Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 22: The Flowers of Remembrance and Forgetfulness (English version)
- People
- Owner Organization

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 20: The Enchanted Waterfall (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 18: The Ogre’s Arm (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 1: Momotaro (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 12: The Cub’s Triumph (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 19: The Ogres of Oyeyama (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 7: The Old Man and the Devils (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 8: Urashima, the Fisher-Boy (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, Second Series, No. 1: The Goblin Spider (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, Second Series, No. 2: The Wonderful Mallet (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 11: The Hare of Inaba (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 13: The Silly Jelly-Fish (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 5: Kachi-Kachi Mountain (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 9: The Serpent with Eight Heads (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 14: The Princes Fire-Flash and Fire-Fade (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 15: My Lord-Bag-O’-Rice (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 4: The Old Man Who Made the Dead Trees Blossom (English version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanese Fairy Tales Series, No. 16: The Wonderful Teakettle (Russian version)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanische Marchen: Der Spiegel du Matsuyama (German version; Japanese Fairy Tales: The Matsuyama Mirror)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanische Marchen: Der Kampf der Krabbe mit dem Affen (German version; Japanese Fairy Tales: The Battle of the Monkey and the Crab)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection

Japanische Marchen: Der Sperling mit der geschliffen Zunge (German version; Japanese Fairy Tales: The Tongue-cut Sparrow)
Edo-Tokyo Museum
Tokyo Museum Collection
Examples of descriptions of the Jomon Prehistoric Sites in Northern Japan (in Japanese and English)
JOMON ARCHIVES; Digital Archives of the Jomon Prehistoric Sites in Northern Japan
JOMON ARCHIVES; Digital Archives of the Jomon Prehistoric Sites in Northern Japan

BOHEMIANS OF PARIS 22: THE CLOTHES SELLER: “Closes to sell!... any hats, shoes, old clothes to sell!” This trade fourishes at carnival time in the vicinity of the schools of law and medicine: the student willingly sells his wardrobe to get himself a stevedore's costume, a wife, a small thimble-full of champagne and limitless tittle-tattle!
The National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo
Union Catalog of the Collections of the National Art Museums, Japan

The Blue-stockings 22: The blue-stocking declaiming her play -Act 6 Scene 1... the theatre shows a tiger asleep in the desert... Rosalba barely drags herself forward, and does so with even greater difficulty because of her five children and her aged father: -Rosalba falls at the foot of a date-palm covered with coconuts, and cries in despair: Oh heaven, when will our torments finish. -The entire audience (in a low voice): ‘and ours, too, when will they finish, oh heaven!’
The National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo
Union Catalog of the Collections of the National Art Museums, Japan

JOURNEY TO CHINA 7: CHINESE MARRIAGE. The angler's skill in setting his lines, the hunter's artfulness in taking game, the horse-dealer's tricks to hide the redhibitory defects of his horse, nothing is comparable to the skill, the artfulness, the trick which a mother deploys in order to marry her daughter... the poor Chinese men mistrust the lures, of honey and of glue, to no avail, someone always falls into the maternal snare
The National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo
Union Catalog of the Collections of the National Art Museums, Japan
Last Updated: 2021-03-27
Uploaded: 2026-03-25
