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Chikugo Province

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File:Provinces of Japan-Chikugo.svg
Map of Japanese provinces (1868) with Chikugo Province highlighted

Lua error in Module:Nihongo at line 88: attempt to call field '_transl' (a nil value). is the name of a old province of Japan in the area that is today the southern part of Fukuoka Prefecture on the island of Kyūshū.[1] Along with Chikuzen Province, it was sometimes called Chikushū (筑州)

Chikugo had borders with Hizen, Chikuzen, Bungo, and Higo Provinces.

History[change]

The ancient capital city of the province was near Kurume, Fukuoka.

In the Meiji period, the provinces of Japan were converted into prefectures. Maps of Japan and Chikugo Province were reformed in the 1870s.[2]

Timeline of notable events[change]

Shrines and Temples[change]

File:Kurume kourataisha.jpg
Kōra taisha

Kōra taisha was the chief Shinto shrine (ichinomiya) of Chikugo. [5]

Related pages[change]

References[change]

  1. Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Chikugo" in Japan Encyclopedia, p. 113.
  2. Nussbaum, "Provinces and prefectures" at p. 780.
  3. Tsuji, Zennosuke. (1932). The Humanitarian Ideas of the Japanese, p. 55; Depuy, Trevor Nevitt. (1992). "Kikuchi Takemitsu," The Harper Encyclopedia of Military Biography, p. 402.
  4. Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Kikuchi Takemitsu" in Japan encyclopedia, p. 517.
  5. "Nationwide List of Ichinomiya," p. 3 Archived 2013-05-17 at the Wayback Machine; retrieved 2012-1-18.

Other websites[change]

File:Commons-logo.svg Media related to Lua error in Module:Commons_link at line 47: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). at Wikimedia Commons