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Pages in category "Fictional Japanese people in anime and manga" The following 170 pages are in this category, out of 170 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
List of Chainsaw Man characters; List of Change 123 characters; List of Chibi Vampire characters; List of Chihayafuru characters; List of Chobits characters; List of Combattler V Robots; List of Chrome Shelled Regios characters; List of Clannad characters; List of Classroom of the Elite characters; List of Claymore characters; List of Kamisama ...
Japanese Title Type Director Studio Ref 1970–1971: The Adventures of Hutch the Honeybee: TV series: Ippei Kuri: Tatsunoko Productions: 1975–1976: The Adventures of Pepero: TV series: Kazuhiko Udagawa: Wako Pro: 1976: 3000 Leagues in Search of Mother: TV series: Isao Takahata: Nippon Animation: 1978–1979: The Adventures of the Little ...
Toyotama-hime (Japanese: 豊玉姫) is a goddess in Japanese mythology who appears in Kojiki and Nihon Shoki. She is the daughter of the sea deity, Watatsumi , and the wife of Hoori . She is known as the paternal grandmother of Emperor Jimmu , the first emperor of Japan.
Hoori's legend is told in both the Kojiki and the Nihon Shoki. Hoori was a hunter, and he had an argument with his brother Hoderi, a fisherman, over a fish-hook that Hoori had forced his elder brother to lend him and had lost. Hoderi claimed that Hoori should give back the fish-hook, for he refused to accept another one (due to the belief that ...
The Adventures of Hutch the Honeybee; The Adventures of Pepero; The Adventures of Lolo the Penguin; Adventures of the Little Koala; The Adventures of the Little Prince (TV series) The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1980 TV series) Aesop World; Age of Adventure; Aika R-16: Virgin Mission; Akado Suzunosuke; Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp (1982 film ...
The Hotsuma Tsutae (also Hotuma Tsutaye, Japanese 秀真伝) is an elaborate epic poem of Japanese legendary history. It differs substantially from the mainstream version as recorded in the Kojiki and the Nihon Shoki , and its antiquity is undetermined.
Ō no Yasumaro (太 安万侶, died August 15, 723) was a Japanese nobleman, bureaucrat, and chronicler. He may have been the son of Ō no Honji, a participant in the Jinshin War of 672. [1] He is most famous for compiling and editing, with the assistance of Hieda no Are, the Kojiki, the oldest extant Japanese history.