Churches and Christian Sites in Nagasaki is a group of twenty-six sites in Nagasaki Prefecture relating to the history of Christianity in Japan. The Nagasaki churches are unique in the sense that each tells a story about the revival of Christianity after long period of official suppression.[1]
Proposed jointly in 2007 for inscription on the UNESCO World Heritage List under criteria ii, iii, iv, v, and vi, the submission currently resides on the Tentative List.[2]
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Christianity arrived in Japan in 1549 with the Jesuit missionary Francis Xavier. Fanning out from Nagasaki, the new faith won many converts, including a number of daimyo. Toyotomi Hideyoshi then Tokugawa Ieyasu persecuted those professing to be Christian. After the Shimabara Rebellion of 1637-1638, the official repression of Christian practices was combined with a policy of national seclusion that lasted over two centuries. With the advent of Western powers and reopening of Japan in the 1850s and the reforms of the Meiji Restoration, missionary activity was renewed and a number of Hidden Christians resurfaced. Ōura Cathedral of 1864 is the first of the churches built in subsequent years.[3]
Name | Completion Date | Location | Construction type | Comments | Image |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ōura Cathedral (大浦天主堂 )[4] | 1864 | Nagasaki | Brick | National Treasure | |
Former Catholic Seminary (旧羅典神学校 )[5] | 1875 | Nagasaki | Timber-framed Brick | Important Cultural Property | |
Kuroshima Church (黒島天主堂 )[6] | 1902 | Sasebo | Brick | Important Cultural Property | |
Former Gorin Church (旧五輪教会堂 )[7] | 1881 | Gotō | Wood | Important Cultural Property | |
Aosagaura Church (青砂ヶ浦天主堂 )[8] | 1910 | Shinkamigotō | Brick | Important Cultural Property | |
Kashiragashima Church (頭ヶ島天主堂 )[9] | 1919 | Shinkamigotō | Stone | Important Cultural Property | |
Tabira Church (田平天主堂 )[10] | 1917/8 | Hirado | Brick | Important Cultural Property | |
Mementos of Father Marc Marie de Rotz (ド・ロ神父遺跡 ) | Nagasaki | ||||
Former Shitsu Aid Center (旧出津救助院 )[11][12][13] | Nagasaki | Shelter, macaroni factory, and sardine processing area are all Important Cultural Properties | |||
Shitsu Church (出津教会 ) | 1882 | Nagasaki | Brick | ||
Ōno Church (大野教会堂 )[14] | 1893 | Nagasaki | Stone | Important Cultural Property | |
Dōzaki Church (堂崎教会 ) | 1907 | Gotō | Brick | ||
Former Nokubi Church (旧野首教会 ) | 1908 | Ojika | Brick | ||
Egami Church (江上天主堂 )[15] | 1917/8 | Gotō | Important Cultural Property | ||
Hōki Church (宝亀教会 ) | 1899 | Hirado | Wood/Brick | ||
Hara Castle (原城跡 )[16] | Minamishimabara | Historic Site | |||
Christian tombstone (吉利支丹墓碑 )[17] | Minamishimabara | Historic Site | |||
Site of Hinoe Castle (日野江城跡 )[18] | Minamishimabara | Historic Site | |||
Site of the Martyrdom of the 26 Saints of Japan (日本二十六聖人殉教地 ) | 1864 | Nagasaki | |||
Site of Saint Dominic Church (サント・ドミンゴ教会跡 ) | 1609 | Nagasaki | |||
Urakami Cathedral (浦上天主堂 ) | 1959 | Nagasaki | Reinforced concrete | ||
Former Residence of Archbishop (旧大司教館 ) | 1914 | Nagasaki | |||
Kaminoshima Church (神ノ島教会 ) | 1897 | Nagasaki | Brick | ||
Kurosaki Church (黒崎教会 ) | 1920 | Nagasaki | Brick | ||
Himosashi Church (紐差教会 ) | 1929 | Hirado | Reinforced concrete | ||
Ōso Church (大曾教会 ) | 1916 | Shinkamigotō | Brick |