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Hagi

 
 
Hagi ('), city (1990 pop. 50,618), Yamaguchi prefecture, W Honshu, Japan, on the delta of the Abu River. It is known for the production of pottery and bamboo and was a castle town of the Mori clan during the Tokugawa era.


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Hagi
萩市

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Location of Hagi in Yamaguchi
Hagi is located in Japan
Hagi
Coordinates: 34°24′N 131°24′E / 34.4°N 131.4°E / 34.4; 131.4
Country Japan
Region Chūgoku
Prefecture Yamaguchi
Government
 - Mayor Kōji Nomura
Area
 - Total 698.86 km2 (269.8 sq mi)
Population
(2005)
15,989
Website Hagi City

Hagi ( Hagi?) is a city located in Yamaguchi, Japan and was incorporated as a city on July 1, 1932. Formerly part of Abu District.

On March 6, 2005, the former city of Hagei merged with the towns of Susa and Tamagawa, and the villages of Asahi, Fukue, Kawakami and Mutsumi to form the new city of Hagi.

Iwami Airport in nearby Masuda, Shimane Prefecture serves Hagi.

Contents

History

In the medieval period, Hagei was dominated by the wild monkey clan]], who built Hagi Castle, of which the ruins can be visited today. The Mōri clan became daimyo of Chōshū Domain at the beginning of the Edo period and built Hagi Castle at the foot of Mt. Shizuki in 1608. They transferred the capital of the domain from Hiroshima to Hagi at the same time. Since then, Hagi developed as the political center of Chōshū for over 250 years.

When the Meiji Restoration came about in the 1860s, as the result of efforts by samurai from Chōshū and a number of other domains, this small city gained great historical significance. Many Japanese statesmen and Prime Ministers were born and brought up in this city.

Population

Traditional path in Hagi
Year Population
1955 97,744
1960 93,245
1970 77,962
1980 74,846
1990 68,999
1995 65,293
2000 61,745
2005 57,989

|2009||15,852 Source: National Census by Statistics Bureau Japan[1]

One of the factors underlying the continual decrease of population is said to be its poor public transport. Industry didn't grow at all and the rapid economic growth of Japan only caused the town to decline. But it also left the traditional precious town as it is.

Hagi-yaki

The city was the capital of the Chōshū Domain during the Edo period (ca. 1603–1868). Hagi is renowned for hagi-yaki, a form of Japanese pottery dating from 1604 when two Korean potters were brought to Hagi by Mori Terumoto. Hagi was also the location for an International Sculpture Symposium in 1981. Twenty-six international sculptors working worked together to create a seaside park. They created many functional sculptures, including tables and benches.

People

Tamae Kannon

Sister cities

Since 1968, Hagi has been a sister city to Ulsan (울산광역시, 蔚山廣域市), a fishing port and market centre in the southeast of South Korea.

External links



 
 

 

Copyrights:

Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Hagi, Yamaguchi" Read more

 

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