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Encyclopedia > Kurashiki

Kurashiki (倉敷市; -shi) is a historic city located to the west of Okayama, Japan, sitting on the Takahashi River, on the coast of the Inland Sea.


As of 2003, the city has an estimated population of 433,477 and the density of 1,450.14 persons per km². The total area is 298.92 km².


The city was founded on April 1, 1928.


Kurashiki is famous within Japan for a number of reasons:

  • Kurashiki is the home to Japan's first Western art museum, the Ohara Museum of Art. Established in 1930 by Magosaburu Ohara, it contains masterpieces by El Greco, Monet, Matisse, Gauguin, and Renoir. The collection also has fine examples of Asian and contemporary art. The museum itself is housed in a neo-Classical building;
  • Kurashiki University of Science and the Arts;
  • the ancient merchant quarter, called the Bikan historical area. This area of the city is surrounded by almost unique examples of 17th century wooden warehouses painted white with traditional black tiles, and sits on a canal framed with weeping willows and filled with koi. The area is extraordinarily picturesque, and is a popular tourist destination. One of the city's former town halls was located in the Kurashiki Kan, an impressive European style building constructed in 1917.

A Tivoli theme park was built in 1998, based on the theme park of the same name in Copenhagen, and is popular with local Japanese.


External links

  • Kurashiki's official homepage (http://www.city.kurashiki.okayama.jp/index_e.html)
  • Ohara Museum of Art website (http://iwe.kusa.ac.jp/OHARA/om_op.html)
  • Kurashiki University of Science and the Arts website (http://www.kusa.ac.jp/)
  Okayama Prefecture
Cities
Bizen | Ibara | Kasaoka | Kurashiki | Niimi | Okayama (capital) | Setouchi | Soja | Takahashi | Tamano | Tsuyama
Districts
Aida | Akaiwa | Asakuchi | Atetsu | Jobou | Katsuta | Kawakami | Kibi | Kojima | Kume | Maniwa | Mitsu | Oda | Oku | Shitsuki | Tomata | Tsukubo | Wake

  Results from FactBites:
 
Kurashiki Travel Guide (105 words)
Kurashiki is a city in Okayama Prefecture, a few kilometers west of Okayama City.
During the Edo Period, Kurashiki was a center for storing rice harvested in the surrounding, fertile regions.
Literally meaning something like "storehouse town", Kurashiki was direcly administered by the Edo shogunate for its economically strategic importance.
Canterburys Digest - New Zealand - Canterbury News (1040 words)
Kurashiki is as far from the equator as Auckland.
Between Kurashiki and Okayama lies a sprawl of housing, and the combined population of the two cities is around one million.
Even though Kurashiki is a country town (if Tokyo was Auckland, Kurashiki would be BurkeÂ’s Pass), the youth of Kurashiki never the less embrace with enthusiasm the spirit of roguery that marks young Japanese people all over the country.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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