MeijiShowa — historical images of Japan between the 1860s and 1930s all imagesphotographyart & printsmapscalendar [ ? ] view cart (0)

70809-0001 - Nihonbashi Bridge

PURCHASE A LICENSE

Tokyo Taisho 1910s Unknown

A streetcar crosses Nihonbashi bridge in Nihonbashi, Tokyo, designed by Yorinaka Tsumaki (妻木頼黄, 1859-1916). The white buildings on the right constitute the Tokyo fish-market.

During the early Edo Period (1603-1868), Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu invited fishermen from Tsukudajima in Osaka to Edo to provide fish for the castle. These fishermen started a specialized wholesale market called Uogashi (fish quay) in Nihonbashi.

After the Nihonbashi fish-market was destroyed in the Great Kanto Earthquake of September 1, 1923 (Taisho 12), it was relocated to the Tsukiji district.

In October 2018 (Heisei 30), the market was moved again, to Toyosu.

Nihonbashi was also the starting point of the many kaido (roadways) that led from Tokyo to cities all over Japan. All the activity attracted shops that eventually grew into trading houses and huge department stores, like Mitsukoshi department store.

In 1896 (Meiji 29), the national mint was relocated to Nihonbashi. Soon, the Bank of Japan (Nippon Ginko)and other financial institutions followed and the area turned into an important financial center and trade.

Kjeld Duits Collection
Find similar:
Nihonbashi, Nihonbashi Bridge, Tokyo, Tokyo Meisho Series, Yorinaka Tsumaki, architecture, bridges, engineering, fish-markets, markets, stone bridges
1 Year License Editorial Advertising Packaging
Small (Web)
1MB/72dpi
USD 45.00 USD 89.00 USD 115.00
Medium (B6)
10MB/300dpi
USD 110.00 USD 140.00 USD 160.00
Large (A4)
23MB/300dpi
USD 140.00 USD 170.00 USD 185.00
Larger sizes available. Contact Us!