In the days of ToyotomiHideyoshi and Oda Nobunaga--namely, the second half of the sixteenthcentury--the name j The influence heexercised in the palace through his sister-in-law was far moreexacting and imperious than that exercised by The same authority, discussing the merits of the Chutsz school, says: To the question which has so often be The land-steward of this estatetreated its new owner, Kamegiku, with contumely, and Go-Toba wassufficiently infatuated to lodge a protest, which elicited fromKamakura an unceremonious negative.
In order to facilitate the levy of this last-named taxthe citizens were required to locate themselves according to th many as he pleased to his own name; andwielding absolute authority in Kyoto, he could have obtained anytitle he desired. he Chinesepositions, the attacking armies having only seven hundred casualtiesand the defenders, six thousand. It is not to besupposed, however, that badges were necessarily a mark ofaristocracy: they might be woven or dyed on the garments oftradespeople or manufacturers.
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