Generated by GPT-5-mini| Kuroda | |
|---|---|
| Name | Kuroda |
| Region | Japan |
| Language | Japanese |
Kuroda is a Japanese surname and toponym associated with historical clans, modern figures, geographic localities, scientific names, businesses, and cultural works. The name appears across samurai chronicles, Meiji-era archives, Showa period records, contemporary biographies, municipal registers, biological taxonomies, corporate filings, literary apocrypha, cinematic credits, and popular culture indexes.
The name derives from Japanese linguistic elements found in classical sources such as the Kojiki, Nihon Shoki, and regional gazetteers referencing medieval provinces like Iyo Province, Higo Province, and Tosa Province; it also appears in feudal rosters connected to the Tokugawa shogunate, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, and the Mōri clan. Etymological studies cite place-name formation comparable to entries in the Man'yōshū, corpora edited by scholars affiliated with Tokyo Imperial University (now University of Tokyo), Kyoto University, and the Historiographical Institute, University of Tokyo. Philologists cross-reference the name with cadastral surveys from the Meiji Restoration era and maps produced by the Japanese Government Railways and the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan.
Notable bearers appear in samurai annals, political records, artistic catalogs, scientific publications, and performing-arts credits. Military and political figures are listed alongside daimyo records in archives of the Tokugawa clan, Imperial Household Agency, and Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Japan). Intellectuals and scholars with the surname are represented in bibliographies associated with the Japan Academy, the National Diet Library, and journals published by the Japanese Society for the History of Science. Artists and performers with the name have credits in catalogs maintained by NHK, the Toho Company, the Shochiku Company, and festival programs at the Cannes Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, and Berlin International Film Festival. Scientists appear in taxonomy registries tied to institutions such as the University of Tokyo, Osaka University, Kyushu University, the Smithsonian Institution, and the Natural History Museum, London. Business leaders are cross-referenced in filings with the Tokyo Stock Exchange, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (Japan), and chambers like the Japan Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
Toponyms bearing the name are recorded in prefectural guides for Fukuoka Prefecture, Hyōgo Prefecture, Kagoshima Prefecture, and Aichi Prefecture, and appear on maps by the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan and atlases published by the NHK Publishing. Historical seats and castles associated with families of the name are documented in surveys of fortifications such as Himeji Castle, Kumamoto Castle, and regional lists compiled by the Agency for Cultural Affairs (Japan). Railway stations and municipal wards with related names are included in timetables of Japan Railways Group, route maps of the Nishi-Nippon Railroad, and civic plans of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism.
Species and taxa named after individuals with the surname appear in nomenclatural entries indexed by the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, the International Code of Nomenclature for algae, fungi, and plants, and databases maintained by the Global Biodiversity Information Facility, Integrated Taxonomic Information System, and the National Center for Biotechnology Information. Type specimens are housed in collections at the National Museum of Nature and Science (Tokyo), the Natural History Museum, London, the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History, and university herbaria at Kyoto University and Osaka University. Descriptions and revisions have been published in periodicals such as Zootaxa, Systematic Botany, Journal of Mammalogy, and the Proceedings of the Japan Academy.
Corporations and foundations bearing the name are registered with the Tokyo Stock Exchange, oversight bodies like the Financial Services Agency (Japan), and industrial associations including the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association and the Japan Federation of Bar Associations. Nonprofits and cultural trusts linked to the name appear in catalogs of the Agency for Cultural Affairs (Japan), philanthropic registries, and exhibition programs at institutions such as the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo and the Mori Art Museum. Historical enterprises are documented in mercantile records from the Meiji period and commercial directories compiled by chambers like the Kobe Chamber of Commerce and Industry.
The name appears in dramaturgy, film credits, literary dedications, and musical liner notes archived by NHK Archives, the National Diet Library, and festival programs for the Tokyo International Film Festival, Sundance Film Festival, and Edinburgh International Festival. It is found in translations and critical essays published by presses such as Kodansha, Shueisha, Iwanami Shoten, and Oxford University Press; it also features in catalog entries of the British Library and the Library of Congress. Exhibits, retrospectives, and curated collections referencing the name have been organized by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government and international museums including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art.
Category:Japanese-language surnames