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Following the [[Meiji Restoration]], the new [[Meiji government]] invited Takanaka to establish and run a medical school in [[Tokyo]]. The school, established in [[1869]], was called the ''daigaku tôkô'', or "University East School," and later developed into the Medical School of the [[University of Tokyo]]; in [[1873]], Takanaka then also established the Juntendô-iin (Juntendô Clinic) in [[Ochanomizu]], and Juntendô University. The latter was later inherited by [[Sato Susumu|Satô Susumu]] (Takawa Kaiseki), another adoptee into the [[Sato family (Juntendo)|Satô family]]. Meanwhile, the Sakura Juntendô passed into the hands of Takanaka's adopted son, [[Sato Shunkai|Satô Shunkai]]<!--佐藤舜海--> (Okamoto Dôan<!--岡本道庵-->)
 
Following the [[Meiji Restoration]], the new [[Meiji government]] invited Takanaka to establish and run a medical school in [[Tokyo]]. The school, established in [[1869]], was called the ''daigaku tôkô'', or "University East School," and later developed into the Medical School of the [[University of Tokyo]]; in [[1873]], Takanaka then also established the Juntendô-iin (Juntendô Clinic) in [[Ochanomizu]], and Juntendô University. The latter was later inherited by [[Sato Susumu|Satô Susumu]] (Takawa Kaiseki), another adoptee into the [[Sato family (Juntendo)|Satô family]]. Meanwhile, the Sakura Juntendô passed into the hands of Takanaka's adopted son, [[Sato Shunkai|Satô Shunkai]]<!--佐藤舜海--> (Okamoto Dôan<!--岡本道庵-->)
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The building which survives today and is maintained as a historical site was originally built in [[1858]] on the opposite side of the street, and was just one part of a larger Juntendô complex.
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The surviving Juntendô buildings were named a prefectural cultural asset in 1975, and were repaired and reopened as the Sakura Juntendô Memorial Buildings museum in 1985.
    
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