鸟羽伏见之战_鸟羽伏见之战伤亡情况
请给我<<新撰组异闻录>>上新撰组成员名单
He was not particularly fond of liquor but it is fictional that he loved sweets.旁边是声优名单
鸟羽伏见之战_鸟羽伏见之战伤亡情况
鸟羽伏见之战_鸟羽伏见之战伤亡情况
Mori, Makiko. Okita Soji Feature. Tokyo: Shin Jinbutsu Oraisha, 1999. ISBN 4404028075
市村鉄之助: 小林由美子
永仓新八: 山口胜平
冲田総司: 斎贺みつき
原田左之助: 乃村健次
土方歳三: 中近藤 勇: 土师孝也田譲治
藤堂平助: 鸟海浩辅
斉藤 一: 松山鹰志
沙 夜: 高桥美佳子
吉田稔麿: 诹访部顺一
山崎 烝: 樱井孝宏
北村 铃: 今井由香
明 里: 根谷美智子
谁有冲田总司的资料,要英文版的
The account in regard of Okita and a certain doctor's daughter originally comes from the Shinsengumi trilogy by Shimozawa Kan. His Shinsengumi books are categorized as (historical) fiction. Likewise, according to Shimozawa's Shinsengumi Shimatsuki, Okita died after an attempt to kill a black cat. Howr, it is debatable how much of it is fact-based.你好
"Okita" (冲田) was his family name; "Soji" (総司) was his given name; "Fujiwara" (藤原) was his family clan (the surname of his ancestors); "Kaneyoshi" (房良) was his formal given name (like a middle name equivalent). It is unclear wher Okita changed his name to Okita Souji Fujiwara no Kaneyoshi in 1863 or in 1862 (or less likely, in 1861.) There's a theory that he changed his name to Souji because some people around him called him "Sou-Ji" (short for Soujirou.) Other than his full name, he could be referred as Okita Soji or Okita Soji Kaneyoshi. In writing, he was sometimes referred as Fujiwara no Kaneyoshi (formal name used in writing) or Okita Kaneyoshi (like the "initials" for his full name.).希望能帮到你
==Okita Soji==
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Okita Sōji (冲田 総司), (1842 or 1844 - July 19, 1868) was the captain of the first troop of the Shinsengumi, a special pol force in Kyoto during the late shogunate period. He was a well-known genius swordan, being one of the strongest out of the Shinsengumi, along with Saito Hajime and Nagakura Shinpachi.
=Background=
He was born Okita Soujirou Fujiwara no Harumasa in 1842 or 1844 from a samurai family in the Shirakawa- han's Edo mansion. His great-grandfather was Okita Kan'emon ( - 1819) and his grandfather was Okita Sanshiro ( - 1833.) His father, Okita Katsujiro, died in 1845; he had two older sisters, Okita Mitsu (1833-1907) and Okita Kin (1836-1908.) In 1846, in order to marry the adopted son of the Okita family, Okita Rintaro (1826-1883), his oldest sister Okita Mitsu became an adopted daughter of Kondo Shusuke in name. Kondo Shusuke was the third of the Tennen Rishin Ryu and Okita started training at the Shieikan with him around the age of nine. By that time, Kondo Shusuke had already adopted Shimazaki Katsuta (the later Kondo Isami), but Hijikata Toshizo had not yet enrolled at the Tennen Rishin-ryu school. Okita proved to be a prodigy and attained Menkyo Kaiden status ( of kenjutsu) at eigh or so.
In 1861, Okita became the Head Coach (Jukutou) at the Shieikan. Even though he was often commented to be honest, polite, and good-natured by those around him, he was also known to be a strict and quick-tempered teacher to his students.
According to Yagi Tamesaburou (Yagi Gennoujou's son) and Satou S'sen (Satou Hikogorou's descendent), Okita was a tall, dark, and thin man with high cheekbones, a wide mouth, and a "flatfish" face. In addition, he was known as a man who iled and laughed well (not very talkative, howr.)
=Shinsengumi Period=
Okita changed his name to Okita Souji Fujiwara no Kaneyoshi some time before his departure to Kyoto in 1863. He soon became a founding member of the Shinsengumi and a Fukuchou Jokin (V-Commander's Assistant.) Okita Rintarou, also a practitioner of the Tennen Rishin-ryu, became a commander of the Shinchougumi (the Shinsengumi's brother league in Edo.)
Okita was the second youngest among the Shieikan members, with Todo Heisuke being the youngest. He was one of the Shieikan members involved in the Serizawa Kamo (one of the original commanders of the Shinsengumi) and the Uchiyama Hikojiro assassinations in 1863.
Based on Shiba Ryoutarou's fiction, many also beli that Okita and Hijikata were like brothers. In history, Yamanami Keisuke was the v-commander Okita shared a brotherly relationship with. Yamanami's seppuku (with Okita as his second) in 1865 was an extremely painful incident in Okita's short life. There is no record showing that Hijikata and Okita were close; it is debatable wher Okita n got along with Hijikata.
Although highly unlikely, it was rumored that he wielded a famous katana called Kikuichi-monji. Howr, he surely owned a set of Kaga Kiyomitsu (a katana and a wakizashi) and his so-called "Kikuichimonji Norimune" was likely a Yamasiro Kunikiyo instead.
=Death=
During the Boshin War, after the Battle of Toba-Fushimi in January of Keiou 4, Okita went into Matsumoto Ryoujun's hospital in Edo. He then moved to a guesthouse with Okita Rintarou, Okita Mitsu, and their children. When the shogunate forces (including the Shinsengumi and the Shinchougumi) retreated to the Tohokegion, Okita remained in Edo alone. He died on July 19 (lunar calendar May 30th), 1868. Later that night, he was buried at his family temple in Edo (present Tokyo), under his birth name (with Okita Souji listed in the death records.) Today, Okita's gre is not open to the public.
The rmation that Okita died when he was 25 is based on the theory that he was born in 1844 and therefore was 25 by East Asian age reckoning when he died in 1868.
=Trivia=
It is a misconception that Okita's mother died when he was a young boy. In fact, she died in 1862.
It is historically accurate that Okita loved children. During his time in Kyoto, he was often seen playing with children and was a baby-sitter to Yagi's sons in Mibu.
Okita was a bit of a clean freak.
Aside from being treated by Matsumoto, Okita also took Kyorou Sanyaku (medicine for enervation and coughing) for his tuberculosis (not to be confused with Ishida Sanyaku for treating injures such as bruises and broken bones.)
There has not been any evidence of an Okita photograph.
=Okita in Fiction=
Like the other members of the Shinsengumi, fictionalized accounts of Okita's life and actions appear in novels, period dramas and anime/m山崎 歩: 永岛由子anga series.
Okita is briefly mentioned and shown in the anime/manga series Rurouni Kenshin, which takes place during and after the Meiji Revolution in Japan. A character later on in the series, Seta Sōjirō, was based on the Okita Sōji from novel Shinsengumi Keppuroku (and therefore, darker than the real Okita.) Okita is also a main character in the anime/manga Peacemaker Kurogane, which takes more liberties with history. In an episode of the anime Ghost Sweeper Mikami, ghost-ter Mikami Reiko gets inside of a haunted movie about the Bakumatsu and meets Okita, who is depicted as a crazy guy who thinks only of killing people (obvious pun on his usual portrayal, which also is a foil to the show's rendition of Hijikata.) In the anime/manga series Shura no Toki, Okita's (fictional) last battle before succumbing to his sickness is with a warrior from the Mutsu Enmei Ryuu, an unarmed martial art. Their duel was a request from Okita himself from years before. And while only briefly appearing in Kido Shinsengumi: Moeyo Ken (in a flashback and as a sible ghost), Okita's fictional daughter ru (by an equally fictional unnamed wife) is one of the three main characters of the series.
Okita is the male protagonist in the manga Kaze Hikaru, a fictional story about the Shinsengumi during the late Tokugawa shogunate, in which Okita trains a young girl to be one of the Shinsengumi in order to enge her father and older brother. He is also featured in the manga Getsumei Seiki.
His anime, manga, and TV depictions tend to be as a handsome young man, sometimes a bishōnen. The Latin American dub of Rurouni Kenshin, n mistook Okita for a woman, and the Hijikata/Okita yaoi pairing is very popular among the fangirls of Peacemaker Kurogane.
The popular Japanese conception of Okita is that his character and his swordanship were of the highest purity. In Shiba Ryotaro's novels, he joined the Shinsengumi not because of his political beliefs but rather out of his loyalty for Kondo Isami and his (fictional) friendship with Hijikata Toshizo.
=References=
Oji, Kazuko. Walking with Okita Soji. Tokyo: Shin Jinbutsu Oraisha, 1989. ISBN 4404016212
完
==Okita Soji==
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Okita Sōji (冲田 総司), (1842 or 1844 - July 19, 1868) was the captain of the first troop of the Shinsengumi, a special pol force in Kyoto during the late shogunate period. He was a well-known genius swordan, being one of the strongest out of the Shinsengumi, along with Saito Hajime and Nagakura Shinpachi.
=Background=
He was born Okita Soujirou Fujiwara no Harumasa in 1842 or 1844 from a samurai family in the Shirakawa- han's Edo mansion. His great-grandfather was Okita Kan'emon ( - 1819) and his grandfather was Okita Sanshiro ( - 1833.) His father, Okita Katsujiro, died in 1845; he had two older sisters, Okita Mitsu (1833-1907) and Okita Kin (1836-1908.) In 1846, in order to marry the adopted son of the Okita family, Okita Rintaro (1826-1883), his oldest sister Okita Mitsu became an adopted daughter of Kondo Shusuke in name. Kondo Shusuke was the third of the Tennen Rishin Ryu and Okita started training at the Shieikan with him around the age of nine. By that time, Kondo Shusuke had already adopted Shimazaki Katsuta (the later Kondo Isami), but Hijikata Toshizo had not yet enrolled at the Tennen Rishin-ryu school. Okita proved to be a prodigy and attained Menkyo Kaiden status ( of kenjutsu) at eigh or so.
In 1861, Okita became the Head Coach (Jukutou) at the Shieikan. Even though he was often commented to be honest, polite, and good-natured by those around him, he was also known to be a strict and quick-tempered teacher to his students.
According to Yagi Tamesaburou (Yagi Gennoujou's son) and Satou S'sen (Satou Hikogorou's descendent), Okita was a tall, dark, and thin man with high cheekbones, a wide mouth, and a "flatfish" face. In addition, he was known as a man who iled and laughed well (not very talkative, howr.)
=Shinsengumi Period=
Okita changed his name to Okita Souji Fujiwara no Kaneyoshi some time before his departure to Kyoto in 1863. He soon became a founding member of the Shinsengumi and a Fukuchou Jokin (V-Commander's Assistant.) Okita Rintarou, also a practitioner of the Tennen Rishin-ryu, became a commander of the Shinchougumi (the Shinsengumi's brother league in Edo.)
Okita was the second youngest among the Shieikan members, with Todo Heisuke being the youngest. He was one of the Shieikan members involved in the Serizawa Kamo (one of the original commanders of the Shinsengumi) and the Uchiyama Hikojiro assassinations in 1863.
Based on Shiba Ryoutarou's fiction, many also beli that Okita and Hijikata were like brothers. In history, Yamanami Keisuke was the v-commander Okita shared a brotherly relationship with. Yamanami's seppuku (with Okita as his second) in 1865 was an extremely painful incident in Okita's short life. There is no record showing that Hijikata and Okita were close; it is debatable wher Okita n got along with Hijikata.
Although highly unlikely, it was rumored that he wielded a famous katana called Kikuichi-monji. Howr, he surely owned a set of Kaga Kiyomitsu (a katana and a wakizashi) and his so-called "Kikuichimonji Norimune" was likely a Yamasiro Kunikiyo instead.
=Death=
During the Boshin War, after the Battle of Toba-Fushimi in January of Keiou 4, Okita went into Matsumoto Ryoujun's hospital in Edo. He then moved to a guesthouse with Okita Rintarou, Okita Mitsu, and their children. When the shogunate forces (including the Shinsengumi and the Shinchougumi) retreated to the Tohokegion, Okita remained in Edo alone. He died on July 19 (lunar calendar May 30th), 1868. Later that night, he was buried at his family temple in Edo (present Tokyo), under his birth name (with Okita Souji listed in the death records.) Today, Okita's gre is not open to the public.
The rmation that Okita died when he was 25 is based on the theory that he was born in 1844 and therefore was 25 by East Asian age reckoning when he died in 1868.
=Trivia=
It is a misconception that Okita's mother died when he was a young boy. In fact, she died in 1862.
It is historically accurate that Okita loved children. During his time in Kyoto, he was often seen playing with children and was a baby-sitter to Yagi's sons in Mibu.
Okita was a bit of a clean freak.
Aside from being treated by Matsumoto, Okita also took Kyorou Sanyaku (medicine for enervation and coughing) for his tuberculosis (not to be confused with Ishida Sanyaku for treating injures such as bruises and broken bones.)
There has not been any evidence of an Okita photograph.
=Okita in Fiction=
Like the other members of the Shinsengumi, fictionalized accounts of Okita's life and actions appear in novels, period dramas and anime/manga series.
Okita is briefly mentioned and shown in the anime/manga series Rurouni Kenshin, which takes place during and after the Meiji Revolution in Japan. A character later on in the series, Seta Sōjirō, was based on the Okita Sōji from novel Shinsengumi Keppuroku (and therefore, darker than the real Okita.) Okita is also a main character in the anime/manga Peacemaker Kurogane, which takes more liberties with history. In an episode of the anime Ghost Sweeper Mikami, ghost-ter Mikami Reiko gets inside of a haunted movie about the Bakumatsu and meets Okita, who is depicted as a crazy guy who thinks only of killing people (obvious pun on his usual portrayal, which also is a foil to the show's rendition of Hijikata.) In the anime/manga series Shura no Toki, Okita's (fictional) last battle before succumbing to his sickness is with a warrior from the Mutsu Enmei Ryuu, an unarmed martial art. Their duel was a request from Okita himself from years before. And while only briefly appearing in Kido Shinsengumi: Moeyo Ken (in a flashback and as a sible ghost), Okita's fictional daughter ru (by an equally fictional unnamed wife) is one of the three main characters of the series.
Okita is the male protagonist in the manga Kaze Hikaru, a fictional story about the Shinsengumi during the late Tokugawa shogunate, in which Okita trains a young girl to be one of the Shinsengumi in order to enge her father and older brother. He is also featured in the manga Getsumei Seiki.
His anime, manga, and TV depictions tend to be as a handsome young man, sometimes a bishōnen. The Latin American dub of Rurouni Kenshin, n mistook Okita for a woman, and the Hijikata/Okita yaoi pairing is very popular among the fangirls of Peacemaker Kurogane.
The popular Japanese conception of Okita is that his character and his swordanship were of the highest purity. In Shiba Ryotaro's novels, he joined the Shinsengumi not because of his political beliefs but rather out of his loyalty for Kondo Isami and his (fictional) friendship with Hijikata Toshizo.
=References=
Oji, Kazuko. Walking with Okita Soji. Tokyo: Shin Jinbutsu Oraisha, 1989. ISBN 4404016212
佐佐木只三郎的见回组的覆灭与只三郎辞世
It was rumored that his tuberculosis was discovered when he coughed blood and fainted during the Ikedaya Affair, but some sources say that he contracted the disease after that. Both are reasonable, as tuberculosis can kill quickly (weeks), or very slowly (many yearsIn addition, he is depicted in the 1999 live-action film Gohatto (sometimes known as Taboo in the USA) and video series Bakumatsu Renka Shinsengumi. His three-point strike (Mumyo-ken) and his tuberculosis are also very similar to the character Ukyo Tachibana from the video series Samurai Shodown.). While many of the Shinsengumi fans beli that Yoshida Toshimaru was killed by Okita during the Ikedaya Affair (based on Shimosawa Kan and Shiba Ryoutarou's fiction), it is in fact historically inaccurate.大政奉还后,见回组更名为“新游击队”,并于庆应4年参加了鸟羽伏见之战。在激烈的战斗中,见回组损失惨重,只三郎也于桥本一役腰部中弹(1月6日)。重伤的只三郎先被送到大阪休养,之后随队撤离,向纪州转移,但不幸于8日不治身亡,享年36岁。
In 1865, Okita became the captain of the first unit of the Shinsengumi and also served as a kenjutsu instructor; later that year, he was appointed by Kondo Isami to be the fifth of the Tennen Rishin-ryu after him.织田信长、前田庆次、明智光秀、冲田总司
Equally skilled with shinai, bokken/bokutou, and katana, his signature technique was named the Mumyo-ken or Sandanzuki (which translates as "Three Piece Thrust"), a technique that could attack one's neck, left shoulder, and right shoulder with one strike. (the Mumyo-ken supedly could hit all three points simultaneously, but this is most likely an embellishment.) The Mumyo-ken was his own invention and it could he been derived from an invention of Hijikata's (the Hirazuki.)我是来吐槽楼主一句的= =跟别人伸手要个drama我都把悬赏提到了50分的说……好吧市村辰之助: 上田佑司我只是路过的,除了冲田之外其他人的生平都不太了解,所以爱莫能助。建议楼主提高点悬赏吧,也许会有知道的人花时间来答……
信长和曹公像只是的说法,他比曹公远了
5分?开玩笑Although his given name is sometimes pronounced as "Soushi" in the fictional world, it's actually "Souji.".,还不少
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