impact:

honedera.jp

Honederamura Shōen ruins (骨寺村荘園遺跡, Honederamura Shōen iseki) is an archaeological site containing the ruins of a large-scale shōen manor from the Kamakura period, located in what is now part of the city of Ichinoseki, Iwate in the Tōhoku region of Japan. A portion of the site (48.8 hectares) was designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 2005. The Honederamura Shōen ruins are located in the Genbi neighborhood of Ichinoseki City on a terraced plain on the left bank of the Iwai River east from Mount Kurikoma. The plain is surrounded by low mountains with heights of around 300 meters, and is a well-watered area with natural springs and the Honedera River flowing eastward through the plain to the Iwai River. The shōen dates from the late Heian period and was originally a donation by the monk Jizaibō Renkō to provide for the upkeep of the Kyōzō sutra repository at Chūson-ji in Hiraizumi. It as administered by a bettō from Chuzon-ji, an arrangement with continued after Minamoto no Yoritomo defeated of the Northern Fujiwara clan and redrew the borders of the shōen. Under the Edo period Tokugawa shogunate, the estate came under the control of the Date clan of Sendai Domain. More information...

According to PR-model, honedera.jp is ranked 911,307th in multilingual Wikipedia, in particular this website is ranked 73,163rd in Japanese Wikipedia.

The website is placed before polonyadan.com and after orangetown.com in the BestRef global ranking of the most important sources of Wikipedia.

#Language
PR-model F-model AR-model
911,307th place
935,318th place
1,240,102nd place
73,163rd place
103,493rd place
69,167th place
1,770,687th place
1,322,804th place
1,881,529th place
488,135th place
369,331st place
498,639th place