Nagasaki Adventures pt. 3 | Museum of History and Culture
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Nagasaki Vacation Travel Guide | Expedia
Nagasaki – a charming port city with a devastating past. In this video, we explore how to make the most of this city’s cultural and historical attractions while on vacation.
Check out all the places we visited in this video:
When ready, browse vacation packages to Nagasaki:
The name #Nagasaki is synonymous with one of the most devastating events in modern
history. But this city is more than just bomb museums and memorials. It is a welcoming
destination, brimming with friendly locals and beautiful spaces. It has a charming culture of
peace and a multicultural spirit.
All visitors to this city are taken on a physical and spiritual journey. From the mouth-
watering fusions of Japanese and Chinese cuisine in Shinchi Chinatown district, to the
challenging realities exhibited in the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum.
This diverse paradox is what makes Nagasaki so uniquely special and such a wonderful contender for your next #vacation.
For now, we hope you enjoy watching this #travel #guide as much as we enjoyed making it.
More travel information around Nagasaki:
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Best Attractions and Places to See in Nagasaki, Japan
Nagasaki Travel Guide. MUST WATCH. Top things you have to do in Nagasaki. We have sorted Tourist Attractions in Nagasaki for You. Discover Nagasaki as per the Traveler Resources given by our Travel Specialists. You will not miss any fun thing to do in Nagasaki.
This Video has covered Best Attractions and Things to do in Nagasaki.
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List of Best Things to do in Nagasaki, Japan
Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum
Nagasaki Electric Tramway
Nagasaki Peace Memorial Hall for the Atomic Bomb Victims
Mt. Inasa
Hashima Island
Inasayama Observation Deck
Nagasaki Penguin Aquarium
Nagasaki Peace Park
Nagasaki Museum of History and Culture
Hypocenter of Atomic Bombing
Nagasaki, Japan Memories
Going over the old video files I came across these clips. Not really knowing what to do with them, I decided to put them together and create a nostalgic movie.
Making our way to Nagasaki from Fukuoka, the fun is just going to continue. A list of items of what/where we went is below.
Questions? Leave a comment or find me at:
Twitter/Instagram: @CharleeChay
This is what we did in Nagasaki:
Douhassen: (JPN Only)
Shofuku-Ji:
Suwa-Jinja:
Sofuku-Ji:
Nagasaki Chinatown:
Hashima / Gunkanjima / Battleship Island:
Nagasaki Peace Park:
Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum:
Spectacles Bridge / Megane-Bashi:
Glover Garden:
Dejima:
Nagasaki Museum of History and Culture:
Music:
A Himitsu - Adventures
Kontinuum - Lost (feat. Savoi) [JJD Remix]
Filmed on: Sony a7II w/35mm f/2.8 & GoPro Hero3+ Black
Nagasaki, Japan: The Former Trading Post of Dejima
Dejima was an artificial island constructed in the port of Nagasaki in 1636 to segregate Portuguese residents from the Japanese and control the spread of Christianity.
The Portuguese acted as liaison between Japan and China and their ships would return laden with silk while sugar was the main commodity imported by the Dutch later on. It is thought that this sugar is why Nagasaki's local cuisine became famous for its lavish use of sugar.
Dejima trading post has been recreated and is most interesting.
Okiagari Koboshi in Nagasaki, part 1 at Nagasaki history and culture museum
Hiroshima atomic bomb: Survivor recalls horrors - BBC News
Thursday marks 70 years to the day since the United States dropped the world's first atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima. Three days later it dropped a second on the city of Nagasaki. The devastation is widely believed to have brought an abrupt end to World War Two - with Japan's surrender. But what about the appalling human cost of the bombing? Rupert Wingfield-Hayes reports from Hiroshima.
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長崎旅行ガイド | エクスペディア
長崎の見どころを8分に凝縮しました。世界各国のエクスペディアで公開されており、海外から日本に来る旅行者のためのビデオガイドです。海外の方の目から見た長崎はどんな街に見えるのでしょう。英語音声でお楽しみください。
Nagasaki, Japan: The Fascinating Dejima Archaeological Museum
One of the buildings in the former Trading Post of Dejima has been turned into an Archaeological Museum. I intended to do a fast in and out but it is fascinating - try to allow enough time.
A highlight is the beautifully carved pipes with a magnifying glass over them so visitors can see the detail. Incredible...
Adventures in Japan 日本 | NIU Students Goes to Nagasaki, Dejima | Japanese Historical Site
This is just a short film of NIU (Nagasaki International University) Japanese Culture class trip to Dejima last June 1, 2019. tried to highlight what i found most interesting but this place has so much more to offer. if you need to know more there is a link of the website of Dejima.(english translation available)
Dejima Website -
Dejima Facebook -
Facebook -
Instagram -
Soundcloud -
Music: Soweto (Michael brun, Shirazee)
Family trip to Fukuoka & Nagasaki
5Days in Fukuoka & Nagasaki, Japan
- Yatai (Food cart) stalls
- Hakata station
- Kamome express train to Nagasaki
- Nagasaki Streetcars (tram)
- Champon, regional cuisine on Nagasaki
- Nagasaki Museum of History and Culture
- Yoshizuka Unagiya, Fukuoka (eel restaurant)
- Canal City
- Ramen Studio in Canal City
- Rakusuien (Japanese Garden and Tea Pavillion)
- Sumiyoshi Shrine
- Western Japan Ohori Fireworks at Ohori Park
- Dazaifu
- Restaurant 'Tenjin Horumon'
- Tenjin underground city
- Ichiran Ramen Fukuoka
BGM:
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Hiroshima, then and now.
On a recent trip to Japan, Hiroshima was a must to visit, and visit we did. One of the most memorable and inspiring places I have visited that is sure to leave some everlasting memories.
The Islands of Nagasaki
Web Japan
History of Nuclear Incidents in Japan, Part 1 of 4: Hiroshima and Nagasaki
This is the first in a series of four videos that offers historical context to the graphic novel Deep Sea Fish (1984), Katsumata Susumu's scathing critique of the nuclear power plants in Fukushima City, Japan, which was published decades before the nuclear disaster in 2011.
Excerpts from Katsumata's Deep Sea Fish is on display in the exhibition The Disasters of Peace: Social Discontent in the Manga of Tsuge Tadao and Katsumata Susumu (Honolulu Museum of Art, November 30, 2017 - April 15, 2018)
For more information about Katsumata Susumu, please see:
About the exhibition The Disasters of Peace:
Beyond manga’s occasional veneer of endearing innocence, the genre of gekiga (literally, “dramatic pictures”), which began in the mid 1950s and went mainstream in the late 1960s, addressed an adult audience and grappled with ethically complex social issues. Through monthly manga anthologies such as Garo, a faction of avant-garde manga artists with gritty, emotionally expressive styles and resolutely anti-authoritarian tones contributed to a new era of humanitarian concern and social activism.
The Disasters of Peace ironically alludes to The Disasters of War (1810–1820), a suite of prints produced by Spanish painter and printmaker Francisco Goya (1746–1828) in response to the horrific violence that he witnessed during the Peninsular War of 1808–1814. In a similar way, the works of Tsuge Tadao (b. 1941) and Katsumata Susumu (1943–2007) displayed here reveal Japan’s plight during the demilitarized era that followed the Pacific War (1941–1945) and the Allied Occupation (1945–1952). Financial hardship, moral confusion, and the lingering shame of military defeat compelled individuals to behave in questionable ways, while large industries, myopically focused upon economic recovery, indulged in unfair labor practices and overlooked environmental hazards. In Garo and other manga publications, Tsuge and Katsumata drew attention to such crises and encouraged public debate about them. At a time when many Americans are similarly concerned about social equality, the future of our planet, and other serious subjects, may these artists inspire thoughtful conversations among ourselves.
About the manga exhibition series at the Honolulu Museum of Art:
Manga— Japanese graphic novels or comics—play a vital
role in contemporary Japanese culture. Not only do they
enjoy immense popularity (annual sales within Japan have
risen to more than two billion US dollars); internationally,
they have become the centerpiece of the “Cool Japan
Initiative,” the Japanese government’s current campaign to
promote its status as a cultural superpower. Manga’s
popularity partly arises from the medium’s historical
connection with Japanese woodblock prints and paintings
(ukiyo-e), which were produced in Japan throughout the Edo
period (1615–1868). The term manga, in fact, was coined by
the renowned ukiyo-e artist Katsushika Hokusai (1760–
1849).
Since 2014, in its mission to expand and significantly
enhance its renowned collection of Japanese works on
paper, the museum has acquired several examples of
Japanese manga by artists such as Maruo Suehiro (b. 1956)
and Anno Moyoco (b. 1971). In 2016, the Honolulu Museum
of Art furthermore presented Visions of Gothic Angels:
Japanese Manga by Takaya Miou (August 25, 2016–January
15, 2017), the first in a series of exhibitions that explore the art-historical importance of manga. That series now
continues with The Disasters of Peace: Social Discontent
in the Manga of Tsuge Tadao and Katsumata Susumu.
Dejima, Nagasaki, Japan, 2019
Dejima (Japanese: 出島, exit island) was a Dutch trading post located in Nagasaki, Japan from 1641 to 1854.[1] Dejima was a small fan-shaped artificial island in the bay of Nagasaki covering an area of 120 m × 75 m (390 ft × 250 ft) or 9,000 m2 (2.2 acres), and is listed in old Western documents Latinised as Deshima, Decima, Desjima, Dezima, Disma, or Disima. Dejima was built in 1634 to house Portuguese traders and separate them from Japanese society by digging a canal through a small peninsula. The Dutch were moved to Dejima in 1641 and during most of the Edo period the island was the single place of direct trade and exchange between Japan and the outside world. Dejima was abolished after the Treaty of Kanagawa in 1854 and the island was later integrated into Nagasaki city through land reclamation. In 1922, the Dejima Dutch Trading Post was designated a Japanese national historic site. Wikipedia
Shinkamigoto - Blessed island in Nagasaki with a fascinating history
Shinkamigoto is a Japanese island in the East China Sea, off the western coast of Kyūshū. It is part of Nagasaki Prefecture. The island forms the northeastern half of the Goto Islands archipelago. At Shinkamigoto you will be astonished by white sand beaches and crystal clear waters, as well as by the evening sun slowly sinking into the East China Sea. In addition to this beautiful scenery, you will also find 29 beautiful churches. These churches are for consideration as UNESCO World Heritage sites and they have already been included on the tentative list. Furthermore, the island offers delicious food and abundant nature, perfect for relaxation. You can easily go there from Hakata Port, Nagasaki Port, and Sasebo Port. Feel Fukuoka's presenter Heeya went there for the first time. Check out this video of her adventure.
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Entering Atomic Bomb Museum in Nagasaki
I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (
Japanese 101 Culture Presentaion: Nagasaki
In this presentation we briefly cover most of the cities, islands and districts of Nagasaki as well as a short history of the region.
Source:
I WAS LEFT SPEECHLESS IN HIROSHIMA! 16+
*0:01 BURNS, NOT BURNES.
This day finally came! I never thought I would visit this town in my life. I've heard stories about Hiroshima and Nagasaki but I couldn't imagine what happened there, how many people lost their lives, how much did they suffer. Today, there live more than a million people and they are amazing. They are so friendly, nice, always smiling even though they have been through a lot in the past. I fell in love with every inch of that city. I've seen the Hiroshima Peace Memorial (or Atomic Bomb Dome, the A-Bomb dome) which is the symbol of destruction but also strength and peace. I've learned about a girl named Sadako Sasaki who died because of leukemia (Full story in this video). Later I went to the Hiroshima Museum where I literally couldn't speak after I've seen those pictures and footages. In the end, I went to the Orizuru Tower where I've folded my paper crane and toss it down because it symbolizes peace.
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Why Japan Keeps Apologizing for World War II
Since the end of WWII, Japanese politicians have apologized for atrocities committed against a number of countries. What are they apologizing for now?
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