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Gunma Prefecture

Gunma Prefecture (群馬県, Gunma-ken) is a prefecture of Japan located in the Kantō region of Honshu.[1] Gunma Prefecture has a population of 1,937,626 (1 October 2019) and has a geographic area of 6,362 km2 (2,456 sq mi). Gunma Prefecture borders Niigata Prefecture and Fukushima Prefecture to the north, Nagano Prefecture to the southwest, Saitama Prefecture to the south, and Tochigi Prefecture to the east.

Gunma Prefecture
群馬県
Japanese transcription(s)
 • Japanese群馬県
 • RōmajiGunma-ken
Koinobori Festival in Kanna Town, Tano, Gunma Prefecture
Anthem: Gunma-ken no uta
Country Japan
RegionKantō
IslandHonshu
CapitalMaebashi
Largest cityTakasaki
SubdivisionsDistricts: 7, Municipalities: 35
Government
 • GovernorIchita Yamamoto
Area
 • Total6,362.28 km2 (2,456.49 sq mi)
 • Rank21st
Population
 (October 1, 2019)
 • Total1,937,626
 • Rank18th
 • Density300/km2 (790/sq mi)
 • Dialect
Gunma dialect
ISO 3166 codeJP-10
Websitewww.pref.gunma.jp
Symbols
BirdCopper pheasant (Phasianus soemmerringii)
FishSweetfish (Plecoglossus altivelis)
FlowerJapanese azalea (Rhododendron japonicum)
TreeJapanese black pine (Pinus thunbergii)

Maebashi is the capital and Takasaki is the largest city of Gunma Prefecture, with other major cities including Ōta, Isesaki, and Kiryū.[2] Gunma Prefecture is one of only eight landlocked prefectures, located on the northwestern corner of the Kantō Plain with 14% of its total land being designated as natural parks.

History

The ancient province of Gunma was a center of horse breeding and trading activities for the newly immigrated continental peoples. The arrival of horses and the remains of horse tackle coincides with the arrival of a large migration from the mainland. From this point forward, the horse became a vital part of Japanese military maneuvers, quickly displacing the older Yayoi tradition of fighting on foot.[citation needed]

When Mount Haruna erupted in the late 6th century, Japan was still in the pre-historical phase (prior to the importation of the Chinese writing system during the Nara period). The Gunma Prefectural archaeology unit in 1994 was able to date the eruption through zoological anthropology at the corral sites that were buried in ash.[citation needed]

In the past, Gunma was joined with Tochigi Prefecture and called Kenu Province. This was later divided into Kami-tsu-ke (Upper Kenu, Gunma) and Shimo-tsu-ke (Lower Kenu, Tochigi). The area is sometimes referred to as Jomo (上毛, Jōmō). For most of Japanese history, Gunma was known as the province of Kozuke.[3]

In the early period of contact between western nations and Japan, particularly the late Tokugawa, it was referred to by foreigners as the "Joushu States", inside (fudai, or loyalist) Tokugawa retainers and the Tokugawa family symbol is widely seen on public buildings, temples, and shrines.[citation needed]

The Tenmei eruption of Mount Asama occurred in 1783, causing enormous damage.[4][5]

The first modern silk factories were built with Italian and French assistance at Annaka in the 1870s.

In the early Meiji period, in what was locally called the Gunma Incident of 1884, a bloody struggle between the idealistic democratic westernizers and the conservative Prussian-model nationalists took place in Gunma and neighboring Nagano. The modern Japanese army gunned down farmers with new repeating rifles built in Japan. The farmers in Gunma were said to be the first victims of the Murata rifle.[citation needed]

In the twentieth century, the Japanese aviation pioneer Nakajima Chikushi of Oizumi, Gunma Prefecture, founded the Nakajima Aircraft Company. At first, he produced mostly licensed models of foreign designs, but beginning with the all-Japanese Nakajima 91 fighter plane in 1931, his company became a world leader in aeronautical design and manufacture, with its headquarters at Ota, Gunma Ken. The factory now produces Subaru motorcars and other products under the name of Subaru née Fuji Heavy Industries.[citation needed]

In the 1930s, German architect Bruno Julius Florian Taut lived and conducted research for a while in Takasaki.[citation needed]

The Girard incident, which disturbed US-Japanese relations in the 1950s, occurred in Gunma in 1957, at Soumagahara Base near Shibukawa.

Four modern prime ministers are from Gunma, namely, Takeo Fukuda, Yasuhiro Nakasone, Keizo Obuchi, and Yasuo Fukuda, the son of Takeo.

Geography

 
Map of Gunma Prefecture
     City      Town      Village
 
Maebashi
 
Takasaki
 
Ōta
 
Kiryū

One of only eight landlocked prefectures in Japan, Gunma is the northwesternmost prefecture of the Kantō plain. Except for the central and southeast areas, where most of the population is concentrated, it is mostly mountainous. To the north are Niigata and Fukushima prefectures, while to the east lies Tochigi Prefecture. To the west lies the Nagano Prefecture, and the Saitama Prefecture is to the south.

Some of the major mountains in Gunma are Mount Akagi, Mount Haruna, Mount Myōgi, Mount Nikkō-Shirane and Mount Asama, which is located on the Nagano border. Major rivers include the Tone River, the Agatsuma River, and the Karasu River.

As of 1 April 2012, 14% of the total land area of the prefecture was designated as Natural Parks, namely Jōshin'etsu-kōgen, Nikkō, and Oze National Parks and Myōgi-Arafune-Saku Kōgen Quasi-National Park.[6]

Cities

Twelve cities are located in Gunma Prefecture:

Towns and villages

These are the towns and villages in each district:

Mergers

Climate

 
Mount Nakanodake viewed from Mount Shibutsu

Because Gunma is situated in inland Japan, the difference in temperature in the summer compared to the winter is large, and there is less precipitation. This is because of the karakkaze ("empty wind"), a strong, dry wind that occurs in the winter when the snow falls on the coasts of Niigata. The wind carrying clouds with snow are obstructed by the Echigo Mountains, and it also snows there, although the high peaks do not let the wind go past them. For this reason, the wind changes into the kara-kaze.

  • Climate in Maebashi
    • Average yearly precipitation: 1,163 mm (approx. 45.8in)
    • Average yearly temperature: 14.2 degrees Celsius (approx. 57.6 degrees Fahrenheit)

Economy

 
Gunma prefecture population pyramid in 2020

Gunma's modern industries include transport equipment and electrical equipment, concentrated around Maebashi and the eastern region nearest Tokyo. More traditional industries include sericulture and agriculture. Gunma's major agricultural products include cabbages and konnyaku. Gunma produces over 90% of Japan's konnyaku, and two-thirds of the farms in the village of Tsumagoi are cabbage farms.[7] Also, the city of Ōta is famous for the car industry, notably the Subaru factory.

Culture

There is a local dialect, known in Japanese as 'gunma-ben' or 'jōshū-ben'.

Gunma has a traditional card game called Jomo Karuta (上毛かるた). It features people, places, and things of regional and/or cultural importance.

Famous Foods

In 2007, the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries held an event to find the top 100 best local dishes across all of Japan. Three dishes were featured from Gunma; yaki-manju, okkirikomi, and konnyaku.[8]

Melody Roads

As of 2018, Gunma is home to eleven of Japan's over thirty Melody Roads. 2,559 grooves cut into a 175-meter stretch of the road surface in transmit a tactile vibration through the wheels into the car body.[9][10][11] The roads can be found in Katashina, Minakami, Takayama, Kanna, Ueno, Kusatsu, Tsumagoi, Nakanojo, Takasaki, Midori, and Maebashi. Each is of a differing length and plays a different song. Naganohara also used to be home to a Melody Road playing “Aj, lučka lučka siroka”, though the road in question was paved over in 2013 due to noise complaints.

Songs

  • Kusatsu - “Kusatsu-Bushi”
  • Takayama - “When You Wish Upon a Star”
  • Tsumagoi - “Oh My Darling Clementine”
  • Nakanojo - “Always With Me” (Japanese title: いつも何度でも, itsumo nando demo) from Spirited Away when driven at 40 km/h
  • Katashina - “Memories of Summer” when driven over at 50 km/h

List of governors of Gunma Prefecture (1947–present)

Governor Term start Term end
Shigeo Kitano (北野重雄) 12 April 1947 25 June 1948
Yoshio Iyoku (伊能芳雄) 10 August 1948 4 July 1952
Shigeo Kitano 2 August 1952 1 August 1956
Toshizo Takekoshi (竹腰俊蔵) 2 August 1956 1 August 1960
Konroku Kanda (神田坤六) 2 August 1960 1 August 1976
Ichiro Shimizu (清水一郎) 2 August 1976 12 June 1991
Hiroyuki Kodera (小寺弘之) 28 July 1991 27 July 2007
Masaaki Osawa (大澤正明) 28 July 2007 27 July 2019
Ichita Yamamoto (山本一太) 28 July 2019 present

Education

Universities

Sports

The sports teams listed below are based in Gunma.

Baseball

Football (soccer)

Rugby

Basketball

Gunma is also famous for its ski resorts in the mountains.

Gunma was the only prefecture in Japan to have all 4 legal types of gambling on races: horse, bicycle, auto and boat. This changed with the closing of the last horse race track in Takasaki in 2004.

Tourism

Gunma has many hot spring resorts and the most famous is Kusatsu Onsen. Another draw to the mountainous Gunma is the ski resorts.

Other attractions include:

Transportation

Rail

Roads

Expressways

National highways

Prefectural symbols

The prefectural symbol consists of the first kanji of the word 'Gunma' surrounded by three stylized mountains symbolizing the three important mountains of Gunma Prefecture: Mount Haruna, Mount Akagi, and Mount Myōgi.

For marketing, the Prefectural Government also uses Gunma-chan, a small super deformed drawing of a horse character wearing a green cap. It is used on promotional posters, banners, and other notable printed materials from the Prefectural Government. Other agencies and companies formally or informally use variations of its likeness and other horse-shaped characters when making signs or notices for work on buildings, roads, and other public notices.

In Popular culture

There are various anime that have based their settings in Gunma, such as:

In the Pokemon franchise, Kanto Region's Pewter City, Route 3, and Mt. Moon are thought to be based on places found in Gunma.[12]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Gumma-ken" in Japan Encyclopedia, p. 267, p. 267, at Google Books; "Kantō" in p. 479, p. 479, at Google Books.
  2. ^ Nussbaum, "Maebashi" in p. 600, p. 600, at Google Books.
  3. ^ Nussbaum, "Provinces and prefectures" in p. 470, p. 470, at Google Books.
  4. ^ "天明3年(1783年)浅間山噴火". www.ktr.mlit.go.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-04-16.
  5. ^ "天明浅間山噴火とは". Kotobank (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-04-16.
  6. ^ "General overview of area figures for Natural Parks by prefecture" (PDF). Ministry of the Environment. 1 April 2012. Retrieved 3 December 2013.
  7. ^ "こんにゃくをめぐる事情" (PDF). 農林水産省の公式HP. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 8 June 2022.
  8. ^ "JAPAN'S TASTY SECRETS". 農林水産省の公式HP. The Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 8 June 2022.
  9. ^ Johnson, Bobbie (13 November 2007). "Japan's melody roads play music as you drive". The Guardian. Farringdon Road, London, England: GMG. p. 19 (International section). Retrieved 20 October 2008.
  10. ^ "Your car as a musical instrument – Melody Roads". Noise Addicts. 29 September 2008. Retrieved 20 October 2008.
  11. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "Singing Roads – Take a Musical Trip in Japan". ITN. 5 December 2007. Retrieved 20 October 2008.
  12. ^ "Pokémon world in relation to the real world". Bulbapedia. Retrieved 17 June 2022.

References

  • Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric and Käthe Roth. (2005). Japan encyclopedia. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01753-5; OCLC 58053128
  • . Gunma Prefecture HomePage. October 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-10-16. Retrieved 2006-10-19.

External links

  • Gunma Prefecture Official Website (in Japanese)
  • Gunma Prefecture Official Website (in English)

Coordinates: 36°22′N 139°7′E / 36.367°N 139.117°E / 36.367; 139.117

gunma, prefecture, gunma, redirects, here, other, uses, gunma, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find. Gunma redirects here For other uses see Gunma disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Gunma Prefecture news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Gunma Prefecture 群馬県 Gunma ken is a prefecture of Japan located in the Kantō region of Honshu 1 Gunma Prefecture has a population of 1 937 626 1 October 2019 and has a geographic area of 6 362 km2 2 456 sq mi Gunma Prefecture borders Niigata Prefecture and Fukushima Prefecture to the north Nagano Prefecture to the southwest Saitama Prefecture to the south and Tochigi Prefecture to the east Gunma Prefecture 群馬県PrefectureJapanese transcription s Japanese群馬県 RōmajiGunma kenKoinobori Festival in Kanna Town Tano Gunma PrefectureFlagSymbolAnthem Gunma ken no utaCountry JapanRegionKantōIslandHonshuCapitalMaebashiLargest cityTakasakiSubdivisionsDistricts 7 Municipalities 35Government GovernorIchita YamamotoArea Total6 362 28 km2 2 456 49 sq mi Rank21stPopulation October 1 2019 Total1 937 626 Rank18th Density300 km2 790 sq mi DialectGunma dialectISO 3166 codeJP 10Websitewww wbr pref wbr gunma wbr jpSymbolsBirdCopper pheasant Phasianus soemmerringii FishSweetfish Plecoglossus altivelis FlowerJapanese azalea Rhododendron japonicum TreeJapanese black pine Pinus thunbergii Maebashi is the capital and Takasaki is the largest city of Gunma Prefecture with other major cities including Ōta Isesaki and Kiryu 2 Gunma Prefecture is one of only eight landlocked prefectures located on the northwestern corner of the Kantō Plain with 14 of its total land being designated as natural parks Contents 1 History 2 Geography 2 1 Cities 2 2 Towns and villages 2 3 Mergers 3 Climate 4 Economy 5 Culture 5 1 Famous Foods 5 2 Melody Roads 5 2 1 Songs 6 List of governors of Gunma Prefecture 1947 present 7 Education 7 1 Universities 8 Sports 8 1 Baseball 8 2 Football soccer 8 3 Rugby 8 4 Basketball 9 Tourism 10 Transportation 10 1 Rail 10 2 Roads 10 2 1 Expressways 10 2 2 National highways 11 Prefectural symbols 12 In Popular culture 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 External linksHistory EditSee also Historic Sites of Gunma Prefecture The ancient province of Gunma was a center of horse breeding and trading activities for the newly immigrated continental peoples The arrival of horses and the remains of horse tackle coincides with the arrival of a large migration from the mainland From this point forward the horse became a vital part of Japanese military maneuvers quickly displacing the older Yayoi tradition of fighting on foot citation needed When Mount Haruna erupted in the late 6th century Japan was still in the pre historical phase prior to the importation of the Chinese writing system during the Nara period The Gunma Prefectural archaeology unit in 1994 was able to date the eruption through zoological anthropology at the corral sites that were buried in ash citation needed In the past Gunma was joined with Tochigi Prefecture and called Kenu Province This was later divided into Kami tsu ke Upper Kenu Gunma and Shimo tsu ke Lower Kenu Tochigi The area is sometimes referred to as Jomo 上毛 Jōmō For most of Japanese history Gunma was known as the province of Kozuke 3 In the early period of contact between western nations and Japan particularly the late Tokugawa it was referred to by foreigners as the Joushu States inside fudai or loyalist Tokugawa retainers and the Tokugawa family symbol is widely seen on public buildings temples and shrines citation needed The Tenmei eruption of Mount Asama occurred in 1783 causing enormous damage 4 5 The first modern silk factories were built with Italian and French assistance at Annaka in the 1870s In the early Meiji period in what was locally called the Gunma Incident of 1884 a bloody struggle between the idealistic democratic westernizers and the conservative Prussian model nationalists took place in Gunma and neighboring Nagano The modern Japanese army gunned down farmers with new repeating rifles built in Japan The farmers in Gunma were said to be the first victims of the Murata rifle citation needed In the twentieth century the Japanese aviation pioneer Nakajima Chikushi of Oizumi Gunma Prefecture founded the Nakajima Aircraft Company At first he produced mostly licensed models of foreign designs but beginning with the all Japanese Nakajima 91 fighter plane in 1931 his company became a world leader in aeronautical design and manufacture with its headquarters at Ota Gunma Ken The factory now produces Subaru motorcars and other products under the name of Subaru nee Fuji Heavy Industries citation needed In the 1930s German architect Bruno Julius Florian Taut lived and conducted research for a while in Takasaki citation needed The Girard incident which disturbed US Japanese relations in the 1950s occurred in Gunma in 1957 at Soumagahara Base near Shibukawa Four modern prime ministers are from Gunma namely Takeo Fukuda Yasuhiro Nakasone Keizo Obuchi and Yasuo Fukuda the son of Takeo Geography Edit Map of Gunma Prefecture City Town Village Maebashi Takasaki Ōta Kiryu One of only eight landlocked prefectures in Japan Gunma is the northwesternmost prefecture of the Kantō plain Except for the central and southeast areas where most of the population is concentrated it is mostly mountainous To the north are Niigata and Fukushima prefectures while to the east lies Tochigi Prefecture To the west lies the Nagano Prefecture and the Saitama Prefecture is to the south Some of the major mountains in Gunma are Mount Akagi Mount Haruna Mount Myōgi Mount Nikkō Shirane and Mount Asama which is located on the Nagano border Major rivers include the Tone River the Agatsuma River and the Karasu River As of 1 April 2012 14 of the total land area of the prefecture was designated as Natural Parks namely Jōshin etsu kōgen Nikkō and Oze National Parks and Myōgi Arafune Saku Kōgen Quasi National Park 6 Cities Edit See also List of cities in Gunma Prefecture by population Twelve cities are located in Gunma Prefecture Annaka Fujioka Isesaki Kiryu Maebashi capital Midori Numata Ōta Shibukawa Takasaki Tatebayashi Tomioka Towns and villages Edit These are the towns and villages in each district Agatsuma District Higashiagatsuma Kusatsu Naganohara Nakanojō Takayama Tsumagoi Kanra District Kanra Nanmoku ShimonitaKitagunma District Shintō Yoshioka Ōra District Chiyoda Itakura Meiwa Ōizumi Ōra Sawa District TamamuraTano District Kanna Ueno Tone District Katashina Kawaba Minakami Shōwa Mergers Edit Main article List of mergers in Gunma PrefectureClimate EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Mount Nakanodake viewed from Mount Shibutsu Because Gunma is situated in inland Japan the difference in temperature in the summer compared to the winter is large and there is less precipitation This is because of the karakkaze empty wind a strong dry wind that occurs in the winter when the snow falls on the coasts of Niigata The wind carrying clouds with snow are obstructed by the Echigo Mountains and it also snows there although the high peaks do not let the wind go past them For this reason the wind changes into the kara kaze Climate in Maebashi Average yearly precipitation 1 163 mm approx 45 8in Average yearly temperature 14 2 degrees Celsius approx 57 6 degrees Fahrenheit Economy Edit Gunma prefecture population pyramid in 2020 Gunma s modern industries include transport equipment and electrical equipment concentrated around Maebashi and the eastern region nearest Tokyo More traditional industries include sericulture and agriculture Gunma s major agricultural products include cabbages and konnyaku Gunma produces over 90 of Japan s konnyaku and two thirds of the farms in the village of Tsumagoi are cabbage farms 7 Also the city of Ōta is famous for the car industry notably the Subaru factory Culture EditThere is a local dialect known in Japanese as gunma ben or jōshu ben Gunma has a traditional card game called Jomo Karuta 上毛かるた It features people places and things of regional and or cultural importance Famous Foods Edit In 2007 the Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries held an event to find the top 100 best local dishes across all of Japan Three dishes were featured from Gunma yaki manju okkirikomi and konnyaku 8 Melody Roads Edit As of 2018 Gunma is home to eleven of Japan s over thirty Melody Roads 2 559 grooves cut into a 175 meter stretch of the road surface in transmit a tactile vibration through the wheels into the car body 9 10 11 The roads can be found in Katashina Minakami Takayama Kanna Ueno Kusatsu Tsumagoi Nakanojo Takasaki Midori and Maebashi Each is of a differing length and plays a different song Naganohara also used to be home to a Melody Road playing Aj lucka lucka siroka though the road in question was paved over in 2013 due to noise complaints Songs Edit Kusatsu Kusatsu Bushi Takayama When You Wish Upon a Star Tsumagoi Oh My Darling Clementine Nakanojo Always With Me Japanese title いつも何度でも itsumo nando demo from Spirited Away when driven at 40 km h Katashina Memories of Summer when driven over at 50 km hList of governors of Gunma Prefecture 1947 present EditGovernor Term start Term endShigeo Kitano 北野重雄 12 April 1947 25 June 1948Yoshio Iyoku 伊能芳雄 10 August 1948 4 July 1952Shigeo Kitano 2 August 1952 1 August 1956Toshizo Takekoshi 竹腰俊蔵 2 August 1956 1 August 1960Konroku Kanda 神田坤六 2 August 1960 1 August 1976Ichiro Shimizu 清水一郎 2 August 1976 12 June 1991Hiroyuki Kodera 小寺弘之 28 July 1991 27 July 2007Masaaki Osawa 大澤正明 28 July 2007 27 July 2019Ichita Yamamoto 山本一太 28 July 2019 presentEducation EditUniversities Edit Isesaki Jobu University Isesaki Campus Tokyo University of Social Welfare Isesaki Campus Maebashi Gunma University Maebashi Institute of Technology Midori Kiryu University Ota Kanto Gakuen University Takasaki Takasaki City University of Economics Takasaki University of Commerce Takasaki University of Health and Welfare Gunma Paz College Jobu University Takasaki Campus Tamamura Gunma Prefectural Women s UniversitySports Edit Shoda Shoyu Stadium Gunma home of Thespakusatsu Gunma The sports teams listed below are based in Gunma Baseball Edit Gunma Diamond PegasusFootball soccer Edit Thespakusatsu Gunma Kusatsu Tonan Maebashi Maebashi Rugby Edit Panasonic Wild Knights Ota Basketball Edit Gunma Crane ThundersGunma is also famous for its ski resorts in the mountains Gunma was the only prefecture in Japan to have all 4 legal types of gambling on races horse bicycle auto and boat This changed with the closing of the last horse race track in Takasaki in 2004 Tourism EditGunma has many hot spring resorts and the most famous is Kusatsu Onsen Another draw to the mountainous Gunma is the ski resorts Other attractions include Lake Nozori Hara Museum Arc Ikaho Sistina Trick Art Museum Mount Haruna Kusatsu Alpine Plant Museum Kusatsu Hot Spring Museum Mount Kusatsu Shirane Mount Tanigawa Mount Akagi Mount Myōgi The Museum of Modern Art Gunma Konnyaku Park Shorinzan Daruma Temple Kiryu Yagi bushi Festival where held on early August on every year A Tomioka Silk Mill a World Herritage cultural property site A many daruma doll set at Shorinzan Daruma Temple in TakasakiTransportation EditRail Edit JR East Joetsu Shinkansen Hokuriku Shinkansen Takasaki Line Shinetsu Line Takasaki Yokokawa Joetsu Line Agatsuma Line Ryomo Line Hachiko Line Kuragano Hachioji Tobu Railway Isesaki Line Nikko Line Itakura Tōyōdai mae Station Sano Line Kiryu Line Joshin Electric Railway Takasaki Shimonita Jomo Electric Railway Chuo Maebashi Nishi Kiryu Watarase Keikoku Railway Watarase Keikoku LineRoads Edit Expressways Edit Kan Etsu Expressway Tōhoku Expressway Jōshin etsu Expressway Kita Kantō Expressway Takasaki Hitachinaka National highways Edit National Route 17 Nihonbashi of Tokyo Saitama Kumagaya Takasaki Shibukawa Ojiya Nagaoka National Route 18 Takasaki Annaka Karuizawa Komoro Nagano Myoko Joetsu National Route 50 Maebashi Isesaki Oyama Yuki Mito National Route 120 National Route 122 National Route 144 National Route 145 National Route 146 National Route 254 National Route 291 National Route 292 National Route 299 National Route 353 National Route 354 National Route 405 National Route 406 National Route 407 National Route 462Prefectural symbols EditThe prefectural symbol consists of the first kanji of the word Gunma surrounded by three stylized mountains symbolizing the three important mountains of Gunma Prefecture Mount Haruna Mount Akagi and Mount Myōgi For marketing the Prefectural Government also uses Gunma chan a small super deformed drawing of a horse character wearing a green cap It is used on promotional posters banners and other notable printed materials from the Prefectural Government Other agencies and companies formally or informally use variations of its likeness and other horse shaped characters when making signs or notices for work on buildings roads and other public notices In Popular culture EditThere are various anime that have based their settings in Gunma such as Initial D A Place Further than the Universe The Flowers of Evil Nichijou You Don t know Gunma YetIn the Pokemon franchise Kanto Region s Pewter City Route 3 and Mt Moon are thought to be based on places found in Gunma 12 See also Edit2022 Japan heatwaveNotes Edit Nussbaum Louis Frederic 2005 Gumma ken in Japan Encyclopedia p 267 p 267 at Google Books Kantō in p 479 p 479 at Google Books Nussbaum Maebashi in p 600 p 600 at Google Books Nussbaum Provinces and prefectures in p 470 p 470 at Google Books 天明3年 1783年 浅間山噴火 www ktr mlit go jp in Japanese Retrieved 2022 04 16 天明浅間山噴火とは Kotobank in Japanese Retrieved 2022 04 16 General overview of area figures for Natural Parks by prefecture PDF Ministry of the Environment 1 April 2012 Retrieved 3 December 2013 こんにゃくをめぐる事情 PDF 農林水産省の公式HP Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 8 June 2022 JAPAN S TASTY SECRETS 農林水産省の公式HP The Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 8 June 2022 Johnson Bobbie 13 November 2007 Japan s melody roads play music as you drive The Guardian Farringdon Road London England GMG p 19 International section Retrieved 20 October 2008 Your car as a musical instrument Melody Roads Noise Addicts 29 September 2008 Retrieved 20 October 2008 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine Singing Roads Take a Musical Trip in Japan ITN 5 December 2007 Retrieved 20 October 2008 Pokemon world in relation to the real world Bulbapedia Retrieved 17 June 2022 References EditNussbaum Louis Frederic and Kathe Roth 2005 Japan encyclopedia Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01753 5 OCLC 58053128 Gunma Prefecture Location and Topography Gunma Prefecture HomePage October 2006 Archived from the original on 2006 10 16 Retrieved 2006 10 19 External links Edit Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Gunma Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gunma prefecture Gunma Prefecture Official Website in Japanese Gunma Prefecture Official Website in English Coordinates 36 22 N 139 7 E 36 367 N 139 117 E 36 367 139 117 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gunma Prefecture amp oldid 1133579785, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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