2/03/2015

chanoma living room

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. Interior Design - The Japanese Home .
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chanoma, cha no ma, cha-no-ma 茶の間 private family living room


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- quote
chanoma 茶の間 lit. tearoom
A Edo period communal living room usually containing a hearth *irori 囲炉裏 and often situated close to the earth-floored area *doma 土間. Its character and use varied according to the scale of the structure.

1 
In relatively large residences of middle ranking warriors or leading farmers and merchants, chanoma was principally used by the women of the household or by female servants as a kind of common room, where meals were taken, some food prepared and informal conversation took place around the hearth.
In the Kansai 関西 region in particular the term was often used to refer to the maidservants' room.

2 
In smaller residences chanoma was often used interchangeably with *ima 居間 or *daidokoro 台所 to refer to the principal communal living room.

3 
In north eastern Japan, along the Japan Sea coast from the prefectures of Niigata to Shimane, in Shikoku 四国 and in parts of Nagano prefecture, the term was used in traditional vernacular houses *minka 民家 to refer to a large room adjacent to, and often opened to, the earth-floored area. Usually the room contained an hearth around which the family gathered for meals. The chanoma was often open to the rafters, allowing smoke to escape through a smoke hole *kemuridashi 煙出 in the roof.
Originally the floor was exposed timber boarding without mats *tatami 畳. Also, the family's Shinto and Buddhist altars *kamidana 神棚 and *butsudan 仏壇 were often located in this room.
- source : JAANUS


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CHANO-MA, Yokohama
A café featuring a 21st century depiction of tea ceremony rooms. The café has a lounge and dining area fusing oriental and occidental essences.
Yokohama Red Brick Warehouse - 1-1-2, Shinko, Naka-ku
- source : chano-ma



ochanoma ryūgaku お茶の間留学 "study abroad from the living room"
Nova is a large eikaiwa school (private English teaching company) in Japan.
- source : wikipedia


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- quote -
Chanoma - tea - of - space -
As our lifestyles have changed, some languages have also changed. A Japanese term “cha-no-ma” is one of them.

"Cha-no-ma", literally means “the space of tea”, referrers to a place where family members get together to chat, eat and relax. That is, a living room. I am not sure about its origin of the word, but in a good old days, when family members spent time together in the same place, tea was always there. “Cha-no-ma” is a nostalgic word associated with cozy and relaxing time in a large family.

Now, the time has changed. The family is smaller, and we live in busier society, and hustle and bustle of life. Eventually, the term of "cha-no-ma" is on its way out. We call the room “ima (literally, existing room)” or “living room” nowadays.

But still, whatever the term is, whatever the size of family is, spending time together among family while having tea will make us mellow out, always.



Sazae san family sitting in their "cha-no-ma"
(One of the most popular manga among men and women of all ages)
- source : japaneseteastory.blogspot.jp


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- - - - - H A I K U and S E N R Y U - - - - -

座敷より茶の間が好きや切山椒
zashiki yori chanoma ga suki ya kirisanshoo

better then the guest room
I like the family living room -
New Year sweets

Tr. Gabi Greve

Ikenouchi Takeshi 池内たけし (1889 - 1974)
The nephew of Takahama Kyoshi 高浜虚子.


. kirizanshoo 切山椒 sweet desert dish .
lit. "cut mountain pepper"
- - kigo for the New Year - -

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A kind of sweet made from rice flour, sugar and mountain pepper. It can be cut and served over a bowl of rice for a quick snack. It is usually served steamed, which enhances the fragrance of the pepper. It is supposed to brick luck with money affairs.

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お茶の間は女ばかりや置ごたつ
ochanoma wa onna bakari ya okigotatsu

in the living room
there are only the womenfolk -
this tabel to get warm

Tr. Gabi Greve

竹田小時 Takeda Kotoki



source : Cleanup Corporation
こたつで本を読む女性たち  Women reading books in the kotatsu
『絵本常磐草』享保15年(1730) 江戸風俗図絵 - より


. okigotatsu 置炬燵 kotatsu table to put on the floor .
- - kigo for all Winter - -


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膳立の茶の間かしまし謠初
正岡子規 Masaoka Shiki


お茶の間に二月礼者のやや長居 山田弘子
お茶の間に集りやすし庭若葉 星野立子
お茶の間の隅にころげて竹婦人 小山佳栄

茶の間と別に家の一角雛あかり 平井さち子
茶の間にて用済む仲や切山椒 大久保橙青
茶の間には笑初めともなくつゞく 皆吉爽雨
茶の間にも桃の色紙や雛の宿 高橋淡路女
茶の間まだ帰宅そろはず霙降る 亀井糸游
茶の間まで葭戸幾重を見とほしに 大島民郎

どこよりも茶の間が親し福沸 高橋真智子
なまはげのずいと茶の間に踏み込みて 高澤良一
わが雛を母の飾れる茶の間かな 下田実花
ストーブに湯気も影なす茶の間かな 藤井知子
万両の雪に明けある茶の間かな 橋本鶏二
亡き妻の茶の間の画像豆の飯 河野静雲
声まがふ茶の間の父子春の宵 亀井糸游
夕河岸の鯵を囲みて茶の間かな 星野 椿
妻の書架茶の間に小さく花曇 遠藤梧逸
寒い朝巨大空母と茶の間に居り 国 しげ彦

扇風機まはれる茶の間ぬけにけり 芝不器男
春めきて小夜の客ある茶の間かな 松尾 静子
牡蠣豆腐茶の間へ客の座を移す 及川貞 夕焼
玉子酒みんな茶の間にあつまりぬ 市村洋子
百菊もさくや茶の間の南向 嵐竹
破蓮に茶の間より掃く埃かな 比叡 野村泊月
籾摺を昨日に終えし茶の間かな 大島麦邨

行火やめて今宵の茶の間四角なり 臼田亞浪
襖しめて隣茶の間や寒夜客 阿部みどり女 笹鳴
込み入った話に茶の間30Wのジヨーク 平田栄一
電車より茶の間が見える薄暑かな 石川文子
- source : HAIKUreikuDB

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. Japanese Architecture - Interior Design - The Japanese Home .

. - Doing Business in Edo - 商売 - Introduction .

. senryu, senryū 川柳 Senryu poems in Edo .


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1/25/2015

kugikakushi

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. Japanese Architecture - Interior Design - The Japanese Home .
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kugi 釘 nail, hook, Nagel



- quote JAANUS -
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kugi 釘 A nail made of metal, wood or bamboo and shaped according to use.
Traditionally, metal kugi are square, kakukugi 角釘. However there are a great variety of other kugi: flat nails hirakugi 平釘; double pointed bent nails aiorekugi 合折釘; double pointed nails aikugi 合釘; twice bent end nijuu orekugi 二重折釘, a thrice bent nails inazuma orekugi 稲妻折釘; and a bag hanging nails fukurokakekugi 袋掛釘.

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aikugi 合釘
Also kurekugi 呉釘, kirikugi 切釘. A straight nail with both ends pointed. It is made of wood, bamboo, iron, or bronze and used to join wooden boards. Some are round in cross section and others are square kakuaikugi 角合釘.
Note that maruaikugi 丸合釘 refers to a Western type nail, and not a round aikugi.

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aiorekugi 合折釘
Also called oreaikugi 折合釘 or mageorekugi 曲折釘. A type of double-pointed iron nail, square in section, and bent into an L-shape. Used to attach the frames of opaque paper sliding screens fusuma 襖, to a skeletal framework, hammered down so that they are not visible from the exterior. Aiorekugi typically are spaced about 21cm apart.

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asagaokugi 朝顔釘
Lit. morning glory nail. A two-pronged nail bent into a right angle for the purpose of hanging a flower vase. The nail usually is driven into the bamboo lath of a vine-laced, lattice-reed window shitajimado 下地窓, or on the lath of a small window hana-akarimado 花明窓, found at the side of the tea house alcove tokonoma 床の間. The points of this nail are bent around the bamboo lath of the window lattice after it has been pounded in. Typically, morning glories 'asagao 朝顔', are displayed in this vase hence the name, but sometimes other flowers are displayed.

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fukurokakekugi 袋掛釘 Lit. bag hanging nail.
A bamboo or iron nail inserted into the middle post nakabashira 中柱, of a tea ceremony room. It is used to hang up the tea caddy bag, shifuku 仕服. The nail is bent to form a hook with the under part being bent at a right angle and rounded to make it easy to hang up the bag gracefully. A small guard regulates how far the nail is to be hammered into the post. The nail is positioned about 11cm above the horizontal wooden piece which holds the extended sleeve wall sodekabe 袖壁, and terminated by the nakabashira. This prevents the bag from touching the floor. Example: Kohouan 孤篷庵 Daitokuji 大徳寺 (rebuilt by Matsudaira Fumai 松平不昧 flourished ca. 1800), Kyoto.

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hanakugi 花釘
A nail used to hang a flower vase in a tea ceremony room chashitsu 茶室. Some are hammered into the center of the alcove tokonoma 床の間, wall and others are hammered into the alcove pillar tokobashira 床柱. The former is also called nakakugi 中釘 and the latter hashirakugi 柱釘 or tokobashira hanakugi 床柱花釘. All are metal nails, bent up into an L- shape to form a hook.

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inazuma orekugi 稲妻折釘
Also nijuu orekugi 二重折釘. A twice bent nail that is used under the ceiling molding or under the attached lintel for hanging scrolls. They are created by first bending them 90 degrees and then a second time.
If set in a channel, musou shibuichi 無双四分一, nails of this type can also be moved to the left or right and are also used for hanging scrolls in an alcove. In this case, they are called inazuma hashirikugi 稲妻走釘 (running right angle hook). The bottom part is inserted through the opening in the web of the channel, and the prongs are bent so that they hang on the edges of the web. When a pair or set of three scrolls are hung, these special nails can be slid to the position needed.

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jikukakekugi 軸掛釘 / Also jikukugi 軸釘, kakemonokugi 掛物釘.
A hook for hanging scrolls kakemono 掛物 that is made of metal or bamboo and hammered into the upper part of the back wall, or the bottom edge of the ceiling molding of a tea ceremony alcove tokonoma 床の間. Metal jikukakekugi are bent twice to form a three-pronged, trident shape. If made of bamboo, the hook is hammered straight into the wall, or with a slight upward incline in a rustic style tea ceremony room.
Bamboo nails are 0.63cm long and are nailed 2.8cm below the ceiling molding, projecting from the wall. Around the late 16c - early 17c, in shoin 書院 style tea rooms one, three, four or eight scrolls were hung and each had a hook. When three hooks, mitsukugi 三ツ釘, were used, the right and left ones were made smaller and projected 3cm. When a set of three scrolls, sanpukutsui 三幅対, were hung, in a large shoin style room, a board 6-8mm thick, 12-30cm wide and 180cm long was nailed to the bottom edge of the ceiling molding and a groove was made so that the inserted zigzag shaped nails could be moved easily.

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kaiorekugi 貝折釘
Also written 皆折釘. A large, square, angular nail used for wooden or bamboo fences. Its head is bent at right angles but has a gable-shaped top. It varies from 8-9cm to 20-30cm long.

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musoukugi 無双釘 Musokugi
Also musou orekugi 無双折釘. A type of nail used to hang a scroll in an alcove nakakugi 中釘. A nail which is composed of two parts: a sharply pointed tip and a second part which is bent up at a right angle to form a hook. The pointed part is securely driven into the plastered wall of an alcove and the latter part can be inserted into a fixed pocket and removed at will. This type of nail prevents damage to the scroll. It may also be used to hang a flower vase.

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nakakugi 中釘
Also hanakugi 花釘, tokonakakugi 床中釘 (see orekugi 折釘).
A nail hammered into the center of the back wall of an alcove tokonoma 床の間, on which to hang a flower vase or a scroll in a tea ceremony room. The nail is bent in such a fashion that when it is driven into the wall the back of the scroll is not damaged. Most nakakugi are placed about 1 m above the surface of the straw mat tatami 畳, but this distance varies widely, usually from 90cm-150cm, depending on the height of the ceiling.

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nijuu orekugi 二重折釘
Also called kakemonokugi 掛物釘. A type of hooked nail orekugi 折釘.
A square, double-bent nail that is used to hang scrolls kakemono 掛物. The nail head forms a ' コ' shape. A nail with three bends is called sanjuu orekugi 三重折釘.

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noshigata-no-kugi 熨斗形の釘
An archaic term for taru-no-kuchi 樽の口. Also called kanimekugi 蟹目釘 or noshigashira kugi 熨斗頭釘.
A large, half-dome-shaped nail similar to a present day rivet. The WAMYOUSHOU 倭名抄 describes it as a large, high-headed nail, kashiradaka ookugi 頭高大釘. It is used to secure a gable pendant, gegyo 懸魚 or a non-penetrating tie beams, nageshi 長押.

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orekugi 折釘 A type of hooked nail made from one piece of iron.
It is bent at a right angle and is square in cross section. The name is a corruption of orikugi 折釘. Orekugi are used for both the interior and exterior of a tea ceremony house *chashitsu 茶室. There are many different sizes and most have stops or guards which determine the extent to which the nail can be inserted into a wall, post, or molding. Orekugi are named according to their placement, or purpose. There are many types of bent nails.
These include: fukurokakekugi 袋掛釘; musoukugi 無双釘; asagaokugi 朝顔釘; *tokobashirahana kugi 床柱花釘; tokonakakugi 床中釘; tokokakenaka kugi 床掛中釘; and tokootoshikake kugi 床落掛釘.




折釘に掛た所が粽哉
orekugi ni kaketa tokoro ga chimaki kana

from a hooked nail
they hang here,
these Chimaki dumplings . . .


. Kobayashi Issa 小林一茶 in Edo .

. Chimaki 粽 dumplings for the Boy's festival, May 5 .

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sanjuu orekugi 三重折釘
A nail that is bent in three tines at a ninety degree angle.

Like the twice bent nail, nijuu orekugi 二重折釘, it is used to hang various kinds of decorative objects. Also called *inazuma orikugi 稲妻折釘.

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takekugi 竹釘 bamboo nail
Usually the nail is 7.5mm square and made from giant bamboo, madake 真竹 (also nigatake 苦竹). They have a hook on which to hang scrolls and are used in a small room or alcove, tokonoma 床の間. When pounded into a wall, the nail project 27mm with the exterior skin on the upper side. Kobori Enshuu 小堀遠州 (1579-1647) and Kanamori Souwa 金森宗和 (1584-1656) preferred nailing takekugi into a wall with the exterior skin on the under side. Hooked bamboo nails were used in a tea ceremony houses, chashitsu 茶室, kitchen, mizuya 水屋, for hanging up towels used to wipe tea implements.
Bamboo nails made from a smaller variety of bamboo that has a smooth surface with non-protruding joints are used by cabinet makers. Once shaped as nails, they are roasted in an iron pot and therefore have a brownish color.

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tokobashirahana kugi 床柱花釘 / hashirakugi 柱釘
tokonakakugi 床中釘; tokokakenaka kugi 床掛中釘; and tokootoshikake kugi 床落掛釘.
Also hanakugi 花釘. A nail on which a flower vase can be hung. It is nailed onto an alcove post tokohashira 床柱 in a tea ceremony room chashitsu 茶室. Opinion varies on its proper position which ranges from 33cm below the alcove lintel otoshigake 落掛, to 97cm above the straw mat tatami 畳 floor.

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wakugi 和釘
Also called nihonkugi 日本釘. A square nail used during and after the Tumulus period (CE 300-538/552). The nail was made of hand-wrought iron and was from 3cm-60cm long. Wakugi were classified by the shape of the nail head. The oldest nail of this type had a square head. Other heads were flat or spiral in shape. The nails were used to secure roof tiles yanegawara 屋根瓦, to eave ends, *nokisaki 軒先. Double pointed nails were used to join two wooden members to make a line like a seam, nuime 縫目. This method appeared during the Heian period (794-1185). At the Houryuuji Gojuu-no-tou 法隆寺五重塔, 27 different types of nails have been identified, ranging in length from slightly over 3.03,to over 60.9.

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yanagikugi 柳釘
Also yanagikakekugi 柳掛け釘. A nail hammered into a partially plastered post yanagibashira 柳柱 (see youjibashira 楊子柱), usually found in a 4 1/2 mat tea ceremony room chashitsu 茶室. The nail is hammered into the upper part of the post (the unplastered part) and a hanging flower vase is hung from it. According to Sen Soutan 千宗旦 (1578-1658) the nail gets its name from springs of willow draped from the nail at New Years. Examples can be seen at Yuuin 又隠 at Urasenke 裏千家, and Onigawara-no-seki 鬼瓦席 at Koudaiji 高台寺 both in Kyoto.

- source : JAANUS -
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. kasugai 鎹 / かすがい clamp, cramp, cleat, staple .

. yanefuki 屋根葺き roofer, craftsman making roofs .
using nails

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deru kugi wa utareru 出る釘は打たれる "A nail that sticks out will be hammered"
deru kui wa utareru 出る杭は打たれる "A stake that sticks out will be hammered"

. The nail that sticks out . . . .




- quote -
kui 杭 - kigui 木杭 Pile
A wooden stake or post driven into the ground.
Closely placed round wooden posts, often shaved to a point, pounded into the ground to form a base that can transfer the down bearing load from the superstructure through the footing, sills, or foundation to the ground. This system has been used from very ancient periods for foundation ground work. Pine logs were most common, but Japanese cedar, sugi 杉, and evergreen oak, kashi 樫, were also used. The stakes had to reach down below the water table, as they decayed if they dried up. In order to strengthen the tip of the kui when driving into hard ground, a protective metal band called a pile shoe, kutsukanamono 沓金物, was sometimes added.

hikaegui 控杭 pole, post
Any upright pole or post added to the inside of a castle wall for extra support. While hikaegui increased the strength of the wall, they did make it more difficult to move around close to the wall on the interior because the light was dim and people could easily fall against these protections.
- source : JAANUS -


国分尼寺守る杭打つ初仕事
Kokubun Niji mamoru kui utsu hatsu shigoto

first work of the year
to strengthen the piles
of nunnery Kokubun-ji


土屋尚 Tsuchiya Masa

. Kokubunji 国分寺 Kokubun-Ji .


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. Legends and Tales from Japan 伝説 - Introduction .

. kugi 釘 伝説 Legends about nails and curses .

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折釘に烏帽子かけたり春の宿
orekugi ni eboshi kaketari haru no yado

On a bent hook
hangs an official's cap,
the lodging house in spring.

Tr. Yuki Sawa

. Yosa Buson - Collection - 蕪村句集 Kushu .


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kugikakushi, kugi kakushi 釘隠し "hiding the nails" nail-hiding ornament

- quote
kugikakushi 釘隠
An ornament used to conceal the head of a large nail on a pressing tie rail *nageshi 長押 and on doors. Made of wood, copper, iron, or gilt bronze. From the Momoyama period techniques of cloisonne *shippou 七宝, inlay *zougan 象嵌, and openwork *sukashibori 透彫, decoration were used, and new materials such as ceramics were introduced. Pre-10c kugikakushi were hemispherical in shape and known as *bai 唄, manjuu kanamono 饅頭金物 (see *manjuugata 饅頭形) or *chichikanamono 乳金物.
From about the 10c, kugikakushi were designed using a circle of flower-petal shapes.
The most common types were the four-petalled *shiyou 四葉, six-petalled *rokuyou 六葉, and eight-petalled *hachiyou 八葉. They consisted of a central projection *taru-no-kuchi 樽の口 (cask plug), a round body *kikuza 菊座, and surrounding petal shapes *zagane 座金.
- source : JAANUS


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CLICK for more photos !


- quote -
Decorative Nail Covers
Colored in various hues, these pieces are thought to be reproductions of nail covers with inlaid cloisonné. The attributed artist Ninsei (also known as Nonomura Seiemon, d. 1694), the prominent Kyoto ware ceramicist of the latter half of the seventeenth century, was a master in the technique of overglaze enamels.



Although these small pieces have no identifiable stamp or inscription, the variegated paints of gold, silver, red, blue, and green, demonstrate the features of Ninsei's Omuro ware. Moreover, considering that these pieces came from the Marugame Kyôgoku clan, which is known for its rich collection of Ninsei works, it appears highly likely that these pieces are authentic.
- source : www.emuseum.jp/detail -


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- - - - - H A I K U and S E N R Y U - - - - -

雛の間へ一間ごとの釘隠し
hina no ma e hitoma goto no kugi kakushi

to the room with Hina dolls
every room is decorated
with nail-hiding ornaments


Yasome Aiko 八染藍子 (1934 - )

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釘隠しまでも梅鉢あたかかし 
kugi kakushi made mo umebachi atatakashi

even the nail-hiding ornaments
like a plum-blossom
feels so warm  


Gotoo Yahan 後藤夜半 Goto Yahan (1895 - 1976)




umebachi was the family crest of the Maeda clan.
Kaga-umebachi kamon
Umebachi kamon in the shape of an ume blossom is the family crest of the Maedas of Daishoji clan (a branch family of Kaga clan) who originated Kutaniyaki Porcelain. An ume, together with a chrysanthemum, bamboo and an orchid was one of four flowers likened to wise man in old China, and the crest has deep relation with Tenjin faith.
The design is classified roughly into two patterns -realistic pattern and geometric pattern in the shape of ume blossom with five single petals. The Maedas used design to be called Kaga-umebachi that intended particular distinction from other similar family crests in shape of ume blossom.
source : kutanimus-volunteers.com


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啓蟄の日がとどきたり釘隠
小室善弘

春荒れのひと夜や鶴の釘隠し
長崎玲子

水亭は釘隠さへかきつばた
飴山實

行く春や緑青をふく釘隠し
渡部義雄

釘隠良夜の釘を隠しをり
真鍋呉夫

黴の戸の栄枯高きに釘隠
古舘曹人


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. Japanese Architecture - Interior Design - The Japanese Home .


. senryu, senryū 川柳 Senryu poems in Edo .


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[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
- - - - - #kugi #nailkugi #takekugi #kugikakushi #kui - - - - -
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1/09/2015

- BACKUP Edo Yasai

Original Link
http://washokufood.blogspot.jp/2009/02/edo-yasai.html
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Edo-Vegetables (Edo yasai)

The special vegetables grown in Edo (and still now in Tokyo) to feed the shoogun and the inhabitants of Edo castle and the whole town.
Edo dentoo yasai 江戸伝統野菜
Traditional vegetables of Edo

Edo Tokyo Yasai 江戸東京野菜


CLICK for original LINK


. Edo no takenoko 江戸の筍 bamboo shoots in Edo .

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CLICK for original and more photos

Kameido daikon 亀戸大根 large radish from Kameido
it grows about 30 long, a small daikon. It is very white and was loved for its color, an early spring harbinger.

.... Nerima daikon 練馬大根 from Nerima
has been introduced by Tokugawa Tsunayoshi, 5th shogun, to help feed the growing population of Edo. It is usually prepared as takuan pickles.
The radish is scrabbed with the skin of shark fish (dry skin is soaked in water to make it softer), then pickled in rice bran. Thus the vitamiens of the rice bran would soak easily into the radish.
For the poor people of Edo this was a cheap way to prevent beri-beri disease, which was caused by the polished white rice.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


quote
The most famous of the daikons of Edo is the Nerima daikon. High in fiber, it is perfect for making takuan pickles. The crispy takuan made with Nerima daikon was a favorite of the Edoites and helped artisans and laborers supplement the salt that they had sweat away.

The Kameido daikon, first cultivated in the Kameido area during the Bunkyu era (1861-64), is another famous daikon of Edo. It was favored by Edoites as an early spring vegetable for its dense flesh and the suitability of both root and leaves for pickling.

The Miura Peninsula in Kanagawa Prefecture has also been a center of Japanese radish production for ages, as evidenced by documents dating as far back as 1841. The Miura daikon, which would later become a big name in the vegetable world, is a natural hybrid between the Nerima daikon and locally grown varieties, such as the Koenbo and Nakabukura.

The Nerima, Kameido, and Miura daikons were all popularly cultivated until the middle or latter half of the Showa era (1926-1989) and formed the cornerstones of a rich food culture. But their production would soon plummet. Diseases and natural disasters, the urbanization of former farmland, the hassle of harvesting, changes in consumer diets, and the expansion of nuclear families all undermined the production of these local varieties.
source : www.tokyofoundation.org / Daikon


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Edogawa
komatsuna こまつな (小松菜) leafy vegetabel, like spinach
Brassica campestris
from Edogawa 江戸川区小松川 Edogawa Komatsuna
Has been grown there since Shogun Yoshimune ordered it.

Komatsuna, or spinach mustard,
is commonly eaten during the New Year. In season from November through March, nearly 10,000 tons of spinach mustard is produced yearly in Edogawa Ward. Komatsuna gets its name from the Komatsugawa district, which includes Edogawa, Katsushika and Adachi wards. Tokyo was the second-largest regional producer of komatsuna in 2004.
The hardy green vegetable tastes best in winter, when its leaves become rich in flavor. Komatsuna is served blanched or in zoni boiled rice cake soup. Demand for komatsuna peaks around this time of the year.
source : www.metro.tokyo.jp / with PHOTO


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Koganei 小金井
They grow some kinds of old vegetables.
Most is grown in hothouses near the homes of the farmers and now used for bringing life back into the community (machiokoshi, machi okoshi).

nagakabu 長カブ long turnips
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

noraboona のらぼう菜 leafy vegetable
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

ookura daikon 大蔵大根(おおくらだいこん)extra large radish
It grows up to 50 cm lenght and is very compact. Good for boiling, since it does not change its form.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

shintorina しんとりな / しんとり菜 leafy stem vegetable
. . . CLICK here for Photos !


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Kanamachi kokabu 金町こかぶ / 金町小かぶ
small turnips from Kanamachi
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



Magome 馬込 from Magome
Magome sansui ninjin 馬込三寸人参(まごめさんすいにんじん)
Magome hanjiro kyuuri 馬込半白胡瓜(まごめはんじろきゅうり



Naitoo kabocha ないとうかぼちゃ / 内藤(ないとう)かぼちゃ
pumpkin from Naito
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



Senjuunegi, Senjuu negi 千住葱 leek from Senju, Senjunegi 千寿葱
They are best when simply grilled over charcoal.




Shinagawa kabu 品川カブ turnips from Shinagawa
. . . CLICK here for Photos !



Takinogawa ninjin 滝野川人参(たきのがわにんじん)
carrots from Takinogawa



Terashima nasu 寺島なす eggplants from Terashima



udo, Tokyo udo 東京うど udo from Tokyo
Aralia cordata Thunb
yama udo 山独活 Mountain spikenard
"mountain asparagus". A mountain vegetable which produces fat, white, edible stalks.
Its tender stalks are similar to asparagus, their flavor is a light fennel. It is also one of the "Kyoto Vegetables".
Peel the outer layer of the stem, cut in oblong pieces, soak in vinegar-water and dry. Eat with vinegared dressings or vinegar miso. The very top of the plant can be used for tempura.

CLICK for more photos It is grown deep under the earth about 4 meters deep in long tunnels (udo muro "独活室”) in Tachikawa 立川.
Very crunchy to the taste (shakishaki, knusprig).
Locally it is served as udo ramen soup 独活ラーメン or in a dressing with salmon like a western asparagus salad (Spargelsalat).
Other specialities from Tachikawa 立川ウド are
udo arare
Kichijoji Udo 吉祥寺ウド is also known.

udo senbei
udo yookan
udo dorayaki
udo pai
. . . CLICK here for Tachikawa Udo Photos !

moyashi udo もやしうど white udo sprouts
A whole group of local farmers continue with the growing of this udo and develop new dishes with it.

udo ae, udo-ae 独活和 (うどあえ) spikenard in dressing
kigo for late spring

udo no kinpira うどのきんぴら boiled in soy sauce and sugar

. . . CLICK here for Photos !
Western asparagus is called "seiyoo udo" 西洋独活.


nanka udo なんかウド/ 軟化独活 soft white udo
grown in Tochigi in special trenches in the dark and harvested three times a year.
They made it to a local speciality, with udo gyooza 独活餃子 at the local chinese restaurant.
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

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Waseda myooga 早稲田茗荷 / みょうが Myoga from Waseda

Yanaka shooga 谷中生姜 ginger from Yanaka


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Worldwide use


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Things found on the way


Tokyo Pigs

Tokyo X buta 東京X豚 Tokyo X pork from special pigs
. . . CLICK here for Photos !

Tokyo-X is a new Japanese breed, bred for high quality pork production. It is unusual for its marbled meat, seldom seen in pork.
Breeding Tokyo-X started in 1990 by the Tokyo Metropolitan Livestock Experiment Station. They combined bloodlines from the Duroc (USA), Berkshire (UK) and a Beijing Black (China) breeds. After five generations of breeding and selection, the first meat was marketed in 1997.
Often processed into a Tokyo Curry.


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- new addition to this file only -

. 業平のシジミ―― Shijimi corbicula from Narihira .

・浅草海苔―― Asakusa Nori
古くは深川あたりでノリがとれたが、まもなく品川沖から大森沖が名産地となった。加工・販売の店が浅草に多かったので「浅草海苔」の名になったとも。江戸土産の第一。
・佃煮 ―― Tsukudani
佃島の漁民が雑魚を醤油で煮しめて、日持ちをよくして人気を呼んだ。とりわけ白魚の佃煮は高級品で、珍重された。
・駒込茄子―― Eggplants from Komagome
なすは各所で作られたが、ブランド品といったら「駒込なす」だった。
・砂村のスイカ―― watermelons from Sunamachi
砂村は、現在の江東区南砂・東砂・新砂のあたり。カボチャやネギ、キュウリなども名産で、促成栽培で、また名をあげた。
・目黒の筍―― bamboo shoots from Meguro
目黒、碑文谷周辺。目黒不動の参詣土産に出して、名産品のうわさが広がった。 上記のほかに、現在の江戸川区・小松川あたりで作られた小松菜、谷中のしょうが、千住のネ ギなども、名産品として知られました。

- reference source : norenkai.net -


. 目黒の筍 bamboo shoots from Meguro .
They were grown in the 碑文谷村 Himonya village since 1772.


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Related words

CLICK for more photos
Edo Tokyo Yasai 江戸東京野菜



***** WASHOKU : Kyooyasai 京野菜 Vegetables from Kyoto

***** . 100 Favorite Dishes of Edo - 江戸料理百選

***** . Tokyo - Local Dishes

***** WASHOKU : INGREDIENTS

WASHOKU : General Information

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. Edo 青物町 Aomonocho "vegetable" district .
Edo no Aomono Ichiba 江戸の青物市場 Vegetable Markets in Edo
In the "three vegetable district" 青物三ケ町 Aomono Sangamachi in Kanda
Tachō, 多町 Tacho - 連雀町 Renjakucho - 永富町 Eifukucho
- - - aomono uri 青物売り vegetable vendor

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1/08/2015

Shikoku - Gallery

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Shikoku 四国 



Ehime / Iyo 愛媛 / 伊予
Kagawa / Sanuki 香川 / 讃岐
Kochi / Tosa 高知 / 土佐
Tokushima / Awa 徳島 / 阿波


- quote
Shikoku (四国, "four provinces")
is the smallest of the four main islands of Japan, located south of Honshū and east of the island of Kyūshū.
Its ancient names include Iyo-no-futana-shima (伊予之二名島), Iyo-shima (伊予島), and Futana-shima (二名島). The current name refers to the four former provinces which made up the island: Awa, Tosa, Sanuki, and Iyo.
- - - More in the WIKIPEDIA !

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- - - - - Introduced in the Darumapedia - - - - -

Henro  遍路  Shikoku Henro Temple List
Pilgrimage to 88 temples in honor of Kobo Daishi Kukai
. Shikoku Henro Temple List .

. Shibaten しばてん / 芝天 otter and Kappa from Tosa .


. Matsuri - Festivals in Shikoku .

. Mingei - Toys and Amulets from Shikoku .




. Washoku - Regional Dishes from Shikoku .

. Sweets from Shikoku .


. Mita Shikoku Machi 三田四国町 "Shikoku Town" in Mita .
Tokyo, 港区 Minato ward, 芝2-5丁目 Shiba second to fifth sub-district


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- - - - - Famous people from Shikoku - - - - -

Iwasaki Yataroo 岩崎弥太郎 Iwasaki Yataro
(1834 - 1885)
Japanese financier and shipping industrialist, and the founder of Mitsubishi 三菱.

. Masaoka Shiki 正岡子規 - Haiku Poet .
(1867 - 1902)

. Sakamoto Ryooma 坂本龍馬 Sakamoto Ryoma .
(1836 – 1867) - Sakamoto Ryuma


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- - - To join me on facebook, click the image !

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[ . BACK to WORLDKIGO . TOP . ]
- #shikoku -
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1/03/2015

- BACKUP - Bakumatsu Persons

[ . BACK to DARUMA MUSEUM TOP . ]
. Persons and People of Edo - Personen .
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Daruma Pilgrims Gallery

This is a backup entry only.

. People People People
The BAKUMATSU aera
1853 - 1867 .




















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People People People
The BAKUMATSU aera

1853 - 1867

Foreigners who took an interest in Japan or
had an influence on the developing culture of modern Japan.


During the Bakumatsu Period and after the Meiji Restoration, many foreigners came to Japan and some of them left us great photo collections.
. Photo Collections 写真集 .


- quote
Bakumatsu 幕末 bakumatsu, "Late Tokugawa Shogunate",
(literally "end of the military camp [government") refers to the final years of the Edo period when the Tokugawa shogunate ended. Between 1853 and 1867 Japan ended its isolationist foreign policy known as sakoku and changed from a feudal shogunate to the Meiji government.
- - - More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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Aime, Humbert Aime エメ アンベール
(1819-1900)

Le Japon illustre - par Aime Humbert


source : www.yushodo.co.jp



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William John Alt
(1840-1905) ウィリアム・オールト
British merchant

William John Alt was born April 4, 1840 in Greenwich, England. At the age of twelve he entered the Merchant Service. Seven years later he joined the Customs Service in China, but left for Nagasaki later the same year after the port was opened to foreign trade. He registered with the British Consulate in Nagasaki January 6, 1860 as a general commission agent.
Like his fellow young merchant-adventurer from Britain, Thomas Glover, William Alt made a considerable fortune in the first decade of the foreign settlement by trading tea, marine products, ships and weapons.
source : jeff.jetsets.jp


source : THE ALT HOUSE:
YESTERDAY, TODAY AND TOMORROW


. Reference .


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Bird, Isabella Bird, Isabella Lucy Bird イザベラ・バード
(1831-1904)

English explorer, writer, and a natural historian.
. . . she went traveling to Asia: Japan, China, Vietnam, Singapore and Malaysia.

© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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Richard Henry Brunton
(26 December 1841 – 24 April 1901)

was the so-called "Father of Japanese lighthouses". Brunton was born in Muchalls, Kincardineshire, Scotland. He was employed by the Japanese Government as an o-yatoi gaikokujin to build lighthouses in Japan.

CLICK for more photos and portrait
Under pressure from British ambassador Sir Harry Parkes to fulfil its obligations to make the waters and harbors of Japan safe for shipping, the Japanese government hired the Edinburgh-based firm of D. and T. Stevenson to chart coastal waters and to build lighthouses where appropriate. The project had already begun under French foreign advisor Léonce Verny, but was not proceeding fast enough for the British.
FRGS, Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



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. Thomas Blake Glover トーマス グラバー
A famous Scottish weapon dealer in Nagasaki. His estate is now a museum, it is the first western-style building in Japan.


quote
The Scot who shaped Japan

History has not been generous in crediting the crucial roles played by maverick trader Thomas Blake Glover in casting off feudalism and ushering in the modern age. But as the centenary of this most singular Victorian nears, Michael Gardiner sets the record straight

This coming Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, marks the centenary of the death in his opulent home in the Shiba Park area of Tokyo's central Azabu district of the Scottish-born trader Thomas Blake Glover, who became the first foreigner ever decorated by the Japanese government when he was awarded the Order of the Rising Sun (second class) in 1908.

Despite that remarkable distinction, however, Glover's life and his contribution to the creation of modern Japan and, unknown (but not unsensed) by him, to its ultimate humiliation in 1945, has registered only unevenly and with some unease in today's still often palpably postwar Japan. And that despite it being a tale of such ambiguities, such outright roguery and cutthroat capitalism — and yet of such vision, too — that it beggars belief it has not already had the "Last Samurai" treatment.
..... For all that, and despite the fact that Glover House now gets 2 million visitors a year, including many on school trips, there have been no serious historical dramatizations of Glover's remarkable life and role in history, even though there is a background enthusiasm for his modernizing energy and willingness to negotiate in unfamiliar and dangerous surroundings.

MORE By MICHAEL GARDINER
source : Japan Times, December 11, 2011

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Iwasaki Yataro 岩崎弥太郎
Tosa Domain . He was close to Sakamoto Ryoma.
CLICK for more photos

Tsukumo Shokai, "Mitsubishi Shokai" in March 1873


. Sakamoto Ryoma (Sakamoto Ryuma) 坂本龍馬
(January 3, 1836 – 10 December 1867)



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Ranald MacDonald
(3 February 1824 – August 24, 1894)
was the first man to teach the English language in Japan, including educating Einosuke Moriyama, one of the chief interpreters to handle the negotiations between Commodore Perry and the Tokugawa Shogunate.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !



Native American in the Land of the Shogun
Ranald MacDonald and the Opening of Japan

Frederik L. Schodt
Stone Bridge Press




Of no relation to the hamburger chain of a similar-sounding name, he was born in 1824 in the area of what is now Astoria, Oregon.
The son of a Chinook Indian princess and a prominent Scottish official in the Hudson's Bay company in the area, he grew up in the rich natural and cultural environment of the early nineteenth century Pacific Northwest.
source : READ MORE


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Kenneth Ross MacKenzie
local agent for Jardine, Matheson and Company.

. Reference .


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James Mitchell
Scottish shipbuilder, owner of "Aberdeen Yard" in Nagasaki.


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Laurence Oliphant
(1829 – 23 December 1888)
was a British author, international traveller, diplomatist and mystic.

Oliphant was Lord Elgin's private secretary on his expedition to China and Japan. In 1861 he was appointed first secretary of the British legation in Japan under Minister Plenipotentiary (later Sir) Rutherford Alcock, and might have made a successful diplomatic career if it had not been interrupted, almost at the outset, by a night attack on the legation, in which he nearly lost his life. He permanently lost the full use of his hand. It seems probable that he never properly recovered from this affair.

He arrived at Edo at the end of June 1861.
On the evening of 5 July a night attack was made on the legation by xenophobic ronin.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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Wirgman, Charles Wirgman チャールズ・ワーグマン
(1832 - 1891)


an English artist and cartoonist, the creator of the Japan Punch and illustrator in China and Meiji period Japan for the Illustrated London News.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !
002 - 102

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Ernest Satow - Sir Ernest Mason Satow
(30 June 1843 - 26 August 1929)
アーネスト・サトウ (Asnesuto Satoo)
British scholar, diplomat and Japanologist.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !

Satow's publication Sakuron 策論 / サトウ 著
at the Waseda University digital collection an influential book in the mid-1850s during the Edo bakumatsu period leading to the Meiji Restoration.
- source : wul.waseda.ac.jp/kotenseki -


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Schliemann, Johannes Heinrich Schliemann
ヨハン・ルートヴィヒ・ハインリヒ・ユリウス・シュリーマン

(1822 - 1890)

a German businessman and a pioneer of field archaeology.
archaeological excavator of Hissarlik, now presumed to be the site of Troy,
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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Scidmore, Eliza Ruhamah Scidmore エリザ・ルアマー・シドモア
(1856 - 1928)

an American writer, photographer and geographer, who became the first female board member of the National Geographic Society.
She visited Japan many times between 1885 and 1928.
© More in the WIKIPEDIA !


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Suenson, Edouard Suenson エドゥアルド・スエンソン
(1842 - 1921)

"Skitserfra Japan" - his book about Edo

- - Reference - -


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After Meiji


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Jack Seward
(1924 – November 2010)

leading expert on Japan
has written forty-four books on Japan
Author of : Strange but True Stories from Japan
Japanese In Action
. Reference


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West meets East - East "out-Wests the West"
a history of misunderstandings and mis-interpretations

Japan as Other: Orientalism and Cultural Conflict

Steven L. Rosen

The Myth of Asia - by John M. Steadman

Neurotic Beauty: An Outsider Looks At Japan
February 23, 2015
by Morris Berman

. Discussion of facebook, July 2015 .

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A Career of Japan:
Baron Raimund von Stillfried
and Early Yokohama Photography




A Career of Japan is the first study of one of the major photographers and personalities of nineteenth-century Japan. Baron Raimund von Stillfried was the most important foreign-born photographer of the Meiji era and one of the first globally active photographers of his generation. He played a key role in the international image of Japan and the adoption of photography within Japanese society itself. Yet, the lack of a thorough study of his activities, travels, and work has been a fundamental gap in both Japanese- and Western-language scholarship. Based on extensive new primary sources and unpublished documents from archives around the world, this book examines von Stillfried’s significance as a cultural mediator between Japan and Central Europe. It highlights the tensions and fierce competition that underpinned the globalising photographic industry at a site of cultural contact and exchange – treaty-port Yokohama. In the process, it raises key questions for Japanese visual culture, Habsburg studies, and cross-cultural histories of photography and globalisation.

“Luke Gartlan’s book is a compelling and enjoyable read, and contributes major new perspectives to the growing field of Meiji photography. It will certainly be the authoritative work on Raimund von Stillfried, but it is also impressive for its contributions to other important areas of Meiji cultural studies, including representations of the emperor, photography of Hokkaido, and world’s fairs.”
Bert Winther-Tamaki (University of California, Irvine)
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1/02/2015

Ii Naosuke - backup

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http://darumapedia-persons.blogspot.jp/2016/02/ii-naosuke-sakuradamon.html
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Ii Naosuke 井伊直弼
(November 29, 1815 – March 24, 1860)



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A daimyo of Hikone (1850–1860) and also Tairō of Tokugawa Shogunate, Japan, a position he held from April 23, 1858 until his death on March 24, 1860. He is most famous for signing the Harris Treaty with the United States, granting access to ports for trade to American merchants and seamen and extraterritoriality to American citizens. He was also an enthusiastic and accomplished practitioner of the Japanese tea ceremony, in the Sekishūryū style, and his writings include at least two works on the tea ceremony.

Under Ii Naosuke’s guidance, the Tokugawa shogunate navigated past a particularly difficult conflict over the succession to the ailing and childless Tokugawa Iesada. Ii Naosuke managed to coerce the Tokugawa Shogunate to its last brief resurgence of its power and position in Japanese society before the start of the Meiji period. Ii was assassinated in the Sakuradamon incident by a group of 17 Mito and 1 Satsuma samurai on March 24, 1860.


Edo Castle's Sakurada Gate – photographed by Felix Beato, 1863–1870.

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- - - - - Tairō
In 1858 after Hotta Masayoshi’s disastrous attempt to obtain the emperor’s approval for the Harris treaty the Tokugawa Shogun, Tokugawa Iesada (徳川家定), chose Ii Naosuke to be the Tairō (Great Elder); a decision influenced by the Kii Party. The position of Tairō, a post traditionally held by members of the Ii family, was rarely filled; in fact there had only been three Tairō between 1700 and Ii Naosuke’s rise to power 158 years later. Ii’s promotion to the post of Tairō annoyed many of the shinpan daimyo (daimyo related to the Shogun, they were unable to be members of the bakufu, but in the event of the Shogun dying heirless the next Shogun would be chosen from one of the shinpan families) including Tokugawa Nariaki. As the Tairō Ii Naosuke had both prestige and power second only to the Shogun; Ii also enjoyed the full backing of the Fudai daimyo. An intelligent and capable politician Ii Naosuke was determined to restore the power of the bakufu in Japanese policy making, both in a domestic and a foreign role.
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- - - - - Kōbu gattai and the Kazunomiya marriage 公武合体
Kōbu Gattai is the policy of binding Kyoto and Edo closer together to shore up the failing shogunate with the prestige of the imperial court. This policy was to be carried out by means of a marriage between the Shogun and the Emperor’s younger sister, Princess Kazunomiya.
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© More in the WIKIPEDIA !

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The daimyo of Hikone Ii Naosuke 井伊直弼 had meat from Omi cows  近江牛 prepared as misozuke, pickled in miso paste, and send it to Edo to the Tokugawa Shogun, especially also to Nariaki of Mito 水戸斉昭.
Nariaki even wrote a letter to thank for the meat.

Original from ...  slia.on.arena.ne.jp/rekishi/index.html
徳川斉昭書状別紙, 嘉永元年(1848年)12月
(彦根城博物館蔵)

The beef from Hikone was also dried in the cold 「寒」の干牛肉 during the coldest month of January and then eaten as "medicine".
When Ii Naosuke was killed in the Sakuradamon incident on March 24, 1860, by a group of samurai from Mito, the shipments to Mito Tokugawa Nariaki stopped and Nariaki was quite unhappy about this turn of events.

. Eating Meat in Edo .

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Sakurada Mon 桜田門 lit. Gate of the Field of Cherry Trees


source : 桜田門外の変」を歩く

Sakurada mon is Nr. 10

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. Kawase Hasui 川瀬巴水 (1883 - 1957) .


Sakurada Gate



Sakurada Gate in Spring Rain


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The Sakuradamon Incident 桜田門外の変 Sakuradamon-gai no Hen
桜田門の変 Sakuradamon no Hen


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the assassination of Japanese Chief Minister (Tairō) Ii Naosuke (1815–1860) on 24 March 1860 by rōnin samurai of the Mito Domain, outside the Sakurada Gate of Edo Castle.

The assassination took place outside the Shogun's Edo Castle in Edo (modern Tokyo), just as Ii Naosuke was reaching the premises. Ii Naosuke had been warned about his safety, and many encouraged him to retire from office, but he refused, replying that "My own safety is nothing when I see the danger threatening the future of the country".



A total of 17 Mito rōnin ambushed Ii Naosuke together with Arimura Jisaemon (有村次左衛門), a samurai from Satsuma Domain. While an attack at the front drew the attention of the guards, a lone assassin fired one shot into the palanquin containing Ii Naosuke, with a Japanese-made Colt 1851 Navy Revolver, which had been copied from the firearms that Perry had given the Shogunate as gifts. Drawing the injured and likely paralyzed Ii Naosuke out, Arimura decapitated Ii Naosuke and then committed seppuku.
Arimura Jisaemon, on the point of committing the assassination.

The conspirators carried a manifesto on themselves, outlining the reason for their act:
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- - - - - Consequences
The popular upheaval against foreign encroachment and assassination of Ii Naosuke forced the Bakufu to soften its stance, and to adopt a compromise policy of Kōbu Gattai ("Union of the Emperor and the Shogun") suggested by Satsuma Domain and Mito Domain, in which both parties vied for political supremacy in the years to follow. This soon amplified into the violent Sonnō Jōi ("Revere the Emperor, Expel the Barbarians") movement.

For the following years until the fall of Bakufu in 1868, Edo, and more generally the streets of Japan, would remain notably hazardous for Bakufu officials (see attack on Andō Nobumasa) and foreigners alike (Richardson murder), as the Sonno Joi movement continued to expand. According to Sir Ernest Satow: "A bloody revenge was taken on the individual [Ii Naosuke], but the hostility to the system only increased with time, and in the end brought about its complete ruin".

The conflict reached its resolution with the military defeat of the Shogunate in the Boshin war, and the installation of the Meiji restoration in 1868.
- - - More in the WIKIPEDIA !




source : d4.dion.ne.jp/~ponskp/bakumatsu

On the famous painting of the incident, you can see some normal Samurai without shoes.
It was winter and a rare snowfall of about 20 cm kept the rather unprotected palanquin bearers and accompanying samurai cold. So many of the 60 people in the procession, who were only hired for the job, did not protect Naosuke but just run away when they heard the shots.
(Some sources quote one shot, others quote two or more.)

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春寒料峭井伊直弼に手を合はす
shunkan ryooshoo Ii Naosuke ni te o awasu

very cold spring day -
I fold my hands
for Ii Naosuke


Kawasaki Tenkoo 川崎展宏 Kawasaki Tenko (1927 - 2009)

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鳥帰る桜田門を掃き終り
斉藤夏風


浮寝鳥桜田門の日向かな
瀧井孝作




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- Reference - Japanese 桜田門の変 -
- Reference - English sakuradamon-


. Introducing Japanese Haiku Poets .

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