Kanjinchō
Kabuki play
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Kanjinchō
Summary
Kanjinchō is a kabuki play[1]. Kanjinchō draws 49 Wikipedia views per month (kabuki_play category, ranking #3 of 13).[2]
Key Facts
- Kanjinchō's image is recorded as Ebizō Ichikawa V as Benkei and Danjūrō Ichikawa VIII as Tokashi.jpg[3].
- Kanjinchō's instance of is recorded as kabuki play[4].
- Kanjinchō's genre is recorded as jidaimono[5].
- Kanjinchō's genre is recorded as matsubamemono[6].
- Kanjinchō's based on is recorded as Ataka[7].
- Kanjinchō's NDL Authority ID is recorded as 00631397[8].
- Kanjinchō's part of is recorded as Kabuki Jūhachiban[9].
- Kanjinchō's Commons category is recorded as Kanjinchō[10].
- Kanjinchō's language of work or name is recorded as Japanese[11].
- Kanjinchō's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/09s2_0[12].
- Kanjinchō's characters is recorded as Minamoto no Yoshitsune[13].
- Kanjinchō's characters is recorded as Musashibō Benkei[14].
- Kanjinchō's characters is recorded as Togashi Yasuie[15].
- Kanjinchō's narrative location is recorded as Ataka no Seki[16].
- Kanjinchō's date of first performance is recorded as +1702-00-00T00:00:00Z[17].
- Kanjinchō's depicted by is recorded as Adachi-ga Hara[18].
- Kanjinchō's location of first performance is recorded as Nakamura-za[19].
- Kanjinchō's JAANUS ID is recorded as k/kanjinchou[20].
- Kanjinchō's Pixiv Encyclopedia ID is recorded as 勧進帳[21].
- Kanjinchō's first performance by is recorded as Ichikawa Danjūrō I[22].
Why It Matters
Kanjinchō draws 49 Wikipedia views per month (kabuki_play category, ranking #3 of 13).[2] Kanjinchō has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[23]