The forum pages are fully operational! See this link for the latest forum topics, where users can collaborate or discuss certain topics in one place!
Difference between revisions of "Sue Ellen Armstrong"
Navarjac000 (talk | contribs) (→Trivia) Tag: visualeditor |
Tag: visualeditor |
||
Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
===Future Life=== | ===Future Life=== | ||
=== ☀ === | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predate | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
tymology[edit] | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.<sup>[30]</sup> | |||
View of routes to Mt. Fuji | |||
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji. | |||
== Geography[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.<sup>[31]</sup> They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.<sup>[30]</sup> | |||
View of routes to Mt. Fuji | |||
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji. | |||
== Geography[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.<sup>[31]</sup> They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission s kanji, and th | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.<sup>[30]</sup> | |||
View of routes to Mt. Fuji | |||
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji. | |||
== Geography[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.<sup>[31]</sup> They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission ese characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.<sup>[30]</sup> | |||
View of routes to Mt. Fuji | |||
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji. | |||
== Geography[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.<sup>[31]</sup> They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.<sup>[30]</sup> | |||
View of routes to Mt. Fuji | |||
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji. | |||
== Geography[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.<sup>[31]</sup> They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission | |||
If the intro to the episode, "[[The Election]]" does happen in the future, she will be either future [[Muffy Crosswire|President Muffy]] 's running mate or a member of her party. In the imagination of Arthur in "[[Arthur Rides the Bandwagon]]", Sue Ellen appears next to the Brain and with a child much like him (but with glasses). | If the intro to the episode, "[[The Election]]" does happen in the future, she will be either future [[Muffy Crosswire|President Muffy]] 's running mate or a member of her party. In the imagination of Arthur in "[[Arthur Rides the Bandwagon]]", Sue Ellen appears next to the Brain and with a child much like him (but with glasses). | ||
Line 149: | Line 358: | ||
*Season 7 | *Season 7 | ||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.<sup>[30]</sup> | |||
View of routes to Mt. Fuji | |||
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji. | |||
== Geography[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.<sup>[31]</sup> They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission | |||
**[[Francine's Split Decision]] 70201 | **[[Francine's Split Decision]] 70201 | ||
**'''[[Muffy Goes Metropolitan]]''' 70202 | **'''[[Muffy Goes Metropolitan]]''' 70202 | ||
Line 267: | Line 517: | ||
==Trivia== | ==Trivia== | ||
*There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "[[The Secret Guardians]]", "[[April 9th]]" and "[[What Scared Sue Ellen?]]". | *There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "[[The Secret Guardians]]", "[[April 9th]]" and "[[What Scared Sue Ellen?]]". | ||
*She is based on Ruth Ann, [[Marc Brown]]'s childhood girlfriend.<ref>A Marc Brown interview that is sometimes included with ''[[Arthur's Perfect Christmas (movie)|Arthur's Perfect Christmas]]''.</ref> | *She is based on Ruth Ann, [[Marc Brown]]'s childhood girlfriend.<ref name=":0">A Marc Brown interview that is sometimes included with ''[[Arthur's Perfect Christmas (movie)|Arthur's Perfect Christmas]]''.</ref> | ||
*She became a vegetarian because she lost taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.<ref>"[[Sue Ellen Vegges Out]]"</ref> | *She became a vegetarian because she lost taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.<ref name=":1">"[[Sue Ellen Vegges Out]]"</ref> | ||
*She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.<ref>"[[Sue Ellen's Little Sister]]</ref><ref>"[[So Funny I Forgot to Laugh]]"</ref> | *She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.<ref name=":2">"[[Sue Ellen's Little Sister]]</ref><ref name=":3">"[[So Funny I Forgot to Laugh]]"</ref> | ||
*She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.<ref>"[[Sue Ellen's Lost Diary]]"</ref> | *She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.<ref name=":4">"[[Sue Ellen's Lost Diary]]"</ref> | ||
*Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit. | *Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit. | ||
*She did not have a speaking role in any [[Season 18]] episode. | *She did not have a speaking role in any [[Season 18]] episode. | ||
Line 280: | Line 530: | ||
|image1 = Sue Ellen Painting.png | |image1 = Sue Ellen Painting.png | ||
|image3 = ST 2.JPG}} | |image3 = ST 2.JPG}} | ||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the m | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.<sup>[30]</sup> | |||
View of routes to Mt. Fuji | |||
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji. | |||
== Geography[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central | |||
**'''[[Sue Ellen Adds It Up]]''' 190201 | |||
**'''[[Wish You Were Here]]''' 190202 | |||
**[[Arthur's Toy Trouble]] 190301 | |||
**[[Francine's Cleats of Strength]] 190801 | |||
**[[Mr. Ratburn's Secret Identity]] 190901 | |||
**[[Besties]] 190902 | |||
**[[The Last Day]] 191000 | |||
*Season 20 | |||
**[[Buster's Second Chance]] 200101 | |||
**[[Cereal]] 200202 | |||
**[[Mutiny on the Pitch]] 200602 | |||
==Trivia== | |||
*There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "[[The Secret Guardians]]", "[[April 9th]]" and "[[What Scared Sue Ellen?]]". | |||
*She is based on Ruth Ann, [[Marc Brown]]'s childhood girlfriend.<ref name=":0">A Marc Brown interview that is sometimes included with ''[[Arthur's Perfect Christmas (movie)|Arthur's Perfect Christmas]]''.</ref> | |||
*She became a vegetarian because she lost taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.<ref name=":1">"[[Sue Ellen Vegges Out]]"</ref> | |||
*She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.<ref name=":2">"[[Sue Ellen's Little Sister]]</ref><ref name=":3">"[[So Funny I Forgot to Laugh]]"</ref> | |||
*She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.<ref name=":4">"[[Sue Ellen's Lost Diary]]"</ref> | |||
*Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit. | |||
*She did not have a speaking role in any [[Season 18]] episode. | |||
*She has a pet snail in [[Sick as a Dog]]. | |||
==Gallery== | |||
{{Fullgallery | |||
|image2 = Sue1.jpg | |||
|image1 = Sue Ellen Painting.png | |||
|image3 = ST 2.JPG}} | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the m | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japa | |||
onshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.<sup>[31]</sup> They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission ountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another c | |||
**'''[[Sue Ellen Adds It Up]]''' 190201 | |||
**'''[[Wish You Were Here]]''' 190202 | |||
**[[Arthur's Toy Trouble]] 190301 | |||
**[[Francine's Cleats of Strength]] 190801 | |||
**[[Mr. Ratburn's Secret Identity]] 190901 | |||
**[[Besties]] 190902 | |||
**[[The Last Day]] 191000 | |||
*Season 20 | |||
**[[Buster's Second Chance]] 200101 | |||
**[[Cereal]] 200202 | |||
**[[Mutiny on the Pitch]] 200602 | |||
==Trivia== | |||
*There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "[[The Secret Guardians]]", "[[April 9th]]" and "[[What Scared Sue Ellen?]]". | |||
*She is based on Ruth Ann, [[Marc Brown]]'s childhood girlfriend.<ref name=":0">A Marc Brown interview that is sometimes included with ''[[Arthur's Perfect Christmas (movie)|Arthur's Perfect Christmas]]''.</ref> | |||
*She became a vegetarian because she lo | |||
***'''[[Sue Ellen Adds It Up]]''' 190201 | |||
***'''[[Wish You Were Here]]''' 190202 | |||
***[[Arthur's Toy Trouble]] 190301 | |||
***[[Francine's Cleats of Strength]] 190801 | |||
***[[Mr. Ratburn's Secret Identity]] 190901 | |||
***[[Besties]] 190902 | |||
***[[The Last Day]] 191000 | |||
**Season 20 | |||
***[[Buster's Second Chance]] 200101 | |||
***[[Cereal]] 200202 | |||
***[[Mutiny on the Pitch]] 200602 | |||
==Trivia== | |||
**There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "[[The Secret Guardians]]", "[[April 9th]]" and "[[What Scared Sue Ellen?]]". | |||
**She is based on Ruth Ann, [[Marc Brown]]'s childhood girlfriend.<ref name=":0">A Marc Brown interview that is sometimes included with ''[[Arthur's Perfect Christmas (movie)|Arthur's Perfect Christmas]]''.</ref> | |||
**She became a vegetarian because she lost taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.<ref name=":1">"[[Sue Ellen Vegges Out]]"</ref> | |||
**She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.<ref name=":2">"[[Sue Ellen's Little Sister]]</ref><ref name=":3">"[[So Funny I Forgot to Laugh]]"</ref> | |||
**She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.<ref name=":4">"[[Sue Ellen's Lost Diary]]"</ref> | |||
**Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit. | |||
**She did not have a speaking role in any [[Season 18]] episode. | |||
**She has a pet snail in [[Sick as a Dog]]. | |||
==Gallery== | |||
{{Fullgallery | |||
|image2 = Sue1.jpg | |||
|image1 = Sue Ellen Painting.png | |||
|image3 = ST 2.JPG}} | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the m | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japa | |||
***'''[[Sue Ellen Adds It Up]]''' 190201 | |||
***'''[[Wish You Were Here]]''' 190202 | |||
***[[Arthur's Toy Trouble]] 190301 | |||
'''[[Sue Ellen Adds It Up]]''' 190201 | |||
**'''[[Wish You Were Here]]''' 190202 | |||
**[[Arthur's Toy Trouble]] 190301 | |||
**[[Francine's Cleats of Strength]] 190801 | |||
**[[Mr. Ratburn's Secret Identity]] 190901 | |||
**[[Besties]] 190902 | |||
**[[The Last Day]] 191000 | |||
*Season 20 | |||
**[[Buster's Second Chance]] 200101 | |||
**[[Cereal]] 200202 | |||
**[[Mutiny on the Pitch]] 200602 | |||
==Trivia== | |||
*There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "[[The Secret Guardians]]", "[[April 9th]]" and "[[What Scared Sue Ellen?]]". | |||
*She is based on Ruth Ann, [[Marc Brown]]'s childhood girlfriend.<ref name=":0">A Marc Brown interview that is sometimes included with ''[[Arthur's Perfect Christmas (movie)|Arthur's Perfect Christmas]]''.</ref> | |||
*She became a vegetarian because she lost taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.<ref name=":1">"[[Sue Ellen Vegges Out]]"</ref> | |||
*She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.<ref name=":2">"[[Sue Ellen's Little Sister]]</ref><ref name=":3">"[[So Funny I Forgot to Laugh]]"</ref> | |||
*She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.<ref name=":4">"[[Sue Ellen's Lost Diary]]"</ref> | |||
*Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit. | |||
*She did not have a speaking role in any [[Season 18]] episode. | |||
*She has a pet snail in [[Sick as a Dog]]. | |||
==Gallery== | |||
{{Fullgallery | |||
|image2 = Sue1.jpg | |||
|image1 = Sue Ellen Painting.png | |||
|image3 = ST 2.JPG}} | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the m | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japa | |||
***[[Francine's Cleats of Strength]] 190801 | |||
***[[Mr. Ratburn's Secret Identity]] 190901 | |||
***[[Besties]] 190902 | |||
***[[The Last Day]] 191000 | |||
**Season 20 | |||
***[[Buster's Second Chance]] 200101 | |||
***[[Cereal]] 200202 | |||
***[[Mutiny on the Pitch]] 200602 | |||
==Trivia== | |||
**There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "[[The Secret Guardians]]", "[[April 9th]]" and "[[What Scared Sue Ellen?]]". | |||
**She is based on Ruth Ann, [[Marc Brown]]'s childhood girlfriend.<ref name=":0">A Marc Brown interview that is sometimes included with ''[[Arthur's Perfect Christmas (movie)|Arthur's Perfect Christmas]]''.</ref> | |||
**She became a vegetarian because she lost taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.<ref name=":1">"[[Sue Ellen Vegges Out]]"</ref> | |||
**She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.<ref name=":2">"[[Sue Ellen's Little Sister]]</ref><ref name=":3">"[[So Funny I Forgot to Laugh]]"</ref> | |||
**She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.<ref name=":4">"[[Sue Ellen's Lost Diary]]"</ref> | |||
**Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit. | |||
**She did not have a speaking role in any [[Season 18]] episode. | |||
**She has a pet snail in [[Sick as a Dog]]. | |||
==Gallery== | |||
{{Fullgallery | |||
|image2 = Sue1.jpg | |||
|image1 = Sue Ellen Painting.png | |||
|image3 = ST 2.JPG}} | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the m | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japa | |||
st taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.<ref name=":1">"[[Sue Ellen Vegges Out]]"</ref> | |||
*She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.<ref name=":2">"[[Sue Ellen's Little Sister]]</ref><ref name=":3">"[[So Funny I Forgot to Laugh]]"</ref> | |||
*She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.<ref name=":4">"[[Sue Ellen's Lost Diary]]"</ref> | |||
*Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit. | |||
*She did not have a speaking role in any [[Season 18]] episode. | |||
*She has a pet snail in [[Sick as a Dog]]. | |||
==Gallery== | |||
{{Fullgallery | |||
|image2 = Sue1.jpg | |||
|image1 = Sue Ellen Painting.png | |||
|image3 = ST 2.JPG}} | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the m | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japa | |||
laims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, | |||
== tymology[edit] == | |||
The current ''kanji'' for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.<sup>[30]</sup> | |||
View of routes to Mt. Fuji | |||
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji. | |||
== Geography[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.<sup>[31]</sup> They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.<sup>[30]</sup> | |||
View of routes to Mt. Fuji | |||
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji. | |||
== Geography[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.<sup>[31]</sup> They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain. | |||
The origin of the name ''Fuji'' is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, ''Tale of the Bamboo Cutter'', says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 ''fushi, fuji'') and also from the image of abundant (富 ''fu'') soldiers (士 ''shi, ji'')<sup>[9]</sup> ascending the slopes of the mountain.<sup>[10]</sup> An early folk etymology claims that ''Fuji'' came from 不二 (''not'' + ''two''), meaning ''without equal'' or ''nonpareil''. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (''not'' + ''to exhaust''), meaning ''neverending''. | |||
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ''ho'') of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (''fuchi'') of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that ''huchi'' means an "old woman" and ''ape'' is the word for "fire", ''ape huchi kamuy'' being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include ''fuji'' as a part also suggest the origin of the word ''fuji'' is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 ''fuji'') and rainbow (虹 ''niji, but with an alternative word fuji''), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".<sup>[11][12][13][14]</sup> | |||
=== Variations[edit] === | |||
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character ''yama'' (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as ''Huzi''. | |||
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include ''Fuji-no-Yama'' (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), ''Fuji-no-Takane'' (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), ''Fuyō-hō'' (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and ''Fugaku''(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, ''Fuji'', and 岳, ''mountain''.<sup>[15]</sup> | |||
== In Shinto mythology[edit] == | |||
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami'', in ''Kojiki'')(国常立尊<sup>?</sup>, ''Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto'', in ''Nihon Shoki'') is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to ''Nihongi'' is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her. | |||
== History[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji covered by clouds | |||
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.<sup>[16]</sup> One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka. | |||
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.<sup>[''citation needed'']</sup> The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The ''shōgun'' Minamoto no Yoritomo held ''yabusame'' in the area in the early Kamakura period. | |||
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages. | |||
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century | |||
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.<sup>[17]:427</sup> Alcock's brief narrative in ''The Capital of the Tycoon'' was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.<sup>[17]:421–7</sup> Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.<sup>[18]</sup> Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.<sup>[19]</sup> | |||
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.<sup>[20]</sup> | |||
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.<sup>[21][22]</sup> In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.<sup>[23]</sup> A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.<sup>[24][25]</sup> It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,<sup>[26]</sup> inspiring the Infiniti logo,<sup>[27]</sup>and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.<sup>[28][29]</sup> | |||
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.<sup>[30]</sup> | |||
View of routes to Mt. Fuji | |||
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji. | |||
== Geography[edit] == | |||
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.<sup>[31]</sup> They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 04:19, 6 February 2018
Sue Ellen Armstrong | |
---|---|
Age | 8[1] |
Grade | 3rd |
Gender | Female |
Animal | Cat[2]
|
Eye color | Blue,[3] Hazel,[4] Green[5] |
Hair color | Dark red (s1 - s5), Dark orange (s6 - present), Blonde (some books) |
Complexion | Peach (s1-s5) Tan (s6-present) |
Favorite color | Olive green[1] |
Residence | Sue Ellen's House, Elwood City |
Family | Mr. Armstrong (father) Mrs. Armstrong (mother)
|
Sue Ellen Armstrong[6] is a 3rd grader in Mr. Ratburn's class at Lakewood Elementary School.
Physical appearance
Sue Ellen is an anthropomorphic cat who is depicted with a tan complexion, curly orange hair worn in pigtails, and wears a teal shirt-dress with a cream-colored vest over it and red-and-white sneakers. In the early Arthur books, her hair was worn loose; she was given her pigtails starting with the book Arthur's TV Trouble. In some of the later books, her hair color had changed from blonde to yellow-orange. Her swimsuit is a two-piece green bikini with a purple trim. For her sleepwear, she is often seen wearing orange pajamas
Personality
Sue Ellen is assertive, proactive, brave,[7] tough,[8] kind, slightly tomboyish, tolerant, honest, and creative.[9] She is an amazing storyteller and is open-minded. She is also easy to get along with and can solve problems on her own. She is very mature and artistic for her age and interested in world culture,[10] which is the reason she makes friends with people older than herself, such as Betsy Johnson.[11] Athletic-wise, she is defender for the Lakewood Elementary Soccer Team. She wanted a sibling so she would not be as lonely, but she ends up regretting the need after she goes to Arthur's house and plays with D.W. for a few hours.[9]
Biography
Life Before Arthur
Sue Ellen's father is a diplomat, so she and her family have lived in various places around the world. It is unknown why her family has settled in Elwood City. She has lived in places like Egypt and Nicaragua, mostly for a couple of months to a year. Her family also spent a year in South Africa. She had never been to a place with snow before moving to Elwood City. She is skilled in martial arts, for example, Tae Kwon Do[8] making her more powerful than the average third grader. In the Postcards From Buster episode "Buster Gets on Board", Buster meets Sue Ellen's friends who are skateboarders including Sue Ellen's pen pal Brandon. This gives hint that Sue Ellen at one time lived in Los Angeles, California.
Future Life
☀
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predate
tymology[edit]
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.[30]
View of routes to Mt. Fuji
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji.
Geography[edit]
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.[31] They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.[30]
View of routes to Mt. Fuji
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji.
Geography[edit]
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.[31] They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission s kanji, and th
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.[30]
View of routes to Mt. Fuji
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji.
Geography[edit]
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.[31] They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission ese characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.[30]
View of routes to Mt. Fuji
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji.
Geography[edit]
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.[31] They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.[30]
View of routes to Mt. Fuji
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji.
Geography[edit]
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.[31] They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission
If the intro to the episode, "The Election" does happen in the future, she will be either future President Muffy 's running mate or a member of her party. In the imagination of Arthur in "Arthur Rides the Bandwagon", Sue Ellen appears next to the Brain and with a child much like him (but with glasses).
Season 1
In "Sue Ellen Moves In," Sue Ellen moves to Elwood City. Buster thinks she is an alien because she has many strange objects. He later realizes that she has lived all over the world and they become friends. In "Bully for Binky", Sue Ellen stands up to Binky and is not afraid to stand up to someone much bigger than her. Binky becomes intimidated by her because she knows martial arts. Later, Sue Ellen says that she doesn't want to fight him, but if he ever does, she'll be ready. Binky soon stops his bullying.
Season 2
In "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", she loses her diary in the library. She asks her friends, but they haven't seen it. They wonder what is inside. Soon, they find her diary, but they ultimately chose to not open it. Sue Ellen recovers her diary and hints that she has a crush on Arthur; this was probably to an allusion to Arthur's crush on Sue Ellen in the Arthur books. In "Sue Ellen's Little Sister", Sue Ellen feels sad that she doesn't have a sibling. She asks her friends to be their siblings and realize that older brothers won't work. She looks for little sisters and ends up with D.W. whom she can't stand. She later realizes the pros of being an only child. Her parents get her a brother-like friend from Tibet to whom she can write letters to.
Season 3
One of Sue Ellen's biggest appearances in this season is in "Sue Ellen and the Brainasaurus". She later appears in "Popular Girls", in which she is the central character with Fern, and "Arthur's Almost Live Not Real Music Festival".
Season 16
In "Sue Ellen Vegges Out", she becomes a vegetarian because she considers animals as friends and loses her taste for consuming them.
Family
Sue Ellen lives with her father, a diplomat,[12] and mother, a homemaker.[12] She is an only child but keeps in touch with her brother-like friend Tenzin in Tibet[9] (she also has a Tibet World Girl doll.) Other family members aren't mentioned or seen. Like the Brain, her parents' given names are unknown.
Appearances
- Specials
- Season 1
- Arthur's Eyes 10101
- Francine's Bad Hair Day (Cameo) 10102
- Arthur and the Real Mr. Ratburn (Cameo) 10201
- Arthur's Spelling Trubble 10202
- Buster's Dino Dilemma (Cameo) 10302
- Arthur's Lost Library Book 10402
- Francine Frensky, Superstar 11002
- Meek for a Week 11701
- Sue Ellen Moves In 12101
- Bully for Binky 12301
- Arthur's Tooth 12401
- Arthur Cleans Up 12502
- My Dad, the Garbage Man 12601
- D.W.'s Blankie (cameo) 12701
- Arthur's Substitute Teacher Trouble 12702
- I'm a Poet (cameo) 12801
- The Scare-Your-Pants-Off Club 12802
- My Club Rules 12901
- Stolen Bike 12902
- Season 2
- Draw! 20102
- Binky Barnes, Art Expert 20201
- Arthur's Lucky Pencil (Cameo) 20202
- Arthur's Underwear (Cameo) 20501
- Night Fright 20702
- The Short, Quick Summer 20902
- D.W. Goes to Washington (Dream sequence) 21001
- Arthur's Mystery Envelope 21002
- Buster Hits the Books 21102
- Arthur's Faraway Friend 21201
- Arthur and the Square Dance (Cameo) 21202
- Sue Ellen's Lost Diary 21401
- Arthur's Knee 21402
- Grandma Thora Appreciation Day 21501
- Fern's Slumber Party 21502
- Love Notes for Muffy 21601
- Francine Redecorates 21701
- Arthur the Loser 21702
- Arthur vs. the Very Mean Crossing Guard (Cameo) 21801
- D.W.'s Very Bad Mood 21802
- Finders Key-pers (Cameo) 21902
- Sue Ellen's Little Sister 22002
- Season 3
- Sue Ellen and the Brainasaurous 30302
- Background Blues (Cameo) 30401
- And Now Let's Talk to Some Kids 30402
- The Chips are Down (Cameo) 30501
- Revenge of the Chip (Cameo) 30502
- Binky Rules (episode) 30601
- Arthur Rides the Bandwagon (Cameo) 30701
- Dad's Dessert Dilemma (Cameo) 30702
- Popular Girls 30801
- Buster's Growing Grudge (Cameo) 30802
- The Return of the King (Cameo) 30902
- Double Tibble Trouble (Cameo) 31101
- Arthur's Almost Live Not Real Music Festival 31102
- What Scared Sue Ellen? 31201
- Arthur's Dummy Disaster (Cameo) 31301
- The Long, Dull Winter 31502
- Season 4
- Arthur's Big Hit 40102
- Hide and Snake 40201
- Muffy's New Best Friend 40202
- The Fright Stuff 40302
- The Blizzard (Cameo) 40501
- Prunella Gets it Twice 40602
- Binky Barnes, Wingman 40701
- 1001 Dads (Cameo) 40801
- What is that Thing? (Cameo) 40901
- Buster's Best Behavior 40902
- My Music Rules 41001
- Season 5
- Arthur and the Big Riddle (Cameo) 50101
- Kids are from Earth, Parents are from Pluto 50201
- It's a No-Brainer (Cameo) 50301
- The Shore Thing 50302
- The Lousy Week (Cameo) 50501
- You Are Arthur (Cameo) 50502
- The Election (Cameo) 50601
- Bitzi's Beau (Cameo) 50802
- Season 6
- Sue Ellen Gets Her Goose Cooked 60101
- Best of the Nest 60102
- Buster's Sweet Success (Cameo) 60202
- Prunella's Special Edition 60301
- Muffy's Soccer Shocker 60401
- Brother, Can You Spare a Clarinet? 60402
- The Boy Who Cried Comet 60501
- D.W.'s Backpack Mishap 60602
- The Boy with His Head in the Clouds (Cameo) 60701
- The Good Sport (Cameo) 60901
- Season 7
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.[30]
View of routes to Mt. Fuji
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji.
Geography[edit]
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.[31] They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission
- Francine's Split Decision 70201
- Muffy Goes Metropolitan 70202
- Ants in Arthur's Pants 70301
- Don't Ask Muffy 70302
- Elwood City Turns 100! 70500
- Jenna's Bedtime Blues 70602
- D.W.'s Time Trouble (Cameo) 70701
- Buster's Amish Mismatch 70702
- Prunella Sees the Light 70901
- Return of the Snowball 70902
- April 9th 71000
- Season 8
- Bugged 80302
- Fernkenstein's Monster 80401
- D.W., Dancing Queen (Cameo) 80402
- Vomitrocious 80501
- Sue Ellen Chickens Out 80502
- Desk Wars 80701
- Desperately Seeking Stanley 80702
- Muffy's Art Attack (Cameo) 80801
- Season 9
- Tipping the Scales 90102
- Arthur Weighs In 90301
- The Law of the Jungle Gym 90302
- Buster's Green Thumb 90401
- All Worked Up 90502
- A is for Angry 90702
- The A Team 90801
- Buster the Myth Maker 90902
- Binky Goes Nuts 91001
- Breezy Listening Blues 91002
- Season 10
- Happy Anniversary 100100
- The Squirrels 100201
- Desert Island Dish 100301
- Feeling Flush (Cameo) 100401
- D.W., Bossy Boots (Cameo and prologue) 100702
- Do You Speak George? 100901
- World Girls 100902
- What's Cooking? 101001
- Buster's Special Delivery (Cameo) 101002
- Season 11
- Germophobia 110102
- Arthur Sells Out (Cameo) 110201
- Prunella Packs It In (Cameo) 110302
- Phony Fern (cameo) 110401
- Brain's Shocking Secret (Cameo/picture) 110402
- Strangers on a Train 110502
- The Making of Arthur (Cameo) 110601
- Dancing Fools (Cameo) 110602
- Mr. Alwaysright (Cameo) 110702
- Francine's Pilfered Paper (Cameo) 110801
- Spoiled Rotten! (Cameo) 110902
- Season 12
- Is That Kosher? (Cameo) 120101
- D.W.'s Stray Netkitten (Cameo) 120301
- Bats in the Belfry (Cameo) 120302
- Ungifted (Cameo) 120402
- The Chronicles of Buster (Cameo) 120501
- On This Spot (Cameo) 120502
- I Owe You One (Cameo) 120702
- Do You Believe in Magic? (Cameo) 120902
- The Perfect Game (Cameo) 121001
- Season 13
- The Great MacGrady (Cameo) 130100
- MacFrensky (cameo) 130401
- The Secret Guardians 130702
- Fernlets by Fern (cameo) 130801
- The Pride of Lakewood 130902
- Season 14
- The Wheel Deal (Cameo) 140101
- The Buster Report 140102
- The Agent of Change 140201
- The Play's the Thing (Cameo) 140302
- Falafelosophy 140401
- Muffy and the Big Bad Blog (Cameo) 140702
- All the Rage 140802
- The Long Road Home (Cameo) 141002
- Season 15
- Fifteen (Cameo) 150101
- I Wanna Hold Your Hand (Cameo) 150201
- Buster's Secret Admirer (Cameo) 150301
- Cents-less (Cameo) 150401
- S.W.E.A.T. 150502
- Prunella the Packrat (Cameo) 150701
- What's in a Name? (Cameo) 150702
- Through the Looking Glasses (Cameo) 150902
- The Butler Did... What? (Cameo) 151001
- The Trouble with Trophies (Cameo) 151002
- Season 16
- Sue Ellen Vegges Out 160902
- So Funny I Forgot to Laugh 161001
- Season 19
- Sue Ellen Adds It Up 190201
- Wish You Were Here 190202
- Arthur's Toy Trouble 190301
- Francine's Cleats of Strength 190801
- Mr. Ratburn's Secret Identity 190901
- Besties 190902
- The Last Day 191000
- Season 20
- Buster's Second Chance 200101
- Cereal 200202
- Mutiny on the Pitch 200602
Trivia
- There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "The Secret Guardians", "April 9th" and "What Scared Sue Ellen?".
- She is based on Ruth Ann, Marc Brown's childhood girlfriend.[13]
- She became a vegetarian because she lost taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.[14]
- She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.[15][16]
- She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.[17]
- Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit.
- She did not have a speaking role in any Season 18 episode.
- She has a pet snail in Sick as a Dog.
Gallery
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the m
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.[30]
View of routes to Mt. Fuji
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji.
Geography[edit]
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central
- Sue Ellen Adds It Up 190201
- Wish You Were Here 190202
- Arthur's Toy Trouble 190301
- Francine's Cleats of Strength 190801
- Mr. Ratburn's Secret Identity 190901
- Besties 190902
- The Last Day 191000
- Season 20
- Buster's Second Chance 200101
- Cereal 200202
- Mutiny on the Pitch 200602
Trivia
- There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "The Secret Guardians", "April 9th" and "What Scared Sue Ellen?".
- She is based on Ruth Ann, Marc Brown's childhood girlfriend.[13]
- She became a vegetarian because she lost taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.[14]
- She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.[15][16]
- She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.[17]
- Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit.
- She did not have a speaking role in any Season 18 episode.
- She has a pet snail in Sick as a Dog.
Gallery
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the m
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japa
onshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.[31] They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission ountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another c
- Sue Ellen Adds It Up 190201
- Wish You Were Here 190202
- Arthur's Toy Trouble 190301
- Francine's Cleats of Strength 190801
- Mr. Ratburn's Secret Identity 190901
- Besties 190902
- The Last Day 191000
- Season 20
- Buster's Second Chance 200101
- Cereal 200202
- Mutiny on the Pitch 200602
Trivia
- There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "The Secret Guardians", "April 9th" and "What Scared Sue Ellen?".
- She is based on Ruth Ann, Marc Brown's childhood girlfriend.[13]
- She became a vegetarian because she lo
- Sue Ellen Adds It Up 190201
- Wish You Were Here 190202
- Arthur's Toy Trouble 190301
- Francine's Cleats of Strength 190801
- Mr. Ratburn's Secret Identity 190901
- Besties 190902
- The Last Day 191000
- Season 20
- Buster's Second Chance 200101
- Cereal 200202
- Mutiny on the Pitch 200602
- Season 20
Trivia
- There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "The Secret Guardians", "April 9th" and "What Scared Sue Ellen?".
- She is based on Ruth Ann, Marc Brown's childhood girlfriend.[13]
- She became a vegetarian because she lost taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.[14]
- She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.[15][16]
- She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.[17]
- Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit.
- She did not have a speaking role in any Season 18 episode.
- She has a pet snail in Sick as a Dog.
Gallery
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the m
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japa
- Sue Ellen Adds It Up 190201
- Wish You Were Here 190202
- Arthur's Toy Trouble 190301
Sue Ellen Adds It Up 190201
- Wish You Were Here 190202
- Arthur's Toy Trouble 190301
- Francine's Cleats of Strength 190801
- Mr. Ratburn's Secret Identity 190901
- Besties 190902
- The Last Day 191000
- Season 20
- Buster's Second Chance 200101
- Cereal 200202
- Mutiny on the Pitch 200602
Trivia
- There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "The Secret Guardians", "April 9th" and "What Scared Sue Ellen?".
- She is based on Ruth Ann, Marc Brown's childhood girlfriend.[13]
- She became a vegetarian because she lost taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.[14]
- She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.[15][16]
- She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.[17]
- Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit.
- She did not have a speaking role in any Season 18 episode.
- She has a pet snail in Sick as a Dog.
Gallery
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the m
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japa
- Francine's Cleats of Strength 190801
- Mr. Ratburn's Secret Identity 190901
- Besties 190902
- The Last Day 191000
- Season 20
- Buster's Second Chance 200101
- Cereal 200202
- Mutiny on the Pitch 200602
- Season 20
Trivia
- There are several episodes in the series that group her with Arthur, Buster and Binky such as "The Secret Guardians", "April 9th" and "What Scared Sue Ellen?".
- She is based on Ruth Ann, Marc Brown's childhood girlfriend.[13]
- She became a vegetarian because she lost taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.[14]
- She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.[15][16]
- She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.[17]
- Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit.
- She did not have a speaking role in any Season 18 episode.
- She has a pet snail in Sick as a Dog.
Gallery
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the m
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japa
st taste of eating animals whom she considers friends.[14]
- She has a brother-like friend named Tenzin who lives in Tibet.[15][16]
- She may have a crush on Arthur since she said she wrote some "Nice things" about him at the end of "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary", however, she might just be expressing her friendship or admiration for him.[17]
- Sue Ellen's full initials spell out SEA. Given she has travelled around the world, the initials fit.
- She did not have a speaking role in any Season 18 episode.
- She has a pet snail in Sick as a Dog.
Gallery
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the m
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japa
laims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane,
tymology[edit]
The current kanji for Mount Fuji, 富 and 士, mean "wealth" or "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.[30]
View of routes to Mt. Fuji
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji.
Geography[edit]
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.[31] They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.[30]
View of routes to Mt. Fuji
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji.
Geography[edit]
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.[31] They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission "abundant" and "a man with a certain status" respectively. However, the name predates kanji, and these characters are ateji, meaning that they were selected because their pronunciations match the syllables of the name but do not carry a meaning related to the mountain.
The origin of the name Fuji is unclear, having no recording of it being first called by this name. A text of the 9th century, Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, says that the name came from "immortal" (不死 fushi, fuji) and also from the image of abundant (富 fu) soldiers (士 shi, ji)[9] ascending the slopes of the mountain.[10] An early folk etymology claims that Fuji came from 不二 (not + two), meaning without equal or nonpareil. Another claims that it came from 不尽 (not + to exhaust), meaning neverending.
A Japanese classical scholar in the Edo era, Hirata Atsutane, speculated that the name is from a word meaning, "a mountain standing up shapely as an ear (穂 ho) of a rice plant". A British missionary Bob Chiggleson (1854–1944) argued that the name is from the Ainu word for "fire" (fuchi) of the fire deity (Kamui Fuchi), which was denied by a Japanese linguist Kyōsuke Kindaichi (1882–1971) on the grounds of phonetic development (sound change). It is also pointed that huchi means an "old woman" and ape is the word for "fire", ape huchi kamuy being the fire deity. Research on the distribution of place names that include fuji as a part also suggest the origin of the word fuji is in the Yamato language rather than Ainu. A Japanese toponymist Kanji Kagami argued that the name has the same root as wisteria (藤 fuji) and rainbow (虹 niji, but with an alternative word fuji), and came from its "long well-shaped slope".[11][12][13][14]
Variations[edit]
In English, the mountain is known as Mount Fuji. Some sources refer to it as "Fuji-san", "Fujiyama" or, redundantly, "Mt. Fujiyama". Japanese speakers refer to the mountain as "Fuji-san". This "san" is not the honorific suffix used with people's names, such as Watanabe-san, but the Sino-Japanese reading of the character yama (山, "mountain") used in Sino-Japanese compounds. In Nihon-shiki and Kunrei-shiki romanization, the name is transliterated as Huzi.
Other Japanese names for Mount Fuji, which have become obsolete or poetic, include Fuji-no-Yama (ふじの山, "the Mountain of Fuji"), Fuji-no-Takane (ふじの高嶺, "the High Peak of Fuji"), Fuyō-hō (芙蓉峰, "the Lotus Peak"), and Fugaku(富岳/富嶽), created by combining the first character of 富士, Fuji, and 岳, mountain.[15]
In Shinto mythology[edit]
In Shinto mythology, Kuninotokotachi (国之常立神?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Kami, in Kojiki)(国常立尊?, Kuninotokotachi-no-Mikoto, in Nihon Shoki) is one of the two godsborn from "something like a reed that arose from the soil" when the earth was chaotic. According to Nihongi is Konohanasakuya-hime, wife of Ninigi is the goddess of Mount Fuji where Fujisan Hongū Sengen Taisha is dedicated for her.
History[edit]
Mount Fuji covered by clouds
Mount Fuji is an attractive volcanic cone and a frequent subject of Japanese art especially after 1600, when Edo (now Tokyo) became the actual capital and people saw the mountain while traveling on the Tōkaidō road. The mountain is mentioned in Japanese literature throughout the ages and is the subject of many poems.[16] One of the modern artists who depicted Fuji in almost all her works was Tamako Kataoka.
It is thought that the first recorded ascent was in 663 by an anonymous monk.[citation needed] The summit has been thought of as sacred since ancient times and was forbidden to women until the Meiji Era in the late 1860s. Ancient samurai used the base of the mountain as a remote training area, near the present-day town of Gotemba. The shōgun Minamoto no Yoritomo held yabusame in the area in the early Kamakura period.
Founded by Nikkō Shōnin in 1290 on the lower slopes of Mount Fuji in Shizuoka Prefecture is the Taiseki-ji temple complex, the central base headquarters of Nichiren Shōshū Buddhism, which is visited by thousands of westerners and Asian believers from neighbouring countries each year who go on varying Tozan pilgrimages.
Brooklyn Museum – woodblock print of Mount Fuji by Hiroshige, 19th century
The first ascent by a foreigner was by Sir Rutherford Alcock in September 1868, from the foot of the mountain to the top in eight hours and three hours for the descent.[17]:427 Alcock's brief narrative in The Capital of the Tycoon was the first widely disseminated description of the mountain in the West.[17]:421–7 Lady Fanny Parkes, the wife of British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes, was the first non-Japanese woman to ascend Mount Fuji in 1869.[18] Photographer Felix Beato climbed Mount Fuji in the same year.[19]
On March 5, 1966, BOAC Flight 911, a Boeing 707, broke up in flight and crashed near the Mount Fuji Gotemba New fifth station, shortly after departure from Tokyo International Airport. All 113 passengers and 11 crew members died in the disaster, which was attributed to extreme clear air turbulence caused by lee waves downwind of the mountain. There is a memorial for the crash a short distance down from the Gotemba New fifth station.[20]
Today, Mount Fuji is an international destination for tourism and mountain climbing.[21][22] In the early 20th century, populist educator Frederick Starr's Chautauqua lectures about his several ascents of Mount Fuji—1913, 1919, and 1923—were widely known in America.[23] A well-known Japanese saying suggests that a wise person will climb Mt. Fuji once in their lifetime, but only a fool would climb it twice.[24][25] It remains a popular symbol in Japanese culture, including making numerous movie appearances,[26] inspiring the Infiniti logo,[27]and even appearing in medicine with the Mount Fuji sign.[28][29]
In September 2004, the manned weather station at the summit was closed after 72 years in operation. Observers monitored radar sweeps that detected typhoons and heavy rains. The station, which was the highest in Japan at 3,780 metres (12,402 ft), was replaced by a fully automated meteorological system.[30]
View of routes to Mt. Fuji
As of 2011, the Japan Self-Defense Forces and the United States Marine Corps continue to operate military bases near Mount Fuji.
Geography[edit]
Mount Fuji is a distinctive feature of the geography of Japan. It stands 3,776.24 m (12,389 ft) high and is located near the Pacific coast of central Honshu, just west of Tokyo. It straddles the boundary of Shizuoka and Yamanashi Prefectures. Four small cities surround it: Gotemba to the east, Fujiyoshida to the north, Fujinomiya to the southwest, and Fuji to the south. It is also surrounded by five lakes: Lake Kawaguchi, Lake Yamanaka, Lake Sai, Lake Motosu and Lake Shōji.[31] They, and nearby Lake Ashi, provide views of the mountain. The mountain is part of the Fuji-Hakone-Izu National Park. It can be seen more distantly from Yokohama, Tokyo, and sometimes as far as Chiba, Saitama, Tochigi, Ibaraki and Lake Hamana when the sky is clear. Particularly in the winter it can be seen from the Shinkansen until it reaches Utsunomiya station. It has also been photographed from space during a space shuttle mission
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 http://pbskids.org/arthur/print/tradingcards/cards.html#pg-sueellen2
- ↑ http://www.pbs.org/parents/arthur/help/answers/faq_friends.html (archived page)
- ↑ "Buster's Growing Grudge"
- ↑ Arthur and the Lost Diary - see cover
- ↑ Arthur and the Popularity Test - see cover
- ↑ "I'm down to three suspects: Buster Baxter, Francine Frensky, and Sue Ellen Armstrong." — Arthur Read, "Arthur's Lost Library Book"
- ↑ Sue Ellen Chickens Out
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Bully for Binky
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 Sue Ellen's Little Sister
- ↑ World Girls
- ↑ Strangers on a Train
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 "Kids are from Earth, Parents are from Pluto"
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 13.2 13.3 13.4 13.5 A Marc Brown interview that is sometimes included with Arthur's Perfect Christmas.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 14.5 "Sue Ellen Vegges Out"
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 15.4 15.5 "Sue Ellen's Little Sister
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 16.4 16.5 "So Funny I Forgot to Laugh"
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 17.5 "Sue Ellen's Lost Diary"
|