Off-the-Beaten-Track Tokyo
Mac, Founder and Lead Guide of Maction Planet Bespoke Japan Travel, introduces some of his favourite off-the-beaten-track Tokyo neighbourhoods.
Kokubunji
Kameido
The main draw of the area is the Kameido Tenjin Shrine. It was was founded in 1661 and dedicated to Sugawara-no-Michizane (845-903), a ninth-century politician who was deified and renamed Tenjin after his death. A great poet and scholar, Sugawara is now regarded as the Shinto god of learning. Original called Kamedio Tenmangu, the name of the shrine was changed to Kameido Jinja in 1873 and then Kameido Tenjin in 1936. The original wooden structure was destroyed during the firebombing raids of World War II . In the years after the war, the shrine was rebuilt with modern materials. The shrine is part of Kameido local life. The shrine now attracts students of all ages who call on higher powers to help them pass their exams, appealing to Sugawara no Michizane for good grades that will lead to admission to top schools and universities. It is famous for its plum trees in late winter, purple weeping wisteria trellises in the spring (which look atmospheric even in summer as shown above) and blossoming chrysanthemums in autumn. The legendary wisterias here have appeared in many works of art; the most well-known of which is probably ‘In the Kameido Tenjin Shrine Compound’ (1856) by ukiyo-e master Utagawa Hiroshige, part of his ‘100 Famous Views of Edo’ series.
Sengakuji
Sengakuji is a station on the Toei Asakusa Line. You can also walk there from the newly opened Takanawa Gateway station, the first Yamanote Line station in almost three decades.
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