Kushiro,_Hokkaido

Kushiro

Kushiro

City in Hokkaido, Japan


Kushiro (釧路市, Kushiro-shi) is a city in Kushiro Subprefecture on the island of Hokkaido, Japan. Located along the coast of the North Pacific Ocean, it serves as the subprefecture's capital and it is the most populated city in the eastern part of the island.

Quick Facts 釧路市, Country ...

History

An Imperial decree in July 1899 established Kushiro as an open port for trading with the United States and the United Kingdom.[1]

Kushiro has been an important port because it is more reliably ice-free during winter than alternative Russian Far East warm-water ports such as Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky or other ports in Hokkaido such as Hakodate, which occasionally do freeze for short periods due to the lower salinity of the Sea of Japan. For this reason, Kushiro was considered a valuable target for the Tsars during the Russo-Japanese Wars, but it only became a really important port during the 1920s with the growth of commercial fishing, for which its reliable freedom from ice reduced costs.[2]

In addition to its port, Kushiro is serviced by Kushiro Airport with flights from Honshu and by the Ōzora limited express train service, which runs six times per day to the main population centres in the west of Hokkaido.

In July 1945 the city of Kushiro was bombed by American naval aircraft, hundreds of people, mostly civilians, were killed.[3] Following the Invasion of the Kuril Islands in August 1945, Kushiro was favoured by the Russians as the eastern cornerstone of a border between an American-occupied south and a Soviet-occupied north-coupled with Rumoi as the western cornerstone. However, these plans were cancelled after pressure by US President Harry S. Truman.[4][5][6][7]

On October 11, 2005, the town of Akan, from Akan District, and the town of Onbetsu, from Shiranuka District, was merged into Kushiro. The town of Shiranuka now lies between the two sections of Kushiro.

In 2008, the city had an estimated population of 189,539 and a total area of 1,362.75 km2 (526.16 sq mi), giving a population density of 140 persons per km2 (363 persons per sq. mi.).

Kushiro was one of the many Japanese cities to receive a Peace Pagoda. Built by the monks and nuns of the Buddhist order Nipponzan Myohoji, it was inaugurated in 1959.

Kushiro was accorded city status on August 1, 1922. It is the sister city of Burnaby, British Columbia; Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, Russia; and Kholmsk, Russia.[8]

  • 1869: Kusuri becomes Kushiro.
  • 1900: Kushiro becomes a First Class Municipality as Kushiro Town.
  • 1920: Kushiro Town becomes Kushiro-ku. Kushiro Village (now Town) splits off.
  • 1922: Kushiro-ku becomes Kushiro City.
  • 1949: Tottori-cho was merged into Kushiro City.
  • 2005: The old city of Kushiro City, Akan Town, and Onbetsu Town merged was expanded city of Kushiro City.

Geography

Train passing through Kushiro Wetlands, in Hokkaido, Japan
Kushiro Marsh
Central business district of Kushiro City
City central

Mountains

Rivers

Lakes

  • Lake Akan
  • Lake Harutori
  • Lake Panketō
  • Lake Penketō
  • Lake Shunkushitakara

National Parks

Climate

Kushiro has a humid continental climate (Dfb) but its winter temperatures are less severe than those of inland East Asia at the same latitude. Its port is the most reliably ice-free throughout winter in all of Hokkaido, due to the lack of indentation in the coastline and absence of large inflows of cold fresh water nearby. It is also markedly sunnier than the extremely gloomy Kuril Islands to its north, being sheltered by Hokkaido's mountains from the heavy snowfalls produced on the Sea of Japan side by the Aleutian Low. It receives only a third as much snowfall as Sapporo and almost twice as much sunshine as the Kuril Islands are estimated to. Its daytime summer temperatures are noticeably cooler than in the interior, sheltered coastal areas and the south coast of Hokkaido.

More information Month, Jan ...
More information Month, Jan ...

Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues. See or edit raw graph data.

Education

Universities

National

Public

Colleges

National

Private

High schools

Public

  • Hokkaido Kushiro Koryo High School
  • Hokkaido Kushiro Konan High School
  • Hokkaido Kushiro Meiki High School
  • Hokkaido Kushiro Commercial High School
  • Hokkaido Kushiro Technical High School
  • Hokkaido Kushiro Hokuyo High School
  • Hokkaido Akan High School (Municipal)

Private

  • Bushukan High School
  • Ikegami Gakuen High School, Kushiro Campus

Transportation

Airways

Airport

Railways

Conventional lines

Hokkaido Railway Company (JR Hokkaidō)
Japan Freight Railway Company (JR Freight)
Taiheiyō Coal Services

Roads

Expressways

Japan National Route

Bus

Local Bus

Operates both city, suburban, and intercity routes

Seaways

Seaport

  • Port of Kushiro

Sightseeing

Local attractions

Culture

Kushiro Ice Arena
Rin-chan, the city's mascot

Sports

Ice hockey

Ice hockey is one of the most popular winter sports in Kushiro. In addition to several leagues devoted to amateur play of all ages, Kushiro is home to the Asia League Ice Hockey Nippon Paper Cranes, three time Asia League Champions.

Kushiro and many other cities are interested in hosting bandy teams.[13] On January 8, 2017, the township of Akan hosted the first national championship,[14] although the size of the field was a smaller version than the official rules for a bandy field. In January 2018, the first championship on a full-sized field took place in Shintoku, with participation from three teams, including FACEOFF Kushiro.[15] The national team for women is based in Kushiro and made its World Championship debut in 2020.[16]

The Kushiro Ice Arena is the city's biggest stadion for ice hockey, figure skating and shorttrack.[17]

Speed skating

The Yanagimachi Speed Skating Rink hosted the 2003 World Junior Speed Skating Championships and several Japanese Championships. It has an asphalt inline speed skating track on the middle field.

Mascot

Kushiro's mascot is Rin-chan (りんちゃん). She is a gentiana triflora flower (though she represents all flowers) from Onbetsu. Her favourite drink is milk.[18]

External relations

Kushiro Tourism and International Relations Center

Twin Towns – Sister Cities

International

Sister Cities
More information City, Country ...
Partner Cities
More information City, Country ...

National

Sister Cities
More information City, Prefecture ...
Partner Cities
More information City, Prefecture ...

Sister ports

Port of Kushiro's sister ports are:

Notable people


References

  1. "Port of Kushiro". World Port Source.
  2. The Asahi Shimbun. "朝日新聞デジタル:空襲の記憶 風化させぬ - 北海道 - 地域". www.asahi.com (in Japanese). Archived from the original on April 14, 2022. Retrieved April 13, 2022.
  3. Holloway, David, ‘Jockeying for Position in the Postwar World: Soviet Entry into the War with Japan in August 1945’, in The End of the Pacific War: Reappraisals, ed. by Tsuyoshi Hasegawa (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2007), pp. 145-188 (pp. 178-179).
  4. Clark, Gregory (August 22, 2014). "How WWII could have ended". Japan Times. Retrieved December 18, 2017.
  5. Yumashev, Ivan (August 19, 1945). "REPORT BY IVAN YUMASHEV TO ALEKSANDR VASILEVSKY". Retrieved December 18, 2017.
  6. City of Kushiro. "Training Camp Guide (Ice sports facilities on page 10-11)" (PDF). Retrieved November 3, 2022.
  7. "Port Stephens Council: Port Stephens Sister Cities". September 27, 2007. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007. Retrieved January 17, 2018.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Kushiro,_Hokkaido, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.