Skip to main content

The Imperial Palace

Quite a while ago I went to the Imperial Palace grounds with a few friends for our Contemporary Japan class.  The class requires us to visit a different part of Tokyo each weekend and do "field work" so that at the end of every third week we can pick one place or monument and write a paper about it.  Nobody actually goes to all of the places, but rather picks one to write on and visits it with that in mind, but that's beside the point.  My first paper was on this place, and I think I picked a pretty nice place to go.  We didn't do a whole lot other than look around, take pictures, enjoy the scenery, and get a whole lot of sun, but it was still a good day.
So, we went to Tokyo Station, and when we walked out of the station itself, we saw this, which is depicting what Tokyo Station is supposed to look like (what it used to look like).


But this is what it really looks like right now.....

Saw some Engrish as we walked toward the Palace grounds.
It took us a while to find the entrance we wanted to go through, so we stopped and took some pictures that had nothing at all to do with what we were there for.
Olivia, Kim, Me, Loren, Elika, Xin
You can tell I've never done a jumping photo before.

We thought we were pretty clever.  I was the K!
 Our professor went on and on about these HUGE rocks that Daimyo (the government officials at the time, aka the head samurai) had to contribute to the building of the castle grounds back when the Edo period started.  He told us all about how one boat could only hold two rocks, and it took 100 men to carry each one.  We had all expected some magnificent rocks ten times larger than our bodies.  He stressed how important it was that we go up and touch the rocks, and realize just how amazing they really are.  These were the rocks.  We took this picture to give to our professor because we are kiss-asses, but impressive is not the word I would use to describe them.

 These rocks, and some other ones we saw later, were a little bigger, but I did not have chills going down my spine as I touched them.

The entrance!

An old guardhouse.

The gardens.

Something with religious significance.


I think the size of the fish were more impressive than the size of the rocks.



This bridge is only open to the public on Christmas and New Years, because it lets you in to the actual Palace.

I wasn't kidding when I said we got sun.
 There was a lot of stuff to see, but most of it wouldn't be very exciting for you to look at pictures of unless I typed out descriptions of what everything USED to be, which I don't really feel like doing right now, so you can just enjoy what you got.
Oh, and I got a B on my essay.

Comments

  1. Hi Pumpkin, Your Tokyo shadow was cool.
    Follow me to the Garden...
    It was pretty.
    Two words SUN SCREEN.
    Three words I LOVE YOU.
    Dad

    ReplyDelete
  2. so pretty!!!! you look adorable jumping off rocks btw

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Mission Revived

This blog has been dormant for too long.  I've tried to write a few posts since returning back to America from Japan, but I couldn't figure out why I never kept up with it.  I love to travel and explore, and I love to write, so what was the problem? When I created this blog I did so partially to keep my friends and family in the loop while I spent a year of my life exploring a foreign country, but my biggest driving factor was providing information.  I researched every corner of the web before I set off on my year abroad in Japan.  I wanted to soak up every bit of information I could about life in Japan, the culture overseas, what my school would be like, and everything in between.  Looking at pictures, watching videos, and reading everything there was to read consumed me and heightened my excitement immensely.  So, I had decided that I wanted to make my trip informative for future study abroad students who would likely be doing the same scouring I had don...

40 Things You Probably Didn't Know About Japan

Before I jump straight into this list, I want to clarify that some of these points may be generally incorrect, or could be exclusive to Tokyo.  I could also have some of my reasonings wrong.  This list is simply something I compiled based off of my own experiences throughout the year that I lived and traveled throughout Japan. This list is also not, in any way, a complete one.  I'm sure if you search the internet you can find many other very true facts about Japan that I have forgotten to list here. In urban areas there will, at any given time or place, be at least one コンビニ ("conbini" / convenience store) within walking distance. Japanese people don’t usually have  middle names . Japanese people are very interested in each others' blood type - it's like astrology in America, except people take it very seriously.  Expect to be asked what your blood type is at least once. Japanese deodorant supposedly doesn't work very well.  I brought my own deodo...

Never Forget

On November 25th I got on a bus headed toward Iwate, a coastal prefecture in Northern Japan located half way between the Northernmost part before the Hokkaido island, and Fukushima, where, on March 11th a powerplant encountered many difficulties and became dangerous to the surrounding area.  The city we went to was called Rikuzentakata.  Rikuzentakata is a unique place, because it is located in a nook of land with the sea accessible on two sides. Before I go any further into this story, I want to explain why I am bothering at all.  Unless you were very young on March 11th, 2011 or have no access to the media, you are fully aware of what happened in Norhern Japan, and realize the destruction it caused.  So, why bring it up again?  It is true that, by telling you about my experience in Iwate, I will not change what happened.  But that is not my purpose.  What I ask of you is that you simply never forget what you know.  As of now, eight months a...