1944 in Japan GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21

      Events in the year 1944 in Japan.


      Incumbents


      Emperor: Hirohito
      Prime Minister:
      Hideki Tōjō, until July 22
      Kuniaki Koiso, from July 22


      = Governors

      =
      Aichi Prefecture: Shinji Yoshino
      Akita Prefecture: Katsumi Osafune (until 7 January); Tadashi Hisayasuhiroshi (starting 1 August)
      Aomori Prefecture: Utsunomiya Kohei (until 1 August); Hiroo Oshima (starting 1 August)
      Ehime Prefecture: Aikawa Katsuroku (until 18 April); Chiyoji Kizawa (starting 18 April)
      Fukui Prefecture: Hatsuo Kato
      Fukushima Prefecture: Koichi Kameyama (until 18 April); Ishii Masakazu (starting 18 April)
      Gifu Prefecture: Miyoshi Shigeo (until 28 July); Masami Hashimoto (starting 28 July)
      Gunma Prefecture: Shinoyama Chiyuki (until 25 February); Ishii Einosuke (starting 25 February)
      Hiroshima Prefecture: Sukenari Yokoyama (until 1 August); Mitsuma Matsumura (starting 1 August)
      Ibaraki Prefecture: Sieve Yoshimi (until 25 August); Hisashi Imai (starting 25 August)
      Iwate Prefecture: Osamuzo Suzuki
      Kagawa Prefecture: Yoshiji Kosuga
      Kochi Prefecture: Saburo Takahashi
      Kumamoto Prefecture: Hikari Akira (until 1 August); Soga Kajimatsu (starting 1 August)
      Kyoto Prefecture: Chiyoji Yukizawa (until April); Arai Zentaro (starting April)
      Mie Prefecture: Yoshio Mochinaga
      Miyagi Prefecture: Nobuya Uchida (until 25 February); Tsurukichi Maruyama (starting 1 August)
      Miyazaki Prefecture: Tadao Nishihiro (until 1 August); Akira Taniguchi (starting 1 August)
      Nagano Prefecture: Yoshio Koriyama (until 1 August); Yasuo Otsubo (starting 1 August)
      Niigata Prefecture: Maeda Tamon
      Oita Prefecture: Motoharu Nakamura
      Okinawa Prefecture: Osamu Mori Izumi
      Saga Prefecture: Yue Yue (until 1 August); Miyazaki Kenta (starting 1 August)
      Saitama Prefecture: Sudo Tetsushin (until 1 August); Ryuichi Fukumoto (starting 1 August)
      Shiname Prefecture: Takeo Yamada
      Tochigi Prefecture: Soma Toshio
      Tokyo: Nisho Toshizo
      Toyama Prefecture:
      until 25 February: Saka Shinya
      25 February-25 July: Shoichi Nishimura
      starting 25 July: Shigero Okamoto
      Yamagata Prefecture: Akira Saito


      Events


      January 31-February 3 - Battle of Kwajalein
      February 17–23 - Battle of Eniwetok
      April 17-May 25 - Battle of Central Henan
      May–August - Battle of Changsha (1944)
      June 4-September 7 - Battle of Mount Song
      June 15-July 9 - Battle of Saipan
      June 15/16 - Bombing of Yawata (June 1944)
      June 19–20 - Battle of the Philippine Sea
      June 22-August 8 - Defense of Hengyang
      July 10-August 25 - Battle of Driniumor River
      July 21-August 10 - Battle of Guam (1944)
      July 24-August 1 - Battle of Tinian
      August 16-November 24 - Battle of Guilin-Liuzhou
      September 15-November 27 - Battle of Peleliu
      September 17-October 22 - Battle of Angaur
      October 10–20 - Formosa Air Battle
      December 7 - 1944 Tōnankai earthquake
      December 30–31 - Battle of Pearl Ridge


      Births


      February 8 - Isao Shibata, former professional baseball player
      April 5 - Hiroyuki Hosoda, politician (d. 2023)
      April 16 - Shoji Tabuchi, fiddler
      July 8 - Hironobu Takesaki, former Chief Justice of Japan
      July 15 - Ken Kagaya, painter and writer (d. 2003)


      Deaths


      January 25 - Monzo Akiyama, admiral (b. 1891)
      February 21 - Yoshimi Nishida, general (b. 1892)
      March 29 - Kiichi Hasegawa, admiral (b. 1894)
      March 31 - Mineichi Koga, Marshal Admiral (b. 1885)
      May 24 - Matsuji Ijuin, vice admiral (b. 1893)
      July 6 - Chūichi Nagumo, admiral (b. 1887)
      July 8 - Takeo Takagi, admiral (b. 1892)
      July 10 - Yoshitsugu Saitō, lieutenant general (b. 1890)
      July 19 - Shigeo Arai, freestyle swimmer (b. 1916)
      July 28 - Takeshi Takashina, general (b. 1891)
      August 1 - Kiyochi Ogata, colonel
      August 2
      Kakuji Kakuta, captain (b. 1890)
      Goichi Oya, admiral
      August 11 - Hideyoshi Obata, general (b. 1890)
      October 15 - Masafumi Arima, admiral (b. 1895)
      October 26 - Hiroyoshi Nishizawa, flying ace (b. 1920)
      November 7 - Hotsumi Ozaki, journalist and soviet spy (b. 1901)
      November 18 - Tsunesaburō Makiguchi, educator (b. 1871)
      November 24 - Kunio Nakagawa, general (b. 1898)
      December 1 - Murakami Namiroku, novelist and fiction writer (b. 1865)


      See also


      List of Japanese films of the 1940s


      References

    Kata Kunci Pencarian:

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    Search Results

    1944 in japan

    Daftar Isi

    1944 in Japan - Wikipedia

    July 8 - Hironobu Takesaki, former Chief Justice of Japan; July 15 - Ken Kagaya, painter and writer (d. 2003) [4]

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    After securing airfields in Saipan and Guam in the summer of 1944, the United States Army Air Forces undertook an intense strategic bombing campaign, using incendiary bombs, burning Japanese cities in an effort to pulverize Japan's industry and shatter its morale.

    Bombing of Tokyo - Wikipedia

    The bombing of Tokyo (東京空襲, Tōkyō kūshū) was a series of air raids on Japan launched by the United States Army Air Forces during the Pacific Theatre of World War II in 1944–1945, prior to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

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    2 days ago · The Allies didn’t drop nearly as many bombs on Japan during World War II. From January 1944 until August 1945, the United States dropped 157,000 tons of bombs on Japanese cities. An estimated 333,000 people were killed as a result of those bombs, including the 80,000 killed in the Hiroshima atomic bomb attack and 40,000 in Nagasaki.

    Japan - WWII, Defeat, Pacific | Britannica - Encyclopedia Britannica

    6 days ago · When the fall of Saipan in July 1944 brought U.S. bombers within range of Tokyo, the Tōjō cabinet was replaced by that of Koiso Kuniaki. Koiso formed a supreme war-direction council designed to link the cabinet and the high command.

    Pacific War - Allied Offensive, 1944, Japan | Britannica

    Dec 1, 2024 · During July and August 1944 the Japanese 18th Army, based on Wewak, mounted an attack on Aitape, employing more than 20,000 troops in the forward area. The attack failed, and the Japanese were driven back toward Wewak.

    Category : 1944 in Japan - Wikimedia

    Media in category "1944 in Japan" The following 12 files are in this category, out of 12 total.

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    1944 in Japan. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. 1944 in Japan. Incumbents Governors Events Births Deaths See also References. Events in the year 1944 in Japan.

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    The Japanese amassed a vast new empire with a defensive perimeter that ranged from western Alaska to the Solomon Islands. In the southwest Pacific, Japan threatened American supply lines to Australia, complicating US plans to use Australia as a staging ground for offensive action.

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    Jan 2, 2025 · The arrival of B-29 Superfortress bombers in 1944 gave the Americans the range to reach Japanese cities, first from bases in China and then from Pacific islands. Bombing raids were conducted on the same lines as U.S. operations in Europe: high-altitude attacks in daylight seeking to strike industrial and military targets.