thumb|250px|Reconstruction of the residence of the North Edo machi-bugyō in present-day [[Tokyo.]] was a title assigned to samurai officials in feudal Japan. Bugyō is often translated as commissioner, magistrate, or governor, and other terms would be added to the title to describe more specifically a given official's tasks or jurisdiction.
thumb|250px|Reconstruction of the residence of the North Edo machi-bugyō in present-day [[Tokyo.]] was a title assigned to samurai officials in feudal Japan. Bugyō is often translated as commissioner, magistrate, or governor, and other terms would be added to the title to describe more specifically a given official's tasks or jurisdiction.
==Pre-Edo period== In the Heian period (794–1185), the post or title of bugyō would be applied only to an official with a set task; once that task was complete, the officer would cease to be called bugyō. However, in the Kamakura period (1185–1333) and later, continuing through the end of the Edo period (1603–1868), posts and titles came to be created on a more permanent and regular basis. Over time, there came to be 36 bugyō in the bureaucracy of the Kamakura shogunate.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).