. . . . "Fusanosuke Got\u014D"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "Fusanosuke Got\u014D (\u5F8C\u85E4 \u623F\u4E4B\u52A9, Got\u014D Fusanosuke), n\u00E9 le 14 novembre 1879 \u00E0 Kurihara dans la pr\u00E9fecture de Miyagi au Japon et d\u00E9c\u00E9d\u00E9 \u00E0 l'\u00E2ge de 44 ans le 31 juillet 1924 dans cette m\u00EAme ville, est un soldat de l'arm\u00E9e imp\u00E9riale japonaise qui se distingua lors de l'incident des monts Hakk\u014Dda. En janvier 1902, 210 soldats du 2e bataillon du 5e r\u00E9giment d'infanterie furent surpris par une temp\u00EAte de neige lors de la travers\u00E9e des monts Hakkoda au d\u00E9part d'Aomori pour un exercice militaire qui visait \u00E0 aguerrir les hommes au climat froid. L'\u00E9quipe de secours d\u00E9couvrit Got\u014D, ce qui mena \u00E0 la d\u00E9couverte de la troupe enti\u00E8re. Ses bras et ses jambes durent \u00EAtre amput\u00E9s \u00E0 cause des gelures. Apr\u00E8s l'incident, il se retire de l'arm\u00E9e et retourne dans sa ville natale o\u00F9 il devint membre de l'assembl\u00E9e du village avant de mourir d'une h\u00E9morragie c\u00E9r\u00E9brale. Dans le livre de Jir\u014D Nitta, Marche vers la mort sur le mont Hakkoda, une semi-fiction de l'incident, Got\u014D est repr\u00E9sent\u00E9 par le personnage du caporal Et\u014D."@fr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "\u5F8C\u85E4\u623F\u4E4B\u52A9"@ja . . . . . . . . . . "Fusanosuke Got\u014D"@fr . "2223"^^ . . . . "1107214522"^^ . "\u5F8C\u85E4 \u623F\u4E4B\u52A9\uFF08\u3054\u3068\u3046 \u3075\u3055\u306E\u3059\u3051\u30011879\u5E74\u3008\u660E\u6CBB12\u5E74\u300911\u670814\u65E5 - 1924\u5E74\u3008\u5927\u6B6313\u5E74\u30097\u670831\u65E5\uFF09\u306F\u3001\u5BAE\u57CE\u770C\u6817\u539F\u90E1\u59EB\u677E\u6751\uFF08\u73FE\u30FB\u6817\u539F\u5E02\uFF09\u51FA\u8EAB\u306E\u653F\u6CBB\u5BB6\u3002 \u516B\u7532\u7530\u96EA\u4E2D\u884C\u8ECD\u906D\u96E3\u4E8B\u4EF6\u3067\u306E\u751F\u5B58\u8005\u306E\u4E00\u4EBA\u3067\u3001\u5E30\u90F7\u5F8C\u306B\u6751\u4F1A\u8B70\u54E1\u3092\u52D9\u3081\u305F\u3002"@ja . "Fusanosuke Got\u014D (\u5F8C\u85E4 \u623F\u4E4B\u52A9, Got\u014D Fusanosuke, November 15, 1879 in Kurihara, Miyagi Prefecture \u2013 July 30, 1924 in Kurihara) was a soldier in the Imperial Japanese Army memorialized by the Memorial Statue of the Hakkoda Death March in Aomori, Japan. In January 1902, 210 soldiers in the 5th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Battalion became trapped on the Hakk\u014Dda Mountains; this was the start of the Hakk\u014Dda Mountains incident. Search parties discovered Got\u014D. The discovery led to the rescue of the other soldiers. His arms and legs were amputated as a result of frostbite."@en . . "\u5F8C\u85E4\u623F\u4E4B\u52A9\uFF081879\u5E7411\u670814\u65E5\uFF0D1924\u5E747\u670831\u65E5\uFF09\uFF0C\u5BAE\u57CE\u7E23\uFF08\u4ECA\u6817\u539F\u5E02\uFF09\u51FA\u8EAB\uFF0C\u5927\u65E5\u672C\u5E1D\u570B\u9678\u8ECD\u7684\u4F0D\u9577\uFF0C\u662F\u516B\u7532\u7530\u96EA\u4E2D\u884C\u8ECD\u906D\u96E3\u4E8B\u4EF6\u767C\u751F\u5F8C\u7684\u751F\u5B58\u8005\u4E2D\u7684\u4E00\u4EBA\u3002\u8FD4\u9109\u5F8C\uFF0C\u64D4\u4EFB\u6751\u6703\u8B70\u54E1\uFF0C\u51712\u671F\u3002"@zh . "Fusanosuke Got\u014D (\u5F8C\u85E4 \u623F\u4E4B\u52A9, Got\u014D Fusanosuke), n\u00E9 le 14 novembre 1879 \u00E0 Kurihara dans la pr\u00E9fecture de Miyagi au Japon et d\u00E9c\u00E9d\u00E9 \u00E0 l'\u00E2ge de 44 ans le 31 juillet 1924 dans cette m\u00EAme ville, est un soldat de l'arm\u00E9e imp\u00E9riale japonaise qui se distingua lors de l'incident des monts Hakk\u014Dda. Apr\u00E8s l'incident, il se retire de l'arm\u00E9e et retourne dans sa ville natale o\u00F9 il devint membre de l'assembl\u00E9e du village avant de mourir d'une h\u00E9morragie c\u00E9r\u00E9brale."@fr . "Fusanosuke Got\u014D (\u5F8C\u85E4 \u623F\u4E4B\u52A9, Got\u014D Fusanosuke, November 15, 1879 in Kurihara, Miyagi Prefecture \u2013 July 30, 1924 in Kurihara) was a soldier in the Imperial Japanese Army memorialized by the Memorial Statue of the Hakkoda Death March in Aomori, Japan. In January 1902, 210 soldiers in the 5th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Battalion became trapped on the Hakk\u014Dda Mountains; this was the start of the Hakk\u014Dda Mountains incident. Search parties discovered Got\u014D. The discovery led to the rescue of the other soldiers. His arms and legs were amputated as a result of frostbite. After the incident, he retired from the army, returned to his hometown, became a member of the village assembly, and later died from cerebral hemorrhage. In Jir\u014D Nitta's Death March on Mount Hakk\u014Dda: A Documentary Novel, a semi-fictional account of the disaster, Got\u014D is portrayed by the character Corporal Et\u014D."@en . "\u5F8C\u85E4\u623F\u4E4B\u52A9"@zh . "\u5F8C\u85E4\u623F\u4E4B\u52A9\uFF081879\u5E7411\u670814\u65E5\uFF0D1924\u5E747\u670831\u65E5\uFF09\uFF0C\u5BAE\u57CE\u7E23\uFF08\u4ECA\u6817\u539F\u5E02\uFF09\u51FA\u8EAB\uFF0C\u5927\u65E5\u672C\u5E1D\u570B\u9678\u8ECD\u7684\u4F0D\u9577\uFF0C\u662F\u516B\u7532\u7530\u96EA\u4E2D\u884C\u8ECD\u906D\u96E3\u4E8B\u4EF6\u767C\u751F\u5F8C\u7684\u751F\u5B58\u8005\u4E2D\u7684\u4E00\u4EBA\u3002\u8FD4\u9109\u5F8C\uFF0C\u64D4\u4EFB\u6751\u6703\u8B70\u54E1\uFF0C\u51712\u671F\u3002"@zh . "20150946"^^ . . . . . "\u5F8C\u85E4 \u623F\u4E4B\u52A9\uFF08\u3054\u3068\u3046 \u3075\u3055\u306E\u3059\u3051\u30011879\u5E74\u3008\u660E\u6CBB12\u5E74\u300911\u670814\u65E5 - 1924\u5E74\u3008\u5927\u6B6313\u5E74\u30097\u670831\u65E5\uFF09\u306F\u3001\u5BAE\u57CE\u770C\u6817\u539F\u90E1\u59EB\u677E\u6751\uFF08\u73FE\u30FB\u6817\u539F\u5E02\uFF09\u51FA\u8EAB\u306E\u653F\u6CBB\u5BB6\u3002 \u516B\u7532\u7530\u96EA\u4E2D\u884C\u8ECD\u906D\u96E3\u4E8B\u4EF6\u3067\u306E\u751F\u5B58\u8005\u306E\u4E00\u4EBA\u3067\u3001\u5E30\u90F7\u5F8C\u306B\u6751\u4F1A\u8B70\u54E1\u3092\u52D9\u3081\u305F\u3002"@ja . . . . . . .