Hirakata
Hirakata (枚方市, Hirakata-shi) is a city in northeastern Osaka Prefecture, Japan.[2] It is known for Hirakata Park, an amusement park which includes roller coasters made of wood.[3]
Hirakata
枚方市 | |||||||||||||
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Hirakata Park | |||||||||||||
Flag Emblem | |||||||||||||
Location of Hirakata in Osaka Prefecture | |||||||||||||
Hirakata Location in Japan | |||||||||||||
Coordinates: 34°49′N 135°39′E | |||||||||||||
Country | Japan | ||||||||||||
Region | Kansai | ||||||||||||
Prefecture | Osaka Prefecture | ||||||||||||
First official recorded | 500 AD | ||||||||||||
City Settled | August 1, 1947 | ||||||||||||
Government | |||||||||||||
• Mayor | Takashi Fushimi[1] | ||||||||||||
Area | |||||||||||||
• Total | 65.08 km2 (25.13 sq mi) | ||||||||||||
Population (October 31, 2019) | |||||||||||||
• Total | 401,449 | ||||||||||||
• Density | 6,200/km2 (16,000/sq mi) | ||||||||||||
Time zone | UTC+09:00 (JST) | ||||||||||||
City hall address | 2-1-20 Ogaito-chō, Hirakata-shi, Osaka-fu 573-8666 | ||||||||||||
Website | city | ||||||||||||
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As of 1 October 2016, the city has an estimated population of 402,927, and a population density of 6,200 inhabitants per square kilometre (16,000/sq mi). The total area of the city is 65.07 square kilometres (25.12 sq mi).
Eriko Aoki, author of "Korean children, textbooks, and educational practices in Japanese primary schools," stated that the city's location in proximity to both Osaka City and Kyoto contributed to its population growth of ten times its previous size from around 1973 to 2013.[4]
History
The modern city was founded on August 1, 1947. On April 1, 2001, Hirakata was designated as a special city of Japan. On April 1, 2014, Hirakata became a Core city.
Surrounding municipalities
- Osaka Prefecture
- Kyoto Prefecture
- Nara Prefecture
Mayors
- Sōichirō Terashima (in office 1947 – 1955, 1959 – 1967) former mayor of Hirakata-chō
- Harufumi Hatakeyama (1955–1959)
- Tomizō Yamamura (1967–1975)
- Kazuo Kitamaki (1975–1991)
- Kazuo Ōshio (1991–1995)
- Hiroshi Nakatsuka (1995–2007)
- Osamu Takeuchi (2007–2015)
- Takashi Fushimi (2015–present)
Demographics
Ethnic Koreans
As of 2013 the city has about 2,000 ethnic Koreans, including permanent residents of Japan, South Korean citizens, and those aligned to North Korea. Most Hirakata Koreans,[5] including children of school age, use Japanese names.[6] Most ethnic Korean children in Hirakata attend Japanese public schools, while some attend Chongryon schools located in Osaka City.[7] Many Koreans in Hirakata operate their own businesses. Hirakata has the "mother's society" or "Omoni no Kai", a voluntary association of ethnic Korean mothers. It also has branches of the Chongryon and Mindan, Japan's two major Korean associations. Hirakata has no particular Korean neighborhoods.[5]
There were about 3,000 ethnic Koreans in Hirakata in the pre-World War II period. In the 1930s Hirakata Koreans, fearful of keeping their own jobs, had negative attitudes towards Osaka-based Koreans who were looking for employment after having lost their jobs. Military construction was the most common job sector of that era's Korean population.[5]
Eriko Aoki stated that in 2013 there was still a sense of difference between the Koreans in Hirakata and the Koreans in Osaka.[5]
Education
Colleges and universities
- Kansai Gaidai University
- Osaka Dental University
- Kansai Medical University
- Setsunan University
- Osaka International University
- Osaka Institute of Technology
- National Tax College
Prefectural senior high schools
- Osaka Prefectural Hirakata High School (大阪府立枚方高等学校)
- Osaka Prefectural Nagao High School (大阪府立長尾高等学校)
- Osaka Prefectural Makino High School (大阪府立牧野高等学校)
- Korigaoka High School (大阪府立香里丘高等学校)
- Hirakatsuda High School (大阪府立枚方津田高等学校)
- Hirakata Nagisa High School (大阪府立枚方なぎさ高等学校)
Municipal high schools
- Osaka City Senior High School (大阪市立高等学校) – In Hirakata
Private senior high schools:
- Josho Keiko Gakuen Junior and Senior High School (常翔啓光学園高等学校)
- Tokai University Gyosei Junior and Senior High School (東海大学付属仰星高等学校)
- Toyo Gakuen Nagaodani High School (長尾谷高等学校)
Transportation
Highways
- National Route 1 Daini Keihan Road (toll road)
- National Route 168
- National Route 170
- National Route 307
Companies with offices in Hirakata
- Komatsu Osaka plant
- Sanyo Electric Co R&D
Sister and friendship cities
- Shimanto, Kōchi, Japan – Friendship city agreement concluded in 1974 (with former Nakamura city)
- Betsukai, Hokkaidō, Japan – Friendship city agreement concluded in 1987
- Takamatsu, Kagawa, Japan – Friendship city agreement concluded in 1987 (with former Shionoe town)
- Changning District, Shanghai, China – Sister city agreement concluded in 1987
- Logan City, Queensland, Australia – Sister city agreement concluded in 1995
Notable people from Hirakata
- Hikaru Nakamura, Japanese American chess player
- Janne Da Arc, Japanese visual kei rock band
- Iori Kogawa, Japanese AV Idol
- Koichiro Yoshinaga, Japanese former Nippon Professional Baseball catcher/infielder
- Airi Shimizu, Japanese gravure idol, actress and variety tarento
- Yuji Naka, Japanese video game programmer, designer, and producer
- Satoshi Hashimoto, Japanese actor and voice actor
- Nobukazu Takemura, Japanese musician and artist
- Haruto Shirai, Japanese football player
- Kenji Honnami, former Japanese football player
- Yuki Kuniyoshi, professional Japanese baseball player
- Junichi Okada, singer, actor and member of popular Japanese boy band V6
- Katsuhisa Inamori, former Japanese football player
- Midori, Japanese American violinist and classic musician
- Kenji Moriwaki, Japanese comedian and radio personality
- Masahito Noto, Japanese football player
- Hirofumi Mukai, Japanese professional boxer
- Yohei Takeda, Japanese football player and goalkeeper
- Hisaya Morishige, Japanese actor and comedian
- Yuji Hino, Japanese professional wrestler
- Yuka Ishii, Japanese writer
- Takayuki Fukumura, Japanese football player
- Yoshimitsu Takashima, Japanese politician of the Democratic Party of Japan, a member of the House of Councillors in the Diet (national legislature)
References
- https://www.city.hirakata.osaka.jp.e.cu.hp.transer.com/0000004030.html
- "Hirakata" at Britannica.com; retrieved August 28, 2013.
- "Hirakta Park" at Osaka-info.jp Archived September 21, 2013, at the Wayback Machine; retrieved August 28, 2013.
- Aoki, Eriko. "Korean children, textbooks, and educational practices in Japanese primary schools" (Chapter 8). In: Ryang, Sonia. Koreans in Japan: Critical Voices from the Margin (Routledge Studies in Asia's Transformations). Routledge, October 8, 2013. ISBN 1136353054, 9781136353055. Start: p. 157. CITED: p. 169-170.
- Aoki, Eriko. "Korean children, textbooks, and educational practices in Japanese primary schools" (Chapter 8). In: Ryang, Sonia. Koreans in Japan: Critical Voices from the Margin (Routledge Studies in Asia's Transformations). Routledge, October 8, 2013. ISBN 1136353054, 9781136353055. Start: p. 157. CITED: p. 170.
- Aoki, Eriko. "Korean children, textbooks, and educational practices in Japanese primary schools" (Chapter 8). In: Ryang, Sonia. Koreans in Japan: Critical Voices from the Margin (Routledge Studies in Asia's Transformations). Routledge, October 8, 2013. ISBN 1136353054, 9781136353055. Start: p. 171.
- Aoki, Eriko. "Korean children, textbooks, and educational practices in Japanese primary schools" (Chapter 8). In: Ryang, Sonia. Koreans in Japan: Critical Voices from the Margin (Routledge Studies in Asia's Transformations). Routledge, October 8, 2013. ISBN 1136353054, 9781136353055. Start: p. 157. CITED: p. 170-171.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hirakata, Osaka. |
- Hirakata City official website (in Japanese)
- www.city.hirakata.osaka.jp.e.cu.hp.transer.com (in English)