خزمەتگوزاری ژێرنووس چاککرایەوە


Mouri Motonari
Mouri Motonari
1. The Wives Say
2. Young Lord Raving Mad
3. The Disqualified Castellan
4. A Woman's Caliber
5. A Castle of Conspiracy
6. A Romance
7. I Fled From the Enemy
8. A Bride Who is Too Good
9. Farewell, My Brother
10. His Miraculous First Battle
11. An Angry Bride
12. An Order To Assassinate Motonari
13. A Child of the War-torn Era Was Born
14. A Giant and A Baby
15. Turning the Tables in Tears
16. His Younger Brother's Rebellion
17. A Fierce Dawn
18. A Naval Goddess
19. A Husband in Love
20. An Illegitimate Woman
21. A Million for One Heart
22. Three Arrows
23. Invasion of the Amago
24. Showdown at Koriyama Castle
25. Amago Tsunehisa Dies
26. The Ghost is Our Enemy
27. No Way Out
28. I Want To See the Ocean
29. Farewell to My Child
30. Good-bye, Mii
31. Sugi Goes To Paradise
32. Motonari Turns Into a Demon
33. His Sharp Knife-Like Strategy
34. Hannya (Jealous Female Demon) Hovering in Darkness
35. The Last Traitor
36. Demon's Politics
37. A Left-out Firefly
38. A Decision at Age 59
39. Outwitting a Plot
40. Storms Bring Chances
41. A Surprise Attack at Itsukushima
42. His Last Woman
43. A Letter to Three Sons
44. Dancing for Silver
45. Man's Caliber
46. Assassinating Takamoto
47. An Avenging Battle
48. Terumoto Making a Debut
49. A Lonely Champion
50. Live Well, Die Well
کورتە
The 36th NHK Taiga Drama is Mori Motonari. This series chronicles the life of Mori Motonari, a warlord of the early 1500s who stood at the vanguard of the Warring States era. All Japanese school textbooks contain the Mitsuya no kyokun, Mori's famous lesson to his three sons that teaches that while one arrow is easily broken, three arrows together cannot be broken. In 1997, 500 years after his birth, NHK dramatizes Motonari's rise from a chief of the region of Aki (now Hiroshima) to a daimyo who rules over ten provinces of the Chugoku region. Motonari was 64 years old and already the patriarch of a powerful dynasty about the time Oda Nobunaga and Takeda Shingen appeared on the scene. And even after his death, the Mori family figured prominently in Japanese history. His grandson Terumoto became a loyal Toyotomi vassal. Defeated at the Battle of Sekigahara, Ieyasu confiscated most of his lands, leaving him only with Suwo and Nagato, later known as Choshu. But 260 years later, the Mori got their ultimate revenge, leading the imperial forces against the Tokugawa in the Meiji Restoration.







