Chuo-ku Tourism Association Official Blog

Chuo-ku Tourism Association correspondent blog

Introducing Chuo-ku's seasonal information by sightseeing volunteer members who passed the Chuo-ku Tourism Association's Chuo-ku Tourism Certification and registered as correspondents.

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Ginza 1-4-chome, Kyobashi 3-chome Walking Course (2)

[CAM] December 9, 2015 18:00

With the people who line up in search of lotteries, the lighthouse is once again

(Photo taken on December 6, 2015, the same applies hereinafter)

IMG_2419.JPG The birthplace of Ginza

IMG_2421.JPG 1612 (2272 AD, 1612 AD) Tokugawa shogunate When the Ginza government office was established here, the town name was called Shin-Ryogaecho, but it was also known as Ginzacho, and it was announced in 1869 that Ginza was finally the street name.
Takeyuki, April 1, 1973
Ginza Union Association 

 

The main pillar of Kyobashi

IMG_2422.JPGLocation Kyobashi 3-chome / Ginza 1-chome, Chuo-ku
Kyobashi has been a famous bridge along with Nihonbashi since the Edo period. The bridge was removed by the landfill of the Kyobashi River in 1959 (1959), and is not seen at present, but three main pillars remain to preserve its remnants.
The two main pillars remaining on the east side of the bridge Kitazume and the west side of Minamizume are stone bridges at the time of 1875 (1875). In the form of giboshi, which inherits the tradition of bridges from the Edo period, the names of the bridges are engraved by the poet Sasaki Shoin, "Kyobashi" and "Kiyahashi" respectively.
On the other hand, the main pillar remaining on the east side of the bridge Minamizume is the bridge that was built in 1922 (1922). It is made of stone and concrete, equipped with lighting equipment.
Kyobashi's main pillars are from the Meiji and Taisho eras, and are registered as a Chuo Ward Cultural Property as a valuable building where you can learn about changes in the design of modern bridges.
March, 1992
Chuo-ku Board of Education

 

IMG_2432.JPG Kyobashi has been famous since ancient times, since the beginning of the year of the Keicho era, but it has been replaced several times since the Meiji era, and this bridge pillar has been rebuilt to the current bridge at the end of 1922. As the main pillar of the pseudo treasure lining when it was replaced by stone in 1875, the name of the bridge was written by Meiji poet Sasagi Inno.
May, 1938

 

 The birthplace of Edo Kabuki

 

IMG_2423.JPG February 15, 1624 The original Saruwaka Kanzaburo Nakamura Nakahashi southern area climbs the play tower of Saruwaka Nakamuraza in this area, which can be said to be the origin of the Edo Kabuki. It is a long memorial as a place.
July, 1957
Former Edo Kabuki History Preservation Society

 

Remains of  Kyobashi Daikon Riverside Vegetable Market

IMG_2424.JPGIn the early years of the Kanbun era, a large number of people at the banks of the banks of the Kyoto market that can be sold to the banks of the river, such as the 700-year-old Yun, to the banks of the river, and to the banks of the 700-year-olds, the number of shops will increase in the number of shops and gradually increase in the shape of the market by the Edo prefecture.
In the wake of the Great East Japan Earthquake in September 1923, the union members worked diligently to recover and made a strong success before the opening of the Central Wholesale Market in Tokyo as part of the implementation of the Central Wholesale Market in February 1980, and after the opening of the World War II, the monument of the old 300 years of attachment to his father was rejected by the request of the Kunio at the request of the Kunio.
June 1973 Tomitaro Fujiura Senegawa Hekitansho