| Native name:  倉橋島 Kurahashi-jima | |
|---|---|
|   Kurahashi-jima Location in Japan | |
| Geography | |
| Location | Seto Inland Sea | 
| Coordinates | 34°8′0″N 132°31′30″E / 34.13333°N 132.52500°E | 
| Area | 69.46 km2 (26.82 sq mi) | 
| Length | 13.4 km (8.33 mi) | 
| Width | 13.4 km (8.33 mi) | 
| Highest elevation | 491 m (1611 ft) | 
| Highest point | mount 古観音山 (Kokannon-yama) | 
| Administration | |
| Japan | |
| Prefecture | Hiroshima Prefecture | 
| city | Kure | 
| Demographics | |
| Population | 19565 (2011) | 
| Pop. density | 282/km2 (730/sq mi) | 
| Ethnic groups | Japanese | 
Kurahashi-jima (倉橋島), also called Nagato-jima (長門島) in ancient texts, is an island in Hiroshima Bay located in southwestern Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan.
Geography
The island is roughly T-shaped, with the northern, most mountainous lobe sandwiched between mainland Kure and Etajima island.
Transportation
The island is connected to mainland of Honshu by a pair of bridges over 80 meters wide strait. The island is served by the national route 487. Also, travel by bus is possible since 2005.[1]
Attractions
- Katsurahama - one of the Top 100 beautiful forests of Japan
- Kurahashi shipbuilding museum[2]
History
- 7-8th century - a major center of shipbuilding and port for Yamato period Japan[3]
- 13th century - an outpost against Wokou pirates for Kamakura period Japan[4]
- 1709 - island come under government of Hiroshima Domain as an important stop-over on the trade route to Kaminoseki
- 1860 - coastal artillery fort is built
- 1 April 1889 - establishment of Kurahashi-jima village
- 1890 - with the assignment of island to the Kure Naval District, the access to the island is restricted
- 1 June 1952 - Kurahashi-jima village status is upgraded to "town".
- 4 December 1961 - first bridge connection to the mainland
- 1973 - bridge connection to Etajima
- 2005 - merge of Kurahashi town to Kure
See also
Notes and references
- This article incorporates material from Japanese Wikipedia page 倉橋島, accessed 14 August 2017
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.