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The Makimuku ruins are ruins in Nara Prefecture Sakurai [1] near Mount Miwa.Recovered artifacts are of the Yayoi Period and Kofun Period.. It is designated as a national historic site, and an archaeological site that began in the 3rd century, and some researchers consider the area to be the birthplace of the Kofun system.
Midoro Kofun (水泥古墳) is a pair of Kofun period burial mounds, located in the Furuse neighborhood of the city of Gose, Nara in the Kansai region of Japan. The pair of tumuli were designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 1961. [1] The tumulus is also called the Imaki-no-sō haka (今木の双墓).
In other words, based on the archaeological findings of the distribution of burial mounds and the emperors' Japanese style posthumous names appeared in the Kojiki and the Nihon Shpoki, the dynasty of the fourth century (early Kofun period) is called the Miwa dynasty ("Iri" dynasty, or Sujin dynasty), while the power in Kawachi in the fifth ...
Tōjin Kofun Cluster (唐仁古墳群) is a group of Kofun period burial mounds located in the Shinkawanishi neighborhood of the town of Higashikushira, Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan. The site been protected as a National Historic Site since 1934. [ 1 ]
The Ueyama Kofun is located at the western end of the hills extending from Amakashi-no-oka, at the southern end of the Nara Basin.The surrounding area is home to a number of important ancient tombs from the 6th and 7th centuries, including the Maruyama Kofun located about 500 meters west of Ueyama Kofun and Shōbuike Kofun located about 700 meters southeast.
[4] [9] Sujin's kofun is one of six that are present in the area; the mounds are thought to have built sometime between 250 and 350 AD. [ 23 ] Outside of the Kojiki , the reign of Emperor Kinmei [ g ] ( c. 509 – 571 AD) is the first for which contemporary historiography is able to assign verifiable dates. [ 26 ]
The Ikime Kofun cluster (生目古墳群) is a group of Kofun period burial mounds located in the Atoe-cho neighborhood of the city of Miyazaki, Miyazaki Prefecture in Kyushu Japan. The tumulus group was designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 1943 with the area under protection expanded in 2007.
Makimuku Ishizuka Kofun is a Kofun found on the premises of Makimuku ruins. It is a keyhole shaped Kofun. [1] It is a Kofun of Makimuku ruins. [2]: 249 During WWII it was flattened to use as a site for an Anti-aircraft cannon. [1] ' The Makimuku Ishizuka Tomb is a Zenpokoenfun and one of the most prominent tombs of its time. [3]