Hikone, Shiga
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Location | |
Country | Japan |
Region | Kansai |
Prefecture | Shiga Prefecture |
Physical characteristics | |
Area | 98.15 km² |
Population (as of 2003) | |
Total | 108,613 |
Density | 1,106.60/km² |
Location | |
Symbols | |
Tree | Tachibana Orange |
Flower | Russian Iris |
Hikone City Hall | |
Address | 〒522-8501 Shiga-ken, Hikone-shi Motomachi-cho 4-2 |
Phone number | 0749-22-1411 |
Official website: City of Hikone |
The city was incorporated on February 11, 1937.
Hikone's most famous historical site is Hikone Castle. Its construction was begun in 1603 by Ii Naokatsu, son of the former lord Ii Naomasa, but was not completed until 1622. Naokatsu's lands had been taken from him in the interval by the Tokugawa shogunate, and when his brother Naotake assumed control of the Omi area, he was able to complete the castle by collecting stones from the former Sawayama castle. When the Meiji era began in 1868, many castles were scheduled to be dismantled and only a request from the emperor himself, touring the area, kept Hikone-jo intact. Today it remains one of the oldest original-construction castles in Japan.
Hikone lies on the Nakasendō, which was one of the most important trading routes until modern times. Today, a small area south of the castle, called the Yume Kyobashi Castle Road, is built in the old style and attracts visitors keen to see modern construction fused with traditional looks. Even the Biwako Bank in this district has remodeled itself to fit in with the surrounding structures.
Hikone is the home of the Japan Center for Michigan Universities (JCMU), a facility operated jointly by a consortium of the fifteen public universities in the State of Michigan and the government of Shiga Prefecture that offers programs for American university students and scholars for the study of Japanese language and culture, as well as courses in English for the citizens of the Shiga Prefecture. The Michigan Center, as it is known, was founded in 1989 under the auspices of the Michigan-Shiga Sister State Agreement, the oldest such relationship between a US state and Japanese prefecture.
In 2003, meetings were held to discuss the merger of Hikone city with Toyosato (豊郷町), Kora (甲良町), and Taga (多賀町) towns. However, a survey conducted by the city in February of 2004 revealed that most of the city's citizens opposed the merger leading the city government to shelve the proposal for the time being.
[edit] Miscellaneous topics
[edit] Sister cities
[edit] External links
- Hikone travel guide from Wikitravel
- Official website in Japanese
- Photos of Hikone Castle at photoguide.jp in English
- Information on the Japan Center for Michigan Universities and its academic programs
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Cities | |||
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Higashiomi | Hikone | Koka | Konan | Kusatsu | Maibara | Moriyama | Nagahama | Otsu (capital) | Omihachiman | Ritto | Takashima | Yasu | |||
Districts | |||
Echi | Gamou | Higashiazai | Ika | Inukami | |||
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