Historic Districts to Visit in Tokyo
Tokyo presents itself as a city of the future—a pulsating metropolis of soaring glass towers, dazzling digital billboards, and hyper-efficient […]
Tokyo presents itself as a city of the future—a pulsating metropolis of soaring glass towers, dazzling digital billboards, and hyper-efficient […]
There are mountains, and then there is Mount Fuji. Rising 3,776 meters (12,389 feet) with a perfection of form so
Just an hour south of Tokyo’s neon-lit frenzy lies a different world entirely. Here, ancient cedar trees guard moss-covered stone
Perched atop Himeyama Hill, its brilliant white plaster walls and soaring, multi-tiered roofs evoke a majestic white heron taking flight.
To understand Tokyo, one looks to the shogun and the samurai. To understand Kyoto, one looks to the emperor and
In the collective memory of Japan, a nation no stranger to seismic tragedy, one event stands as a foundational cataclysm:
In the grand narrative of Japan’s transformation from a feudal society to a modern world power, the Meiji Restoration of
Imagine a nation where central authority has evaporated. A hundred rival lords, each commanding their own army, eye their neighbors
To understand Japan is to understand Kansai. While Tokyo represents the nation’s hyper-modern, forward-facing present, the Kansai region—encompassing the prefectures
In the quiet mountains and along the rugged coastlines of Shikoku, Japan’s smallest main island, a timeless drama of faith,
Stretching like a weathered spine between the turbulent Sea of Japan and the serene Seto Inland Sea, the Chugoku region
In the collective imagination of Japan, the Tohoku region—the six prefectures of Aomori, Akita, Iwate, Yamagata, Miyagi, and Fukushima—occupies a