Tokugawa Japan: Peace, Isolation, and Hidden Power — Fexingo History

The Soba King: Noodles and Social Mobility in Tokugawa Japan

9 min · 2. kesä 2026
jakson The Soba King: Noodles and Social Mobility in Tokugawa Japan kansikuva

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In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how a simple bowl of soba noodles became a symbol of social mobility and urban culture in Edo-period Japan. They trace the rise of soba from street food to a thriving industry, focusing on the legendary soba master Imaoka Hikozaemon, who is said to have founded the first dedicated soba restaurant in Edo around 1700. They discuss how soba shops became social equalizers, where samurai, merchants, and commoners ate side by side, and how the dish reflected the rhythms of city life. Lucas explains the economics of soba, from the rise of 'tachi-gui' standing eateries to the role of soba in fire watchtowers and late-night culture. The conversation also touches on the political dimensions of soba, including its use as a symbol of frugality during the Kansei Reforms and its role in the 'Soba Riots' of the Tenpo era. Along the way, they examine the technological innovations in noodle-making, the importance of buckwheat as a crop, and how soba's popularity influenced Japanese cuisine. This episode offers a fresh lens on Tokugawa society through a familiar bowl of noodles. #Soba #EdoJapan #Tokugawa #CulinaryHistory #ImaokaHikozaemon #StreetFood #JapanFood #KanseiReforms #TenpoRiots #SobaRiots #TachiGui #Beansprouts #Bakufu #Edo #History #FexingoHistory #Noodles #SocialMobility Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson Tokugawa Japan's Forgotten Navy: The Shogun's Ships and Coast Defense kansikuva

Tokugawa Japan's Forgotten Navy: The Shogun's Ships and Coast Defense

When we think of Tokugawa Japan, we think of sakoku — isolation — and assume the shoguns gave up on the sea. But the Tokugawa bakufu actually maintained a navy: warships, coastal patrols, and a secret shipbuilding program that built Japan's first Western-style vessels. This episode uncovers the forgotten story of the Shogun's Navy — from the early Edo period's coastal defense fleets to the crisis of the 1800s, when foreign black ships forced the shogun to build steam warships and even send a delegation across the Pacific. We meet key figures like the shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu, who sponsored Western shipbuilding, and the Tokugawa admiral Kimura Kaishū, who captained Japan's first trans-Pacific voyage. We explore the bakufu's naval reforms, the construction of the Kanrin Maru, and the little-known battles the shogun's navy actually fought — including the bombardment of Chōshū and the final naval clashes of the Boshin War. This is the story of a naval tradition that never quite sailed, but shaped Japan's encounter with the modern world. #TokugawaNavy #Sakoku #KanrinMaru #KimuraKaishū #EdoPeriod #BoshinWar #Bakufu #NavalHistory #Shogun #CoastDefense #WesternShipbuilding #BlackShips #Chōshū #JapaneseHistory #Sengoku #FexingoHistory #EastAsia #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Tokugawa Japan's Great Fire of Meireki and the Rebirth of Edo

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Eilen8 min
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Tokugawa Japan's Secret Cities: Edo and Osaka Urban Planning

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Tokugawa Japan's Secret Police: The Onmitsu Network

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