:Ōshū, Iwate
{{Infobox settlement
| name = Ōshū
| native_name = {{nobold|{{lang|ja|奥州市}}}}
| official_name =
| native_name_lang = ja
| settlement_type = City
| image_skyline = OSHU_Composite.jpg
| imagesize =
| image_alt =
| image_caption = From top left; Spring in Mizusawa Park, the Autumn rice harvest in Isawa, Maesawa and the Kitakami River in Summer from Mt. Otowa, Autumn foliage at Fujiwara no Sato in Esashi and a manhole cover in Koromogawa
| image_flag = Flag of Oshu Iwate.svg
| flag_alt =
| image_seal = Emblem of Ōshū, Iwate.svg
| seal_alt =
| image_shield =
| shield_alt =
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| nickname =
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| image_map = Oshu in Iwate Prefecture Ja.svg
| map_alt =
| map_caption = Location of Ōshū in Iwate Prefecture
| pushpin_map = Japan
| pushpin_label_position =
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| coordinates = {{coord|39|8|40.1|N|141|08|20.9|E|region:JP|display=inline,title}}
| coor_pinpoint =
| coordinates_footnotes =
| subdivision_type = Country
| subdivision_name = Japan
| subdivision_type1 = Region
| subdivision_name1 = Tōhoku
| subdivision_type2 = Prefecture
| subdivision_name2 = Iwate
| subdivision_type3 =
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| established_title =
| established_date =
| founder =
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| government_footnotes =
| leader_party =
| leader_title = Mayor
| leader_name = Masaaki Aihara
| leader_title1 =
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| total_type =
| unit_pref =
| area_magnitude =
| area_footnotes =
| area_total_km2 = 993.30
| area_land_km2 =
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| population_footnotes =
| population_total = 114620
| population_as_of = April 30, 2020
| population_density_km2 = auto
| population_est =
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| timezone1 = Japan Standard Time
| utc_offset1 = +9
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| blank_name_sec1 = Phone number
| blank_info_sec1 = 0197-24-2111
| blank1_name_sec1 = Address
| blank1_info_sec1 = 1-1 Ōtemachi, Mizusawa-ku, Ōshū-shi, Iwate-ken
023-8501
| blank_name_sec2 = Climate
| website = {{Official website|1=http://www.city.oshu.iwate.jp/}}
| footnotes =
| module = {{Infobox place symbols| embedded=yes
| tree = Maple
| flower = Sakura
| bird = Green pheasant
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}}
}}
{{Nihongo|Ōshū|奥州市|Ōshū-shi}} is a city located in Iwate Prefecture, Japan. {{As of|2020|04|30}}, the city had an estimated population of 114,620 and a population density of 120 persons per km2 in 45,728 households.[https://www.city.oshu.iwate.jp/uploaded/attachment/24130.pdf Ōshū City official statistics] {{in lang|ja}} The total area of the city is {{convert|993.30|sqkm|sqmi}}. Ōshū is famous for its Maesawa Beef, numerous festivals, historic temples and shrines and Fujiwara no Sato, a theme park and movie lot based on the exploits of the Northern Fujiwaras in the 12th century. Many famous people claim Ōshū as their home, including Los Angeles Dodgers baseball player Shohei Ohtani and Ichiro Ozawa, the long-time leader of the Democratic Party of Japan.
Geography
Ōshū is located in the south-central portion of Iwate Prefecture, bordered by the Akita Prefecture to the west. At 993.35 square kilometers, Ōshū is the second largest municipality in Iwate Prefecture in terms of land area. The city lies in a fertile plain straddling the Kitakami River and rises to the Ōu Mountains in the west and the Kitakami Mountains to the east. The city's highest point is Mt. Yakeishi-dake at 1,548 meters in the Ōu Mountains. The northern boundary is marked by the Isawa River while the Koromogawa River marks the southern border. Ishibuchi Dam creates a reservoir on the upper reaches of the Isawa River near Mt. Yakeishi-dake.
=Neighboring municipalities=
Akita Prefecture
Iwate Prefecture
=Climate=
Ōshū has a humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate classification Cfa) or humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification Dfa) depending on the isotherm used with warm summers and cold winters. The average annual temperature in Ōshū is 10.4 °C. The average annual rainfall is 1278 mm with September as the wettest month and January as the driest month. The temperatures are highest on average in August, at around 24.2 °C, and lowest in January, at around -2.5 °C.[https://en.climate-data.org/location/5142/ Ōshū climate data]
{{Weather box
|width=auto
|collapsed = Y
|single line = Y
|metric first = Y
|location = Wakayanagi, Ōshū, Iwate (1991−2020 normals, extremes 1976−present)
|Jan record high C = 14.1
|Feb record high C = 15.9
|Mar record high C = 21.7
|Apr record high C = 30.6
|May record high C = 33.6
|Jun record high C = 33.4
|Jul record high C = 35.8
|Aug record high C = 36.9
|Sep record high C = 34.7
|Oct record high C = 28.3
|Nov record high C = 22.7
|Dec record high C = 19.3
|Jan high C = 2.1
|Feb high C = 3.3
|Mar high C = 8.0
|Apr high C = 14.9
|May high C = 20.5
|Jun high C = 23.9
|Jul high C = 27.0
|Aug high C = 28.5
|Sep high C = 24.5
|Oct high C = 18.4
|Nov high C = 11.5
|Dec high C = 4.6
|Jan mean C = -1.4
|Feb mean C = -0.7
|Mar mean C = 3.0
|Apr mean C = 8.9
|May mean C = 14.8
|Jun mean C = 18.8
|Jul mean C = 22.3
|Aug mean C = 23.4
|Sep mean C = 19.5
|Oct mean C = 13.1
|Nov mean C = 6.6
|Dec mean C = 1.0
|Jan low C = -5.1
|Feb low C = -4.7
|Mar low C = -1.5
|Apr low C = 3.2
|May low C = 9.7
|Jun low C = 14.7
|Jul low C = 18.8
|Aug low C = 19.8
|Sep low C = 15.5
|Oct low C = 8.5
|Nov low C = 2.1
|Dec low C = -2.4
|Jan record low C = -19.9
|Feb record low C = -15.9
|Mar record low C = -13.2
|Apr record low C = -6.5
|May record low C = 0.9
|Jun record low C = 6.3
|Jul record low C = 9.0
|Aug record low C = 11.4
|Sep record low C = 4.4
|Oct record low C = -0.9
|Nov record low C = -8.2
|Dec record low C = -12.5
|precipitation colour = green
|Jan precipitation mm = 65.1
|Feb precipitation mm = 50.4
|Mar precipitation mm = 83.6
|Apr precipitation mm = 87.6
|May precipitation mm = 109.4
|Jun precipitation mm = 136.6
|Jul precipitation mm = 186.3
|Aug precipitation mm = 154.4
|Sep precipitation mm = 166.9
|Oct precipitation mm = 124.6
|Nov precipitation mm = 80.7
|Dec precipitation mm = 80.8
|year precipitation mm = 1325.2
| unit precipitation days = 1.0 mm
|Jan precipitation days = 14.0
|Feb precipitation days = 11.7
|Mar precipitation days = 12.0
|Apr precipitation days = 10.3
|May precipitation days = 10.5
|Jun precipitation days = 10.6
|Jul precipitation days = 13.1
|Aug precipitation days = 11.9
|Sep precipitation days = 11.6
|Oct precipitation days = 10.8
|Nov precipitation days = 11.6
|Dec precipitation days = 14.6
|Jan sun = 74.6
|Feb sun = 90.8
|Mar sun = 141.5
|Apr sun = 171.0
|May sun = 179.3
|Jun sun = 140.2
|Jul sun = 119.3
|Aug sun = 133.0
|Sep sun = 115.8
|Oct sun = 127.8
|Nov sun = 109.7
|Dec sun = 76.2
|year sun = 1485.2
|source 1 = JMA{{cite web
| url = https://www.data.jma.go.jp/obd/stats/etrn/view/rank_a.php?prec_no=33&block_no=0235&year=&month=&day=&view=h0
|script-title=ja:観測史上1~10位の値(年間を通じての値)
| publisher = JMA
| access-date = February 25, 2022}}{{cite web
| url = https://www.data.jma.go.jp/obd/stats/etrn/view/nml_amd_ym.php?prec_no=33&block_no=0235&year=&month=&day=&view=h0
|script-title=ja:気象庁 / 平年値(年・月ごとの値)
| publisher = JMA
| access-date = February 25, 2022}}}}
Demographics
Per Japanese census data,[https://www.citypopulation.de/php/japan-iwate.php Ōshū population statistics] the population of Ōshū peaked at around the year 2000, and has been in decline since.
{{Historical populations
| 1920 | 93,876
| 1930 | 104,752
| 1940 | 110,980
| 1950 | 137,556
| 1960 | 138,272
| 1970 | 126,304
| 1980 | 130,318
| 1990 | 132,116
| 2000 | 133,056
| 2010 | 124,746
| 2020 | 112,937
|align = none
| footnote =
}}
History
The area of present-day Ōshū was part of ancient Mutsu Province, and has been settled since at least the Japanese Paleolithic period. Isawa is especially rich in Kofun Period remains from the 5th century. By the Nara period, Japanese hunters, trappers, settlers and itinerant missionaries were visiting and settling in this area, and coming into contact with the native Emishi people. In 729, Kokuseki-ji temple claims to have been established by the Buddhist priest Gyōki in a mountainous area to the east of the Kitakami River in what is now Mizusawa. In 776, two separate attacks were launched by the imperial dynasty against the Emishi with little success. In June 787 Emishi cavalry led by Aterui and More surprised and routed a larger force of Japanese infantry in the Battle of Subuse (located in what is now part of Mizusawa). Despite these successes the Emishi could not hold out against the Japanese and in 802 Aterui and More surrendered and were beheaded. That same year Sakanoue no Tamuramaro, established Isawa Castle. Despite the victory the Japanese found if difficult to rule the territory directly. Six semi-autonomous districts were established along the Kitakami River. Eventually these came under the control of a powerful Emishi clan from Appi, the Abe clan. Early in the 11th century Abe no Yoritoki refused to pay taxes to the central government, led raiding parties south of the Koromo River, and generally ruled as an independent monarch. This led to the {{Nihongo|Zenkunen War|前九年合戦}} or Early Nine-Years War (1050 - 1062), in which Minamoto no Yoriyoshi reinforced by Kiyohara no Takenori from Dewa Province defeated the Abe clan. The area later came under the rule of the Kiyohara clan. Corrupt administration by the Kiyohara led to the Gosannen War (後三年合戦) or Latter Three Years' War (1083 - 1087) in which Minamoto no Yoshiie subdued the Kiyohara.
Fujiwara no Kiyohira, the founder of the Ōshū Fujiwara dynasty, was born in Fort Toyota which is now in the Iwayado area of Esashi. Around 1100, he relocated to Hiraizumi where he and his descendants ruled for nearly a hundred years.
In 1348, a Zen Buddhist priest named Mutei Ryōshō founded the temple of Shōbō-ji near Kokuseki-ji temple in Mizusawa. It is the third head temple of the Sōtō sect of Zen Buddhism and boasts the largest thatched roof in Japan.
During the Sengoku period, the area came under control of the powerful Date clan. During this period, Italian Jesuit missionaries regarded it as a kingdom.{{cite book |last1=Amati |first1=Scipione |title=Historia del regno di Voxu |date=1615}} which they called "Voxu". Following the Battle of Sekigahara, the Tokugawa shogunate confirmed the area was part of Sendai Domain under Date Masamune. One of his retainers was a certain Juan Gotō who commanded Date Masamune's gun regiment at Osaka in 1614 and 1615. He was also a Kirishitan and established a church in the Fukuwara area of Mizusawa. After Christianity was outlawed in 1623 he went into hiding to escape capture. Foreign missionaries continued to visit the area in secret until December 1623 when the Jesuit Padre Diogo de Carvalho from Portugal was captured on the upper reaches of the Isawa River, sent to Sendai and forced to stand in the frozen Hirose River until he died in the early hours of what was then New Year's Day, namely February 19, 1624. There is a memorial to Juan Gotō in the Fukuwara area and many crypto-Christian remains can still be seen in that neighborhood.
Following the Meiji restoration, the area was assigned to Iwate Prefecture rather than Miyagi Prefecture as part of the governments efforts to break up former Sendai Domain, partly due to its role in opposing the Meiji government during the Boshin War. The town of Mizusawa was created within Isawa District on April 1, 1889, with the establishment of the modern municipalities system. It was raised to city status on April 1, 1954. The village of Esashi was likewise created on April 1, 1889, raised to town status on February 10, 1955, and to city status on November 3, 1958.
The city of Ōshū was established on February 20, 2006, from the merger of the cities Esashi and Mizusawa with the towns of Isawa and Maesawa, and the village of Koromogawa.
Government
Ōshū has a mayor-council form of government with a directly elected mayor and a unicameral city legislature of 28 members. Ōshū, together with the city of Kanegasaki contributes five seats to the Iwate Prefectural legislature. In terms of national politics, the city is part of Iwate 3rd district of the lower house of the Diet of Japan.
Education
- Graduate University for Advanced Studies – Iwate campus
- Iwate University – Ōshū campus
- Ōshū has 27 public elementary schools and 12 public middle schools operated by the city government and eight public high schools operated by the Iwate Prefectural Board of Education. The prefecture also operates one special education school.
Transportation
=Railway=
22px East Japan Railway Company (JR East) - Tōhoku Shinkansen
- {{STN|Mizusawa-Esashi|x}}
22px East Japan Railway Company (JR East) - Tōhoku Main Line
- {{STN|Maesawa|x}} - {{STN|Rikuchū-Orii|x}} - {{STN|Mizusawa|x}}
=Highway=
- {{jct|country=JPN|Exp|E4}} – Maesawa SA, Mizusawa IC
- {{jct|country=JPN|Route|4}}
- {{jct|country=JPN|Route|107}}
- {{jct|country=JPN|Route|343}}
- {{jct|country=JPN|Route|397}}
- {{jct|country=JPN|Route|456}}
Sister cities
- {{flagicon|Austria}} Breitenwang, Tirol, Austria, since June 2011
- {{flagicon|Australia}} Greater Shepparton, Victoria, Australia, since March 1979
- {{flagicon|Austria}} Reutte, Tirol, Austria, since June 2011{{cite web|url=http://www.clair.or.jp/cgi-bin/simai/e/03.cgi?p=03&n=Iwate%20Prefecture|title=International Exchange|work=List of Affiliation Partners within Prefectures|publisher=Council of Local Authorities for International Relations (CLAIR)|language=en|access-date=21 November 2015}}
Local attractions
- Isawa Castle, ruins of a Heian-period fortification, a National Historic Site{{cite web|url=http://bunka.nii.ac.jp/heritages/detail/171335|title=志波城跡 しわじょうあと|work=Cultural Heritage Online|publisher=Agency for Cultural Affairs|language=ja|access-date=25 December 2016}}
- The sound of the Nambu Fūrin (wind chimes) at Mizusawa Station in Ōshū is designated as one of the 100 Soundscapes of Japan by the Ministry of the Environment{{cite web |url=http://www.env.go.jp/air/life/nihon_no_oto/index.html |title=100 Soundscapes of Japan |publisher=Ministry of the Environment |access-date=8 December 2015}}
- Ōsuzukami Site, Jōmon period ruins, a National Historic Site{{cite web|url= http://bunka.nii.ac.jp/heritages/detail/140577 |title=大清水上遺跡|work=Cultural Heritage Online|publisher=Agency for Cultural Affairs|language=ja|access-date=25 December 2016}}
- Shirotoridate ruins, Heian period settlement ruins, a National Historic Site {{cite web |url=https://bunka.nii.ac.jp/heritages/detail/190072|script-title=ja:柳之御所・平泉遺跡群 |trans-title=Yanagi Gosho - Hiraizumi Sites |language=ja |publisher=Agency for Cultural Affairs |access-date=3 August 2017}}
- Tsunozuka Kofun, the northernmost keyhole-shaped kofun in Japan, a National Historic Site{{cite web |url= https://kunishitei.bunka.go.jp/heritage/detail/401/168 |title=角塚古墳|trans-title=Tsunozuka kofun |language=ja |publisher=Agency for Cultural Affairs }}
Notable people
- Shiina Etsusaburo, diplomat, foreign minister
- Maedagawa Katsu, sumo wrestler
- Keiji Kokuta, politician
- Akiko Kuji, announcer, actress, and model
- Saito Makoto, IJN admiral, politician and prime minister of Japan
- Eiichi Ohtaki, musician, singer-songwriter
- Shohei Ohtani, professional baseball player
- Gotō Shinpei, politician
- Oikawa Teruhisa, sumo wrestler
- Tatsuya Yoshida, musician
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Commons category|Oshu, Iwate|Ōshū, Iwate}}
- [http://www.city.oshu.iwate.jp/ Official Website] {{in lang|ja}}
{{Iwate}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Oshu}}