Murakawa Villa (Photo: Elizabeth S)

Former Murakawa Villa

The east meets west home of a Japanese historian

Murakawa Villa (Photo: Elizabeth S)
Elizabeth S   - 3 min read

On your way from Narita Airport to Tokyo, there a number of routes you can choose. One of them, the Narita Line, has through service to Ueno and Tokyo Stations. But if you’re interested in a slow route, one that takes you to the turn of the last century, I suggest a stop in Abiko City. One hundred years ago, this quiet suburb was a hothouse for writers, artists, journalists, and educators. A hint of Abiko City’s heyday as a literary mecca remains in the form of summer villas, some of which are open to the public. One is the Murakawa Villa, a lovely combination of the classic teahouse and early 20th-century sensibility.

The master of the house was Murakawa Kengo, a famed Japanese scholar of western history. Born in Kumamoto Prefecture in 1875, he was a graduate of the Imperial University of Tokyo (now Tokyo University) and assisted James Murdoch, an early western historian of Japanese history, in his opus, History of Japan. Murakawa went on to become a professor of western history and published works on ancient Egyptian, Greek, and Roman history. His contribution to Japan’s understanding of western history includes Japanese translations of significant western history books.

The Murakawa family residence, a nationally recognized historical property in Tokyo’s Bunkyo Ward, is a private house only open to the public by appointment during special events, but the Murakawa Villa in Abiko City is open with free admission. This villa, with two distinctive buildings, was constructed in 1926, and, like the main Tokyo house, is designated as a cultural heritage property.

Murakawa’s impulse in the planning of the villa was to create a space that turned conventional shelter on its head. In Japanese, the usual concept of the necessities of life is expressed as ishokujuu, a compound of the characters for food, clothing, and shelter. He turned the expression around by indicating shelter first.

The results are two charming buildings. One is a classic study in teahouse architecture, with attention to fine details in the hardware and tokonoma display space where visitors can see seasonal displays of calligraphy and utensils. The other is the newer villa which has a sweeping gable in the Japanese style, parquet floors, and turn of the last century woodwork and hardware. The villa rambles over the hillside above Teganuma marsh, nestled in a bamboo grove.

Elizabeth S

Elizabeth S @elizabeth.scally

You will see many of my stories on Japan Travel are about places and events outside of big city centers and tourist destinations. While I highly recommend the big name sights and experiences, I encourage visitors to see and feel the atmosphere off the beaten path, too.