Muza-chan's Gate to Japan

Kyoto Ponto-cho, the story of a name

Tue, September 1, 2015, by Muza-chan
The Portuguese were the first westerners who arrived in Japan, in 1543, and because of the commercial exchanges many Portuguese words were borrowed by Japanese. Some of them are Bidoro (glass), that comes from "Vidro", Pan (bread), from "Pão", end even Igirisu (England), that comes from the Portuguese word "Inglês".

Furthermore, traces of the Portuguese language can be found in the name of one of the most popular streets in Kyoto, Ponto-chō. Although it is written with kanji characters, 先斗町, the Ponto-chō name comes from the Portuguese "ponte" (which means bridge), combined with the Japanese term "chō", that means block or town.

Ponto-cho, Kyoto
EXIF info:

Nikon Df
Lens: 24-70mm F/2.8G
Focal Length: 24mm
Aperture: F/2.8
Shutter Speed: 1/60s
ISO Sensitivity: ISO 8000


Popular searches:

# Sakura, cherry blossoms

# Kyoto travel

# Japanese trains

# Travel tips for visiting Japan

# Japanese castles

# Night time photos from Japan

# Tokyo travel

# Traditional Japanese house


  •  Home
  •  Featured articles
  •  A Japan photo per day
  •  Japan travel
  •  Japanese customs & traditions
  •  Japanese food
  •  Japanese history
  •  Anime & otaku
  •  Did you know? Japan facts
  •  About Muza-chan