Top 10 similar words or synonyms for mizobuchi

takahasi    0.866088

oonishi    0.863180

nishimori    0.861275

katsuda    0.857798

yagasaki    0.854851

kanoh    0.853770

hashizume    0.853137

shioi    0.852733

kajimura    0.851932

walicke    0.851254

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for mizobuchi

Article Example
Partha Ghose (i) His paper in collaboration with D. Home and G. S. Agarwal (the GHA experiment) in unraveling the nature of wave–particle duality in single-photon experiments led to its experimental verification by Y. Mizobuchi and Y. Ohtake in Japan and later by M. Genovese and collaborators in Italy. This work has been widely referred to and has found place even in popular texts.,
An Jung-geun Ahn's Japanese captors showed sympathy to him. He recorded in his autobiography that the public prosecutor, Mizobuchi Takao, exclaimed "From what you have told me, it is clear that you are a righteous man of East Asia. I can't believe a sentence of death will be imposed on a righteous man. There's nothing to worry about." He was also given New Year's delicacies and his calligraphy was highly admired and requested.
Shibata Castle The construction date of the original Shibata Castle is unknown; however, the surrounding area was under control of the Shibata clan since the Kamakura period. The Shibata were destroyed in the early Muromachi period by the forces of Uesugi Kagekatsu. In 1597, Toyotomi Hideyoshi moved the Uesugi clan to Aizu-Wakamatsu and assigned the former Shibata lands to Mizoguchi Hidekatsu in 1598. Construction began immediately on a new castle, which was not completed until the rule of the 3rd generation "daimyō" of Shibata Domain, Mizobuchi Nobunao, in 1654. Much of the castle was destroyed by a fire in 1668 and rebuilt by 1679. The main gate dates from a 1732 reconstruction.
Shibata Castle Following the Meiji restoration and subsequent abolition of the han system, the Mizobuchi clan surrendered Shibata Castle to the new Meiji government. In 1871, the castle was garrisoned by a detachment of the Imperial Japanese Army, and in 1873 most of the structures were pulled down. At the time, it had 11 "yagura" watchtowers and five gates. Of those 16 main structures only one gate, the "Omotemon", and one "yagura" remain today. Both are designated as important cultural properties. The wall outside the turret, in a style called , is waterproof. The stone wall is made of regularly piled stones in the manner of "Kirikomihagi".