:Saga Prefecture

{{Short description|Prefecture of Japan}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2011}}

{{redirect|Saga, Japan|the city|Saga (city)}}

{{Infobox settlement

| name = Saga Prefecture

| native_name = {{nobold|{{lang|ja|佐賀県}}}}

| settlement_type = Prefecture

| translit_lang1 = Japanese

| translit_lang1_type = Japanese

| translit_lang1_info = {{lang|ja|佐賀県}}

| translit_lang1_type1 = Rōmaji

| translit_lang1_info1 = {{lang|ja-Latn|Saga-ken}}

| image_skyline = Nijinomatsubara.jpg

| image_caption = Nijinomatsubara pine forest and a corner of Karatsu city, Saga

| image_flag = Flag of Saga Prefecture.svg

| flag_size = 100px

| image_seal = Symbol mark of Saga prefecture.svg

| seal_size = 80px

| image_blank_emblem = Emblem of Saga Prefecture.svg

| blank_emblem_size = 80px

| blank_emblem_type = Emblem

| image_map = Map of Japan with highlight on 41 Saga prefecture.svg

| coordinates =

| subdivision_type = Country

| subdivision_name = Japan

| subdivision_type1 = Region

| subdivision_name1 = Kyushu

| subdivision_type2 = Island

| subdivision_name2 = Kyushu

| seat_type = Capital

| seat = Saga

| parts_type = Subdivisions

| parts_style = para

| p1 = Districts: 6

| p2 = Municipalities: 20

| leader_title = Governor

| leader_name = Yoshinori Yamaguchi

| area_total_km2 = 2,439

| area_water_percent = 1.7

| area_rank = 42nd

| population_footnotes =

| population_total = 785,748

| population_density_km2 = 322

| demographics_type2 = GDP

| demographics2_footnotes = {{Cite web |title=2020年度国民経済計算(2015年基準・2008SNA) : 経済社会総合研究所 - 内閣府 |url=https://www.esri.cao.go.jp/jp/sna/data/data_list/kakuhou/files/2020/2020_kaku_top.html |access-date=2023-05-18 |website=内閣府ホームページ |language=ja}}

| demographics2_title1 = Total

| demographics2_info1 = JP¥ 3,220 billion
US$ 29.5 billion (2019)

| iso_code = JP-41

| website = [https://www.pref.saga.lg.jp/ Saga Prefecture-japanese-english translate]

| module = {{Infobox place symbols| embedded=yes

| country = Japan

| bird = Black-billed magpie (Pica pica)

| fish =

| flower = Camphor blossom (Cinnamomum camphora)

| tree = Camphor tree (Cinnamomum camphora)

}}

| anthem = Saga kenmin no uta

}}

{{nihongo|Saga Prefecture|佐賀県|Saga-ken|{{IPA|ja|saꜜ.ɡa, -ŋa, sa.ɡaꜜ.keɴ, -ŋaꜜ.keɴ}}{{cite book|script-title=ja:NHK日本語発音アクセント新辞典|publisher=NHK Publishing|editor=NHK Broadcasting Culture Research Institute|date=24 May 2016|lang=ja}}}} is a prefecture of Japan located on the island of Kyushu.Nussbaum, Louis-Frédéric. (2005). "Fukuoka-ken" in {{Google books|p2QnPijAEmEC|Japan Encyclopedia, p. 218|page=218}}. Saga Prefecture has a population of roughly 780,000 and has a geographic area of {{Convert|2439|km2|sqmi|comma=}}. Saga Prefecture borders Fukuoka Prefecture to the northeast and Nagasaki Prefecture to the southwest.

Saga is the capital and largest city of Saga Prefecture, with other major cities including Karatsu, Tosu, and Imari.{{sfnp|Nussbaum|Roth|2005|loc="Saga prefecture", p. 804}} Saga Prefecture is located in the northwest of Kyūshū covering an isthmus-like area extending between the Sea of Japan and the Ariake Sea.{{sfnp|Nussbaum|Roth|2005|loc="Saga prefecture", p. 804}} Saga Prefecture's western region is known for the production of ceramics and porcelain, particularly in the towns of Karatsu, Imari, and Arita.

History

{{See also|Historic Sites of Saga Prefecture}}

File:YoshinogariIseki.jpg building at the Yoshinogari site]]

File:唐津城 - panoramio.jpg]]

In ancient times, the area composed by Nagasaki Prefecture and Saga Prefecture was called Hizen Province.{{sfnp|Nussbaum|Roth|2005|loc="Provinces and prefectures", p. 780}} The current name dates from the Meiji Restoration. Rice farming culture has prospered here since ancient times, and vestiges can be seen at the ruins of Nabatake in Karatsu and the Yoshinogari site in Yoshinogari.

=Feudal period=

File:Sagajyou shachinomon.jpg (Shachi gate)]]

File:Romon gate and Honden of Yutoku Inari Shrine.jpg]]

File:La Montgorlfier Nocturne.JPG]]

File:Nijinomatsubara.jpg]]

From the Kamakura period to the Muromachi period, it is thought that over 100 feudal clans existed. Also exerting great influence during this time was a samurai clan operating along the Genkai Sea called the Matsuratō. Upon entering the Sengoku period, the Ryūzōji clan expanded their control to include all of Hizen and Chikugo Provinces, and part of Higo and Chikuzen Provinces. After the death of daimyō Ryūzōji Takanobu, Nabeshima Naoshige took control of the political situation, and by 1607 all of the Ryūzōji clan's domain was under the control of the Nabeshima clan.

In the Edo period this area was called the Saga Domain (佐賀藩 Saga-han), and it included three sub-domains: the Hasunoike, Ogi and Kashima Domains. Also within the current borders of Saga Prefecture during this time were the Karatsu Domain (唐津藩 Karatsu-han) and two territories of the Tsushima-Fuchū Domain (対馬府中藩 Tsushimafuchū-han). Saga Domain and its sub-domains continued to be ruled by the Nabeshima clan, its various illegitimate family lineages and members of the former Ryūzōji clan, and politically the area was relatively stable. The cost of defending Nagasaki was increasing and, difficult from the start, the financial situation was worsened by the great Kyōhō famine and the Siebold Typhoon of 1828. Due to the large area of reclaimed land from the Ariake Sea, arable land was increased significantly and by the 1840s the annual koku of Saga Domain increased to about 670,000, twice that of 200 years before.

Around the middle of the 19th century, Naomasa Nabeshima strove to set right the domain's financial affairs, reduce the number of government officials, and encourage local industry such as Arita porcelain, green tea, and coal. Also, thanks to the proximity of the international port of Nagasaki, new technologies were introduced from overseas, such as the reverberatory furnace and models of steam locomotives.

After the Boshin War, many people from Saga Domain assisted in the Meiji Restoration. In the Meiji era the modernization of coal mines in Kishima and Higashimatsuura districts, among others, progressed bolstered by the construction of railroads.

=Timeline=

Image:Eto Shimpei at Saga Rebellion.jpg in Saga. Woodblock print from Tokyo Nichinichi Shimbun, 1874.]]

Geography

Kyushu's prefecture, Saga, is located on the northwest corner of the island, bordered by the Genkai Sea and the Tsushima Strait to the north and the Ariake Sea to the south. Saga's proximity to mainland Asia has made it an important gateway for the transmission of culture and trade throughout Japanese history. Largely rural outside of the two largest cities of Saga and Karatsu, agricultural and forested lands comprise over 68% of the total prefectural land area. There are six prefectural parks and one quasi-national park in Saga.

  • Northernmost point: Enuonohana, Kakarajima, Karatsu – {{coord|33|36|N|129|51|E}}
  • Easternmost point: Iida-machi, Tosu – {{coord|33|23|N|130|32|E}}
  • Southernmost point: Ōurakō, Tara – {{coord|32|57|N|130|13|E}}
  • Westernmost point: Ōse, Madarashima, Karatsu – {{coord|33|34|N|129|44|E}}

=Geographical features=

==Plains==

  • Saga Plains

==Mountains==

  • Sefuri Mountains, Tara Mountains
  • Mount Kyōga (1,076 m, the highest point in Saga), Mount Sefuri (1,056 m), Tenzan (1,046 m), Taradake (996 m), Mount Ihara (962 m), Kinzan (957 m), Raizan (955 m), Mount Hagane (900 m)

==Rivers and lakes==

  • Chikugo River (15.5 km in Saga), Kase River (57.5 km), Matsuura River (45.3 km), Rokkaku River (43.6 km)
  • Hokuzan Dam, Kase River Dam

==Seas==

==Peninsulas==

  • Higashimatsuura Peninsula, part of Kitamatsuura Peninsula

==Islands==

  • Genkai Sea: Takashima, Kashiwajima, Ogawajima, Kakarajima, Matsushima, Madarajima, Kabeshima, Mukushima, Iroha Islands{{cite web |title=The Saga Sightseeing Information: Nature |url=http://www.asobo-saga.jp/lang/english/nature.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140908015550/http://www.asobo-saga.jp/lang/english/nature.html |archive-date=September 8, 2014 |publisher=Saga Tourist Federation Information Center (Tourism Division) |access-date=26 September 2012}}
  • Ariake Sea: Okinoshima

==Forests==

  • Niji-no-Matsubara

==Caves==

  • Nanatsugama Caves

=Land use=

Total area: 2439.31 km2

  • Forest, rough lands: 49.2% – 1/3 of the national average.
  • Forested area: 1096.9 km2 – From 2000, 42nd in the country.
  • Arable land: 39.1% – 2 times the national average.
  • Residential: 6.8% – 1.4 times the national average.
  • Other: 4.9% – Roughly the same as the national average.

As of March 31, 2008, 11% of the total land area of the prefecture was designated as Natural Parks, namely the Genkai Quasi-National Park and Hachimandake, Kawakami-Kinryū, Kurokamiyama, Sefuri-Kitayama, Taradake, and Tenzan Prefectural Natural Parks.{{cite web |url=http://www.env.go.jp/en/nature/nps/park/doc/files/np_6.pdf |title=General overview of area figures for Natural Parks by prefecture |date=1 April 2014 |publisher=Ministry of the Environment (Japan) |access-date=4 February 2012}}

=Climate=

Saga Prefecture has a mild climate with an average temperature of about {{cvt|16|°C}}.

Municipalities

{{See also|List of cities in Saga Prefecture by population}}Image:Map of Saga Prefecture Ja.svg

File:Saga cityscape from mount Kinryu.jpg

File:100731 Central of Karatsu.jpg

File:Tara town center from west of Kamezaki.jpg

As of October 1, 2007, there are 10 cities, six districts, and 10 towns in Saga Prefecture, a total of 20 municipalities. As a part of the Great Heisei Merger, the number of municipalities has decreased since January 1, 2005. On March 20, 2006, the village of Sefuri merged with the city of Kanzaki, leaving Saga with no more villages.

=Cities=

=Towns=

= Mergers =

{{main|List of mergers in Saga Prefecture}}

=Metropolitan areas=

  • Karatsu-Higashimatsuura
  • Karatsu, Genkai
  • Kitō
  • Takeo, Kashima, Ureshino, Shiroishi, Ōmachi, Kōhoku, Tara
  • Saga
  • Saga, Taku, Ogi, Kanzaki
  • Tosu
  • Tosu, Kamimine, Kiyama, Yoshinogari, Miyaki

Economy

Agriculture, forestry, and coastal fisheries form a large portion of the prefectural economy. Regional agricultural specialties include Saga beef, onions, and strawberries. The prefecture is the largest producer of mochigome (sticky rice) and greenhouse mandarin oranges in Japan.

According to 2002 figures, regional trade exports are focused primarily towards North America (29.3%), Western Europe (26.1%), and the Newly Industrializing Economies of South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore (19.9%). Imports come principally from North America (40.6%), the ASEAN nations (23.3%), and the People's Republic of China (12.2%).

Demographics

File:Saga prefecture population pyramid in 2020.svg

In 2002, the census recorded a population of 873,885 in Saga. Of these, 15.9% were aged 0–14, 62.7% were aged 15–64, and 21.4% were over 65 years old. There were 3,596 foreigners (0.4%) and 307 exchange students (0.03%) living in the prefecture.

Education

=Universities=

Transportation

{{directory|section|date=October 2020}}

=Air=

=Rail=

=Road=

Culture

Arita, Imari and Karatsu are famous for the porcelain that is created there. The top porcelain houses in the country are located in these areas, including Imaemon Porcelain, Genemon Porcelain and Fukagawa Porcelain.

Language

Saga-ben (Saga dialect) is Saga's own variation of Japanese.

Festivals

=Balloon Fiesta=

The Saga International Balloon Fiesta is held at the beginning of November every year just outside Saga City along the Kase River. This is a popular event and attracts competitors from all over the world.{{citation needed|date=October 2020}}

=Karatsu Kunchi=

The Karatsu Kunchi is held at the beginning of November in Karatsu City. This is Saga's largest festival and attracts around 500,000 visitors every year.

=Kashima Gatalympics=

The Kashima Gatalympics are held every May–June in the city of Kashima. This event involves playing a variety of sports in the mudflats of the Ariake Sea. The Gatalympics are not held if the weather is raining.

=Imari Ton-Ten-Ton Festival=

The Imari Ton-Ten-Ton Festival is held for 3 days every year near the end of October. Located in Imari City, the festival is one of the three great fighting festivals in Japan. In the festival a crashing battle takes place between the two huge portable shrines, the Ara-mikoshi and the Danjiri. The name "Ton-Ten-Ton" represents the sound of drums used in the festival.

Sports

=Sports teams=

Teams listed below are based in Saga Prefecture.

Football (soccer)

Volleyball

Basketball

Baseball

Tourism

Karatsu, with its fine castle, is a tourist destination in Saga. The remains of a Yayoi village in Yoshinogari also attract large numbers of sightseers. Another place to visit is Yūtoku Inari Shrine, one of Japan's three biggest Inari shrines.

The Saga prefecture helped sponsor the 2018 anime Zombie Land Saga, which has attracted tourists to various locations showcased in the series, including the museum that doubles in the series as the girls' house and Drive-In Tori Chicken.

Notable people

{{More citations needed section|date=March 2014}}

  • Comedian and J-pop singer Hanawa became famous for comically singing about Saga Prefecture and its oddities.
  • Former TV personality Masashi Tashiro was born in Saga Prefecture.
  • World War II fighter ace Saburō Sakai was born in Saga Prefecture.
  • Actress and J-pop singer Yasuko Matsuyuki and her younger brother, J-pop/rock singer Yuna Katsuki (of Lazy Knack and Red), are from Saga city.{{Cite web |url=http://flare.sugizolove.com/yuna.html |title=Yuna |publisher=Love Flare |date=2005 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120327143011/http://flare.sugizolove.com/yuna.html |archive-date=March 27, 2012 |access-date=June 10, 2015}}

=The Seven Wise Men of Saga=

"The Seven Wise Men of Saga" is the name given to these seven men from Saga, each of whom have made a significant contribution to the modernisation of Japan. Their contributions began in the last days of the Tokugawa shogunate, and continued into the Meiji Restoration. Even today, this era shines impressively in Saga's history.

See also

Notes

{{Reflist}}

References

  • {{Cite book |last1=Nussbaum |first1=Louis-Frédéric |author-link1=Louis Frédéric |first2=Käthe |last2=Roth |year=2005 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=p2QnPijAEmEC |title=Japan Encyclopedia |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts |publisher=Harvard University Press |isbn=978-0-674-01753-5 |oclc=58053128 |pages=[https://books.google.com/books?id=p2QnPijAEmEC&pg=PA780 780], [https://books.google.com/books?id=p2QnPijAEmEC&pg=PA804 804] }}
  • {{Cite web |title=Welcome to Saga |publisher=International Exchange Division, General Affairs Department |location=Saga Prefecture}}