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The final Tokugawa shogun, [[Tokugawa Yoshinobu]], declared his resignation and the abolition of the shogunate while in Kyoto, having never stepped foot in Edo as shogun. For the first time in over a thousand years, the Imperial Court was moved, this time from Kyoto to Edo, newly renamed as Tokyo, marking the end of the Edo period and the beginning of the [[Meiji Period]].
 
The final Tokugawa shogun, [[Tokugawa Yoshinobu]], declared his resignation and the abolition of the shogunate while in Kyoto, having never stepped foot in Edo as shogun. For the first time in over a thousand years, the Imperial Court was moved, this time from Kyoto to Edo, newly renamed as Tokyo, marking the end of the Edo period and the beginning of the [[Meiji Period]].
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For the first decade or two of the Meiji Period, the architects of the new nation made little effort to refashion or re-present Kyoto as an element in new, modern, Imperial, national(ist) discourses. It was not until the 1880s that efforts began to be made to explicitly refigure Kyoto within the national narratives as an exalted site of the traditional, Imperial, spiritual, past, as leaders concurrently began working for the first time to explicitly and expansively construct discourses of Tokyo as the modern, political Imperial center.<ref>Takashi Fujitani, ''Splendid Monarchy'', UC Press (1998), 33-34.</ref>
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For the first decade or two of the Meiji Period, the architects of the new nation were conflicted as to the role Kyoto should play in the new Imperial nation, and in particular in discourses of the nation. It was perhaps not until [[1877]]-[[1878]] that top-ranking officials, as well as the [[Meiji Emperor]] himself, began to propose and implement plans to actively preserve Kyoto as a site and symbol of the traditional Japanese and lofty, spiritual, Imperial past. The Emperor made a personal gift in 1877 of funds to the Kyoto prefectural government to be used for the preservation of the city, and while passing through Kyoto on one of his [[Six Great Imperial Tours]] the following year, made a statement calling for the preservation of the city, which had already begun to decline since his departure for Tokyo. Around this time, too, certain officials or perhaps the Emperor himself first suggested that accession ceremonies and certain other Imperial rituals continue to be performed in Kyoto, even as the Imperial capital was moved to Tokyo, in order to maintain the significance of the city, and to draw upon that history to enhance the power and legitimacy of the Imperial institution.<ref>Takashi Fujitani, ''Splendid Monarchy'', UC Press (1998), 56.</ref> These efforts continued into the 1880s as efforts began, concurrently, to shape Tokyo into a political center evocative of particular discourses of modernity, and of Imperial power and engagement.<ref>Fujitani, 33-34.</ref>
    
==Culture==
 
==Culture==
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