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Komoro
å°è«¸å¸‚
Location of Komoro in Nagano
Area
 - Total 98.66 km2 (38.1 sq mi)
Population
(December 1, 2005)
45,287
 - Density 459.00/km2 (1,188.8/sq mi)
Website City of Komoro
Phone number 0267-22-1700
Address

3-3-3 Aioi-chÅ, Komoro-shi, Nagano-ken
384-8501

Komoro (å°è«¸å¸‚ Komoro-shi-) is a city located in Nagano, Japan.

As of May 1, 2006, the city has an estimated population of 45,190. The total area is 98.66 km².

Contents

Municipal Timeline

  • February 1, 1954-Komoro absorbed the villages of Kawanabe, Kitaoi, and Osato from Kitasaku District.
  • April 1, 1954-Komoro gained city status after the villages of Minamioi and Mioka from Kitasaku District was merged into Komoro.
  • April 1, 1959-Parts of the town of Tobu (now part of the city of Tomi) was merged into the city and the city has been unchanged since.

Education

High school

  • Komoro-shogyo High School
  • Komoro High School

Junior High school

  • Ashihara Junior high school
  • Komoro-higashi Junior high school

Sightseeing

Key Sights

  • Kaikoen, a park in the center of Komoro containing the foundations of Komoro castle as well as a museum dedicated to Shimazaki Toson (see below) and a zoo.
  • Nunobikki, a temple dating from 1252 located at the top of a ravine. About a 5 minute drive outside of town, walking is possible if you know where to go.
  • Mountain hiking in Takamine, close to the active volcano Mt Asama, about a 30 minute drive uphill from Komoro.

Famous Residents

  • Shimazaki Toson, poet and writer. Toson spent a period teaching in Komoro, and is featured in a dedicated museum located within Komoro's Kaikoen park.
  • Sodo Yokoyama, a leaf-flute Zen Master who lived as a hermit in Komoro's Kaikoen Park until 1980. Yokoyama was inspired by an earlier resident of Komoro, the poet and writer Shimazaki Toson. See Arthur Braverman's excellent article for some personal recollections of Yokoyama.
  • Tsuchiya, Keiichi, Japanese race car driver & D1 pioneer[1]

References

  1. ^ http://www.janis.or.jp/users/omuretu2/na6ce_02.htm

External links



Dieser Artikel basiert auf dem Artikel Komoro,_Nagano aus der freien Enzyklopädie Wikipedia und steht unter der "Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike"-Lizenz. In der Wikipedia ist eine Liste der Autoren verfügbar.








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