Yamaguchi Prefecture
Yamaguchi Prefecture 山口県 |
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Prefecture | ||
Japanese transcription(s) | ||
• Japanese | 山口県 | |
• Rōmaji | Yamaguchi-ken | |
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Country | Japan | |
Region | Chūgoku (San'yō) | |
Island | Honshū | |
Capital | Yamaguchi | |
Government | ||
• Governor | Tsugumasa Muraoka | |
Area | ||
• Total | 6,110.94 km2 (2,359.45 sq mi) | |
Area rank | 22nd | |
Population (May 1, 2011) | ||
• Total | 1,445,702 | |
• Rank | 25th | |
• Density | 236.58/km2 (612.7/sq mi) | |
ISO 3166 code | JP-35 | |
Districts | 4 | |
Municipalities | 19 | |
Flower | Bitter summer mandarin blossom (Citrus natsudaidai) | |
Tree | Red pine tree (Pinus densiflora) | |
Bird | Hooded crane (Grus monacha) | |
Fish | Tetraodontidae (Takifugu rubripes) | |
Website | www |
Yamaguchi Prefecture (山口県 Yamaguchi-ken?) is a prefecture of Japan in the Chūgoku region on Honshū island.[1] The capital is the city of Yamaguchi, in the center of the prefecture.[2] The largest city, however, is Shimonoseki.
Contents
History
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Yamaguchi Prefecture was created by the merger of the provinces of Suō and Nagato.[3] During the rise of the samurai class during the Heian and Kamakura Periods (794–1333), the Ouchi family of Suō Province and the Koto family of Nagato Province gained influence as powerful warrior clans. In the Muromachi Period (1336—1573), Ouchi Hiroyo, the 24th ruler of the Ouchi family conquered both areas of Yamaguchi Prefecture. The Ouchi clan imitated the city planning of Kyoto. They gained great wealth through cultural imports from the continent and trade with Korea and Ming Dynasty China. As a result, Yamaguchi came to be known as the "Kyoto of the West," and Ouchi culture flourished. Sue Harutaka defeated the 31st ruler of the Ouchi clan. The Sue clan was then defeated by Mōri Motonari, and the Mōri family gained control of the Chugoku region. Yamaguchi was ruled as part of the Mōri clan domain during the Sengoku period. Mōri Terumoto was then defeated by Tokugawa Ieyasu in the battle of Sekigahara in 1600. He was forced to give up all his land except for the Suō and Nagato areas (current-day Yamaguchi Prefecture), where he built his castle in Hagi. Mōri sought to strengthen the economic base of the region and increase local production with his Three Whites campaign (salt, rice, and paper).
After Commodore Matthew Perry's opening of Japan, clans from Nagato (also called Chōshū) played a key role in the fall of the Tokugawa shogunate and the establishment of the new imperial government. Four years after the Edo Shogunate was overthrown and the Meiji government formed in 1868, the present Yamaguchi Prefecture was established. The Meiji government brought in many new systems and modern policies, and promoted the introduction of modern industry, though the prefecture was still centered around agriculture during this period. In the Taisho period, from 1912 to 1926, shipbuilding, chemical, machinery, and metal working plants were built in Yamaguchi's harbors in the Seto Inland Sea area. During the post-World War II Shōwa Period, Yamaguchi developed into one of the most industrialized prefectures in the country due to the establishment of petrochemical complexes.[4]
Geography
As of April 1, 2012, 7% of the total land area of the prefecture was designated as Natural Parks, namely the Setonaikai National Park; Akiyoshidai, Kita-Nagato Kaigan, and Nishi-Chugoku Sanchi Quasi-National Parks; and Chōmonkyō, Iwakiyama, Rakanzan, and Toyota Prefectural Natural Parks.[5]
Cities
Thirteen cities are located in Yamaguchi Prefecture:
Towns and districts
These are the towns in each district:
Mergers
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Economic development
For the purposes of development analysis, Yamaguchi is construed to be part of Northern Kyūshū. Although Yamaguchi not part of the island of Kyūshū, it has become a functional satellite of the Kanmon Straits metropolitan area.[6]
Tourism
The most popular place for tourism is Shimonoseki. One of the major attractions is the famous Kintai Bridge in the town of Iwakuni. This five arched wooden structure is considered a symbol of Western Honshū. The area on the banks of the Nishiki river close to the bridge is considered among the best places in Japan for Hanami, when groups of family and friends gather in early April to view cherry blossoms. Akiyoshidai Quasi-National Park, which includes Japan’s longest cave, the Akiyoshido (秋芳洞?), is another popular destination.
Famous festivals and events
- Kintaikyo Festival in Iwakuni - held in April 29
- Nishiki River Water Festival in Iwakuni - held in August
- Iwakuni Festival in August
- Yokomichi Festival, Kintai Bridge November 19
- Yanai Goldfish Lantern Festival in August
- Yamaguchi Gion Festival in July 20 to 27
- Yamaguchi Tanabata Lantern Festival in August 6 to 7
- Hagi Era Festival in April
- Hagi Festival in August 2 to 3
- Shimonoseki Strait Festival in May 2 to 4
- Shimonoseki Firework Festival in August[citation needed]
Education
Universities
- Yamaguchi University (national)
- National Fisheries University (national)
- Shimonoseki City University (public)
- Yamaguchi Prefectural University (public)
Private Universities
Ube Frontier University | University of East Asia |
Baiko Gakuin University | Tokyo University of Science, Yamaguchi |
Yamaguchi Gakugei College | Yamaguchi University of Human Welfare and Culture |
Transportation
Ferries from Shimonoseki Port International Terminal
Two ferry services provide regular sea transport from the Shimonoseki Port International Terminal: Kanpu Ferry provides round-trip service to Busan, South Korea; the Orient Ferry provides round-trip service to Qingdao and Shanghai, respectively.
- The Kanpu ferry to Pusan in South Korea regularly.
- The Gwangyang Beech to Gwangyang in South Korea regularly.
- The Orient ferry to Qingdao in China regularly.
- The Orient ferry to Shanghai in China regularly.
Other Ferry Route
Air
Yamaguchi Ube Airport is a domestic airport with service to Haneda Airport (Tokyo).
Railway
- West Japan Railway Company
- Nishikigawa Railway
Roads
Expressways
Toll Road
- Hagi Misumi Road
- Kanmon Bridge
- Yamaguchi Ube Onoda Road
- Ogori Hagi Road
- Kanmon Road Tunnel
National Highway
- Route 2
- Route 9
- Route 187 (Iwakuni-Tsuwano-Masuda)
- Route 188
- Route 189 (Iwakuni-Yanai-Hikari-Kudamatsu)
- Route 262
- Route 315 (Shunan-Hagi)
- Route 316
- Route 376 (Yamaguchi-Shunan-Iwakuni)
- Route 435
- Route 437
- Route 489
- Route 490
- Route 491
Prefectural symbols
- Tree: Red pine tree (Pinus densiflora)
- Flower: Bitter summer mandarin blossom (Citrus natsudaidai)
- Bird: Hooded crane (Grus monacha)
- Fish: Tetraodontidae (Takifugu rubripes)
- Beast: Sika deer (Cervus nippon nippon)
- Mascot: Choruru
Media
Newspaper
TV
Radio
Famous people from Yamaguchi
- Current Prime Minister Shinzo Abe represented first Yamaguchi's 1st then 4th district in the House of Representatives; his father represented Yamaguchi as well.
- Kasumi Ishikawa, silver medalist in Women's Team Table Tennis at the London 2012 Olympics, is from Yamaguchi City in Yamaguchi prefecture.
- Kido Takayoshi, one of the two main architects of the Meiji Restoration
- Atsushi Tamura of the comic duo London Boots Ichi-go Ni-go is from Shimonoseki in Yamaguchi.
- Teruzane Utada music producer, manager and father of Utada Hikaru is from somewhere in Yamaguchi Prefecture, as mentioned on the latter's blog.
- Sayumi Michishige, a Japanese idol who is one of the 6th generation members of Japanese idol group Morning Musume was born in Yamaguchi.
- Raizo Tanaka, a Japanese rear admiral during World War II. Tanaka was the commander of the Midway invasion force and later made famous for his efforts to keep Japanese forces on Guadalcanal in supply with the "Tokyo Express."
- Prime Minister Naoto Kan was born in Ube in 1946.[7]
- Karyu, guitarist of the band D'espairsRay is from Yamaguchi. The band had a "homecoming" live there in 2007 and 2009.
- Harukichi Yamaguchi, founder of the Yamaguchi-gumi, born near Kobe but his entire family hailed from Yamaguchi.
- Shintaro Abe, former Minister of Foreign Affairs and General Secretary of the LDP.
- Itō Hirobumi, a samurai of Chōshū domain, Japanese statesman, four-time Prime Minister of Japan (the 1st, 5th, 7th and 10th), genrō and Resident-General of Korea.
- Yasunori Mitsuda, composer
- Shaura, singer
- Shojiro Iida, a Japanese general during World War II who led the invasions of Thailand and Burma
- Kaiketsu Masateru, sumo wrestler, who reached the second highest rank of ōzeki on two separate occasions and was chairman of the Japan Sumo Association 2010-2012.
Sister districts
Yamaguchi Prefecture has alliance with the following three districts.[8]
- Shandong Province, China (since 1982)
- South Gyeongsang Province, South Korea (since 1987)
- Navarre, Spain (since November 2003)
Politics
Since the Meiji Restoration in which lower-rank nobility from Chōshū played a major role, many politicians from Yamaguchi have held important positions in national politics. In the post-war era, the most prominent political family from Yamaguchi is the Kishi-Abe/Satō prime ministerial dynasty, and Yamaguchi is leaning solidly towards the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).
Delegation to the National Diet
Since the electoral reform of the 1990s, Yamaguchi elects four members directly to the House of Representatives. Three of the new single-member districts have been held exclusively by Liberal Democrats as of 2013, the easternmost district bordering Hiroshima was initially won by Shinji Satō (Eisaku Satō's son) in 1996, but went to Democrat Hideo Hiraoka in several later elections. Currently, following the 2012 general election, Yamaguchi's directly elected delegation to the lower house consists of LDP president Shinzō Abe (4th district, 7th term), LDP vice president Masahiko Kōmura (1st district, 11th term), the head of the LDP election campaign division, Takeo Kawamura (3rd district, 8th term), and the current president of the LDP prefectural federation in Yamaguchi,[9] Abe's brother Nobuo Kishi (2nd district, 1st term, former two-term member of the House of Councillors). For the proportional representation segment of the House of Representatives, Yamaguchi forms part of the Chūgoku block.
In the House of Councillors, Yamaguchi is represented by two members, making it one of the currently 31 winner-take-all single-member districts. As of 2013, the two members are Yoshimasa Hayashi (LDP, 4th term, up in 2019), agriculture minister in the 2nd Abe Cabinet, and following the April 2013 by-election to replace Nobuo Kishi, Kiyoshi Ejima (LDP, 1st term, up in 2016), former mayor of Shimonoseki city.
Governor
The current governor of Yamaguchi is former MIC bureaucrat Tsugumasa Muraoka. He won the gubernatorial election in February 2014 with more than 60% of the vote against other two candidates, and succeeded Shigetarō Yamamoto who had been hospitalized since October 2013 and resigned in January 2014.
Elected governors of Yamaguchi have been:
- Tatsuo Tanaka, 1947–1953 (2 terms, resigned mid-term to enter national politics), the son of pre-war prime minister Baron Giichi Tanaka
- Tarō Ozawa, 1953–1960 (2 terms, resigned mid-term to enter national politics), Tanaka's son-in-law
- Masayuki Hashimoto, 1960–1976 (4 terms), previously member of the House of Representatives from Yamaguchi for the LDP
- Tōru Hirai, 1976–1996 (5 terms), previously Home Affairs Ministry bureaucrat and vice-governor of Yamaguchi under Hashimoto
- Sekinari Nii, 1996–2012 (4 terms), previously Home Affairs Ministry bureaucrat and treasurer of Yamaguchi under Hirai
- Shigetarō Yamamoto, 2012–2014 (1 term, resigned for health reasons), former LDP candidate for the House of Representatives in Yamaguchi's 2nd district
Assembly
The prefectural assembly of Yamaguchi has 49 members, elected in unified local elections in 15 electoral districts: 5 single-member districts, four two-member districts and six districts that elect each between four and ten members.[10] In the 2011 election, the LDP won a majority with 27 seats. Liberal Democrats form two parliamentary groups together with independents. As of February 25, 2014, the assembly is composed as follows: LDP 25 members, LDP Shinseikai 8, DPJ 5, Kōmeitō 5, JCP 2, SDP 1, and the independent "groups" shinsei club, tokoton and kusa no ne have one member each.[11]
Notes
- ↑ Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Yamaguchi-ken" in Japan Encyclopedia, pp. 1039-1040, p. 1039, at Google Books; "Chūgoku" at p. 127, p. 127, at Google Books.
- ↑ Nussbaum, "Yamaguchi" at p. 1039, p. 1039, at Google Books.
- ↑ Nussbaum, "Provinces and prefectures" in p. 780, p. 780, at Google Books.
- ↑ The History of Yamaguchi Prefecture
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Sakamoto, Hiroshi. (2011). "CGE Analysis of Regional Policy in the Northern Kyushu Area." Kitakyushu: The International Centre for the Study of East Asian Development (ICSEAD), Working Paper Series Vol. 2011-03
- ↑ Kantei bio notes
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ LDP Yamaguchi: officials (Japanese)
- ↑ Yamaguchi Prefectural Assembly: Electoral districts and district magnitudes (Japanese)
- ↑ Yamaguchi Prefectural Assembly: Composition by group (Japanese)
References
- Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric and Käthe Roth. (2005). Japan encyclopedia. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01753-5; OCLC 58053128
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yamaguchi prefecture. |
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