Showa period - определение. Что такое Showa period
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Что (кто) такое Showa period - определение

PERIOD OF JAPANESE HISTORY WITHIN THE 20TH CENTURY CE
Showa era; Shouwa period; Syowa period; Showa Era; Showa Period; Showa (second); Showa period; Shōwa Period; Showa Jidai; Syouwa; ㍼; Shōwa Era; Shōwa period; Shōwa (1926-1989); Shōwa (1926–1989); Draft:昭和; 昭和

Shōwa Restoration         
Showa Restoration; Showa restoration; Showa Reformation
The was promoted by Japanese author Kita Ikki in the 1930s, with the goal of restoring power to the newly enthroned Japanese Emperor Hirohito and abolishing the liberal Taishō democracy.James L.
Showa University         
JAPANESE UNIVERSITY
Showa University Society; 10.15369
is a private comprehensive medical university in Japan with campuses in Tokyo, Yamanashi and Kanagawa Prefectures. It currently has four schools: medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, and nursing and rehabilitation sciences.
Infectious period         
  • latent period]], the infectious period (the period of communicability) and the [[incubation period]]. In some diseases, as depicted in this diagram, the latent period is shorter than the incubation period. A person can transmit an infection without showing any signs of the disease. Such an infection is called a [[subclinical infection]].
TIME INTERVAL DURING WHICH A HOST (INDIVIDUAL OR PATIENT) IS INFECTIOUS, I.E. CAPABLE OF DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY TRANSMITTING PATHOGENS TO ANOTHER SUSCEPTIBLE HOST
Infective period; Period of communicability; Period of infectiousness; Communicability period; Contagious period; Period of contagiousness; Transmission period; Transmissibility period
In epidemiology, particularly in the discussion of infectious disease dynamics (mathematical modeling of disease spread), the infectious period is the time interval during which a host (individual or patient) is infectious, i.e.

Википедия

Shōwa era

The Shōwa era (昭和, Shōwa) was the period of Japanese history corresponding to the reign of Emperor Shōwa (commonly known in English as Emperor Hirohito) from December 25, 1926, until his death on January 7, 1989. It was preceded by the Taishō era. The pre-1945 and post-war Shōwa periods are almost completely different states: the pre-1945 Shōwa era (1926–1945) concerns the Empire of Japan, and post-1945 Shōwa era (1945–1989) concerns the State of Japan.

Before 1945, Japan moved into political totalitarianism, ultranationalism and statism culminating in Japan's invasion of China in 1937, part of a global period of social upheavals and conflicts such as the Great Depression and World War II.

Defeat in the Second World War brought about radical change in Japan. For the first and only time in its history, Japan was occupied by foreign powers, an American-led occupation which lasted for seven years. Allied occupation brought forth sweeping democratic reforms. It led to the formal end of the emperor's status as a demigod and the transformation of Japan from a form of mixed constitutional and absolute monarchy to a constitutional monarchy with a liberal democracy. In 1951, with the Treaty of San Francisco, Japan became a sovereign state again. The postwar Shōwa period was characterized by the Japanese economic miracle.

The Shōwa era was longer than the reign of any previous Japanese emperor. Emperor Shōwa was both the longest-lived and longest-reigning historical Japanese emperor as well as the longest-reigning monarch in the world at the time. On 7 January 1989, Crown Prince Akihito succeeded to the Chrysanthemum Throne upon the death of his father Emperor Shōwa, which marked the start of the Heisei period. Emperor Hirohito was served by total of 33 prime ministers, beginning with Wakatsuki Reijiro and ending with Noboru Takeshita.