When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. History of the Catholic Church in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Catholic...

    Emperor Ōgimachi issued edicts to ban Catholicism in 1565 and 1568, but to little effect. [4] Beginning in 1587, with imperial regent Toyotomi Hideyoshi's ban on Jesuit missionaries, Christianity was repressed as a threat to national unity. [5] After the Tokugawa shogunate banned Christianity in 1620

  3. Martyrs of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martyrs_of_Japan

    Persecution flared episodically and over a period of 15 years, between 1617 and 1632, 205 missionaries and native Christians are known to have been killed for their faith, 55 of them during the Great Genna Martyrdom, a further 50 during the Great Martyrdom of Edo (but only three were beatified as part of the 205 Martyrs of Japan). [4]

  4. Great Genna Martyrdom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Genna_Martyrdom

    The Great Genna Martyrdom (元和の大殉教, Genna no daijunkyō), also known as the Great Martyrdom of Nagasaki, was the execution of 55 foreign and domestic Catholics killed together at Nishizaka Hill in Nagasaki, Japan, on 10 September 1622. Beginning in 1614, Christianity was banned in Japan and a smuggling incident concerning two foreign ...

  5. Urakami Yoban Kuzure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urakami_Yoban_Kuzure

    The conservative faction within the government, which had once been active in the Emperor Exclusionist movement, did not hide their opposition to Christianity and strongly opposed the repeal of the ban, saying that since Shinto was the national religion-it was natural to exclude foreign religions, and that it was unlikely that the West would ...

  6. 205 Martyrs of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/205_Martyrs_of_Japan

    The persecution of Missionaries and Christian followers continued after the martyrdom of the twenty-six individuals in 1597. Jesuit fathers and others who had successfully fled to the Philippines wrote reports which led to a pamphlet that was printed in Madrid in 1624 "A Short Account of the Great and Rigorous Martyrdom, which last year (1622) was suffered in Japan by One Hundred and Eighteen ...

  7. Hidden Christian Sites in the Nagasaki Region - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hidden_Christian_Sites_in...

    With the advent of Western powers and reopening of Japan in the 1850s and the reforms of the Meiji Restoration, missionary activity was renewed and a number of Hidden Christians resurfaced. Ōura Cathedral of 1864 is the first of the churches built in subsequent years. [4]

  8. Kakure Kirishitan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kakure_Kirishitan

    The gion-mamori, the crest of the Gion Shrine, which depicts two crossing scrolls and a horn, was adopted by the Kakure Kirishitan as their crest under the Tokugawa shogunate [4] Kakure Kirishitan are the Catholic communities in Japan which hid themselves during the ban and persecution of Christianity by Japan in the 1600s. [3] [5]

  9. Great Martyrdom of Edo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Martyrdom_of_Edo

    The Great Martyrdom of Edo [1] was the execution of 50 foreign and domestic Catholics (kirishitans), who were burned alive for their Christianity in Edo (modern-day Tokyo), Japan, on 4 December 1623. The mass execution was part of the persecution of Christians in Japan by Tokugawa Iemitsu, the third shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate.