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  1. Hitoshi Imamura was born on June 28, 1886. He was a native of Sendai City in the Miyagi Prefecture. Imamura’s father was a judge. He graduated from the Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1907, then later in the Army War College in 1915. In two years, Imamura was promoted to captain and was sent to England as a military attaché in 1918.

  2. This is a brief biographical sketch of the military career of General Hitoshi Imamura. He was a general during World War Two. He was a general during World War Two. Biography of General Hitoshi Imamura - (今村 均) - (いまむら ひとし) (1886 – 1968), Japan

  3. Hitoshi Imamura was a chief of Army General Staff operations section during 1931-32 and after that a liason to 9th Division in Shanghai Incident, fighting early 1932. He was made then for regimental commander, promoted to Major-General and made for brigade commander in 1935. He became a deputy chief-of-staff, Kwantung Army, Manchuria 1936 and a ...

  4. An account of the life of Imamura Hitoshi who was Japanese Army Group Commander at Rabaul Headquarters. His area of command included New Guinea and Bougainville. After the war he was held responsible for acts of brutality against Indian and Chinese personnel within his area of command. He was also tried and acquitted by a Dutch court for ...

  5. Overview Gallery Synopsis Relationships Hitoshi Shinso (心 (しん) 操 (そう) 人 (ひと) 使 (し) , Shinsō Hitoshi?) is a student in U.A. High School's General Department from Class 1-C, although he is awaiting transfer to the hero course for his second year. Hitoshi is a relatively tall young man with messy, indigo-colored hair that flares out in large tufts around his head, notably ...

  6. It is no wonder that the early period of the military adminis-. tration of Java under Imamura was characterized by swiftness, decisiveness, and pervasiveness.74 However, if we regard this as. an expression of Japan's intention to make Java "a Japanese colony pure and simple,"75 we will be mistaken.

  7. "Imamura was detained at Rabaul by the Australian Army, as he and troops under his command were accused of war crimes, including the execution of Allied prisoners of war. One infamous example highlighted how the prisoners captured in eastern Java were locked up in bamboo cattle cages and thrown overboard into shark-infested waters. In April 1946, Imamura wrote to the Australian commander at ...