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- Kugyō abstract "For Kugyō, the Buddhist monk who in 1291 assassinated Kamakura shogun Minamoto no Sanetomo, see Kugyō (Minamoto no Yoshinari)". Kugyō (公卿) is the collective term for the very few most powerful men attached to the court of the Emperor of Japan in pre-Meiji eras. The kugyō was broadly divided into two groups: the Kō (公), comprising the Chancellor of the Realm, the Minister of the Left, and the Minister of the Right; and the Kei (卿), comprising the Major Counsellor, the Middle Counsellor, the Court Councillor (参議, Sangi), and members of the Japanese court of the third rank or higher.As part of the Meiji reforms, a single aristocratic class, the kazoku, was created in 1869 by merging the kuge (the court nobility in Kyoto, of which the kugyō was a part) and the daimyo (the feudal land holders and warriors). In the 1870s, the organizational structure of the court itself was also modernized. In the period after the Second World War, the kazoku was abolished, as a part of post-war Japanese reforms. The remaining political powers of the Emperor were transferred to the constitutional government of Japan, and the responsibility for state matters concerning the Emperor and the Imperial family was consolidated entirely into the Imperial Household Agency.".
- Kugyō wikiPageID "11208206".
- Kugyō wikiPageLength "1862".
- Kugyō wikiPageOutDegree "28".
- Kugyō wikiPageRevisionID "680206132".
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Category:Japanese_historical_terms.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Category:Royal_and_noble_courts.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Chancellor_of_the_Realm.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Chūnagon.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Daijirin.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Daijisen.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Daijō-daijin.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Daijō-kan.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Daimyo.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Dainagon.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Emperor_of_Japan.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Government_of_Japan.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Imperial_House_of_Japan.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Imperial_Household_Agency.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Kazoku.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Kuge.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Kugyō_(Minamoto_no_Yoshinari).
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Kōjien.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Kōkyū.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_Restoration.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_period.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Meiji_reformation.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Minamoto_no_Sanetomo.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Minister_of_the_Left.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Minister_of_the_Right.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Sadaijin.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Sangi_(Japan).
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Second_World_War.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Sesshō_and_Kampaku.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink Udaijin.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLinkText "Kugyō".
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLinkText "court noble".
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLinkText "court nobles".
- Kugyō wikiPageWikiLinkText "kugyō".
- Kugyō hasPhotoCollection Kugyō.
- Kugyō wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Daijō-kan.
- Kugyō wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Japan-hist-stub.
- Kugyō wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Nihongo.
- Kugyō subject Category:Japanese_historical_terms.
- Kugyō subject Category:Royal_and_noble_courts.
- Kugyō comment "For Kugyō, the Buddhist monk who in 1291 assassinated Kamakura shogun Minamoto no Sanetomo, see Kugyō (Minamoto no Yoshinari)". Kugyō (公卿) is the collective term for the very few most powerful men attached to the court of the Emperor of Japan in pre-Meiji eras.".
- Kugyō label "Kugyō".
- Kugyō sameAs Kugyō.
- Kugyō sameAs Kugyō.
- Kugyō sameAs 公卿.
- Kugyō sameAs 공경.
- Kugyō sameAs m.02r3qdz.
- Kugyō sameAs Kugyō.
- Kugyō sameAs Q3138036.
- Kugyō sameAs Q3138036.
- Kugyō sameAs 公卿.
- Kugyō wasDerivedFrom Kugyō?oldid=680206132.
- Kugyō isPrimaryTopicOf Kugyō.