【K】Japan Travel-Nagasaki[일본 여행-나가사키]나가사키의 인공섬 데지마/Dejima/Artificial island
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규슈 서쪽의 항구도시 나가사키로 갔다. 나가사키는 1571년 포르투갈과 무역을 시작하면서 무역항이 되었다.나가사키에는 데지마라는 독특한 장소가 있다. 에도시대에 만든 인공섬인데 입구에 당시 모습을 재현한 모형이 있다. 포르투갈인의 기독교 포교를 막고 주민과의 거리를 두기 위해 만들어졌다. 복원된 건물들은 막부시대부터 19세기초까지 다양한 형태를 띠고 있다. 이 주택은 상관장의 거주지로 데지마를 대표하는 건물이다. 1639년 막부의 쇄국령으로 포르투갈인이 추방되고 2년후 네덜란드 상관이 들어온다. 네덜란드는 포교에는 관심이 없었기 때문이다. 데지마는 그 후 2백여년간 서구문물을 받아들이는 창구가 되었다. 거리에선 사무라이 차림의 사람이 아이들 앞에서 시범을 보인다. 찍은 사진을 함께 확인하는 모습이 정겹다. 1층 에는 당시 생활상들이 전시되어 있다. “도쿠가와 막부시대에는 일본이 쇄국 중이라 여기서만 무역이 가능했어요. 쇄국이 해제된 후에는 데지마가 외국인이 살아도 되는 곳이라고 허가를 받고 거류지가 되었지요.”데지마의 건설이 시작될 무렵나가사키의 대표적인 축제도 시작되었다. 일본3대 군치 중 하나인 나가사키 군치이다. 매년 10월 7일부터 사흘간 열리는 이 축제에서는 나가사키의 77개 마을이 7년에 한번씩 돌아가며 춤을 바친다. “옛날 어부들의 마을, 기름 장수들의 마을 등 여러 마을이 있었지요. 서로 거래를 하다가 각 마을의 부자들이 모여서 이 마쓰리를 만들었지요.”
[English: Google Translator]
Port of Kyushu went west to the city of Nagasaki. Nagasaki became a trading port at the beginning of 1571, Portugal and trade. There is a unique place called Dejima in Nagasaki. Inde even artificial islands created in the era has reproduced the model then look at the entrance. Prevent Christian missionary in Portugal has been made to keep the distance between people. The restored buildings are tinged in various forms from the Edo period to the early 19th century. The house is a building that represents the Dejima to any chapter residence. In 1639 the Portuguese banished to seclusion command of the Shogunate and the Netherlands two years later, comes this matter. The Netherlands is that there was no interest in propaganda. Dejima accept Western civilization 200 years after he became the counter. In the distance a man dressed in samurai seems a demonstration in front of the kids. Jeonggyeopda with a view to make the pictures taken. First floor, at the time of their life are on display. ..
[Information]
■클립명: 아시아036-일본18-13 나가사키의 인공섬 데지마/Dejima/Artificial island
■여행, 촬영, 편집, 원고: 손병규 PD (travel, filming, editing, writing: KBS TV Producer)
■촬영일자: 2015년 10월 October
[Keywords]
섬,island,열도, 군도, archipelago, cay,마을,village,시골, 농촌, 어촌, 구시가지, uptown, town, suburb, ,country, old town, farm,관공서,government building,city hall, square, national assembly, capitol, parliament,생가,birthplace,author, writer, painter, artist, king, queen, musician,전시관,gallery,미술관, 문화센터, 여행안내소, exhibit hall ,전통의식,풍습,,traditional ceremony,결혼 event, wedding, festival, marriage,현지인생활,풍습,,local life,uptown, town, suburb, ,country, old town, farm,아시아,Asia,,일본,Japan,Nihon,Nippon,손병규,2015,10월 October,규슈,Kyushu,Kyushu,큐슈,구주
Japan / Hiroshima City Part 7
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Hiroshima:
As of 2006, the city has an estimated population of 1,154,391, while the total population for the metropolitan area was estimated as 2,043,788 in 2000.The total area of the city is 905.08 km², with a population density of 1275.4 persons per km².The population around 1910 was 143,000. Before World War II, Hiroshima's population had grown to 360,000, and peaked at 419,182 in 1942.Following the atomic bombing in 1945, the population dropped to 137,197.By 1955, the city's population had returned to pre-war levels.
Hiroshima has a professional symphony orchestra, which has performed at Wel City Hiroshima since 1963. There are also many museums in Hiroshima, including the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, along with several art museums. The Hiroshima Museum of Art, which has a large collection of French renaissance art, opened in 1978. The Hiroshima Prefectural Art Museum opened in 1968, and is located near Shukkei-en gardens. The Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art, which opened in 1989, is located near Hijiyama Park. Festivals include Hiroshima Flower Festival and Hiroshima International Animation Festival.Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, which includes the Hiroshima Peace Memorial, draws many visitors from around the world, especially for the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Ceremony, an annual commemoration held on the date of the atomic bombing. The park also contains a large collection of monuments, including the Children's Peace Monument, the Hiroshima National Peace Memorial Hall for the Atomic Bomb Victims and many others.
Hiroshima's rebuilt castle (nicknamed Rijō, meaning Koi Castle) houses a museum of life in the Edo period. Hiroshima Gokoku Shrine is within the walls of the castle. Other attractions in Hiroshima include Shukkei-en, Fudōin, Mitaki-dera, and Hijiyama Park.
The atomic bombings of the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan were conducted by the United States during the final stages of World War II in 1945. The two events are the only use of nuclear weapons in war to date.Following a firebombing campaign that destroyed many Japanese cities, the Allies prepared for a costly invasion of Japan. The war in Europe ended when Nazi Germany signed its instrument of surrender on 8 May, but the Pacific War continued. Together with the United Kingdom and the Republic of China, the United States called for a surrender of Japan in the Potsdam Declaration on 26 July 1945, threatening Japan with prompt and utter destruction. The Japanese government ignored this ultimatum, and the United States deployed two nuclear weapons developed by the Manhattan Project. American airmen dropped Little Boy on the city of Hiroshima on 6 August 1945, followed by Fat Man over Nagasaki on 9 August.
Within the first two to four months of the bombings, the acute effects killed 90,000--166,000 people in Hiroshima and 60,000--80,000 in Nagasaki, with roughly half of the deaths in each city occurring on the first day. The Hiroshima prefecture health department estimated that, of the people who died on the day of the explosion, 60% died from flash or flame burns, 30% from falling debris and 10% from other causes. During the following months, large numbers died from the effect of burns, radiation sickness, and other injuries, compounded by illness. In a US estimate of the total immediate and short term cause of death, 15--20% died from radiation sickness, 20--30% from burns, and 50--60% from other injuries, compounded by illness. In both cities, most of the dead were civilians, although Hiroshima had a sizeable garrison.On 15 August, six days after the bombing of Nagasaki, Japan announced its surrender to the Allies, signing the Instrument of Surrender on 2 September, officially ending World War II. The bombings led, in part, to post-war Japan's adopting Three Non-Nuclear Principles, forbidding the nation from nuclear armament. The role of the bombings in Japan's surrender and their ethical justification are still debated.
Why All People Left Hashima Island in Japan
A concrete island with tumble-down houses and not a single tree or plant around. The gloomiest place on Earth you’ve ever seen, for sure. Can it be real? In fact, it is. Welcome to Hashima!
This island 9 miles from Nagasaki is one of many hundreds of uninhabited islands in the prefecture. Unlike others, which are green and covered with forests, Hashima looks like bare rocks with no plants on them. If you look closer you’ll see that the rocks are actually empty high-risers standing on manmade coastal banks.
Other videos you might like:
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TIMESTAMPS:
A brief history of Hashima 1:00
The first big concrete building in Japan 3:09
Why Hashima citizens had no umbrellas 5:01
No ground, no plants 5:59
Why all the residents of Hashima left the island forever 6:24
#Japan #Hashima #brightside
Hashima 4: By By VKaeru, CC BY-SA 3.0
A student exploring Hashima Island in Japan: By Jordy Meow - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0
The 16-story Ingalls Building in Cincinnati, Ohio became the world's first reinforced concrete skyscraper in 1903: By Wikimedia, CC BY-SA 3.0
Animation is created by Bright Side.
SUMMARY:
- For many centuries, people living on Takashima – a big island not far from Hashima, gathered coal, which lay close to the surface.
- In 18-19th centuries Takashima island was part of feudal lands belonging to the Fukahori family. They saw the profit that coal mining started to bring and took control of all the bargains in their own hands.
- Takashima coal had a high quality and soon filled the treasury of Nagasaki with foreign currency.
- At the end of the 19th century they sold the island to Mitsubishi, which was a shipping enterprise then. The new owner built dwelling houses for workers.
- Hashima produced about 150.000 tons of coal each year, and its population in 1916 was 3000 people.
- In 1959 the population of Hashima was over 5,200. The total square of the island is 6.3 ha, and 60% of it are rocky slopes where most of the dwelling houses are built.
- Between residential houses, there were squeezed a primary school, a secondary school, a playground, a gym, a cinema, bars, restaurants, 25 different stores, and a Buddhist church.
- Hashima citizens had no umbrellas, as the mazes of corridors and stairs connected all the dwelling houses and served as a transport system.
- Housing, electricity and water were free for workers, but all the residents had to take part in public works and clean-up of the territory.
- The most remarkable trait of this place was a total absence of the ground and plants. Hashima was nothing more but coal ash, laid around a bare rock.
- At the end of the 1960-s Japanese economy skyrocketed, and coal was admitted an ecologically dirty fuel.
- The government started shutting down coalmines around the country, and Hashima wasn’t an exclusion.
- Mitsubishi reduced staff on Hashima, retrained workers and sent them to other subsidiaries.
- By 1974 there were about 2000 people left on the island, and on January 15, 1974 the company officially announced the closure of the mine.
- Hashima now is an abandoned and forgotten island, which looks as a strange lighthouse guarding the entrance to Nagasaki bay.
- In September 2008 Hashima (Gunkanjima) island was included in the list to get the status of UNESCO world heritage as a monument to a whole period of Japanese history.
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Nagasaki 長崎 グラバー園、大浦天主堂、ランタンフェスティバルの準備等
2015/2/11
Nagasaki (長崎市 Nagasaki-shi?) (About this sound listen (help·info)) is the capital and the largest city of Nagasaki Prefecture on the island of Kyushu in Japan. It became a center of Portuguese and other European influence in the 16th through 19th centuries, and the Churches and Christian Sites in Nagasaki have been proposed for inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List. Part of Nagasaki was home to a major Imperial Japanese Navy base during the First Sino-Japanese War and Russo-Japanese War. Its name means long cape.
During World War II, the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki made Nagasaki the second and, to date, last city in the world to experience a nuclear attack.[1]
As of January 1, 2009, the city has an estimated population of 446,007 and a population density of 1,100 persons per km². The total area is 406.35 km².
Glover Garden (グラバー園 Gurabāen?) is a park in Nagasaki, Japan built for Thomas Blake Glover, a Scottish merchant who contributed to the modernization of Japan in shipbuilding, coal mining, and other fields. In it stands the Glover Residence, the oldest Western style house surviving in Japan and Nagasaki's foremost tourist attraction.
It is located on the Minamiyamate hillside overlooking Nagasaki harbor. It was built by Hidenoshin Koyama of Amakusa island and completed in 1863. It has been designated as an Important Cultural Asset. As the house and its surroundings are reminiscent of Puccini's opera, it is also known as the Madame Butterfly House. Statues of Puccini and diva Miura Tamaki, famed for her role as Cio-Cio-san, stand in the park near the house. This house was also the venue of Glover's meetings with rebel samurai particularly from the Chōshū and Satsuma domains.
Thomas Blake Glover, Order of the Rising Sun (6 June 1838 – 16 December 1911) was a Scottish merchant in Bakumatsu and Meiji period Japan.
Ōura Church (大浦天主堂 Ōura Tenshudō?) is a Roman Catholic church in Nagasaki, Japan, built soon after the end of the Japanese government's Seclusion Policy in 1853. It is also known as the Church of the 26 Japanese Martyrs. It was for many years the only western-style building declared a national treasure, and is said to be the oldest church in Japan.
長崎市(ながさきし)は、九州の北西部に位置する都市で、長崎県の県庁所在地である。国から中核市に指定されている。
古くから、外国への玄関口として発展してきた港湾都市である。江戸時代は国内唯一の貿易港出島を持ち、ヨーロッパから多くの文化が入ってきた。外国からの文化流入の影響や、坂の多い街並みなどから、日本国内の他都市とは違った景観を保持している。また、県下最大の人口を持つ長崎県の中心都市である。
市域面積の13.1%である市街地に人口の約78%が住み、市街地の人口密度は、7,900人/km²と過密である。
長崎ランタンフェスティバル(ながさきランタンフェスティバル)は、毎年冬に長崎県長崎市で行われるイベント。
長崎に住む華人が旧正月を祝う祭りを長崎新地中華街で行っていた春節祭という祭りが1994年より長崎市全体でのイベントとなり、中華街以外の場所にも中国提灯(ランタン)が飾られるようになった。
旧暦の1月1日を初日として約2週間、新地中華街を中心に1万数千個のランタンや点灯式のオブジェが飾られる。暦の関係で、年ごとに開催期間は前後に移動する(2014年は1月31日~2月14日)。
2013年には皇帝パレードに長崎市出身の金子昇が参加し、期間中に過去最高の101万人が来場した。
[News Today] 1월 16일
[Anchor Lead]
Korea's youth employment rate in 2013 has fallen into the 30 percent range for the first time in history. The number of new hires has dropped for 21 straight years.
[Pkg]
This young lady visiting the women's apparel shops in this department store happens to be an intern. She was hired over some 300 other applicants, showing how hard it is to even land an internship. With competition so fierce for just this one position, it's even harder to find a real job. The young people employed between the ages of 15 and 29 stood at 3.79 million last year, showing a 21-year decline. More strikingly, the employment rate of these young people fell to 39.7%. This is the first time the figure has dipped below the 40% line. To add to the trouble, it isn't likely that the job situation will improve this year. The Korea Chamber of Commerce & Industry found that the top 500 companies definitely plan on hiring 39 thousand new employees. That's 1.5% less than during the same period last year.
[Soundbite] Jo Yeong-mu (LG Economy Research Institute) : If young people can't get decent jobs, they're missing out on building their own assets, which could suppress Korea's long-term domestic demand.
More jobs for young people have to be created to achieve one of the government's top economic objectives of stimulating domestic spending.
2. UNESCO Conflict
[Anchor Lead]
The Japanese government wants its mines and shipyards added to UNESCO's World Heritage list as a legacy to the country's industrialization. Many Koreans are alarmed, as these were the sites of forced Korean labor during Japanese colonial rule of Korea.
[Pkg]
Hashima Island in Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan, used to be called a living hell among Koreans. During the Pacific War, more than 800 Koreans who forced to become laborers and had to work in tunnels one-thousand meters underground. Some 120 Koreans died on the island. The Japanese government is seeking to add Hashima Island, Nagasaki Shipyard, and 26 oth
China afraid to US and japan new military base very large in the south china sea
The Japanese government has completed the 16 billion yen (US$146 million) purchase of an uninhabited island between Kyushu and Okinawa prefecture which it plans to develop into a training base for Japanese and US military aircraft.
Mageshima is part of the Osumi Islands and hosted an important airfield for the Japanese military when defending Okinawa in the closing stages of World War II.
Its planned development reflects Tokyo's revised security doctrine and determination to protect the scattered islands off its most southern prefecture.
Okinawa governor raps Japan's central gov't over U.S. base
The governor of Okinawa has accused the Japanese government of neglecting the human rights and democracy of the prefecture.
Governor Takeshi Onaga has been an outspoken critic of the government plan to relocate a U.S. air base on the island.
Japan to establish more defense units on its remote islands
Japan is looking to establish ten inhabited remote islands near its national borders as special border remote islands to promote the islands' protection and development.
According to Japanese government sources, a bill that's likely to be submitted to parliament in the fall will call on the government to construct Self-Defense Force facilities on the islands.
Candidates for special border remote islands include the Oki Islands in Shimane Prefecture.
The Oki Islands are around 160-kilometers away from Korea's Dokdo Island.
Meanwhile, on a semi-related note, Japan's Kyodo News agency reported on Tuesday that over 100 senior maritime Self-Defense Force officers paid a visit to the Yasukuni war shrine in May.
Korea and China see the shrine as a celebration of Japan's past militarism as several Class-A war criminals are laid to rest there.
The Dark History of Japan's Abandoned Island| History of Hashima
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Municipalities of Japan
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Japan has three levels of government: national, prefectural, and municipal.The nation is divided into 47 prefectures.Each prefecture consists of numerous municipalities, with 1,719 in total .There are four types of municipalities in Japan: cities, towns, villages and special wards .
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2017 Hiroshima Peace Ceremony Media Coverage (KGMB) - Aug 7, 2017
Teens from the YMCA of Honolulu and Hiroshima YMCA commemorate the 72nd Anniversary of the Bombing of Hiroshima by ringing the replica of the Hiroshima Peach Bell at the Izumo Taishakyo Mission and presenting 1,000 folded cranes.
The Hiroshima and Honolulu teens have spent the past two weeks together as part of the annual “YMCA Let’s Get Together” student peace exchange that has taken place every summer for the past 57 years. The folded cranes are a symbol of world peace based on the life and story of Sadako Sasaki.
Sadako was two years old when the atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima and was later diagnosed with leukemia and died on October 25, 1955 at the age of 12. Prior to her passing, Sadako diligently folded paper cranes or “orizuru,” based on the Japanese legend that would grant one wish to anyone who would fold 1,000 cranes. When Sadako passed away, her school classmates continued folding cranes and today, the origami crane has become an international symbol of peace, and people, throughout the world.
The 1,000 cranes remained on display at the Izumu Taishakyo Mission for the 28th Annual Hiroshima Commemoration and Peace Ceremony that was scheduled to take place on Monday, August 7, 11 am – 12 noon.
About Let’s Get Together Hiroshima and Honolulu Student Exchange Program
Since 1960, the YMCA of Honolulu and the Hiroshima YMCA have participated in an annual international student exchange program that focuses on world peace. Alternating hosting duties, the students and families of the YMCAs of Honolulu and Hiroshima welcome each other into their homes and participate in activities aimed at building bonds between the young students. Honolulu’s bonds with Hiroshima dates back to 1959 when the two were established as sister cities.
At that time, the Mayor of Honolulu, Neal Blaisdell, and the Mayor of Hiroshima, Shinzo Hamai, met in Hiroshima to strengthen international understanding and friendship. From this meeting came a vow to work for peace and to maintain an exchange of ideas between two cities. The mayors then pledged a continuance of a person to person relationship between the two cities.
Today, the Let’s Get Together program continues with the YMCA of Honolulu and the Hiroshima YMCA participating in an annual international student exchange program that focuses on world peace each summer. This summer, the YMCA of Honolulu students hosted the Hiroshima YMCA students.
About the Hiroshima Peace Bell
In 1985, the Hiroshima Prefectural Government presented a replica of the Hiroshima Peace Bell as a gift to the people of Hawaii, in recognition of their long-standing and strong relationship. These bonds include a sister city relationship established in 1959 between Honolulu and Hiroshima and a sister chamber relationship between the Honolulu Japanese Chamber of Commerce and the Hiroshima Chamber of Commerce and Industry created in 1981.
The Hiroshima Peace Bell was dedicated and placed next to the Izumo Taishakyo Mission in 1990. Since 1990, a Hiroshima Commemoration and Peace Service has been held annually. This year, 2017, marks the 28th annual service.
Japan Local Hidden Spot Osaka Nanko, ATC and Government Building Observatory #215
I introduce Local hidden spot Osaka Nanko, ATC, and Osaka prefecture government building observatory in this video! Less tourist and really quiet peaceful place next to the Ocean. Locals come to fishing as well.
There are too many travelers in Osaka recently, so maybe you can visit here when you get tired with crowd and tourist in Osaka ????
You can learn about Mentaiko (Spicy Cod Roe) in the ITM building in the ATC as well.
Here is the address of the ATC (Asia & Pacific trade center)
Address: 2 Chome-1-10 Nankokita, Suminoe Ward, Osaka, 559-0034, Japan
Phone: +81 6-6615-5230
[Nearest station (Nako Port Town line) Trade Center Mae Station]
Osaka Prefectural Government Sakishima Building Observatory
Address: 1 Chome-14-16 Nankokita, Suminoe Ward, Osaka, 559-0034, Japan
[800 JPY for adults, 500 JPY for 16 and younger) to enter for the observatory????]
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Japan: Okinawans vote on final day of US military base referendum
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Okinawans cast their votes at a polling station in Nago on Sunday, as a controversial non-binding referendum on plans to relocate a US military base entered its final day.
Government proposals to move the US Marine Corps Futenma Air Station from the densely populated city of Ginowan to a new location on the Henoko Bay near Nago have been in the planning stages for years.
The relocation plans have been criticised for multiple reasons by locals, with some claiming that the plans will destroy the area's delicate ecosystem, while others point out that Okinawa already has a disproportionately large number of US bases compared to the rest of Japan.
One voter commented that he wanted other prefectures in Japan to also be burdened with bases, adding that he hoped all of Japan tries to reduce and close all US bases in Japan, not only from Okinawa.
Okinawa hosts around 25,000 US troops - roughly half of the total US deployment to the country - despite accounting for less than one percent of Japan's total land area, and taking up approximately 25 percent of the island's total area.
The non-binding vote on the plan's was called by Okinawa prefecture's governor, Denny Tamaki, who has long been a vocal critic of the US military presence on the island. The Japanese government has already begun work on the project and has stated that whatever the outcome of the referendum the plans will continue.
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Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum, Japan, 11apr2019
#adriantravels @ Atomic Bomb Museum, Nagasaki, Japan, 11apr2019
Let's Denken 〜 Important Preservation Districts for Groups of Historic Buildings・Fukushima, Yame 〜
The Japanese government has designated 110 places throughout the country as Important Preservation Districts for Groups of Historic Buildings. 5 of those districts are in Fukuoka Prefecture.
These districts are not confined to houses; they can be anything from townscapes and waterways. Any area that has value as a historical community can be under consideration.
In this video, we introduce one of Fukuoka Prefecture's preservation districts, Fukushima of Yame City.
[Wikipedia] Basilica of the Twenty-Six Holy Martyrs of Japan (Nagasaki)
The Basilica of the Twenty-Six Holy Martyrs of Japan (日本二十六聖殉教者堂) also Ōura Church (大浦天主堂, Ōura Tenshudō) is a Roman Catholic minor basilica and Co-cathedral in Nagasaki, Japan, built soon after the end of the Japanese government's Seclusion Policy in 1853. It is also known as the Church of the 26 Japanese Martyrs. It was for many years the only Western-style building declared a national treasure, and is said to be the oldest church in Japan.
New Documentaries 2018 The Nature Incredible documentary [Best Documentary 2018]
New Documentaries 2018 The Nature Incredible documentary [Best Documentary 2018]
Ancient Kyoto (Kyoto, Uji and Otsu Cities) encompasses 17 locations in Japan within the city of Kyoto and its immediate vicinity.
The locations are in three cities: Kyoto and Uji in Kyoto Prefecture; and Ōtsu in Shiga Prefecture; Uji and Ōtsu border Kyoto to the south and north, respectively.
Of the monuments, 13 are Buddhist temples, three are Shinto shrines, and one is a castle.
The properties include 38 buildings designated by the Japanese government as National Treasures, 160 properties designated as Important Cultural Properties, eight gardens designated as Special Places of Scenic Beauty, and four designated as Places of Scenic Beauty.
UNESCO listed the site as World Heritage in 1994.
Kyoto has a substantial number of historic buildings, unlike other Japanese cities that lost buildings to foreign invasions and war; and has the largest concentration of designated Cultural Properties in Japan.
Although ravaged by wars, fires, and earthquakes during its eleven centuries as the imperial capital, Kyoto was spared from much of the destruction and danger of World War II.
It was saved from the nearly universal firebombing of large cities in Japan in part to preserve it as the primary atomic bomb target. It was later removed from the atomic bomb target list by the personal intervention of Secretary of War Henry L.
Stimson, as Stimson wanted to save this cultural center which he knew from his honeymoon and later diplomatic visits. As a result, Nagasaki was then added as a target.
S.Korea sends emergency response team to Japan quake site / YTN
South Korea has dispatched an emergency response team to the earthquake-struck site in southern Japan to check on Korean residents or tourists there.
The team of four foreign ministry officials -- two from Seoul and two from Tokyo -- arrived in Japan on Sunday and will report the status of Korean nationals in the quake-affected areas.
Dozens of people have been confirmed dead and hundreds of others injured after a 7.3-magnitude quake struck Kumamoto Prefecture in Kyushu on Saturday, that followed a 6.5-magnitude tremblor in the same region two days earlier.
The South Korean Consulate General in Fukuoka, the nearest South Korean mission from the earthquake site on Japan's Kyushu Island, said no South Korean casualties were reported in the quakes by midday today (Monday). About 20,000 Korean nationals are known to live on Kyushu Island.
Fukuoka consulate officials also said some 330 South Korean travelers have been safely moved to other areas.
They added some of the tourists have already been flown back to Seoul.
Meanwhile, the South Korean government said there has not been any direct adverse impact on the country from the Japanese quakes.
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Nagasaki 長崎 グラバー園、大浦天主堂、ランタンフェスティバルの準備等(Film look)
2015/2/11
Nagasaki (長崎市 Nagasaki-shi?) (About this sound listen (help·info)) is the capital and the largest city of Nagasaki Prefecture on the island of Kyushu in Japan. It became a center of Portuguese and other European influence in the 16th through 19th centuries, and the Churches and Christian Sites in Nagasaki have been proposed for inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List. Part of Nagasaki was home to a major Imperial Japanese Navy base during the First Sino-Japanese War and Russo-Japanese War. Its name means long cape.
During World War II, the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki made Nagasaki the second and, to date, last city in the world to experience a nuclear attack.[1]
As of January 1, 2009, the city has an estimated population of 446,007 and a population density of 1,100 persons per km². The total area is 406.35 km².
Glover Garden (グラバー園 Gurabāen?) is a park in Nagasaki, Japan built for Thomas Blake Glover, a Scottish merchant who contributed to the modernization of Japan in shipbuilding, coal mining, and other fields. In it stands the Glover Residence, the oldest Western style house surviving in Japan and Nagasaki's foremost tourist attraction.
It is located on the Minamiyamate hillside overlooking Nagasaki harbor. It was built by Hidenoshin Koyama of Amakusa island and completed in 1863. It has been designated as an Important Cultural Asset. As the house and its surroundings are reminiscent of Puccini's opera, it is also known as the Madame Butterfly House. Statues of Puccini and diva Miura Tamaki, famed for her role as Cio-Cio-san, stand in the park near the house. This house was also the venue of Glover's meetings with rebel samurai particularly from the Chōshū and Satsuma domains.
Thomas Blake Glover, Order of the Rising Sun (6 June 1838 – 16 December 1911) was a Scottish merchant in Bakumatsu and Meiji period Japan.
Ōura Church (大浦天主堂 Ōura Tenshudō?) is a Roman Catholic church in Nagasaki, Japan, built soon after the end of the Japanese government's Seclusion Policy in 1853. It is also known as the Church of the 26 Japanese Martyrs. It was for many years the only western-style building declared a national treasure, and is said to be the oldest church in Japan.
長崎市(ながさきし)は、九州の北西部に位置する都市で、長崎県の県庁所在地である。国から中核市に指定されている。
古くから、外国への玄関口として発展してきた港湾都市である。江戸時代は国内唯一の貿易港出島を持ち、ヨーロッパから多くの文化が入ってきた。外国からの文化流入の影響や、坂の多い街並みなどから、日本国内の他都市とは違った景観を保持している。また、県下最大の人口を持つ長崎県の中心都市である。
市域面積の13.1%である市街地に人口の約78%が住み、市街地の人口密度は、7,900人/km²と過密である。
長崎ランタンフェスティバル(ながさきランタンフェスティバル)は、毎年冬に長崎県長崎市で行われるイベント。
長崎に住む華人が旧正月を祝う祭りを長崎新地中華街で行っていた春節祭という祭りが1994年より長崎市全体でのイベントとなり、中華街以外の場所にも中国提灯(ランタン)が飾られるようになった。
旧暦の1月1日を初日として約2週間、新地中華街を中心に1万数千個のランタンや点灯式のオブジェが飾られる。暦の関係で、年ごとに開催期間は前後に移動する(2014年は1月31日~2月14日)。
2013年には皇帝パレードに長崎市出身の金子昇が参加し、期間中に過去最高の101万人が来場した。
The Moment in Time: The Manhattan Project
The Moment in Time documents the uncertain days of the beginning of World War II when it was feared the Nazis were developing the atomic bomb. The history of the bomb's development is traced through recollections of those who worked on what was known as the gadget. [6/2000] [Show ID: 5090]
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