|
‹{錧“o•ÄŽs |
Toyoma-machi (“o•Ä’¬) Nakada-cho (’†“c’¬) Towa-cho (“Œ˜a’¬) |
|
IMAGE | ||
Toyoma-machi (“o•Ä’¬) | ||
(Thursday 6 January) Old Office of Mizusawa Prefecture (built in 1872), 1 Tereike-Sakura-koji, Toyama-machi. It was used between 1872-1875. | ||
(Thursday 6 January) Old Office of Mizusawa Prefecture (built in 1872), 1 Sakura-koji, Teraike, Toyama-machi | ||
(Thursday 6 January) A Samurai House, Sakura-koji, Teraike, Toyoma-machi | ||
(Thursday 6 January) A Samurai House, Sakura-koji, Teraike, Toyoma-machi | ||
(Thursday 6 January) Old Elementary School (Kyu-Toyama Kotojinkyo Shogakko, built in 1888), 6 Sakura-koji, Teraike, Toyoma-machi. Now it is open to the public as a museum of primary education after the Meiji Era. | ||
(Thursday 6 January) A monument of Basho Matsuo in front of the Old Elementary School, 6 Sakura-koji, Teraike, Toyoma-machi. Matsuo stayed here for one night on the way to Hiraizumi from Ishinomaki. | ||
(Thursday 6 January) A monument of Basho Matsuo in front of the Old Elementary School, 6 Sakurakoji, Teraike, Toyama-machi: See "Station 22 Ishinomaki" of Matsuo Basho's "Narrow Road to the Deep North":
We walked along the embankment of the Kitakami River, getting glimpses from afar of places celebrated in verse - the Sode Ford, the Pasture of Obachi, and the Reed Plain of Mano. Trudging on a road along a lengthy expanse of marshy ground, we found that the countryside weighed heavily upon our feelings. We came to a place called Toima [now "Toyoma-machi] and then spent the night. At last, the next day, we arrived in Hiraizumi. The distance we had covered was more than forty-five miles. (trans. from Earl Miner's Japanese Poetic Diaries, 1976) |
||
Nakada-cho (’†“c’¬) | ||
(Thursday 6 January) Statue of "Kamen Raidaa 1-go" (Masked Rider no.1), the hero of the famous juvenile manga/TV drama "Kamen Daidaa" (1971) in the opposite side of "Ishinomori Shotaro Furusato Kinen-kan," Nakada-cho | ||
(Thursday 6 January) "Ishinomori Shotaro Furusato Kinen-kan" (Memorial Hall of Shotaro Ishinomori in His Native Place), Nakada-cho. Born in here in Ishinomori-cho (now part of Nakada-cho), Ishinomori Shotaro (1938-1998) was one of the greatest manga [Japanese cartoon or comic strip] writers. He got a great debut with "Nikyu Tenshi" (Second-class Angel) in the magazine Manga Shonen in 1954 when he was a high school student here.
After graduating from Sanuma High School, Miyagi, he went to Tokyo to become a manga writer: he soon moved to the legendary manga apartment building called "Tokiwa-so," 5-2235 Shiina-machi [now 5 Minami-Nagasaki, one stop away from Ikebukuro on Seibu-Ikebukuro Line], Toshima Ward, and lived together with various prominent manga artists including Osamu Tezuka, Fujio Fujiko [Hiroshi Fujimoto & Motoo Abiko], Fujio Akatsuka, Jiro Tsunoda and Hiroo Terada. Until his sudden death in January 1998, he created numerous wonderful works including "Kamen Ridaa," ("Masked Rider"), "Jinzo-Ningen Kikaidaa" ("Android Kikaider"), "Himitsu Sentai Go-Ranger" ("Secret Service Five Rangers," TV series), "Cyborg 009," "Genma Taisen" ("Genma Wars"), "Genshi-Shonen Ryu" ("Ryu the Primitive Boy"), "Harmagedon" (original movie), "Sarutobi Ecchan," "Hotel," "Manga Nihon Keizai Nyuumon" ("Manga Version of the Introduction to the Japanese Ecomony," TV series) and "Manga Nihon no Rekishi" ("Manga Version of the History of Japan"). |
||
(Thursday 6 January) Statues of Cyborg 009 (right) and Cyborg 003 (left) of the famous manga/TV animation series "Cyborg 009" (1964; 1968;1979;2001), Ishinomori Shotaro Furusato Kinenkan, Nakada-cho | ||
Basically nothing to see here for the general tourist, but Towa-cho (“Œ˜a’¬) is worth visiting if you know Juan Goto, the legendary Christian lord of Fukuwara, Mizusawa, Oshu City, who reclaimed wasteland by damming up the stream of Isawa River, etc. while he invited many Catholic priests from Western Japan where the Tokugawa Shogunate strictly began to control propagandize Christianity under the great lord Masamune Date's generous treatment. After 1623, however, when Masamune had to send troops to Fukuwara, but Goto left Fukuwara with only several retainers before that. It was said that Goto and his men wandered in the Nambu dominions. In March 1951, a grave inscribed with the name of "Don Juan Gotoo 1565-1626" was discovered by an editorial staff of the History of Miyagi Prefecture in Nishikamizawa, Yonekawa, Towa-cho, Tome City, Miyagi, adjoining to Fujisawa-cho. It is difficult to find the grave but it is along the route 346, about 7 or 8 km east of the crossing of route 295.
For further information, 1. go to: the Juan Goto and Crypto-Christians in Fukuwara page, 2. go to: the Mizusawa (Oshu City) page. |
||
(Saturday 7 May) Juan Goto's Grave, Nishikamizawa, Yonekawa, Towa-cho | ||
(Saturday 7 May) Juan Goto's Grave, Nishikamizawa, Yonekawa, Towa-cho | ||
(Saturday 7 May) Inscribed with the name of "Don Juan Gotoo 1565-1626," on the back of Juan Goto's Grave, Nishikamizawa, Yonekawa, Towa-cho | ||
(Saturday 7 May) Probably martyrs' grave, in the precincts of Juan Goto's Grave, Nishikamizawa, Yonekawa, Towa-cho. Okago, Fujisawa-cho, famous for the history of the crypto-Christians in the early seventeenth century, is about 8 km north from here. | ||
(Saturday 7 May) Information post of Juan Goto's Grave, Nishikamizawa, Yonekawa, Towa-cho | ||
(Saturday 7 May) Information post of Juan Goto's Grave, Nishikamizawa, Yonekawa, Towa-cho |
For
further information of the Juan Goto and Crypto-Christians,
1. go to the Juan Goto and Crypto-Christians
page.
2. go to the Mizusawa page.
3. go to the Ichinoseki page.
4. go to the Azuchi page.