Resultado-kuéra ij-pe g̃uarã
Umi documento tembiasakue rehegua ojejuhúva Ij-pe g̃uarã
Umi documento tembiasakue rehegua ha’e umi documento oikuaaukáva umi detalle imba´eguasuvéva umi mba'e ojehúva peteĩ tapicha rekovépe. Eñemoaranduve
| Ta’anga | Téra | Evento-kuéra | Rrelasiõnguéra |
|---|---|---|---|
![]() | Maths Ij. | Teñói 1761 Censo from 1794 to 1806 Kurkijoki, Viipuri, Finland | Ndaipóri rrelasiõ oĩva lista-pe |
![]() | N M Ij | Censo 1911 Maidstone, Kent, England, United Kingdom Teñói 1882 | Ndaipóri rrelasiõ oĩva lista-pe |
![]() | J A R Ij | Servicio Militar 1941 Nashville Ac Facilities, Tennessee, United States Teñói 1924 OKLAHOMA | Ndaipóri rrelasiõ oĩva lista-pe |
![]() | Sek Alph A R Ij | Servicio Militar 10 December 1942 Kansas City, Kansas, United States Teñói 0032 07 | Ndaipóri rrelasiõ oĩva lista-pe |
Arbol Familiar perfil-kuéra ojetopa Ij-pe g̃uarã
Ko’ãva ikatu ha’e nde ypykue ambue puruharakuéra omoĩmava Árbol Familiar komunidape. Eñemoaranduve
Mandu’akuéra ojetopa Ij-pe g̃uarã
Mandu’akuéra ikatu ha’e foto, ñemombe’upy, documento térã audio pehẽnguemi ambue puruhára ohupiva’ekue Árbol Familiar-pe. Eñemoaranduve Eñemoaranduve
Terajoapy/Apellido informasiõ ojetopa Ij-pe g̃uarã
Ij
Japanese: written 井伊 ‘well’ and ‘that’, the name one of Japan's great daimyō families, originally based in Tōtōmi (now part of Shizuoka prefecture), later in Kōzuke (now Gunma prefecture) and Ōmi (now Shiga prefecture). Other variants of the name substitute either character with similar sounding characters such as 飯 ‘cooked rice’, 居 ‘residence’, and so forth. It was formerly Romanized as Iyi. — Note: In the population figure published by the US Census Bureau, the Roman number II (meaning ‘the second’, i.e. ‘the younger’ of the two bearers of the name) is apparently also counted as a surname Ii. History: Ii Naomasa (1561–1602) was awarded lands in Kōzuke and Ōmi for his service in the civil wars that won the shōgunate (military dictatorship) for Tokugawa Ieyasu. His family built the beautiful castle of Hikone, which still stands. His descendant Ii Naosuke (1815–1860) ruled Japan for two years as Tairō (Great Elder) and played a major part in signing treaties that opened Japan to foreign trade at the end of the Tokugawa Shōgunate. He was assassinated by adherents of the anti-foreign party.
Dictionary of American Family Names © Patrick Hanks 2003, 2006.
Ij ojejuhu jepive ramo Netherlands-pe ha mokõi ambue tetãme.
