Born in [[Edo]] in [[1863]] the son of [[Tsuboi Shinryo|Tsuboi Shinryô]]<!--坪井信良-->, Shôgorô went on to attend [[Tokyo Imperial University]]; he was one of three men from the university who made the very first discovery of [[Yayoi period]] materials in [[1884]], just outside the campus.<ref>Plaques on-site at University of Tokyo.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/15800690658/sizes/k/]</ref> Tsuboi graduated from the Imperial University in [[1886]], and founded the Tokyo Anthropological Society that same year. After studying abroad for a time in England and France (including with E.B. Tylor, a prominent early figure in British archaeology), he become a professor at his alma mater in [[1892]]. | Born in [[Edo]] in [[1863]] the son of [[Tsuboi Shinryo|Tsuboi Shinryô]]<!--坪井信良-->, Shôgorô went on to attend [[Tokyo Imperial University]]; he was one of three men from the university who made the very first discovery of [[Yayoi period]] materials in [[1884]], just outside the campus.<ref>Plaques on-site at University of Tokyo.[https://www.flickr.com/photos/toranosuke/15800690658/sizes/k/]</ref> Tsuboi graduated from the Imperial University in [[1886]], and founded the Tokyo Anthropological Society that same year. After studying abroad for a time in England and France (including with E.B. Tylor, a prominent early figure in British archaeology), he become a professor at his alma mater in [[1892]]. |