- Source: Toyohashi
Toyohashi (豊橋市, Toyohashi-shi) is a city in Aichi Prefecture, Japan. As of 1 December 2019, the city had an estimated population of 377,453 in 160,516 households and a population density of 1,400 persons per km2. The total area of the city was 261.86 square kilometres (101.10 sq mi). By area, Toyohashi was Aichi Prefecture's second-largest city until March 31, 2005, when it was surpassed by the city of Toyota, which had merged with six peripheral municipalities.
Geography
Toyohashi is located in southeastern Aichi Prefecture, and is the capital of the informal "Higashi-Mikawa Region" of the prefecture. It is bordered by Shizuoka Prefecture to the east, and by Mikawa Bay and the headlands of the Atsumi Peninsula to the west. To the south is the Enshū Sea of the Pacific Ocean. The presence of the warm Kuroshio Current offshore gives the city a temperate climate. The Katahama Jusan-ri Beach (片浜十三里) stretching in adjacent city of Tahara to the west, Toyohashi, and the city of Hamamatsu to the east is a sea turtle nesting spot.
= Climate
=The city has a climate characterized by hot and humid summers, and relatively mild winters (Köppen climate classification Cfa). The average annual temperature in Toyohashi is 16.3 °C (61.3 °F). The average annual rainfall is 1,651.3 mm (65.01 in) with September as the wettest month. The temperatures are highest on average in August, at around 27.5 °C (81.5 °F), and lowest in January, at around 5.4 °C (41.7 °F).
= Demographics
=Per Japanese census data, the population of Toyohashi has grown steadily over the past 60 years.
= Neighboring municipalities
=Aichi Prefecture
Shinshiro
Tahara
Toyokawa
Shizuoka Prefecture
Hamana-ku, Hamamatsu
Kosai
= City scape
=History
= Origins
=The area around present-day Toyohashi has been inhabited for many thousands of years.
Archaeologists have found human remains from the Japanese Paleolithic period, which have been carbon dated to more than 10,000 BC along with the bones of Naumann elephants.
Numerous remains from the Jōmon period, and especially from the Yayoi and Kofun periods have also been found, including many kofun burial mounds.
During the Nara period, the area was assigned to Atsumi, Hoi and Yana Districts of Mikawa Province and prospered during subsequent periods as a post town on an important river crossing of the Tōkaidō connecting the capital with the eastern provinces.
= Sengoku period
=During the Sengoku period, the area was a highly contested zone between the Imagawa clan based in Suruga Province and various local warlords, who built a number of fortifications in the area, including Yoshida Castle.
The rising power of the Matsudaira clan and its alliance with Oda Nobunaga eventually neutralized the threat posed by the Imagawa, and the area became part of the holdings of Tokugawa Ieyasu.
Following the Battle of Odawara in 1590, Toyotomi Hideyoshi ordered the Tokugawa clan to relocate to the Kantō region and assigned the castle to Ikeda Terumasa. Ikeda developed the surrounding castle town and embarked on a massive and ambitious plan to rebuild Yoshida Castle. However, following the Battle of Sekigahara, he was relocated to Himeji Castle.
= Edo period
=After the establishment of the Tokugawa shogunate, Yoshida Castle became the center of Yoshida Domain, a clan fief. The domain was assigned to several different fudai daimyō clans until coming into the possession of the Matsudaira (Nagasawa-Ōkōchi) clan in 1752, which remained in residence at Yoshida until the Meiji Restoration.
The final daimyō of Yoshida, Matsudaira Nobuhisa, surrendered the domain to the Meiji government in 1868. In 1869, the name of the domain was formally changed from Yoshida to Toyohashi.
= Meiji period
=With the establishment of the modern municipalities system under the Meiji government in 1879, Toyohashi Town was created within Atsumi District, Aichi Prefecture. Toyohashi Zoo was established in 1899.
The town achieved city status in 1906.
= Taishō period
=A tram system (the present-day Toyohashi Railway Asumadai Main Line) was established in 1925.
= Shōwa period
=In 1932, Toyohashi expanded its borders by annexing Shimoji Town (Hoi District), Takashi Village, Muroyoshida Village (Atsumi District), and Shimokawa Village (Yana District).
Toyohashi suffered considerable damage during the 1944 Tōnankai earthquake, and even more damage during the Toyohashi Air Raid, which destroyed more than 60% of the city in June 1945.
= Modern Toyohashi
=In 1955, Toyohashi's geographic extent was expanded again with the annexation of neighboring Maeshiba Village (Hoi District), Futagawa Village, Takatoyo Village, Oitsu Village (Atsumi District) and Ishimaki Village (Yana District). Toyohashi achieved core city status in 1999 with increased autonomy from the prefectural government.
Government
= Mayor-council
=Toyohashi has a mayor-council form of government with a directly elected mayor and a unicameral city legislature of 36 members.
= Prefectural Assembly
=The city contributes five members to the Aichi Prefectural Assembly.
= House of Representatives
=In terms of national politics, the city is part of Aichi District15 of the lower house of the Diet of Japan.
= List of mayors of Toyohashi (from 1907)
=Public
= Police
=Aichi Prefectural Police
Toyohashi police station
= Firefighting
=Toyohashi Fire department
Toyohashi-Minami fire department
Toyohashi-Naka fire department
= Health care
=Hospital
Toyohashi City Hospital
= Post office
=Toyohashi Post office
Toyohashi-Minami Post office
= Library
=Toyohashi City Library
Toyohashi City Central Library
Toyohashi City Mukaiyama Liburary
Toyohashi City Oshimizu Liburary (Minakuru)
International relations
Sister cities
Nantong, Jiangsu, China, since May 1987
Toledo, Ohio, United States, since April 2000
Panevėžys, Lithuania, since June 2019
Friendship cities
Jinju, South Gyeongsang, South Korea, since 1992
Paranavaí, Paraná, Brazil, since 2008
Wolfsburg, Lower Saxony, Germany, since 2011
Economy
= Primary sector of the economy
=Agriculture
Cabbage
Napa cabbage
Tomato
Diospyros kaki
Pyrus pyrifolia
Grape
Chikuwa
Japan Agricultural Cooperatives
JA Toyohashi
= Secondary sector of the economy
=Industrial production is centered around the production of automotive-related components for Toyota, Mitsubishi, Suzuki Motors, and Honda, all of whom have factories in the region.
Motors
Toyota
Mitsubishi
Suzuki Motors
Honda
VOLKSWAGEN Group Japan
= Tertiary sector of the economy
=Worldwide trade
Mikawa Port is a major port for worldwide trade, and its presence has made Toyohashi the largest import and export hub in Japan for automobiles, in volume terms. Compared to other ports around the world, Mikawa is roughly on a par with the German port of Bremerhaven.
Shopping center
APiTA Mukaiyama
Æon Toyohashi-Minami Shopping center
Æon Town Toyohasihashira
Cocola Avenue
Media
= Studio
=FM Toyohashi (JOZZ6AA-FM, 84.30 MHz)
= Newspaper
=Higashi Aichi Newspaper
Tonichi Shimbun Newspaper
Education
= University
=National university
Toyohashi University of Technology
Private university
Aichi University
Toyohashi Sozo College
Private college
Aichi Junior College
= Primary and secondary schools
=Toyohashi has 52 public elementary schools and 22 public middle schools operated by the city government, and eight public high schools operated by the Aichi Prefectural Board of Education. The city also has one private middle school and three private high schools. The prefecture also operated three special education schools for the handicapped.
= International schools
=Escola Alegria de Saber (エスコーラ・アレグリア・デ・サベール) - Brazilian school
Escola Cantinho Brasileiro (カンティーニョ学園) - Brazilian primary school
EJA Interativo – Educação de Jovens e Adultos - Brazilian institution
Toyohashi Korean Elementary School and Kindergarten (豊橋朝鮮初級学校) - North Korean school
Transportation
= Railway
=Toyohashi Station is on the Tōkaidō Shinkansen and the Tōkaidō Main Line. Hikari shinkansen services stop at Toyohashi Station approximately once every two hours, and Kodama services stop twice an hour. Toyohashi Station is also the terminus of the Iida Line, Meitetsu Nagoya Main Line, Toyohashi Railroad Atsumi Line, and the Toyohashi Railroad Azumada Main Line, making it an important transportation hub.
Highspeed rail
Central Japan Railway Company
Tōkaidō Shinkansen: Toyohashi
Conventional lines
Central Japan Railway Company
Tōkaidō Main Line: Toyohashi • Futagawa
Iida Line: Toyohashi • Funamachi • Shimoji
Meitetsu
Meitetsu Nagoya Line: Toyohashi
Toyotetsu
Toyohashi Railroad Atsumi Line: Shin-Toyohashi • Yagyu-bashi • Koike • Aichidaigakumae • Minami-Sakae • Takashi • Ashihara • Ueta • Mukougaoka • Ōshimizu • Oitsu • Sugiyama
= Tramway
=Toyotetsu
Toyohashi Railroad Azumada Main Line: Ekimae • Ekimae-ōdōri • Shinkawa • Fudagi • Shiyakushomae • Toyohashi-kōenmae • Higashi-hatchō • Maehata • Azumada-sakaue • Azumada • Keirinjōmae • Ihara • Akaiwaguchi
Ihara • Undōkōen-mae
= Bus
=Almost all services are operated by Toyotetsu Bus, a subsidiary of Toyohashi Railroad.
= Roads
=Highway
Tomei Expressway
Japan National Route
National Route 1
National Route 23
National Route 42
National Route 151
National Route 259
National Route 362
= Sea port
=Port of Toyohashi (Port of Mikawa)
Local attractions
= Places of interest
=Toyohashi Park, which includes the site of Yoshida Castle (吉田城址), and the Toyohashi City Museum Art and History.
Site of Nirengi Castle
Toyohashi City Public Hall (豊橋市公会堂, Toyohashi-shi Kōkaidō), a National Important Cultural Property .
Toyohashi Orthodox Cathedral (豊橋ハリストス正教会), a National Important Cultural Property
Futagawa-juku honjin museum
Toyohashi Zoo
Toyohashi Natural History Museum
Toyohashi Museum of Natural Resources
= Facilities and parks
=Toyohashi has many parks, including the Natural History Museum and Zoological Park, the Imou swamp, Mikawa Seaside Forest, Kamo Iris Garden, and the Mukaiyama Ume Garden. It also has what is considered one of the best surfing beaches in Aichi and the surrounding region.
Culture
= Festivals
=Toyohashi Festival, Spring Festival, Iris Flower Festival, Gion Festival, Demon Festival (February), and traditional marionette performances (Akumi joruri). At some of these festivals, especially the summer festivals, the use of traditionally handcrafted fireworks is showcased, and include hand-held bamboo-tube fireworks known as tezutsu hanabi.
= Special products
=Chikuwa (a type of baked sausage roll made from fish), Gohei rice cake (五平餅, Gohei-mochi), beach fermented soybeans, food boiled in goby fish and soy, top producer of quail eggs in Japan, Toyohashi calligraphy brush (豊橋筆, Toyohashi-fude).
= In popular culture
=In the fictional Harry Potter universe, Toyohashi is the hometown of the professional Quidditch team, the Toyohashi Tengu.
In the Takeshi Kitano movie Kikujiro, the story revolves around the characters' trip from Tokyo to Toyohashi.
Toyohashi is the setting of the light novel series Makeine: Too Many Losing Heroines!, the anime television adaptation of which premiered in July 2024.
= Sports
=Basketball
San-en NeoPhoenix (Toyohashi City General Gymnasium)
Baseball
Chunichi Dragons (Toyohashi Municipal Baseball Stadium)
Gallery
Notable people from Toyohashi
Yua Aida, AV idol and model
Katsuhito Asano, Japanese politician
Daniel (Nushiro) of Japan, primate of Japanese Orthodox Church
Atsushi Fujii, professional baseball player
Emi Fujino, mixed martial artist, kickboxer and professional wrestler
Mizuki Inoue, kickboxer and mixed martial artist
Yoshitaka Iwamizu, Olympic long-distance runner
Kitaro, musician
Aya Kitō, writer
Masaji Kiyokawa, Olympic gold-medalist swimmer
Masatoshi Koshiba, Nobel Prize winner
Ken Matsudaira, actor
Rena Matsui, actress, former member of SKE48
Yūji Mitsuya, actor, voice actor
Masahiko Morifuku, professional baseball player
Sakura Nogawa, voice actress
Kenichi Ogawa, boxer
Yoshio Sawai, manga artist
Akiko Suzuki, professional figure skater
Buyūzan Takeyoshi, sumo wrestler
Sakon Yamamoto, professional race car driver
See also
18th Infantry Regiment (Imperial Japanese Army)
Black Thunder (chocolate bar)
Nirengi Castle
Nishikawa Castle
Siege of Yoshida Castle
Toyohashi Air Raid
Toyokawa Bridge
References
External links
Geographic data related to Toyohashi at OpenStreetMap
Toyohashi travel guide from Wikivoyage
Official website (in Japanese)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Toyohashi, Aichi
- Stasiun Toyohashi
- Jalur Iida
- Stasiun Shimoji
- Stasiun Funamachi
- Stasiun Moto Kasadera
- Universitas Aichi
- Stasiun Futagawa
- Stasiun Sakura (Aichi)
- Stasiun Moto Hoshizaki
- Toyohashi
- Toyohashi Station
- Toyohashi Railroad
- Aichi Prefecture
- Kikujiro
- Bombing of Toyohashi
- Iida Line
- Toyohashi City Museum of Art and History
- Maruei
- Tōkai region