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.

List of Authors

>>About this blog

Recent blog post

◆Chuo-ku There is a history here (64) Jukasha 19 birth 250 years-Visit a place related to the city-

[Akira Makibuchi / Sharakusai] Nov. 9, 2015 09:00

This year is the 250th anniversary of his birth, Jipponshaikku, a playwright familiar with Tokaido Naka-Kurige. He ate at Juzaburo Tsutaya "Koshodo" in Tsuyu-cho (now Nihonbashiodenmacho), and later lived in nearby Hase Kawamachi (now Nihonbashi Horidomecho 2-chome). burial ground is now in Toyoin in Kachidoki. Let's visit places related to 19 in Chuo-ku.

 

0913_64_151105jippennsha.jpgJukasha 19 was born in 1765 in Sunpu (now Shizuoka City) as the eldest son of the Shigeta family, who was concentric with magistrate's office Sunpucho, and named himself Sadaichi Shigeta. It is said that he worked hard in martial arts and learning since his childhood, and was keen on training spear art.

 

From around the age of 30 in 1794 (1794), he stopped by Tsutaya "Koshodo" in Tsutsuyu-cho to prevent the paint from bleeding with a solution mixed with glue to prevent the paint from bleeding). It is said that he was doing it. Nineteen was already known as a Joruri writer in Osaka. Koshodo debuted with three yellow covers, and nineteen himself did everything from writing to drawing and brushing (pictured above).

 

In 1796 (1796), he left Tsutaya and lived in Hase Kawamachi. Located in the southeast of Toyu-cho, close to Murata-ya, Enomoto-ya, Iwato-ya, etc., and close to the play-machi in Sakaimachi and Fukiya-cho, where actors and others lived. In the rakugo "Hyakukawa", "Sanko Shindo" appears in the story. At present, it is the area where Sanko Inari Shrine is enshrined (center of the photo).

 

The first edition of the bestseller, "Ukiyodo Naka-Kurige", was published in 1802 (1802). It was 45 years old in 1809 (1809) when he wrote eight stories traveling to Kyoto and Osaka as "Tokaido Naka-Kurige", and a sequel was subsequently published.

 

As a full-time writer, 1999, who lived with a single brush, closed his 67-year-old life in 1831. Toyo-in, which was buried, was originally located in Asakusa permanent residence, but moved to Kachidoki, where it was located after the Great Kanto Earthquake (bottom photo). The tomb of the registered cultural property of the Chuo Ward is engraved with the resignation of "If you are left with the smoke of incense stick in your spare time and spare time." @ Akira Makibuchi

 

 

 
1