Japan

Treaty-of-Portsmouth-was-signed-in-New-Hampshire.jpg

4min30
Less than 120 years ago, on September 5, 1905, the Treaty of Portsmouth was signed in New Hampshire, ending the year-and-a-half-long Russo-Japanese War. According to various estimates, up to 80,000 Japanese and up to 52,000 Russian servicemen died in it, including my great-grandfather Afanasy Reshetnikov. For his role in Portsmouth negotiations U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt […]

Yuri Chekalin07.03.2025
homelessness-in-japan.jpg

14min522
“The streams of the receding river…, they are continuous; but they are not the same, the old waters… Bubbles of foam floating in the backwaters…, they will disappear, then they will reconnect anew; but they are not given to stay for long. In this world, people and their dwellings… and they are like bubbles on […]

Yuri Chekalin31.01.2025
nicholas-tattoo.jpg

2min17091
While in Japan, Nicholas II demanded to get a tattoo, which somewhat shocked the locals. There was a reason for their surprise. Japanese citizens were legally banned from getting tattoos in 1872. Nevertheless, the newspapers wrote that Nicholas got a “tattoo of a dragon more than 1 shaku (about 30 cm) in size on his […]

Yuri Chekalin17.01.2025
rice.jpg

3min10341
After World War II, Japan imported many different ideas from America. One of them was that “a bread diet is better for health.” At that time, it was widely advertised that eating rice makes people stupid. Here is what Japanese scientists, supported even by the Japanese government, claimed at the time: “…The character of rice […]

tokyo.jpg

2min11087
In an exclusive interview with Nikkei, Chairman of the Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO) Ishiguro Noriyuki discusses the prospects for cooperation with the United States, which sets the trends for the development of Japan’s foreign economic activity. N. Ishiguro, who is on a business visit to New York, confirmed that JETRO’s representative offices in the […]

Egor Sennikov25.11.2024
Manchukuo-Soldiers-1945.jpg

2min1196
In Manchukuo, the Japanese were creating a completely new state that was theoretically independent, meaning that there were no restrictions on the policies the new state could pursue. Many university graduates in Japan, despite being opposed to the social system that existed in Japan itself, went to work in Manchukuo, believing that they could carry […]


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