Online Encyclopedia

NAGOYA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 152 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NAGOYA  , the

capital of the province of Owari,
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Japan, on the
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great trunk railway of Japan, 235 M. from Tokyo and 94 M. from
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Kioto . Pop . (1903) 284,829 . It is the fifth of the chief cities in Japan . It lies near the head of the shallow Isenumi
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Bay, about 30 M. from the
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port of Yokkaichi, with which it communicates by
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light-draught steamers and by
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rail . The castle of Nagoya, erected in 161o, never suffered in war, but in
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modern times became a military depot; the interior contains much splendid decoration . The central keep of the citadel is a remarkable structure, covering close upon
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half an acre, but rapidly diminishing in each of its five storeys till the top
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room is only about 12 yds. square . Gabled
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roofs and
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hanging rafters break the almost pyramidal outline; and a pair of gold-plated dolphins 8 ft. high form a striking finial . Both were removed in 1872, and one of them was at the Vienna
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Exhibition in 1873; but they have been restored to their proper site . The religious buildings of Nagoya include a very
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fine Buddhist temple, Higashi Hongwanji . Nagoya is well known as one of the great seats of the pottery trade; 132 M. distant are the potteries of Seto, where the first glazed pottery made in Japan was produced by
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Kato Shirozaemon, after a visit to
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China in 1229 . From Kato's time Seto continued, during several centuries, to be the chief centre of ceramic production in Japan, the manufacture of
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porcelain being added to that of pottery in the 19th century .

All the products of the flourishing

industry now carried on there and at other places in the province are transported to Nagoya, for sale there or for export . Cotton mills have been established, and an extensive business is carried on in the embroidery of handkerchiefs . Another of its celebrated manufactures is arimatsushibori, or textile fabrics (
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silk or cotton), dyed so as to show spots in
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relief from which the colour radiates . It is further distinguished as the birthplace of cloisonne enamelling in Japan, all
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work of that nature before 1838—when a new departure was made by Kaji Tsunekichi—having been for purposes of subordinate decoration . Quantities of cloisonne enamels are now produced in the
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town .

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