High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Goryo Hamaguchi (?? ??, Hamaguchi Goryo?, June 15, 1820 - April 21, 1885) was the seventh business owner of current Yamasa Corporation in Japan He saved many lives of his fellow villagers of Hiro, Kii Province (current Hirogawa, Wakayama), when a massive tsunami struck the Kii Peninsula in 1854. He set fire to stacks of "Inamura" (rice sheaves) to use as landmarks and help him guide those villagers to safe place. Lafcadio Hearn wrote a story about him in "Gleanings in Buddha-Fields: Studies of Hand and Soul in the Far East (1897). Inamura no Hi: The burning rice fields (published in the U.S. by Sara Cone Bryant in 1963) also chronicled Goryo's heroic exploits and accounts of his efforts were also introduced into Japanese textbooks. Данное издание представляет собой компиляцию сведений, находящихся в свободном доступе в среде Интернет в целом, и в информационном сетевом ресурсе "Википедия" в частности. Собранная по частотным запросам...