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Edo

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Edo



 
 
, literally: bay
Headlands and bays

Headlands and bays are two related features of the coastal environment....
-door
Door

A door is a moveable barrier used to cover an opening. Doors are used widely and are found in walls or partitions of a building or space, furniture such as cupboards, cage s, vehicles, and containers....
, "estuary
Estuary

An estuary is a semi-enclosed coastal body of water with one or more rivers or streams flowing into it, and with a free connection to the open sea....
", ), also romanized
Romanization of Japanese

The romanization of Japanese or is the use of the Latin alphabet to write the Japanese language. Japanese is normally written in logogram borrowed from Chinese and syllabary scripts ....
 as Yedo or Yeddo, is the former name
Geographical renaming

Geographical renaming is the act of changing the Geonym of a geography feature or area. This can range from the uncontroversial change of a street name to a highly disputed change to the name of a country....
 of the Japanese capital
Capital of Japan

Tokyo, the seat of the Government of Japan and home of the Emperor of Japan, is de-facto Capital of Japan. This is generally not in dispute, but it is not legally defined....
 Tokyo
Tokyo

, officially , is one of the 47 prefectures of Japan of Japan and located on the eastern side of the main island Honshu. The twenty-three special wards of Tokyo, each governed as a city, cover the area that was once the Tokyo City in the eastern part of the prefecture, and total over 8 million people....
, and was the seat of power for the Tokugawa shogunate
Tokugawa shogunate

The Tokugawa shogunate, also known as the , and the , was a feudalism regime of Japan established by Tokugawa Ieyasu and ruled by the shoguns of the Tokugawa family....
 which ruled Japan from 1603 to 1868. During this period it grew to become one of the largest cities in the world and the site of a vibrant urban culture centered on notions of the "floating world
Ukiyo

Ukiyo described the urban life style, especially the pleasure-seeking aspects, of Edo Period Japan .This view of the Floating World is centered on Yoshiwara, the licensed red-light district of Edo ....
".

Edo magistrates

From the establishment of the Tokugawa bakufu's headquarters at Edo, Kyoto remained merely the formal capital of the country.






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, literally: bay
Headlands and bays

Headlands and bays are two related features of the coastal environment....
-door
Door

A door is a moveable barrier used to cover an opening. Doors are used widely and are found in walls or partitions of a building or space, furniture such as cupboards, cage s, vehicles, and containers....
, "estuary
Estuary

An estuary is a semi-enclosed coastal body of water with one or more rivers or streams flowing into it, and with a free connection to the open sea....
", ), also romanized
Romanization of Japanese

The romanization of Japanese or is the use of the Latin alphabet to write the Japanese language. Japanese is normally written in logogram borrowed from Chinese and syllabary scripts ....
 as Yedo or Yeddo, is the former name
Geographical renaming

Geographical renaming is the act of changing the Geonym of a geography feature or area. This can range from the uncontroversial change of a street name to a highly disputed change to the name of a country....
 of the Japanese capital
Capital of Japan

Tokyo, the seat of the Government of Japan and home of the Emperor of Japan, is de-facto Capital of Japan. This is generally not in dispute, but it is not legally defined....
 Tokyo
Tokyo

, officially , is one of the 47 prefectures of Japan of Japan and located on the eastern side of the main island Honshu. The twenty-three special wards of Tokyo, each governed as a city, cover the area that was once the Tokyo City in the eastern part of the prefecture, and total over 8 million people....
, and was the seat of power for the Tokugawa shogunate
Tokugawa shogunate

The Tokugawa shogunate, also known as the , and the , was a feudalism regime of Japan established by Tokugawa Ieyasu and ruled by the shoguns of the Tokugawa family....
 which ruled Japan from 1603 to 1868. During this period it grew to become one of the largest cities in the world and the site of a vibrant urban culture centered on notions of the "floating world
Ukiyo

Ukiyo described the urban life style, especially the pleasure-seeking aspects, of Edo Period Japan .This view of the Floating World is centered on Yoshiwara, the licensed red-light district of Edo ....
".

History


Edo magistrates

  • Ishimaru Sadatsuga, 1661.


From the establishment of the Tokugawa bakufu's headquarters at Edo, Kyoto remained merely the formal capital of the country. The de facto capital was now Edo, because it was the center of real political power. Edo consequently rapidly grew from what had been a small, virtually unknown fishing village in 1457 to a metropolis of 1,000,000 residents by 1721, the largest city in the world at the time.

Edo was repeatedly devastated by fires, with the Great Fire of Meireki
Great Fire of Meireki

The , also known as the Furisode Fire, destroyed 60-70% of the Japanese capital city of Edo on March 2, 1657, this is the third year of the Meireki nengo....
 in 1657—in which an estimated 100,000 people died—perhaps the most disastrous. During the Edo period
Edo period

The , or , is a division of History of Japan running from 1603 to 1868. The period marks the governance of the Edo or Tokugawa shogunate, which was officially established in 1603 by the first Edo shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu....
 there were about one hundred fires, typically started by accident and often quickly escalating to giant proportions, spreading through neighbourhoods of wooden
machiya
Machiya

are traditional wooden townhouses found throughout Japan and typified in the historical capital of Kyoto. Machiya and noka constitute the two categories of Japanese vernacular architecture known as minka ....
that were heated with charcoal fires. Between 1600 and 1945, Edo/Tokyo was leveled every 25–50 years or so by fire, earthquakes, tsunami, volcanic eruptions, and war.

In 1868, when the shogun
Shogun

is a military rank and historical title for Hereditary Commanders in Chief of the Armed Forces of Japan. The Japanese word for "general", it is made up of two kanji characters: sho, meaning "commander", "general", or "admiral", and gun meaning military troops or warriors....
ate came to an end, the city was renamed
Tokyo, meaning "eastern capital", and the emperor moved his residence to Tokyo, making the city the formal capital of Japan.

  • Keio 4, on the 17th day of the 7th month (September 3, 1868): Edo
    Edo

    , literally: Headlands and bays-door, "estuary", ), also Romanization of Japanese as Yedo or Yeddo, is the Geographical renaming of the Capital of Japan Tokyo, and was the seat of power for the Tokugawa shogunate which ruled Japan from 1603 to 1868....
     was renamed "Tokyo
    Tokyo

    , officially , is one of the 47 prefectures of Japan of Japan and located on the eastern side of the main island Honshu. The twenty-three special wards of Tokyo, each governed as a city, cover the area that was once the Tokyo City in the eastern part of the prefecture, and total over 8 million people....
    ," i.e. meaning "Eastern Capital."
  • Keio 4, on the 27th day of the 8th month, (October 12, 1868): Emperor Meiji
    Emperor Meiji

    The or Meiji the Great was the 122nd Emperor of Japan of Japan according to the traditional order of succession, reigning from 3 February 1867 until his death....
     is crowned in the Shishin-den in Kyoto.
  • Keio 4, on the 8th day of the 9th month (October 23, 1868): The nengo is formally changed from Keio to Meiji; and a general amnesty is granted.


  • Meiji 2, on the 23rd day of the 10th month (1868): The emperor went to Tokyo; and Edo castle became an Imperial palace.


Government and administration

During the Edo period, the Shogunate appointed administrators called
machi bugyo to run the police and, from the time of Tokugawa Yoshimune
Tokugawa Yoshimune

was the eighth shogun of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan, ruling from 1716 until his abdication in 1745. He was the son of Tokugawa Mitsusada, the grandson of Tokugawa Yorinobu, and the great-grandson of Tokugawa Ieyasu....
 onward, the commoner fire department
Fire department

A fire department is a public sector or private sector organization that provides fire protection for a certain jurisdiction, which typically is a municipality, county, or fire protection district....
 (
machibikeshi). The machi bugyo heard criminal and civil suits and performed other administrative functions.

Geography

The city was arranged as a castle town, around Edo castle. The area immediately surrounding the castle, known as the "Yamanote", consisted largely of
daimyo
Daimyo

The were powerful territorial lords who ruled most of Japan from their vast, hereditary land holdings. The term derives from a shortening of the title , which literally means "great named land" and originally simply referred to the owner of a large estate....
(feudal lords') mansions, whose families lived in Edo year-round as part of the sankin kotai
Sankin kotai

Sankin kotai was a policy of the shogunate during most of the Edo period of History of Japan. The purpose was to control the daimyo. In adopting the policy, the shogunate was continuing and refining similar policies of Toyotomi Hideyoshi....
system; the daimyo themselves made journeys in alternating years to Edo and made use of these mansions for their extensive entourages. It was this extensive samurai
Samurai

is the term for the military nobility of Pre-industrial society Japan. According to translator William Scott Wilson: "In Chinese, the character ? was originally a verb meaning to wait upon or accompany a person in the upper ranks of society, and this is also true of the original term in Japanese, saburau....
 (noble warrior class) population which defined the character of Edo, particularly in contrast to the two major cities of Kyoto and Osaka
Osaka

is a Cities of Japan in Japan, located at the mouth of the Yodo River on Osaka Bay, in the Kansai region of the main island of Honshu.Osaka is a City designated by government ordinance under the Local Autonomy Law and the capital city of Osaka Prefecture....
, neither of which were ruled by a
daimyo or had any significant samurai population. Kyoto's character was dominated by the Imperial Court, the court nobles
Kuge

The kuge was a Japanese aristocratic Social class that dominated the Japanese imperial court in Kyoto until the rise of the Shogunate in the 12th century at which point it was eclipsed by the daimyo....
, its numerous Buddhist temples, and its traditional heritage and identity, while Osaka was the country's commercial center, dominated by the
chonin
Chonin

was a social class that emerged in Japan during the early years of the Edo period period. The majority of chonin were merchants, but some were craftsmen, as well....
merchant class.

Other areas further from the center were the domains of commoners, or
chonin, literally "townsfolk." The area known as Shitamachi
Shitamachi

The traditional name for the area of Tokyo going from Taito, Tokyo-ku to Chiyoda-ku and Chuo, Tokyo-ku, the physically low part of the city next to, and particularly east of, the Sumida river.Although superficially similar to the English term downtown and often thought to be analogous or even related to it, the term has in fact a differe...
 (??, lit. "lower town" or "downtown"), to the northeast of the castle, was perhaps one of the key centers of urban culture. The ancient Buddhist temple of Senso-ji
Senso-ji

is an ancient Buddhist temple located in Asakusa, Taito, Tokyo. It is Tokyo's oldest temple, and one of its most significant. Formerly associated with the Tendai sect, it became independent after World War II....
 still stands in Asakusa
Asakusa

File:Kaminarimon1500.jpg is a district in Taito, Tokyo, Japan, most famous for the Senso-ji, a Buddhist temple dedicated to the bodhisattva Kannon. There are several more temples in Asakusa, as well as various festivals....
 and marks the center of an area of traditional "low-town" culture. Some of the shops in the streets before the temple have been carried on continuously in the same location since the Edo period.

The Sumida River
Sumida River

The Sumida River is a river which flows through Tokyo, Japan. It branches from the Arakawa River at Iwabuchi and flows into Tokyo Bay. Its tributaries include the Kanda River and Shakujii River rivers....
, then simply called the Great River, ran along the eastern edge of the city, along which one would find the shogunate's official rice storage warehouses and other official buildings, along with some of the city's most famous restaurants.

The Edo Bridge
Nihonbashi

, or Nihombashi, is a business district of Chuo, Tokyo, Japan which grew up around the bridge of the same name which has linked two sides of the Nihonbashi River at this site since the 17th century....
 (???,
Edo-bashi) marked the center of the city's commercial center, an area also known as Kuramae (??, "in front of the storehouses"). Many fishermen, craftsmen, and other producers and retailers operated here, as did shippers who managed ships to and from Osaka (called tarubune) and other cities, either taking goods into the city, or simply transferring them from sea-routes onto river barges or onto land routes such as the Tokaido
Tokaido (road)

The was the most important of the Edo_Five_Routes of the Edo period, connecting Edo to Kyoto in Japan. Unlike the inland and less heavily travelled Nakasendo, the Tokaido travelled along the sea coast of eastern Honshu, hence the route's name....
, which terminated here. The area remains the center of Tokyo's financial and business district today.

The northeastern corner of the city, regarded as a dangerous direction in traditional
onmyodo
Onmyodo

is a traditional Japanese esoteric cosmology, a mixture of natural science and occultism. It is based on the Chinese philosophies of Wu Xing and Yin and yang, introduced into Japan at the turn of the 6th century, and accepted as a practical system of divination....
(cosmology/geomancy), is guarded from evil spirits by a series of temples, including Senso-ji and Kan'ei-ji
Kan'ei-ji

is a Tendai Buddhism temple in Tokyo, Japan, founded in 1625 by Tenkai. The main object of worship is . Because it was one of the two Tokugawa clan funeral temples and because it was destroyed in the closing days of the war that put an end to the Tokugawa shogunate, its name is inextricably linked to that of the Tokugawa shoguns....
. Just beyond these lay the districts of the
eta
Burakumin

, are a Japanese people social minority group. The burakumin are one of the main demographics of Japan, along with the Ainu people of Hokkaido, the Ryukyuans of Okinawa and the Zainichi Korean and Han Chinese descent....
or outcastes, who engaged in unclean vocations and were thus separated from the main sections of commoner residences. A long dirt path extended west from the riverbank, a short distance north of these eta districts, leading along the northern edge of the city to the Yoshiwara
Yoshiwara

Yoshiwara was a famous Akasen district in Edo, present-day Tokyo, Japan.In the early 17th century, there was widespread male and female prostitution throughout the cities of Kyoto, Edo, and Osaka....
 pleasure districts. Previously located within the city proper, close to Asakusa, the districts were rebuilt in this more distant location after the Meireki Fire of 1657.

Gallery


See also

  • 1703 Genroku earthquake
    1703 Genroku earthquake

    The occurred on December 31, 1703 in Edo, the forerunner of present-day Tokyo, Japan. It shook Edo and killed an estimated 2,300 people. Genroku is a Japanese era name spanning from 1688 through 1704....
  • Edokko
    Edokko

    is a Japanese language term referring to a person born and raised in Edo . The term is believed to have been coined in the late 18th century in Edo. Being an Edokko also implied that the person had certain personality traits different from the non-native population, such as being assertive, straightforward, cheerful, perhaps a bit mercantile, , e...
     (native of Edo)
  • History of Tokyo
    History of Tokyo

    The eastern mainland part of Tokyo occupies land that, together with the modern-day Saitama Prefecture, the city of Kawasaki, Kanagawa and the eastern part of Yokohama, Kanagawa, made up Musashi Province, one of the Provinces of Japan under the ritsuryo system....
  • Iki
    Iki (aesthetic ideal)

    Iki is a traditional aesthetic ideal in Japan. The basis of iki is thought to have been formed among commoners in Edo, pre-modern Tokyo....
     (a Japanese aesthetic ideal)


External links