Hokkaido’s Museum of Northern People | Ainu and Inuit in Abashiri
This is one of the most highly recommended museums in the area! Where am I? Hokkaidō Museum of Northern Peoples
309-1 Shiomi, Abashiri-shi, Hokkaidō 093-0042
0152-45-3888
Northeast HOKKAIDO Guide PART 1 of 2: Abashiri | JAPAN | @Bianca_Valerio
Venture into some of Japan’s coldest adventure offerings in northeast Hokkaido where Bianca Valerio takes you all around Abashiri: from the Abashiri prison, to the Okhotsk winter festival, the iconic drift Ice Cruise and more.
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Ainu Museum - Understanding the Native People of Hokkaido
Join me as we visit the Ainu Museum and learn about the Native people of Hokkaido. Today we visit the Asahikawa City Museum and get a fascinating look about the native people of Northern Japan.Understanding of the Native People of Hokkaido.
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My Northern Hokkaido Summer Odyssey PART 3
Travel to Japan's Northern Hokkaido region's Abashiri city and learn what happens during the harsh winters. Visit the Drift Ice museum (Okhotsk Ryuhyo Museum) where a damp towel will freeze instantly, roam the Hokkaido Museum of Northern Peoples, and finally, see what lurks under the winter sea. Beauty can be so fatal.
Background music: Piano_tic Romance by Mike Vekris provided by Windswept by Kevin MacLeod at
Ainu Cultural Museum Hokkaido
Pure Ainu are hard to find now because many Ainu married Japanese after the late 19th century, when the Meiji government enforced the assimilation policy.
This meant that the Ainu village will bring you closer to how life was lived by true land owners of Hokkaido.
Hokkaido Regional Airport | Memanbetsu, Abashiri
Welcome to Abashiri 網走市 (North East Hokkaido)
This is a quick tour around the Memanbetsu Airport.
Buses from the airport to Abashiri costs ¥910 ($8.50) and takes about 40-45 min
I am here
There are 4-5 flights a day from Tokyo with JAL costing ¥16,000 to ¥24,000 ($150-$225) depending on the day and time.
This trip is fully funded by viewers and supports like you on Patreon! Thank you!!
Ainu Museum
Stopped by the Ainu Museum in Shiaoi near Noboribetsu. It's a quiet place where you can see Ainu dancing, learn some Ainu language (in Japanese) and see buildings and other cultural aspects of Japan's indigenous people.
Best Attractions and Places to See in Abashiri, Japan
Abashiri Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in Abashiri. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Abashiri for You. Discover Abashiri as per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Abashiri.
This Video has covered top Attractions and Best Things to do in Abashiri.
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List of Best Things to do in Abashiri
Abashiri Prison Museum
Cape Notoro
Hokkaido Museum of Northern Peoples
Kitahama Station
Michi-no-Eki Ryuhyokaido Abashiri
Tentozan Viewing Platform
Lake Notoro
Lake Abashiri
Okhotsk Chipmunk Park
Abashiri Coast
Abashiri Ice Breaker Port Adventure | North Hokkaido
At the Abashiri “Michi no Eki” where the pier for the ice break shop “Aurora” departs. We have some blue ice soft ice cream and some killer bear soda! Ah, typical live stream fromnan arctic-like location!
Where am I?
Abashiri “road house” Hokkaido
Hokkaido Ice Breaker Ship Experience | Abashiri
Come aboard the Ice Breaker Aurora with me as we live stream over icebergs and drift ice in the Ohotsk Sea!
You can catch the boat 5-6 times a day here:
Abashiri Drift Ice Sightseeing & Icebreaker Ship
〒093-0003 Hokkaidō, Abashiri-shi, Minami 3 Jōhigashi, 4 Chome−5−1
0152-43-6000
How to Take the Metro and Bus to Hokkaido Museum in Sapporo
In this travel video I will show you how to arrive at Hokkaido Museum (北海道博物館) by first taking to metro to Shin-Sapporo Station (新札幌駅) on the Tōzai Line (東西線) and then the JR Hokkaido Bus No. “Shin 22” from Shin-Sapporo Bus Terminal (新札幌バスターミナル).
Happy travels!
On Top of Sapporo: Mount Moiwa Observation Deck:
I'm a Beijing-based Romanian with an interest in world travel, books, and calisthenics.
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JG 4K 北海道 網走監獄 Abashiri Prison,Hokkaido
網走監獄 Abashiri Prison,Hokkaido
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Ainu Spirits [Hokkaido] - JAPAN FROM ABOVE: UP CLOSE
JAPAN FROM ABOVE flutters through the foothills of Asahikawa in Hokkaido, where people like Mayunkiki, Rekpo, and Hisae keep the traditions of the indigenous Ainu people alive.
This program is a co-production between NHK, Gedeon Programmes, ZDF Arte, and Voyage.
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Hokkaido Museum
29th August
After visiting the Hokkaido Historical Village we stopped at the nearby museum. Their special exhibition was about baseball, but no photography was allowed in that section.
More information here:
Abashiri
Hokkaido Museum of Northern Peoples
Okhotsk Ryuhyo Museum
Abashiri Prison Museum
20110308 Journeys in Japan Abashiri City
Abashiri PRISON MUSEUM.
Welcome to Abashiri prison!
Well, perhaps welcome isn't ideal, but you get the gist.
We had an interesting time learning about Hokkaido's convict history.
Abashiri prison ran from 1890 until 1984.
They offer guided tours, a virtual movie theatre experience, sampling prison cuisine and much more.
There's something for everyone at KANGOKU.
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Adeyto ❄️ AINU amazing INDIGENOUS TRIBE of HOKKAIDO Culture Village Kotan ????️ Huawei P20 Pro
AMAZING SURPRISE visit to AINU KOTAN, I always wanted so much to know more about this northern indigenous people of Japan before Hokkaido became Japanese!! The Ainu were only in 2008 recognized as Indigenous people, although they used to live in Hokkaido long before it was taken over by Japan. They were conquered by the Japanese early in the 9th century.
In 1264, Ainu invaded the land of Nivkh people controlled by the Yuan Dynasty, resulting in battles between Ainu and the Chinese. Active contact between the Wajin (the ethnically Japanese) and the Ainu of Ezochi (now known as Hokkaido) began in the 13th century. The Ainu formed a society of hunter-gatherers, surviving mainly by hunting and fishing. They followed a religion which was based on natural phenomena.
During the Muromachi period (1336–1573), the disputes between the Japanese and Ainu developed into a war. Takeda Nobuhiro killed the Ainu leader, Koshamain. During the Edo period (1601–1868) the Ainu, who controlled the northern island which is now named Hokkaido, became increasingly involved in trade with the Japanese who controlled the southern portion of the island. The Tokugawa bakufu (feudal government) granted the Matsumae clan exclusive rights to trade with the Ainu in the northern part of the island. Later, the Matsumae began to lease out trading rights to Japanese merchants, and contact between Japanese and Ainu became more extensive. Throughout this period the Ainu became increasingly dependent on goods imported by the Japanese, and were suffering from epidemic diseases such as smallpox.
Although the increased contact created by the trade between the Japanese and the Ainu contributed to increased mutual understanding, it also led to conflict which occasionally intensified into violent Ainu revolts. In 1899, the Japanese government passed an act labelling the Ainu as former aborigines, with the idea they would assimilate—this resulted in the Japanese government taking the land where the Ainu people lived and placing it from then on under Japanese control. Also at this time, the Ainu were granted automatic Japanese citizenship, effectively denying them the status of an indigenous group. the land the Ainu lived on was distributed to the Wajin who had decided to move to Hokkaido, encouraged by the Japanese government of the Meiji era to take advantage of the island's abundant natural resources, and to create and maintain farms in the model of Western industrial agriculture.
During this time, the Ainu were forced to learn Japanese, required to adopt Japanese names, and ordered to cease religious practices such as animal sacrifice and the custom of tattooing.The vast majority of these Wajin men are believed to have compelled Ainu women into partnering with them as local wives. Intermarriage between Japanese and Ainu was actively promoted by the Ainu to lessen the chances of discrimination against their offspring. As a result, many Ainu are indistinguishable from their Japanese neighbors, but some Ainu-Japanese are interested in traditional Ainu culture. In 1966 the number of pure Ainu was about 300.
On June 6, 2008, the Japanese Diet passed a bipartisan, non-binding resolution calling upon the government to recognize the Ainu people as indigenous to Japan, and urging an end to discrimination against the group. The resolution recognized the Ainu people as an indigenous people with a distinct language, religion and culture. The government immediately followed with a statement acknowledging its recognition, stating, The government would like to solemnly accept the historical fact that many Ainu were discriminated against and forced into poverty with the advancement of modernization, despite being legally equal to Japanese people.
The Ainu - Japan's Forgotten People | The Real Japan | HD
The Ainu - Japan's Forgotten People | The Real Japan | HD
Honshu (northern Japan) and the island of Hokkaido.
It's here the Ainu, Japan's little-known indigenous people live.
They've lived here for tens of thousands of years.
But like the native people of America and Australia, the Ainu have suffered discrimitaton.
They are know for having more body hair than the Japanese.
The men have beards which they leave unshaven. While women's mouths are tattooed.
Ainu culture is very different to that of the Japanese. They are traditionally hunter-gatherers.
They have their own language, but fewer than 100 people still speak it, and it is classified as 'endangered'.
The Ainu practice 'arctolatry' - the worship of bears. They hunted them for food but also kept them as pets.
Today, only a few thousand Ainu remain.
After many decades of discrimination, it was only, in 2008 that the Japanese government officialy recognised the Ainu as indigenous people, with their own language and culture.
Perhaps the Ainu will no longer be Japan's 'forgotten people'...
Did you know about the Ainu? What do you think the furture holds for them? Please let me know by leaving a comment below...
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As The Real Japan, Rob Dyer shares inspiration and resources for discovering and exploring Japan beyond the cliches - The Real Japan. Rob is an expert on those off-the-beaten track places and he loves to share his knowledge.
If you're really serious about discovering and exploring The Real Japan, I've personally put together a free guide to Amazing Adventures in Japan that you really need to get a copy of. In that guide I cover 5 (actually there's 6 - but don't tell anyone!) unforgettable adventures in Japan, spanning the northern most and coldest island of Hokkaido, through the main island of Honshu, and down to the sub-tropical southern island of Okinawa. What's more, 2 of those amazing adventures are completely free - so won't cost you a penny!
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Sahoro, Hokkaido: Ainu People of Hokkaido | Club Med X HISTORY
For centuries, the Ainu people of Hokkaido have developed a unique indigenous culture. One of the distinctive parts of their culture includes the traditional Ainu patterns, which were believed to keep evil spirits at bay.
While in Club Med Sahoro Hokkaido, look out for the Ainu-inspired designs while being surrounded by the beautiful mountains in Hokkaido
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