Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum, Nagasaki | Japan Travel Guide
Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum ( 長崎原爆資料館 )
Description
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The Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum relates the history of the city when it was hit by the atomic bomb during the Second World War. Along with photographs showing Nagasaki before and after the bombing, there are displays relating stories regarding the bombing including materials that had actually been irradiated, the history behind the development of nuclear weapons, and wishes for peace.
Nearby Spots:
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Nagasaki Hypocenter Park
Nagasaki Peace Park
Mt. Inasa
Meganebashi (Spectacles) Bridge
Huis Ten Bosch
Kofukuji Temple
Dejima
Nagasaki Chinatown
Sofuku-ji Temple
Gunkanjima (Battleship Island)
Nagasaki City Travel Guide:
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Nagasaki
Nagasaki Itineraries:
Nagasaki Tours & Activities
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Atomic Bomb Museum & Peace Park Nagasaki | Vlog 26
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The Atomic bomb museum in nagasaki is amazing! You definitely should try to make it there if you are in Kyushu or near Nagasaki.
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Nagasaki Peace Park, Nagasaki | Japan Travel Guide
Nagasaki Peace Park ( 長崎平和公園 )
Description
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Nagasaki became a target of the atomic bomb during the Second World War. Nagasaki Peace Park continues to relate the tragic conditions after the bombing and the importance of world peace to future generations.
Nearby Spots:
————————————————————————
Nagasaki Hypocenter Park
Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum
Mt. Inasa
Meganebashi (Spectacles) Bridge
Huis Ten Bosch
Kofukuji Temple
Dejima
Nagasaki Chinatown
Gunkanjima (Battleship Island)
Sofuku-ji Temple
Nagasaki City Travel Guide:
————————————————————————
Nagasaki
Nagasaki Itineraries:
Nagasaki Tours & Activities
----------------------------------------------------------------------
All this and more in:
¡Subscribe!
Facebook:
Youtube:
--
☞Ask ANYTHING about your JAPAN TRIP in the FORUM and get a response in less than 24h:
--
☞Meet our Japan Experience channel with travel tips, fun videos and curiosities about Japan: Japan Fan
Nagasaki - Japan ★ Atomic Bomb Museum ★Peace Monument ★Catholic Cathedral
No visit to Japan is complete without visiting Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Therefore Nagasaki, a city with 450,000 population was the last destination on my Japan tour. During World War II, the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki made Nagasaki the second last city in the world to experience a nuclear attack.
In terms comparison of memorials, Hirioshima was a tough act to follow and after having seen Nagasaki I would have to give the nod to Hiroshima.
As of January 1, 2009, the city has an estimated population of 446,007 and a population density of 1,100 persons per km². The total area is 406.35 km².
Nagasaki Peace Park, Atomic Bomb Museum & Hypocenter, Japan, 2019
1. Nagasaki Peace Park is a park located in Nagasaki, Japan, commemorating the atomic bombing of the city on August 9, 1945 during World War II. Wikipedia
2. The Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum (長崎原爆資料館 Nagasaki Genbaku Shiryōkan) is in the city of Nagasaki, Japan. The museum is a remembrance to the atomic bombing of Nagasaki by the United States of America 9 August 1945 at 11:02:35 am. Wikipedia
3. The Hypocenter near the Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum.
Japan | Hiroshima Memorial Museum and Peace Park | Virtual Tour
A virtual tour of Hiroshima Memorial Museum and Peace Memorial Park. In order to allow you your own personal learning experience, and out of respect for those who have sacrificed far more than I have in the name of preserving history, every word spoken in this video is quoted directly from the placards at the museum, brochures distributed at the museum, and the Hiroshima Memorial Museum official website.
This is not a comprehensive video by any means. You can learn more and view the rest of the museum at:
***
Music:
That Was the Day by Ben McElroy
The Brightness Surrounds by Ben Mc Elroy
Video:
The historical footage of the aftermath of Hiroshima belongs to the Public Domain.
You can find the footage used, and much more, for free use at archive.org.
*The fallout pictured at the beginning of the video is of Nagasaki, not Hiroshima. I felt this appropriate, as Nagasaki was bombed three days later by the same methods.
**It's also worth noting that while the video images are of victims from the A-bomb, the children/people on screen are not the owners of the items at the museum, or the same people being talked about in the voice-over.
Images:
Origami crane clipart (public domain):
Nagasaki, Japan: Atomic Bomb Peace Park Memorial
There are many landmarks in Nagasaki to remind locals and visitors about August 9, 1945 when the A-Bomb was dropped. Nagasaki Peace Park is one of those place and the hypocenter of the blast.
The explosion crushed, burned and killed everything in sight. The hypocenter remains as an international peace park and symbol of aspirations for world harmony.
Nagasaki Peace Park | Atomic Bomb Museum | Japan
Nagasaki is a Japanese city on the northwest coast of the island of Kyushu. It’s set on a large natural harbor, with buildings on the terraces of surrounding hills. It is synonymous with a key moment during World War II, after suffering an Allied nuclear attack in August 1945. The event is memorialized at the city’s Atomic Bomb Museum and Peace Park.
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Exploring Peace Park In Nagasaki Japan
The Nagasaki Peace Park is dedicated to the victims and future peace. Excellent sculptures and monuments.
NAGASAKI - Bomb Hypocenter and Peace Park
In 1968, a memorial monolith was built in the hypocenter park to mark ground zero of the atomic explosion.
A layer of the ground at that time is exhibited at the site, where visitors can see the remains of destroyed houses: roof tiles, bricks, ceramic and pieces of glass that boiled in the 3000℃ atomic heat.
Near the hypocenter of the explosion, remnants of a concrete wall of Urakami Cathedral can still be seen. Urakami Cathedral was the grandest church in east Asia at the time.
At the Peace park's north end is the 10-meter-tall Peace Statue created by sculptor Seibo Kitamura . The statue's right hand points to the threat of nuclear weapons while the extended left hand symbolizes eternal peace.
My trip to Nagasaki Japan, Atomic bomb museum and peace park
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Atomic Bomb Memorial & Glover Park, Nagasaki, JAPAN
A timeline of events leading up to the plutonium atomic bomb, Fatman exploding over Nagasaki, Japan. 9 August 1945 at 11:02am.
Scenes from the epicenter, Peace Memorial Park, Glover Park and downtown Nagasaki.
The massive Peace Statue, erected in memory and a symbol of world peace, dominates this thoughtful park. Statues from various countries were donated as a symbol of peace.
Glover Gardens: This hilltop, open-air museum exhibits mansions from the Meiji era, belonging to former Western residents of Nagasaki. Enjoy panoramic views of Nagasaki harbor from the beautifully landscaped grounds.
NAGASAKI JAPAN ATOMIC BOMB MUSEUM || I CAN FEEL THE PAIN
The Nagasaki Peace Park (平和公園, Heiwa Kōen) is a tranquil space that commemorates the atomic bombing of Nagasaki on August 9, 1945, which destroyed a significant portion of the city and killed tens of thousands of inhabitants. The complex is comprised of two parks and a memorial museum.
The Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum covers the history of this event in the accessible form of a story. It begins with the disastrous scene of the attack and includes the events leading up to the dropping of the atomic bomb, the reconstruction of Nagasaki up to the present day, the history of nuclear weapons development, and the hope for a peaceful world free of nuclear weapons.
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Hiroshima Bombing Story | Tour around the Atomic Hypocenter ★ ONLY in JAPAN
Today is the 74th anniversary of the Hiroshima Bombing - August 6, 2019
Hiroshima, August 6, 1945. It’s a day that changed everything. The atomic bomb decimated the city, killing nearly all nearby the blast. Fast forward about 75 years later, and Hiroshima is now a beautiful city, resurrected from the ruins of the post war period. Near the hypocenter is the Hiroshima Memorial Peace Park and Museum and across the river, the A-Bomb Dome which sits as it did, destroyed after the bomb in ruins. We'll look at the area around the hypocenter and see old video footage from 1945 after the bomb. We'll also meet a witness who will describe in detail the horror he saw as he volunteered to help in Hiroshima on August 7, 1945, the next day.
We’re now in the 4th generation since the bomb was dropped, those that were kids who could remember are now in their 80s and 90s. Yuji is a 3rd generation Hiroshima resident since the bomb and he wants to share the city of Hiroshima so people don’t forget the past. He learned a lot from his great uncle who told him stories as a kid of the horrors of that day and how the city rebuilt. Another reason is that he wants to teach his son so he can pass on the stories from his family who were alive nearby on that tragic day. They're now tour guides in Hiroshima.
At age 92, Yuji’s great uncle shares his story of the day he will never forget. He lived in Kure city near by, saw the mushroom cloud and went into the city to help. His account is graphic, the scene is grim and real.
The city cannot erase it’s past but it can move on and write the next chapter in its history and I think that is where Hiroshima is today. Tourism to the city is increasing, many international visitors stop by Hiroshima to understand what happened on that day, pay their respects, and tours like the one with Yuji and Magical Trip I took is a way to understand just how much the city changed that day and how it’s re-invented itself since. I hope you can feel something for Hiroshima and if you are in Japan, it's a must visit destination.
★ Hiroshima Peace (Heiwa) Walking Tour can be reserved here:
Note: The tour takes about 4.5 hours. Child tour guide assistant may not always be present during tours.
▶︎WHERE is Hiroshima and the Peace Park?
Thank you to Magical Trip for helping me with this story to connect the past with the present and get a better understanding of where Hiroshima came from and where it is gong in the future.
Magical Trip Website:
ONLY in JAPAN is a registered trademark. All rights are reserved. This show has been created and produced by John Daub ジョン・ドーブ. He's been living and working in Japan for over 21 years and regularly reports on TV for Japan's International Channel.
#Hiroshima #ONLYinJAPAN
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Hiroshima Peace Museum Tour 3rd Floor (広島平和記念館)
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Anyone still looking for ways to keep on top of important information coming out of Japan about the March 11 earthquake and tsunami now has a central hub to consult, in the shape of a dedicated page from the Google Crisis Response project.
The resources listed include the Person Finder we've seen before, links to the latest information from the domestic utilities, such as Tokyo Electric (TEPCO), government agencies, and a comprehensive list of transit providers.
Many of those are pre-formatted to serve up Japanese pages in machine-translated English, but there's also a full ranzge of information for native speakers of Japanese.
Likely the most useful among these are the missing persons phone lines for the various parts of Tohoku affected by the twin disasters, while there are also continuously updating scanned photos of the resident lists in the various shelters for people displaced from their homes.
Lastly, this being a service from one of the web's heaviest hitters, there are also real time updates from Google News and Twitter.
Read more: Google swings into action with earthquake crisis response hub | CNNGo.com
Amid the horrific stories of death and destruction surrounding the March 11 earthquake and tsunami in the Tohoku region, there's still room for the occasional wry smile, such as the one surely engendered by the news of 240 refugees taking shelter in, of all places, a nuclear power plant.
The group of men, women and children from Onagawa in Miyagi Prefecture has been holed up in the plant since the tsunami hit, seemingly killing over 1,000 of the town's 10,000 population.
The irony of the nature of their refuge clearly isn't lost on the temporary residents, as the nuclear accident at Fukushima Daiichi power plant 120 kilometers away plays out daily on their televisions.
The electricity to power the sets, incidentally, comes direct from the regional power grid to which the Onagawa plant is attached. The facility is run by Tohoku Electric Power, a separate entity from Tokyo Electric Power, or TEPCO, the operator in charge of Fukushima.
As the group shelters in the employee gym, right next door to the reactors, the good fortune of the survivors is clear.
One man, sheltering with his family said: It's pretty spread out. People are just kind of lying around and relaxing. There are a lot of aftershocks, but it's safe.
Meanwhile, an older woman settled on a more prosaic object of gratitude: It's very clean inside. We have electricity and nice toilets.
Hiroshima Peace Museum and Memorial
A video dedicated to the Hiroshima Peace Museum and Memorial in Hiroshima, Japan.
Nagasaki Peace Memorial Park (Atomic Bomb Museum) |Japan Travel
Hey all, I am here with a vlog to a historical place in Nagasaki, i.e., Nagasaki Atomic Bomb Museum. Please watch the video for more information.
Inside The Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum
JAPAN trip 2012 in the Hiroshima Peace memorial Museum
We went to the ATOMIC BOMB MUSEUM in Nagazaki, Japan (2019) │ My Travel Journal
Japan is such an interesting country, so different than ours, so organized, so clean ( the funny part is that you don't find garbage bins easily).
We came to Nagasaki, we really wanted to see how is the city, the people.
The Atomic bomb is part of the history of this country, imagine how important is for the history of NAGASAKI.
We visited the BOMB MUSEUM and the surroundings. Just by the museum we found the Peace park, the famous Shrine, the Cathedral, the Hypocenter (where the bomb exploded), etc.
In the PEACE PARK we will find the famous PEACE MEMORIAL STATUE, it is huge but today they were cleaning and fixing it. This statue has a very interesting meaning, the way is done and the Sculpture wrote this:
After experiencing that nightmarish war,
that blood-curdling carnage,
that unendurable horror,
Who could walk away without praying for peace?
This statue was created as a signpost in the
struggle for global harmony.
Standing ten meters tall,
it conveys the profundity of knowledge and
the beauty of health and virility.
The right hand points to the atomic bomb,
the left hand points to peace,
and the face prays deeply for the victims of war.
Transcending the barriers of race
and evoking the qualities of Buddha and God,
it is a symbol of the greatest determination
ever known in the history of Nagasaki
and the highest hope of all mankind.
— Seibo Kitamura (Spring 1995)
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