Online Encyclopedia

NAGASAKI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 151 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NAGASAKI  , a

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town on the south-west of the island of Kiushiu,
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Japan, in 32° 44' N., 129° 51' E., with 163,324 (1905) inhabitants, and a
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foreign settlement containing a population of 400 (excluding Chinese) . The first
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port of entry for
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ships coming from the south or the west to Japan, it lies at the head of a beautiful inlet some 3 M. long, which forms a splendid anchorage, and is largely used by ships coming to
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coal and by warships . Marine products, coal and cotton goods are the chief exports, and raw cotton, iron, as well as other metals and materials used for
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ship-
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building, constitute the
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principal imports . The value of imports approaches L2,000,000 annually . That of exports has fluctuated considerably . In 1889 it was f1,005,367, but in 1894 it was only 1444,839, and does not generally exceed L450,000 . The most important
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industries of the town are represented by the engine
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works of Aka-no-ura, three large docks and a patent slip, the
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property of the Mitsu Bishi
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Company . Steamers of over 6000 tons have been constructed at these docks, which, as well as the engine works, are situated on the western
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shore of the inlet . The brisk atmosphere of business that pervades them does not reach the town on the eastern side, which lies under the shadow of forests of tombstones that cover the over-looking hills . Nagasaki is noted as a coaling station . The coal is obtained chiefly from Takashima, an islet•8 m . S.E. of the entrance to the harbour, and in lesser quantities from two other islets, Naka-no-shima and Ha-shima, which lie about 1 m. farther out .

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sources of supply, however, show signs of exhaustion . There are several favourite
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health resorts in the neighbourhood of Nagasaki, notably Unzen, with its
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sulphur springs . Nagasaki owed its earliest importance to foreign intercourse . Originally called Fukae-no-ura (Fukae
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Bay), it was included inthe
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fief of Nagasaki Kotaro in the 12th century, and from him it took its name . But it remained an insignificant
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village until the 16th century, when, becoming the headquarters of
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Japanese
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Christianity, and subsequently the
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sole emporium of foreign trade in the hands of the Dutch and the Chinese, it
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developed considerable prosperity . The opening of the port of
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Moji for export trade deprived Nagasaki of its monopoly as a coaling station, and the visits of war vessels were reduced when Russia acquired Port Arthur,
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Great Britain Wei-hai-wei and Germany Kiaochow . On the north side of the channel by which the harbour is entered there stands a cliff called Takaboko, which, under the name of Pappenberg, has long been rendered notorious by a tradition that thousands of Christians were precipitated from it in the 17th century because they refused to trample on the
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Cross . It has been conclusively proved that the legend is untrue .

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