buddhist mythology, who is commonly conflated with Otohihime, the wife of Otomo no Sadehiko. ''Matsuura Sayohime'' is also the title of a noh play about the character, whose authoship is ascribed to Zeami.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.noh-kyogen.com/story/english/Matsurasayohime.pdf )
==As Matsura Sayohime==
The original Buddhist legend of Matsura Sayohime tells of how she was born to Lord Kyōgoku after he and his wife prayed to the Bodhisattva Kannon. After her father's death, Sayohime was too poor to sponsor a memorial service for him; to raise funds, she sold herself to a man named Gonga no Tayu, who (unbeknownst to Sayohime) intended to sacrifice her to the snake deity of his village in place of his own daughter. When presented to the snake, Sayohime read from the Lotus sutra, enabling the deity to achieve enlightenment and shed its monstrous form. The deity then returned Sayohime to the care of her mother.

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「Matsura Sayohime」の詳細全文を読む



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