Edo

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Edo
江戸
Former city
Nickname(s): Tokyo (Current City)
Former location of Edo (present-day Tokyo)
Former location of Edo (present-day Tokyo)
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Country  Japan
Castle built 1457
De facto capital 1603
Renamed Tokyo 1868
Government
 • Type Dictatorship (Shogunate Period)
Population (1721)[1]
 • Total 1,000,000

Edo (?, literally "bay-entrance" or "estuary"), also romanized as Yedo or Yeddo, is the former name of Tokyo.[2] It was the seat of power for the Tokugawa shogunate, which ruled Japan from 1603 to 1868. During this period, it grew to become one of the largest cities in the world and home to an urban culture centered on the notion of a "floating world".[1]

History

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From the establishment of the Tokugawa bakufu headquarters at Edo, the town became the de facto capital and center of political power, although Kyoto remained the formal capital of the country. Edo grew from what had been a small, little-known fishing village in 1457 into the largest metropolis in the world with an estimated population of 1,000,000 by 1721.[1][3]

Edo was repeatedly devastated by fires, with the Great Fire of Meireki in 1657 being the most disastrous. An estimated 100,000 people died in the fire. During the Edo period, there were about 100 fires mostly begun by accident and often quickly escalating and spreading through neighborhoods of wooden machiya which were heated with charcoal fires. Between 1600 and 1945, Edo/Tokyo was leveled every 25–50 years or so by fire, earthquakes, or war.

Small, sepia-colored map of Edo in the 1840s
Map of Edo in the 1840s

In 1868, when the shogunate came to an end, the city was renamed Tokyo ("eastern capital"). The emperor moved his residence to Tokyo, making the city the formal capital of Japan:

  • Keiō 4: On the 17th day of the 7th month (September 3, 1868), Edo was renamed Tokyo.[4]
  • Keiō 4: On the 27th day of the 8th month (October 12, 1868), Emperor Meiji was crowned in the Shishin-den in Kyoto.[5]
  • Keiō 4: On the eighth day of the ninth month (October 23, 1868), the nengō was formally changed from Keiō to Meiji and a general amnesty was granted.[5]
  • Meiji 2: On the 23rd day of the 10th month (1868), the emperor went to Tokyo and Edo castle became an imperial palace.[5]

Magistrate

Painted scroll of a great fire, with people trying to escape
Scroll depicting the Great Fire of Meireki

Ishimaru Sadatsuga was the magistrate of Edo in 1661.[6]

Government and administration

During the Edo period, the Shogunate appointed administrators (machi bugyō) with jurisdiction over the police, and beginning with the rule of Tokugawa Yoshimune), the fire department (machibikeshi). The machi bugyō heard criminal and civil suits, and performed other administrative functions.

Geography

Museum room with wood furniture and cooking utensils in center
Chōnin-room exhibit at the Fukagawa Edo Museum

The city was laid out as a castle town around Edo Castle. The area surrounding the castle known as Yamanote consisted largely of daimyō mansions, whose families lived in Edo as part of the sankin kōtai system; the daimyō made journeys in alternating years to Edo, and used the mansions for their entourages. It was this extensive samurai class which defined the character of Edo, particularly in contrast to the two major cities of Kyoto and Osaka neither of which were ruled by a daimyō or had a significant samurai population. Kyoto's character was defined by the Imperial Court, the court nobles, its Buddhist temples and its history; Osaka was the country's commercial center, dominated by the chōnin or the merchant class.

Areas further from the center were the domain of the chōnin (町人, literally "townsfolk"). The area known as Shitamachi (下町, lit. "lower town" or "downtown"), northeast of the castle, was a center of urban culture. The ancient Buddhist temple of Sensō-ji still stands in Asakusa, marking the center of an area of traditional Shitamachi culture. Some shops in the streets near the temple have existed continuously in the same location since the Edo period.

The Sumida River, then called the Great River (大川), ran along the eastern edge of the city. The shogunate's official rice-storage warehouses,[7] other official buildings and some of the city's best-known restaurants were located here.

Painting of people crossing the wooden Edo Bridge
Nihonbashi in Edo, Ukiyo-e by Hiroshige

The "Japan Bridge" (日本橋, Nihon-bashi) marked the center of the city's commercial center, an area also known as Kuramae (蔵前, "in front of the storehouses"). Fishermen, craftsmen and other producers and retailers operated here. Shippers managed ships known as tarubune to and from Osaka and other cities, bringing goods into the city or transferring them from sea routes to river barges or land routes such as the Tōkaidō. This area remains the center of Tokyo's financial and business district.

The northeastern corner of the city was considered a dangerous direction in traditional onmyōdō (cosmology), and is protected from evil by a number of temples including Sensō-ji and Kan'ei-ji. Beyond this were the districts of the eta or outcasts, who performed "unclean" work and were separated from the main parts of the city. A long dirt path, which was a short distance north of the eta districts, extended west from the riverbank leading along the northern edge of the city to the Yoshiwara pleasure districts. Previously located within the city proper near Asakusa, the districts were rebuilt in this more-remote location after the Great Fire of Meireki in 1657.

Gallery

Edo, 1865 or 1866. Photochrom print. Five albumen prints joined to form a panorama. Photographer: Felice Beato

See Tokyo for photographs of the modern city.

See also

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Sansom, George. A History of Japan: 1615–1867, p. 114.
  2. US Department of State. (1906). A digest of international law as embodied in diplomatic discussions, treaties and other international agreements (John Bassett Moore, ed.), Vol. 5, p. 759; excerpt, "The Mikado, on assuming the exercise of power at Yedo, changed the name of the city to Tokio".
  3. Gordon, Andrew. (2003). A Modern History of Japan from Tokugawa Times to the Present, p. 23.
  4. Ponsonby-Fane, Richard. (1956). Kyoto: the Old Capital, 794–1869, p. 327.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Ponsonby-Fane, p. 328.
  6. Encyclopædia Britannica (1911): "Japan: Commerce in Tokugawa Times," p. 201.
  7. Taxes, and samurai stipends, were paid not in coin, but in rice. See koku.

References

External links

Historic