Top 10 similar words or synonyms for kuni_fudoki

kudara    0.789748

kozuke    0.788407

bitchu    0.781108

regent_kampaku_fujiwara    0.776278

shimotsuke    0.774156

sakanoue    0.768259

suō    0.767933

tajihi    0.763920

hōki    0.761753

heguri    0.760350

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for kuni_fudoki

Article Example
Shiranui (optical phenomenon) According to the Nihon Shoki, the Hizen no Kuni Fudoki, and the "Higo no Kuni Fudoki," when Emperor Keiko, went to southern Kyushu to conquer the natives and visited Kumamoto, it is said that they advanced using the shiranui as a landmark. In his journey for expanding the Yamato Ōken, saw unexplainable spots of moving fire, Shiranui, in the Ariake Sea and the Yatsushiro Sea (also called the Shiranui Sea), and a gozoku in that land replied that he did not know the fire, the origin of Shiranui. This light was named Shiranui ("unknown light") and the area was named , now Kumamoto Prefecture.
Yato-no-kami The are snake deities in Japanese folklore appearing in the "Hitachi No Kuni Fudoki". They lived in Namegata county, in fields near the government office. They were rumored to bring familial extermination on anyone who saw them. Eventually, they were killed by a man clearing the fields, enshrined, and banished to the mountains.
Edwina Palmer Palmer has written many articles on Japanese culture, focusing on humor and hidden meaning in traditional Japanese texts. She has also worked on the eighth-century document "Harima no Kuni Fudoki", analyzing the stories it contains from the perspective of archaeology and orality, humor and hidden meaning.
Daidarabotchi The "Hitachi no Kuni Fudoki", a recording of the imperial customs in the Hitachi Province compiled in the 8th century, also told of a Daidarabotchi living on a hill west of a post office of Hiratsu Ogushi who fed on giant clams from the beach, piling the shells on top of a hill.
Daidarabotchi "Izumo no Kuni Fudoki" also mentions a legendary king of Izumo, Ōmitsunu, who was the grandson of Susanoo and a demi-god. Having the strength of a giant, he performed Kuni-biki, pulling land from Silla with ropes, to increase the size of his territory.