Best Attractions and Places to See in Seto, Japan
Seto Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in Seto. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Setofor You. Discover Setoas per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Seto.
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List of Best Things to do in Seto, Japan
Iwayado Park
Aichi Prefectural Ceramic Museum
Jokoji Temple
Michi no Eki Seto Shinano
Seto-gura Museum
Kamagaki no Komichi
Fukagawa Shrine
New Century Crafts Museum
Seto Hongyogama Museum
Kamagaki no Komichi Museum
THE CUT MIRROR / 2015 / Mirror Man - ミラーマン / Stanislav Müller / SETO/AICHI/NAGOYA / JAPAN
The Radiance of Stillness and Motion:
Bohemian Glass from the Collection of the Museum of Decorative Arts in Prague, Achi Prefectural Ceramic Museum, 2015/4/11
A Perfect Day to Explore Seto ― A Pottery Journey
Setoyaki is a pottery tradition with a thousand-year history.
Let's take the Meitetsu Railway's Seto Line on a tour of the city's unspoiled history and masterpieces.
HOT NEWS Tourism In Seto Aichi
Tourism In Seto Aichi. Seto (瀬戸市 Seto-shi?) is a city located in Aichi Prefecture, Japan.
As of May 2015, the city had an estimated population of 129,976 and a population density of 1,170 persons per km². The total area was 111.61 square kilometres (43.09 sq mi). It is located about 35 minutes from Nagoya by way of the Meitetsu Seto Line.
Japanese road with beautiful sky. Seto-Shi to Owariasahi-Shi drive
The sky was so beautiful that I had to record it. The video resolution ended up being decent. Forgive the squeaky clutch, I have an old vehicle.
The drive is about 4 kms, and goes from Seto-shi, (shi means town) an historical small town know for its pottery, to Owariasahi-shi, another small town. Both are next to Nagoya, a large city in central Japan.
Please do let me know if there is a particular place or thing you would like to see in/about Japan.
YWCAの遠足(2014年5月23日金曜日)(SUB ITA-ENG)
愛知県瀬戸市の陶磁資料館名古屋YWCA学院日本語学校
In gita con la scuola YWCA al museo delle ceramiche di Seto
YWCA's day trip to Aichi Prefectural Ceramic Museum in Seto
Soundtrack by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
Created with MAGIX Video deluxe MX Plus
Arita Tokichi - I Live in Japan 11
I live in Japan
Talking about my life in Japan
Cultural (and not so) and everyday experiences.
Eleventh Episode: The Arita Pottery Festival
This year's trip to the Arita Pottery Festival held every year during Golden Week in Arita, Saga prefecture.
Music: Eastern Thought by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Gun Barrel [MTB] - Seto City - Japan - 7_2010
Gun Barrel - Seto city. MTB. Fully wet and treacherous.
Many thanx to Irish and Gazza for the awesome day ^^
Shot using a Lumix Panasonic DMC-FT1 in HD. Autofocus is off.
First Day in Nagoya [Nagoya Pt. 1] (Travels in Japan Pt. 16)
Fresh off the bullet train and took some quick footage. Enjoy!
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VIDEO GAME (When Imaginary)
Nagoya (名古屋市 Nagoya-shi?) is the largest city in the Chūbu region of Japan. It is Japan's third-largest incorporated city and the fourth most populous urban area. It is located on the Pacific coast on central Honshu. It is the capital of Aichi Prefecture and is one of Japan's major ports along with those of Tokyo, Osaka, Kobe, Yokohama, Chiba, and Kitakyushu. It is also the center of Japan's third-largest metropolitan region, known as the Chūkyō Metropolitan Area. As of 2015, 2.28 million people lived in the city, part of Chūkyō Metropolitan Area's 9.10 million people.[3]
Oda Nobunaga and his protégés Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Tokugawa Ieyasu were powerful warlords based in the Nagoya area who gradually succeeded in unifying Japan. In 1610, Tokugawa Ieyasu moved the capital of Owari Province from Kiyosu, about seven kilometers (4.3 miles) away, to a more strategic location in present-day Nagoya.
Tokugawa period
During this period Nagoya Castle was constructed, built partly from materials taken from Kiyosu Castle. During the construction, the entire town around Kiyosu Castle, consisting of around 60,000 people, moved from Kiyosu to the newly planned town around Nagoya Castle.[5] Around the same time, the nearby ancient Atsuta Shrine was designated as a waystation, called Miya (the Shrine), on the important Tōkaidō road, which linked the two capitals of Kyoto and Edo (now Tokyo). A town developed around the temple to support travelers. The castle and shrine towns formed the city.
Industrialization
During the Meiji Restoration Japan's provinces were restructured into prefectures and the government changed from family to bureaucratic rule. Nagoya was proclaimed a city on October 1, 1889, and designated a city on September 1, 1956, by government ordinance.
Nagoya became an industrial hub for the region. Its economic sphere included the famous pottery towns of Tokoname, Tajimi and Seto, as well as Okazaki, one of the only places where gunpowder was produced under the shogunate. Other industries included cotton and complex mechanical dolls called karakuri ningyō.
Mitsubishi Aircraft Company was established in 1920 in Nagoya and became one of the largest aircraft manufacturers in Japan. The availability of space and the central location of the region and the well-established connectivity were some of the major factors that lead to the establishment of the aviation industry there.
World War II and later
Aerial photographs of Nagoya
Nagoya was the target of US air raids during World War II. The population of Nagoya at this time was estimated to be 1.5 million, fourth among Japanese cities and one of the three largest centers of the Japanese aircraft industry. It was estimated that 25% of its workers were engaged in aircraft production. Important Japanese aircraft targets (numbers 193, 194, 198, 2010, and 1729) were within the city itself, while others (notably 240 and 1833) were to the north of Kagamigahara. It was estimated that they produced between 40% and 50% of Japanese combat aircraft and engines, such as the vital Mitsubishi A6M Zero fighter. The Nagoya area also produced machine tools, bearings, railway equipment, metal alloys, tanks, motor vehicles and processed foods during World War II.
Air raids began on April 18, 1942, with an attack on a Mitsubishi Heavy Industries aircraft works, the Matsuhigecho oil warehouse, the Nagoya Castle military barracks and the Nagoya war industries plant.[6] The bombing continued through the spring of 1945, and included large-scale firebombing. Nagoya was the target of two of Bomber Command’s attacks. These incendiary attacks, one by day and one by night, devastated 15.3 square kilometres (5.9 sq mi) . The XXI Bomber Command established a new U.S. Army Air Force record with the greatest tonnage ever released on a single target in one mission—3,162 tons of incendiaries. It also destroyed or damaged twenty-eight of the numbered targets and raised the area burned to almost one-fourth of the entire city.[7][full citation needed] Nagoya Castle, which was being used as a military command post, was hit and mostly destroyed on May 14, 1945.[8] Reconstruction of the main building was completed in 1959.
In 1959, the city was flooded and severely damaged by the Ise-wan Typhoon.
瀬戸の町並み 4 窯垣の小径 【 うろうろ中部 】 愛知県 瀬戸市 Seto Aichi
瀬戸のグランドキャニオンが見たくて出かけました。
備前や常滑とは違う雰囲気で、あちこちでかわいいお宝がいっぱい見れます。瀬戸、大好き♪
瀬戸蔵ミュージアムはよく考えられたセンスのある素晴らしい展示だと思ったことと 鰻やさんのいい匂いと 無風庵の係りの女性の方の温かい気配り。・・・瀬戸、持ってるねぇ~と思いました。
愛犬のインテリア、作ってくれるらしいですよ*(^o^)/*
【 うろうろ中部 】
是非是非どうぞチャンネル登録お願いします。
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音楽は甘茶の音楽工房さんからお借りしております。
Nagoya | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
00:00:50 1 Etymology
00:01:34 2 History
00:01:43 2.1 Origin
00:02:17 2.2 Tokugawa period
00:03:06 2.3 Industrialization
00:04:18 2.4 World War II and later
00:06:46 3 Geography and administrative divisions
00:07:47 3.1 Wards
00:07:58 3.2 Climate
00:08:21 4 Demographics
00:09:32 5 Economy
00:09:50 5.1 Automotive industry
00:10:28 5.2 Aviation industry
00:11:31 5.3 Ceramics
00:13:32 5.4 Technology
00:14:26 5.5 Retail
00:14:51 5.6 Arts and crafts
00:15:10 5.7 Other
00:15:33 6 Transportation
00:17:07 7 Education
00:21:34 8 Culture
00:22:28 8.1 Museums
00:25:55 8.2 Theatres
00:26:57 8.3 Festivals
00:27:35 8.4 Dialect
00:28:06 8.5 Handicrafts
00:31:23 8.6 Cuisine
00:32:29 8.7 In popular culture
00:33:39 9 Sports
00:34:59 10 International relations
00:35:16 10.1 Twin towns – sister cities
00:36:11 10.2 Sister ports
00:36:49 10.3 Sister Airport
00:37:06 11 Notable people
00:37:15 11.1 Historical figures
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SUMMARY
=======
Nagoya (名古屋) is the largest city in the Chūbu region of Japan. It is Japan's fourth-largest incorporated city and the third-most-populous urban area. It is located on the Pacific coast on central Honshu. It is the capital of Aichi Prefecture and is one of Japan's major ports along with those of Tokyo, Osaka, Kobe, Yokohama, Chiba, and Kitakyushu. It is also the center of Japan's third-largest metropolitan region, known as the Chūkyō metropolitan area. As of 2015, 2.28 million people lived in the city, part of Chūkyō Metropolitan Area's 10.11 million people.
It is also one of the 50 largest urban areas in the world.
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Nagoya (名古屋市 Nagoya-shi?) is the largest city in the Chūbu region of Japan. It is the third-largest incorporated city and the fourth most populous urban area. It is located on the Pacific coast on central Honshu. It is the capital of Aichi Prefecture and is one of Japan's major ports along with those of Tokyo, Osaka, Kobe, Yokohama, Chiba, and Kitakyushu. It is also the center of Japan's third-largest metropolitan region, known as the Chūkyō Metropolitan Area. As of 2000, 2.27 million people lived in the city, part of Chūkyō Metropolitan Area's 8.74 million people.[3]The city's name was historically written as 那古野 or 名護屋 (both read as Nagoya). One possible origin is the adjective nagoyaka (なごやか?), meaning 'peaceful'. [1]
The name Chūkyō (中京, consisting of chū (middle) + kyō (capital)) is also used to refer to Nagoya. Notable examples of the use of the name Chūkyō include the Chūkyō Industrial Area, Chūkyō Metropolitan Area, Chūkyō Television Broadcasting, Chukyo University and the Chukyo Racecourse.Nagoya lies north of Ise Bay on the Nōbi Plain. The city was built on low-level plateaus to ward off floodwaters. The plain is one of the nation's most fertile areas. The Kiso River flows to the west along the city border, and the Shōnai River comes from the northeast and turns south towards the bay at Nishi Ward. The man-made Hori River was constructed as a canal in 1610. It flows from north to south, as part of the Shōnai River system. The rivers allowed for trade with the hinterland. The Tempaku River feeds from a number of smaller river in the east, flows briefly south at Nonami and then west at Ōdaka into the bay.
The city's location and its position in the centre of Japan allowed it to develop economically and politically.Oda Nobunaga and his protégés Toyotomi Hideyoshi and Tokugawa Ieyasu were powerful warlords based in the Nagoya area who gradually succeeded in unifying Japan. In 1610, Tokugawa Ieyasu moved the capital of Owari Province from Kiyosu, about seven kilometers (4.3 miles) away, to a more strategic location in present-day Nagoya.
Tokugawa period
During this period Nagoya Castle was constructed, built partly from materials taken from Kiyosu Castle. During the construction, the entire town around Kiyosu Castle, consisting of around 60,000 people, moved from Kiyosu to the newly planned town around Nagoya Castle.[4] Around the same time, the nearby ancient Atsuta Shrine was designated as a waystation, called Miya (the Shrine), on the important Tōkaidō road, which linked the two capitals of Kyoto and Edo (now Tokyo). A town developed around the temple to support travelers. The castle and shrine towns formed the city.
Industrialization
Nagoya became an industrial hub for the region. Its economic sphere included the famous pottery towns of Tokoname, Tajimi and Seto, as well as Okazaki, one of the only places where gunpowder was produced under the shogunate. Other industries included cotton and complex mechanical dolls called karakuri ningyō.
During the Meiji Restoration Japan's provinces were restructured into prefectures and the government changed from family to bureaucratic rule. Nagoya was proclaimed a city on October 1, 1889 and designated a city on September 1, 1956 by government ordinance.
World War II and modern era
Nagoya was the target of US air raids during World War II. The population of Nagoya at this time was estimated to be 1.5 million, third among Japanese cities and one of the three largest centers of the Japanese aircraft industry. It was estimated that 25% of its workers were engaged in aircraft production. Important Japanese aircraft targets (numbers 193,194,198, 2010, and 1729) were within the city itself, while others (notably 240 and 1833) were to the north of Kagamigahara. It was estimated that they produced between 40% and 50% of Japanese combat aircraft and engines. The Nagoya area also produced machine tools, bearings, railway equipment, metal alloys, tanks, motor vehicles and processed foods during World War II.
Air raids began on April 18, 1942 with an attack on a Mitsubishi Aircraft Works, the Matsuhigecho oil warehouse, the Nagoya Castle military barracks and the Nagoya war industries plant.[5] The bombing continued through the spring of 1945, and included large-scale firebombing.