OLD PHOTOS of JAPAN, a photo blog of Japan in the Meiji, Taisho and Showa periods

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shows photos of Japan between the 1860s and 1930s. In 1854, Japan opened its doors to the outside world for the first time in more than 200 years. It set in motion a truly astounding transformation. As fate would have it, photography had just been invented. As the old country vanished and a new one was born, daring photographers took photos. Discover what life was like with their rare and precious photographs of old Japan.

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Geisha: Women of Japan's Flower & Willow World • Tina Skinner, Mary L. Martin
Geisha: Women of Japan's Flower & Willow World

Over 500 beautiful photographs and postcards, mostly of between 1900 and 1940, take you back to Japan’s now-extinct licensed pleasure districts. You will keep opening up this book again and again. A beauty!


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Yokohama 1910s • Yoshidamachi-dori

Tags: UnknownTaishoYokohama
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Yoshidamachi, Yokohama
Yoshida-cho, Yokohama

People pass by shops on a quiet Yoshidamachi-dori. On the right is a drug store (薬屋) advertising goodies like Chujoto women’s herbal supplement tea (中将湯), bedbug extermination (南京虫退治) and industrial use chemicals (工業用薬品). Sounds like a fun store to visit. Although quiet on this postcard, Yoshidamachi-dori was actually perfectly located and a popular street to go shopping.

When Commodore Perry first arrived in Japan, Yokohama-mura was a quiet village not connected to the Tokaido, which at the time was still bustling with daimyo, their samurai and other travelers. In the eyes of the Tokugawa government, this remoteness made Yokohama an ideal location to place foreigners, worried as they were about them clashing with samurai.

Within no time a road was built from Kanagawa-juku, the nearest station on the Tokaido, to Yokohama. Where the road crossed the Yoshida River, a bridge was built and quite appropriately named Yoshidabashi (Yoshida Bridge).

Yoshidabashi was guarded by a checkpoint, Kanmon in Japanese. The area guarded by the Kanmon, and therefore “inside” the Kanmon, was called Kannai, the area “outside”, Kangai. Foreigners moved into Kannai and Japanese lived mainly in Kangai.

In 1860, the Japanese authorities built canals to completely surround Kannai by water, uncomfortably reminding many of the foreigners there of the situation in Nagasaki‘s Deshima. For some two centuries the Dutch traders who lived on that tiny island in the bay of Nagasaki had not been allowed to leave its confines.

However, this resemblance was only superficial. With a passport, foreigners could actually venture a certain distance beyond Kannai. This turned Yoshidabashi into the main crossing point between Kannai and Kangai

Over the years, restrictions were eased and streets nearby Yoshidabashi became attractive locations for shops, theaters, restaurants and other businesses. These in their turn attracted bustling crowds. Especially popular were Isezakicho-dori, known among foreigners as Theater Street and Yoshidamachi-dori.

Like Isezakicho, Yoshidamachi was repeatedly destroyed by disasters and war and always rebuilt. The street exists to this day, but it has lost its disorderly charm and ambiance as well as its enthralling drug store.

Map of Yokohama 1890
1890 (Meiji 23) Map of Yokohama: 1. Isezakicho-dori; 2. Yoshidamachi-dori; 3. Miyakobashi; 4. Nogemachi-dori; 5. Yoshidabashi; 6. Yanagibashi; 7. Nishikibashi; 8. Oebashi; 9. Yokohama Station; 10. Bashamichi; 11. Bentenbashi.

Photographer: Unknown
Publisher: Ueda
Medium: Postcard
Image Number: 70122-0012
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<a href="http://oldphotosjapan.com/en/photos/152/yoshidamachi-dori">Yokohama 1910s • Yoshidamachi-dori</a>

People pass by shops on a quiet Yoshidamachi-dori. On the right is a drug store advertising goodies like Chujoto women’s herbal supplement tea, bedbug extermination and industrial use chemicals. Sounds like a fun store to visit. Although quiet on this postcard, Yoshidamachi-dori was actually perfectly located and a popular street to go shopping.

Thumbnail URL: http://oldphotosjapan.com/images/31t.jpg
Posted by Kjeld Duits • 2008-04-10
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