Examples of using Bizen in English and their translations into German
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Colloquial
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Computer
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Political
Large Wood fired Bizen Houhin Style Lidded Bowl.
Bizen Yaki is also one of the oldest forms of pottery in Japan.
Naoshima and Shōdoshima was separated from Bizen Province and merged into Sanuki Province.
Bizen is named after the village of Imbe in Okayama prefecture, formerly known as Bizen province.
The Hamon is a very nice Choji Midare with Nioi and Yakiba andlong Ashi, like the Bizen tradition, The Jihada is an very close Itame one.
Bizen passed through a variety of hands during the Edo period before being incorporated into the modern prefecture system.
After its completion he worked in several ceramic workshops in Hagi, Bizen and Okinawa and became skilled in a range of styles and techniques.
Bizen Yaki is one of the special products of Okayama Prefecture, and is also a recognized art of Japan's six ancient kilns.
By the time of Terumasa's death in 1613,the Ikeda had grown to rule over Harima, Bizen, Inaba, and Awaji, with a combined income of around 1,000,000-koku.
After Kobayakawa Hideaki helped Tokugawa Ieyasu to win the Battle of Sekigahara over Ukita and others,he was granted Ukita's domains in Bizen and Mimasaka.
At the Bizen Osafune Japanese Sword Museum you can learn about the physical power and techniques that swordsmiths put into forging the swords wielded by samurai.
They are the North Noh stage in Kyoto's Nishi Hongan-ji,the auditorium of the former Shizutani School in Bizen, and the Roman Catholic Ōura Church in Nagasaki.
IETADA made fairly brilliant hamon of Choji midare from Bizen school or splendid wave from Soushu technique and meet with increasing requirement from the Samurai class in peaceful Edo era and further he sometimes emulated the koto sword from Yamato school, especially he was very much influenced by Tegai works.
History==Shōdoshima was once known as Azuki-shima andwas part of Kibi(later Bizen) Province, given to Sanuki Province, and finally made part of Kagawa prefecture.
Isezaki Jun, who was nominated a“Living National Treasure” in 2004- the highest accolade that a Japanese ceramist can receive-is part of the Bizen tradition, which has been unbroken for seven centuries.
For instance, the capital of Suō Province occupied an area of 1 km²,that of Bizen Province 850 m×850 m. Inside or near the kokufu, there were also the most important religious sites of the province, the Buddhist provincial temples,"kokubun-ji", one each for monks and nuns as well as the highest ranked Shinto shrine,"Ichinomiya.
A signed late Muromachi period Katana(ca. 1550) with a beautiful Koshirae and fawless blade as a special fort hat period Uchi-Katana in good polish.This Katana is signed, Bizen Kuni Yu Osafune KATSUMITSU with NBTHK Hozon papers.