Special cities of Japan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Administrative divisions of Japan
Prefectural level
Prefectures
(都道府県 todōfuken)
Subprefectural level
Subprefectures
(支庁 shichō)


Designated cities
(政令指定都市 seirei-shitei-toshi)


Districts
(郡 gun)

Municipal level
Core cities
(中核市 chūkaku-shi)


Special cities
(特例市 tokurei-shi)


Cities
(市 shi)


Special wards (Tokyo)
(特別区 tokubetsu-ku)


Wards
(区 ku)


Towns
(町 chō, machi)


Villages
(村 son, mura)

Special Cities (特例市) of Japan are cities with populations of at least 200,000, and are delegated a subset of the functions delegated to core cities.

This category was established by the Local Autonomy Law, article 252 clause 26. They are designated by the Cabinet after a request by the city council and the prefectural assembly.

Contents

[edit] List

The following 39 cities have been designated as Special Cities

November 1, 2000

April 1, 2001

April 1, 2002

April 1, 2003

April 1, 2004

  • Soka (Saitama Prefecture)

October 1, 2005

[edit] Former special cities now core or designated cities

Became a special city on November 1, 2000; achieved the status of Core city on October 1, 2005.
Became a special city on April 1, 2001; on April 1, 2003 the city merged with the old core city of Shizuoka to form the new core city of Shizuoka; achieved the status of designated city of April 1, 2005
Became a special city of April 1, 2002; Redesignated on February 13, 2005 when the city merged with the former towns of Kikugawa, Toyota, Toyoura, and Hōhoku to form the new city of Shimonoseki; achieved the status of Core city in 2005.

[edit] Scheduled to become a special city

April 1, 2007

[edit] Following cities have the requirements but not yet designated

Following cities has the population of more than 200,000 people but not yet designated (Scheduled to become a special city are not in this list)

In other languages