. . . . . "59357745"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . "My\u014Drin (\u5999\u6797) or Yoshioka Myorin-ni (\u5409\u5CA1\u5999\u6797\u5C3C) was a late-Sengoku period female warlord onna-musha. She was the wife of a samurai warlord, and served Otomo clan in Bungo. She was the heroic woman who defended the Otomo clan in the Ky\u016Bsh\u016B campaign against Shimazu's army. Her contributions to the Kyushu campaign were so significant that they completely changed the course of history and she was highly praised by Japan's most powerful man at the time, Toyotomi Hideyoshi. Later, she was named Guardian of Tsurusaki, an honorary title due to her heroic acts."@en . . "\u5999\u6797\u5C3C\uFF08\u307F\u3087\u3046\u308A\u3093\u306B\u3001\u751F\u6CA1\u5E74\u4E0D\u8A73\uFF09\u306F\u3001\u6226\u56FD\u6642\u4EE3\u306E\u5973\u6027\u3002\u5927\u53CB\u6C0F\u306E\u5BB6\u81E3\u30FB\u306E\u59BB\u3002\u5409\u5CA1\u5999\u6797\u3001\u5409\u5CA1\u6797\u5B50\u3068\u3082\u547C\u3070\u308C\u308B\u3002\u53F2\u6599\u306F\u307B\u3068\u3093\u3069\u6B8B\u3063\u3066\u304A\u3089\u305A\u3001\u300E\u5927\u53CB\u8208\u5EC3\u8A18\u300F\u300E\u300F\u306B\u305D\u306E\u540D\u304C\u3001\u30EB\u30A4\u30B9\u30FB\u30D5\u30ED\u30A4\u30B9\u306E\u6587\u66F8\u306B\u5999\u6797\u5C3C\u3068\u601D\u308F\u308C\u308B\u4EBA\u7269\u306E\u8A18\u9332\u304C\u767B\u5834\u3059\u308B\u306E\u307F\u3067\u3042\u308B\u3002"@ja . "Yoshioka Myorin-ni"@en . . "Guardian of Tsurusaki"@en . . . . . . "\u5409\u5CA1\u5999\u6797\u5C3C"@en . "Yoshioka Munemasu"@en . . . . . . . . "Myorin"@en . . . "16"^^ . "\u5999\u6797\u5C3C\uFF08\u307F\u3087\u3046\u308A\u3093\u306B\u3001\u751F\u6CA1\u5E74\u4E0D\u8A73\uFF09\u306F\u3001\u6226\u56FD\u6642\u4EE3\u306E\u5973\u6027\u3002\u5927\u53CB\u6C0F\u306E\u5BB6\u81E3\u30FB\u306E\u59BB\u3002\u5409\u5CA1\u5999\u6797\u3001\u5409\u5CA1\u6797\u5B50\u3068\u3082\u547C\u3070\u308C\u308B\u3002\u53F2\u6599\u306F\u307B\u3068\u3093\u3069\u6B8B\u3063\u3066\u304A\u3089\u305A\u3001\u300E\u5927\u53CB\u8208\u5EC3\u8A18\u300F\u300E\u300F\u306B\u305D\u306E\u540D\u304C\u3001\u30EB\u30A4\u30B9\u30FB\u30D5\u30ED\u30A4\u30B9\u306E\u6587\u66F8\u306B\u5999\u6797\u5C3C\u3068\u601D\u308F\u308C\u308B\u4EBA\u7269\u306E\u8A18\u9332\u304C\u767B\u5834\u3059\u308B\u306E\u307F\u3067\u3042\u308B\u3002"@ja . . "1104941033"^^ . . . . . . . . . "Yoshioka Akioki"@en . . . . . . "Yoshioka Myorin-ni"@en . . ""@en . . . "My\u014Drin (\u5999\u6797) or Yoshioka Myorin-ni (\u5409\u5CA1\u5999\u6797\u5C3C) was a late-Sengoku period female warlord onna-musha. She was the wife of a samurai warlord, and served Otomo clan in Bungo. She was the heroic woman who defended the Otomo clan in the Ky\u016Bsh\u016B campaign against Shimazu's army. Her contributions to the Kyushu campaign were so significant that they completely changed the course of history and she was highly praised by Japan's most powerful man at the time, Toyotomi Hideyoshi. Later, she was named Guardian of Tsurusaki, an honorary title due to her heroic acts."@en . . . . . . "purple"@en . "Unknown"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "A simple statue representing Myorinni as the Guardian of Tsurusaki, in \u014Cita city"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Myorin-ni"@en . . . . . "\u5999\u6797\u5C3C"@ja . . . . . . . "11134"^^ . . . . . . . . .