Une famille au Japon: tea ceremony lesson in Kanaya
Un moment privilégié qui dépasse la barrière de la langue : dans une maison typique japonaise, être initées par des maîtres venus de Kyoto à la cérémonie du thé vert, le matcha, de la préparation à la dégustation, habillées de kimonos dans un cadre magique.
言葉では表現できない貴重な体験。伝統的な日本家屋で、京都の茶道の先生たちによるお茶会が開かれた。着物を着させてもらって、お茶会の習わしに沿って抹茶をいただく。
Words cannot describe the select time we had in a typical Japanese house where we were initiated to tea ceremony by Senseis from Kyoto ; we were dressed in kimonos and drank the famous Matcha green tea, the one and only used for tea ceremony.
Titre
tea ceremony lesson in Kanaya
Directed by
minuscule production
Date
August 2016
Location
Kanaya, Futtsu, Japan
Duration
2'01''
Music
forest by Gaspard Sommer
Produced by
Cent Dix
Copyright
© minuscule production
Special thanks to
Kanaya, Futtsu
Kururi Castle, Kimitsu, Chiba Prefecture, Japan
Kururi Castle (久留里城) in Kimitsu, Chiba prefecture.
Built in 1540 by Mariya Takeda. It was later captured by Satomi Yoshitaka, who used it as his base of operations against the Hōjō clan who were based in Odawara Castle.
The Hōjō made three failed attempts to take Kururi Castle, until finally in 1564 the Hõjõ, with the help of samurai trained in the methods of shinobijutsu (castle infiltration), seized the castle and the Satomi fled. The Satomi weren’t fazed though and led an all out assault to reclaim the castle just three years later in 1567.
In 1590 Toyotomi Hideyoshi laid siege to the Hõjõ base castle at Odawara defeating the Hõjõ. The Satomi had been asked by Toyotomi Hideyoshi to help in the attack on the Hõjõ, but support from the Satomi clan wasn’t given in time. Toyotomi Hideyoshi subsequently punished them by depriving the Satomi of their entire domain.
Toyotomi Hideyoshi’s able ally Tokugawa Ieyasu assigned the castle to Matsudaira Tadamasa. A large castle town was established at the base of the mountain within the third bailey of the castle which now encompassed not only the mountain but the entire valley below.
Kururi Castle was later successively ruled by the Osuga, Tsuchiya, and Kuroda clans after the Battle of Sekigahara (1600). In 1679 the daimyõ Tsuchiya Naoki was declared insane, his son was demoted, and the domain was suppressed. The castle was allowed to fall into ruin.
In 1842 the domain was once again revived under Kuroda Naozumi when the shõgun appointed him to the castle with the hope of reinvigorating the peninsula. The Kuroda continued to rule the domain up until the Meiji Restoration in 1868.
In 1872, by order of the new Meiji government, the castle was demolished and the lumber and stone was carried down from the mountain to be used for building public buildings and road works.
Like most Japanese castles today, Kururi Castle’s ruins are now a public park. A new keep was constructed in 1979 in concrete from drawings and diagrams dating from the mid-1500’s. This new concrete keep was built next to the original castle’s base, not on the same site, to preserve the original foundations. The original foundations are situated right next to the new keep and are fenced off. A sign has been erected showing a photo of the original foundation stones.
It is a 600 odd metre walk to the second bailey and then a further 50 metres or so to the main keep. One can see how easy it would have been to defend on all sides as the castle was built to take advantage of the steep terrain. Even today there is only one way to the main keep and that was protected on all sides by steep cliffs topped by a wall.
The keep itself sits atop a narrow mountain top with a small bailey that was walled and had a single simple gate. It commands a grand view of the surrounding area which even today is over 90% heavily forested mountains. Fifty metres down from the main keep the second bailey was much smaller and also encircled by a wall with two simple gates. The Third bailey was actually 800 metres away down in the plains at the base of the mountain. This was similarly walled with two simple gates. There were no moats at this castle.
Of interest are the walls which stand at only 5’2”. This was to enable the castles occupants to lob stones and flaming bails over the walls at attackers.
During the construction of the original castle, legend states that it rained 21 times, or once every three days. For this reason the castle was also given the nickname U Castle (雨) or “rain” Castle.
© James Kemlo
Shore at Futtsu
Place where we dig and pick clam shells..we came back in the afternoon to see how it looks and now digging small crabs.=)
Location: Futtsu,Chiba
Date: May 03, 2010
2015年03月28日 MARIライブ「カフェinカフェ」@Cafe edomons(富津市金谷)
千葉県富津市金谷の合掌造りの古民家カフェえどもんすで開催された「カフェinカフェ」イベント内でMARIさんのライブが行われました。
その中から「夏色百景」の模様をお届けします。
▼イベント紹介記事
▼MARIさん公式サイト
▼Cafe edomons
【浮世絵 名所絵】葛飾北斎 富嶽三十六景
富嶽は富士山の別名。19世紀後半のヨーロッパでジャポニスムと呼ばれる潮流を起こした北斎の代表作。初めは題名の通り36図出版されましたが、非常に好評であったため、後から10図が追加されて最終的に46図になりました。当初の36図を「表富士」、追加の10図を「裏富士」と呼びます。「富嶽三十六景」は単なる風景画の域を超え、日本人の心の風景を描き出しています。
日本が世界に誇る浮世絵をアップしていきます。チャンネル登録はこちらです。
葛飾北斎の再生リスト
浮世絵 春画の再生リスト
アキーラさん散策!千葉県千葉市幕張海岸の突堤!Makuhari-beach,Chiba-city,Japan
国際ジャーナリスト&旅行ジャーナリスト 大川原 明のホームページは下記
アメブロ(憂国の士アキーラ世界1周・日本1周旅行記のブログ)は下記をクリック
Youtube別チャンネル(憂国の旅人アキーラ旅Travel Channel2)
Youtube別チャンネル(ジャーナリスト大川原 明)
千葉県千葉市幕張海岸の突堤を夜の散策
Tokyo Bay
Tokyo Bay is a bay located in the southern Kantō region of Japan, and spans the coasts of Tokyo, Kanagawa Prefecture, and Chiba Prefecture. Tokyo Bay is connected to the Pacific Ocean by the Uraga Channel. Its old name was Edo Bay. The Tokyo Bay region is both the most populous and largest industrialized area in Japan.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video