Nagano, Nagano — For other uses, see Nagano (disambiguation). Nagano 長野 Core city 長野市 · Nagano City … Wikipedia
Nagano — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Nagano (homonymie). Nagano shi (長野市) Centre ville Administration … Wikipédia en Français
Ueda, Nagano — Infobox City Japan Name= Ueda JapaneseName= 上田市 Map Region= Chūbu Prefecture= Nagano District= Area km2= 552.00 PopDate= April 1, 2006 Population= 163,256 Density km2= 296.00 Coords= LatitudeDegrees= 36 LatitudeMinutes= 24 LatitudeSeconds=… … Wikipedia
Asahi Broadcasting Nagano — Co.,Ltd. (長野朝日放送株式会社, Nagano Asahi Hōsō Kabushiki gaisha?), also known as abn, is a Japanese broadcast network affiliated with the ANN. Their headquarters are located in Nagano Prefecture. Contents … Wikipedia
Chiisagata District, Nagano — Chiisagata (小県郡; gun) is a district located in Nagano Prefecture, Japan. As of February 1, 2006, the district has an estimated population of 12,039. The total area is now down to 241.04 km². There are only one town and one village left in… … Wikipedia
Maruko, Nagano — Maruko (丸子町, Maruko machi?) was a town located in Chiisagata District, Nagano, Japan. On March 6, 2006 Maruko was merged with the town of Sanada, the village of Takeshi, all from Chiisagata District, and the old city of Ueda to form the new city… … Wikipedia
List of mergers in Nagano Prefecture — The following is a list of mergers that occurred in the 2000s in Nagano Prefecture, Japan.(as of March 31, 2006)Mergers before April 1, 1999*On June 1, 1993 The town of Kamisato (from Shimoina District) was merged into the expanded city of… … Wikipedia
List of Japanese government and military commanders of World War II — In the administration of Japan dominated by the Imperial Way Faction movement during World War II, the civil central government of Japan was under the management of some military men, and of some civilians:Central governmentupreme head of… … Wikipedia
Castillo Ueda — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Castillo Ueda 上田城上田城 Prefectura de Nagano, Japón. Casti … Wikipedia Español
Komatsuhime — nihongo|Komatsuhime|小松姫 (1573 March 27, 1620) was a Japanese woman of the late Azuchi Momoyama through early Edo periods. Born the daughter of Honda Tadakatsu, she was adopted by Tokugawa Ieyasu, before marrying Sanada Nobuyuki. She is described… … Wikipedia