is a public cemetery in Minami-Ikebukuro, Toshima, Tokyo, founded by the Tokyo Metropolitan government.
The cemetery is nonsectarian, and contains the graves of many famous people in its 10 ha area. It is maintained by the Tokyo Metropolitan Park Association.
History
ZÃ
Âshigaya Cemetery was founded by the local government of Tokyo Prefecture in 1874 as a public graveyard following the policy of the new government of the Meiji period, which prohibited burial in the central part of Tokyo. Cremation was prohibited in 1873 and nine sites were designated new public graveyards in 1874. The local government of Tokyo prefecture established six cemeteries including ZÃ
Âshigaya. Its construction and administration works were entrusted to the Tokyo Chamber (the Tokyo Chamber of Commerce and Industry of today). In 1876, the administration of the cemetery were taken into care by the prefectural government, and then by the Tokyo Metropolitan Park Association in 1985.
The name of the cemetery at first was ; as ZÃ
Âshigaya-AsahidechÃ
 was the name of the town in which it was located. It was changed to the current name of in 1935.
Burials
Among those interred here are (Japanese surnames are in capital letters):
- OGATA GekkÃ
 â Japanese painter and woodblock print artist of the ukiyo-e genre
- Lafcadio Hearn â International writer best known for his books about Japan
- Takio IZAWA â Japanese politician
- KyÃ
Âka IZUMI â Japanese writer of novels, short stories, and kabuki plays
- Kaita MURAYAMA â Japanese writer and painter
- KATÃ
 Hiroyuki â Japanese academic and politician of the Meiji period
- Hiroshi KAWAGUCHI â Japanese movie actor
- MatsutarÃ
 KAWAGUCHI â Japanese novelist, playwright, and movie producer of the ShÃ
Âwa period
- KyÃ
Âsuke KINDAICHI â Japanese linguist
- KUBOTA Utsubo â Japanese lyric poet
- KafÃ
« NAGAI â Japanese writer, playwright, essayist, and diarist
- NAKAHAMA ManjirÃ
 â One of the first Japanese people to visit the United States and translator
- ShÃ
Ânen MATSUMURA â Japanese entomologist
- MORITA SÃ
Âhei â Japanese novelist and translator of Western literature of the late Meiji, TaishÃ
 and early ShÃ
Âwa periods
- NARUSHIMA RyÃ
«hoku â Japanese writer and scholar
- NATSUME SÃ
Âseki â Japanese novelist of the Meiji period
- OGINO Ginko â First licensed and practicing woman physician of Western medicine in Japan
- ShunrÃ
 OSHIKAWA â Japanese writer, journalist, and editor, best known as a pioneer of science fiction
- Yumeji TAKEHISA â Japanese poet and painter
- Seiji TÃ
ÂGÃ
 â Japanese artist and painter
- Hideki TÃ
ÂJÃ
 â Japanese general of the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA), the leader of the Taisei Yokusankai, and the 40th Prime Minister of Japan
- TSUNASHIMA RyÃ
Âsen â Japanese writer and philosopher
- Raphael von Koeber â German-Russian teacher of philosophy at the Tokyo Imperial University
Cultural references
Before Natsume SÃ
Âseki himself was buried in ZÃ
Âshigaya Cemetery, he selected the cemetery as the final resting place for the friend of the Sensei in the novel Kokoro (1914).
References
External links