Ōmuta, Fukuoka
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ōmuta's location in Fukuoka, Japan. |
|
Location | |
Country | Japan |
Region | Kyūshū |
Prefecture | Fukuoka |
Physical characteristics | |
Area | 81.55 km² (31.49 sq mi) |
Population (as of March 2006) | |
Total | 133,802 |
Density | 1,654.49 /km² (4,285 /sq mi) |
Location | |
Symbols | |
Tree | Sawtooth Oak |
Flower | Camellia |
Flag |
|
Ōmuta Government Office | |
Mayor | Michio Koga |
Phone number | 0944-41-2222 |
Official website: City of Ōmuta |
Ōmuta (大牟田市 Ōmuta-shi?) is a city located in Fukuoka prefecture, Japan.
As of March 2006, the city has an estimated population of 133,802 (Men 61,249; Women 72,553) and the density of 1,654.49 persons per km². The total area is 81.55 km².
The current mayor is Michio Koga.
Contents |
[edit] Geography
Please help improve this section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page or at requests for expansion. |
Omuta is located in the southernmost end of Fukuoka prefecture, is bordered by the Ariake Sea in the west, and meets Kumamoto prefecture to the south and east.
It contains Yamagi and Miike mountains, and the rivers Omuta, Suwa, Doumen and Kumagawa.
Ōmuta's zoo is known for being home to lesser pandas.
Ōmuta is the birth place of the Japanese card game karuta.[citation needed]
[edit] History
The oldest reference to Ōmuta, precisely Kunugi, one of the neighborhoods in the current Ōmuta city, is found in Nihonshoki (720), the chapter of Emperor Keikō, whose historical existence is doubtful[1].
In the late 12th Century, three ponds were formed, supposedly as a result of volcanic activity. Miike, a neighborhood in Ōmuta, is named after those three ponds (jp: "三池 mi-ike").
In 1469, a farmer named Denzaemon eventually found coal in the mountains when he made a bonfire. Coal mining would become the main industry in this area.
During the Edo period, Ōmuta was a part of the Miike han (Miike Domain), ruled by the Tachibana clan who also ruled Yanagawa. In 1721, Ono Harunobu, karō (steward) of Yanagawa han (Yanagawa Domain) was granted Hirano Takatori yama, and started to mine coal. During the 1850s another two coal mines were opened.
In 1871, in a course of the Meiji restoration, the Han system was abolished and prefectures were founded. Ōmuta belonged to the Miike (1871), Mizuma (1871-1876) and finally Fukuoka prefectures (1876-present) respectively.
The Ōmuta and Miike townships, which would form the core of the current city, were founded on April 1, 1889, a consequence of the town and village administrative system, in Miike county, Fukuoka. The Meiji government ran coal mining in Miike at first themselves, but soon sold it to a private company for a very low price, compared to its value, which caused a scandal.
On March 1, 1917, Ōmuta received city status. Ōmuta had developed as an industrial city, centered on the Miike coal mine, which existed from the 1860s until 1997. In 1891, a railway began to operate, connecting Ōmuta with Fukuoka. It is still operated today as the Kagoshima Main Line. In 1902, Miike Port opened on Ariake Bay. New coal mines were opened, and Ōmuta became an industrial center in this region. 1908 Miike Port was opened to foreigners and in the next year the Trade Taxation Office was established along the port, as a branch of the Nagasaki Trade Taxation Office.
While miners enjoyed good wages, their working conditions were not very good, like many other Japanese laborers. In 1918 and 1924, big strikes and other protests arose. Through many protests and other activities, in the 1930s we found many of the strikers' wishes granted: women, prisoners, and horses were no longer found in mines, and miners were hired directly by the company.
In 1921 and 1941, mergers with neighboring towns and villages, including Ōmuta, occurred, and in 1941 the city became as large as it is now. The 1941 merger was a side effect of World War II: the government led mergers in many places, thinking it would make municipal administration more efficient. During the war, Ōmuta was bombed in 1944 and 1945, not only in industrial areas, but also downtown. The prisoner-of-war camp "Fukuoka 17", where allied prisoners were forced to work in the mines, was located in the outskirts of the city.
In the late 1950s, Ōmuta reached the high point of its history. In 1959, Ōmuta recorded its largest population: 208,877. But Japanese industry began to switch their main energy resource from coal to oil. Coal mining became less popular and popular, and many mines were closed, but Miike Mine remained one of the biggest coal mine in Japan until its closure in 1997. Many people left the city, since they couldn't find new workplaces in the city. It affects the local economy majorly, and many downtown shops were closed consequently.
In 1960, the Japanese media observed the Miike dispute which was linked with the reform of the Treaty of Mutual Cooperation and Security between Japan and the United States of America.
[edit] Sister Cities
- Datong (northern Shanxi Province in China)
- Muskegon, Michigan (United States of America)
[edit] Industry
For the majority of its past in the modern age, Omuta was a coal mining town. However, with the recent closure of the Miike mine, industry has focused elsewhere.
Thanks to coal mining, chemical industry was developed. Currently, there is movement in the environmental recycling industry, centered on the generation of electricity from waste products.
Another main industry is Alminium fining, which has been also in a hard situation due to high price of electricity in Japan and its international competency is insufficient.
Commercial fishing continues out of the port, Kurosaki.
[edit] Transport
[edit] Airport
Saga and Kumamoto Airports are close, but a great many more passengers transit to or from Omuta through Fukuoka Airport due to its greater number of connecting flights and additional services.
[edit] Railroad
The city is serviced by JR Kyushu's Kagoshima Main Line for national intercity rail services which connects the city with Fukuoka, Kurume, Kumamoto or Kagoshima directly. JR provides also two night train services, one is bound to Kyoto, another to Tokyo. Formerly those night trains connected those cities with Kagoshima, but now their terminal is located in Kumamoto, due to decrease of numbers passengers in the past decades. Nishi-Nippon Railroad runs the Tenjin Omuta Line connecting Omuta to Fukuoka, in addition to industrial freight services.
[edit] Bus
General Shuttle and High-Speed buses are provided to nearby cities and airports by Nishi-Nippon Railroad
[edit] Road
Omuta is serviced by two Japanese national highways (208 & 389).
[edit] Shipping
Docks at Port Miike are the main way to approach the city by sea.
[edit] External links
- Omuta official website in Japanese
- Omuta official website in English
|
|||
Cities | |||
---|---|---|---|
Asakura | Buzen | Chikugo | Chikushino | Dazaifu | Fukuoka (capital) | Fukutsu | Iizuka | Kasuga | Kama | Kitakyūshū | Koga | Kurume | Maebaru | Miyama | Miyawaka | Munakata | Nakama | Nōgata | Ogōri | Ōkawa | Ōmuta | Ōnojō | Tagawa | Ukiha | Yame | Yanagawa | Yukuhashi | |||
Districts | |||
Asakura | Chikujō | Chikushi | Itoshima | Kaho | Kasuya | Kurate | Mii | Miyako | Mizuma | Onga | Tagawa | Yame | |||
|