Yaponiya imperatori (Uzbek Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Yaponiya imperatori" in Uzbek language version.

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  • Kanʼichi Asakawa. The early institutional life of Japan: a study in the reform of 645 A.D.. Tokyo: Shueisha (1903), p. 25. „We purposely avoid, in spite of its wide usage in foreign literature, the misleading term Mikado. If it be not for the natural curiosity of the races, which always seeks something novel and loves to call foreign things by foreign names, it is hard to understand why this obsolete and ambiguous word should so sedulously be retained. It originally meant not only the Sovereign, but also his house, the court, and even the State, and its use in historical writings causes many difficulties which it is unnecessary to discuss here in detail. The native Japanese employ the term neither in speech nor in writing. It might as well be dismissed with great advantage from sober literature as it has been for the official documents.“
  • Kinsley, David. The goddesses' mirror : visions of the divine from East and West. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1989 — 80–90 bet. ISBN 9780887068355. 
  • Ashkenazi, Michael „Ninigi-no-Mikoto“,. Handbook of Japanese mythology. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO, 2003 — 222 bet. ISBN 9781576074671. 

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  • Totman, Conrad (1966). „Political Succession in The Tokugawa Bakufu: Abe Masahiro's Rise to Power, 1843–1845“. Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 26-jild. 102–124-bet. doi:10.2307/2718461. JSTOR 2718461.

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  • Kelly, Charles F. „Kofun Culture“. Japanese Archaeology (27-aprel 2009-yil). 2021-yil 10-oktyabrda asl nusxadan arxivlangan. Qaraldi: 2021-yil 15-oktyabr.

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  • Edgington-Brown, Luke (2016). „The international origins of japanese archaeology: william gowland and his kofun collection at the british museum“. ProQuest Dissertations Publishing.

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