Talk:Nakagawa Hidenari

Page contents not supported in other languages.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Possible alternate name[edit]

Copied from Wikipedia:Help_desk/Archives/2021 July 18#Nakagawa Hidenari → Nakagawa Hideshige

I submit the following evidence to provide the source why Nakagawa Hideenari is Nakagawa Hideshige. You can see that Nakagawa Hideshige is used more than Nakagawa Hidenari.

1.

信長のWiki

中川秀成 Nakagawa Hideshige (1570年-1612年)

2.

Hideshige Nakagawa

Hideshige Nakagawa (Japanese: 中川秀成, Genki 1st year (1570) - August 14th (September 9, 1612) in the 17th lunar year of Keicho) was a warlord and daimyo from the Azuchi-Momoyama period to the first half of the Edo period. . He was the first lord of the Bungooka Domain.

3.

VAN HIER TOT TOKIO – JAPANESE ANTIQUE STORE

EXCEPTIONAL SET OF 2 EDO PERIOD SUITS-OF-ARMOUR (YOROI), COMPLETE WITH 2 MATCHING HIGH 6 PANEL BYOBU SCREENS

he split Bungo Province in a number of small fiefs and transferred in 1594 Nakagawa Hideshige (1570-1612) from Miki Castle in the Harima Fief to Oka Castle in Kyūshū.

4.

ReversoContext

Translation of "秀成" in English

Hideshige - 秀成, 秀重

5.

The Mystery of Inari and the Caves That Surround the Castle Town (Chapter 4)

I contacted the landowner and asked him about the Inari shrine. I received a surprising answer. “Somewhere along the line it became an Inari shrine without my realizing it. I donʼt know who did it. From childhood I had always thought of it as a beautiful cave but up until 15 years ago (1997) it definitely wasnʼt an Inari shrine.” Lord Hideshige Nakagawa allowed many vassals to live in the Kudo area.

6.

The Otamaya Park of Oka feudal lord

Unshitsuzenshi was invited from Toganji of Somadani that was situated southeast of the castle town, and made funeral service of Nakagawa Hideshige and became the first Jushoku (chief priest) of Hekiunji.

Thank you. --Gameposo (talk) 11:39, 20 July 2021 (UTC)[reply]

Vchimpanzee • talk • contributions • 22:55, 6 September 2021 (UTC)[reply]