thumb|right|200px|A street car runs in front of the Tokyo Stock Exchange. thumb|right|200px|The Tokyo Stock Exchange during the 1960s Kabutochō (), or more formally Nihonbashi Kabutochō (), is a neighborhood of Nihonbashi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, where the Tokyo Stock Exchange and many securities companies are located, so that it is considered Japan's equivalent of Wall Street in New York City.
via Wikidata · CC0
thumb|right|200px|A street car runs in front of the Tokyo Stock Exchange. thumb|right|200px|The Tokyo Stock Exchange during the 1960s Kabutochō (), or more formally Nihonbashi Kabutochō (), is a neighborhood of Nihonbashi, Chuo-ku, Tokyo, where the Tokyo Stock Exchange and many securities companies are located, so that it is considered Japan's equivalent of Wall Street in New York City.
==History== The name of Kabutochō, literally the town of Kabuto (ancient helmet), is said to come from a legend that Minamoto no Yoshiie, upon his return from having conquered the north-eastern provinces in the eleventh century, buried his helmet there. It used to be a swampy area till the early 17th century, when the Daimyo who were forced to participate in the building of the Edo Castle built their residences.
3 mapped locations
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).