• 4 months ago
Oama Inari Shrine, 1-33-19 Denenchofu, Ota-ku, Tokyo

When you visit shrines in Tokyo, you are often surprised by the sacred places that have been protected by people.
Floods, fires, earthquakes, war damage, and materialism.
Small shrines, shrines on the rooftops of buildings, shrines directly under the highway.
Sacred places that are there for people in any form, and the guardians that protect them.
I made this video because I wanted to share these beautiful images.
Japanese landscapes and Japanese people of the past preserved in old photographs.
There is a Japan that seems to be forgotten. I really don't want to forget the forgotten Japan.
The photographs are around 100 years old, some are about 150 years old, and some are 85 years old.
Please come and feel the connection with the people of the past.

Source
The House of the Tondenhei. 1897. Souvenirs of Yézo Août-September 1897 Phototype by K. Ogawa. Gallica
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b105240594/f43.item.r=Kazuma%20Ogawa
Omairi.club Daiten Inari Shrine
https://omairi.club/spots/99647
Honmoku Yokohama 192 postal carts, certain couleurs, of Japan, by Challay in 1928. Gallica
https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/btv1b532006431/f129.item.r=ginza
Album of 18 photos. Japanese style rehearsals, first published in 1884, photo by F. Beato, who played the name of E. Ziegler, photo in Paris, and later the V. Ballet cache, later by Ziegler. Registered in 1930

BGM
Amacha's Music Studio
Narration by Ondoku-san

Category

🏖
Travel

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