Shōzō Ichiyama
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Shōzō Ichiyama
Shōzō, Shozo, Shouzou or Shohzoh (written: 昭三, 省三, 省蔵, 省太, 正三, 正蔵 or 昌三) is a masculine Japanese given name. Notable people with the name include: *, Japanese judoka *, Japanese historian *, Japanese comedian and voice actor *, Japanese voice actor *, Japanese speed skater *, Japanese video game designer *, Japanese businessman and shipbuilder *, Japanese photographer *, Japanese professional wrestler and actor *, Japanese politician *, Japanese film director, producer and businessman *, Japanese swimmer *Shozo Miyamoto (born 1940), Japanese golfer *, Japanese businessman, politician and diplomat *, Japanese playwright *, Japanese playwright *, Japanese boxer *, Japanese general *, Japanese sport wrestler *, Japanese biathlete *, Japanese artist *Shozo Tominaga
Japan Times, January 15, 2002
was a Japanese War Cri ...
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Kanji
are the logographic Chinese characters taken from the Chinese family of scripts, Chinese script and used in the writing of Japanese language, Japanese. They were made a major part of the Japanese writing system during the time of Old Japanese and are still used, along with the subsequently-derived syllabic scripts of ''hiragana'' and ''katakana''. The characters have Japanese pronunciation, pronunciations; most have two, with one based on the Chinese sound. A few characters were invented in Japan by constructing character components derived from other Chinese characters. After World War II, Japan made its own efforts to simplify the characters, now known as shinjitai, by a process similar to China's simplified Chinese characters, simplification efforts, with the intention to increase literacy among the common folk. Since the 1920s, the Japanese government has published character lists periodically to help direct the education of its citizenry through the myriad Chinese characte ...
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Shozo Miyamoto
Shozo Miyamoto (born 1 March 1940) is a Japanese professional golfer. Miyamoto played on the Japan Golf Tour, winning twice. Professional wins (4) Japan Golf Tour wins (2) Japan Golf Tour playoff record (0–1) Other wins (2) *1966 Kansai Open *1967 Japan PGA Championship The is a professional golf tournament on the Japan Golf Tour, and is one of the tour's four major championships. It was founded in 1926, making it one of the oldest professional tournaments in Japan, and is played at a variety of courses througho ... External links * Japanese male golfers Japan Golf Tour golfers Sportspeople from Osaka Prefecture 1940 births Living people {{Japan-golf-bio-stub ...
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Shozo Tsugitani
was a Japanese football player. Club career Tsugitani was born in Hyogo Prefecture on June 25, 1940. After graduating from Kwansei Gakuin University, he joined Mitsubishi Motors in 1963. In 1965,Mitsubishi Motors joined new league Japan Soccer League. He retired in 1967. He played 40 games and scored 16 goals in the league. National team career On August 15, 1961, when he was a Kwansei Gakuin University student, he debuted for Japan national team against Indonesia. He played at 1962 Asian Games. In 1964, he was selected Japan for 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, but he did not compete. He played 12 games and scored 4 goals for Japan until 1965. On June 2, 1978, Tsugitani died of cirrhosis in Kobe Kobe ( , ; officially , ) is the capital city of Hyōgo Prefecture Japan. With a population around 1.5 million, Kobe is Japan's seventh-largest city and the third-largest port city after Tokyo and Yokohama. It is located in Kansai region, whic ... at the age of 37. National tea ...
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Shozo Tominaga

Japan Times, January 15, 2002
was a Japanese War Crimes, Japanese war criminal turned peace activist. Tominaga served in Manchuria during the Second Sino-Japanese War. In that time, he participated in many war crimes. He served with the 39th Division, based in Hiroshima, and from July 1941 onward served in Central China. Tominaga was captured during the Soviet invasion of Manchuria in 1945. As with many other Japanese prisoners of war in the Soviet Union, he was interred in a harsh POW camp in Siberia. In 1950, he was handed over to People's Republic of China. Tominaga was released in 1957 and returned to Japan. That same year, he co-founded a peace activist group In 2001, shortly prior to his death, he participated in the Japanese documentary film ''Japanese Devils'' (Riben guizi).
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Shozo Shimamoto
was a Japanese artist. Having studied with Jirō Yoshihara, the future Gutai leader, from 1947, Shimamoto was a key founding member of Gutai along with Yoshihara and fifteen others in August, 1954. He was close to the leader Yoshihara and actively engaged in the early activities and group administrations. He xpand this here more in an evocative manner: holes poked on layered newspaper, bottle-throwing paintings, film experiments, stage experiments, sound art, etc. etc.He was particularly strong with performative innovations, anticipating the future performance art. Indeed, when Yoshihara turned to focus more on painting, upon his meeting with the French art critic Michel Tapié, Shimamoto continued to urge the leader to pursue this direction, wanting to work with Allan Kaprow, for example. After Gutai, he became known for his mail art activities with the group AU and the continuation of his painting performances which he staged around the world. He died of acute heart failure ...
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Shozo Sasaki
is a Japanese biathlete The biathlon is a winter sport that combines cross-country skiing and rifle shooting. It is treated as a race, with contestants skiing through a cross-country trail whose distance is divided into shooting rounds. The shooting rounds are not time .... He competed in the 20 km individual event at the 1972 Winter Olympics. References 1944 births Living people Japanese male biathletes Olympic biathletes for Japan Biathletes at the 1972 Winter Olympics Sportspeople from Akita Prefecture {{Japan-biathlon-bio-stub ...
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Shozo Sasahara
is a retired Japanese freestyle wrestler who won a world title in 1954 and an Olympics gold medal in 1956. He was the flag bearer for Japan at the 1956 Games. During his career Sasahara won approximately 200 bouts. After retiring from competitions he worked as a national coach. His trainees included Osamu Watanabe. Sasahara is credited with designing "bound tennis" in 1980, which is a form of tennis played on a small-sized court. In 1981 he became the founding president of Japan Bound Tennis Association. Between 1989 and 2003 Sasahara was president of Japan Wrestling Association. For many years he also served as Vice-President of United World Wrestling (FILA), and was later named its Honorary Vice-president. In 2006 he was inducted to the FILA International Wrestling Hall of Fame The National Wrestling Hall of Fame and Museum is a museum and hall of fame for amateur wrestling, headquartered in Stillwater, Oklahoma. In 2010, it began operating the Dan Gable Museum in Waterlo ...
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Shōzō Sakurai
was a lieutenant general in the Imperial Japanese Army during the Second Sino-Japanese War and World War II. Biography Sakurai was born in Nagoya, although his official records list Hagi city, Yamaguchi prefecture as his hometown. After Sakurai attended military preparatory schools in Nagoya and Tokyo, he graduated from the 23rd class of the Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1911 and served as a junior officer with the IJA 53rd Infantry Regiment. He graduated with top scores from the 31st class of the Army Staff College in 1919. He was initially an infantry officer, but became a specialist in military transport and logistics. He spent a short time in France as a military attaché. Promoted to lieutenant colonel in August 1930, he served as an instructor at the Staff College from September 1930 to August 1934, when he was promoted to colonel. He then assumed command of the IJA 77th Infantry Regiment to August 1936.Ammenthorp, The Generals of World War II From August 1936, Sakurai ...
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Shozo Saijo
is a Japanese former professional boxer from Saitama. He is a former WBA featherweight champion. Biography Saijo made his professional debut in August, 1964, but did not show immediate promise in the ring, losing or drawing against several lowly regarded fighters. He traveled to the United States, where he fought three times before meeting WBA featherweight champion Raul Rojas in a non-title match. Saijo won by decision, and challenged Rojas for the title on September 27, 1968 in Los Angeles. He defeated Rojas for the second time, becoming the seventh Japanese boxer to win a world title, and the first Japanese boxer to win a title fighting outside Japan. He defended the title a total of six times before losing to Antonio Gomez in 1971. He also fought in numerous non-title matches in between his defenses, including a bout against WBA super featherweight champion, Hiroshi Kobayashi, where Saijo lost by decision over 10 rounds. This was the first fight between two Japanese ...
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Namiki Shōzō II
Namiki Shōzō II (並木正三) (died 1807) was a ''kabuki'' playwright and relative of the more prominent Namiki Shōzō I Namiki Shōzō I (並木正三) (1730–1773) was a prominent Japanese playwright who produced roughly 100 works for ''bunraku'' (puppet theater) and for ''kabuki is a classical form of Japanese dance- drama. Kabuki theatre is known for its .... Though none of his surviving plays are prominent ones, he may have been the author of the 1801 '' Kezairoku'' (or ''Gezairoku''), a kabuki playwriting manual. References *Takaya, Ted T. (1985). "Namiki Shōzō." Kodansha Encyclopedia of Japan. Tokyo: Kodansha Ltd. Kabuki playwrights 1807 deaths Year of birth missing Japanese dramatists and playwrights Japanese writers of the Edo period 18th-century Japanese writers 19th-century Japanese writers 18th-century Japanese people 19th-century Japanese people {{Japan-writer-stub ...
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Namiki Shōzō I
Namiki Shōzō I (並木正三) (1730–1773) was a prominent Japanese playwright who produced roughly 100 works for ''bunraku'' (puppet theater) and for ''kabuki''. Shōzō is also credited with inventing the revolving stage (回り舞台, ''mawaributai''), one of many tricks of stagecraft used extensively in ''kabuki'', and with popularizing the use of trapdoors (セリ上げ, ''seriage''). Shōzō left ''bunraku'' in 1751; adapting plays from ''bunraku'' to ''kabuki'' was a very common practice, and it is likely that many of Shōzō's kabuki plays began as puppet productions. His roughly one hundred plays were mostly '' jidai-mono'' (時代物, historical plays), and include ''Keisei ama no hagoromo'' (The Feathery Garment from Heaven, 1753), ''Sanjikkoku yobune no hajimari'' (The Beginning of the Heavy Cargo Ships on the Yodo River, 1758), and ''Sanzen-sekai yarikuri ōrai'' (Kin'emon the Notorious Pirate, 1772). References *Takaya, Ted T. (1985). "Namiki Shōzō." Kodansha En ...
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Shōzō Murata
was a Japanese entrepreneur, cabinet minister and diplomat before, during and after World War II. Biography Murata was a native of Tokyo and a graduated the Tokyo Higher Commerce School (now Hitotsubashi University) in 1900.「村田省蔵 むらた しょうぞう」
国立国会図書館近代日本人の肖像
There he was friends with Shinji Tazaki, a commerce scholar who was awarded Senior Third Rank, the First Order of Merit. After graduation, he went to work with the ''Osaka Shosen Kaisha'' (currently