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Draft:Mémorial d'Amour

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  • Comment: Hello, I checked the sources, but I can't find a mention of Mémorial d'Amour specifically in any of the Le Progrès sources. Am I missing it, maybe the news sites don't allow searching the page correctly? As a result, I am not sure how notable the memorial is. Can you please expand the lead with a few more details? Also, in External links, please use the template:Official website and other direct external links, not how they are formatted now. The paragraph "There permanently float twenty flags" is missing citations. Was this text translated from somewhere else? I did not find an article at fr:Mémorial d'Amour. I will decline this for now due to lack of notability, but please do see if you can address these and submit again if there are notable sources. Thank you, Caleb Stanford (talk) 03:40, 23 March 2025 (UTC)

Musashi Statue in front of the Mémorial d'Amour

The Mémorial d'Amour (Memorial of Love) initially founded in 2004 on the domain of the Château de Bois Franc in Jarnioux, has been established since December 8, 2014 on the public domain of the municipality of Gleizé.[1][2]

Memorial

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The Mémorial d'Amour (Heiho Niten Ichi Ryu Memorial) recalls the memory and history of Japan in France in the Rhône, Beaujolais, Lyon, Jarnioux, Ville-sur-Jarnioux and Liergues and the historical and official links established with the Okayama prefecture, the Mimasaka Province, Mimasaka, Ōhara-Cho and Yokohama. This place was successively recognized by eighteen nations, Japan,[3] France, Cambodia,[4] the eleven ASEAN countries[5] and Russia,[6] China, Mali, Bulgaria, and the Assyro-Chaldeans.

There permanently float twenty flags officially handed over by the public authorities concerned, those of Japan, France, Cambodia, ASEAN, Russia, China, Mali, Bulgaria, Mimasaka, Rhône, the Center Region, the Burgundy Region, the Mori clan, of the Lordship of Doat, the Hyoho Niten Ichi Ryu, 150th Anniversary of Franco-Japanese Relations, Club Lyon-Japon, Sacred Heart Royal, of the Tricolor Sacred Heart, and the Holy Spirit.

Since June 17, 2023, the Statue of Miyamoto Musashi has been inaugurated.[7][8]

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ ""Report - Dojo - France3 - Ecole Miyamoto Musashi"". France 3. February 1999.
  2. ^ Peltier, Julien (2016). Samouraïs (Prisma ed.). Editions Prisma. ISBN 9782810417445.
  3. ^ "A symbolic bridge to Asia, Un pont symbolique vers l'Asie". Le Progrès. 12 December 2015.
  4. ^ ""Cambodia in the spotlight"". Le Progrès. December 13, 2015.
  5. ^ ""Symbolic exchange of flags"". Le Progrès. April 13, 2016.
  6. ^ ""Russia and ASEAN have the honor"". Le Progrès. February 12, 2017.
  7. ^ "Gleizé : inauguration de la statue Miyamoto Musashi".
  8. ^ "Gleizé : une statue en hommage au samouraï Miyamoto Musashi".

External websites

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  • Mimasaka.fr[1]
  • Mimasaka town hall[2]
  • Official site[3]