Best Attractions and Places to See in Hirado, Japan
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List of Best Things to do in Hirado , Japan
Catholic Tabira Church
Francisco de Xavier Memorial Church
Hirado Castle
Hirado Ohashi
Ikitsuki Ohashi
Obae Lighthouse
Kawachi Toge Pass
Matsuura Historical Museum
Shiodawara Cliff
Ikitsuki Sunsetway
Saint Francis Xavier and the Roots of Christianity in Japan | nippon.com
Arriving in Japan in 1550, Jesuit priest Francis Xavier played a key role in the early spread of Christianity in the country. His missionary work included preaching in Hirado in the northwest of present-day Nagasaki Prefecture, where Christianity took root most firmly and “hidden Christians” preserved the faith during centuries of prohibition. Today Hirado is home to numerous historic churches, testifying to the enduring influence of Spanish and Portuguese missionaries.
Nagasaki Harmony 2 (English)
Introduction to Christianity in Nagasaki, the setting for Martin Scorsese's film Silence.
The Hidden Christian Sites in the Nagasaki Region was inscribed as World Heritage in July of 2018.
・World Heritage
・Nagasaki Pilgrimage Guidebook
・Learn more about the film Silence here
The history of Christianity in Nagasaki, Japan, spans 450 years and is one that deserves to be shared with the world. Entering Japan through Nagasaki, it flourished here more than any other places in the country.
Christianity survived despite a nationwide ban imposed in 1587.
After the lifting of the ban, Christianity flourished once again in the open.
Today, Nagasaki is a destination for many Christian pilgrims as it is home to the largest number of churches in Japan.
Rembrandt’s Collection of “Schilderachtig” (Painterly) Objects - Japan
Rembrandt’s Collection of “Schilderachtig” (Painterly) Objects - Japan
Rembrandt & Adriaen van Rijn lutes /Hans Meijer - lutes Johnson - Flatt pavan
Caccini-Amarilli
Dowland - Go Crystal Tears / Hendrickje & Martina Stoffels
Paula Bär-Giese - soprano
Maria den Hertog - mezzo soprano
Rembrandt printed his etchings on Japanese paper since 1647 to his last print in 1665.
Rembrandt would have chosen it because he liked to experiment with printing techniques tinge to this paper gives the print a deep , warm glow.
The VOC was known to have brought magnificent objects to the Netherlands in the 17th century.
Maki-e technique: various types of gold powder are dusted onto wet lacquer in varying degrees of fineness to produce pictures. The quality of this decorative technique is unprecedented and the opulence of the motifs and nuances in the sprinkled gold is enchanting. After 1641 no more Japanese lacquer work was made for foreign patrons. Dutch VOC servants were the only foreigners who were given access to the workshops where the most exclusive lacquer work was made. Before 1641, when exporting this exceptionally beautiful lacquer work from Japan was banned, they managed to ship twelve sublime objects to the Netherlands, the quality of which was immediately recognised in Europe.
THE DUTCH TRADING HOUSE IN HIRADO, 1609-1641
The Dutch received a permit to trade from Tokugawa Ieyasu, who in 1603 had bestowed upon himself the title of Shogun. In 1605, when some survivors of the `Liefde` arrived on a Japanese junk in Pattani in Thailand, this 'trade pass' was conveyed to Captain Matelieff - the uncle of Quaeckernaeck, one of the 'Liefde's' survivors. A short time before, in 1602, the Dutch had founded the East Indian Company (VOC), the idea behind this being to unite many smaller trading companies into the one powerful organisation which would make it easier to acquire vessels and dominate the trading world. The VOC can be seen as the world's first shareholder company. Besides trading, the Dutch government authorized the VOC to initiate contacts with foreign 'authorities'. A second trade permit received stated that the Dutch were to be allowed to trade in all Japanese ports and expressed the hope that many Dutch ships would do so. This document is today in the National Archives in the Hague. The Dutch were first able to comply with Tokugawa`s hopes in 1609, when two ships formed the first official Dutch VOC delegation to Japan. They arrived in Hirado and after presentation of an official letter from Maurits, Prince of Orange, the Dutch received official permission to open a trading post. This first trading post was founded by Jacques Specx on the island of Hirado on the north-west coast of Kyushu. Hirado was a convenient location for trade with Taiwan and China, but did not overly impress the Dutch because most wealthy merchants lived in nearby Nagasaki.
In the period 1600-1641, the Dutch could move around the country freely and enjoyed unrestricted contact with the Japanese. In Hirado they set up a foundry and built a well. They were impressed by the quality and competence of Japanese craftsmen, who were frequently hired by the Dutch. However, in the early period trade was not profitable due to the limited contacts with other VOC outposts. Furthermore, the Dutch had no trading centre in China and were thus not able to supply the Japanese with silk. This problem was addressed by piracy of heavily loaded Portuguese trading ships. The Portuguese understandably complained and the Japanese government responded by banning piracy in Japanese waters. The threats of interference caused the Shogun to gradually apply a stricter policy in contacts with foreigners, both the Southern Barbarians (Portuguese) and the Red-Haired Barbarians (Dutch). In 1614 Tokugawa Ieyasu issued a ban on Christianity and evicted missionaries and prominent Japanese Christians from Japan. This ban was strictly enforced and many Japanese Christians were martyred and had to flee or hide. In 1621 Japanese subjects were forbidden to leave the country and board foreign vessels without special passes, and soon afterwards all departures from the country were forbidden. In 1639 the children of foreign fathers and Japanese mothers were forced to leave and the daughter of Dutch head merchant Van Nijenroode of Hirado had to leave for Batavia, present day Jakarta in Indonesia. Such children were not allowed to have contact with the Japanese anymore - a ruling which led to tearful scenes when they had to be parted from their mothers. The Hirado City Museum displays a touching letter of the time written on kimono-silk, the so called Jagatara-bun by Koshioro. After 1657 the Japanese government relaxed the rules somewhat and family news ('onshin') was allowed. Cornelia van Nijenroode wrote `onshin` to her family in Hirado, which are still preserved in Hirado.
Fr. Emmanuel Charles McCarthy (part 2 of 2)
In Part 2, Fr. McCarthy uses the Nagasaki bombing, where an all Christian bombing crew led by a Catholic commander dropped the atomic bomb on the oldest and largest Catholic community in the orient, using the Nagasaki Cathedral as ground zero, as an example how the church is destroying itself by its acceptance and promotion of violence.
[ECAPC #17]
Dejima - Japan and Europe
In 1543, the history of direct contacts between Japan and Europe began with the arrival of storm-blown Portuguese merchants on Tanegashima. Six years later the Jesuit missionary Francis Xavier landed in Kagoshima. At first Portuguese traders were based in Hirado, but they moved in search of a better port. More info please visit:
Dejima
dejima ghost in the shell
dejima museum
dejima sumo
dejima agencies
dejima inc
dejima network
dejima dutch
dejima wharf
dejima nagasaki
nagasaki dejima wharf
dejima island
dejima fishing supplies
dejima japan
dejima in nagasaki
dejima-to
dejima inc
4/4 生月かくれキリシタン「おらしょ★聖歌」Ikitsuki hiding kirishitan'Oratio&Hymn'
生月町博物館・島の館:長崎県平戸市
Ikitsuki-cho museum Shimanoyakata : Hirado City Nagasaki Pref.
4/4 かくれキリシタン「ごしょう(おらしょ)聖歌」
Hiding kirishitan 'Gosyo(oratio)& Hymn'
出演:萩本氏、大石氏、川崎氏、土肥氏、大川氏(生月町壱部浦)
Appearance: Mr.Hagimoto, Mr. Oishi, Mr.Kawasaki, Mr.Doi, Mr. Okawa [Ikitsuki-cho Ichibu-bay]
解説:中園成生
Explanation: Shigeo Nakazono
「島の館」は「平戸オランダ商館」から車で20分です。
Chihira Junco「地平ジュンこ」7/8 Singing @ Odaiba (2017.3) [4K]
Android “Chihira Junco” (Toshiba)
Aqua City Odaiba, Tokyo, Japan
2017.3
Андроид «Тихира Дзюнко» (Toshiba)
Аква Сити Одайба, Токио, Япония
2017.3
アンドロイド「地平ジュンこ」(東芝)
AQUA CITYお台場 ◦ 東京 ◦ 日本
2017年3月
The song: Céline Dion — My Heart Will Go On
Nagasaki: Oura Church
I left in my lens cap blooper because I thought it was funny and we get some info from Miyuki while we are in the dark.
隠れキリシタン歌オラショ「ぐるりようざ」長崎県平戸市生月町壱部集落
2014/11/24 長崎県平戸市生月町博物館・島の館において隠れキリシタン信者によるオラショ(御誦)の公演が行われた。
2014/11/24 performance of chanting by Kakure Kirishitan (Hidden Christians) was held at the Shima-no-Yakata Museum in Ikitsuki island, Hirado, Nagasaki, Japan.
Pope at Te Deum: God does not choose us because of our 'brilliance'
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#11 長崎県 Nagasaki Pref ,Japan 日本一周撮影旅
Filmed in Nagasaki Pref,Japan on Nov 2017
2017年11月に撮影 日本一周11県目 長崎県
For best quality don't forget to select 4K.
どうぞ4K画質でお楽しみ下さい。
Please enjoy watching :D
------------------------------------------------------
Japan Theaters:
2017年7月20日より日本全国47都道府県を巡る撮影旅がスタート
主に、自然や田舎を撮影中
WORLD THEATERS :
Traveling around the World in 500 days on all continents from May 7, 2015 to September 17, 2016.
”地球×4K” 世界一周 500日間 7大陸+南極 2015年5月7日~2016年9月17日
Travel route / 世界一周移動ルート
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Filmed :
1)SONY PXW-FS5K
2)SONY α7R II
3)DJI Phantom 4
Edited :ZBook15 of HP
------------------------------------------------------
Support :
協賛/サポート
HP Japan Inc.
株式会社 日本HP
Sony Business Solutions Corporation
ソニービジネスソリューション株式会社
DJI JAPAN
DJI JAPAN 株式会社
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Nagasaki: St Maximillian Kolbe Museum part 1
St Maximillian Kolbe has been one of my favourite saints since childhood. I was very excited to be in one of the monasteries that he founded and look around his museum.
Urakami Cathedral - Nagasaki, Nagasaki, Kyushu-Okinawa, Japan
- Created at TripWow by TravelPod Attractions (a TripAdvisor™ company)
Urakami Cathedral Nagasaki
Read more at:
Travel blogs from Urakami Cathedral:
- ... At one point in the park I could see the Urakami Cathedral ...
- ... Across the valley from the park is the rebuilt Urakami Cathedral, which - while not especially picturesque now - has retained fragments of its ruins outside its entrance ...
- ... We then drove past the epicentre - this was where the Urakami Cathedral had stood and which has now been rebuilt - another park and the museum which houses everything to do with that period ...
Read these blogs and more at:
Photos from:
- Nagasaki, Nagasaki, Kyushu-Okinawa, Japan
Photos in this video:
- Urakami Cathedral in Nagasaki by Xerius from a blog titled Feudal Japan's window on the world
- Z15. Remains of Urakami Cathedral by Rich from a blog titled Giggling...
- Ruins of Urakami Cathedral by Mchao from a blog titled Nagasaki: Where Catholics go to Die
Sina goes Japan | Missionar werden in Japan
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Nagasaki | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
Nagasaki
00:01:14 1 History
00:01:23 1.1 Christian Nagasaki
00:07:13 1.2 Seclusion era
00:09:19 1.3 Meiji Japan
00:10:52 1.4 Atomic bombing of Nagasaki during World War II
00:14:42 1.5 After the war
00:15:55 2 Geography and climate
00:17:54 3 Education
00:18:03 3.1 Universities
00:18:32 3.2 Junior colleges
00:18:56 4 Transportation
00:19:41 5 Demographics
00:20:09 6 Sports
00:20:25 7 Main sites
00:22:38 8 Events
00:23:09 9 Cuisine
00:23:39 10 Notable people
00:24:00 11 Twin towns
00:24:48 12 See also
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The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
Nagasaki (長崎市, Nagasaki-shi, Japanese: [naɡaꜜsaki]) (listen ) is the capital and the largest city of Nagasaki Prefecture on the island of Kyushu in Japan. The city's name, 長崎, means long cape in Japanese. Nagasaki became a centre of colonial Portuguese and Dutch influence in the 16th through 19th centuries, and the Hidden Christian Sites in the Nagasaki Region have been recognized and included in the UNESCO World Heritage List. Part of Nagasaki was home to a major Imperial Japanese Navy base during the First Sino-Japanese War and Russo-Japanese War.
During World War II, the American atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki made Nagasaki the second and, to date, last city in the world to experience a nuclear attack (at 11:02 a.m., August 9, 1945 'Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)').As of 1 March 2017, the city has an estimated population of 425,723 and a population density of 1,000 people per km2. The total area is 406.35 km2 (156.89 sq mi).
Francis Xavier
Francis Xavier, SJ, born Francisco de Jasso y Azpilicueta (7 April 1506 – 3 December 1552), was a Roman Catholic missionary born in Xavier, Kingdom of Navarre (now part of Spain), and co-founder of the Society of Jesus. He was a study companion of St. Ignatius of Loyola and one of the first seven Jesuits who took vows of poverty and chastity at Montmartre, (Paris) in 1534. He led an extensive mission into Asia, mainly in the Portuguese Empire of the time. He was influential in evangelization work most notably in India. He also ventured into Japan, Borneo, the Maluku Islands, and other areas which had, until then, not been visited by Christian missionaries. In these areas, being a pioneer and struggling to learn the local languages in the face of opposition, he had less success than he had enjoyed in India. It was a goal of Xavier to extend his missionary preaching to China but he died in Shangchuan Island shortly before doing so.
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Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
【公式】ULTRA HD ~「水の都」島原~ 長崎
春間近の長崎県島原市をスマートホンの4Kカメラ片手に散策してみました。
古くから「水の都」と言われてきた島原市。
背後にそびえる眉山(まゆやま)や、雲仙山系(うんぜんさんけい)に降った雨水が、
長い時間(じかん)をかけて山を下り、地下水となって流れ、
市内一帯に湧く、湧水(ゆうすい)として、人々の生活を潤してきました。
島原を代表するかんざらしの店「銀水」は、ここ浜の川湧水にありました。
惜しまれながら閉店した店を、「しまばら観光おもてなし課」が、昨年8月、20年ぶりに復活させました。
敷地内に湧水の池を持つ、「しまばら水屋敷」は、明治時代に建てられた和洋折衷の古民家で、
旅人の癒しのスポットとなっています。
봄 곧 나가사키 현 시마 바라시을 스마트 폰의 4K 카메라 들고 산책 해 보았습니다.
옛부터 「물의 도시 로 알려져왔다 시마 바라시.
뒤에 우뚝 솟은 비잔 (まゆやま)와 운젠 산맥 (운젠 산케이)에 내린 빗물이
긴 시간 (차관)을 들여 산 아래 지하수가 흐르고
시내 일대에 솟는 샘물 (幽邃)로 사람들의 생활을 윤택하게했습니다.
시마 바라를 대표하는 寒晒し 상점 '실버 물'은 여기 바닷가 강 용수에있었습니다.
아까워하면서 폐점 한 가게를 「시마 바라 관광 대접과」가 지난해 8 월, 20 년만에 부활 시켰습니다.
부지 내에 용수 연못이있는 '시마 물 저택'은 메이지 시대에 지어진 和洋折衷의 고민가에서
여행자의 치유 명소가 있습니다.
I tried walking around Shimabara-shi, Nagasaki prefecture near spring, with a smartphone 4K camera.
Shimabara-shi has been told old city water city.
Rain water falling from the mountainous mountain (Mayuyama) rising behind and the Unzen Mountain Range (Yunzen saki)
It took a long time to go down the mountain, flowing as groundwater,
As spring water springs up around the city, I have been moistening people's lives.
Shimabara's representative brand-name shop Silverwater was here on the river spring water.
Shimabara sightseeing hospitality section was revived for the first time in 20 years last August.
Tabara Shrine with a spring pond in the premises is an old private house of Japanese and Western eclectic built in the Meiji era,
It is a healing spot for travelers.
春天长崎县岛原的接近我试图步行到4K摄像机一方面的一款智能手机。
岛原,它被称为“城市水”很长一段时间。
眉山高耸的背后(Mayuyama)和雨水,在云仙山脉瀑布(产经新闻云仙)
向下(时间)山在很长一段时间,流动变得地下水,
喷在城区,如泉水(退休和安静),一直滋润着人们的生活。
店“Ginsui”代表Kanzarashi岛原的,我们在这里度过了滨野河泉水。
备用的同时,“岛原旅游接待部门”是在去年八月,是恢复了20年来第一次在商店被关闭。
与现场的池塘的泉水,“岛原水屋”,在妥协的东方和西方之间的老房子,建在明治时代,
它已成为旅客的愈合现场。
Pilgrimage, a city of sunshine and gardens: What Nagasaki today offers
Pilgrimage, a city of sunshine and gardens: What Nagasaki today offers:
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gazes at the faithful from the Oura Cathedral. It’s a story of true, persistent faith. In 1865, after years of closure to the outside world, during which Japanese Christians (originally known as “kirishitan”) were persecuted and killed, Japan started reopening itself again. Oura Cathedral had just been built by French missionaries in Nagasaki, in honor of the first 26 martyrs of the faith who were executed in 1587. By his written account, one afternoon, Fr. Bernard Petitjean was visited by 15 men, women and children. These were “Hidden Christians” from nearby Urakami, who had secretly kept their faith going. The place had had over 250 years of isolation. ADVERTISEMENT Approaching the priest, a woman placed a hand on her chest and told Petitjean in a whisper, “Our hearts are the same as yours.” It is a story that takes on added poignancy inside the Cathedral, which stands atop a flight of stairs, a serene, white statue of the Virgin Mary, christened , standing in welcome at the door. A bust of St. John Paul II, the first Catholic pope to visit Japan, beside a garden It overlooks modern-day Nagasaki’s busy international port—there’s a massive cruise ship docked, visible from the historic Glover Garden—and features darkened wood interiors, stained glass windows, and a painting of the crucifixion of the 26 martyrs on one side of the altar. In a park below, a small Japanese garden with a bust of St. John Paul II commemorates the first ever visit of a Catholic leader to Nagasaki, in 1981. It may, indeed, be a modest church, but it was built by a people who had to fight for what they believed in, even at the risk of losing their lives. Nagasaki may not be some Filipinos’ idea of a pilgrimage site in the same vein as Fatima, Lourdes or Jerusalem, but its importance was recently highlighted in pop culture in the Martin Scorsese movie “Silence.” There’s a Kyushu Tourism booth at the 3rd Japan Travel Festival, Oct. 7-8, 10 a.m.-8 p.m., SM Mall of Asia. ADVERTISEMENT The port of Nagasaki, seen from the historic Glover Garden Years later, many of the churches that rose would be leveled by another persecutor, the atomic bomb, dropped here by the Americans on Aug. 9, 1945 (serendipitously, it turns out, but more on that later). Yet, this hilly place on the island of Kyushu has not just risen from the literal ashes; it is now also a progressive city full of sunshine and gardens, embraced by the ocean and very much preoccupied with promoting peace. The pace is slower than large metropolises like Tokyo and Osaka, the people are friendly, and they take their time. Christianity was introduced to Japan by the Jesuit priest Francis Xavier in 1549, and it flourished for almost 40 years. The Arima Christian Heritage Museum is partly a tribute to the most distinguished alumni of a seminary built there. Four teenage boys, known as the Tensho Embassy, were sent to Rome on an educational mission, and brought back a printing press used to produce books.
#Pilgrimage, #city, #sunshine, #gardens, #WhatNagasaki, #today, #offers
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