Sakurada Gate
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Sakurada Gate | |
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桜田門 | |
General information | |
Type | Gate |
Location | Tokyo Imperial Palace |
Town or city | Tokyo |
Country | Japan |
Coordinates | 35°40′43″N 139°45′14″E / 35.6785°N 139.7539°E |
Known for | The Sakuradamon Incident of 1860 The Sakuradamon Incident of 1932 |
Sakurada Gate (桜田門, sakurada-mon) is a gate in the inner moat of Tokyo Imperial Palace, in Tokyo, Japan.
It was the location of the Sakuradamon Incident in 1860, in which Tairō Ii Naosuke was assassinated outside the gate by samurai of the Mito Domain and Satsuma Domain.
In 1932, it was the location of another assassination attempt, when Korean independence activist Lee Bong-chang attempted to kill Emperor Hirohito as his procession passed through the gate.
Opposite the gate of Sakurada Gate is the headquarters of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Department, which shares "Sakurada Gate" as a metonym (akin to London's Scotland Yard).[1]
Access
[edit]- Sakuradamon Station (Yūrakuchō Line)
- Kasumigaseki Station (Marunouchi, Hibiya, and Chiyoda lines)
References
[edit]- ^ 霞が関、桜田門、兜町…「別の意味」でも使われる東京の地名 - Money post web(01/14/2020)
External links
[edit]- Media related to Sakurada-mon at Wikimedia Commons
- Soto Sakurada-mon Gate at Chiyoda Ward Tourism's official website (English)