Kaibara, Hyōgo, a former town located in Hikami District, Hyōgo, Japan.
Hyōgo Prefecture | Sumoto, Hyōgo | Hyogo Prefecture | Tōjō, Hyōgo | Takarazuka, Hyōgo | Kanzaki, Hyōgo | Kaibara, Hyōgo | Kaibara Ekken | Iwaya Station (Hyogo) | Ikuno, Hyōgo | Hyogo Performing Arts Center Orchestra | Ashiya, Hyōgo |
Aboshi Station, a train station in Himeji, Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan
Den was born in Tamba-Kaibara Domain, located in Hikami District of Tamba Province (part of the modern-day city of Tamba, Hyōgo), where his father was a wealthy farmer and landholder.
One of the services making up JR West's "Big X Network", it connects Kyoto Station, Amanohashidate Station and Toyooka Station via the Sanin Main Line and Kitakinki Tango Railway's Miyafuku Line and Miyazu Line.
Concerning Shuten-doji, there are stories that he was born at the base of Mount Ibuki among other famous stories, but concerning Ibaraki-doji, there are stories that he was born in Amagasaki, Hyogo, and Ibaraki, Osaka among other places, and documented from various sources like the Settsu Meisho Zue (摂津名所図会), Settsuyou Kendan (摂陽研説), and Setuyou Gundan (摂陽群談).
Hankyū Imazu Line, 9.3 km long commuter rail in Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan
Kaibara Ekken (1630-1714), a Japanese Neo-Confucian philosopher and botanist
# Kōsoku Kōbe Station - (高速神戸駅) on the Hanshin Railway Kobe Kosoku Line and the Hankyu Railway Kobe Kosoku Line in Chuo-ku, Kobe, Hyogo Prefecture
This station is located near Iwaya Station of the Hanshin Main Line, and an entrance to HAT Kobe (includes Hyogo Prefectural Museum of Art, Hyogo International Center of JICA, WHO Kobe Center and Disaster Reduction and Human Renovation Institution).
It was named after the Japanese Physician, Seiichiro Tarui (1927- ), who was a native of Hyōgo Prefecture in Japan.
Satsu Station, a station in Kami, Mikata District, Hyōgo, Japan
Original novel series released under the label include Read or Die by Hideyuki Kurata, Happy Seven by Hiroyuki Kawasaki, Ginban Kaleidoscope by Rei Kaibara, Kure-nai by Kentarō Katayama, and Akikan! by Riku Ranjō.
Ōnishi′s ashes were divided between two graves – one at the Zen temple of Sōji-ji in Tsurumi, Yokohama, and the other at the public cemetery in former Ashida village in Hyōgo prefecture.
Yojiro Terada (born 1947), Japanese racing driver from Kobe, Hyogo Prefecture