History of Tokyo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

History of Tokyo

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Former Edo Castle, now the Kokyo Imperial Palace.
Marker in Nihonbashi from which distances are measured in Japan.
Graves of 47 Ronin at Sengakuji Temple. See year 1701.
Sakuradamon Gate of Edo Castle where Ii Naosuke was assassinated in 1860.
The Hoei Crater, visible to the right of the peak of Mt. Fuji, was the location of the 1707 eruption that spewed ash as far as Edo.
Tokyo Tower was built in 1958. It was built from recycled military tanks.
Statue of Saigo Takamori in Ueno Park.
A map from the 1888 Meyers Konversations-Lexikon Encyclopedia shows the old German name for Tokyo and Edo: Tokio and Jedo, respectively.
The new Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building was built in 1991 at Shinjuku, Tokyo.

The eastern mainland part of Tokyo occupies land that, together with the modern-day Saitama Prefecture, the city of Kawasaki and the eastern part of Yokohama, made up Musashi, one of the provinces under the ritsuryō system. This was established in the 7th century. The central part of the 23 special wards lay in Toshima, Ebara, Adachi, and Katsushika Districts. Western Tokyo occupied Tama District. Tokyo's oldest Buddhist temple, Sensō-ji in Asakusa, is said[by whom?] to date from the year 645.

In the Kamakura period, the village of Edo was established.[year needed] The construction of Edo Castle by Ōta Dōkan, a vassal of Uesugi Mochitomo, began in 1457 during the Muromachi period in what is now the East Garden of the Imperial Palace. Hōjō Ujitsuna entered Edo Castle in 1524, and Tokugawa Ieyasu moved there in 1590.

Contents

[edit] Edo period

The Edo period began when Tokugawa Ieyasu became shogun in 1603. The city developed rapidly under his successors. The construction of Edo Castle, including the main tower, was finally completed in 1637. In 1657, the Great Fire of Meireki destroyed much of the Yoshiwara red-light district, Asakusa, and Edo Castle, while 100,000 people died.

In 1701, in the shogun's palace, Asano Naganori drew his sword and attacked Kira Yoshinaka, the highest-ranking master of protocol. Asano was immediately forced to commit seppuku. At the end of the following year, his 47 master-less retainers avenged their master's death by attacking and beheading Kira at his residence in Ryōgoku. This story of loyalty soon became a timeless classic known as Chūshingura.

Mount Fuji erupted and spewed ash on Edo in 1707. In 1855, the Great Edo Earthquake occurred.

Edo had more a population of more than 1 million by the mid-eighteenth century.[1]

The bakumatsu era saw an increase in political activity. In 1860 Ii Naosuke, who favored opening Japan to the West, was assassinated by an anti-foreign rebel samurai. Japan's last shogun, Tokugawa Yoshinobu, surrendered power to the emperor in 1867 and fled Edo in 1868 following military defeat by powerful provincial powers seeking power in the name of the Emperor.

[edit] Modern History

[edit] Anticipated events

  • 2011 Completion of Sumida Tower, Japan's tallest structure (about 610m high displacing the CN Tower in Toronto as the world's tallest free-standing structure). Completion of the renovation of Tokyo Station.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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