January 1st and 23rd December (but if answering Kidnapped question it is 23rd December and 2nd January)
December 23 and January 2.
Japan still has an Emperor (Emperor Akihito) , the 125th emperor of Japan. The previous Emperor was Emperor Showa (Hirohito), Akihito's father. He was Emperor during WWII and died in 1987.
Titus was the emperor that opened the Colosseum with 100 days of games.Titus was the emperor that opened the Colosseum with 100 days of games.Titus was the emperor that opened the Colosseum with 100 days of games.Titus was the emperor that opened the Colosseum with 100 days of games.Titus was the emperor that opened the Colosseum with 100 days of games.Titus was the emperor that opened the Colosseum with 100 days of games.Titus was the emperor that opened the Colosseum with 100 days of games.Titus was the emperor that opened the Colosseum with 100 days of games.Titus was the emperor that opened the Colosseum with 100 days of games.
During the early part of World War Two, the distance of Japan was so far from the US that the Pacific Ocean protected Japan from invasion. The Chinese had no chance to invade Japan and the USSR had an agreement not to engage in combat until the very last days before Japan's surrender.
In 1898, the emperor of China himself became sympathetic to Kang's ideas and, on June 11, launched one hundred days of reform. He took as his models Peter the Great and Japanese Meiji Emperor. Edicts were issued for sweeping reforms of China's schools, railroads, police, laws, military services, bureaucracy, post offices, and examination system. But conservative resistance was nationwide and the others were implemented in only one province. At the court, the empress dowager regained control, and the reforms soon ended. Kang and most his associates fled to Japan; one reformer who remained behind was executed.
Like many other nations, Japan also has public holidays that are celebrated nationally. Some prominent ones include:New Year's Day: January 1 - celebrates the New Year of the Gregorian CalendarFoundation Day: February 11 - celebrates the establishment of a unified Japanese stateConstitution Memorial Day: May 3 - celebrates the postwar 1948 Constitution of Japan's enactmentThe Emperor's Birthday: currently December 23 - date changes depending on the reigning Emperor of Japan
THEY WERE BROTHERS AND THE SHOGUN WAS OLDER:) :( people these days the real answer is that the shogun went to war against the emperor and gained more power by victory of the battle. that's why the emperor had less power on japan than the shogun.
about 2 months
That's the easiest question ever... Of course the Atomic bombs were dropped, ending the war with Japan. But some argue the second bomb wasn't needed. America didn't give Japan a chance to surrender after the first bomb, because the second was dropped within days of the first.
Six days after Waterloo he resigned as Emperor of the French.
Mussolini was captured a few days before the war in Italy ended and he was executed. Emperor Hirohito remained the royal head of the country, as it was Tojo and the military who were blamed. Tojo was the Minister of War, and the general of the Japanese Army, along with being the Prime Minister of Japan.
Seven Days in Japan - 2005 is rated/received certificates of: USA:PG-13