Shirakawa, Fukushima

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Shirakawa City
白河市
Location of Shirakawa City
Shirakawa City's location in Fukushima, Japan.
Location
Country Japan
Region Tōhoku
Prefecture Fukushima
Physical characteristics
Area 117.67 km² (45.43 sq mi)
Population (as of 2005)
     Total 65,707
     Density 215.2 /km² (557 /sq mi)
Location 37°07′N 140°12′E / 37.117, 140.2Coordinates: 37°07′N 140°12′E / 37.117, 140.2
Symbols
Tree Japanese Red Pine
Flower Ume
Bird Emberiza cioides
Shirakawa City Government Office
Mayor Hideo Narui
Address 961-0941
Fukushima-ken, Shirakawa-shi, Hachimankōji 7-1
Phone number 0248-22-1111
Official website: Shirakawa City

Shirakawa (白河市; Shirakawa-shi) is a city in Fukushima, Japan. It is located in the southern portion of the prefecture.

The 2003 estimated population was 48,297 and the density in that year was 410.44 persons per km². The total area was 117.67 km². However, on November 7th, 2005, after including neighbouring villages in its territory (see History section below), the population count was raised to about 66,000.

Contents

[edit] History

Shirakawa is known for a long time as the main entryway for the old Mutsu Province of Japan. Up to the Edo Period it had prospered under the control of the Shirakawa Clan as a castle town. In the Heian Period, a monk and waka poet Nōin composed the following short poem about the region:

都をば霞とともに立ちしかど秋風ぞ吹く白河の関

Miyako wo ba kasumi to tomo ni tachishikado akikaze zo fuku Shirakawa no seki.

(English: I left the capital with the spring haze, but at the barrier of Shirakawa the autumn wind blows.)

During the Meiji Period in 1889, the area was classified as the town of Shirakawa 白河町 (-machi?) . In more recent times, on April 1, 1949, Shirakawa was considered as a city after merging with Ōnuma Village (大沼村 -mura?) .

Subsequent merges happened in 1954 and 1955, with the inclusion of the villages of Shirasaka (白坂村 -mura?), Odagawa (小田川村 -mura?), Goka (五箇村 -mura?) and a part of Omotegou (表郷村 -mura?) in the territory of Shirakawa. Also, on November 7, 2005, Shirakawa-shi incorporated the neighbouring villages of Taishin (大信村 -mura?) , Higashi (東村 -mura?) and the whole Omotegou (表郷村 -mura?).

[edit] City Services and Access

Shirakawa has four High Schools, eight Junior High Schools and fifteen Elementary Schools.

There are also nineteen Post Offices [1] (including minor ones) within the boundaries of the city.

The city can be easily reached through the Tōhoku Main Line, where Shinkansen bullet trains stop frequently in the nearby station of Shinshirakawa 新白河駅 (Shinshirakawa Eki?), located in the neighbouring Nishigō Village (西郷村 -mura?)

Also, Shirakawa can be accessed by the nearby Tohoku Expressway and routes 289 and 294.

[edit] Claims to fame

Residents point to the local variation of rāmen as the town's main claim to fame, and some assert that it is the most famous in all of Japan. The main attractions of the town, aside from the restaurants, include Kominejō (literally "Small Peak Castle") and Nankō ("South Lake") Park.

Festivals held in Shirakawa include "Daruma Ichi", a festival celebrating the traditional "Daruma" doll, wherein the cty streets are packed with stalls selling Daruma, a variety of festival foods and charms, and "Chouchin Matsuri" (Lantern Festival), which is held each summer, with a special three-day celebration held once every three years.

[edit] Twinning

[edit] External links

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ [1] - (Japanese) List of Post Offices in Shirakawa


Shadow picture of Fukushima Prefecture Fukushima Prefecture
Flag of Fukushima Prefecture
Cities
Aizuwakamatsu | Date | Fukushima (capital) | Iwaki | Kitakata | Kōriyama | Minamisōma | Motomiya | Nihonmatsu | Shirakawa | Sōma | Sukagawa | Tamura
Districts
Adachi | Date | Futaba | Higashishirakawa | Ishikawa | Iwase | Kawanuma | Minamiaizu | Nishishirakawa | Ōnuma | Sōma | Tamura | Yama
  See also: Towns and villages by district edit