Japanese Overseas Migration Museum 2018 | JICA海外移住資料館
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The Japanese Overseas Migration Museum in Minato Mirai is an institution dedicated to collecting records on Japanese migrations overseas and showing the history of those emigrants; about how they set up roots and became important members of those countries (their new homes) yet keeping their identity as Japanese.
The history of Japanese migrations in the modern age started in 1885, when 945 Japanese left Yokohama for Hawaii islands for three years of labor in January 28, 1895. After that, many headed to the Hawaii islands as important hands in growing sugar cane and then to North America looking for highly paid jobs. Emigrants migrated to South America after the United States closed its door in 1924. Over the last 100 years, some 760,000 went overseas and now some 2.5 million nikkei, or persons of Japanese ancestry are living all over the world. They are living in North and South America countries such as the United States, Canada, Columbia, Paraguay, Peru, Brazil, Bolivia and Argentina. This museum shows the history of those emigrants and the hardship they faced and how they set up roots in these new worlds through its exhibits.
A real size model of a float crafted by Japanese migrant farmers for a Festival in Oregon welcomes you at the entrance. A lot of pictures, models, and items actually used by migrants are displayed all over the floor. Through them you can imagine how they lived in these new places and created their communites. A heap of luggage in the center of the floor reminds me of a display of luggage at Elis Island Museum in New York. I heard from a museum guide that some brought a picture of the emperor and empress with them in their luggage. We can learn the culture of those days through them.
Those who migrated boarded a ship from Yokohama or Kobe. There were government migration training centers in both cities, where migrants learned languages and get necessary information for a few months before setting sail. Yokohama functioned as a gateway for their destinations until the last group of emigrants left Yokohama in February 14, 1973.
I also learned from the guide that many Japanese descendants of those who left from Yokohama have come to this museum as a part of their journey of roots searching. Exhibit materials are written both in Japanese and English.
Three to four times a year, special exhibitions are held at the exhibition hall to focus on particular topics. When I visited the museum this August, it featured Japanese towns in the Americas, where they continue to be the center of their communities.
The museum is located in the JICA building across the street from World Porters, a large shopping mall, in the Shinko area. JICA is the Japanese version of the U.S. Peace Corps. It is on the same street as the Nissin Cup Noodle Museum, which is just a few minutes away on foot. At a restaurant on the third floor of the building, they serve meals at a reasonable price.
JICA's trainees from Africa, Asia and the Middle East use the restaurant and give it an international atmosphere. Views of the Redbrick warehouses and harbor beyond are nice.
100年以上の日本人の海外移住の歴史、そして移住者と日系人の現在の姿を伝える資料館。常設展示では、移住の歴史を5つの時代に分け、年表・文献・写真・映像によって展示。年間を通して特別展示や公開講座、公開シンポジウムなども開催しています。
横浜赤レンガ倉庫の向かいに位置し、3階のカフェテリアからはベイブリッジや大桟橋に停泊する客船など、素晴らしい景色を楽しめます。
#YokohamaTravelVlog #JapaneseOverseasMigrationMuseum #JICA海外移住資料館
Kobe Earthquake Memorial Museum 1 17 1995
Nankinmachi originated in 1868, when Kobe's port was opened to foreigners including Chinese immigrants from Guangdong and Fujian. The newcomers settled in the western end of Kobe's foreign district, which soon became the focal point for subsequent Chinese migrants. During that time, the Chinese people were referred to as people from Nanking by the Japanese, hence the name Nankinmachi (Nanking Town). By the early 1920s, Nankinmachi was a vibrant area bustling with businesses, restaurants, and homes. That all changed, however, during the next two decades when many Chinese returned to China in response to Japan's expansion of Northeastern China, the Second Sino-Japanese War, and World War II. Destroyed during the allied bombings of Kobe, Nankinmachi was re-built after the war by the remaining Chinese community that stayed behind. In 1995, it was severely damaged during the Great Hanshin earthquake. It was quickly rebuilt, and once again thrives as a center of Chinese culture and activity throughout the Kansai region. There are currently 10,000 people residing in Kobe's Chinatown.
【元町】神戸華僑歴史博物館 Kobe Overseas Chinese History Museum 1
平成31年2月2日@神戸元町
神戸華僑歴史博物館
Kobe Overseas Chinese History Museum
神戸港の開港(1868年)とともに居留地には欧米人が商館を開きました。彼等とともに長崎や上海、香港などから神戸にやってきた華僑も、居留地の周辺に貿易商館を構え、中国人街を形成していきました。それがいまの南京町です。
Nankin-machi originated in 1868, when Kobe's port was opened to foreigners including Chinese immigrants from Guangdong and Fujian. The newcomers settled in the western end of Kobe's foreign district, which soon became the focal point for subsequent Chinese migrants. During that time, the Chinese people were referred to as people from Nanking by the Japanese, hence the name Nankinmachi (Nanking Town). By the early 1920s, Nankinmachi was a vibrant area bustling with businesses, restaurants, and homes. That all changed, however, during the next two decades when many Chinese returned to China in response to Japan's expansion of Northeastern China, the Second Sino-Japanese War, and World War II. Destroyed during the allied bombings of Kobe, Nankinmachi was re-built after the war by the remaining Chinese community that stayed behind. In 1995, it was severely damaged during the Great Hanshin earthquake. It was quickly rebuilt, and once again thrives as a center of Chinese culture and activity throughout the Kansai region. There are currently 10,000 people residing in Nankin-machi.
【元町】神戸華僑歴史博物館 Kobe Overseas Chinese History Museum 4
平成31年2月2日@神戸元町
神戸華僑歴史博物館
Kobe Overseas Chinese History Museum
神戸港の開港(1868年)とともに居留地には欧米人が商館を開きました。彼等とともに長崎や上海、香港などから神戸にやってきた華僑も、居留地の周辺に貿易商館を構え、中国人街を形成していきました。それがいまの南京町です。
Nankin-machi originated in 1868, when Kobe's port was opened to foreigners including Chinese immigrants from Guangdong and Fujian. The newcomers settled in the western end of Kobe's foreign district, which soon became the focal point for subsequent Chinese migrants. During that time, the Chinese people were referred to as people from Nanking by the Japanese, hence the name Nankinmachi (Nanking Town). By the early 1920s, Nankinmachi was a vibrant area bustling with businesses, restaurants, and homes. That all changed, however, during the next two decades when many Chinese returned to China in response to Japan's expansion of Northeastern China, the Second Sino-Japanese War, and World War II. Destroyed during the allied bombings of Kobe, Nankinmachi was re-built after the war by the remaining Chinese community that stayed behind. In 1995, it was severely damaged during the Great Hanshin earthquake. It was quickly rebuilt, and once again thrives as a center of Chinese culture and activity throughout the Kansai region. There are currently 10,000 people residing in Nankin-machi.
【元町】神戸華僑歴史博物館 Kobe Overseas Chinese History Museum 3
平成31年2月2日@神戸元町
神戸華僑歴史博物館
Kobe Overseas Chinese History Museum
神戸港の開港(1868年)とともに居留地には欧米人が商館を開きました。彼等とともに長崎や上海、香港などから神戸にやってきた華僑も、居留地の周辺に貿易商館を構え、中国人街を形成していきました。それがいまの南京町です。
Nankin-machi originated in 1868, when Kobe's port was opened to foreigners including Chinese immigrants from Guangdong and Fujian. The newcomers settled in the western end of Kobe's foreign district, which soon became the focal point for subsequent Chinese migrants. During that time, the Chinese people were referred to as people from Nanking by the Japanese, hence the name Nankinmachi (Nanking Town). By the early 1920s, Nankinmachi was a vibrant area bustling with businesses, restaurants, and homes. That all changed, however, during the next two decades when many Chinese returned to China in response to Japan's expansion of Northeastern China, the Second Sino-Japanese War, and World War II. Destroyed during the allied bombings of Kobe, Nankinmachi was re-built after the war by the remaining Chinese community that stayed behind. In 1995, it was severely damaged during the Great Hanshin earthquake. It was quickly rebuilt, and once again thrives as a center of Chinese culture and activity throughout the Kansai region. There are currently 10,000 people residing in Nankin-machi.
Nikkei History: Bridging Japan and Latin America [English]
Today, over 2 million people of Japanese descent, or Nikkei, reside in Central and South America. Beginning in 1897 with Mexico, a large number of Japanese immigrants settled in countries throughout Latin America. Despite a history filled with trials and hardships, they have been upholding their roots and Japanese values. Thanks to the Nikkei, Japan and Latin America have developed a close relationship.
Shooting location:Japanese Overseas Migration Museum [
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【元町】神戸華僑歴史博物館 Kobe Overseas Chinese History Museum 2
平成31年2月2日@神戸元町
神戸華僑歴史博物館
Kobe Overseas Chinese History Museum
神戸港の開港(1868年)とともに居留地には欧米人が商館を開きました。彼等とともに長崎や上海、香港などから神戸にやってきた華僑も、居留地の周辺に貿易商館を構え、中国人街を形成していきました。それがいまの南京町です。
Nankin-machi originated in 1868, when Kobe's port was opened to foreigners including Chinese immigrants from Guangdong and Fujian. The newcomers settled in the western end of Kobe's foreign district, which soon became the focal point for subsequent Chinese migrants. During that time, the Chinese people were referred to as people from Nanking by the Japanese, hence the name Nankinmachi (Nanking Town). By the early 1920s, Nankinmachi was a vibrant area bustling with businesses, restaurants, and homes. That all changed, however, during the next two decades when many Chinese returned to China in response to Japan's expansion of Northeastern China, the Second Sino-Japanese War, and World War II. Destroyed during the allied bombings of Kobe, Nankinmachi was re-built after the war by the remaining Chinese community that stayed behind. In 1995, it was severely damaged during the Great Hanshin earthquake. It was quickly rebuilt, and once again thrives as a center of Chinese culture and activity throughout the Kansai region. There are currently 10,000 people residing in Nankin-machi.
【元町】神戸華僑歴史博物館 Kobe Overseas Chinese History Museum 5
平成31年2月2日@神戸元町
神戸華僑歴史博物館
Kobe Overseas Chinese History Museum
神戸港の開港(1868年)とともに居留地には欧米人が商館を開きました。彼等とともに長崎や上海、香港などから神戸にやってきた華僑も、居留地の周辺に貿易商館を構え、中国人街を形成していきました。それがいまの南京町です。
Nankin-machi originated in 1868, when Kobe's port was opened to foreigners including Chinese immigrants from Guangdong and Fujian. The newcomers settled in the western end of Kobe's foreign district, which soon became the focal point for subsequent Chinese migrants. During that time, the Chinese people were referred to as people from Nanking by the Japanese, hence the name Nankinmachi (Nanking Town). By the early 1920s, Nankinmachi was a vibrant area bustling with businesses, restaurants, and homes. That all changed, however, during the next two decades when many Chinese returned to China in response to Japan's expansion of Northeastern China, the Second Sino-Japanese War, and World War II. Destroyed during the allied bombings of Kobe, Nankinmachi was re-built after the war by the remaining Chinese community that stayed behind. In 1995, it was severely damaged during the Great Hanshin earthquake. It was quickly rebuilt, and once again thrives as a center of Chinese culture and activity throughout the Kansai region. There are currently 10,000 people residing in Nankin-machi.
【元町】神戸華僑歴史博物館 Kobe Overseas Chinese History Museum 6
平成31年2月2日@神戸元町
神戸華僑歴史博物館
Kobe Overseas Chinese History Museum
神戸港の開港(1868年)とともに居留地には欧米人が商館を開きました。彼等とともに長崎や上海、香港などから神戸にやってきた華僑も、居留地の周辺に貿易商館を構え、中国人街を形成していきました。それがいまの南京町です。
Nankin-machi originated in 1868, when Kobe's port was opened to foreigners including Chinese immigrants from Guangdong and Fujian. The newcomers settled in the western end of Kobe's foreign district, which soon became the focal point for subsequent Chinese migrants. During that time, the Chinese people were referred to as people from Nanking by the Japanese, hence the name Nankinmachi (Nanking Town). By the early 1920s, Nankinmachi was a vibrant area bustling with businesses, restaurants, and homes. That all changed, however, during the next two decades when many Chinese returned to China in response to Japan's expansion of Northeastern China, the Second Sino-Japanese War, and World War II. Destroyed during the allied bombings of Kobe, Nankinmachi was re-built after the war by the remaining Chinese community that stayed behind. In 1995, it was severely damaged during the Great Hanshin earthquake. It was quickly rebuilt, and once again thrives as a center of Chinese culture and activity throughout the Kansai region. There are currently 10,000 people residing in Nankin-machi.
Osaka Museum of Housing and Living
「博物館住まい学習研究会」制作&「大阪くらしの今昔館」撮影協力で、大阪の町家建築と暮らしを紹介するビデオが完成!
「博物館住まい学習研究会」(代表 大阪教育大学教授 碓田智子)が建築技術教育普及センタ−の助成を受け、大阪くらしの今昔館と協力して、
大阪の町家建築と暮らしの魅力を紹介するビデオを制作しました。
Japan Travel 88 Osaka 3 2019 New year visit a Shrine
Namba Yasaka Shrine
Auckland Vacation Guide: Auckland Maritime Museum
Auckland Vacation Guide: Photo Tour of the Auckland Maritime Museum, located at Auckland's Viaduct Harbour.
Entry: $20.00 (Adults); $17.00 (Seniors / Students); $10.00 (Children); $40.00 (Family Pass)
* Free for Auckland Residents (bring some proof)
Hours: 10:00am - 5:00pm
Located on Hobson Wharf in the Viaduct. The museum provides a variety of information and displays. It commences with the story of the Maori migration to New Zealand, and includes displays of various forms of Maori and Polynesian vessels.
The museum also acknowledges the voyages of Abel Tasman and Captain Cook to New Zealand.
There are models of early Auckland wharf activity, as well as a variety of vessels of all shapes and sizes. Kids of all ages will love viewing these models.
There's also a replica of a beachside dairy/milk bar, information about the workings of NZ Customs, and a display of the first Hamilton Jet.
Allow 90 minutes to thoroughly explore this unique museum.
The museum displays will satisfy patrons of all ages.
Check out the Michael Brady YouTube Channel for other similar presentations.
Auckland Tourism
Auckland Botanic Gardens
Albert Park
Auckland CBD
Princess Street Historic Buildings, Old Government House
Auckland Domain Wintergarden
Devonport Trail
Auckland Botanic Gardens (short video)
Auckland Zoo
The Best of Auckland Zoo
North Head Tunnels, Devonport
Eden Gardens, Mt Eden
Puhoi, North Auckland
Auckland Museum
Leaving Waiheke Island (as seen from the Fullers Ferry)
Auckland Maritime Museum
Waiheke Island Day Trip
Alberton Historic House
Bethells Beach and Lake Wainamu
Michael Brady, Auckland, New Zealand
The World Gallery - Horniman Museum and Gardens
Come and encounter cultures from across the continents in the World Gallery.
Hear from our CEO Nick Merriman, Classicist Mary Beard, Heritage Lottery Fund's Ros Kerslake and the Chair of our Board, Eve Salomon in this video, about the new displays.
Over 3,000 objects from around the world give you a glimpse into other ways of life and a greater understanding of other peoples, places and cultures.
You can touch intricately tooled Tuareg metalwork, arctic seal and reindeer skin, or discover a digital coral reef at your feet.
Smell aromatic herbs used by Bhutanese ritual healers in the Himalayas, listen to epic First Nations’ stories from the Pacific Northwest Coast, and even play in a Lagos market stall.
What can you expect?
The World Gallery will show some of the ways that ordinary people live their lives and make their way in the world we all share.
You can find stories about contemporary issues such as climate change, migration and displacement alongside artwork and objects from ancient civilisations.
Over 200 people from our community networks worked with our curators and Horniman staff, including local groups, arts organisations, community leaders, international museums, academic partners and representatives of some of those who made or used the objects in the collections.
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The Horniman Museum and Gardens is an inspiring, surprising, family-friendly, free attraction in South London’s Forest Hill. We’ve been open since Victorian times, when Frederick John Horniman first opened his house and extraordinary collection of objects to visitors. Since then, our collection has grown tenfold and includes internationally important collections of anthropology and musical instruments, as well as an acclaimed aquarium and natural history collection.
Unusually for such an important museum, you can see our collection up-close and face-to-face. You can even pick up, try on and play with some of our objects.
Find out what's on and pay us a visit:
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Day 22 - Japan
After going to the migration museum in Kobe, we went to the port, where we did a little photo shoot just for fun. Then we got back to Yokohama by train.
I found a dinosaur!!
I haven't been Harbour Land in Kobe for a long time, but today I went there.
Then I found a dinosaur!!
It was a nice surprise.
The Great Wall Story – The Way I Have Discovered It by William Lindesay OBE
Between the late fourth century BC to 1644 AD at least 16 border-defence systems were intermittently built, or inherited and operated, by rulers of Chinese dynasties – all of them functioning as fortifications against nomadic cavalry from the north. These are known as “Great Walls of China”. Chinese chroniclers wrote a great library about their empires, including a history of each dynasty, but shy of rough work on imperial frontiers they seldom reference “Great Walls”. Today, their remnants comprise the largest system of related ancient ruins in the world, yet in spite of the urgent need to conserve these monuments their academic study and field research is ignored by university faculties – because “Great Wall Studies” transcends many fields.
By reviewing a series of personal Great Wall explorations, field-research foci, discoveries, advocacy and archive projects carried out and achieved in China between 1987 and 2017, as a geographer, author and film-maker I will show how diverse, personal, unconventional – and “foreign” – approaches have made significant contributions to the surprisingly narrow, Sino-centric and limited corpus of Great Wall knowledge, as well as popular understanding.
“The Great Wall”, the most famous building in the world, a bucket-list must-see, remains the least-known and most superficially protected of UNESCO world heritages, as continuing damage to it by nature and man shows. I hold that a better future for its protection, and rational, economic, educational and inspirational uses, rests with the development of “Great Wall Studies” as an integrated course at university level.
William Lindesay gave this Keynote Presentation at The Asian Conference on Media, Communication & Film MediAsia2017 in Kobe, Japan. For more information about MediAsia please visit:
– Biography –
William Lindesay OBE is an honorary senior research fellow at University of Liverpool, where he studied geography and geology in the 1970s. Recently he received the Royal Society for Asian Affairs’ Special Award 2016. He first went to China to recce the Great Wall in 1986, making the first documented traverse of the ruins on foot the following year, in 1987, in which he covered 2,470 km.
Since 1990 he has resided permanently in China, spending more than 2,700 days on its Great Walls. He has written five books on the subject, published by Harvard University Press and Penguin among others, and fronted documentaries that have been screened on National Geographic Channel, Channel 4, Discovery Channel and the Smithsonian Channel.
William Lindesay is credited with arousing China’s national consciousness to protect the Great Wall and its environment, and he has created/curated two national exhibitions in Beijing, at the Capital Museum and the Imperial Academy, and seven provincial exhibitions. For his work presenting and preserving the Great Wall and assuming the role of its international ambassador he was granted permanent residency in China. He lives with his wife and two sons in Beijing, in a village below the Great Wall in the city’s northern suburbs.
3D The Gift of Angels at USJ (Part 2)
I found misalignment of last part (widest angle scene). Sorry about that! Please visit the revised 3D video (not open to public) instead of this entry ;
(I wish YouTube has replace function!)
--------------Original Caption-------------
3D recording of a USJ Event, The gift of Ang
els (2009 Big E Awards winner) on twin GH1 3D rig with 7-14 mm equivalent wide angle lenses.
In this Part 2, Angels are lighting the Christmas Tree (36 m tall, tallest in Japan) with arrows.
Part 1 can be seen here;
Merry Christmas to all of you!
Mark Wiens Vlogs 2 | Japanese Food | Amazing Lunch Sets at Sake Noana 酒の穴 Restaurants in Ginza
Please watch: Mark Wiens First Ever Food Review Show | Cambodia 2010 | Eating Bugs and Exploring Local Markets
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Sake Noana 酒の穴
Address: Japan, 104-0061 Tokyo, Ginza Chuo-ku, 3 Chome-5-8, Tokyo, Japan (Google map:
Open hours: 11:30 am - 11 pm daily
Total price: 3,480 JPY ($31.25 USD)
My overall rating - 8/10
Sake Noana 酒の穴 is a sake bar and great budget Japanese restaurant in Ginza, Tokyo. My wife and I had just landed in Tokyo, and we really had no plans for where to eat lunch, so we took a walk outside our hotel, and we found this place just by chance.
It turned out to be an excellent little basement restaurant, and although it’s known to be a Japanese sake bar, they also have some amazing lunch specials, which I thought were a very good deal for Tokyo.
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Awaji Island Keeping traditions alive Best Documentary HD
Awazi redirects here. For the Islamic jurist, see Abd al-Rahman al-Awza'i.
Awaji Native name: 淡路島 Awaji-shima
Location-of-Awaji-island-en.png
Map of Awaji Island
Awaji is located in Japan
Awaji
Awaji
Location in Japan
Geography
Location Seto Inland Sea
Coordinates 34°23′N 134°50′ECoordinates: 34°23′N 134°50′E
Area 592.17 km2 (228.64 sq mi)
Length 53 km (32.9 mi)
Width 28 km (17.4 mi)
Highest elevation 606 m (1,988 ft)
Administration
Japan
Prefecture Hyōgo Prefecture
Demographics
Population 157,000 (2005)
Pop. density 265 /km2 (686 /sq mi)
Ethnic groups Japanese
Awaji Island (淡路島? Awaji-shima) is an island in Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan, in the eastern part of the Seto Inland Sea between the islands of Honshū and Shikoku. The island has an area of 592.17 square kilometres (228.64 square miles),[1] and is the largest of the Inland Sea's islands.
As a transit between those two islands, Awaji originally means the road to Awa,[2] the historic province bordering the Shikoku side of the Naruto Strait, now part of Tokushima Prefecture The island is separated from Honshū by the Akashi Strait and from Shikoku by the Naruto Strait. Since April 5, 1998, it has been connected to Kobe on Honshū by the Akashi Kaikyō Bridge, the longest suspension bridge in the world.[3] Since its completion the Kobe Awaji Naruto Expressway across the island has been the main eastern land link between Honshū and Shikoku. The Naruto whirlpools form in the strait between Naruto, Tokushima and Awaji.[4]
The Nojima Fault, responsible for the 1995 Great Hanshin earthquake, cuts across the island. A section of the fault was protected and turned into the Nojima Fault Preservation Museum in the Hokudancho Earthquake Memorial Park (北淡町震災記念公園?) to show how the movement in the ground cut across roads, hedges and other installations. Outside of this protected area, the fault zone is less visible.[5] The Onaruto Bridge Memorial Museum (大鳴門橋記念館? Ōnarutokyō Kinenkan) and the Uzushio Science Museum (うずしお科学館? Uzushio Kagakukan) are located near Fukura.[6]
History
According to the creation myth in Shinto, Awaji was the first of the ōyashima islands born from the kami Izanagi and Izanami.[7] Awaji constituted a province between the 7th and the 19th century, Awaji Province, and was a part of Nankaidō. Today the island consists of three municipalities: Awaji, Sumoto and Minamiawaji.
The Awaji Ningyō-Jōruri, a more-than-500-year-old form of traditional puppet theater, or ningyō-jōruri, daily performs several shows in the Awaji Ningyō-Jōruri Hall (人形浄瑠璃館?) in Minamiawaji, Hyōgo in the southern part of the island and is designated an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Japan. The Awaji puppets perform popular traditional dramas but have their origins in religious rituals.[8]
Starting in the 1830s, the local potter Minpei started producing what would be then known as Awaji ware, also known as Minpei ware.
Tadao Ando designed several structures on the island, amidst them the Hompuku-ji water temple (本福寺?)[9][10] and the Awaji Yumebutai,[11][12] both located in Awaji, Hyōgo.
In 1995, this island was the epicenter of the Kobe earthquake, which killed over 5,502 peopl
Happy Japan losing appetite for reform | Short View
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