- Michinoku region
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"Michinoku" redirects here. For the professional wrestler, see Taka Michinoku. For the wrestling promotion, see Michinoku Pro Wrestling.
Michinoku (道奥 )[1] is a geographical region of northern Honshu, Japan.[2]
Contents
History
The use of Michinoku as a descriptive term is first recorded in Hitachi-no-kuni Fudoki (常陸国風土記 ) (654).
The usage and meaning of the term has evolved along with Japanese expansion northward in the 7th and 8th centuries. The ambit of the region expanded beyond what is today Miyagi Prefecture; and it eventually encompassed all of northern Honshu.
Poetic allusion
Michinoku or the "interior road" alluded to the "end of the line"[3] — virtually the end of the world in Heian times.[4]
omoi wa michinoku ni
koi wa suruga ni kayounari
misomezariseba nakanaka ni
sora ni wasurete yaminamashiMy longing goes as far as Michinoku,
as my love wanders Suruga;
if it had not been love at first sight,
it would be easy to forget, fading into the distant air.[4]Modern usage
Modern usage varies, referring refer either to Mutsu Province alone (which at its largest covered present-day Fukushima, Miyagi, Iwate and Aomori prefectures)[5] or to both Mutsu and neighboring Dewa Province, which covered all of the Tōhoku region.
Notes
- ^ The region's name can also be written as 陸奥, which is a cognate of Mutsu.
- ^ Hanihara, Kazuro. "Emishi, Ezo and Ainu: An Anthropological Perspective," Japan Review, 1990, 1:37 (PDF p. 3).
- ^ Pacific Island Travel, Tohoku
- ^ a b Kim, Yung-Hee. (1994). Songs to Make the Dust Dance: the 'Ryōjin hishō' of Twelfth-century Japan, p. 129 at Google Books
- ^ McCullough, Helen Craig. (1988). The Tale of the Heike, p. 81 at Google Books; excerpt, "Furthermore, in the old days, the two famous eastern provinces, Dewa and Michinoku, were a single province made up of sixty-six districts, of which twelve were split off to create Dewa."
References
- Itakura, Katsutaka. "On the Structure of Economy and Society in Tohoku," Science Reports of Tohoku University, Vol. 32, Issue: 2 (December 1982), pp. 71-87.
Regions and administrative divisions of Japan Regions Prefectures Hokkaido Tōhoku Kantō Chūbu Kansai Chūgoku Shikoku Kyushu This Iwate Prefecture location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. This Aomori Prefecture location article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.