Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe
0 sources
Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe
Summary
Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe is a diplomatic mission[1]. It draws 41 Wikipedia views per month (diplomatic_mission category, ranking #5 of 21).[2]
Key Facts
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe is in the country of Tokugawa shogunate[3].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's image is recorded as Japanese Embassy to Europe Members in Paris 1862.png[4].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's instance of is recorded as diplomatic mission[5].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's followed by is recorded as Second Japanese Embassy to Europe[6].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's Commons category is recorded as Japanese Embassy to Europe in 1862[7].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's chairperson is recorded as Takeuchi Yasunori[8].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's chairperson is recorded as Matsudaira Yasunao[9].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's chairperson is recorded as Kyōgoku Takaaki[10].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's start time is recorded as +1862-01-21T00:00:00Z[11].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's end time is recorded as +1863-01-30T00:00:00Z[12].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/02qj225[13].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's start point is recorded as Shinagawa Minato[14].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's destination point is recorded as Europe[15].
- Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's vessel is recorded as HMS Odin[16].
Body
Identity
Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe's followed by is recorded as Second Japanese Embassy to Europe[6].
Leadership
Chairpersons include Takeuchi Yasunori[8], a diplomat[17], 1807–1867[18]; Matsudaira Yasunao[9], a military commander[19], 1569–1593[20]; and Kyōgoku Takaaki[10], 1850–1864[21], of Japan[22].
Why It Matters
Bunkyū Japanese Embassy to Europe draws 41 Wikipedia views per month (diplomatic_mission category, ranking #5 of 21).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23]