Puneet Varma (Editor)

Minamishimabara

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Country
  
Japan

City hall address
  
859-2211

Population
  
51,476 (1 Jan 2009)

Flower
  
Sunflowers

Points of interest
  
Hinoe Castle

Region
  
Kyushu

Area
  
169.9 km²

Local time
  
Monday 6:36 AM

Prefecture
  
Nagasaki Prefecture

Minamishimabara httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Time zone
  
Japan Standard Time (UTC+9)

Website
  
www.city.minamishimabara.lg.jp

Weather
  
11°C, Wind N at 11 km/h, 94% Humidity

Minamishimabara (南島原市, Minami-Shimabara-shi, lit. South Shimabara City) is a city in Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan. It occupies the southern tip of Shimabara Peninsula.

Contents

Map of Minamishimabara, Nagasaki Prefecture, Japan

As of 1 January 2009, the city has an estimated population of 51,476 and a population density of 303 persons per km². The total area is 169.89 km².

The modern city of Minamishimabara was founded on March 31, 2006, from the merger of the towns of Arie, Fukae, Futsu, Kazusa, Kitaarima, Kuchinotsu, Minamiarima and Nishiarie (all from Minamitakaki District). Minamitakaki District was therefore dissolved as a result of this merger.

History

The area now comprising Minamishimabara was under the control of the Arima clan, who ruled from Hinoe Castle in the Muromachi period. The area was the site of considerable foreign trade and Portuguese and Spanish missionary activity, and by the early Edo period, a large percentage of the population were Kirishitan. After the start of the national isolation policy, the Tokugawa Bakufu banned Christianity from 1614 and replaced Arima Naozumi with Matsukura Shigemasa, who relocated the capital of Shimabara Domain to Shimabara Castle is what is now Shimabara. Due to misgovernment, high taxes and persecution of Christianity, the population rose in the Shimabara Rebellion of 1637, with the peasants occupying the fortress of Hara Castle as their strongpoint. The rebellion was suppressed with extreme severity by the Tokugawa Bakufu, and the area of Minamishimabara was ruled by a branch of the Matsudaira clan from 1668-1774 and from 1774-1871.

References

Minamishimabara Wikipedia