The Best Sight in Nagoya, Nagoya, Ise-Shima, and the Kii Peninsula

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We've compiled the best of the best in Nagoya - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

Tokugawa Art Museum

Higashi-ku

The seldom-displayed 12th-century hand scrolls of The Tale of Genji, widely recognized as the world's first novel, are housed here. Even when the scrolls are not available, beautiful relics of the lifestyle of the aristocratic samurai class—including swords and armor, tea-ceremony artifacts, Noh masks, clothing, and furnishings—fascinate visitors. If you're visiting specifically to see the scrolls, check out the Hosa Library rooms, which house an incredible collection of other ancient scrolls and texts (some 110,000 in all), some dating to the 8th century. If you've got time, it's worth paying an additional ¥300 for entry to the adjacent Tokugawaen (徳川園), an attractive Japanese garden modeled in the Edo style. Tokugawa Art Museum is a 10-minute walk south of exit 3 of Ozone Station, which is on the Meijo subway line and the JR Chuo Line.

1017 Tokugawacho, Nagoya, 461-0023, Japan
052-935–6262
Sight Details
¥1,600
Closed Mon. and late Dec.–Jan. 3

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