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Japanese community of Düsseldorf

There is a Japanese community in Düsseldorf, Germany.[1] The city and its surrounding regions has hosted Japanese companies since the 1950s,[1] and as of 2021 there are 636 Japanese-related companies in the state of North Rhine-Westphalia.[2] Around 7,000 (2021) Japanese nationals live in its capital city Düsseldorf.[3]

Eko House of Japanese Culture
NEC Europe headquarters in Düsseldorf

History edit

In 1950 there was one Japanese person registered as living in Düsseldorf.[4] Beginning in the mid-1950s, the Japanese companies returning to Germany in the post-World War II period were mostly settling in Düsseldorf,[5] while in the pre-World War II period the Japanese population was concentrated in Hamburg.[6] Arikawa stated that the Japanese settlement began when ten businesspersons from Tokyo, trying to buy metal ore and machinery for Japan, established their businesses in Düsseldorf. Due to this settlement, information about the Ruhr region circulated within Japanese companies.[7] 300 Japanese were registered as living in the city by 1960. The Japanese Chamber of Commerce was founded in 1966. There were 100 Japanese companies in the Düsseldorf area in 1968.[4]

Due to Düsseldorf's central location within Europe and proximity to other areas in Europe, its location in the Ruhr industrial area, and the proximity to the river port Duisburg, Japanese companies had a preference for Düsseldorf as they established European operations in the 1970s.[6] By 1973 2,000 Japanese were registered as living in Düsseldorf and 200 Japanese companies were located in the area. By 1980 the number of Japanese companies had increased to 300.[4] As of 1985 there were 6,000 Japanese residents.[7] In 1990 there were 30 Japanese production facilities in the city. By 1992, 7,443 Japanese were registered as living in the city.[4]

In 1985 the general manager of the Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Düsseldorf, Akira Arikawa, stated that of all of the cities in the world outside Japan, Düsseldorf had the highest concentration of Japanese residents.[7]

Due to the reunification of Germany making Berlin the capital of the country, the decline in the Japanese economy, and the European Single Market causing Japanese companies to move to places with lower costs, since 1992 there had been a decline in the Japanese community. Many of the Japanese companies had shifted to the Netherlands. In the late 1990s the Düsseldorf area housed 520 Japanese companies. In 1999 about 4,500 Japanese people lived in and around Düsseldorf. By the late 1990s there were almost no Japanese production facilities in Düsseldorf, or in all of Germany. Due to the infrastructure and support from the Japanese community, including the Japanese school and the Buddhist centre, many companies that had moved out of Düsseldorf in the early 1990s, especially those that had moved to Berlin, began moving back to Düsseldorf by the late 1990s.[4]

In 2001 Harold Kerbo and Patrick Ziltener, authors of the article "Japanese Business in Germany," wrote that "Dusseldorf remains the center for Japanese business activity in Germany."[4]

Geography edit

 
Japan Center Düsseldorf, including Hotel Nikko Düsseldorf to the right
 
Since 2021 Immermannstraße (インマーマン通り, Inmāman Dōri) has bilingual (German/Japanese) street signs.

As of 1985 Immermann Street had a concentration of Japanese businesses. In 1985 Mark Heinrich of the Associated Press (AP) stated that the Hotel Nikko Düsseldorf on Immermann Street was the center of the Japanese community. Japan Airlines established the hotel in 1978.[7] The Japanische Internationale Schule in Düsseldorf is located in Niederkassel,[8] and it previously had a campus in Oberkassel.[7]

The area around Immermann Street where Japanese offices and stores are concentrated is sometimes called "Little Tokyo",[9] "Japantown",[10] or "Klein-Tokio am Rhein".[11]

Media edit

In 1977 a weekly Japanese newspaper was established. Düsseldorf resident Tsunejiro Takagi was the publisher of Life in Europe, which was Europe's first Japanese language newspaper and as of 1985 had a circulation of 6,000. Its coverage included European Economic Community (EEC) developments, consumer news, a column on Japanese company representatives, area Japanese sports, and travel news.[7]

Economy edit

 
Shochiku (松竹, Shōchiku), a Japanese supermarket

As of 1985, 300 Japanese multinational companies operated in the Düsseldorf area and had invested over $600 million U.S. dollars in that area. As of that year, the multinationals included Mitsubishi and Nippon Steel.[7]

As of the 2010s, about 421 Japanese companies had operations in the Düsseldorf area.[12]

A selection of some Japanese companies in Düsseldorf: Sumitomo Deutschland GmbH (Industrial), Asahi Kasei Europe GmbH (Chemicals), Hitachi Europe GmbH (Electronic), Sompo International (Insurance), Daikin (Chemicals), Komatsu Germany GmbH (Industry), Tokio Marine Europe S.A., Düsseldorf (Insurance).[13]

Düsseldorf is the most important location for Japanese financial institutions. Three of the biggest Japanese credit institutions have their German headquarter in the financial center Düsseldorf: MUFG Bank (Europe) N.V. Germany Branch, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, Düsseldorf Branch, SMBC EU AG, Düsseldorf Branch and Mizuho Bank Ltd., Düsseldorf Branch. Furthermore, Chartered Investment Germany (CIG) is a German subsidiary of the Japanese securities trading bank PWM Japan Securities.[13]

Demographics edit

As of 1985 over 90% of ethnic Japanese households in West Germany had an affluent corporate executive as the head of the household. This executive often stays in Germany for three to five years.[7]

As of 1985 company employees arriving in Germany often move into residences formerly occupied by those returning to Japan.[7]

As of 2005 the Japanese population was about one third of that of London.[14]

Japanese nationals:

Culture edit

Eric Zielke, a professor at University of Düsseldorf, stated around 1985 that Japanese often only interact with Germans when doing and being involved with business. He concluded that "the Japanese have no particular interest in becoming integrated into German society" because many are in Germany for only a three to five-year period, and that "The Japanese form a colony, remaining unobtrusive and keeping to themselves."[7]

Education edit

 
Japanische Internationale Schule in Düsseldorf

The Japanische Internationale Schule in Düsseldorf, a Japanese international school, is in Düsseldorf. It opened in 1971 and gained a permanent building in 1973.[16] In 1985 the school had 880 students.[7] The Japanische Ergänzungsschule in Düsseldorf (デュッセルドルフ日本語補習校 Dyuserudorufu Nihongo Hoshūkō), a Japanese weekend school, is a part of the institution.[17]

Transport edit

In the spring of 1985, Japan Airlines started a flight from Tokyo to Düsseldorf on a twice weekly basis.[7]

In 2014 All Nippon Airways established a flight from Tokyo to Düsseldorf.[18] Previously ANA had a dedicated shuttle bus from Düsseldorf to Frankfurt Airport so passengers may board ANA flights at the airport, but the bus service was discontinued after ANA began its Düsseldorf flights.[12] The bus stopped at the Radisson Blu Scandinavia Hotel.[19]

Institutions edit

The Consulate-General of Japan, Düsseldorf [ja] (在デュッセルドルフ日本国総領事館; Japanisches Generalkonsulat Düsseldorf) is located in the city.

Recreation edit

The Japan Day in Düsseldorf is held annually.

Notable residents edit

See also edit

References edit

  • Kerbo, Harold and Patrick Ziltener. "Japanese Business in Germany." In: Bird, Allan (editor). Encyclopedia of Japanese Business and Management. Routledge, December 6, 2001. ISBN 0203996321, 9780203996324.
  • Okamura, Kayko. "Chapter 4: Multicultural Identity in a Global Society: Locality and Nationality of Contemporary Children of the Japanese Diaspora in Germany" In: Adachi, Nobuko (editor). Japanese and Nikkei at Home and Abroad: Negotiating Identities in a Global World. Cambria Press, 2010. 1621968979, 9781621968979.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b [About Dusseldorf City]. The Consulate-General of Japan, Düsseldorf (in Japanese). 2009-02-01. Archived from the original on 2022-10-23. Retrieved 2022-10-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  2. ^ [Statistics on Japanese-related companies overseas 2021 (as of 1 October 2021)] (in Japanese). Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Japan). 2022-08-04. tab "欧州" cell C30. Archived from the original on 2022-10-23. Retrieved 2022-10-23. 在デュッセルドルフ総領事館 636{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
    • web pages linking to yearly files: 海外進出日系企業拠点数調査
    • Regions of survey: "Die Japanischen Auslandsvertretungen in Deutschland". Botschaft von Japan in Deutschland (Embassy of Japan in Germany) (in German). Japanisches Generalkonsulat Düsseldorf Konsularbereich: Nordrhein-Westfalen
  3. ^ a b c [Annual report of statistics on Japanese nationals overseas 2022 (as of 1 October 2021)] (in Japanese). Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Japan). 2022-08-04. tab "都市別邦人数上位50位". Archived from the original on 2023-02-23. Retrieved 2022-10-22.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
    • tab "統計の目的等": (excerpts) 3. Scope of this survey: Japanese nationals who are or will be residing overseas for a long term (over 3 months). Emigrants or descendants (Nikkeijin) who do not have Japanese citizenship are not counted.
    • tab "都市別邦人数上位50位"
      • 2018 CE; cell L39:M39 "27 デュッセルドルフ 8,451"="Dusseldorf 8,451"
      • 2021 CE; cell C43:D43 "31 デュッセルドルフ 7,144"="Dusseldorf 7,144"
    • This file does not contain statistics for North Rhine-Westphalia
    • web pages linking to yearly files: latest data, past data (2012–), archive (1997–2018)
  4. ^ a b c d e f Kerbo and Ziltener, p. 230.
  5. ^ Kerbo and Ziltener, p. 229-230.
  6. ^ a b Kerbo and Ziltener, p. 229.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Heinrich, Mark (November 24, 1985). "Corporate Japanese colony sprouts in West German city". Houston Chronicle. Associated Press. p. 1 section 4 – via NewsBank, Record Number HSC112453511. Duesseldorf has the highest percentage of Japanese residents of any city outside Japan, says Akira Arikawa, general manager of the Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry here. The lure: business opportunities in the highly industrialized Ruhr region.
  8. ^ "デュッセルドルフ日本人学校トップ." Japanische Internationale Schule in Düsseldorf. Retrieved on 1 January 2014. "Niederkasseler Kirchweg 38, 40547 Düsseldorf GERMANY"
  9. ^ "Warum es die Japaner nach Düsseldorf zog". Remscheider General-Anzeiger (in German). 2020-03-12. from the original on 2020-10-29. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  10. ^ Gertzen, Ann-Christin (2014-11-26). "Japan-Gemeinde in Düsseldorf: Nase putzen ist unhöflich". Süddeutsche Zeitung. from the original on 2021-09-29. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
  11. ^ "Düsseldorf für Japan-Fans: Klein-Tokio am Rhein." Der Spiegel. Wednesday 27 February 2013.
  12. ^ a b "Yokoso! All Nippon Airways (ANA) to Offer Daily Connection between Düsseldorf and Tokyo Starting March 30 2018-08-25 at the Wayback Machine." Press release from ANA at the website of convention bureau DÜSSELDORF. Retrieved on October 26, 2016.
  13. ^ a b "Mitgliedsunternehmen". Japanische IHK zu Düsseldorf e.V. Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  14. ^ White, Paul. "The Japanese in London: From transience to settlement?" In: Goodman, Roger, Ceri Peach, Ayumi Takenaka, and Paul White (editors). Global Japan: The Experience of Japan's New Immigrant and Overseas Communities. Routledge, June 27, 2005. ISBN 1134431457, 9781134431458. p. 89.
  15. ^ [Annual report of statistics on Japanese nationals overseas 2011 (as of 1 October 2010)] (PDF) (in Japanese). Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Japan). 2011-09-01. p. 16. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2022-10-19. Retrieved 2022-10-22.
    • p1: (excerpts) 1.2 Scope of this survey: Japanese nationals who are or will be residing overseas for a long term (over 3 months). Emigrants or descendants (Nikkeijin) who do not have Japanese citizenship are not counted.
    • p16: 2.7.2 Population (total (long term stay + permanent)) trends per city:
      • 1 October 2008: 24 Dusseldorf 7,961
      • 1 October 2009: 22 Dusseldorf 8,187
      • 1 October 2010: 23 Dusseldorf 8,067
    • p20: 2.7.2 Population (long term stay) trends per city:
      • 1 October 2008: 18 Dusseldorf 6,914
      • 1 October 2009: 18 Dusseldorf 6,926
      • 1 October 2010: 18 Dusseldorf 6,735
    • pp48–49: デュッセルドルフ総領事館([within regions covered by] The Consulate-General of Japan, Düsseldorf):
      • p48: Population (total): 12,040
      • p49: Japanese-related companies (100% or jointly owned): 500
    • p66: Regions of survey: 在デュッセルドルフ総領事館(The Consulate-General of Japan, Düsseldorf): The State of North Rhine-Westphalia
    • web pages linking to the file: archive
  16. ^ "Outline of the school." (Archive) Japanische Internationale Schule in Düsseldorf. Retrieved on 1 January 2014.
  17. ^ Home page (). Japanische Internationale Schule in Düsseldorf. Retrieved on 31 March 2014.
  18. ^ . Flug Revue. 2013-12-18. Archived from the original on 2017-04-04. Retrieved 2016-09-27.
  19. ^ "ANA Shuttle-Bus" (). All Nippon Airways. Retrieved on October 29, 2016.

Further reading edit

  • Glebe, Günther. "Segregation and the ethnoscape: the Japanese business community in Düsseldorf." In: Goodman, Peach, Takenaka, White (Hrsg.): Global Japan. The experience of Japan’s new immigrant and overseas communities. Routledge, Abingdon Oxford 2003, ISBN 0-415-29741-9, S. 98–115.
  • "Düsseldorf's Japanese outreach." (Archive) Bundesliga 2. 05.12.2013.

External links edit

  • (in German) Consulate-General of Japan in Düsseldorf
  • (in Japanese) Consulate-General of Japan in Düsseldorf

japanese, community, düsseldorf, there, japanese, community, düsseldorf, germany, city, surrounding, regions, hosted, japanese, companies, since, 1950s, 2021, update, there, japanese, related, companies, state, north, rhine, westphalia, around, 2021, japanese,. There is a Japanese community in Dusseldorf Germany 1 The city and its surrounding regions has hosted Japanese companies since the 1950s 1 and as of 2021 update there are 636 Japanese related companies in the state of North Rhine Westphalia 2 Around 7 000 2021 Japanese nationals live in its capital city Dusseldorf 3 Eko House of Japanese CultureNEC Europe headquarters in Dusseldorf Contents 1 History 2 Geography 3 Media 4 Economy 5 Demographics 6 Culture 7 Education 8 Transport 9 Institutions 10 Recreation 11 Notable residents 12 See also 13 References 14 Notes 15 Further reading 16 External linksHistory editIn 1950 there was one Japanese person registered as living in Dusseldorf 4 Beginning in the mid 1950s the Japanese companies returning to Germany in the post World War II period were mostly settling in Dusseldorf 5 while in the pre World War II period the Japanese population was concentrated in Hamburg 6 Arikawa stated that the Japanese settlement began when ten businesspersons from Tokyo trying to buy metal ore and machinery for Japan established their businesses in Dusseldorf Due to this settlement information about the Ruhr region circulated within Japanese companies 7 300 Japanese were registered as living in the city by 1960 The Japanese Chamber of Commerce was founded in 1966 There were 100 Japanese companies in the Dusseldorf area in 1968 4 Due to Dusseldorf s central location within Europe and proximity to other areas in Europe its location in the Ruhr industrial area and the proximity to the river port Duisburg Japanese companies had a preference for Dusseldorf as they established European operations in the 1970s 6 By 1973 2 000 Japanese were registered as living in Dusseldorf and 200 Japanese companies were located in the area By 1980 the number of Japanese companies had increased to 300 4 As of 1985 there were 6 000 Japanese residents 7 In 1990 there were 30 Japanese production facilities in the city By 1992 7 443 Japanese were registered as living in the city 4 In 1985 the general manager of the Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry in Dusseldorf Akira Arikawa stated that of all of the cities in the world outside Japan Dusseldorf had the highest concentration of Japanese residents 7 Due to the reunification of Germany making Berlin the capital of the country the decline in the Japanese economy and the European Single Market causing Japanese companies to move to places with lower costs since 1992 there had been a decline in the Japanese community Many of the Japanese companies had shifted to the Netherlands In the late 1990s the Dusseldorf area housed 520 Japanese companies In 1999 about 4 500 Japanese people lived in and around Dusseldorf By the late 1990s there were almost no Japanese production facilities in Dusseldorf or in all of Germany Due to the infrastructure and support from the Japanese community including the Japanese school and the Buddhist centre many companies that had moved out of Dusseldorf in the early 1990s especially those that had moved to Berlin began moving back to Dusseldorf by the late 1990s 4 In 2001 Harold Kerbo and Patrick Ziltener authors of the article Japanese Business in Germany wrote that Dusseldorf remains the center for Japanese business activity in Germany 4 Geography edit nbsp Japan Center Dusseldorf including Hotel Nikko Dusseldorf to the right nbsp Since 2021 Immermannstrasse インマーマン通り Inmaman Dōri has bilingual German Japanese street signs As of 1985 Immermann Street had a concentration of Japanese businesses In 1985 Mark Heinrich of the Associated Press AP stated that the Hotel Nikko Dusseldorf on Immermann Street was the center of the Japanese community Japan Airlines established the hotel in 1978 7 The Japanische Internationale Schule in Dusseldorf is located in Niederkassel 8 and it previously had a campus in Oberkassel 7 The area around Immermann Street where Japanese offices and stores are concentrated is sometimes called Little Tokyo 9 Japantown 10 or Klein Tokio am Rhein 11 Media editIn 1977 a weekly Japanese newspaper was established Dusseldorf resident Tsunejiro Takagi was the publisher of Life in Europe which was Europe s first Japanese language newspaper and as of 1985 had a circulation of 6 000 Its coverage included European Economic Community EEC developments consumer news a column on Japanese company representatives area Japanese sports and travel news 7 Economy editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it April 2015 nbsp Shochiku 松竹 Shōchiku a Japanese supermarketAs of 1985 300 Japanese multinational companies operated in the Dusseldorf area and had invested over 600 million U S dollars in that area As of that year the multinationals included Mitsubishi and Nippon Steel 7 As of the 2010s about 421 Japanese companies had operations in the Dusseldorf area 12 A selection of some Japanese companies in Dusseldorf Sumitomo Deutschland GmbH Industrial Asahi Kasei Europe GmbH Chemicals Hitachi Europe GmbH Electronic Sompo International Insurance Daikin Chemicals Komatsu Germany GmbH Industry Tokio Marine Europe S A Dusseldorf Insurance 13 Dusseldorf is the most important location for Japanese financial institutions Three of the biggest Japanese credit institutions have their German headquarter in the financial center Dusseldorf MUFG Bank Europe N V Germany Branch Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation Dusseldorf Branch SMBC EU AG Dusseldorf Branch and Mizuho Bank Ltd Dusseldorf Branch Furthermore Chartered Investment Germany CIG is a German subsidiary of the Japanese securities trading bank PWM Japan Securities 13 Demographics editAs of 1985 over 90 of ethnic Japanese households in West Germany had an affluent corporate executive as the head of the household This executive often stays in Germany for three to five years 7 As of 1985 company employees arriving in Germany often move into residences formerly occupied by those returning to Japan 7 As of 2005 the Japanese population was about one third of that of London 14 Japanese nationals 7 961 2008 15 8 451 2018 3 7 144 2021 3 Culture editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2022 Eric Zielke a professor at University of Dusseldorf stated around 1985 that Japanese often only interact with Germans when doing and being involved with business He concluded that the Japanese have no particular interest in becoming integrated into German society because many are in Germany for only a three to five year period and that The Japanese form a colony remaining unobtrusive and keeping to themselves 7 Education edit nbsp Japanische Internationale Schule in DusseldorfThe Japanische Internationale Schule in Dusseldorf a Japanese international school is in Dusseldorf It opened in 1971 and gained a permanent building in 1973 16 In 1985 the school had 880 students 7 The Japanische Erganzungsschule in Dusseldorf デュッセルドルフ日本語補習校 Dyuserudorufu Nihongo Hoshukō a Japanese weekend school is a part of the institution 17 Transport editIn the spring of 1985 Japan Airlines started a flight from Tokyo to Dusseldorf on a twice weekly basis 7 In 2014 All Nippon Airways established a flight from Tokyo to Dusseldorf 18 Previously ANA had a dedicated shuttle bus from Dusseldorf to Frankfurt Airport so passengers may board ANA flights at the airport but the bus service was discontinued after ANA began its Dusseldorf flights 12 The bus stopped at the Radisson Blu Scandinavia Hotel 19 Institutions editThe Consulate General of Japan Dusseldorf ja 在デュッセルドルフ日本国総領事館 Japanisches Generalkonsulat Dusseldorf is located in the city Recreation editThe Japan Day in Dusseldorf is held annually Notable residents editTetsuya Kakihara Blumio Fumio Kuniyoshi Erika IkutaSee also edit nbsp North Rhine Westphalia portal nbsp Japan portalJapanese people in GermanyReferences editKerbo Harold and Patrick Ziltener Japanese Business in Germany In Bird Allan editor Encyclopedia of Japanese Business and Management Routledge December 6 2001 ISBN 0203996321 9780203996324 Okamura Kayko Chapter 4 Multicultural Identity in a Global Society Locality and Nationality of Contemporary Children of the Japanese Diaspora in Germany In Adachi Nobuko editor Japanese and Nikkei at Home and Abroad Negotiating Identities in a Global World Cambria Press 2010 1621968979 9781621968979 Notes edit a b デュッセルドルフ市概要 About Dusseldorf City The Consulate General of Japan Dusseldorf in Japanese 2009 02 01 Archived from the original on 2022 10 23 Retrieved 2022 10 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link 海外進出日系企業拠点数調査 2021年調査結果 令和3年10月1日現在 Excel Statistics on Japanese related companies overseas 2021 as of 1 October 2021 in Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs Japan 2022 08 04 tab 欧州 cell C30 Archived from the original on 2022 10 23 Retrieved 2022 10 23 在デュッセルドルフ総領事館 636 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link web pages linking to yearly files 海外進出日系企業拠点数調査 Regions of survey Die Japanischen Auslandsvertretungen in Deutschland Botschaft von Japan in Deutschland Embassy of Japan in Germany in German Japanisches Generalkonsulat Dusseldorf Konsularbereich Nordrhein Westfalen a b c 海外在留邦人数調査統計 集計結果 令和4年 2022年 版 令和3年10月1日現在 Excel Annual report of statistics on Japanese nationals overseas 2022 as of 1 October 2021 in Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs Japan 2022 08 04 tab 都市別邦人数上位50位 Archived from the original on 2023 02 23 Retrieved 2022 10 22 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link tab 統計の目的等 excerpts 3 Scope of this survey Japanese nationals who are or will be residing overseas for a long term over 3 months Emigrants or descendants Nikkeijin who do not have Japanese citizenship are not counted tab 都市別邦人数上位50位 2018 CE cell L39 M39 27 デュッセルドルフ 8 451 Dusseldorf 8 451 2021 CE cell C43 D43 31 デュッセルドルフ 7 144 Dusseldorf 7 144 This file does not contain statistics for North Rhine Westphalia web pages linking to yearly files latest data past data 2012 archive 1997 2018 a b c d e f Kerbo and Ziltener p 230 Kerbo and Ziltener p 229 230 a b Kerbo and Ziltener p 229 a b c d e f g h i j k l Heinrich Mark November 24 1985 Corporate Japanese colony sprouts in West German city Houston Chronicle Associated Press p 1 section 4 via NewsBank Record Number HSC112453511 Duesseldorf has the highest percentage of Japanese residents of any city outside Japan says Akira Arikawa general manager of the Japanese Chamber of Commerce and Industry here The lure business opportunities in the highly industrialized Ruhr region Available online from the Houston Public Library with a library card デュッセルドルフ日本人学校トップ Japanische Internationale Schule in Dusseldorf Retrieved on 1 January 2014 Niederkasseler Kirchweg 38 40547 Dusseldorf GERMANY Warum es die Japaner nach Dusseldorf zog Remscheider General Anzeiger in German 2020 03 12 Archived from the original on 2020 10 29 Retrieved 2022 10 23 Gertzen Ann Christin 2014 11 26 Japan Gemeinde in Dusseldorf Nase putzen ist unhoflich Suddeutsche Zeitung Archived from the original on 2021 09 29 Retrieved 2022 10 24 Dusseldorf fur Japan Fans Klein Tokio am Rhein Der Spiegel Wednesday 27 February 2013 a b Yokoso All Nippon Airways ANA to Offer Daily Connection between Dusseldorf and Tokyo Starting March 30 Archived 2018 08 25 at the Wayback Machine Press release from ANA at the website of convention bureau DUSSELDORF Retrieved on October 26 2016 a b Mitgliedsunternehmen Japanische IHK zu Dusseldorf e V Retrieved 2020 03 31 White Paul The Japanese in London From transience to settlement In Goodman Roger Ceri Peach Ayumi Takenaka and Paul White editors Global Japan The Experience of Japan s New Immigrant and Overseas Communities Routledge June 27 2005 ISBN 1134431457 9781134431458 p 89 平成22年の海外在留邦人数調査統計 Annual report of statistics on Japanese nationals overseas 2011 as of 1 October 2010 PDF in Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs Japan 2011 09 01 p 16 Archived from the original PDF on 2022 10 19 Retrieved 2022 10 22 p1 excerpts 1 2 Scope of this survey Japanese nationals who are or will be residing overseas for a long term over 3 months Emigrants or descendants Nikkeijin who do not have Japanese citizenship are not counted p16 2 7 2 Population total long term stay permanent trends per city 1 October 2008 24 Dusseldorf 7 961 1 October 2009 22 Dusseldorf 8 187 1 October 2010 23 Dusseldorf 8 067 p20 2 7 2 Population long term stay trends per city 1 October 2008 18 Dusseldorf 6 914 1 October 2009 18 Dusseldorf 6 926 1 October 2010 18 Dusseldorf 6 735 pp48 49 デュッセルドルフ総領事館 within regions covered by The Consulate General of Japan Dusseldorf p48 Population total 12 040 p49 Japanese related companies 100 or jointly owned 500 p66 Regions of survey 在デュッセルドルフ総領事館 The Consulate General of Japan Dusseldorf The State of North Rhine Westphalia web pages linking to the file archive Outline of the school Archive Japanische Internationale Schule in Dusseldorf Retrieved on 1 January 2014 Home page Archive Japanische Internationale Schule in Dusseldorf Retrieved on 31 March 2014 ANA kommt taglich nach Dusseldorf Flug Revue 2013 12 18 Archived from the original on 2017 04 04 Retrieved 2016 09 27 ANA Shuttle Bus Archive All Nippon Airways Retrieved on October 29 2016 Further reading editGlebe Gunther Segregation and the ethnoscape the Japanese business community in Dusseldorf In Goodman Peach Takenaka White Hrsg Global Japan The experience of Japan s new immigrant and overseas communities Routledge Abingdon Oxford 2003 ISBN 0 415 29741 9 S 98 115 Dusseldorf s Japanese outreach Archive Bundesliga 2 05 12 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Japanese community in Dusseldorf in German Consulate General of Japan in Dusseldorf in Japanese Consulate General of Japan in Dusseldorf Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japanese community of Dusseldorf amp oldid 1166029632, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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