Za (guilds) - definizione. Che cos'è Za (guilds)
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Cosa (chi) è Za (guilds) - definizione

FORMER JAPANESE TRADE GUILD SYSTEM
  • Merchant shops on Nihonbashi bridge in Edo (present-day Tokyo)

Za (guilds)         
The were one of the primary types of trade guilds in feudal Japan. The za grew out of protective cooperation between merchants and religious authorities.
Taga za Yug         
  • Konstantin Miladinov
  • Announcement of the Miladinov Brothers on the publication of "Bulgarian Folk Songs" and the poems of Konstantin Miladinov "Grief for the South" and "Abroad" in the newspaper "Dunavski Lebed".
POEM
T'ga za Jug; Tga za Jug (wine); Tuga za Jug; Tuga za Yug; Tga za Jug; Taga za jug; Tuga za Jug (wine); Taga za Jug
Taga za Yug (Originally spelled in non-standardized Bulgarian orthography: Тѫга за югъ, , ,The absence of yer leads to an apostrophe often being used in Macedonian to print texts composed in the language varieties that use the corresponding vowel, such as this poem. For more see: in English "Longing for the South") is the name of a famous poem by the Bulgarian National Revival poet Konstantin Miladinov.
Za Frûmi         
SWEDISH MUSIC GROUP
Za Frumi; Zafrumi; Frumi; ZaFrumi; The Za Frûmi saga; The Za Frumi saga; Simon Kölle; User:Zimmerman100/sandbox; Kölle, Simon; Simon Albin Andreas Kölle
Za Frûmi is a Swedish music group that was formed in 2000. The Group creates dark, fantasy-inspired music.

Wikipedia

Za (guilds)

The za (, 'seat' or 'pitch') were one of the primary types of trade guilds in feudal Japan. The za grew out of protective cooperation between merchants and religious authorities. They became more prominent during the Muromachi period where they would ally themselves with noble patrons, before they became more independent later in the period. The za commonly organized by locality, and not by trade in the rural areas; but grouped by trade in the larger cities, more familiar to their European counterparts.

The monopoly of the za was challenged during the reign of Oda Nobunaga. Later in the early 18th century, the za gained in influence by working more closely with the Tokugawa government; this brought more centralization and a return to their monopoly power. After the Meiji restoration, the za was either replaced, eclipsed or would gradually adopt more modern forms of business, eventually giving rise to the modern zaibatsu and keiretsu monopolies of the 20th century.