Iron sword / iron sword inscription
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During the period of activity of the Five Kings of Japan, the tombs of the great kings were constructed in the Mozu Tombs and Furuichi Kofun Cluster (Osaka Prefecture, Sakai City, Habikino City, Fujiidera), and Je's tomb is assumed to be one of them.[1] These tombs are now designated as mausoleums by the Miyouchi Agency, so there is a lack of archaeological data to date them, but one theory compares them to the Ichinoyama tomb (the current imperial tomb of Emperor Yunkyo).
Another archaeological source is the "Gift of Wang" excavated from the Inari Daichi Kofun (Ichihara City, Chiba Prefecture). (or Chin), since he is self-explanatory only by writing "Wang".[2][3] It should be noted, however, that the iron sword from Inariyama burial mound inscription and the iron sword from Etafuneyama burial mound inscription are distinct from the "Great King" of the Inariyama Sword[4]。
References[edit]
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- ↑ "Wa" no Monogatari (Headquarters Committee for the Promotion of the Mozu and Furuichi Tumulus Group World Cultural Heritage Registration, "Mozu and Furuichi Tumulus Group")
- ↑ Mori Kosho 2010, pp. 51-55.
- ↑ Kouchi Haruhito 2018, pp. 73-119.
- ↑ 河内春人 2018, pp. 73-119.