• Source: Keno Province
    • Keno Province (毛野国 or 毛国, Keno no kuni), also known as Kenu Province, is an old province of Japan prior to the Nara Period. Keno was located in the area of Tochigi Prefecture and Gumma Prefecture.


      History


      Prior to the administrative reforms of the Taihō Code, Keno Province encompassed the area that subsequently would be divided into Kōzuke Province ("Upper Ke(no)," i.e. the part of Keno that was closer to the contemporary capital of Japan, equivalent to modern Gunma Prefecture) and Shimotsuke Province ("Lower Ke(no)," i.e. the part of Keno that was farther from the capital, equivalent to modern Tochigi Prefecture). The name of this province is considered by some to be cognate with the name of the Kinu River, a major river of the North Kantō region that arises in the territory of ancient Keno Province.


      See also


      Ryōmō Line
      Tōbu Railway Ryōmō limited express


      Notes




      References


      Philippi, Donald L. (1969). Kojiki. Princeton: Princeton University Press. OCLC 187351156
      Tsunoda, Ryūsaku and Luther Carrington Goodrich. (1951). Japan in the Chinese Dynastic Histories: Later Han through Ming dynasties. South Pasadena, California: Perkins. OCLC 1107990

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