Difference between revisions of "Kaga Edo mansion"

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The lord of Kaga han typically [[sankin kotai|arrived in Edo]] with an entourage of 8,000, leaving roughly 4,000 behind afterwards to help manage his estates.
 
The lord of Kaga han typically [[sankin kotai|arrived in Edo]] with an entourage of 8,000, leaving roughly 4,000 behind afterwards to help manage his estates.
  
The famous red gate (''akamon'') still standing on the university campus was originally built in [[1827]] for the occasion of the marriage of Kaga daimyô [[Maeda Nariyasu]] to [[Yohime|Yôhime]], 21st daughter of Shogun [[Tokugawa Ienari]].<ref>Craig, 78.; "[http://www.seisonkaku.com/english/tenjisitu/meihin5.html Embroidered Costume on Pale Blue Crepe]," [[Seisonkaku]] official website.</ref>
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The famous red gate (''akamon'') still standing on the university campus was originally built in [[1827]] for the occasion of the marriage of Kaga daimyô [[Maeda Nariyasu]] to [[Yohime|Yôhime]], 21st daughter of Shogun [[Tokugawa Ienari]].<ref>Craig, 78.; "[http://www.seisonkaku.com/english/tenjisitu/meihin5.html Embroidered Costume on Pale Blue Crepe]," [[Seisonkaku]] official website.</ref> The gate, originally known as the ''goshudenmon''<!--御守殿門-->, is today a registered [[Important Cultural Property]].<ref>Plaques on-site.</ref>
  
 
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Revision as of 11:37, 16 December 2014

The Akamon ("red gate") which now serves as a gate to the University of Tokyo main campus
  • Japanese: 加賀江戸藩邸 (Kaga Edo hantei)

The main mansion of Kaga han in Edo covered roughly 267 acres, filled with warehouses, barracks, residences, gardens, and schools, and inhabited by as many as 30,000 people.[1] The space is today the main campus of the University of Tokyo.

The lord of Kaga han typically arrived in Edo with an entourage of 8,000, leaving roughly 4,000 behind afterwards to help manage his estates.

The famous red gate (akamon) still standing on the university campus was originally built in 1827 for the occasion of the marriage of Kaga daimyô Maeda Nariyasu to Yôhime, 21st daughter of Shogun Tokugawa Ienari.[2] The gate, originally known as the goshudenmon, is today a registered Important Cultural Property.[3]

References

  1. Albert M. Craig, The Heritage of Japanese Civilization, Second Edition, Prentice Hall (2011), 72.
  2. Craig, 78.; "Embroidered Costume on Pale Blue Crepe," Seisonkaku official website.
  3. Plaques on-site.