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The flag was given to 宮下廣長 Miyashita Hironaga. The only slogan written there is a typical patriotic one 武運長久 "eternal good luck in battle." The rest is all signatures. I can't judge if it's genuine or not.
Me neither. It doesn't look like an obvious fake (the orientation of the signatures seems OK, no obvious fake signatures like "Hideki Tojo" or anything like that).
Another interesting one!
I find the interest in owning or collecting these to be ghoulish.
The second one of post #5 uses some unique kanji for サムハラ. These kanji are almost unknown except for a shrine of the same name in Osaka. They do not appear in unicode, so I can't replicate them, but you can find them here;
サムハラ神社 - Wikipedia
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The erstwhile phrase "Good luck in battle"
That makes two of us.I misused the word "erstwhile" most of my life
That makes two of us.
And, along with penultimate, this is another word I hope to use correctly from now on. Imagine, coming to Japan and learning how to speak English correctly, one painful word at a time.
The signature on the right end is a Shintō priest 矢田部盛枝 Yatabe Morie of 日光二荒山神社宮司 Nikkō Futarasan Shrine. Google search results say that this priest really existed.Can I please have some advice on this one? It is located very close to me. Thanks!
You know, there comes a point when people stop thinking they're helping out of kindness and start thinking they're being used.
We're not a free online appraisal service.
Sorry, I am not interested in buying anymore, I am just interested to see what is written on them.
Even less are we here to endlessly satisfy pointless idle curiosity. Have you considered making efforts to learn the language yourself?