The Japan Timesのインスタグラム(thejapantimes) - 3月20日 13時41分


For the rest of the world all roads might lead to Rome, but in Japan all roads lead to Nihonbashi. Beginning in the Edo Period (1603-1868) the famously well-maintained and extensive highway system, the Gokaido, spread out from Nihonbashi to facilitate travel across Japan. As a result, Edo (now Tokyo) became a cultural — and culinary — melting pot, and Nihonbashi, as a mixed-use district of entertainment, finance and trade, was quite literally at its center. For good reason, it was known as the “kitchen of Edo.” Nowadays, Coredo Muromachi brings together specialty shops from across Japan. Under the banner of “creating while preserving and reviving,” Coredo Muromachi modernizes the historic Nihonbashi “melting pot” and brings together myriad culinary treasures to within easy reach. (Claire Williamson photos)
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#Japan #Nihonbashi #Coredo #tourism #travel #food #instafood #delicious #history #coredo室町 ##コレド室町 #東京 #日本橋 #旅行 #食べ物 #食事 #文化 #買い物 #歴史


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