Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Musashi Imperial Graveyard (武蔵陵墓地, Musashi ryōbochi) is a mausoleum complex of the Japanese Emperors in Nagabusa-machi, Hachiōji, Tokyo, Japan.

  2. El Cementerio Imperial Musashi (en japonés: 武蔵陵墓地 Musashi ryōbochi) es el complejo del mausoleo en Hachiōji, al oeste del centro de la ciudad de Tokio, la capital del país asiático de Japón.

  3. The Musashi Imperial Graveyard near Takao Station in Hachioji city just outside urban Tokyo contains the burial mounds of Emperor Taisho and Emperor Showa. Also buried here are their widows, Empress Teimei and Empress Kojun, respectively.

    • Musashi Imperial Graveyard wikipedia1
    • Musashi Imperial Graveyard wikipedia2
    • Musashi Imperial Graveyard wikipedia3
    • Musashi Imperial Graveyard wikipedia4
    • Musashi Imperial Graveyard wikipedia5
  4. In the far western suburbs of Tokyo, you'll find the Musashi Imperial Graveyard. It's a fairly large park containing four graves of two emperors: Emperor Taisho and his wife Empress Teimei, and Emperor Showa and his wife Empress Kojun. The graves are huge and beautifully surrounded by nature.

    • Musashi Imperial Graveyard wikipedia1
    • Musashi Imperial Graveyard wikipedia2
    • Musashi Imperial Graveyard wikipedia3
    • Musashi Imperial Graveyard wikipedia4
    • Musashi Imperial Graveyard wikipedia5
  5. Hirohito's state funeral was held on 24 February at Shinjuku Gyo-en, when he was buried near his parents, Emperor Taishō and Empress Teimei, at the Musashi Imperial Graveyard in Hachiōji, Tokyo.

  6. “Beginning with Emperor Taisho, who died on December 25 1926, Japan’s emperors have been buried at the Musashino Imperial Mausoleum, near Hachiōji in western, suburban Tokyo. Prior to that, from 1629 through 1867, the traditional burial site of the rulers of Japan was the Sennyū-ji Temple complex in Kyoto.