No crowd will collect for the conventional lighting of the 17-century stone lantern on the Tidal Basin this weekend, as a result of Washington’s annual Cherry Blossom Festival might be online. But the flame is much from the most fascinating a part of this uncommon image of Japanese historical past and tradition.
The mayor of Tokyo gave the lantern to the United States in 1954, however its floor is deeply weathered by a far longer historical past.
The Japanese authorities initially deliberate to ship the lantern in the 1920s, however the thought was shelved as relations between the two international locations chilled and ultimately led to conflict.
After the wartime enemies grew to become postwar allies, the lantern lastly arrived, in March of 1954.
[Satellite images capture D.C.’s cherry blossoms at peak bloom]
“It was an act of appreciation,” mentioned John Malott, former Director of Japanese Affairs at the U.S. State Department and longtime president of the Japan-America Society of Washington D.C. “The Japanese … were extremely grateful to the United States for how we helped them after [World War II], that we were not an abusive victor. So there was a tremendous sense of gratitude from the Japanese people and they supported us.”
(National Park Service)
The stone tells a really previous story
The lantern was created in the center of the 17th century for the funeral ceremony of Tokugawa Iemitsu, a Japanese shōgun, one among the iron-fisted army leaders who dominated the Japanese islands in the centuries earlier than the 1868 Meiji Restoration elevated the emperor from a ceremonial titleholder to precise energy.
Almost each sq. inch of the sculpture tells a narrative.
No random gift
The lantern was initially carved to commemorate Tokugawa Iemitsu (1604-1651), the third shōgun of the mighty Tokugawa clan, which unified feudal Japan below its stern rule for almost 270 years. A grandson of clan patriarch and dynasty founder Tokugawa Ieyasu, Iemitsu is principally remembered for the Sakoku Edict of 1635. The strict, brutally enforced coverage of whole isolation slammed the door on overseas commerce, overseas faith and foreigners, who confronted abstract execution in the event that they remained in Japan.
This sakoku coverage stayed in place for over 200 years, till an American naval commander, Commodore Matthew Perry, dropped anchor at Yokohama in 1853. Using diplomacy — however backed with a flotilla of state-of-the-art warships — Perry satisfied the Japanese to reopen commerce and finish the coverage.
A century later, the Japanese commemorated this occasion by sending this lantern to the United States.

(National Park Service)
There’s a twin lantern on the market
It initially was a part of a two-lantern set put in as a part of Tokugawa Iemitsu’s funeral ceremonies at his household’s shrine in what right now is Ueno Park in Tokyo. Much of the printed literature on the lanterns claims that the twin stands there to this present day. However, Ueno Park’s lantern assortment accommodates no matching lantern and even any point out of 1.
Yoko Nishimura, Assistant Professor of East Asian Studies at Gettysburg College, who has traced the trails of many of those feudal-era Japanese lanterns, mentioned she feels assured that the D.C. lantern’s twin, although maybe not nicely displayed or labeled, continues to be round.
“It’s survived the many episodes where these stone and bronze lanterns were damaged or destroyed, or sold to foreign countries,” she mentioned. “It survived until 1954 (the year the pair was split up and the Tidal Basin lantern was sent to Washington). That is significant. I don’t think they’d want to just destroy it.”
While Washington’s annual in-person celebration of Japanese history and culture may be on hold, there’s a few timeless pieces of Japan — the cherry trees and Tokugawa Iemitsu’s lantern among them — that stand as silent but enduring symbols of unity between countries that were once enemies.

Bonnie Berkowitz and Julia Mio Inuma additionally contributed to this story.