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Osaka

Osaka (Japanese: 大阪市, Hepburn: Ōsaka-shi, pronounced [oːsakaɕi]; commonly just 大阪, Ōsaka [oːsaka] (listen)) is a designated city in the Kansai region of Honshu in Japan. It is the capital of and most populous city in Osaka Prefecture, and the third most populous city in Japan, following Special wards of Tokyo and Yokohama. With a population of 2.7 million in the 2020 census, it is also the largest component of the Keihanshin Metropolitan Area, which is the second-largest metropolitan area in Japan[4] and the 10th largest urban area in the world with more than 19 million inhabitants.[3]

Osaka
大阪市
From top left: Osaka Castle (front) and Osaka Business Park (behind), Tsūtenkaku tower in Shinsekai, Dōtonbori, The Dainihongu building (main sanctuary) and Sorihashi bridge of Sumiyoshi Taisha shrine, Shitennō-ji temple (front) with Abeno Harukas (behind), Midōsuji Avenue and Nakanoshima island within downtown core
Location of Osaka in Osaka Prefecture
Osaka
Location in the Kansai region
Osaka
Osaka
Osaka
Coordinates: 34°41′38″N 135°30′8″E / 34.69389°N 135.50222°E / 34.69389; 135.50222Coordinates: 34°41′38″N 135°30′8″E / 34.69389°N 135.50222°E / 34.69389; 135.50222
Country Japan
RegionKansai
PrefectureOsaka Prefecture
IslandHonshu
Government
 • BodyOsaka City Council
 • MayorIchirō Matsui (ORA)[1]
Area
 • Designated city225.21 km2 (86.95 sq mi)
 [2][circular reference]
Population
 (March 1, 2021)
 • Designated city2,753,862
 • Rank3rd in Japan
 • Density12,214/km2 (31,630/sq mi)
 • Metro19,303,000 (2019, Keihanshin)
Time zoneUTC+9 (Japan Standard Time)
- TreeCherry
- FlowerPansy
AddressOsaka City Hall: 1-3-20 Nakanoshima, Kita-ku, Osaka-shi, Osaka-fu
530-8201
Phone number06-6208-8181
Websitewww.city.osaka.lg.jp
Osaka
Ōsaka in kanji
Japanese name
Kanji大阪
(obsolete) 大坂
Hiraganaおおさか
Katakanaオオサカ
Transcriptions
RomanizationŌsaka

Osaka was traditionally considered Japan's economic hub. By the Kofun period (300–538) it had developed into an important regional port, and in the 7th and 8th centuries, it served briefly as the imperial capital. Osaka continued to flourish during the Edo period (1603–1867) and became known as a center of Japanese culture. Following the Meiji Restoration, Osaka greatly expanded in size and underwent rapid industrialization. In 1889, Osaka was officially established as a municipality. The construction boom accelerated population growth throughout the following decades, and by the 1900s, Osaka was the industrial hub in the Meiji and Taishō periods. Osaka made noted contributions to redevelopment, urban planning and zoning standards in the postwar period, the city developed rapidly as one of the major financial center in the Keihanshin Metropolitan Area.

Osaka is a major financial center of Japan, and it is recognized as one of the most multicultural and cosmopolitan cities in Japan. The city is home to the Osaka Exchange as well as the headquarters of multinational electronics corporations such as Panasonic and Sharp. Osaka is an international center of research and development and is represented by several major universities, notably Osaka University, Osaka Metropolitan University, and Kansai University. Famous landmarks in the city include Osaka Castle, Osaka Aquarium Kaiyukan, Dōtonbori, Tsūtenkaku in Shinsekai, Tennōji Park, Abeno Harukas, Sumiyoshi Taisha Grand Shrine, and Shitennō-ji, one of the oldest Buddhist temples in Japan.

Etymology

Ōsaka means "large hill" or "large slope". It is unclear when this name gained prominence over Naniwa, but the oldest written evidence for the name dates back to 1496.[5][6]

By the Edo period, 大坂 (Ōsaka) and 大阪 (Ōsaka) were mixed use, and the writer Hamamatsu Utakuni [ja], in his book Setsuyo Ochiboshu published in 1808, states that the kanji was abhorred because it "returns to the earth," and then was used. The kanji (earth) is also similar to the word (knight), and means against, so can be understand as "samurai rebellion," then was official name in 1868 after the Meiji Restoration. The older kanji (坂) is still in very limited use, usually only in historical contexts. As an abbreviation, the modern kanji han refers to Osaka City or Osaka Prefecture.

History

Origins: Jōmon and Yayoi period

In the Jōmon period (7,000 BCE), Osaka was mostly submerged by the Seto Inland Sea, and the small Uemachi-daichi plateau (12 km long and 2.5 km wide), located in the southern part of the city called Uehonmachi, was a peninsula.[7] The Uehonmachi area consisted of a peninsula with an inland sea (Seto Inland Sea) in the east.[7] It is considered one of the first places where inhabitants of Japan settled, both for the favorable geological conditions, rich in fresh water and lush vegetation, and because it was in a position difficult to attack from a military point of view.[7]

The earliest evidence of settlements in the Osaka area are the Morinomiya ruins (森ノ宮遺跡, Morinomiya iseki) which is located in the central Chuo-ku district.[7] Buried human skeletons and a kaizuka (a mound containing remains), were found as well as shell mounds, oysters, and other interesting archaeological discoveries from the Jomon period.[7] In addition to the remains of consumed food, there were arrow heads, stone tools, fishing hooks and crockery with remains from rice processing. It is estimated that the ruins contain 2,000-year-old debris between the Jomon and Yayoi period. The findings of the archeological sites are exhibited in an adjacent building.[8][7]

In the years between the end of the Jōmon period and the beginning of the Yayoi period, the sediments that were deposited north of the Uemachi-daichi peninsula / plateau transformed the sea that stretched to the east into a lagoon which was called Kawachi.[9] During the Yayoi period (300 BCE-250 CE), permanent habitation on the plains grew as rice farming became popular.[8]

At the beginning of the third century CE the grand shrine of Sumiyoshi-taisha was inaugurated near the harbor, commissioned by consort Empress Jingū. This Shinto shrine structure survived historical events,[10] which inaugurated a new style in the construction of Shinto shrines, called Sumiyoshi-zukuri.[11] The maritime panorama enjoyed from the shrine gardens inspired several artists, and nowadays the representations of that type of landscape are called Sumiyoshi drawings.

Towards the end of the Yayoi period the Uemachi-daichi plateau-peninsula expanded further, transforming the Kawachi Lagoon (河内湖) into a lake connected to the mouth of the Yodo River, which had widened to the south.[9]

Kofun period

By the Kofun period, Osaka developed into a hub port connecting the region to the western part of Japan. The port of Naniwa-tsu was established and became the most important in Japan.[12] Trade with other areas of the country and the Asian continent intensified.[12] The large numbers of increasingly larger keyhole-shaped Kofun mounds found in the plains of Osaka are evidence of political-power concentration, leading to the formation of a state.[8][13] The findings in the neighboring plains, including the mausoleum of Emperor Nintoku was discovered nearby in Sakai testify to the status of imperial city that Osaka had reached. Four of these mounds can be seen in Osaka, in which important members of the nobility are buried. They are located in the southern districts of the city and date back to the 5th century.[12] A group of megalithic tombs called Mozu Tombs are located in Sakai, Osaka Prefecture.[14]

Important works of the Kofun period is the excavation that diverted the course of the Yamato River, whose floods caused extensive damage, and the construction of important roads in the direction of Sakai and Nara.[8][15] Maritime traffic connected to the port of Naniwa-tsu increased in such a way that huge warehouses were built to stow material arriving and departing.[8]

Asuka and Nara period

The Kojiki records that during 390–430 AD, there was an imperial palace located at Osumi, in what is present day Higashiyodogawa ward, but it may have been a secondary imperial residence rather than a capital.[16]

In 645, Emperor Kōtoku built his Naniwa Nagara-Toyosaki Palace in what is now Osaka,[17] making it the capital of Japan. The city now known as Osaka was at this time referred to as Naniwa, and this name and derivations of it are still in use for districts in central Osaka such as Naniwa (浪速) and Namba (難波).[18] Although the capital was moved to Asuka (in Nara Prefecture today) in 655, Naniwa remained a vital connection, by land and sea, between Yamato (modern day Nara Prefecture), Korea, and China.[8][19]

Naniwa was declared the capital again in 744 by order of Emperor Shōmu, and remained so until 745, when the Imperial Court moved back to Heijō-kyō (now Nara). By the end of the Nara period, Naniwa's seaport roles had been gradually taken over by neighboring areas, but it remained a lively center of river, channel, and land transportation between Heian-kyō (Kyoto today) and other destinations. Sumiyoshi Taisha Grand Shrine was founded by Tamomi no Sukune in 211 CE.[20] Shitennō-ji was first built in 593 CE and the oldest Buddhist temple in Japan.[21]

Heian to Edo period

In 1496, Jōdo Shinshū Buddhists established their headquarters in the heavily fortified Ishiyama Hongan-ji, located directly on the site of the old Naniwa Imperial Palace. Oda Nobunaga began a decade-long siege campaign on the temple in 1570 which ultimately resulted in the surrender of the monks and subsequent razing of the temple. Toyotomi Hideyoshi constructed Osaka Castle in its place in 1583.[22] Osaka Castle played a pivotal role in the Siege of Osaka (1614–1615).

Osaka was long considered Japan's primary economic center,[23] with a large percentage of the population belonging to the merchant class (see Four divisions of society). Over the course of the Edo period (1603–1867), Osaka grew into one of Japan's major cities and returned to its ancient role as a lively and important port. Daimyōs (feudal lords) received most of their income in the form of rice. Merchants in Osaka thus began to organize storehouses where they would store a daimyō's rice in exchange for a fee, trading it for either coin or a form of receipt; essentially a precursor to paper money. Many if not all of these rice brokers also made loans, and would actually become quite wealthy and powerful. Osaka merchants coalesced their shops around Dōjima, where the Rice Exchange was established in 1697 and where the world's first futures market would come to exist to sell rice that was not yet harvested.[24]

The popular culture of Osaka[25] was closely related to ukiyo-e depictions of life in Edo. By 1780, Osaka had cultivated a vibrant arts culture, as typified by its famous Kabuki and Bunraku theaters.[26] In 1837, Ōshio Heihachirō, a low-ranking samurai, led a peasant insurrection in response to the city's unwillingness to support the many poor and suffering families in the area. Approximately one-quarter of the city was razed before shogunal officials put down the rebellion, after which Ōshio killed himself.[27] Osaka was opened to foreign trade by the government of the Bakufu at the same time as Hyogo Town (modern Kobe) on January 1, 1868, just before the advent of the Boshin War and the Meiji Restoration.[28] The Kawaguchi foreign settlement, now the Kawaguchi subdistrict, is a legacy of the foreign presence in Osaka.

Osaka residents were stereotyped in Edo literature from at least the 18th century. Jippensha Ikku in 1802 depicted Osakans as stingy almost beyond belief. In 1809, the derogatory term "Kamigata zeeroku" was used by Edo residents to characterize inhabitants of the Osaka region in terms of calculation, shrewdness, lack of civic spirit, and the vulgarity of Osaka dialect. Edo writers aspired to samurai culture, and saw themselves as poor but generous, chaste, and public spirited. Edo writers by contrast saw "zeeroku" as obsequious apprentices, stingy, greedy, gluttonous, and lewd. To some degree, Osaka residents are still stigmatized by Tokyo observers in the same way today, especially in terms of gluttony, evidenced in the phrase, "Residents of Osaka devour their food until they collapse" (大阪は食倒れ, "Ōsaka wa kuidaore").[29]

Meiji to Heisei period

With the enormous changes that characterized the country after the Meiji Restoration (1868), and the relocation of the capital from Kyoto to Tokyo, Osaka entered a period of decline. From being the capital of the economy and finance, it became a predominantly industrial center.[30] The modern municipality was established[30] in 1889 by government ordinance, with an initial area of 15 square kilometres (6 sq mi), overlapping today's Chuo and Nishi wards. Later, the city went through three major expansions to reach its current size of 223 square kilometres (86 sq mi). Osaka was the industrial center most clearly defined in the development of capitalism in Japan. It became known as the "Manchester and Melbourne of the Orient".[30] In 1925, it was the largest and most populated cities in Japan and sixth in the world.[30]

The rapid industrialization attracted many Asian immigrants (Indians, Chinese, and Koreans), who set up a life apart for themselves.[31] The political system was pluralistic, with a strong emphasis on promoting industrialization and modernization.[32] Literacy was high and the educational system expanded rapidly, producing a middle class with a taste for literature and a willingness to support the arts.[33] In 1927, General Motors operated a factory called Osaka Assembly until 1941, manufacturing Chevrolet, Cadillac, Pontiac, Oldsmobile, and Buick vehicles, operated and staffed by Japanese workers and managers.[34] In the nearby city of Ikeda in Osaka Prefecture is the headquarters of Daihatsu, one of Japan's oldest automobile manufacturers.

Like its European and American counterparts, Osaka displayed slums, unemployment, and poverty. In Japan it was here that municipal government first introduced a comprehensive system of poverty relief, copied in part from British models. Osaka policymakers stressed the importance of family formation and mutual assistance as the best way to combat poverty. This minimized the cost of welfare programs.[35]

During World War II, Osaka came under air raids in 1945 by the United States Army Air Forces as part of the air raids on Japan. On March 13, 1945, a total of 329 Boeing B-29 Superfortress heavy bombers took part in the raid against Osaka. According to an American prisoner of war who was held in the city, the air raid took almost the entire night and destroyed 25 square miles (65 km2) of the city. The U.S. bombed the city again twice in June 1945 and again on August 14, a day before Japan's surrender.[36]

In the decades after World War II, the reconstruction plan and the industriousness of its inhabitants ensured Osaka even greater prosperity than it was before the war. Osaka's population regrew to more than three million in the 1960s when large-scale prefectural suburbanization began and doubled to two million by the 1990s. The factories were rebuilt and trade revived, the city were developed rapidly it became a major multicultural and financial center in the postwar period between the 1950s and the 1980s, it is known as the "Chicago and Toronto of the Orient".[This quote needs a citation] Osaka Prefecture was chosen as the venue for the prestigious Expo '70, the first world's fair ever held in an Asian country. Since then, numerous international events have been held in Osaka, including the 1995 APEC Summit.

The modern municipality, which when it was established in 1889 occupied an area of just 15 km2 including the districts of Chūō and Nishi, following three successive expansions has reached an area of 222 km2. It was one of the first cities in Japan to obtain designated city status in 1956.[37]

21st century to present

The plan to reorganize Osaka and its province into a metropolis like Tokyo met with stiff opposition in some municipalities, particularly the highly populated Sakai. He then fell back on a project that included the suppression of the 24 wards of Osaka, thus dividing the city into 5 new special districts with a status similar to that of the 23 Special wards of Tokyo. It was introduced by former mayor Tōru Hashimoto, leader of the reform party Osaka Restoration Association which he founded. The referendum of May 17, 2015 called in Osaka for the approval of this project saw the narrow victory of no, and consequently Hashimoto announced his withdrawal from politics.[38] A second referendum for a merger into 4 semi-autonomous wards was narrowly voted down by 692,996 (50.6%).[39]

According to the Forbes list of The World's Most Expensive Places To Live 2009, Osaka was the second most expensive in the world after Tokyo.[40] By 2020 it slipped to 5th rank of most expensive cities.[41]

On March 7, 2014, the 300-meter tall Abeno Harukas opened, which is the tallest skyscraper in Japan.[42]

Geography and climate

Geography

 
Satellite image of Osaka

The city's west side is open to Osaka Bay, and is otherwise completely surrounded by more than ten satellite cities, all of them in Osaka Prefecture, with one exception: the city of Amagasaki, belonging to Hyōgo Prefecture, in the northwest. The city occupies a larger area (about 13%) than any other city or village within Osaka Prefecture. When the city was established in 1889, it occupied roughly the area known today as the Chuo and Nishi wards, only 15.27 square kilometres (6 sq mi) that would eventually grow into today's 222.30 square kilometres (86 sq mi) via incremental expansions, the largest of which being a single 126.01-square-kilometre (49 sq mi) expansion in 1925. Osaka's highest point is 37.5 metres (123.0 ft) Tokyo Peil in Tsurumi-ku, and the lowest point is in Nishiyodogawa-ku at −2.2 metres (−7.2 ft) Tokyo Peil.[43] Osaka has a latitude of 34.67 (near the 35th parallel north), which makes it more southern than Rome (41.90), Madrid (40.41), San Francisco (37.77) and Seoul (37.53).[44]

Climate

Osaka is located in the humid subtropical climate zone (Köppen Cfa), with four distinct seasons. Its winters are generally mild, with January being the coldest month having an average high of 9.3 °C (49 °F). The city rarely sees snowfall during the winter. Spring in Osaka starts off mild, but ends up being hot and humid. It also tends to be Osaka's wettest season, with the tsuyu (梅雨, tsuyu, "plum rain")—the rainy season—occurring between early June and late July. The average starting and ending dates of the rainy season are June 7 and July 21 respectively.[45] Summers are very hot and humid. In August, the hottest month, the average daily high temperature reaches 33.5 °C (92 °F), while average nighttime low temperatures typically hover around 25.5 °C (78 °F). Fall in Osaka sees a cooling trend, with the early part of the season resembling summer while the latter part of fall resembles winter. Precipitation is abundant, with winter being the driest season, while monthly rainfall peaks in June with the "tsuyu" rainy season, which typically ends in mid to late July. From late July through the end of August, summer's heat and humidity peaks, and rainfall decreases somewhat. Osaka experiences a second rainy period in September and early October, when tropical weather systems, including typhoons, coming from the south or southwest are possible.

Climate data for Osaka (1991−2020 normals, extremes 1883−present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 19.1
(66.4)
23.7
(74.7)
24.2
(75.6)
30.7
(87.3)
32.7
(90.9)
36.1
(97.0)
38.4
(101.1)
39.1
(102.4)
36.2
(97.2)
33.1
(91.6)
27.2
(81.0)
24.5
(76.1)
39.1
(102.4)
Average high °C (°F) 9.7
(49.5)
10.5
(50.9)
14.2
(57.6)
19.9
(67.8)
24.9
(76.8)
28.0
(82.4)
31.8
(89.2)
33.7
(92.7)
29.5
(85.1)
23.7
(74.7)
17.8
(64.0)
12.3
(54.1)
21.3
(70.3)
Daily mean °C (°F) 6.2
(43.2)
6.6
(43.9)
9.9
(49.8)
15.2
(59.4)
20.1
(68.2)
23.6
(74.5)
27.7
(81.9)
29.0
(84.2)
25.2
(77.4)
19.5
(67.1)
13.8
(56.8)
8.7
(47.7)
17.1
(62.8)
Average low °C (°F) 3.0
(37.4)
3.2
(37.8)
6.0
(42.8)
10.9
(51.6)
16.0
(60.8)
20.3
(68.5)
24.6
(76.3)
25.8
(78.4)
21.9
(71.4)
16.0
(60.8)
10.2
(50.4)
5.3
(41.5)
13.6
(56.5)
Record low °C (°F) −7.5
(18.5)
−6.5
(20.3)
−5.2
(22.6)
−2.6
(27.3)
3.5
(38.3)
8.9
(48.0)
14.8
(58.6)
13.6
(56.5)
10.4
(50.7)
3.0
(37.4)
−2.2
(28.0)
−4.5
(23.9)
−7.5
(18.5)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 47.0
(1.85)
60.5
(2.38)
103.1
(4.06)
101.9
(4.01)
136.5
(5.37)
185.1
(7.29)
174.4
(6.87)
113.0
(4.45)
152.8
(6.02)
136.0
(5.35)
72.5
(2.85)
55.5
(2.19)
1,338.3
(52.69)
Average snowfall cm (inches) 0
(0)
1
(0.4)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
1
(0.4)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.5 mm) 6.4 7.3 10.3 10.0 10.4 12.3 11.3 7.8 10.6 9.2 7.0 7.1 109.7
Average relative humidity (%) 61 60 59 58 61 68 70 66 67 65 64 62 63
Mean monthly sunshine hours 146.5 140.6 172.2 192.6 203.7 154.3 184.0 222.4 161.6 166.1 152.6 152.1 2,048.6
Average ultraviolet index 3 4 6 8 9 10 11 10 8 6 3 2 7
Source: Japan Meteorological Agency[46] and Weather Atlas[47]

Cityscape

Osaka's sprawling cityscape has been described as "only surpassed by Tokyo as a showcase of the Japanese urban phenomenon".[48]

 
Osaka skyline at night from Umeda Sky Building (2008)

Neighborhoods

Central Osaka is roughly divided into downtown and uptown areas known as Kita (, "north") and Minami (, "south").[49][50]

Kita is home to the Umeda district and its immediate surrounding neighborhoods, a major business and retail hub that plays host to Osaka Station City and a large subterranean network of shopping arcades.[49] Kita and nearby Nakanoshima contain a prominent portion of the city's skyscrapers and are often featured in photographs of Osaka's skyline.

Minami, though meaning "south", is essentially in Chūō Ward (中央区, Chūō-ku) and geographically central within the city.[50] Well known districts here include Namba and Shinsaibashi shopping areas, the Dōtonbori canal entertainment area, Nipponbashi Den Den Town, as well as arts and fashion culture-oriented areas such as Amerikamura and Horie. The 300-meter tall Abeno Harukas is the tallest skyscraper in the country since 2014.[42]

The business districts between Kita and Minami such as Honmachi and Yodoyabashi, called Semba (船場), house the regional headquarters of many large-scale banks and corporations. The Midōsuji boulevard runs through Semba and connects Kita and Minami.

Further south of Minami are neighborhoods such as Shinsekai (with its Tsūtenkaku tower), Tennoji and Abeno (with Tennoji Zoo, Shitennō-ji and Abeno Harukas), and the Kamagasaki slums, the largest slum in Japan.[51]

The city's west side is a prominent bay area[52] which serves as its main port as well as a tourist destination with attractions such as Kyocera Dome, Universal Studios Japan and the Tempozan Harbour Village. Higashiosaka is zoned as a separate city, although the east side of Osaka city proper contains numerous residential neighborhoods including Tsuruhashi KoreaTown, as well as the Osaka Castle Park, Osaka Business Park and the hub Kyōbashi Station.

Osaka contains numerous urban canals and bridges, many of which serve as the namesake for their surrounding neighbourhoods.[53] The phrase "808 bridges of Naniwa" was an expression in old Japan used to indicate impressiveness and the "uncountable". Osaka numbered roughly 200 bridges by the Edo period[54] and 1,629 bridges by 1925. As many of the city's canals were gradually filled in, the number dropped to 872, of which 760 are currently managed by Osaka City.[53]

List of wards

There are currently 24 wards in Osaka.

Name Kanji Population Land area in km2 Pop. density

per km2

Map of Osaka
1 Abeno-ku 阿倍野区 107,000 5.99 18,440
 
2 Asahi-ku 旭区 90,854 6.32 14,376
3 Chūō-ku 中央区 100,998 8.87 11,386
4 Fukushima-ku 福島区 78,348 4.67 16,777
5 Higashinari-ku 東成区 83,684 4.54 18,433
6 Higashisumiyoshi-ku 東住吉区 126,704 9.75 12,995
7 Higashiyodogawa-ku 東淀川区 176,943 13.27 13,334
8 Hirano-ku 平野区 193,282 15.28 12,649
9 Ikuno-ku 生野区 129,641 8.37 15,489
10 Jōtō-ku 城東区 167,925 8.38 20,039
11 Kita-ku (administrative center) 北区 136,602 10.34 13,211
12 Konohana-ku 此花区 65,086 19.25 3,381
13 Minato-ku 港区 80,759 7.86 10,275
14 Miyakojima-ku 都島区 107,555 6.08 17,690
15 Naniwa-ku 浪速区 74,992 4.39 17,082
16 Nishi-ku 西区 103,089 5.21 19,787
17 Nishinari-ku 西成区 108,654 7.37 14,743
18 Nishiyodogawa-ku 西淀川区 95,960 14.22 6,748
19 Suminoe-ku 住之江区 120,629 20.61 5,853
20 Sumiyoshi-ku 住吉区 153,425 9.40 16,322
21 Taishō-ku 大正区 62,872 9.43 6,667
22 Tennōji-ku 天王寺区 80,830 4.84 16,700
23 Tsurumi-ku 鶴見区 111,501 8.17 13,648
24 Yodogawa-ku 淀川区 182,254 12.64 14,419

Demographics

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1870271,992—    
1880292,636+7.6%
1890483,609+65.3%
1900881,344+82.2%
19101,239,373+40.6%
19201,798,295+45.1%
19252,135,248+18.7%
19302,477,959+16.1%
19353,022,425+22.0%
19403,300,714+9.2%
19451,614,632−51.1%
19502,015,350+24.8%
19552,547,316+26.4%
19603,011,563+18.2%
19653,156,222+4.8%
19702,980,487−5.6%
19752,778,987−6.8%
19802,648,180−4.7%
19852,636,249−0.5%
19902,623,801−0.5%
19952,602,421−0.8%
20002,598,774−0.1%
20052,628,811+1.2%
20102,666,371+1.4%
20152,691,185+0.9%
20202,752,024+2.3%

Population numbers have been recorded in Osaka since as early as 1873, in the early Meiji era.[55] According to the census in 2005, there were 2,628,811 residents in Osaka, an increase of 30,037 or 1.2% from 2000.[56] There were 1,280,325 households with approximately 2.1 persons per household. The population density was 11,836 persons per km2. The Great Kantō earthquake caused a mass migration to Osaka between 1920 and 1930, and the city became Japan's largest city in 1930 with 2,453,573 people, outnumbering even Tokyo, which had a population of 2,070,913. The population peaked at 3,252,340 in 1940, and had a post-war peak of 3,156,222 in 1965, but continued to declined since, as the residents moved out to the suburbs.[57]

There were 144,123 registered foreigners, the two largest groups being Korean (60,110) and Chinese (39,551) 2021 years.[58] Ikuno, with its Tsuruhashi district, is the home to one of the largest population of Korean residents in Japan, with 20,397 registered Zainichi Koreans.[59][60][61]

Dialect

The commonly spoken dialect of this area is Osaka-ben, a typical sub-dialect of Kansai-ben. Of the many other particularities that characterize Osaka-ben, examples include using the copula ya instead of da, and the suffix -hen instead of -nai in negative verb forms.

Government

Local administration
The Mayor and the Council
 
Osaka City Hall
Mayor:Ichiro Matsui
Vice Mayors:Toru Takahashi,
Shin Asakawa,
Tsuyoshi Yamamoto
City Council
President:Toshifumi Tagaya (LDP)
Members:83 councilors (7 vacant)
Factions:Osaka Restoration Association (36),
Liberal Democratic Party
and Citizen's Club (20),
Komei Party (19),
Japanese Communist Party (9),
Go OSAKA (1)
Osaka Abe (1)
Seats by districts:
WebsiteOsaka City Council
Note: As of October 27, 2017

The Osaka City Council is the city's local government formed under the Local Autonomy Law. The council has eighty-nine seats, allocated to the twenty-four wards proportional to their population and re-elected by the citizens every four years. The council elects its president and Vice President. Toshifumi Tagaya (LDP) is the current and 104th president since May 2008. The mayor of the city is directly elected by the citizens every four years as well, in accordance with the Local Autonomy Law. Tōru Hashimoto, former governor of Osaka Prefecture is the 19th mayor of Osaka since 2011. The mayor is supported by two vice mayors, currently Akira Morishita and Takashi Kashiwagi, who are appointed by him in accordance with the city bylaw.[62]

Osaka also houses several agencies of the Japanese government. Below is a list of governmental offices housed in Osaka.

  • Japan Coast Guard, Fifth Regional Headquarters
  • Japan Fair Trade Commission; Kinki, Chugoku, Shikoku Office
  • Kinki Regional Finance Bureau
  • Kinki Regional Economy, Trade and Industry Bureau
  • Kinki Regional Transportation Bureau
  • Kinki Communications Bureau
  • Kinki Regional Development Bureau
  • Kinki Regional Police Bureau
  • Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Osaka Office
  • Osaka Customs
  • Osaka District Court
  • Osaka Family Court
  • Osaka High Court
  • Osaka Immigration
  • Osaka Labour Bureau
  • Osaka Meteorological Observatory
  • Osaka Public Prosecutors Office
  • Osaka Regional Aerospace Bureau
  • Osaka Regional Law Bureau
  • Osaka Regional Taxation Bureau
  • Osaka Summary Court

Developments

In July 2012, a joint multi-party bill was submitted to the Diet that would allow for implementation of the Osaka Metropolis plan as pursued by the mayor of Osaka city, the governor of Osaka and their party. If implemented, Osaka City, neighboring Sakai City and possibly other surrounding municipalities would dissolve and be reorganized as four special wards of Osaka prefecture – similar to former Tokyo City's successor wards within Tokyo prefecture. Special wards are municipal-level administrative units that leave some otherwise municipal administrative responsibilities and revenues to the prefectural administration.[63]

In October 2018, the city of Osaka officially ended[64] its sister city relationship with San Francisco in the United States after the latter permitted a monument memorializing "comfort women" to remain on a city-owned property, circulating in the process a 10-page, 3,800-word letter in English addressed to San Francisco mayor London Breed.[65]

On November 1, 2020, a second referendum to merge Osaka's 24 wards into 4 semi-autonomous wards was narrowly voted down. There were 692,996 (50.6%) votes against and 675,829 (49.4%) votes supported it.[39] Osaka mayor and Osaka Ishin co-leader Ichiro Matsui said he would resign when his term ends in 2023.[39]

Energy policies

Nuclear power

On February 27, 2012, three Kansai cities, Kyoto, Osaka, and Kobe, jointly asked Kansai Electric Power Company to break its dependence on nuclear power. In a letter to KEPCO they also requested to disclose information on the demand and supply of electricity, and for lower and stable prices. The three cities were stockholders of the plant: Osaka owned 9% of the shares, while Kobe had 3% and Kyoto 0.45%. Toru Hashimoto, the mayor of Osaka, announced a proposal to minimize the dependence on nuclear power for the shareholders meeting in June 2012.[66]

On March 18, 2012, the city of Osaka decided as largest shareholder of Kansai Electric Power Co, that at the next shareholders-meeting in June 2012 it would demand a series of changes:

  • that Kansai Electric would be split into two companies, separating power generation from power transmission.
  • a reduction of the number of the utility's executives and employees.
  • the implementation of absolutely secure measurements to ensuring the safety of the nuclear facilities.
  • the disposing of spent fuel.
  • the installation of new kind of thermal power generation to secure non-nuclear supply of energy.
  • selling all unnecessary assets including the stock holdings of KEPCO.

In this action, Osaka had secured the support of two other cities and shareholders: Kyoto and Kobe, but with their combined voting-rights of 12.5 percent they were not certain of the ultimate outcome, because for this two-thirds of the shareholders would be needed to agree to revise the corporate charter.[67]

At a meeting held on April 10, 2012, by the "energy strategy council", formed by the city of Osaka and the governments of the prefectures, it became clear that at the end of the fiscal year 2011 some 69 employees of Kansai Electric Power Company were former public servants. "Amakudari" was the Japanese name for this practice of rewarding by hiring officials that formerly controlled and supervised the firm. Such people included the following:

  • 13 ex-officials of the: Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism
  • 3 ex-officials of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry,
  • 2 ex-officials of the Ministry of the Environment,
  • 16 former policemen,
  • 10 former fire-fighters,
  • 13 former civil engineers.

Besides this, it became known that Kansai Electric had done about 600 external financial donations, to a total sum of about 1.695 billion yen:

  • 70 donations were paid to local governments: to a total of 699 million yen
  • 100 donations to public-service organizations: 443 million yen,
  • 430 donations to various organizations and foundations: a total of 553 million yen

During this meeting some 8 conditions were compiled, that needed to be fulfilled before a restart of the No.3 and No.4 reactors Oi Nuclear Power Plant:

  • the consent of the local people and government within 100 kilometer from the plant
  • the installation of a new independent regulatory agency
  • a nuclear safety agreement
  • the establishment of new nuclear safety standards
  • stress tests and evaluations based on these new safety rules[68]

Economy

 
A street in Umeda, Osaka

The gross city product of Osaka in fiscal year 2004 was ¥21.3 trillion, an increase of 1.2% over the previous year. The figure accounts for about 55% of the total output in the Osaka Prefecture and 26.5% in the Kinki region. In 2004, commerce, services, and manufacturing have been the three major industries, accounting for 30%, 26%, and 11% of the total, respectively. The per capita income in the city was about ¥3.3 million, 10% higher than that of the Osaka Prefecture.[69] MasterCard Worldwide reported that Osaka ranks 19th among the world's leading cities and plays an important role in the global economy.[70] Osaka's GDP per capita (Nominal) was $59,958.($1=\120.13)[71][72] However, by 2020, Osaka ranked as the 5th most expensive city due to flatlining consumer prices and government subsidies of public transportation.[41]

 
Osaka Exchange in the Kitahama district of Osaka

Historically, Osaka was the center of commerce in Japan, especially in the middle and pre-modern ages. Nomura Securities, the first brokerage firm in Japan, was founded in the city in 1925, and Osaka still houses a leading futures exchange. Many major companies have since moved their main offices to Tokyo. However, several major companies, such as Panasonic, Sharp, and Sanyo, are still headquartered in Osaka. Recently, the city began a program, headed by mayor Junichi Seki, to attract domestic and foreign investment.[73] In the 2017 Global Financial Centres Index, Osaka was ranked as having the 15th most competitive financial center in the world and fifth most competitive in Asia (after Singapore, Hong Kong, Tokyo, and Shanghai).[74]

The Osaka Securities Exchange, specializing in derivatives such as Nikkei 225 futures, is based in Osaka. The merger with JASDAQ will help the Osaka Securities Exchange become the largest exchange in Japan for start-up companies.[75]

According to global consulting firm Mercer, Osaka was the second most expensive city for expatriate employees in the world in 2009. It jumped up nine places from 11th place in 2008 and was the eighth most expensive city in 2007. However, it was not ranked in the top ten places of the list in 2013.[76][77] The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU) ranked Osaka as the second most expensive city in the world in its 2013 Cost of Living study.[78]

Keihanshin

 
Greater Osaka (without Kyoto) Metropolitan Employment Area
 
Keihanshin with Osaka (red), Kobe (green), and Kyoto (blue)

Osaka is part of the metropolitan region called Keihanshin (aka Greater Osaka) in the Kansai region. The Keihanshin region includes the prefectures of Osaka, Kyoto, Hyōgo (Kobe), Nara, Shiga, Wakayama, Sakai.[4] The Keihanshin region has a population (as of 2015) of 19,303,000 (15% of Japan's population) which covers 13,228 km2 (5,107 sq mi).[3] It is ranked the second most urban region in Japan after the Greater Tokyo area and 10th largest urban area in the world.[3] Keihanshin has a GDP of approximately $953.9 billion in 2012 (16th largest in the world).[79] Osaka-Kobe has a GDP of $681 billion (2015), which is a bit more than Paris or Greater London.[80]

Transportation

 
Map of Osaka Metro system

Greater Osaka has an extensive network of railway lines, comparable to that of Greater Tokyo. Major stations within the city include Umeda (梅田), Namba (難波), Shinsaibashi (心斎橋), Tennōji (天王寺), Kyōbashi (京橋), and Yodoyabashi (淀屋橋).

Osaka connects to its surrounding cities and suburbs via the JR West Urban Network as well as numerous private lines such as Keihan Electric Railway, Hankyu Railway, Hanshin Electric Railway, Kintetsu Railway, and Nankai Electric Railway.

The Osaka Metro system alone ranks 8th in the world by annual passenger ridership, serving over 912 million people annually (a quarter of Greater Osaka Rail System's 4 billion annual riders), despite being only 8 of more than 70 lines in the metro area.

All Shinkansen trains including Nozomi stop at Shin-Osaka Station and provide access to other major cities in Japan, such as Kobe, Kyoto, Nagoya, Yokohama, and Tokyo.

Regular bus services are provided by Osaka City Bus, as well Hankyu, Hanshin and Kintetsu, providing a dense network covering most parts of the city.

Osaka is served by two airports situated just outside of the city, Kansai International Airport (IATA: KIX) which handles primarily international passenger flights and Osaka International Airport (IATA:ITM) which handles mostly domestic services and some international cargo flights.

Due to its geographical position, Osaka's international ferry connections are far greater than that of Tokyo, with international service to Shanghai, Tianjin, Korea along with domestic routes to Kitakyushu, Kagoshima, Miyazaki and Okinawa.

Culture and lifestyle

 
A chef prepares for the evening rush in Umeda.
 
The Glico Man among numerous signboards at Dōtonbori
 
Grand Front Osaka
 
Chayamachi district in Kita-ku
 
Amerikamura in Chuo-ku
 
Nipponbashi in Naniwa-ku

Shopping and food

Osaka has a large number of wholesalers and retail shops: 25,228 and 34,707 respectively in 2004, according to the city statistics.[81] Many of them are concentrated in the wards of Chuō (10,468 shops) and Kita (6,335 shops). Types of shops vary from malls to conventional shōtengai shopping arcades, built both above- and underground.[82] Shōtengai are seen across Japan, and Osaka has the longest one in the country.[83] The Tenjinbashi-suji arcade stretches from the road approaching the Tenmangū shrine and continues for 2.6 km (1.6 miles) going north to south. The stores along the arcade include commodities, clothing, and catering outlets.

Other shopping areas include Den Den Town, the electronic and manga/anime district, which is comparable to Akihabara; the Umeda district, which has the Hankyu Sanbangai shopping mall and Yodobashi Camera, a huge electrical appliance store that offers a vast range of fashion stores, restaurants, and a Shonen Jump store.

Osaka is known for its food, in Japan and abroad. Author Michael Booth and food critic François Simon of Le Figaro have suggested that Osaka is the food capital of the world.[84] Osakans' love for the culinary is made apparent in the old saying "Kyotoites are financially ruined by overspending on clothing, Osakans are ruined by spending on food."[85] Regional cuisine includes okonomiyaki (お好み焼き, pan-fried batter cake), takoyaki (たこ焼き, octopus in fried batter), udon (うどん, a noodle dish), as well as the traditional oshizushi (押し寿司, pressed sushi), particularly battera (バッテラ, pressed mackerel sushi).

Osaka is known for its fine sake, which is made with fresh water from the prefecture's mountains.[86] Osaka's culinary prevalence is the result of a location that has provided access to high-quality ingredients, a high population of merchants, and proximity to the ocean and waterway trade.[87] In recent years, Osaka has started to garner more attention from foreigners with the increased popularity of cooking and dining in popular culture.[88]

Other shopping districts include:

Entertainment and performing arts

 
The National Museum of Art, a subterranean museum of Japanese and international art
  • Osaka is home to the National Bunraku Theatre,[89] where traditional puppet plays, bunraku, are performed.
  • At Osaka Shochiku-za, close to Namba station, kabuki can be enjoyed as well as manzai.
  • At Shin Kabuki-za, formerly near Namba and now near Uehommachi area, enka concerts and Japanese dramas are performed.
  • Yoshimoto Kogyo, a Japanese entertainment conglomerate operates a hall in the city for manzai and other comedy shows: the Namba Grand Kagetsu hall.
  • The Hanjō-tei opened in 2006, dedicated to rakugo. The theatre is in the Ōsaka Tenman-gū area.
  • Umeda Arts Theater opened in 2005 after relocating from its former 46-year-old Umeda Koma Theater. The theater has a main hall with 1,905 seats and a smaller theater-drama hall with 898 seats. Umeda Arts Theatre stages various type of performances including musicals, music concerts, dramas, rakugo, and others.
  • The Symphony Hall, built in 1982, is the first hall in Japan designed specially for classical music concerts. The Hall was opened with a concert by the Osaka Philharmonic Orchestra, which is based in the city. Orchestras such as the Berlin Philharmonic and Vienna Philharmonic have played here during their world tours as well.
  • Osaka-jō Hall is a multi-purpose arena in Osaka-jō park with a capacity for up to 16,000 people. The hall has hosted numerous events and concerts including both Japanese and international artists.
  • Nearby City Hall in Nakanoshima Park, is Osaka Central Public Hall, a Neo-Renaissance-style building first opened in 1918. Re-opened in 2002 after major renovation, it serves as a multi-purpose rental facility for citizen events.
  • The Osaka Shiki Theatre[90] is one of the nine private halls operated nationwide by the Shiki Theatre, staging straight plays and musicals.
  • Festival Hall was a hall hosting various performances including noh, kyōgen, kabuki, ballets as well as classic concerts. The Bolshoi Ballet and the Philharmonia are among the many that were welcomed on stage in the past. The hall has closed at the end of 2008, planned to re-open in 2013 in a new facility.

Annual festivals

 
Tenjin Matsuri

One of the most famous festivals held in Osaka, the Tenjin Matsuri [ja], is held on July 24 and 25 (Osaka Tenmangū). Other festivals in Osaka include the Aizen Matsuri (June 30–July 2, Shōman-in Temple), the Sumiyoshi Matsuri (July 30–August 1, Sumiyoshi Taisha), Shōryō-e (April 22, Shitennō-ji) and Tōka-Ebisu (January 9–10, Imamiya Ebisu Jinja). The annual Osaka Asian Film Festival takes place in Osaka every March.

Museums and galleries

The National Museum of Art (NMAO) is a subterranean Japanese and international art museum, housing mainly collections from the post-war era and regularly welcoming temporary exhibitions. Osaka Science Museum is in a five storied building next to the National Museum of Art, with a planetarium and an OMNIMAX theatre. The Museum of Oriental Ceramics holds more than 2,000 pieces of ceramics, from China, Korea, Japan and Vietnam, featuring displays of some of their Korean celadon under natural light. Osaka Municipal Museum of Art is inside Tennōji park, housing over 8,000 pieces of Japanese and Chinese paintings and sculptures. The Osaka Museum of History, opened in 2001, is located in a 13-story modern building providing a view of Osaka Castle. Its exhibits cover the history of Osaka from pre-history to the present day. Osaka Museum of Natural History houses a collection related to natural history and life.

Sports

 
The Osaka Dome, home to the Orix Buffaloes and Hanshin Tigers

Osaka hosts four professional sport teams: one of them is the Orix Buffaloes, a Nippon Professional Baseball team, playing its home games at Kyocera Dome Osaka. Another baseball team, the Hanshin Tigers, although based in Nishinomiya, Hyōgo, plays a part of its home games in Kyocera Dome Osaka as well, when their homeground Koshien Stadium is occupied with the annual National High School Baseball Championship games during summer season.

There are two J.League clubs, Gamba Osaka, plays its home games at Suita City Football Stadium. Another club Cerezo Osaka, plays its home games at Yanmar Stadium Nagai. The city is home to Osaka Evessa, a basketball team that plays in the B.League. Evessa has won the first three championships of the league since its establishment. Kintetsu Liners, a rugby union team, play in the Top League. After winning promotion in 2008–09, they will again remain in the competition for the 2009–10 season. Their base is the Hanazono Rugby Stadium.

The Haru Basho (春場所, "Spring Tournament"), one of the six regular tournaments of professional sumo, is held annually in Osaka at Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium.

Another major annual sporting event that takes place in Osaka is Osaka International Ladies Marathon. Held usually at the end of January every year, the 42.195 km (26.219-mile) race starts from Nagai Stadium, runs through Nakanoshima, Midōsuji and Osaka castle park, and returns to the stadium. Another yearly event held at Nagai Stadium is the Osaka Gran Prix Athletics games operated by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) in May. The Osaka GP is the only IAAF games annually held in Japan.

Osaka made the bid for the 2008 Summer Olympics and the 2008 Summer Paralympics but was eliminated in the first round of the vote on July 13, 2001, which awarded the game to Beijing.

Osaka was one of the host cities of the official Women's Volleyball World Championship for its 1998, 2006 and 2010 editions.

Osaka is the home of the 2011 created Japan Bandy Federation and the introduction of bandy, in the form of rink bandy, was made in the city.[91] In July 2012 the first Japan Bandy Festival was organized.[92]

Media

 
NHK Osaka

Osaka serves as one of the media hubs for Japan, housing headquarters of many media-related companies. Abundant television production takes place in the city and every nationwide TV network (with the exception of TXN network) registers its secondary-key station in Osaka. All five nationwide newspaper majors also house their regional headquarters, and most local newspapers nationwide have branches in Osaka. However major film productions are uncommon in the city. Most major films are produced in nearby Kyoto or in Tokyo. The Ad Council Japan was founded in 1971 is based in Osaka, now it is the Osaka branch.

Newspapers

All five major national newspapers of Japan, The Asahi Shimbun, Mainichi Shimbun, Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Sankei Shimbun and Yomiuri Shimbun,[93] have their regional headquarters in Osaka and issue their regional editions. Furthermore, Osaka houses Osaka Nichi-nichi Shimbun, its newspaper press. Other newspaper-related companies located in Osaka include the regional headquarters of FujiSankei Business i.;Houchi Shimbunsha; Nikkan Sports; Sports Nippon, and offices of Kyodo News Jiji Press; Reuters; Bloomberg L.P.

Television and radio

The five TV networks are represented by Asahi Broadcasting Corporation (ANN), Kansai Telecasting Corporation (FNN), Mainichi Broadcasting System, Inc. (JNN), Television Osaka, Inc. (TXN) and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation (NNN), headquartered in Osaka. NHK has also its regional station based in the city. AM Radio services are provided by NHK as well as the ABC Radio (Asahi Broadcasting Corporation), MBS Radio (Mainichi Broadcasting System, Inc.) and Radio Osaka (Osaka Broadcasting Corporation) and headquartered in the city. FM services are available from NHK, FM OSAKA, FM802 and FM Cocolo, the last providing programs in multiple languages including English.

Publishing companies

Osaka is home to many publishing companies, including Examina, Izumi Shoin, Kaihou Shuppansha, Keihanshin Elmagazine, Seibundo Shuppan, Sougensha, and Toho Shuppan.

Education

Public elementary and junior high schools in Osaka are operated by the city of Osaka. Its supervisory organization on educational matters is Osaka City Board of Education.[94] Likewise, public high schools are operated by the Osaka Prefectural Board of Education.

Osaka once had a large number of universities and high schools, but because of growing campuses and the need for larger area, many chose to move to the suburbs, including Osaka University.[95]

Historically foreign expatriates in the Kansai region preferred to live in Kobe rather than Osaka. As a result, until 1991 the Osaka area had no schools catering to expatriate children.[96] Osaka International School of Kwansei Gakuin, founded in 1991, is located in nearby Minoh,[97] and it was the first international school in the Osaka area.[96] The Great Hanshin-Awaji earthquake of 1995 caused a decline in demand for international schools, as there were about 2,500 U.S. nationals resident in Osaka after the earthquake while the pre-earthquake number was about 5,000. American Chamber of Commerce in Japan (ACCJ) Kansai chapter president Norman Solberg stated that since 2002 the numbers of expatriates in Kansai were recovering "but the fact is there is still a persistent exodus to Tokyo."[98] In 2001 the city of Osaka and YMCA established the Osaka YMCA International School.[96]

Colleges and universities include:

Libraries

Learned society

Facilities

"Important cultural property" (重要文化財) after the name of a facility indicates an important cultural property designated by the country.

Leisure facilities and high-rise buildings

Historical site

  • Osaka Castle
  • Old Kawaguchi Reservation [ja]
  • Tekijuku (important cultural property)
  • Ruins of Naniwanomiya Palace [ja]
  • Hirano [ja]
  • Horijo [ja]

Parks and gardens

Ancient architecture

Modern architecture

  • Around Umeda
  • Osaka Central Post Office [ja] – Central Electric Club [ja] – Oe Building [ja]
  • Nakanoshima
  • Osaka City Central Public Hall [ja] (Important Cultural Property) – Osaka Prefectural Nakanoshima Library (Important Cultural Property) – Bank of Japan Osaka Branch Old Building
  • Around Osaka Castle
  • Old Mint Foundry Front Entrance [ja] (Former Youth Art Gallery) (Important Cultural Property) – Senpukan (Important Cultural Property) – Osaka Castle (registered tangible cultural property) – former Osaka City Museum – Osaka Prefectural Government Office [ja]
  • Kitasenba, Minamisenba
  • Kitahama Retro Building [ja] (Registered Tangible Cultural Property) – Osaka Securities ExchangeSumitomo Mitsui Banking Osaka (Sumitomo Building) – Arai Building [ja] (Registration Tangible Cultural Property) – Osaka Municipal Aizuku Kindergarten [ja] (Important Cultural Property) – Nippon Life Insurance Head Office Building – Osaka Club [ja] (registered tangible cultural property) – Sumitomo Mitsui Bank Osaka Central Branch – Koraibashi Nomura Building [ja] – Nippon Christian Church Naniwa Church [ja] – Aoyama Building [ja] (Registered Tangible Cultural property) – Fushimi Building [ja] (registered tangible cultural property) – former Konishi Gisuke store building [ja] (important cultural property) – Osaka Gas Building [ja] (registered tangible cultural property) – Ikoma Building [ja] (registered tangible cultural property) – Cotton Industry Hall [ja] (Important Cultural Property) – Meidi-Ya building – Miki Musical Instrument Headquarters [ja] (Registered Tangible Cultural Properties) – Harada Industry [ja]
  • Shimojoba (Nishisenba)
  • Japanese Christian Church Osaka Church [ja] (registered tangible cultural property) – Yamauchi Building (registered tangible cultural property) – Edobori Kodama Building (registered tangible cultural property)
  • Shinsaibashi/Namba
    • Daimaru Shinsaibashi – Takashimaya Osaka (Nankai Namba) – Takashimaya East Annex – Miki Instruments Main Store Kaiseikan [ja] (registered tangible cultural property)
  • Osaka Port/Kawaguchi
  • Tsuki Port Red Brick Warehouse [ja] – Sumitomo Warehouse Tsuki Port [ja] – MOL Mitsui Tsuki Port Building (Osaka Merchant Ship [ja]) – Japan Anglican Church Kawaguchi Christian Church (Registered Tangible Cultural Property) – Mitsui Warehouse [ja]Osaka Municipal Transportation Bureau (Osaka City Electricity Bureau)

Theaters and halls

Sport venues

 
Nagai Park is visible at center.

Religious facilities

Shrines
Temples
  • Shitennō-ji
  • Shitennoji Honbo Garden [ja]
  • Shomanin [ja]
  • Daienbutsuji [ja]
  • Taishokannonji [ja]
  • Isshin-ji
  • Taiyū-ji
  • Hozenji [ja]
  • Honganji Tsumura Betsuin [ja]
  • Shinshu Buddhist Otani-ha Sect Namba Betsuin Temple [ja]
Churches
  • United Church of Christ in Japan (UCCJ) Naniwa Church [ja]
  • Grand Cathedral of the Virgin Mary of Osaka [ja]
  • Japan Anglican Church
  • Japan Christian Church Osaka Fukushima Church
  • Japan Evangelical Lutheran Osaka Church
Mosques
  • Osaka Masjid

International relations

 
Tsūtenkaku, a symbol of Osaka's postwar reconstruction

Twin towns – sister cities

Osaka is twinned with:[100]

Friendship cooperation cities

Osaka also cooperates with:[100]

Business partner cities

Osaka's business partner cities, mostly in the Asia-Pacific region, are:[100]

Sister ports

Osaka's sister ports are:[100]

See also

References

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  2. ^ with undecided boundary, see Japanese wiki ja:大阪市
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  10. ^ templi www.treccani.it
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  22. ^ . January 29, 2018. Archived from the original on September 23, 2016. Retrieved September 19, 2016.
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on March 22, 2009. Retrieved March 21, 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
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Further reading

  • Benesch, Oleg (2018). (PDF). Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 28: 107–134. doi:10.1017/S0080440118000063. S2CID 158403519. Archived from the original (PDF) on November 20, 2018. Retrieved November 19, 2018.
  • De Lange, William (2021). An Encyclopedia of Japanese Castles. Groningen: Toyo Press. pp. 600 pages. ISBN 978-9492722300.
  • De Lange, William. (2022). The Siege of Osaka Castle: The Winter and Summer Campaigns. Groningen: Toyo Press. ISBN 978-949-2722-386
  • Gerstle, C. Andrew. Kabuki Heroes on the Osaka Stage 1780–1830 (2005).
  • Hanes, Jeffrey. The City as Subject: Seki Hajime and the Reinvention of Modern Osaka (2002) online edition
  • Hauser, William B. "Osaka: a Commercial City in Tokugawa Japan." Urbanism past and Present 1977–1978 (5): 23–36.
  • Hein, Carola, et al. Rebuilding Urban Japan after 1945. (2003). 274 pp.
  • Hotta, Chisato. "The Construction of the Korean Community in Osaka between 1920 and 1945: A Cross-Cultural Perspective." PhD dissertation U. of Chicago 2005. 498 pp. DAI 2005 65(12): 4680-A. DA3158708 Fulltext: ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
  • Lockyer, Angus. "The Logic of Spectacle C. 1970," Art History, Sept 2007, Vol. 30 Issue 4, p571-589, on the international exposition held in 1970
  • McClain, James L. and Wakita, Osamu, eds. Osaka: The Merchants' Capital of Early Modern Japan. (1999). 295 pp. online edition
  • Michelin Red Guide Kyoto Osaka Kobe 2011 (2011)
  • Najita, Tetsuo. Visions of Virtue in Tokugawa Japan: The Kaitokudo Merchant Academy of Osaka. (1987). 334 pp.
  • Rimmer, Peter J. "Japan's World Cities: Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya or Tokaido Megalopolis?" Development and Change 1986 17(1): 121–157. ISSN 0012-155X
  • Ropke, Ian Martin. Historical Dictionary of Osaka and Kyoto. 273pp Scarecrow Press (July 22, 1999) ISBN 978-0810836228.
  • Ruble, Blair A. Second Metropolis: Pragmatic Pluralism in Gilded Age Chicago, Silver Age Moscow, and Meiji Osaka. (2001). 464 pp.
  • Torrance, Richard. "Literacy and Literature in Osaka, 1890–1940," The Journal of Japanese Studies 31#1 (Winter 2005), pp. 27–60 in Project MUSE

External links

  • Osaka City official website (in English)
  • Official Osaka Tourist Guide
  • "Osaka" . The New Student's Reference Work . 1914.
  •   Geographic data related to Osaka at OpenStreetMap

osaka, this, article, about, city, japan, prefecture, with, same, name, where, this, city, located, prefecture, other, uses, disambiguation, japanese, 大阪市, hepburn, Ōsaka, pronounced, oːsakaɕi, commonly, just, 大阪, Ōsaka, oːsaka, listen, designated, city, kansa. This article is about the city in Japan For the prefecture with the same name where this city is located see Osaka Prefecture For other uses see Osaka disambiguation Osaka Japanese 大阪市 Hepburn Ōsaka shi pronounced oːsakaɕi commonly just 大阪 Ōsaka oːsaka listen is a designated city in the Kansai region of Honshu in Japan It is the capital of and most populous city in Osaka Prefecture and the third most populous city in Japan following Special wards of Tokyo and Yokohama With a population of 2 7 million in the 2020 census it is also the largest component of the Keihanshin Metropolitan Area which is the second largest metropolitan area in Japan 4 and the 10th largest urban area in the world with more than 19 million inhabitants 3 Osaka 大阪市Designated cityFrom top left Osaka Castle front and Osaka Business Park behind Tsutenkaku tower in Shinsekai Dōtonbori The Dainihongu building main sanctuary and Sorihashi bridge of Sumiyoshi Taisha shrine Shitennō ji temple front with Abeno Harukas behind Midōsuji Avenue and Nakanoshima island within downtown coreFlagEmblemLocation of Osaka in Osaka PrefectureOsakaLocation in the Kansai regionShow map of Kansai regionOsakaShow map of JapanOsakaShow map of AsiaOsakaShow map of EarthCoordinates 34 41 38 N 135 30 8 E 34 69389 N 135 50222 E 34 69389 135 50222 Coordinates 34 41 38 N 135 30 8 E 34 69389 N 135 50222 E 34 69389 135 50222Country JapanRegionKansaiPrefectureOsaka PrefectureIslandHonshuGovernment BodyOsaka City Council MayorIchirō Matsui ORA 1 Area Designated city225 21 km2 86 95 sq mi 2 circular reference Population March 1 2021 Designated city2 753 862 Rank3rd in Japan Density12 214 km2 31 630 sq mi Metro 3 2nd 19 303 000 2019 Keihanshin Time zoneUTC 9 Japan Standard Time TreeCherry FlowerPansyAddressOsaka City Hall 1 3 20 Nakanoshima Kita ku Osaka shi Osaka fu530 8201Phone number06 6208 8181Websitewww wbr city wbr osaka wbr lg wbr jpOsakaŌsaka in kanjiJapanese nameKanji大阪 obsolete 大坂HiraganaおおさかKatakanaオオサカTranscriptionsRomanizationŌsakaOsaka was traditionally considered Japan s economic hub By the Kofun period 300 538 it had developed into an important regional port and in the 7th and 8th centuries it served briefly as the imperial capital Osaka continued to flourish during the Edo period 1603 1867 and became known as a center of Japanese culture Following the Meiji Restoration Osaka greatly expanded in size and underwent rapid industrialization In 1889 Osaka was officially established as a municipality The construction boom accelerated population growth throughout the following decades and by the 1900s Osaka was the industrial hub in the Meiji and Taishō periods Osaka made noted contributions to redevelopment urban planning and zoning standards in the postwar period the city developed rapidly as one of the major financial center in the Keihanshin Metropolitan Area Osaka is a major financial center of Japan and it is recognized as one of the most multicultural and cosmopolitan cities in Japan The city is home to the Osaka Exchange as well as the headquarters of multinational electronics corporations such as Panasonic and Sharp Osaka is an international center of research and development and is represented by several major universities notably Osaka University Osaka Metropolitan University and Kansai University Famous landmarks in the city include Osaka Castle Osaka Aquarium Kaiyukan Dōtonbori Tsutenkaku in Shinsekai Tennōji Park Abeno Harukas Sumiyoshi Taisha Grand Shrine and Shitennō ji one of the oldest Buddhist temples in Japan Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Origins Jōmon and Yayoi period 2 2 Kofun period 2 3 Asuka and Nara period 2 4 Heian to Edo period 2 5 Meiji to Heisei period 2 6 21st century to present 3 Geography and climate 3 1 Geography 3 2 Climate 4 Cityscape 4 1 Neighborhoods 5 List of wards 6 Demographics 6 1 Dialect 7 Government 7 1 Developments 7 2 Energy policies 7 2 1 Nuclear power 8 Economy 8 1 Keihanshin 9 Transportation 10 Culture and lifestyle 10 1 Shopping and food 10 2 Entertainment and performing arts 10 3 Annual festivals 10 4 Museums and galleries 10 5 Sports 10 6 Media 10 6 1 Newspapers 10 6 2 Television and radio 10 6 3 Publishing companies 11 Education 11 1 Libraries 11 2 Learned society 12 Facilities 12 1 Leisure facilities and high rise buildings 12 2 Historical site 12 3 Parks and gardens 12 4 Ancient architecture 12 5 Modern architecture 12 6 Theaters and halls 12 7 Sport venues 12 8 Religious facilities 13 International relations 13 1 Twin towns sister cities 13 2 Friendship cooperation cities 13 3 Business partner cities 13 4 Sister ports 14 See also 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksEtymology EditŌsaka means large hill or large slope It is unclear when this name gained prominence over Naniwa but the oldest written evidence for the name dates back to 1496 5 6 By the Edo period 大坂 Ōsaka and 大阪 Ōsaka were mixed use and the writer Hamamatsu Utakuni ja in his book Setsuyo Ochiboshu published in 1808 states that the kanji 坂 was abhorred because it returns to the earth and then 阪 was used The kanji 土 earth is also similar to the word 士 knight and 反 means against so 坂 can be understand as samurai rebellion then 阪 was official name in 1868 after the Meiji Restoration The older kanji 坂 is still in very limited use usually only in historical contexts As an abbreviation the modern kanji 阪 han refers to Osaka City or Osaka Prefecture History EditFor a chronological guide see Timeline of Osaka Origins Jōmon and Yayoi period Edit In the Jōmon period 7 000 BCE Osaka was mostly submerged by the Seto Inland Sea and the small Uemachi daichi plateau 12 km long and 2 5 km wide located in the southern part of the city called Uehonmachi was a peninsula 7 The Uehonmachi area consisted of a peninsula with an inland sea Seto Inland Sea in the east 7 It is considered one of the first places where inhabitants of Japan settled both for the favorable geological conditions rich in fresh water and lush vegetation and because it was in a position difficult to attack from a military point of view 7 The earliest evidence of settlements in the Osaka area are the Morinomiya ruins 森ノ宮遺跡 Morinomiya iseki which is located in the central Chuo ku district 7 Buried human skeletons and a kaizuka a mound containing remains were found as well as shell mounds oysters and other interesting archaeological discoveries from the Jomon period 7 In addition to the remains of consumed food there were arrow heads stone tools fishing hooks and crockery with remains from rice processing It is estimated that the ruins contain 2 000 year old debris between the Jomon and Yayoi period The findings of the archeological sites are exhibited in an adjacent building 8 7 In the years between the end of the Jōmon period and the beginning of the Yayoi period the sediments that were deposited north of the Uemachi daichi peninsula plateau transformed the sea that stretched to the east into a lagoon which was called Kawachi 9 During the Yayoi period 300 BCE 250 CE permanent habitation on the plains grew as rice farming became popular 8 At the beginning of the third century CE the grand shrine of Sumiyoshi taisha was inaugurated near the harbor commissioned by consort Empress Jingu This Shinto shrine structure survived historical events 10 which inaugurated a new style in the construction of Shinto shrines called Sumiyoshi zukuri 11 The maritime panorama enjoyed from the shrine gardens inspired several artists and nowadays the representations of that type of landscape are called Sumiyoshi drawings Towards the end of the Yayoi period the Uemachi daichi plateau peninsula expanded further transforming the Kawachi Lagoon 河内湖 into a lake connected to the mouth of the Yodo River which had widened to the south 9 Kofun period Edit By the Kofun period Osaka developed into a hub port connecting the region to the western part of Japan The port of Naniwa tsu was established and became the most important in Japan 12 Trade with other areas of the country and the Asian continent intensified 12 The large numbers of increasingly larger keyhole shaped Kofun mounds found in the plains of Osaka are evidence of political power concentration leading to the formation of a state 8 13 The findings in the neighboring plains including the mausoleum of Emperor Nintoku was discovered nearby in Sakai testify to the status of imperial city that Osaka had reached Four of these mounds can be seen in Osaka in which important members of the nobility are buried They are located in the southern districts of the city and date back to the 5th century 12 A group of megalithic tombs called Mozu Tombs are located in Sakai Osaka Prefecture 14 Important works of the Kofun period is the excavation that diverted the course of the Yamato River whose floods caused extensive damage and the construction of important roads in the direction of Sakai and Nara 8 15 Maritime traffic connected to the port of Naniwa tsu increased in such a way that huge warehouses were built to stow material arriving and departing 8 Gallery Ancient shells found in the Morinomiya kaizuka Jomon period Asuka and Nara period Edit The Kojiki records that during 390 430 AD there was an imperial palace located at Osumi in what is present day Higashiyodogawa ward but it may have been a secondary imperial residence rather than a capital 16 In 645 Emperor Kōtoku built his Naniwa Nagara Toyosaki Palace in what is now Osaka 17 making it the capital of Japan The city now known as Osaka was at this time referred to as Naniwa and this name and derivations of it are still in use for districts in central Osaka such as Naniwa 浪速 and Namba 難波 18 Although the capital was moved to Asuka in Nara Prefecture today in 655 Naniwa remained a vital connection by land and sea between Yamato modern day Nara Prefecture Korea and China 8 19 Naniwa was declared the capital again in 744 by order of Emperor Shōmu and remained so until 745 when the Imperial Court moved back to Heijō kyō now Nara By the end of the Nara period Naniwa s seaport roles had been gradually taken over by neighboring areas but it remained a lively center of river channel and land transportation between Heian kyō Kyoto today and other destinations Sumiyoshi Taisha Grand Shrine was founded by Tamomi no Sukune in 211 CE 20 Shitennō ji was first built in 593 CE and the oldest Buddhist temple in Japan 21 Gallery Sumiyoshi Taisha Grand Shrine Shitennō ji Remains of Naniwa no Miya Palace 2017 Heian to Edo period Edit In 1496 Jōdo Shinshu Buddhists established their headquarters in the heavily fortified Ishiyama Hongan ji located directly on the site of the old Naniwa Imperial Palace Oda Nobunaga began a decade long siege campaign on the temple in 1570 which ultimately resulted in the surrender of the monks and subsequent razing of the temple Toyotomi Hideyoshi constructed Osaka Castle in its place in 1583 22 Osaka Castle played a pivotal role in the Siege of Osaka 1614 1615 Osaka was long considered Japan s primary economic center 23 with a large percentage of the population belonging to the merchant class see Four divisions of society Over the course of the Edo period 1603 1867 Osaka grew into one of Japan s major cities and returned to its ancient role as a lively and important port Daimyōs feudal lords received most of their income in the form of rice Merchants in Osaka thus began to organize storehouses where they would store a daimyō s rice in exchange for a fee trading it for either coin or a form of receipt essentially a precursor to paper money Many if not all of these rice brokers also made loans and would actually become quite wealthy and powerful Osaka merchants coalesced their shops around Dōjima where the Rice Exchange was established in 1697 and where the world s first futures market would come to exist to sell rice that was not yet harvested 24 The popular culture of Osaka 25 was closely related to ukiyo e depictions of life in Edo By 1780 Osaka had cultivated a vibrant arts culture as typified by its famous Kabuki and Bunraku theaters 26 In 1837 Ōshio Heihachirō a low ranking samurai led a peasant insurrection in response to the city s unwillingness to support the many poor and suffering families in the area Approximately one quarter of the city was razed before shogunal officials put down the rebellion after which Ōshio killed himself 27 Osaka was opened to foreign trade by the government of the Bakufu at the same time as Hyogo Town modern Kobe on January 1 1868 just before the advent of the Boshin War and the Meiji Restoration 28 The Kawaguchi foreign settlement now the Kawaguchi subdistrict is a legacy of the foreign presence in Osaka Osaka residents were stereotyped in Edo literature from at least the 18th century Jippensha Ikku in 1802 depicted Osakans as stingy almost beyond belief In 1809 the derogatory term Kamigata zeeroku was used by Edo residents to characterize inhabitants of the Osaka region in terms of calculation shrewdness lack of civic spirit and the vulgarity of Osaka dialect Edo writers aspired to samurai culture and saw themselves as poor but generous chaste and public spirited Edo writers by contrast saw zeeroku as obsequious apprentices stingy greedy gluttonous and lewd To some degree Osaka residents are still stigmatized by Tokyo observers in the same way today especially in terms of gluttony evidenced in the phrase Residents of Osaka devour their food until they collapse 大阪は食倒れ Ōsaka wa kuidaore 29 Gallery Osaka Castle first built in 1583 The Sumiyoshi matsuri in the 16th century Japanese painting of the Siege of Osaka 1615 Map of Osaka 1686 Dōjima Rice Exchange ukiyo e by Yoshimitsu SasakiMeiji to Heisei period Edit With the enormous changes that characterized the country after the Meiji Restoration 1868 and the relocation of the capital from Kyoto to Tokyo Osaka entered a period of decline From being the capital of the economy and finance it became a predominantly industrial center 30 The modern municipality was established 30 in 1889 by government ordinance with an initial area of 15 square kilometres 6 sq mi overlapping today s Chuo and Nishi wards Later the city went through three major expansions to reach its current size of 223 square kilometres 86 sq mi Osaka was the industrial center most clearly defined in the development of capitalism in Japan It became known as the Manchester and Melbourne of the Orient 30 In 1925 it was the largest and most populated cities in Japan and sixth in the world 30 The rapid industrialization attracted many Asian immigrants Indians Chinese and Koreans who set up a life apart for themselves 31 The political system was pluralistic with a strong emphasis on promoting industrialization and modernization 32 Literacy was high and the educational system expanded rapidly producing a middle class with a taste for literature and a willingness to support the arts 33 In 1927 General Motors operated a factory called Osaka Assembly until 1941 manufacturing Chevrolet Cadillac Pontiac Oldsmobile and Buick vehicles operated and staffed by Japanese workers and managers 34 In the nearby city of Ikeda in Osaka Prefecture is the headquarters of Daihatsu one of Japan s oldest automobile manufacturers Like its European and American counterparts Osaka displayed slums unemployment and poverty In Japan it was here that municipal government first introduced a comprehensive system of poverty relief copied in part from British models Osaka policymakers stressed the importance of family formation and mutual assistance as the best way to combat poverty This minimized the cost of welfare programs 35 During World War II Osaka came under air raids in 1945 by the United States Army Air Forces as part of the air raids on Japan On March 13 1945 a total of 329 Boeing B 29 Superfortress heavy bombers took part in the raid against Osaka According to an American prisoner of war who was held in the city the air raid took almost the entire night and destroyed 25 square miles 65 km2 of the city The U S bombed the city again twice in June 1945 and again on August 14 a day before Japan s surrender 36 In the decades after World War II the reconstruction plan and the industriousness of its inhabitants ensured Osaka even greater prosperity than it was before the war Osaka s population regrew to more than three million in the 1960s when large scale prefectural suburbanization began and doubled to two million by the 1990s The factories were rebuilt and trade revived the city were developed rapidly it became a major multicultural and financial center in the postwar period between the 1950s and the 1980s it is known as the Chicago and Toronto of the Orient This quote needs a citation Osaka Prefecture was chosen as the venue for the prestigious Expo 70 the first world s fair ever held in an Asian country Since then numerous international events have been held in Osaka including the 1995 APEC Summit The modern municipality which when it was established in 1889 occupied an area of just 15 km2 including the districts of Chuō and Nishi following three successive expansions has reached an area of 222 km2 It was one of the first cities in Japan to obtain designated city status in 1956 37 21st century to present Edit The plan to reorganize Osaka and its province into a metropolis like Tokyo met with stiff opposition in some municipalities particularly the highly populated Sakai He then fell back on a project that included the suppression of the 24 wards of Osaka thus dividing the city into 5 new special districts with a status similar to that of the 23 Special wards of Tokyo It was introduced by former mayor Tōru Hashimoto leader of the reform party Osaka Restoration Association which he founded The referendum of May 17 2015 called in Osaka for the approval of this project saw the narrow victory of no and consequently Hashimoto announced his withdrawal from politics 38 A second referendum for a merger into 4 semi autonomous wards was narrowly voted down by 692 996 50 6 39 According to the Forbes list of The World s Most Expensive Places To Live 2009 Osaka was the second most expensive in the world after Tokyo 40 By 2020 it slipped to 5th rank of most expensive cities 41 On March 7 2014 the 300 meter tall Abeno Harukas opened which is the tallest skyscraper in Japan 42 Gallery Skyscrapers in Umeda district Sennichimae area in 1916 View of Osaka after the bombing in 1945 Abeno Harukas tallest building in JapanGeography and climate EditGeography Edit Satellite image of Osaka The city s west side is open to Osaka Bay and is otherwise completely surrounded by more than ten satellite cities all of them in Osaka Prefecture with one exception the city of Amagasaki belonging to Hyōgo Prefecture in the northwest The city occupies a larger area about 13 than any other city or village within Osaka Prefecture When the city was established in 1889 it occupied roughly the area known today as the Chuo and Nishi wards only 15 27 square kilometres 6 sq mi that would eventually grow into today s 222 30 square kilometres 86 sq mi via incremental expansions the largest of which being a single 126 01 square kilometre 49 sq mi expansion in 1925 Osaka s highest point is 37 5 metres 123 0 ft Tokyo Peil in Tsurumi ku and the lowest point is in Nishiyodogawa ku at 2 2 metres 7 2 ft Tokyo Peil 43 Osaka has a latitude of 34 67 near the 35th parallel north which makes it more southern than Rome 41 90 Madrid 40 41 San Francisco 37 77 and Seoul 37 53 44 Climate Edit Osaka is located in the humid subtropical climate zone Koppen Cfa with four distinct seasons Its winters are generally mild with January being the coldest month having an average high of 9 3 C 49 F The city rarely sees snowfall during the winter Spring in Osaka starts off mild but ends up being hot and humid It also tends to be Osaka s wettest season with the tsuyu 梅雨 tsuyu plum rain the rainy season occurring between early June and late July The average starting and ending dates of the rainy season are June 7 and July 21 respectively 45 Summers are very hot and humid In August the hottest month the average daily high temperature reaches 33 5 C 92 F while average nighttime low temperatures typically hover around 25 5 C 78 F Fall in Osaka sees a cooling trend with the early part of the season resembling summer while the latter part of fall resembles winter Precipitation is abundant with winter being the driest season while monthly rainfall peaks in June with the tsuyu rainy season which typically ends in mid to late July From late July through the end of August summer s heat and humidity peaks and rainfall decreases somewhat Osaka experiences a second rainy period in September and early October when tropical weather systems including typhoons coming from the south or southwest are possible Climate data for Osaka 1991 2020 normals extremes 1883 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 19 1 66 4 23 7 74 7 24 2 75 6 30 7 87 3 32 7 90 9 36 1 97 0 38 4 101 1 39 1 102 4 36 2 97 2 33 1 91 6 27 2 81 0 24 5 76 1 39 1 102 4 Average high C F 9 7 49 5 10 5 50 9 14 2 57 6 19 9 67 8 24 9 76 8 28 0 82 4 31 8 89 2 33 7 92 7 29 5 85 1 23 7 74 7 17 8 64 0 12 3 54 1 21 3 70 3 Daily mean C F 6 2 43 2 6 6 43 9 9 9 49 8 15 2 59 4 20 1 68 2 23 6 74 5 27 7 81 9 29 0 84 2 25 2 77 4 19 5 67 1 13 8 56 8 8 7 47 7 17 1 62 8 Average low C F 3 0 37 4 3 2 37 8 6 0 42 8 10 9 51 6 16 0 60 8 20 3 68 5 24 6 76 3 25 8 78 4 21 9 71 4 16 0 60 8 10 2 50 4 5 3 41 5 13 6 56 5 Record low C F 7 5 18 5 6 5 20 3 5 2 22 6 2 6 27 3 3 5 38 3 8 9 48 0 14 8 58 6 13 6 56 5 10 4 50 7 3 0 37 4 2 2 28 0 4 5 23 9 7 5 18 5 Average precipitation mm inches 47 0 1 85 60 5 2 38 103 1 4 06 101 9 4 01 136 5 5 37 185 1 7 29 174 4 6 87 113 0 4 45 152 8 6 02 136 0 5 35 72 5 2 85 55 5 2 19 1 338 3 52 69 Average snowfall cm inches 0 0 1 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 4 Average precipitation days 0 5 mm 6 4 7 3 10 3 10 0 10 4 12 3 11 3 7 8 10 6 9 2 7 0 7 1 109 7Average relative humidity 61 60 59 58 61 68 70 66 67 65 64 62 63Mean monthly sunshine hours 146 5 140 6 172 2 192 6 203 7 154 3 184 0 222 4 161 6 166 1 152 6 152 1 2 048 6Average ultraviolet index 3 4 6 8 9 10 11 10 8 6 3 2 7Source Japan Meteorological Agency 46 and Weather Atlas 47 Cityscape EditOsaka s sprawling cityscape has been described as only surpassed by Tokyo as a showcase of the Japanese urban phenomenon 48 Central Osaka looking north from the Abeno Harukas observation deck 2014 Osaka skyline towards Umeda 2014 Osaka skyline at night from Umeda Sky Building 2008 Neighborhoods Edit Central Osaka is roughly divided into downtown and uptown areas known as Kita 北 north and Minami 南 south 49 50 Kita is home to the Umeda district and its immediate surrounding neighborhoods a major business and retail hub that plays host to Osaka Station City and a large subterranean network of shopping arcades 49 Kita and nearby Nakanoshima contain a prominent portion of the city s skyscrapers and are often featured in photographs of Osaka s skyline Minami though meaning south is essentially in Chuō Ward 中央区 Chuō ku and geographically central within the city 50 Well known districts here include Namba and Shinsaibashi shopping areas the Dōtonbori canal entertainment area Nipponbashi Den Den Town as well as arts and fashion culture oriented areas such as Amerikamura and Horie The 300 meter tall Abeno Harukas is the tallest skyscraper in the country since 2014 42 The business districts between Kita and Minami such as Honmachi and Yodoyabashi called Semba 船場 house the regional headquarters of many large scale banks and corporations The Midōsuji boulevard runs through Semba and connects Kita and Minami Further south of Minami are neighborhoods such as Shinsekai with its Tsutenkaku tower Tennoji and Abeno with Tennoji Zoo Shitennō ji and Abeno Harukas and the Kamagasaki slums the largest slum in Japan 51 The city s west side is a prominent bay area 52 which serves as its main port as well as a tourist destination with attractions such as Kyocera Dome Universal Studios Japan and the Tempozan Harbour Village Higashiosaka is zoned as a separate city although the east side of Osaka city proper contains numerous residential neighborhoods including Tsuruhashi KoreaTown as well as the Osaka Castle Park Osaka Business Park and the hub Kyōbashi Station Osaka contains numerous urban canals and bridges many of which serve as the namesake for their surrounding neighbourhoods 53 The phrase 808 bridges of Naniwa was an expression in old Japan used to indicate impressiveness and the uncountable Osaka numbered roughly 200 bridges by the Edo period 54 and 1 629 bridges by 1925 As many of the city s canals were gradually filled in the number dropped to 872 of which 760 are currently managed by Osaka City 53 Gallery Nakanoshima a boundary of Kita right and Semba left Umeda district 2019 Dōtonbori bridge Namba 2015 List of wards EditThere are currently 24 wards in Osaka Name Kanji Population Land area in km2 Pop density per km2 Map of Osaka1 Abeno ku 阿倍野区 107 000 5 99 18 440 2 Asahi ku 旭区 90 854 6 32 14 3763 Chuō ku 中央区 100 998 8 87 11 3864 Fukushima ku 福島区 78 348 4 67 16 7775 Higashinari ku 東成区 83 684 4 54 18 4336 Higashisumiyoshi ku 東住吉区 126 704 9 75 12 9957 Higashiyodogawa ku 東淀川区 176 943 13 27 13 3348 Hirano ku 平野区 193 282 15 28 12 6499 Ikuno ku 生野区 129 641 8 37 15 48910 Jōtō ku 城東区 167 925 8 38 20 03911 Kita ku administrative center 北区 136 602 10 34 13 21112 Konohana ku 此花区 65 086 19 25 3 38113 Minato ku 港区 80 759 7 86 10 27514 Miyakojima ku 都島区 107 555 6 08 17 69015 Naniwa ku 浪速区 74 992 4 39 17 08216 Nishi ku 西区 103 089 5 21 19 78717 Nishinari ku 西成区 108 654 7 37 14 74318 Nishiyodogawa ku 西淀川区 95 960 14 22 6 74819 Suminoe ku 住之江区 120 629 20 61 5 85320 Sumiyoshi ku 住吉区 153 425 9 40 16 32221 Taishō ku 大正区 62 872 9 43 6 66722 Tennōji ku 天王寺区 80 830 4 84 16 70023 Tsurumi ku 鶴見区 111 501 8 17 13 64824 Yodogawa ku 淀川区 182 254 12 64 14 419Demographics EditHistorical populationYearPop 1870271 992 1880292 636 7 6 1890483 609 65 3 1900881 344 82 2 19101 239 373 40 6 19201 798 295 45 1 19252 135 248 18 7 19302 477 959 16 1 19353 022 425 22 0 19403 300 714 9 2 19451 614 632 51 1 19502 015 350 24 8 19552 547 316 26 4 19603 011 563 18 2 19653 156 222 4 8 19702 980 487 5 6 19752 778 987 6 8 19802 648 180 4 7 19852 636 249 0 5 19902 623 801 0 5 19952 602 421 0 8 20002 598 774 0 1 20052 628 811 1 2 20102 666 371 1 4 20152 691 185 0 9 20202 752 024 2 3 Population numbers have been recorded in Osaka since as early as 1873 in the early Meiji era 55 According to the census in 2005 there were 2 628 811 residents in Osaka an increase of 30 037 or 1 2 from 2000 56 There were 1 280 325 households with approximately 2 1 persons per household The population density was 11 836 persons per km2 The Great Kantō earthquake caused a mass migration to Osaka between 1920 and 1930 and the city became Japan s largest city in 1930 with 2 453 573 people outnumbering even Tokyo which had a population of 2 070 913 The population peaked at 3 252 340 in 1940 and had a post war peak of 3 156 222 in 1965 but continued to declined since as the residents moved out to the suburbs 57 There were 144 123 registered foreigners the two largest groups being Korean 60 110 and Chinese 39 551 2021 years 58 Ikuno with its Tsuruhashi district is the home to one of the largest population of Korean residents in Japan with 20 397 registered Zainichi Koreans 59 60 61 Dialect Edit See also Kansai dialect The commonly spoken dialect of this area is Osaka ben a typical sub dialect of Kansai ben Of the many other particularities that characterize Osaka ben examples include using the copula ya instead of da and the suffix hen instead of nai in negative verb forms Government EditLocal administrationThe Mayor and the Council Osaka City HallMayor Ichiro MatsuiVice Mayors Toru Takahashi Shin Asakawa Tsuyoshi YamamotoCity CouncilPresident Toshifumi Tagaya LDP Members 83 councilors 7 vacant Factions Osaka Restoration Association 36 Liberal Democratic Party and Citizen s Club 20 Komei Party 19 Japanese Communist Party 9 Go OSAKA 1 Osaka Abe 1 Seats by districts Ward no of seats Abeno ku 4 Asahi ku 4 Chuō ku 2 Fukushima ku 2 Higashinari ku 3 Higashisumiyoshi ku 5 Higashiyodogawa ku 6 Hirano ku 6 Ikuno ku 5 Jōtō ku 5 Kita ku 3 Konohana ku 3 Minato ku 3 Miyakojima ku 3 Naniwa ku 2 Nishi ku 2 Nishinari ku 5 Nishiyodogawa ku 3 Suminoe ku 4 Sumiyoshi ku 6 Taishō ku 3 Tennōji ku 2 Tsurumi ku 3 Yodogawa ku 5 WebsiteOsaka City CouncilNote As of October 27 2017See also Local Autonomy Law Municipalities of Japan and Politics of Osaka City The Osaka City Council is the city s local government formed under the Local Autonomy Law The council has eighty nine seats allocated to the twenty four wards proportional to their population and re elected by the citizens every four years The council elects its president and Vice President Toshifumi Tagaya LDP is the current and 104th president since May 2008 The mayor of the city is directly elected by the citizens every four years as well in accordance with the Local Autonomy Law Tōru Hashimoto former governor of Osaka Prefecture is the 19th mayor of Osaka since 2011 The mayor is supported by two vice mayors currently Akira Morishita and Takashi Kashiwagi who are appointed by him in accordance with the city bylaw 62 Osaka also houses several agencies of the Japanese government Below is a list of governmental offices housed in Osaka Japan Coast Guard Fifth Regional Headquarters Japan Fair Trade Commission Kinki Chugoku Shikoku Office Kinki Regional Finance Bureau Kinki Regional Economy Trade and Industry Bureau Kinki Regional Transportation Bureau Kinki Communications Bureau Kinki Regional Development Bureau Kinki Regional Police Bureau Ministry of Foreign Affairs Osaka Office Osaka Customs Osaka District Court Osaka Family Court Osaka High Court Osaka Immigration Osaka Labour Bureau Osaka Meteorological Observatory Osaka Public Prosecutors Office Osaka Regional Aerospace Bureau Osaka Regional Law Bureau Osaka Regional Taxation Bureau Osaka Summary Court Developments Edit In July 2012 a joint multi party bill was submitted to the Diet that would allow for implementation of the Osaka Metropolis plan as pursued by the mayor of Osaka city the governor of Osaka and their party If implemented Osaka City neighboring Sakai City and possibly other surrounding municipalities would dissolve and be reorganized as four special wards of Osaka prefecture similar to former Tokyo City s successor wards within Tokyo prefecture Special wards are municipal level administrative units that leave some otherwise municipal administrative responsibilities and revenues to the prefectural administration 63 In October 2018 the city of Osaka officially ended 64 its sister city relationship with San Francisco in the United States after the latter permitted a monument memorializing comfort women to remain on a city owned property circulating in the process a 10 page 3 800 word letter in English addressed to San Francisco mayor London Breed 65 On November 1 2020 a second referendum to merge Osaka s 24 wards into 4 semi autonomous wards was narrowly voted down There were 692 996 50 6 votes against and 675 829 49 4 votes supported it 39 Osaka mayor and Osaka Ishin co leader Ichiro Matsui said he would resign when his term ends in 2023 39 Energy policies Edit Nuclear power Edit On February 27 2012 three Kansai cities Kyoto Osaka and Kobe jointly asked Kansai Electric Power Company to break its dependence on nuclear power In a letter to KEPCO they also requested to disclose information on the demand and supply of electricity and for lower and stable prices The three cities were stockholders of the plant Osaka owned 9 of the shares while Kobe had 3 and Kyoto 0 45 Toru Hashimoto the mayor of Osaka announced a proposal to minimize the dependence on nuclear power for the shareholders meeting in June 2012 66 On March 18 2012 the city of Osaka decided as largest shareholder of Kansai Electric Power Co that at the next shareholders meeting in June 2012 it would demand a series of changes that Kansai Electric would be split into two companies separating power generation from power transmission a reduction of the number of the utility s executives and employees the implementation of absolutely secure measurements to ensuring the safety of the nuclear facilities the disposing of spent fuel the installation of new kind of thermal power generation to secure non nuclear supply of energy selling all unnecessary assets including the stock holdings of KEPCO In this action Osaka had secured the support of two other cities and shareholders Kyoto and Kobe but with their combined voting rights of 12 5 percent they were not certain of the ultimate outcome because for this two thirds of the shareholders would be needed to agree to revise the corporate charter 67 At a meeting held on April 10 2012 by the energy strategy council formed by the city of Osaka and the governments of the prefectures it became clear that at the end of the fiscal year 2011 some 69 employees of Kansai Electric Power Company were former public servants Amakudari was the Japanese name for this practice of rewarding by hiring officials that formerly controlled and supervised the firm Such people included the following 13 ex officials of the Ministry of Land Infrastructure Transport and Tourism 3 ex officials of the Ministry of Economy Trade and Industry 2 ex officials of the Ministry of the Environment 16 former policemen 10 former fire fighters 13 former civil engineers Besides this it became known that Kansai Electric had done about 600 external financial donations to a total sum of about 1 695 billion yen 70 donations were paid to local governments to a total of 699 million yen 100 donations to public service organizations 443 million yen 430 donations to various organizations and foundations a total of 553 million yenDuring this meeting some 8 conditions were compiled that needed to be fulfilled before a restart of the No 3 and No 4 reactors Oi Nuclear Power Plant the consent of the local people and government within 100 kilometer from the plant the installation of a new independent regulatory agency a nuclear safety agreement the establishment of new nuclear safety standards stress tests and evaluations based on these new safety rules 68 Economy EditMain articles Hanshin Industrial Region and Keihanshin industrial region A street in Umeda Osaka The gross city product of Osaka in fiscal year 2004 was 21 3 trillion an increase of 1 2 over the previous year The figure accounts for about 55 of the total output in the Osaka Prefecture and 26 5 in the Kinki region In 2004 commerce services and manufacturing have been the three major industries accounting for 30 26 and 11 of the total respectively The per capita income in the city was about 3 3 million 10 higher than that of the Osaka Prefecture 69 MasterCard Worldwide reported that Osaka ranks 19th among the world s leading cities and plays an important role in the global economy 70 Osaka s GDP per capita Nominal was 59 958 1 120 13 71 72 However by 2020 Osaka ranked as the 5th most expensive city due to flatlining consumer prices and government subsidies of public transportation 41 Osaka Exchange in the Kitahama district of Osaka Historically Osaka was the center of commerce in Japan especially in the middle and pre modern ages Nomura Securities the first brokerage firm in Japan was founded in the city in 1925 and Osaka still houses a leading futures exchange Many major companies have since moved their main offices to Tokyo However several major companies such as Panasonic Sharp and Sanyo are still headquartered in Osaka Recently the city began a program headed by mayor Junichi Seki to attract domestic and foreign investment 73 In the 2017 Global Financial Centres Index Osaka was ranked as having the 15th most competitive financial center in the world and fifth most competitive in Asia after Singapore Hong Kong Tokyo and Shanghai 74 The Osaka Securities Exchange specializing in derivatives such as Nikkei 225 futures is based in Osaka The merger with JASDAQ will help the Osaka Securities Exchange become the largest exchange in Japan for start up companies 75 According to global consulting firm Mercer Osaka was the second most expensive city for expatriate employees in the world in 2009 It jumped up nine places from 11th place in 2008 and was the eighth most expensive city in 2007 However it was not ranked in the top ten places of the list in 2013 76 77 The Economist Intelligence Unit EIU ranked Osaka as the second most expensive city in the world in its 2013 Cost of Living study 78 Keihanshin Edit Greater Osaka without Kyoto Metropolitan Employment Area Keihanshin with Osaka red Kobe green and Kyoto blue Osaka is part of the metropolitan region called Keihanshin aka Greater Osaka in the Kansai region The Keihanshin region includes the prefectures of Osaka Kyoto Hyōgo Kobe Nara Shiga Wakayama Sakai 4 The Keihanshin region has a population as of 2015 update of 19 303 000 15 of Japan s population which covers 13 228 km2 5 107 sq mi 3 It is ranked the second most urban region in Japan after the Greater Tokyo area and 10th largest urban area in the world 3 Keihanshin has a GDP of approximately 953 9 billion in 2012 16th largest in the world 79 Osaka Kobe has a GDP of 681 billion 2015 which is a bit more than Paris or Greater London 80 Transportation EditMain article Transport in Keihanshin Map of Osaka Metro system Greater Osaka has an extensive network of railway lines comparable to that of Greater Tokyo Major stations within the city include Umeda 梅田 Namba 難波 Shinsaibashi 心斎橋 Tennōji 天王寺 Kyōbashi 京橋 and Yodoyabashi 淀屋橋 Osaka connects to its surrounding cities and suburbs via the JR West Urban Network as well as numerous private lines such as Keihan Electric Railway Hankyu Railway Hanshin Electric Railway Kintetsu Railway and Nankai Electric Railway The Osaka Metro system alone ranks 8th in the world by annual passenger ridership serving over 912 million people annually a quarter of Greater Osaka Rail System s 4 billion annual riders despite being only 8 of more than 70 lines in the metro area All Shinkansen trains including Nozomi stop at Shin Osaka Station and provide access to other major cities in Japan such as Kobe Kyoto Nagoya Yokohama and Tokyo Regular bus services are provided by Osaka City Bus as well Hankyu Hanshin and Kintetsu providing a dense network covering most parts of the city Osaka is served by two airports situated just outside of the city Kansai International Airport IATA KIX which handles primarily international passenger flights and Osaka International Airport IATA ITM which handles mostly domestic services and some international cargo flights Due to its geographical position Osaka s international ferry connections are far greater than that of Tokyo with international service to Shanghai Tianjin Korea along with domestic routes to Kitakyushu Kagoshima Miyazaki and Okinawa Culture and lifestyle Edit A chef prepares for the evening rush in Umeda The Glico Man among numerous signboards at Dōtonbori Grand Front Osaka Chayamachi district in Kita ku Amerikamura in Chuo ku Nipponbashi in Naniwa ku Shopping and food Edit Osaka has a large number of wholesalers and retail shops 25 228 and 34 707 respectively in 2004 according to the city statistics 81 Many of them are concentrated in the wards of Chuō 10 468 shops and Kita 6 335 shops Types of shops vary from malls to conventional shōtengai shopping arcades built both above and underground 82 Shōtengai are seen across Japan and Osaka has the longest one in the country 83 The Tenjinbashi suji arcade stretches from the road approaching the Tenmangu shrine and continues for 2 6 km 1 6 miles going north to south The stores along the arcade include commodities clothing and catering outlets Other shopping areas include Den Den Town the electronic and manga anime district which is comparable to Akihabara the Umeda district which has the Hankyu Sanbangai shopping mall and Yodobashi Camera a huge electrical appliance store that offers a vast range of fashion stores restaurants and a Shonen Jump store Osaka is known for its food in Japan and abroad Author Michael Booth and food critic Francois Simon of Le Figaro have suggested that Osaka is the food capital of the world 84 Osakans love for the culinary is made apparent in the old saying Kyotoites are financially ruined by overspending on clothing Osakans are ruined by spending on food 85 Regional cuisine includes okonomiyaki お好み焼き pan fried batter cake takoyaki たこ焼き octopus in fried batter udon うどん a noodle dish as well as the traditional oshizushi 押し寿司 pressed sushi particularly battera バッテラ pressed mackerel sushi Osaka is known for its fine sake which is made with fresh water from the prefecture s mountains 86 Osaka s culinary prevalence is the result of a location that has provided access to high quality ingredients a high population of merchants and proximity to the ocean and waterway trade 87 In recent years Osaka has started to garner more attention from foreigners with the increased popularity of cooking and dining in popular culture 88 Other shopping districts include American Village Amerika mura or Ame mura fashion for young people Dōtonbori part of Namba district and considered heart of the city Namba main shopping sightseeing and restaurant area Shinsaibashi luxury goods and department stores Osaka market Umeda theaters boutiques and department stores near the train stationEntertainment and performing arts Edit See also Kamigata The National Museum of Art a subterranean museum of Japanese and international art Osaka is home to the National Bunraku Theatre 89 where traditional puppet plays bunraku are performed At Osaka Shochiku za close to Namba station kabuki can be enjoyed as well as manzai At Shin Kabuki za formerly near Namba and now near Uehommachi area enka concerts and Japanese dramas are performed Yoshimoto Kogyo a Japanese entertainment conglomerate operates a hall in the city for manzai and other comedy shows the Namba Grand Kagetsu hall The Hanjō tei opened in 2006 dedicated to rakugo The theatre is in the Ōsaka Tenman gu area Umeda Arts Theater opened in 2005 after relocating from its former 46 year old Umeda Koma Theater The theater has a main hall with 1 905 seats and a smaller theater drama hall with 898 seats Umeda Arts Theatre stages various type of performances including musicals music concerts dramas rakugo and others The Symphony Hall built in 1982 is the first hall in Japan designed specially for classical music concerts The Hall was opened with a concert by the Osaka Philharmonic Orchestra which is based in the city Orchestras such as the Berlin Philharmonic and Vienna Philharmonic have played here during their world tours as well Osaka jō Hall is a multi purpose arena in Osaka jō park with a capacity for up to 16 000 people The hall has hosted numerous events and concerts including both Japanese and international artists Nearby City Hall in Nakanoshima Park is Osaka Central Public Hall a Neo Renaissance style building first opened in 1918 Re opened in 2002 after major renovation it serves as a multi purpose rental facility for citizen events The Osaka Shiki Theatre 90 is one of the nine private halls operated nationwide by the Shiki Theatre staging straight plays and musicals Festival Hall was a hall hosting various performances including noh kyōgen kabuki ballets as well as classic concerts The Bolshoi Ballet and the Philharmonia are among the many that were welcomed on stage in the past The hall has closed at the end of 2008 planned to re open in 2013 in a new facility Annual festivals Edit Tenjin Matsuri One of the most famous festivals held in Osaka the Tenjin Matsuri ja is held on July 24 and 25 Osaka Tenmangu Other festivals in Osaka include the Aizen Matsuri June 30 July 2 Shōman in Temple the Sumiyoshi Matsuri July 30 August 1 Sumiyoshi Taisha Shōryō e April 22 Shitennō ji and Tōka Ebisu January 9 10 Imamiya Ebisu Jinja The annual Osaka Asian Film Festival takes place in Osaka every March Museums and galleries Edit See also Museums in Osaka The National Museum of Art NMAO is a subterranean Japanese and international art museum housing mainly collections from the post war era and regularly welcoming temporary exhibitions Osaka Science Museum is in a five storied building next to the National Museum of Art with a planetarium and an OMNIMAX theatre The Museum of Oriental Ceramics holds more than 2 000 pieces of ceramics from China Korea Japan and Vietnam featuring displays of some of their Korean celadon under natural light Osaka Municipal Museum of Art is inside Tennōji park housing over 8 000 pieces of Japanese and Chinese paintings and sculptures The Osaka Museum of History opened in 2001 is located in a 13 story modern building providing a view of Osaka Castle Its exhibits cover the history of Osaka from pre history to the present day Osaka Museum of Natural History houses a collection related to natural history and life Sports Edit The Osaka Dome home to the Orix Buffaloes and Hanshin Tigers Osaka hosts four professional sport teams one of them is the Orix Buffaloes a Nippon Professional Baseball team playing its home games at Kyocera Dome Osaka Another baseball team the Hanshin Tigers although based in Nishinomiya Hyōgo plays a part of its home games in Kyocera Dome Osaka as well when their homeground Koshien Stadium is occupied with the annual National High School Baseball Championship games during summer season There are two J League clubs Gamba Osaka plays its home games at Suita City Football Stadium Another club Cerezo Osaka plays its home games at Yanmar Stadium Nagai The city is home to Osaka Evessa a basketball team that plays in the B League Evessa has won the first three championships of the league since its establishment Kintetsu Liners a rugby union team play in the Top League After winning promotion in 2008 09 they will again remain in the competition for the 2009 10 season Their base is the Hanazono Rugby Stadium The Haru Basho 春場所 Spring Tournament one of the six regular tournaments of professional sumo is held annually in Osaka at Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium Another major annual sporting event that takes place in Osaka is Osaka International Ladies Marathon Held usually at the end of January every year the 42 195 km 26 219 mile race starts from Nagai Stadium runs through Nakanoshima Midōsuji and Osaka castle park and returns to the stadium Another yearly event held at Nagai Stadium is the Osaka Gran Prix Athletics games operated by the International Association of Athletics Federations IAAF in May The Osaka GP is the only IAAF games annually held in Japan Osaka made the bid for the 2008 Summer Olympics and the 2008 Summer Paralympics but was eliminated in the first round of the vote on July 13 2001 which awarded the game to Beijing Osaka was one of the host cities of the official Women s Volleyball World Championship for its 1998 2006 and 2010 editions Osaka is the home of the 2011 created Japan Bandy Federation and the introduction of bandy in the form of rink bandy was made in the city 91 In July 2012 the first Japan Bandy Festival was organized 92 Media Edit NHK Osaka Osaka serves as one of the media hubs for Japan housing headquarters of many media related companies Abundant television production takes place in the city and every nationwide TV network with the exception of TXN network registers its secondary key station in Osaka All five nationwide newspaper majors also house their regional headquarters and most local newspapers nationwide have branches in Osaka However major film productions are uncommon in the city Most major films are produced in nearby Kyoto or in Tokyo The Ad Council Japan was founded in 1971 is based in Osaka now it is the Osaka branch Newspapers Edit All five major national newspapers of Japan The Asahi Shimbun Mainichi Shimbun Nihon Keizai Shimbun Sankei Shimbun and Yomiuri Shimbun 93 have their regional headquarters in Osaka and issue their regional editions Furthermore Osaka houses Osaka Nichi nichi Shimbun its newspaper press Other newspaper related companies located in Osaka include the regional headquarters of FujiSankei Business i Houchi Shimbunsha Nikkan Sports Sports Nippon and offices of Kyodo News Jiji Press Reuters Bloomberg L P Television and radio Edit The five TV networks are represented by Asahi Broadcasting Corporation ANN Kansai Telecasting Corporation FNN Mainichi Broadcasting System Inc JNN Television Osaka Inc TXN and Yomiuri Telecasting Corporation NNN headquartered in Osaka NHK has also its regional station based in the city AM Radio services are provided by NHK as well as the ABC Radio Asahi Broadcasting Corporation MBS Radio Mainichi Broadcasting System Inc and Radio Osaka Osaka Broadcasting Corporation and headquartered in the city FM services are available from NHK FM OSAKA FM802 and FM Cocolo the last providing programs in multiple languages including English Publishing companies Edit Osaka is home to many publishing companies including Examina Izumi Shoin Kaihou Shuppansha Keihanshin Elmagazine Seibundo Shuppan Sougensha and Toho Shuppan Education Edit Kansai University Osaka Metropolitan University Public elementary and junior high schools in Osaka are operated by the city of Osaka Its supervisory organization on educational matters is Osaka City Board of Education 94 Likewise public high schools are operated by the Osaka Prefectural Board of Education Osaka once had a large number of universities and high schools but because of growing campuses and the need for larger area many chose to move to the suburbs including Osaka University 95 Historically foreign expatriates in the Kansai region preferred to live in Kobe rather than Osaka As a result until 1991 the Osaka area had no schools catering to expatriate children 96 Osaka International School of Kwansei Gakuin founded in 1991 is located in nearby Minoh 97 and it was the first international school in the Osaka area 96 The Great Hanshin Awaji earthquake of 1995 caused a decline in demand for international schools as there were about 2 500 U S nationals resident in Osaka after the earthquake while the pre earthquake number was about 5 000 American Chamber of Commerce in Japan ACCJ Kansai chapter president Norman Solberg stated that since 2002 the numbers of expatriates in Kansai were recovering but the fact is there is still a persistent exodus to Tokyo 98 In 2001 the city of Osaka and YMCA established the Osaka YMCA International School 96 Colleges and universities include Kansai University Morinomiya University of Medical Sciences Osaka Metropolitan University Osaka University of Economics Osaka Institute of Technology Osaka Jogakuin College Osaka Seikei University Osaka University of Arts Minamikawachi District Osaka Osaka University of Comprehensive Children education Osaka University of Education Soai University Tokiwakai Gakuen University Libraries Edit International Institute for Children s Literature Osaka 99 Osaka Prefectural Nakanoshima Library Osaka Municipal Central LibraryLearned society Edit The Japanese Academy of Family MedicineFacilities Edit Important cultural property 重要文化財 after the name of a facility indicates an important cultural property designated by the country Leisure facilities and high rise buildings Edit Universal Studios Japan OAP Tower Osaka Garden City ja Osaka Business Park Intex Osaka Tempozan Harbor Village ja Namba Parks Universal Studios Japan Asia Pacific Trade Center ja Osaka Prefectural Government Sakishima Building Umeda Sky Building Abeno Harukas Tsutenkaku Registered Tangible Cultural Property Festivalgate Historical site Edit Osaka Castle Old Kawaguchi Reservation ja Tekijuku important cultural property Ruins of Naniwanomiya Palace ja Hirano ja Horijo ja Parks and gardens Edit Utsubo Park Ogimachi Park ja Nakanoshima Park Osaka Castle Park Shirokita Park ja Sakuranomiya Park ja Yodogawa River Park ja Hakubo Memorial Park Tsurumi Ryokuchi ja Tennoji Park Nagai Park Sumiyoshi Park Suminoe Park ja Osaka Nanko Bird Sanctuary ja Keitaku Garden ja Gallery Utsubo Park Osaka Castle Park Sakuranomiya Park ja Yodogawa Riverside ParkAncient architecture Edit Sumiyoshi Taisha main shrine national treasure Modern architecture Edit This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is clarify list structure Please help improve this section if you can April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Around Umeda Osaka Central Post Office ja Central Electric Club ja Oe Building ja Nakanoshima Osaka City Central Public Hall ja Important Cultural Property Osaka Prefectural Nakanoshima Library Important Cultural Property Bank of Japan Osaka Branch Old Building Around Osaka Castle Old Mint Foundry Front Entrance ja Former Youth Art Gallery Important Cultural Property Senpukan Important Cultural Property Osaka Castle registered tangible cultural property former Osaka City Museum Osaka Prefectural Government Office ja Kitasenba Minamisenba Kitahama Retro Building ja Registered Tangible Cultural Property Osaka Securities Exchange Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Osaka Sumitomo Building Arai Building ja Registration Tangible Cultural Property Osaka Municipal Aizuku Kindergarten ja Important Cultural Property Nippon Life Insurance Head Office Building Osaka Club ja registered tangible cultural property Sumitomo Mitsui Bank Osaka Central Branch Koraibashi Nomura Building ja Nippon Christian Church Naniwa Church ja Aoyama Building ja Registered Tangible Cultural property Fushimi Building ja registered tangible cultural property former Konishi Gisuke store building ja important cultural property Osaka Gas Building ja registered tangible cultural property Ikoma Building ja registered tangible cultural property Cotton Industry Hall ja Important Cultural Property Meidi Ya building Miki Musical Instrument Headquarters ja Registered Tangible Cultural Properties Harada Industry ja Shimojoba Nishisenba Japanese Christian Church Osaka Church ja registered tangible cultural property Yamauchi Building registered tangible cultural property Edobori Kodama Building registered tangible cultural property Shinsaibashi Namba Daimaru Shinsaibashi Takashimaya Osaka Nankai Namba Takashimaya East Annex Miki Instruments Main Store Kaiseikan ja registered tangible cultural property Osaka Port Kawaguchi Tsuki Port Red Brick Warehouse ja Sumitomo Warehouse Tsuki Port ja MOL Mitsui Tsuki Port Building Osaka Merchant Ship ja Japan Anglican Church Kawaguchi Christian Church Registered Tangible Cultural Property Mitsui Warehouse ja Osaka Municipal Transportation Bureau Osaka City Electricity Bureau Theaters and halls Edit Izumi Hall ja Umeda Arts Theater Morinomiya Piloti Hall ja NHK Osaka Hall Osaka International Convention Center Osaka Shiki Theater ja Osaka Castle Music Hall ja Osaka jō Hall Orix Theater National Bunraku Theatre The Symphony Hall ja Theater BRAVA ja New Kabukiza ja Zepp Osaka Tenma Tenjin Hanjotei ja Namba Grand Kagetsu ja Festival Hall Osaka Gallery Izumi Hall ja Osaka jō Hall National Bunraku Theatre Tenma Tenjin Hanjotei ja Sport venues Edit Nagai Park is visible at center Ogimachi Pool ja Osaka Municipal Central Gymnasium Osaka Prefectural Gymnasium Maruzen Intec Osaka Pool Kyocera Dome Osaka Nagai Park Yanmar Stadium Nagai Yanmar Field Nagai Yodoko Sakura Stadium Maishima Sports Island Religious facilities Edit ShrinesSumiyoshi Taisha Osaka Tenmangu Goryo Shrine ja Zama Shrine ja Namba Shrine ja Ikukunitama Shrine Tamatsukuri Inari Shrine Kozugu Shrine ja Mitsu Hachimangu ja Namba Yasaka Shrine ja Shinmei Shrine ja Imamiya Shrine Abe Seimei Shrine ja Kumata Shrine ja Tsuyunoten Shrine ja Tsunashiki Tenjinsha ja Asahi Shinmeisha ja TemplesShitennō ji Shitennoji Honbo Garden ja Shomanin ja Daienbutsuji ja Taishokannonji ja Isshin ji Taiyu ji Hozenji ja Honganji Tsumura Betsuin ja Shinshu Buddhist Otani ha Sect Namba Betsuin Temple ja ChurchesUnited Church of Christ in Japan UCCJ Naniwa Church ja Grand Cathedral of the Virgin Mary of Osaka ja Japan Anglican Church Japan Christian Church Osaka Fukushima Church Japan Evangelical Lutheran Osaka Church MosquesOsaka MasjidInternational relations EditSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Japan Tsutenkaku a symbol of Osaka s postwar reconstruction Twin towns sister cities Edit Osaka is twinned with 100 San Francisco CA United States former partnership October 1957 October 2018 Sao Paulo Brazil since October 1969 Chicago IL United States since November 1973 Shanghai China since April 1974 Melbourne Victoria Australia since April 1978 Saint Petersburg Russia since August 1979 Milan Lombardy Italy since June 1981 Hamburg Germany since May 1989 Toronto ON Canada since June 1994 Friendship cooperation cities Edit Osaka also cooperates with 100 Budapest Hungary 1998 Busan South Korea 2008 Buenos Aires Argentina 1998 Dnipro Ukraine 2022 Business partner cities Edit Osaka s business partner cities mostly in the Asia Pacific region are 100 Auckland New Zealand Bangkok Thailand Hamburg Germany Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam Hong Kong China Jakarta Indonesia Kuala Lumpur Malaysia Manila Philippines Melbourne Victoria Australia Mumbai Maharashtra India Seoul South Korea Shanghai China Singapore Tianjin China Sister ports Edit Osaka s sister ports are 100 Port of Busan South Korea Port of Le Havre France Port of Melbourne Australia Port of San Francisco United States Port of Valencia Spain Port of Shanghai friendship port treaty Port of Valparaiso Chile Saigon Port VietnamSee also EditExpo 70 Expo 2025 List of metropolitan areas by populationReferences Edit Johnston Eric April 8 2019 Osaka leaders win in elections to swap roles but merger prospects unclear via Japan Times Online with undecided boundary see Japanese wiki ja 大阪市 a b c d Table 2 10 Population of Three Major Metropolitan Areas PDF Statistics Bureau of Japan p 21 Retrieved November 26 2019 a b 2015 Census Final Data Statistics Bureau of Japan Gyuichi Ōta 2011 The Chronicle of Lord Nobunaga Brill Publishers pp 153 154 ISBN 978 9004201620 Retrieved July 16 2019 Ring Trudy Watson Noelle Schellinger Paul eds 1996 Asia amp Oceania International Dictionary of Historic Places Routledge p 650 ISBN 1884964044 Retrieved July 16 2019 a b c d e f Uemachidaichi A journey to ancient osaka www osaka info jp May 1 2007 Archived from the original on December 28 2012 a b c d e f Historical Overview the City of Osaka official homepage Archived from the original on March 22 2009 Retrieved March 21 2009 Navigate to the equivalent Japanese page 大阪市の歴史 タイムトリップ20 000年 History of Osaka A timetrip back 20 000 years 1 Archived February 26 2009 at the Wayback Machine for additional information a b Hikotaro Kajiyama Minoru Itihara 1972 The Developmental History of the Osaka Plain 地質学論集 7 101 112 Archived from the original on December 1 2017 templi www treccani it Sumiyoshi Ward www city osaka lg jp April 21 2011 Archived from the original on December 1 2017 a b c Tezukayama Ancient Burial Mound www city osaka lg jp April 15 2014 Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Wada Stephanie 2003 Tsuneko S Sadao Stephanie Wada Discovering the Arts of Japan A Historical Overview ISBN 978 4 7700 2939 3 Retrieved March 25 2007 Enjoying Sakai Kofun Tombs Tumuli Sakai City Archived from the original on July 22 2011 Retrieved May 8 2011 Stephanie Wada 2003 Discovering the Arts of Japan A Historical Overview Kodansha International ISBN 978 4 7700 2939 3 Retrieved July 4 2010 大石慎三郎 日本の遷都の系譜 學習院大學經濟論集 第28巻第3号 学習院大学 1991年10月 31 41頁 NAID 110007523974 P 31 史跡 難波宮跡 財団法人 大阪都市協会 Naniwa Palace Site by Osaka Toshi Kyokai in Japanese Archived from the original on May 2 2007 Retrieved March 25 2007 This name was historically written as 浪華 or 浪花 with the same pronunciation though these renderings are uncommon today Peter G Stone and Philippe G Planel 1999 The constructed past experimental archaeology education and the public London Routledge in association with English Heritage p 68 ISBN 978 0 415 11768 5 歴史年表 History of Sumiyoshi taisha sumiyoshitaisha net Archived from the original on September 24 2015 Retrieved November 11 2019 Scheid Bernhard Religion in Japan Torii in German University of Vienna Retrieved February 12 2010 HISTORICAL OVERVIEW DISCOVER OSAKA INFO Osaka Visitors Guide January 29 2018 Archived from the original on September 23 2016 Retrieved September 19 2016 Osaka City Archived from the original on March 22 2009 Retrieved March 21 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Moss David A Kintgen Eugene January 30 2009 The Dojima Rice Market and the Origins of Futures Trading a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help A Guide to the Ukiyo e Sites of the Internet C Andrew Gerstle Kabuki Heroes on the Osaka Stage 1780 1830 2005 Ebrey Patricia Buckley Walthall Anne Palais James B 2006 East Asia A Cultural Social and Political History Houghton Mifflin Company p 400 ISBN 978 0 618 13384 0 Whitney Hall John Jansen Marius B 1988 The Cambridge History of Japan Cambridge University Press p 304 ISBN 978 0 521 22356 0 Richard Torrance Literacy and Literature in Osaka 1890 1940 The Journal of Japanese Studies 31 1 Winter 2005 pp 27 60 a b c d Osaka city Osaka info jp Archived from the original on March 6 2010 Retrieved May 5 2010 Chisato Hotta The Construction of the Korean Community in Osaka between 1920 and 1945 A Cross Cultural Perspective PhD dissertation U of Chicago 2005 498 pp DAI 2005 65 12 4680 A DA3158708 Fulltext ProQuest Dissertations amp Theses Blair A Ruble Second Metropolis Pragmatic Pluralism in Gilded Age Chicago Silver Age Moscow and Meiji Osaka 2001 Richard Torrance Literacy and Literature in Osaka 1890 1940 Journal of Japanese Studies 31 1 Winter 2005 p 27 60 in Project MUSE GM had early start in Japan but was hobbled by nationalism August 25 2008 Kingo Tamai Images of the Poor in an Official Survey of Osaka 1923 1926 Continuity and Change 2000 15 1 99 116 ISSN 0268 4160 Fulltext Cambridge UP Andy Raskin The Ramen King and I How the Inventor of Instant Noodles Fixed My Love Life Jacobs A J Japan s Evolving Nested Municipal Hierarchy The Race for Local Power in the 2000s Hindawi Urban Studies Research Vol 2011 2011 doi 10 1155 2011 692764 Archived from the original on March 21 2012 Retrieved March 23 2012 Hashimoto announces exit from politics after Osaka rejects merger plan in referendum May 19 2017 Archived from the original on November 27 2020 a b c Eric Johnston November 2 2020 Osaka referendum defeat raises questions about future of city s politics Archived from the original on November 2 2020 In Depth World s Most Expensive Cities To Live Forbes July 7 2009 Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved August 20 2016 a b The World s 10 Most Expensive Cities To Live In Forbes November 18 2020 Archived from the original on January 9 2021 Retrieved January 9 2021 a b Tallest high rise nears completion The Japan Times October 23 2013 Retrieved November 6 2013 http www city osaka jp keikakuchousei toukei G000 Gyh19 Gb00 Gb00 html permanent dead link Osaka Japan Geographic Information Latlong net April 2022 Archived from the original on May 6 2021 Retrieved April 22 2022 Agency 気象庁 Japan Meteorological 気象庁 過去の梅雨入りと梅雨明け 近畿 気象庁 平年値 年 月ごとの値 Japan Meteorological Agency Retrieved May 19 2021 Osaka Japan Detailed climate information and monthly weather forecast Weather Atlas Yu Media Group Retrieved July 9 2019 Discover Japan Lonely Planet 2010 pp 146 ISBN 9781741799965 a b Osaka Travel Kita Umeda a b Osaka Travel Minami Namba Kamagasaki Japan s biggest slum April 8 2014 Archived from the original on July 14 2014 Retrieved July 10 2014 Osaka Travel Osaka Bay Area a b Eiichi Watanabe Dan M Frangopol Tomoaki Utsunomiya 2004 Bridge Maintenance Safety Management and Cost Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Bridge Maintenance Safety and Management Kyoto Japan Taylor amp Francis p 195 ISBN 978 90 5809 680 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link More About Osaka Osaka City Government Archived from the original on April 2 2003 Japanese Imperial Commission 1878 Le Japon a l exposition universelle de 1878 Geographie et histoire du Japon in French Paris p 16 2005 Population Census Statistics Bureau Director General for Policy Planning Statistical Standards and Statistical Research and Training Institute Japan Retrieved February 18 2009 Prasad Karan Pradyumna Kristin Eileen Stapleton 1997 The Japanese City University Press of Kentucky pp 79 81 ISBN 978 0 8131 2035 5 大阪市外国人住民国籍別区別人員数 PDF Osaka City Retrieved July 16 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link 住民基本台帳人口 外国人人口 令和3年3月末日現在 Retrieved September 13 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link JOHNSTON ERIC June 29 2002 Tsuruhashi home of exotic Korea in Osaka The Japan Times Online The Japan Times Archived from the original on April 29 2011 Retrieved February 18 2009 Karan Pradyumna Prasad Kristin Eileen Stapleton 1997 The Japanese City University Press of Kentucky p 124 ISBN 978 0 8131 2035 5 Osaka City Council homepage City osaka lg jp Retrieved May 5 2010 The Japan Times July 31 2012 Bill to transform Osaka government jointly submitted to Diet Osaka cuts sister city ties with San Francisco over comfort women statue Global Voices Global Voices October 6 2018 Retrieved October 7 2018 Yoshimura Hirofumi October 2 2018 Archived copy PDF Letter to London Breed Mayor of San Francisco City of Osaka Archived from the original PDF on October 3 2018 Retrieved May 20 2019 a href Template Cite press release html title Template Cite press release cite press release a CS1 maint archived copy as title link The Mainichi Shimbun February 27 2012 3 major Kansai cities aim to break dependence on nuclear power Archived July 10 2012 at archive today The Mainichi Shimbun March 19 2012 Osaka aims to end Kansai Electric s nuclear power ops as shareholder Archived March 19 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Mainichi Shimbun April 10 2012 Kansai Electric affiliates had 69 ex bureaucrats employed as execs as of end of fiscal 2011 Archived April 14 2012 at the Wayback Machine 大阪市データネット 市民経済計算 Osaka City Datanet Osaka City Economy in Japanese Archived from the original on December 7 2006 Retrieved March 25 2007 Mastercard Global Leading Company in Payment Solutions Offering Credit Debit Prepaid Cards amp More PDF Archived PDF from the original on June 24 2008 Osaka GDP PDF Archived from the original PDF on August 22 2018 Retrieved August 22 2018 Osaka 2015 Population Osaka aims to stem exodus of firms to Tokyo Archived from the original on January 3 2007 Retrieved June 1 2016 The Global Financial Centres Index 21 PDF Long Finance March 2017 Archived from the original PDF on June 11 2017 経営に資する統合的内部監査 June 11 2008 大証との経営統合 ようやく決着 ジャスダック J CASTニュース J cast com Retrieved May 5 2010 Worldwide Cost of Living survey 2009 Mercer com July 7 2009 Archived from the original on July 25 2011 Retrieved May 5 2010 2013 Cost of Living Rankings Mercer Mercer LLC 2013 Archived from the original on July 25 2011 Retrieved February 23 2014 George Arnett Chris Michael February 14 2014 The world s most expensive cities The Guardian Retrieved February 23 2014 NationMaster com Brookings Institution report 2015 retrieved August 23 2015 大阪市データネット 1 主要指標 Archived from the original on May 10 2007 Retrieved February 24 2009 Reiber Beth Janie Spencer 2008 Frommer s Japan Frommer s p 388 ISBN 978 0 470 18100 3 2 Archived December 22 2008 at the Wayback Machine Booth Michael July 13 2009 Osaka the world s greatest food city The Guardian Shinbunsha Asahi 1979 Japan Quarterly Asahi Shinbunsha1954 Retrieved March 25 2007 Superior brand sake Food Library Kuidaore Osaka Archived from the original on March 27 2015 Retrieved July 18 2014 The Roots Food Library Kuidaore Osaka Archived from the original on March 27 2015 Retrieved July 18 2014 Osaka Food Guide Archived October 20 2014 at the Wayback Machine The City Lane National Theatre of Japan Ntj jac go jp Archived from the original on October 4 2002 Retrieved May 5 2010 劇団四季 サイトインフォメーション Theatres Shiki gr jp Archived from the original on August 13 2010 Retrieved May 5 2010 Bandy came to Japan Archived from the original on May 2 2012 BANDY Festival 2012 in OSAKA Archived from the original on October 16 2012 The five largest newspapers by number of circulation in Japan in alphabetical order Mooney Sean ebrary Inc 2000 5 110 Days in Tokyo and Everything s Hunky dory Greenwood Publishing Group pp 99 104 ISBN 978 1 56720 361 5 3 Archived March 10 2010 at the Wayback Machine 大阪市の教育史 History of Education in Osaka in Japanese Archived from the original on April 6 2009 Retrieved February 18 2009 a b c Stewart Alex educating kansai Archive The Journal of the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan Janaru Volume 40 Issues 7 12 The American Chamber of Commerce in Japan ACCJ 2003 p 43 School Profile 2014 2015 Archived March 6 2016 at the Wayback Machine Osaka International School of Kwansei Gakuin Retrieved on November 1 2015 Stewart Alex education kansai Archive The Journal of the American Chamber of Commerce in Japan Janaru Volume 40 Issues 7 12 The American Chamber of Commerce in Japan ACCJ 2003 p 41 4 Archived February 14 2008 at the Wayback Machine a b c d The City of Osaka s International Network city osaka lg jp Osaka Archived from the original on April 15 2021 Retrieved December 7 2020 Further reading EditSee also Bibliography of the history of Osaka Benesch Oleg 2018 Castles and the Militarisation of Urban Society in Imperial Japan PDF Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 28 107 134 doi 10 1017 S0080440118000063 S2CID 158403519 Archived from the original PDF on November 20 2018 Retrieved November 19 2018 De Lange William 2021 An Encyclopedia of Japanese Castles Groningen Toyo Press pp 600 pages ISBN 978 9492722300 De Lange William 2022 The Siege of Osaka Castle The Winter and Summer Campaigns Groningen Toyo Press ISBN 978 949 2722 386 Gerstle C Andrew Kabuki Heroes on the Osaka Stage 1780 1830 2005 Hanes Jeffrey The City as Subject Seki Hajime and the Reinvention of Modern Osaka 2002 online edition Hauser William B Osaka a Commercial City in Tokugawa Japan Urbanism past and Present 1977 1978 5 23 36 Hein Carola et al Rebuilding Urban Japan after 1945 2003 274 pp Hotta Chisato The Construction of the Korean Community in Osaka between 1920 and 1945 A Cross Cultural Perspective PhD dissertation U of Chicago 2005 498 pp DAI 2005 65 12 4680 A DA3158708 Fulltext ProQuest Dissertations amp Theses Lockyer Angus The Logic of Spectacle C 1970 Art History Sept 2007 Vol 30 Issue 4 p571 589 on the international exposition held in 1970 McClain James L and Wakita Osamu eds Osaka The Merchants Capital of Early Modern Japan 1999 295 pp online edition Michelin Red Guide Kyoto Osaka Kobe 2011 2011 Najita Tetsuo Visions of Virtue in Tokugawa Japan The Kaitokudo Merchant Academy of Osaka 1987 334 pp online edition Rimmer Peter J Japan s World Cities Tokyo Osaka Nagoya or Tokaido Megalopolis Development and Change 1986 17 1 121 157 ISSN 0012 155X Ropke Ian Martin Historical Dictionary of Osaka and Kyoto 273pp Scarecrow Press July 22 1999 ISBN 978 0810836228 Ruble Blair A Second Metropolis Pragmatic Pluralism in Gilded Age Chicago Silver Age Moscow and Meiji Osaka 2001 464 pp Torrance Richard Literacy and Literature in Osaka 1890 1940 The Journal of Japanese Studies 31 1 Winter 2005 pp 27 60 in Project MUSEExternal links Edit Look up 大阪 or Ōsaka in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Osaka category Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Osaka Osaka City official website in English Official Osaka Tourist Guide Osaka The New Student s Reference Work 1914 Geographic data related to Osaka at OpenStreetMap Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Osaka amp oldid 1132495159, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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