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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Itō_ChūtaItō Chūta - Wikipedia

    Itō Chūta (伊東 忠太, 26 October 1867 – 7 April 1954) was a Japanese architect, architectural historian, and critic. He is recognized as the leading architect and architectural theorist of early 20th-century Imperial Japan.

  2. “World Observation: Itō Chūta and the Making of Architectural Knowledge in Modern Japan” historicizes the relationship between architecture (kenchiku) and observation (kansatsu) as both ideas were simultaneously imported, taught and critiqued in late-nineteenth and early-twentieth century Japan.

  3. 19 de oct. de 2021 · El templo Tsukiji Honganji (distrito Chūō, Tokio), conocido por su magnífica edificación principal de estilo indio, es un templo budista de la escuela Honganji de la secta Jōdo Shinshū, cuyo ...

  4. The focus of this essay is a self-deining moment for the nascent profession in the 1890s when a young member, Itō Chūta (1867-1954), who would eventually become the pioneer historian and theoretician of architecture in his country, spoke ardently for the recognition of architecture as a ine art.

  5. 3 de feb. de 2020 · The Tsukiji annex of the Buddhist Nishi Honganji temple in Tokyo (1934) was built by Itō Chūta at the height of Japanese imperial ambitions in Asia; it was also a late product of Itō’s Indian travels three decades earlier.

  6. Itō Chūtas originality was not only his thesis, but also his demonstration for which he followed the traces of enthasis throughout Eurasia. After leaving Tokyo on 29 March 1902, he traveled for three years and three months through China, Burma, Malay, India, Sri Lanka, the Ottoman Empire including Egypt, then Greece, Italy, Germany ...

  7. November 21, 1867 - April 7, 1954. Birthplace (modern name) Yamagata. Occupation, Status. Scholar (Natural Science) Description. Architect and architectural historian. The second son of ITO Yujun, feudal retainer of the Yonezawa domain. Graduated from the College of Technology of the Imperial University of Tokyo in 1892.