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Yokohama Silk Museum

Japanese museum stubsMuseums in YokohamaNaka-ku, YokohamaSilkTextile museums in Japan
Yokohama SilkCenter
Yokohama SilkCenter

The Yokohama Silk Museum is a museum located in Naka-ku, Yokohama, Japan that covers the silk trade in Japan. The museum displays silk kimono and covers the importance of Yokohama as a silk port.The objective of the museum is, according to their website: To disseminate an understanding of the science and technology of silk production, display beautiful costumes for people to admire and promote the demand for silk.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Yokohama Silk Museum (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Yokohama Silk Museum
Yokohama Naka Ward

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N 35.44757 ° E 139.645337 °
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シルクセンター


231-0023 Yokohama, Naka Ward
Japan
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Yokohama SilkCenter
Yokohama SilkCenter
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Yokohama Archives of History
Yokohama Archives of History

The Yokohama Archives of History (横浜開港資料館, Yokohama Kaikō Shiryōkan) in Naka ward, central Yokohama, near Yamashita Park, is a repository for archive materials on Japan and its connection with foreign powers since the arrival of Commodore Matthew Perry in 1853. The archives are next to Kaiko Hiroba (Port Opening Square) where Commodore Perry landed to sign the Convention of Kanagawa.The archives are housed in a newly built annex of the former British Consulate building. The British Consulate building, which replaced a building destroyed in the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake, was completed in 1931 and used as a consulate until 1972. The ground floor of the building is open to the public and there is a small exhibition room which is free. There are plaques in the building commemorating consulate employees who died in the earthquake, as well as British sailors who died during the British Bombardment of Kagoshima in 1863. The British Court for Japan, under the British Supreme Court for China and Japan, sat in the consulate compound from 1879 to 1900. Prior to that the British Provincial Court for Kanagawa sat in the compound from 1865 to 1878.The archives include a museum which tells the story of Japan and Yokohama's opening to the West, beginning with the arrival of Commodore Perry and his black ships.The reading room downstairs has historic Japanese and English newspapers and books. Materials include papers of Ernest Satow, foreign and Japanese newspapers of the Meiji period including, the Japan Daily Herald, the Japan Weekly Mail and Japan Punch. Many of the old newspapers have been copied onto new paper, making them very easy to handle. These copies can be accessed directly from the shelves and can be photocopied. There are also collections of various diplomatic papers relating to Japan's foreign relations. A select number of books on Japanese history, published by the archives, are also available for purchase.

Heichinrou
Heichinrou

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