Page:Brinkley - Japan - Volume 6.djvu/389

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INDEX

  • Kiyōmori, Taira, principles of his autocracy, ii. 5; immorality, 218.
  • Kōbō Daishi, founder of Shingon sect of Buddhists, i. 180, v. 146.
  • Kobori, chief of Yenshu, master of tea cult, ii. 255, 257.
  • Kōbun, emperor, suicide, ii. 284.
  • Kōgyoku, empress, patron of wrestling, iii. 67.
  • Kōkaku, emperor, iii. 156.
  • Kōken, emperor, superstition, i. 176.
  • Kōken, empress dowager, separate religious government, i. 93; zeal for Confucianism, 252.
  • Kōkō, empress, verse-making parties, i. 190.
  • Kōmei, emperor, foreign policy, iii. 179.
  • Kōmon (Mitsukuni), chief of Mito, work on imperial power, iii. 138, 155.
  • Komyo, empress, legend of her piety, i. 251.
  • Kōnin, emperor, severity, iv. 63.
  • Konoye, Prince, foreign policy, iii. 215, 221.
  • Konoye, noble family, hereditary privileges, iv. 5, 35.
  • Korea, and causes of Chinese–Japanese war, i. 17, v. 44–55; ancient intercourse with Japan, i. 69; ancient customs common to Japan and, 69; raids on Japan, 70; ancient Japanese invasion, 72; colonists to Japan, 75, 83, 252; Japanese piratical expeditions, iii. 106; attitude toward new government of Japan, iv. 203; threat of war, 207; expedition against, 211; opened to foreign trade, 211; Japanese mediæval trade, vi. 162–164, 173; Hideyoshi's invasion, 164, 237; mediæval diplomatic intercourse, 174.
  • Kose no Kanaoka, painter, i. 201.
  • Kotoku, emperor, i. 125, 147.
  • Kuga, noble family, hereditary privileges, iv. 5.
  • Kūmoso, origin and characteristics, iv. 50–53.
  • Kunimune, Saionji, plots to kill Godaigo, ii. 18.
  • Kwammu, emperor, transfers capital, i. 159; attempted reforms, 163–165.
  • Kwanami, dancer, iii. 30.
  • Kwan-in, princely family, hereditary privileges, iv. 5.
  • Kwanyei era, iv. 145.
  • Kwazan, emperor, effeminacy, i. 212.
  • Kyōhō era, character, iii. 145–147.
  • Kyōtō, Imperial capital, i. 159; plan and adornment, 196, 253–255, ii. 54–57; shogunate capital, 24; vicissitudes during Military epoch, 50–52, 57–59; character in Tokugawa epoch, iv. 148; regulation of its markets, vi. 145.
  • Labour, forced public, i. 118, ii. 120, 124; building the Nikko mausoleum, iv. 14–17; increased remuneration, v. 19, vi. 241.
  • Land, ancient Crown right and patriarchal control, i. 115; Crown control under Taikwa reforms, 116; allotment system,

285