Setagaya, Tokyo
Setagaya (世田谷区, Setagaya-ku?) is one of the 23 special wards of Tokyo in Japan. It is also the name of a neighborhood within the ward. The ward calls itself the City of Setagaya in English. Its official bird is the Azure-winged Magpie, its flower the Fringed Orchid, and its tree the Zelkova serrata.
It has the largest population and second largest area (after Ōta) of Tokyo's 23 special wards.
Geography
Setagaya sits at the southwestern corner of the 23 special wards. The Tama River separates it from Kanagawa Prefecture. Many railroads extend radially from the center of Tokyo, passing through Setagaya.
Most of the land is in the Musashino tableland. The parts along the Tama River to the south are comparatively low-lying.
The population of Setagaya is among the highest in Tokyo, and there are many residential neighborhoods.
The ward is divided into five districts. These are Setagaya, Kitazawa, Tamagawa, Kinuta and Karasuyama. Each area has own office as a part of administrative structure.
History
The special ward of Setagaya was founded on March 15, 1947.
During the Edo period, 42 villages occupied the area. With the abolition of the han system in 1871, the central and eastern portions became part of Tokyo Prefecture while the rest became part of Kanagawa Prefecture; in 1893, some areas were transferred to Tokyo Prefecture. With the establishment of Setagaya Ward (an ordinary ward) in the old Tokyo City in 1932, and further consolidation in 1936, Setagaya took its present boundaries.
During the 1964 Summer Olympics, the village of Karasuyama-machi located in Setagaya was part of the athletics marathon and 50 km walk event.[1]
Setagaya has sister-city relationships with Winnipeg, Manitoba in Canada; the Döbling district of Vienna, Austria; and Bunbury, Western Australia.
Landmarks
Places
- Setagaya
- Matsubara
- Kitazawa
- Tamagawa
- Kinuta
- Karasuyama
Transportation
Rail
- Keio Electric Railway
- Keiō Line: Daitabashi, Meidai-mae, Shimo Takaido, Sakura Josui, Kami Kitazawa, Hachiman Yama, Roka Koen, Chitose-Karasuyama Stations
- Keiō Inokashira Line: Ikenoue, Shimo-Kitazawa, Shindaita, Higashi-Matsubara, Meidaimae Stations
- Odakyu Electric Railway
- Tokyu Corporation
- Den-en-toshi Line: Ikejiri Ohashi, Sangen-Jaya, Komazawa Daigaku, Sakura Shinmachi, Yōga, Futako-Tamagawa Stations
- Meguro Line: Okusawa Station
- Ōimachi Line: Midorigaoka, (Jiyūgaoka), Kuhon-butsu, Oyamadai, Todoroki, Kaminoge, Futako-Tamagawa Stations
- Setagaya Line (LRT): Sangen-Jaya, Nishi Taishido, Wakabayashi, Shoin Jinja-mae, Setagaya, Kami Machi, Miyanosaka, Yamashita, Matsubara, Shimo Takaido Stations
- Tōyoko Line: (Jiyūgaoka Station)
Highways
Freeways
Politics
On April 25, 2011, amid national concern over the safety of nuclear power triggered by the March 11 Earthquake and Fukushima I nuclear accidents, former Social Democratic Party Upper House House of Councillors legislator Nobuto Hosaka was elected mayor on an anti-nuclear platform.[2] Prior to becoming mayor, Hosaka was also well-known his staunch opposition of the death penalty [3] and his defense of Japan's Otaku culture [4].
Economy
Education
Setagaya operates public elementary and junior high schools. The Tokyo Metropolitan Government Board of Education operates public high schools.
- Chitosegaoka High School
- Engei High School
- Fukasawa High School
- Matsubara High School
- Roka High School
- Sakuramachi High School
- Setagaya Izumi High School
- Setagaya Sogo High School
- Setagaya Technical High School
- Sogo Technical High School
- Tamagawa High School
The metropolis operates the Kugayama School for the Blind.
Elementary Schools
Operated by Setagaya[7]
- Wakabayashi Elementary School
- Misyuku Elementary School
- Hihashi-Ohara Elementary School
- Taishidou Elementary School
- Sakura Elementary School
- Matsugaoka Elementary School
- Sakuragaoka Elementary School
- Daizawa Elementary School
- Mamoriyama Elementary School
- Tamon Elementary School
- Setagaya Elementary School
- Matsuzawa Elementary School
- Komazawa Elementary School
- Asahi Elementary School
- Nakazato Elementary School
- Matsubara Elementary School
- Kitazawa Elementary School
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- Kamikitazawa Elementary School
- Komatsunagi Elementary School
- Ikenoue Elementary School
- Kyodo Elementary School
- Tsurumaki Elementary School
- Yamazaki Elementary School
- Nakamaru Elementary School
- Daita Elementary School
- Sangen-Jaya Elementary School
- Akatsuzumi Elementary School
- Matsugaoka Elementary School
- Ikejiri Elementary School
- Sasahara Elementary School
- Hanamido Elementary School
- Shiroyama Elementary School
- Fukasawa Elementary School
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- Tamagawa Elementary School
- Kyosai Elementary School
- Futako-Tamagawa Elementary School
- Yahata Elementary School
- Okusawa Elementary School
- Oyamadai Elementary School
- Higashi-Fukasawa Elementary School
- Higashi-Tamagawa Elementary School
- Sakuramachi Elementary School
- Kuhonbutsu Elementary School
- Seta Elementary School
- Todoroki Elementary School
- Yoga Elementary School
- Nakamachi Elementary School
- Tamadutsumi Elementary School
- Karasuyama Elementary School
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- Tsukado Elementary School
- Soshigaya Elementary School
- Kinuta Elementary School
- Meisei Elementary School
- Karasuyama-Kita Elementary School
- Hachiman-Yama Elementary School
- Roka Elementary School
- Funabashi Elementary School
- Kinuta-Minami Elementary School
- Kyuden Elementary School
- Yamano Elementary School
- Chitose Elementary School
- Kitami Elementary School
- Musashigaoka Elementary School
- Kibogaoka Elementary School
- Chitosedai Elementary School
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National and Private Schools
- Kunimoto Elementary School
- Showa Elementary School of Showa Women's University
- Seijo Gakuen Primary School
- Seisen International School
- St. Dominic's Institute
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- St. Mary's International School
- Denenchofu Futaba Gakuen Elementary School
- Tokyo City University Elementary School
- Wako Elementary School
- Setagaya Elementary School of National Tokyo Gakugei University
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See also
References
External links
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1896: Marathon (city), Panathinaiko Stadium • 1900: Croix-Catelan Stadium • 1904: Francis Field • 1908: White City Stadium • 1912: Stockholm Olympic Stadium • 1920: Olympisch Stadion • 1924: Stade de Colombes • 1928: Olympic Stadium • 1932: Olympic Stadium, Riverside Drive at Griffith Park • 1936: Avus Motor Road, Olympic Stadium • 1948: Empire Stadium • 1952: Olympic Stadium • 1956: Melbourne Cricket Ground • 1960: Arch of Constantine, Raccordo Anulare, Stadio Olimpico, Via Appia Antica, Via Cristoforo Colombo • 1964: Fuchu City, Karasuyama-machi, National Stadium, Sasazuka-machi, Shinjuku • 1968: Estadio Olímpico Universitario, Zócalo • 1972: Olympiastadion • 1976: Montreal Botanical Garden, Olympic Stadium, Streets of Montreal • 1980: Grand Arena, Streets of Moscow • 1984: Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Santa Monica College, Streets of Los Angeles, Streets of Santa Monica • 1988: Olympic Stadium, Streets of Seoul • 1992: Estadi Olímpic de Monjuïc, Marathon course, Mataró, Walking course • 1996: Marathon course, Olympic Stadium, Walking course • 2000: Marathon course, North Sydney, Olympic Stadium • 2004: Marathon (city), Olympic Stadium, Panathinaiko Stadium, Stadium at Olympia • 2008: Beijing National Stadium • 2012: Marathon Course, Olympic Stadium • 2016: Flamengo Park, João Havelange Stadium, Sambódromo
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