
Marker in
Nihonbashi from which distances are measured in Japan.

Graves of 47 Ronin at Sengakuji Temple. See year 1701.

Sakuradamon Gate of Edo Castle where
Ii Naosuke was assassinated in 1860.

Tokyo Tower was built in 1958. It was built from recycled military tanks.
The 'History of Tokyo' began in the
7th century. The mainland area now occupied by
Tokyo was, together with modern-day
Saitama Prefecture and the
cities of
Kawasaki and the eastern part of
Yokohama, established in the
7th century as
Musashi, one of the
province under the ''
ritsuryÅ'' system. Small parts were in
Shimosa Province. The central part of the
23 special wards lay in
Toshima,
Ebara,
Adachi, and (in Shimosa)
Katsushika Districts.
Western Tokyo occupied
Tama District. Tokyo's oldest
Buddhist temple,
SensÅ-ji in
Asakusa, is said to date from the year 645.
In the
Kamakura period, the village of
Edo appeared. The construction of
Edo Castle by
ÅŒta DÅkan, a vassal of
Uesugi Mochitomo, began in 1457 during the
Muromachi period in what is now the East Garden of the
Imperial Palace.
HÅjÅ Ujitsuna entered Edo Castle in 1524, and
Tokugawa Ieyasu moved there in 1590.
Edo period
The
Edo period began when Tokugawa Ieyasu became
shogun in 1603, and the city developed rapidly under his successors. The construction of Edo Castle, including the main tower, was finally completed in 1637. In 1657, the
Great Fire of Meireki destroyed much of the
Yoshiwara red-light district,
Asakusa, and Edo Castle. 100,000 people died.
In 1701, in the shogun's palace,
Asano Naganori drew his sword and cut
Kira Yoshinaka, the highest-ranking master of protocol. Asano was immediately forced to commit
seppuku. At the end of the following year, his
47 masterless retainers avenged their master's death by attacking and beheading Kira at his residence in
RyÅgoku. This story of loyalty soon became a timeless classic known as ''Chushingura.''
Mount Fuji erupted and spewed ash on Edo in 1707. Nature struck again in 1855 with the Great Edo Earthquake.
The ''
bakumatsu'' era saw an increase in political activity. In 1860
Ii Naosuke, who favored opening Japan to the West, was assassinated by anti-foreign rebel samurai. 1867 Japan's last shogun,
Tokugawa Yoshinobu, surrendered power to the emperor in 1867 and fled Edo in 1868 following military defeat by powerful provincial powers seeking power in the name of the Emperor.
Modern History
★ 1868 With the
Meiji Restoration, the ruler of Japan shifts from the shogun to an oligarchy ruling under the banner of the emperor. Edo is renamed as "Tokyo (Tokio)," meaning "Eastern Capital," as ordered by
Emperor Meiji.
★ 1869 Emperor Meiji moves to Tokyo and makes Tokyo Castle, the Imperial Palace. However, the capital was never legally "transferred" from Kyoto to Tokyo, making some people believe that Kyoto may still be the capital, or a co-capital today. ''See:
Capital of Japan.'' Samurai from the
Satsuma and
ChÅshÅ« (and other) regions, having defeated the Tokugawa, take crucial roles in the new ruling oligarchy. A foreigner settlement is established at Tsukiji.
★ 1871 The feudal han system is abolished to establish the prefectural system. Tokyo Prefecture is thereby established.
★ 1872 Tokyo Prefecture expands to include what is now the 23 wards. Also, Tokyo's (and Japan's) first rail line opens between
Shinbashi (now
Shiodome) and Yokohama (now
Sakuragicho).
★ 1874 The Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department is established.
★ 1882
Ueno Zoo is completed.
★ 1885 The first section of what was to become the
Yamanote Line opens between
Akabane and
Shinagawa Stations. Train stations such as Shibuya and
Shinjuku Stations open as a result.
★ 1889
Tokyo City is established with 15 wards.
★ 1893 The three Tama districts are admitted into Tokyo Prefecture.
★ 1898 The special city ordinance for Tokyo city is abolished, making Tokyo city a normal city.
★ 1899 The foreigner settlement at Tsukiji is abolished.
★ 1914
Tokyo Station opens.
★ 1923 The
Great KantÅ earthquake strikes Tokyo, killing approximately 70,000 people. A massive reconstruction plan was drawn up, but was too expensive to complete.
★ 1925 The
Yamanote Line looping train line is finally completed when the section between Kanda and Ueno Stations is completed. Construction first started in 1885.
★ 1927 Tokyo's first subway (
Ginza Line) opens between Asakusa and Ueno.
★ 1932 Five districts and 82 towns and villages are admitted to Tokyo city which then has 35 wards.
★ 1936 The
National Diet Building is completed. In an attempted coup (the
February 26 Incident), nearly 1500 junior officers of Japan's army occupied the National Diet Building, the
Kantei (Prime Minister's Residence) and other key locations in Tokyo. The coup was suppressed by the Army and Navy within three days.
★ 1942 Tokyo suffers the
Doolittle Raid, its first air raid by US bombers, soon after the Pearl Harbor attack on Dec. 1941.
★ 1943 Tokyo Prefecture and Tokyo city merge to form Tokyo Metropolis or Tokyo-to, commonly called "Tokyo." Since this time, no city in Japan has had the name "Tokyo."
★ 1945 Tokyo was
heavily bombed, and much of the city was burned to the ground by heavy bombardment by
B-29 and other aircraft. Extensive tracts of land were leveled both by the explosions and by the subsequent fires. The damage was not limited to the former Tokyo City, but extended to Hachioji and other cities in western Tokyo, as the bombers targeted air bases, transportation facilities, and strategically important manufacturing plants. Due to the heavy death toll and populace fleeing to the countryside, the population in
1945 was only half that of
1940. From September on, Tokyo is under military occupation and governed by the allied forces.
General Douglas MacArthur established the occupation headquarters in what is now the
DN Tower 21 (formerly the Dai-Ichi Seimei building) overlooking the
Imperial Palace. The American presence in Tokyo made it an important command and logistics center during the
Korean War. Tokyo still hosts
Yokota Air Base and a small number of minor U.S. military installations.
★ 1947 Tokyo's number of wards is reduced to 23 which then become the
special wards.
★ 1954 The
Marunouchi Line, Tokyo's second subway line, opens between Ikebukuro and Ochanomizu.
★ 1958
Tokyo Tower is completed.
★ 1961 The
Hibiya subway line opens between Minami-senju and Naka-Okachimachi.
★ 1964 The
TÅkaidÅ Shinkansen opens on October 1 in time for the Tokyo Olympic Games starting on October 10. Tokyo's re-emergence from wartime trauma was complete at the
1964 Summer Olympics, which publicized the city on an international stage and brought global attention to the "economic miracle".
★ 1968 The
Ogasawara Islands (Bonin Islands) are returned to Japan and become part of Tokyo.
★ 1977
Tachikawa Air Force Base is returned to Japan and later converted partially into a park.
★ 1978 The
New Tokyo International Airport (now
Narita International Airport) in nearby
Chiba Prefecture opens.
Tokyo International Airport (Haneda Airport) then serves mainly domestic flights.
★ 1986 The
bubble economy starts with land prices skyrocketing.
★ 1988 The
Tokyo Dome indoor baseball stadium is completed.
★ 1990 The bubble economy starts to pop, triggering a fall in Tokyo land prices.
★ 1991 The new
Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building in Shinjuku is completed.
★ 1993 The
Rainbow Bridge is completed.
★ 1995 On
March 20, the
Aum Shinrikyo cult spread
Sarin nerve gas on the Tokyo
subway system (in the tunnels beneath the political district of central Tokyo) in which 12 people were killed and thousands affected (see
Sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway). Newly-elected Tokyo governor
Yukio Aoshima announces that he will keep his campaign promise and cancel the World City Expo that was to be held in 1996 in the Odaiba waterfront area.
★ 1999
Shintaro Ishihara is elected Governor of Tokyo.
★ 2000 The
Oedo subway line opens.
★ 2003
Shintaro Ishihara is reelected Governor of Tokyo.
Roppongi Hills opens.
★ 2005 The
Tsukuba Express railway line opens.
Anticipated events
★ 2007 Completion of
Tokyo Midtown (the city's tallest high-rise construction) and the
Tokyo Metro Line 13.
★ 2011 Completion of
Sumida Tower, Japan's tallest structure (About 610m high displacing the
CN Tower in Toronto as the world's tallest free-standing structure.) Completion of the renovation of
Tokyo Station.
References
Notes
Further reading
See also
★
Edo period
★
Tokyo
★
History of Japan
External links
★
History of Tokyo by Tokyo Metropolitan Government
★
Chronological History of Tokyo by Tokyo Metropolitan Government
★
Thousands of photographs and films of Edo and Tokyo from Meji (1867) to present.
★
''Tokyo Rising'' - review of Edward Seidensticker's book on the history of Tokyo from 1923 to the late 1980s
★
Old Tokyo - Vintage Tinted Images of the Japanese Capital City