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This section of GeoDig provides web resources and links to Kobe, Japan.

 

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Content derived from Wikipedia article on Kobe

 

Kobe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

 

Kobe

神戸市

Kobe's location in Hyōgo Prefecture, Japan.

Location

Country Japan

Region Kansai

Prefecture Hyōgo Prefecture

Physical characteristics

Area 551.40 km²

Population (as of 1 Sep 2006)

     Total 1,528,948

     Density 2766/km²

Location 34°41′59″N, 135°8′36″E

Symbols

Tree Camellia sasanqua

Flower Hydrangea

 

Symbol of Kobe

Kobe Hall

Mayor Tatsuo Yada

Address 650-8570

Kobe-shi, Chūō-ku, Kano-cho 6-5-1

Phone number 078-331-8181

Official website: Kobe City

Coordinates: 34°41′59″N, 135°8′36″E

For the NBA basketball player, see Kobe Bryant.

For the Iron Chef Italian, see Masahiko Kobe.

Kobe (神戸市, Kōbe-shi?) is a city in Japan located on the island of Honshū. Kobe is the capital of Hyōgo Prefecture and is one of Japan's major ports. It is in the Kansai region of Japan, in Hyōgo Prefecture to the west of Osaka. It was one of the first cities to open for trade with the West, as of 1868. This cosmopolitan port city has a population of 45,500 foreign residents from more than 100 countries.

 

The city is a part of the Osaka-Kobe-Kyoto metropolitan sprawl.

 

The city was severely affected by the 1995 Great Hanshin Earthquake, in which many residents lost their lives. Kobe has largely recovered from the damage.

 

Kobe is also the point of origin of the world-famous Kobe beef; a special type of cattle is raised and slaughtered for this beef.

 

 

 

 

Contents

 

1 Orientation

2 Buildings

3 History

4 Wards

5 Transportation

6 Universities in Kobe

6.1 Public universities

6.2 Private universities

6.3 International schools

7 Major company headquarters in Kobe

7.1 World headquarters

7.2 Japanese headquarters

8 Sport teams

9 Sister cities

10 See also

11 External links

 

 

 

Orientation

Wedged in between the coast and the mountains (Rokko Mountain), the city of Kobe is long and narrow. The landmark of the port area is the red steel Port Tower (hyperboloid structure). A giant ferris wheel sits in nearby Harbor Land, a notable tourist promenade, and offers spectacular views of the surroundings including the bay area, especially at night. Two artificial islands, Port Island and Rokko Island, have been constructed to give the city room to expand.

 

Away from the seaside at the heart of Kobe lie the Motomachi and Kokashita districts as well as Kobe's Chinatown Nankinmachi, all well-known retail areas. A multitude of train lines cross the city from east to west. The main transport hub is Sannomiya Station, with the eponymous Kobe Station located to the west and the Shinkansen Shin-Kobe Station to the north.

 

Mount Rokko overlooks Kobe with an elevation of 931 meters: during the autumn season, it is famous for the rich change in colors of its forests. Mt. Rokko is also the site of Japan's first golf course, established by the Englishman Arthur Hasketh Groom in 1903.

 

Kobe serves as one of the most important seaports in Japan. It is famous for its Kobe beef, the Arima Onsen (hot springs), night view of the city both from the coast and the mountain, and the exotic atmosphere which mainly came from its history as a port city. Kobe is also home to Kobe University, which traces its roots back to 1902. To the east is the city of Ashiya.

 

The name "Kobe" means "houses (families) owned by a shrine". It derives from the fact that the central part (from Motomachi to Sannomiya) of Kobe was originally owned by the Ikuta Shrine.

 

Most of the movie Sayonara takes place in Kobe.

 

 

Kobe Port Tower

 

Nakatottei

 

Port of Kobe

 

Harbor land

 

 

Port of Kobe

 

Hyōgo Prefectural Museum of Art

 

Akashi-Kaikyo Bridge

 

Kobe bridge

 

 

from Venus bridge.

 

Sunset over Kobe.

 

Downtown Kobe from a harbour cruise boat

 

Harborland

 

 

Chinatown in Kobe.

 

 

 

Buildings

Kobe Port Tower

 

History

 

Nishikie (Colored woodcut) of the Kobe port.It is said that the port was open by the early 7th century.[citation needed]

 

Kobe was briefly the capital of Japan in 1180 A.D. at the end of the Heian period. Taira no Kiyomori moved his grandson Emperor Antoku to Fukuhara. The exact location is uncertain, but is probably the neighborhood of the same name in Hyōgo-ku. The Emperor returned to Kyoto after about five months.

 

During this period, the port was established as the hub for trade with China and other countries. The original name of the port was Ohwada port.

 

The city was founded on April 1, 1889 and was designated on September 1, 1956 by government ordinance.

 

During the course of World War II, Kobe was bombed with incendiary bombs by 331 B-29 bombers on March 17, 1945.

 

Following continuous pressure from citizens, on March 18, 1975, the Kobe City Council passed an ordinance banning vessels carrying nuclear weapons from Kobe Port. This effectively prevented any U.S. warships from entering the port, policy being not to disclose whether any warship is carrying nuclear weapons. This nonproliferation policy has been termed the "Kobe Formula".

 

On January 17, 1995 an earthquake measuring at 7.2 on the Richter Scale occurred at 05:46 am JST near the city. 6,433 were killed, 300,000 were made homeless and large parts of the port facilities and other parts of the city were destroyed. It was one of the most costly natural disasters in modern history. The earthquake notably destroyed the Hanshin Expressway, an elevated freeway which dramatically toppled over: within Japan, the earthquake is known as the Great Hanshin Earthquake (or the Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake).

 

Kobe was Japan's busiest port and one of Asia's top ports until the Great Hanshin Earthquake occurred. [1] Since then, the port of Nagoya became Japan's busiest port. Kobe's world ranking has dropped down to the twenty-ninth busiest port (as of 2002). Kobe has, however, recovered to become Japan's third busiest port.

 

To commemorate Kobe's recovery from the 1995 quake, the city holds an annual event called the Luminarie, where every December the city hall is decorated with illuminated metal archways.

 

 

Wards

Kobe has 9 wards (ku):

 

Chūō-ku(中央区)

Higashinada-ku (東灘区)

Hyōgo-ku (兵庫区)

Kita-ku(北区)

Nada-ku (灘区)

Nagata-ku (長田区)

Nishi-ku(西区)

Suma-ku (須磨区)

Tarumi-ku (垂水区)

 

Transportation

JR-West (Sanyō Shinkansen/Tōkaidō Main Line/Sanyō Main Line/Kobe Line)

Hankyu Railway (Kobe Line)

Hanshin Electric Railway (Main Line)

Sanyō Electric Railway

Kobe Electric Railway

Kobe Rapid Railway

Kobe Municipal Subway

Kobe New Transit

The new Kobe Airport was opened on a newly-built reclaimed land on February 16, 2006.

 

 

Universities in Kobe

 

Public universities

Kobe University

University of Hyōgo (Prefectural university) [2]

Kobe City University of Foreign Studies [3]

Kobe City College of Nursing [4]

 

Private universities

Konan University [5]

Konan Women's University [6]

Kobe Kaisei College (Women's university) [7]

Kobe Gakuin University [8]

Kobe Design University [9]

Kobe International University [10]

Kobe Shoin Women's University [11]

Kobe Women's University [12]

Kobe Shinwa Women's University [13]

Kobe Pharmaceutical University [14]

Kobe Yamate University [15]

University of Marketing and Distribution Science [16]

 

International schools

Marist Brothers International School (Montessori-12), located in Suma-ku [17]

Canadian Academy (K-12), located on the man-made island of Rokko Island [18]

St. Michael's International School (PreK-6), a small British elementary school located in Kitano-cho, near Sannomiya and Motomachi stations [19]

Deutsche Schule Kobe - European School, located in Nada-ku [20]

 

Major company headquarters in Kobe

 

World headquarters

ASICS

Daiei

Kawasaki Heavy Industries

Kiss-FM KOBE

Kobe Electric Railway

Kobe New Transit

Kobe Rapid Railway

Kobe Shimbun

Kobe Steel, Ltd.

Konigs Krone

Morozoff

SUN-TV

UCC Ueshima Coffee Co., Ltd.

World Co. Ltd

 

Japanese headquarters

Eli Lilly and Company

Nestlι

Procter & Gamble

 

Sport teams

Club Sport League Venue Established

Kobe Steel Kobelco Steelers Rugby Top League Kobe Wing Stadium 1928

Orix Buffaloes Baseball Pacific League Skymark Stadium

Osaka Dome 1938

Vissel Kobe Football J.League Kobe Wing Stadium 1995

Nikkō Kobe IceBucks

(shared with Nikkō, Tochigi) Ice Hockey Asia League  1999

 

 

Sister cities

 Seattle, United States - 1957 [21]

 Marseille, France - 1961 [22]

 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil - 1969 [23]

 Tianjin, People's Republic of China - 1973 [24]

 Riga, Latvia - 1974 [25]

 Brisbane, Australia - 1985 [26]

 Philadelphia, United States (friendship city) - 1986 [27]

 Barcelona, Spain - 1993 [28]

 

See also

Kobe beef

Akashi Kaikyo Bridge

Kobe Port Tower

Arthur Hasketh Groom

Alexander Cameron Sim

Foreign cemeteries in Japan

 

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

KobeKobe travel guide from Wikitravel

 

(English) Official Kobe homepage

(Japanese) Japan Red Cross Hyogo Branch

(English) Japan International Cooperation Agency Hyogo Office

(English) WHO Kobe Centre

(English) Kobe City Info

Template:Hyōgo

 

v • d • e  Regions and administrative divisions of Japan

Regions

Hokkaidō • Tōhoku • Kantō • Chūbu (Hokuriku • Kōshinetsu • Tōkai • Chūkyō) • Kansai • Chūgoku • Shikoku • Kyūshū • Ryūkyū

 

Prefectures

Aichi • Akita • Aomori • Chiba • Ehime • Fukui • Fukuoka • Fukushima • Gifu • Gunma • Hiroshima • Hokkaidō • Hyōgo • Ibaraki • Ishikawa • Iwate • Kagawa • Kagoshima • Kanagawa • Kōchi • Kumamoto • Kyoto • Mie • Miyagi • Miyazaki • Nagano • Nagasaki • Nara • Niigata • Ōita • Okayama • Okinawa • Osaka • Saga • Saitama • Shiga • Shimane • Shizuoka • Tochigi • Tokushima • Tokyo • Tottori • Toyama • Wakayama • Yamagata • Yamaguchi • Yamanashi

 

Designated cities

Special wards of Tokyo • Chiba • Fukuoka • Hiroshima • Kawasaki • Kitakyushu • Kobe • Kyoto • Nagoya • Osaka • Saitama • Sakai • Sapporo • Sendai • Shizuoka • Yokohama

 

 

End of Wikipedia content, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobe

 

 

Resources for Kobe

 

Japan Prefectures > Kobe in the Open Directory - Dmoz

Kobe Directory from Japan Telephone Directory – iTownPages

Hyogo Prefecture – Kobe in the Yahoo Directory

 

 

 

 

 

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Other References for Kobe

 

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