Iyo Araki (1877-1969), also known as Iyo Araki San and later as Iyo Araki Kubo , was a Japanese nurse and nursing educator. She was superintendent of nurses and head of the nurses' training school at St. Luke's International Hospital in Tokyo from 1903.
20-416: (Redirected from Iyo ) Iyo may refer to: People [ edit ] Iyo Araki , Japanese nurse and nursing educator Iyo Matsumoto ( 松本 伊代 , born 1965) , Japanese pop idol Iyo Sky ( イヨ・スカイ , born 1990) , ring name of Japanese professional wrestler Iyo, legendary Japanese queen, also called Taiyoo Places [ edit ] Iyo, Benin .
40-529: A political scandal when four soldiers of the Russian Navy serving at an isolated garrison on the island starved to death and dozens of others were hospitalized suffering from the effects of starvation. Their commanders had failed to send them rations for months, and the matter became a national scandal regarding the state of the armed forces. In 2002, the St. Seraphim Monastery, a monastery belonging to
60-462: A Japanese women's softball team Iyotetsu , also called Iyo Railway Co., Ltd., the main transport provider in Matsuyama, Ehime, Shikoku, Japan Iyo language , New Guinea Iyo a character from Ani-Yoko Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title IYO . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
80-601: A curriculum based on the American programs she examined in her studies. She presented a report about tuberculosis in Japan for the Sixth International Congress on Tuberculosis in 1908. In 1918-1919, Araki led a unit of Japanese nurses working at an American Red Cross hospital at Russian Island . She resigned from teaching duties at St. Luke's in 1920, but remained as superintendent of nurses. She
100-744: A nurse in Japan. In 1900 she traveled to the United States to study nursing education, at Old Dominion Hospital in Richmond, Virginia , and Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, Maryland , sent by an American medical missionary, Dr. Rudolf Teusler . Araki was on staff at a hospital in Kobe as a young woman. Beginning in 1903, she was superintendent of nurses and head of the nurses' training school at St. Luke's International Hospital in Tokyo, using
120-670: A village in the commune of Bassila Iyo, Ehime , a city located in Ehime Prefecture Iyo District, Ehime , a district located in Ehime Prefecture Iyo Province , a province of Japan in the area of northwestern Shikoku Iyo-Matsuyama Domain , a feudal domain Iyo-Yoshida Domain Other uses [ edit ] Iyo dialect , a dialect of Japanese spoken by people from Ehime Prefecture Iyo Bank Vertz ,
140-929: Is an island in Peter the Great Gulf in the Sea of Japan , in Primorsky Krai , Russia . It is the largest island in the Eugénie Archipelago , separated from the Muravyov-Amursky Peninsula immediately to the north by the Eastern Bosphorus , and is one of the four islands in Primorsky Krai that are permanently inhabited, with a population of 5,360 (2010). Russky Island is home to Far Eastern Federal University and
160-604: Is on the southern slope of the mountain. The first map to feature Russky Island was published in Russia in 1859, although only the western and northern shores of the island were shown. It became a part of the Russian Empire the following year in 1860 after the Convention of Peking , when Outer Manchuria was ceded by Qing China. The island was named Russky Island, meaning "Russian Island", by Nikolay Muravyov-Amursky ,
180-629: The Governor-General of Eastern Siberia . The island was charted in its entirety by an expedition led by the cartographer Lieutenant Colonel Vasily Babkin in 1862, as part of the survey of Peter the Great gulf after its acquisition. A map featuring the whole island was published in 1865 with the name Kazakevich Island, in honour of Petr Kazakevich, the military governor of Primorskaya Oblast . The names Russky Island and Kazakevich Island were used interchangeably until after World War II , when it
200-614: The Vladivostok diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church , was built on the island. In April 2019, the island hosted a summit between President Vladimir Putin and North Korean Supreme Leader Kim Jong-un . Development of Russky Island is linked to Russia's response to growing Chinese economic power in the region and the opportunity of the Chinese market. The 2012 Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit
220-602: The archipelago connected to Russky Island by land, as a thin isthmus forms a land bridge during low tide. Russky Mountain, 291 metres (955 ft) above sea level , is the highest point of Russky Island and the Eugénie Archipelago, and one of the highest peaks of Vladivostok. It is located in the northern part of the island, near the south-western shore of the Novik Bay. The source of the Russky River
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#1732798840125240-405: The archipelago include Shkot Island to the south, Popov Island (7 km (4.3 mi) long, 4.3 km (2.7 mi) wide), Reyneke Island (3.4 km (2.1 mi) across), and Rikord Island (4.1 km (2.5 mi) long and less than 2 km (1.2 mi) wide) to the south-west. There are many small islets and sea stacks scattered between them. Shkot Island is the only island in
260-598: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=IYO&oldid=1223650688 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Japanese feminine given names Hidden categories: Articles containing Japanese-language text Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Iyo Araki Araki attended St. Margaret's School in Tokyo , and first trained as
280-503: The north and east of the island, and the closest part to the mainland. Novik Bay is a long and thin bay located between the Saperny Peninsula and the remainder of the island. Russky Island is the largest and northernmost island in the Eugénie Archipelago , a cluster of small islands and islets south of the Muravyov-Amursky Peninsula that extend to the southwest for about 40 km (25 mi). Major neighboring islands in
300-542: The southern span of the Russky Bridge , the world's longest cable-stayed bridge , connecting the island across the Eastern Bosphorus to the mainland portion of Vladivostok . Russky Island is located about 9,334 kilometres (5,800 mi) east of Moscow , the capital of Russia. It is the largest island in Primorsky Krai , with about a quarter of its area being the Saperny Peninsula, which forms much of
320-512: Was built in an irregular trapezoid shape, with numerous artillery batteries which were meant to be able to fire into almost all the bays of Russky island in case of invasion. During the Soviet era , the island was a closed territory and was home to several military installations, and became one of the largest training areas for the Soviet Navy . In 1992, Russky Island became the scene of
340-506: Was held on Russky Island, and about US$ 6 billion was set aside for the development of the island and Vladivostok in preparation for the summit and construction of the site for the 2012 APEC conference that was also planned and built as a new campus for the Far Eastern Federal University . Plans include the potential to develop the island as a large scale tourist resort and to construct the official residence of
360-479: Was permanently changed to only Russky Island. By 1889, Fort Pospelov had been built on the island as part of the Vladivostok Fortress complex, as developed by Colonel K. I. Velichko. Over several years, the initial temporary wooden structures were gradually replaced with stone structures. Fort Russky was built on Russky Mountain, near the highest point on the island, between 1898 and 1903. The fort
380-611: Was prominent coordinating the hospital's response in the aftermath of Tokyo's 1923 Great Kantō earthquake , evacuating patients and keeping them alive when the hospital burned. In 1927-1928 she traveled again to the United States, on a fellowship from the Rockefeller Foundation , to study American hospitals. "Miss Araki is something of a national hero in her native country", noted The New York Times in 1927. Araki married Rudolf Teusler's assistant and successor as director at St. Luke's, Dr. Tokutarō Kubo, in 1935. She
400-476: Was widowed when Dr. Kubo died in 1941. In 1951 she was honored by the Church of Japan as one of Tokyo's "semicentenarians", marking more than fifty years since her baptism. She died in 1969, aged 92 years. Russian Island 43°00′N 131°51′E / 43.00°N 131.85°E / 43.00; 131.85 Russky Island ( Russian : Ру́сский о́стров , lit. 'Russian Island')
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