Tokugawa Art Museum - Nagoya - Aichi - 徳川美術館 - 4K Ultra HD
Nagoya’s Tokugawa Art Museum was founded in 1935 and built on the grounds of the Owari’s former feudal residence, one of the three major branches of the ruling Tokugawa family in Nagoya during the Edo Period. Tokugawa Art Museum offers visitors the chance to enjoy some of Japan’s oldest arts as well as many past artifacts donated by the Tokugawa Yoshichika itself, including samurai armor and swords, and also antique Kimono and tea ceremony utensils.
Not only is the Tokugawa Art Museum worth a visit, but its beautiful garden is also something that needs to be experienced and enjoyed, either on your own or with your family.
To Subscribe to this Channel, click here!! :
For any questions, Inquiries or if you are looking to acquire some of our rush, please contact us here: tokyostreetview@gmail.com
Love this video? Feel free to share it among your friends or even better embed it on your website!
Twitter : @TokyoStreetView
Facebook :
Pinterest :
Blog :
Instagram :
Vine :
Experience the real spirit of Japan: The Tokugawa Art Museum
The Tokugawa Art Museum was established under the non-profit The Tokugawa Reimeikai Foundation in 1935. The Museum ranks as the fourth oldest privately-endowed museum in Japan.
At the core of the collection are objects inherited from the first shogun, Ieyasu. The Owari, like other great daimyo, also treasured the art from earlier generations. Thus the Museum has come to own most of the extant sections of the twelfth century Illustrated Tale of Genji.
Some idea of the quality of the collection can be gleaned from the fact that besides this early masterpiece the collection includes nine other designated National Treasures, fifty-nine registered Important Cultural Properties, and forty-six Important Art Objects. The Museum is noted further for the overall fine condition of its pieces. Moreover most objects have been handed down accompanied by meticulous family documents, catalogues and other records.
These establish clear provenance and the historical background of patronage and use for the works of art. The Museum is uniquely fortunate to hold such an intact and well documented collection. It is a trove not only of beautiful things but a wealth of historic information.
For more details see
Japan Travel: Tokugawa Art Museum treasures of Tokugawa family, Nagoya
Japan Travel: Tokugawa Art Museum treasures of Tokugawa family, Nagoya 08 Moopon
Tokugawa Art Museum
During the Edo Period (1600-1868), Nagoya served as the seat of the Owari, one of the three major branches of the ruling Tokugawa family. Regarding the great wealth the family amassed, there were only four feudal domains that surpassed out of 200 of the Edo Period. The Tokugawa Art Museum was built on the grounds of the Owari's former feudal residence and preserves and displays several of their treasures including swords and samurai armor and tea utensils, noh masks and costumes, poems, scrolls and maps.
There is a beautiful Japanese landscape garden called Tokugawa-en next to the museum, that has a large pond at its center. The garden used to be part of a retirement residence of the local lords, but was ruined during the war. In 2001 the garden was rebuilt and reopened to the public in 2004. A large network of walking trails lead around the grounds to a tea house, rest houses, and across several bridges. The best season to visit the garden is during spring, when its Peony (mid to late April) and Iris gardens (late May to early June) bloom, and during the autumn season (November).
Access information
The museum is a ten minute walk from Ozone Station on the JR Chuo, Meijo Subway, and the Meitetsu Seto Line. JR Chuo Line is frequently operated to directly connect between Ozone Station and Nagoya Station (12 minutes, 200 yen one way).
In addition, to get to the museum, the Meguru loop bus line for tourists can be used, and from Nagoya Station it takes about 40 minutes or from Nagoya Castle it takes about 15 minutes. The fare is 200 yen per ride or 500 yen for a day pass.
Hours: 10:00 to 17:00 (entry ends at 16:30)
Closed: Mondays (or following day if Monday is a national holiday)
Mid December to early January
Admission: 1200 yen for museum only, 1350 yen for museum and garden
English: Good
【The Best Savings--Ultimate Japan Coupon Site Moopon】
Official Website :
facebook:
【Our Sister YouTube Channel】
The Best Japan Trip ・Useful Information in Japan(English):
旅日首選旅館、飯店、餐飲及娛樂・旅日精選景點(中文繁体):
旅日首选旅馆、饭店、餐饮及娱乐・旅日精选景点(中文簡体):
Wisata terbaik Jepang Informasi di Jepang(Bahasa Indonesia):
日本のおすすめ旅館・ホテル・レジャー・飲食店・日本のオススメ観光地(Japanese):
The Tokugawa Art Museum Nagoya Japan
The Tokugawa Art Museum Nagoya Japan
The Tokugawa Art Museum Nagoya Japan
The Tokugawa Art Museum Nagoya Japan
The Tokugawa Art Museum Nagoya Japan
The Tokugawa Art Museum Nagoya Japan
Japan Trip: Tokugawa Art Museum Japan's history & tradition, Nagoya
Japan Trip: Tokugawa Art Museum Japan's history & tradition, Nagoya
[008] aichi Tokugawa Art Museum
Subscribe link :
Tokugawa Art Museum
During the Edo Period (1600-1868), Nagoya served as the seat of the Owari, one of the three major branches of the ruling Tokugawa family. Regarding the great wealth the family amassed, there were only four feudal domains that surpassed out of 200 of the Edo Period. The Tokugawa Art Museum was built on the grounds of the Owari's former feudal residence and preserves and displays several of their treasures including swords and samurai armor and tea utensils, noh masks and costumes, poems, scrolls and maps.
There is a beautiful Japanese landscape garden called Tokugawa-en next to the museum, that has a large pond at its center. The garden used to be part of a retirement residence of the local lords, but was ruined during the war. In 2001 the garden was rebuilt and reopened to the public in 2004. A large network of walking trails lead around the grounds to a tea house, rest houses, and across several bridges. The best season to visit the garden is during spring, when its Peony (mid to late April) and Iris gardens (late May to early June) bloom, and during the autumn season (November).
Access information
The museum is a ten minute walk from Ozone Station on the JR Chuo, Meijo Subway, and the Meitetsu Seto Line. JR Chuo Line is frequently operated to directly connect between Ozone Station and Nagoya Station (12 minutes, 200 yen one way).
In addition, to get to the museum, the Meguru loop bus line for tourists can be used, and from Nagoya Station it takes about 40 minutes or from Nagoya Castle it takes about 15 minutes. The fare is 200 yen per ride or 500 yen for a day pass.
Hours: 10:00 to 17:00 (entry ends at 16:30)
Closed: Mondays (or following day if Monday is a national holiday)
Mid December to early January
Admission: 1200 yen for museum only, 1350 yen for museum and garden
English: Good
The Tokugawa Art Museum Nagoya Japan
The Tokugawa Art Museum Nagoya Japan
The Tokugawa Art Museum Nagoya Japan
The Tokugawa Art Museum Nagoya Japan
Fish
JAPANTRIP「Tokugawa Art Museum」Nagoya, Aichi 【徳川美術館】
The Tokugawa Art Museum (徳川美術館 Tokugawa Bijutsukan) is a private art museum, located on the former Ōzone Shimoyashiki compound in Nagoya, central Japan. Its collection contains more than 12,000 items, including swords, armor, Noh costumes and masks, lacquer furniture, Chinese and Japanese ceramics, calligraphy, and paintings from the Chinese Song and Yuan dynasties (960-1368).
Nagoya Castle HQ of the Owari Branch of the Tokugawa Shogunate!
Nagoya Castle was constructed under the order of Tokugawa Ieyasu who founded the Tokugawa Shogunate after the battle of Sekigahara and resolved in 1609 to move from Kiyosu to build a castle in Nagoya in order to secure an important position on the Tokaido highway and to ward off attacks from the direction of Osaka. Construction of the donjons began in 1610 and ended in 1612. Nagoya Castle is an exemplary castle of those built on flat lands.
Kato Kiyomasa, Fukushima Masanori, and Maeda Toshimitsu were some of the 20 feudal lords from the northern and western part of Japan who were appointed to the construction. THe inscriptions of feudal lords and their vassals carved on the stones they carried are still visible today on the stone walls. Up until the Meiji Restoration, Nagoya Castle flourished as the castle where the Tokugawa lineage of Owari, the foremost of the three Tokugawa family lineages, resided.
At the beginning of the Meiji era the Army Ministry administered the castle, and the Nagoya Detached Garrison and barracks were disposed on the castle grounds. Transferred to the Imperial Household Ministry in 1893, the castle became the Nagoya Imperial Villa. IN 1930, after the abolition of the Imperial Villa, the castle was brought under the administration of the City of Nagoya and was opened to the public in February of the following year.
In May 1945, due to the air raids on Nagoya during World War II, buildings such as the main and small donjons, and the Hommaru Palace were burned down. Fortunately, three towers, three gates, and 1,047 paintings on the sliding doors and walls of the palace survived the fire and have been designated as important national cultural assets. In 1959, the main and small donjons, and the main gate were practically restored to their original form.
Back ground music courtesy of IODA
Samurai Oshari MG MUSIC LTD (NEW AGE, WORLD)
Step into the ancient world of the Samurai, a culture devoted in their pursuit of balance of mind, body, spirit, and perfection. The music is performed on many authentic instruments such as Taiko drums and Shaku flutes which gives the CD a unique Japanese atmosphere, which is both Zen like and soul stirring.
The music is performed on many authentic instruments such as Taiko drums
and Shaku flutes which gives the CD a unique Japanese atmosphere, which
is both Zen like and soul stirring.
Tracts: 1. The Sword
travel vlog Tokugawa Art Museum(徳川公園)
DescriptionThe Tokugawa Garden is a Japanese garden in the city of Nagoya, central Japan. It is located next to the Tokugawa Art Museum
Nick Nakamura on ancient Tokugawa Family swords
Meiji Mura, Inuyama, Aichi in 4K - Japan's Finest Open Air Museum - 博物館明治村 - Japan As It Truly Is
Meiji Mura is Japan's most fantastic open-air museum - walk back over a century in an amazing journey of a changing Japan.
Here you will find nearly 70 buildings saved from destruction, from an era long gone, and showing a changing Japan with a mix of traditional and western influences. Some of the places are simply wonderful, and how they took apart so many buildings and reassembled them all perfectly together here is astonishing. The buildings are all from the Meiji Era (1868-1912) when Japan opened up to modernization and industrialization after 250 years of isolation. Very few buildings from this era have survived, and Meiji Mura has brought in scores from all over the country - and puts all the other similar places to shame. Meiji Mura was opened in March 1965.
There are also old trains and trolleys you can ride, just like they did over 120 years ago.
Meiji-Mura is in Inuyama City, Aichi, about 90 minutes by train and bus north of Nagoya. It is still not well known to the tourist mobs, and it is so large that you can easily spend half a day there. It is about 1.1 km long and 620 m wide. Adult tickets are ¥1700, jr high age and younger ¥600.
Meiji Mura hours: Open 9:30-5:00 (Mar.-Jul. 22, Sep-Oct.)
10:00-17:00 (Jul. 23-Aug. 31)
9:30-16:00 (Nov.)
10:00-16:00 (Dec.-Feb.)
Closed Jan. 7-11, Sep. 3-7, Dec. 17-18, 24, 31, and from Jan. 21-Feb. 25 on Mondays (except national holidays).
Official website:
Along with seeing Inuyama Castle, it makes a great day trip.
For more videos like this, please subscribe:
Please leave some comments below. If you have any questions, feel free to ask.
Nagoya, Japan - Castle - Toyota Museum - City
I'm in Japan for a business trip, but had some time to check out some local attractions around the city of Nagoya. Enjoy!
Music by:
A Tokugawa Scholar's Private Museum
Rebecca and I spent Silver Week in the mountains of Shizuoka, in a small town known as Shimada. We stayed with one Mr. Kurosawa, a man who devoted his life to studying Buddhist Scriptures and the life of Tokugawa Ieyasu. Our gracious host allowed us to tour his own personal museum, a traditional Japanese home surrounded by tea terraces, which he calls his hideaway.
Enjoy!
Visiting the Iga Ninja Museum on a Day Trip from Nagoya
Have you always wanted to become a Ninja? Then there is one place in Japan you have to visit: Iga
Iga has the longest history if Ninja in Japan and at the Iga Ninja Museum you can learn a lot about Ninja. The museum has a real Ninja house with hidden doors and secret tunnels. Don't forget to attend the Ninja show where you can see the amazing Ninja weapons in action!
Afterward, you might want to visit the Ninja Cafe the home of the Ninja Cat.
And how about a visit to Moku Moku Farm where you can learn how to make sausages (and eat them afterward with a nice cool beer). I know this one doesn't have anything to do with Ninja.
*************************************************************
Iga Ryu Ninja Museum
Admission: 700 Yen (7 USD)
Opening Hours: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Ninja Show
Admission: 400 Yen (4 USD)
Hours: Multiple times daily, no reservation required
Ninja Cafe Murai Bankouen
Try the Ninja Parfait
Hours: 9 a.m. - 7 p.m.
*************************************************************
SUBSCRIBE ►
********
FOLLOW ME!
HOMEPAGE ►
NEWSLETTER ►
FACEBOOK ►
TWITTER ►
INSTAGRAM ►
********
WANT TO DO YOUR OWN GAP YEAR?
GAP YEAR PLANNING BLOG ►
GAP YEAR PLANNING PRINTABLE ►
********
BOOK YOUR TRAVELS!
FLIGHTS Skyscanner ►
HOTELS 15€ off at booking.com►
TOURS Get Your Guide►
EXPERIENCES in Asia with klook.com►
********
VLOGGING GEAR!
CAMERA Lumix G85 ►
LENS Olympus 12-40 mm f2.8 pro►
MICROPHONE Rode VideoMicro ►
********
If you loved this video, don’t forget to subscribe to my channel!
None of the experiences in this video are in any way sponsored and have all been paid for by myself. The opinions stated are all my own and have not been influenced in any way.
This description contains affiliate links. I receive a commission if a product is purchased through one of these links, at no extra cost to you. Please support me by purchasing products through my links!
Shogun The Shogun Age Exhibition from the Tokugawa Art Museum Japan
Tokugawa-Park Nagoya
Ein Landschaftsgarten in Japan