Writer Profile

Hiroichi Yanase
Other : Professor, Institute for Liberal Arts, Tokyo Institute of TechnologyÎçÒ¹¾ç³¡ alumni

Hiroichi Yanase
Other : Professor, Institute for Liberal Arts, Tokyo Institute of TechnologyÎçÒ¹¾ç³¡ alumni
National Route 16 is a ring road with an actual length of approximately 330 kilometers that surrounds the Tokyo metropolitan area. It passes through 27 municipalities in four prefectures¡ªKanagawa, Tokyo, Saitama, and Chiba¡ªstretching from Hashirimizu and Yokosuka on the Miura Peninsula through Yokohama, Sagamihara, Machida, Hachioji, Fussa, Iruma, Kawagoe, Saitama, Kasukabe, Noda, Kashiwa, Funabashi, Chiba, Ichihara, Kimitsu, and Kisarazu, all the way to Futtsu on the Boso Peninsula.
The general image of Route 16, which was enacted in 1963, is that of a suburban road connecting new towns. However, tens of thousands of years of human history have accumulated in the areas through which this road passes. After the war, U.S. military bases were concentrated here, and many popular music trends took flight. From the end of the Edo period through the Meiji era and the pre-war period, the raw silk industry flourished, supporting the promotion of new industries, while naval ports and air bases were established to lead the policy of enriching the country and strengthening the military. In the Middle Ages, samurai rose to power and the Kamakura Shogunate was born. The Kofun, Yayoi, Jomon, and Paleolithic periods¡ªthere has always been a thriving human presence here.
In this book, I attempted to unravel the secret of how Japanese civilization and culture developed along this road. The key is the topography. Two peninsulas with rias coasts, numerous plateaus and hills, giant rivers flowing between them, and Tokyo Bay with its vast tidal flats. People preferred to live in small river basins born on the edges of the plateaus and hills in the Route 16 area. Shell mounds, burial mounds, old castles, military facilities, and new towns were all drawn here by the topography of Route 16.
Ancient history sleeps beneath Route 16, and beneath that lies a unique topography. This perspective was cultivated during my student days at ÎçÒ¹¾ç³¡ over 30 years ago. At Hiyoshi, I was involved in nature conservation activities for the Koajiro Forest on the Miura Peninsula, led by Professor Emeritus Yuji Kishi of biology, and I traveled back and forth along Route 16 from Yokohama to Miura countless times. I learned that this region is made up of a series of small river basins and that there are ruins from the Jomon and Paleolithic periods. At Mita, under Professor Emeritus Shinya Sugiyama of economic history, I researched the role the Yokohama Specie Bank played in Japan's modern economy and wrote my graduation thesis on how the trade of cotton and raw silk, which is deeply connected to Route 16, grew into Japan's leading export industry.
The realizations guided by my mentors at ÎçÒ¹¾ç³¡ became a book 32 years later. Currently, as a university faculty member, I am engaged in educational work every day. I want to give my students the kind of long-range realizations that I received from my mentors at the university.
Hiroichi Yanase
Shinchosha
232 pages, 1,450 yen (excluding tax)
*Affiliations and titles are as of the time this magazine was published.