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・ Ōi, Fukui
・ Ōi, Kanagawa
・ Ōi, Saitama
・ Ōi-juku
・ Ōichi Station
・ Ōigawa Dam
・ Ōigawa Railway
・ Ōigawa Railway Ikawa Line
・ Ōigawa Railway Ōigawa Main Line
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Ōiryō
・ Ōishi Masami
・ Ōishi Sadahisa
・ Ōishi Station
・ Ōishi Yoshio
・ Ōishida
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・ Ōiso Station
・ Ōiso, Kanagawa
・ Ōiso-juku
・ Ōita Bank Dome
・ Ōita dialect
・ Ōita District, Ōita
・ Ōita Expressway
・ Ōita Prefectural Museum of History


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Ōiryō : ウィキペディア英語版
Ōiryō
was a bureau within the Imperial Household Ministry under the Japanese Ritsuryō system. The Bureau of Palace Kitchens〔Samurai Archives: ( "Ritsuryō Government Positions." )〕 was responsible for food preparation for religious ceremonies and feasts within the court. Beginning in the Heian Era, it was controlled by the Nakahara clan.
==History==
The Asuka-, Nara- and Heian-period Imperial court hierarchy encompassed a .〔(Ministry of Emperor's Household ), Sheffield.〕 The origin of the current Imperial Household Agency can be traced back to the provisions on the government structure which were put into effect during the reign of Emperor Monmu,〔(History of Imperial Household Agency )〕 with significant modifications in 1702, 1870, and 1889,〔("Ministry of the Imperial Household" ), ''Catholic Encyclopedia.''〕 ''Daijō-kan'' officials within this ministry structure were:〔Titsingh, p. 433; Sansom, George. ''Japan: A Short Cultural History,'' pp. 104, 164.〕 The management of food stores and food pood preparation within the court was encompassed within the organization structure of the ritsuryō system, including an acknowledgment of the place held by its senior officials within the structured palace hierarchy.

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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