thumb|Festival at Kanda Myojin

thumb|Monument to Zenigata Heiji

thumb|Hiroshige, the dyers' district of Kanda

is an area in northeastern Chiyoda, Tokyo, Japan. It encompasses about thirty neighborhoods. Kanda was a ward prior to 1947. When the 35 wards of Tokyo were reorganized into 23, it was merged with Kojimachi to form the modern Chiyoda.

Kanda, together with Nihonbashi and Kyobashi, is the core of Shitamachi, the original downtown center of Edo-Tokyo, before the rise of newer secondary centers such as Shinjuku and Shibuya.

It is home to the Kanda Myojin (Shinto) shrine, devoted to the ancient rebel Taira no Masakado, who led an uprising against the central government during the Heian period with the aim of establishing himself as "Shinnō" (New Emperor) of an eastern Court. In the Edo period, the shrine's festival was one of the three most noted in the city. It is also home to the "Mausoleum of Confucius at Yushima", a temple dedicated to Confucianism.

Kanda is the home of the Tokyo Resurrection Cathedral which was built by Nicholas of Japan and is the main Cathedral of the Japanese Orthodox Church.

Neighborhoods

  • Aioichō
  • Awajichō
  • Hanaokachō
  • Higashi-Kanda
  • Higashikonyachō
  • Higashimatsushitachō
  • Hirakawachō
  • Iwamotochō
  • Izumichō
  • Jinbōchō - the largest bookstore district in Japan
  • Kajichō
  • Kanda-Misakichō
  • Kanda-Sarugakuchō
  • Kitanorimonochō
  • Konyachō
  • Matsunagachō
  • Mikurachō
  • Mitoshirochō
  • Neribeichō
  • Nishifukudachō
  • Nishi-Kanda
  • Nishikichō
  • Ogawamachi
  • Sakumachō
  • Sakumagashi
  • Soto-Kanda - Akihabara
  • Sudachō
  • Surugadai
  • Tachō
  • Tomiyamachō
  • Tsukasamachi
  • Uchi-Kanda

See also

  • Kanda River
  • Kanda Station (Tokyo)

References