- Inuyama, Aichi
Infobox City Japan
Name= Inuyama
JapaneseName= 犬山市
Map
Region= Chūbu
Prefecture= Aichi
District=
Area_km2= 74.97
PopDate= 2003
Population= 73,247
Density_km2= 977.02
Coords=
LatitudeDegrees= 35
LatitudeMinutes= 23
LatitudeSeconds=
LongtitudeDegrees= 136
LongtitudeMinutes= 57
LongtitudeSeconds=
Tree=Chinese hawthorn (Crataegus pentagina )
Flower=Cherry blossoms,Prunus spp.
Bird=
Symbol
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SymbolDescription= Flag
Mayor= Yoshihiro Ishida
CityHallPostalCode=
CityHallAddress=
CityHallPhone=
CityHallLink= [http://www.city.inuyama.aichi.jp/ City of Inuyama]nihongo|Inuyama|犬山市|Inuyama-shi is a city located near
Nagoya in Aichi,Japan .The city was founded on
April 1 ,1954 . As of 2003, the city has an estimatedpopulation of 73,247 and the density of 977.02 persons per km². The total area is 74.97 km². The city lies along the edge of Aichi Prefecture, separated from neighboringGifu Prefecture by theKiso River .There are a number of famous attractions in and around the city. The most famous attraction is
Inuyama castle on a 40m rise overlooking the Kiso river. ThisJapanese castle is also known as Hakutei-jo (White Emperor Castle), as named by the Confucian scholar Sorai Ogyu during theEdo period . It is a four-story structure with two underground levels, although it has only three roofs. The castle was designated as a Japanese national treasure in 1935 and again in 1952. The castle in its current form was built in 1537 by Oda Nobuyasu, grandfather of the great warlordOda Nobunaga . After construction, the castle had a rapid succession of different owners. AfterToyotomi Hideyoshi took control of the area, he put Ishikawa Sadakiyo in charge of the castle. After the defeat of Hideyoshi by Matsudaira Tadayoshi Ogasawara Yoshitsugu received the castle. In 1616 the Naruse family was put in charge of the structure until the Meiji era. After theMeiji Restoration the government seized the castle in 1869. The castle was damaged by the Great NobiEarthquake in 1891. The castle was then given to the Naruse family under the condition that they repair the castle. This makes the castle the only privately owned castle in Japan. The castle survived all wars and has remained unchanged since it was built, making it the oldest original wooden castle in Japan.Another famous attraction is the Urakuen tea garden used for tea ceremonies. This garden contains the Joan tea house, built in 1618 by Oda Uraku 1547-1621, younger brother of Oda Nobunaga. Tea master Oda Uraku was a student of the famous tea masterSen no Rikyu . While the Joan tea house was originally built inKyoto , it was moved to its current location in 1972. The building is considered one of the finest examples of tea house architecture.The Kiso river also has some very picturesque rapids upstream of the castle. These rapids and the rock formations are called the Nihon Rhine after the
Rhine river inGermany , and boat tours are available.Cormorant fishing on the Kiso river is also done, although nowadays almost exclusively for tourists.Near Inuyama is the
Meiji Mura open-air architectural museum for preserving and exhibiting structures of the Meiji (1867-1912) and Taishō (1913-1926) eras. As of 2005, 67 historical buildings are preserved on an area of 1,000,000m². The most famous one is the main entrance and lobby of Tokyo's oldImperial Hotel , designed byFrank Lloyd Wright and built in 1923.Another former open-air museum near Inuyama is also an amusement park called Little World Museum of Man. This anthropological museum contained a large number of buildings built according to the native style of over 22 countries.
Another amusement park is the Japan Monkey park, with different species of
monkey s and other entertainment.Inuyama is also the site of the
Primate Research Institute ofKyoto University , one of the world's foremost centres for research in non-humanprimate biology and behaviour. Thechimpanzee Ai and her son Ayumu live there.ister cities
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Davis, California Transportation
Bridges
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Aigioohashi Bridge , crossing theKiso River into Kakamigahara inGifu Prefecture External links
*ja icon [http://www.inuyama.gr.jp/ Official website]
*ja icon [http://www.city.inuyama.aichi.jp/ Other official website]
*en icon [http://www.city.inuyama.aichi.jp/english/ Official website]
* [http://www.pri.kyoto-u.ac.jp/ Primate Research Institute official website]
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