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Azumino, Nagano

 
Wikipedia: Azumino, Nagano
Azumino
安曇野市

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Location of Azumino in Nagano
Azumino is located in Japan
Azumino
Coordinates: 36°17′N 137°55′E / 36.283°N 137.917°E / 36.283; 137.917
Country Japan
Region Chūbu
Prefecture Nagano
Government
 - Mayor Munehiro Miyazawa
Area
 - Total 331.82 km2 (128.1 sq mi)
Population
(August 1, 2009)
99,307
 - Density 299/km2 (774.4/sq mi)
City Symbols
 - Tree Zelkova
 - Flower Wasabi (Japanese horseradish)
Website City of Azumino
Phone number 0263-71-2000
Address

4932-26 Toyoshina, Azumino-shi, Nagano-ken
399-8205

Azumino (安曇野市 Azumino-shi?) is a city located in Nagano Prefecture, Japan.

The city was founded on October 1, 2005, when the town of Akashina, from Higashichikuma District, and the towns of Hotaka and Toyoshina, and the villages of Horigane and Misato, from Minamiazumi District, merged to form a new city. The city's population is near 100,000 people and it is the 6th most populous in Nagano Prefecture.

Contents

Etymology of Azumino

Azumino is a combination of two words, "Azumi" and "no". "Azumi" comes from the Azumi people, who are said to have moved to the "no"(plain) in ancient times. The Azumi people originally lived in northern Kyushu, and were famed for their skills in fishing and navigation. "The Azumi people" can be translated as "the people who live on the sea."  The reason why the seafaring people migrated to this mountainous region is a mystery.

Geography

Azumino, named after the plain in which it is located, lies between two mountain ranges to the west and east. The range of mountains on the western border is known as the Northern Alps and is popular among hikers all over Japan. To the south is the city of Matsumoto, Nagano prefecture's second largest city. To the north lies the city of Ōmachi, as well as the village of Hakuba. Hakuba was the site of many of the ski events during the 1998 winter Olympics. (This created a lot of traffic through the Azumino area, spurring a great deal of construction during that period.)


Sister cities

Notable Azumino Natives

  • Keikoku Fujimori (1835-1905), artist & educator
  • Kigenji Iguchi (1870-1938), educator
  • Kiyoshi Kiyosawa (1890-1945), journalist
  • Kei Kumai (1930-2007), film director
  • Matsuzawa Kyūsaku (1855-1887), people's rights activist
  • Risaku Mutai (1890-1974), philosopher
  • Rokuzan Ogiwara (1879-1910), sculptor
  • Aizō Sōma (1870-1954), founded Nakamuraya
  • Tada Kasuke (?-1687), executed farmer
  • Setsuro Takahashi (1914-2007), lacquerware artist
  • Etsujirō Uehara (1877-1962), political scientist & politician
  • Yoshimi Usui (1905-1987), editor & writer

External links



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