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centuries in Japan, of which three are located a small, three-kilometer, area of southwestern Gunma
Prefecture. From the fifth century AD, this region welcomed immigrants from the mainland, who brought advanced technologies, such as raising and breeding horses, iron working, stoneware production, and weaving. It is likely that the local inhabitants regarded their region as sophisticated in comparison with surrounding provinces despite its distance from the capital at
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in the 1790s. In 1884, the governor of Gunma
Prefecture, Katori Motohiko, authorized the prefectural government to purchase a land where the stele is located, put the monument on a new base stone, and had a small structure built to protect it. The current structure dates from 1991 and the stele can
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around the seventh century AD; however, the practice of erecting stelae never became as widespread as in China and Korea, partly due to the fact that in this period of
Japanese history, writing was the preserve of the elite. There are only eighteen stelae known to exist from the seventh to eleventh
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named "Miyake". A total of nine family members are named, including four women. The head of the family was Sano no Miyake (佐野 三家), who is believed to be a descendant of the family that erected the nearby
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into the northern Kantō region by the early Nara period. The inscription of "Gunma" on this stele is the earliest known reference to this topographic name.
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The
Kanaizawa Stele was found lying flat on the southern slope of a hill facing the hamlet of Kanaizawa and was excavated in the middle of the
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and has a height of 110 cm, a width of 70 cm and a thickness of 65 cm. The surface has an inscription in nine lines with 112
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with the date of 726 AD. It is a memorial for seven generations of ancestors an aristocratic family in Takada
Village, Shimosanu Ward,
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system. The stele therefore provides confirmation of the enforcement of the hometown system and the penetration of
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system. Likewise, the format in which the names were written is in the family-register format stipulated by the
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in 1921, and was raised in status to a
Special National Historic Site in 1954. As one of the "
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by farmers who used it as a washboard for vegetables in a nearby stream. It is made of
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be viewed through a window It is located about 10 minutes on foot from
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The practice of erecting stelae was introduced to Japan from the
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492:"Nomination form International Memory of the World Registry"
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discovered in the Yamana neighborhood of the city of
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466:"Three Cherished Stelae of Ancient Kozuke"
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566:History of Gunma Prefecture
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90:Kanaizawa Stele (Japan)
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298:Three Stelae of Kōzuke
148:36.28556°N 139.01611°E
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286:Kantō region
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121:Kantō region
591:Nara period
529:Kanaizawahi
271:Nara period
217:Nara period
151: /
139:139°00′58″E
127:Coordinates
550:Categories
426:References
420:Tago Stele
337:Edo period
321:Tang China
223:Site notes
136:36°17′08″N
505:11 August
476:11 August
450:11 August
392:railway.
307:in 2017
501:. UNESCO
472:. UNESCO
396:See also
374:Buddhism
370:ritsuryō
365:ritsuryō
341:andesite
311:Overview
278:Takasaki
199:andesite
195:Material
103:Location
388:on the
213:Periods
205:Founded
190:History
440:"金井沢碑"
302:UNESCO
208:726 AD
185:110 cm
182:Height
117:Region
495:(PDF)
346:kanji
326:Asuka
290:Japan
274:stele
269:is a
177:70 cm
174:Width
168:stele
111:Japan
507:2020
478:2020
452:2020
330:Nara
319:and
256:金井沢碑
248:The
164:Type
23:金井沢碑
328:or
288:of
231:Yes
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Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.