Sat, May 23 · 10:00 AM JST
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This time we're in Fushimi â a different neighbourhood, and a different kind of history.
Most people know Fushimi for Inari Shrine. But this district has a deeper story: it was Toyotomi Hideyoshi, the warlord who unified Japan, who turned Fushimi into an economic powerhouse. He built the infrastructure, canals, embankments, river routes. That made it one of Japan's great port and trade hubs. The underground water he couldn't take credit for, but it did the rest: Fushimi's springs are so distinctively soft that the city was named after them, and they gave birth to a sake industry that still defines the neighbourhood today.
Fushimi was also, crucially, just far enough from Kyoto. In the final years of the Edo period, it became a place where revolutionaries could meet, plan, and eventually fight â the opening battle of the Meiji Restoration erupted in these streets. Daikoji was here for all of it.
The vice-abbot studied law, spent years working in tech, and now runs a media platform on Japanese temple and shrine culture alongside his role at the temple.
After the session, we're heading to a local restaurant in Fushimi for lunch. Come hungry.
ð» 10:00 - 13:00 Coworking session
ð 13:10 - Lunch (optional, nearby)
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