Karuizawa, Nagano

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}}Template:Main other{{#ifexpr:{{#invoke:ParameterCount|main|mapframe|image_map|image_map1|pushpin_map}} >2 |Template:Main other}} Template:Nihongo is a resort town located in Nagano Prefecture, Japan. Template:As of, the town had an estimated population of 21,834 in 11,285 households,<ref name="Population">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and a population density of 139 persons per km2. The total area of the town is Template:Cvt.

Originally, there was a stage station (shukuba) called Karuisawa-shuku on the Nakasendō. The Shin'etsu Line opened in 1888 and the town became popular as a Western-style hill station around that time.<ref>Shotenkenchiku-sha, HOTEL RESTAURANTS & BARS, 1995, p.15</ref>

Geography

File:Mt.asama.karuizawa.jpg
Mt.Asama seen from Karuizawa

Karuizawa is located in eastern Nagano Prefecture, bordered by Gunma Prefecture to the north, east and south. The town is located on an elevated plain at the foot of Mount Asama, one of Japan's most active volcanoes. The mountain is classed as a Category A active volcano. A small eruption was detected in June 2015, and a more significant eruption spewing hot rocks and a plume of ash occurred in February 2015. Mount Asama's most destructive eruption in recent recorded history took place in 1783, when over 1,000 were killed. The volcano is actively monitored by scientists and climbing close to the summit is prohibited.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Surrounding municipalities

Climate

Karuizawa has a humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification Dfb) with warm summers and cold winters. The average annual temperature in Karuizawa is Template:Cvt. The average annual rainfall is Template:Cvt with September as the wettest month. The temperatures are highest on average in August, at around Template:Cvt, and lowest in January, at around Template:Cvt.<ref name=normals/> Precipitation is much heavier in the summer than in the winter.

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History

File:Hiroshige Travellers lighting their pipes by a fire.jpg
From Hiroshige's series Sixty-nine Stations of the Kisokaido (1834–1842), view 19 and station 18 at Karuisawa
File:Alexander Croft Shaw.jpg
Alexander Croft Shaw
File:Karuizawa Union Church 2.jpg
Karuizawa Union Church, before 1945
File:Kyu-Karuizawa Main Street, Vintage Photos.jpg
Kyu-Karuizawa Ginza (Main Street), 1930s
File:Karuizawa Foreigners Cemetery 1.jpg
Karuizawa Foreigner's Cemetery

The area of present-day Karuizawa was part of ancient Shinano Province, and developed as Karuisawa-shuku, a post station on the Nakasendō highway connecting Edo with Kyoto during the Edo period.

  • 2 August 1876: The hamlets of Kutsukake, Shiozawanitta, Karijuku, Narusawanitta, and Yui merged to form the village of Nagakura. The village of Hatsuji in Saku District absorbed the hamlet of Matorikaya.
  • 14 January 1879: Kitasaku District was created, and the town of Usuitoge, and the villages of Karuizawa, Nagakura, Oiwake were established with Kitasaku District.
  • 1886: Canadian Anglican missionary Rev. Alexander Croft Shaw and Tokyo Imperial University English professor James Main Dixon introduced Karuizawa as a summer resort.
  • 1 April 1889: With the establishment of the modern municipalities system, the town of Usuitoge, and the villages of Karuizawa, and the areas of the former villages of Kutsukake, Shiozawanitta, and Karijuku from the village of Nagakura merged to form the village of Higashinagakura in Kitasaku District, and the areas of the former villages of Narusawanitta and Yui in the village of Nagakura, and the villages of Hatsuji and Oiwake merged to form the village of Nishinagakura in Kitasaku District.
  • 1910s: Begins to attract the attention of other expatriates and Japanese.<ref>Tohoku: The Scotland of Japan, p. 181</ref> Specially Germans congregate here, language professors and academics hold annual conferences.
  • 1 August 1923: The village of Higashinagakura gains town status to become the town of Karuizawa. (The pre-town areas before gaining the town status is known as Kyu-Karuizawa.)
  • 8 May 1942: The village of Nishinagakura is merged into Karuizawa.
  • 1942–45: Site of an internment camp for enemy foreigners and diplomats during World War 2
  • From 1943 relocation of an increasing number of Germans from Tokyo, which is suffering from US fire bombing. The Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers deported most German nationals in late 1947.
  • 1951: Selected as International Cultural and Tourism City
  • 1 February 1957: Karuizawa absorbed Serizawa area from the former village of Goga, which was absorbed by the town of Miyota.
  • 1 April 1959: The Kajikazawa area of the former village of Oiwake was split off and merged with the town of Miyota.
  • 1964: 1964 Summer Olympics (Equestrian)
  • February 1972: Asama-Sanso incident; Police besiege communist militants holed up in holiday resort after mass killing and hostage taking.
  • 1 October 1997: The Nagano Shinkansen opens, serving Karuizawa.
  • 1998: 1998 Winter Olympics (Curling)
  • 2004: Mount Asama erupts.
  • 2016: The G7 Transport Ministers' Meeting
  • 2019: The G20 Energy and Environment Ministers' Meeting
  • 2023: G7 Foreign Ministers' Meeting in conjunction with the G7 Summit<ref name="G7-2023">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Demographics

Per Japanese census data,<ref name="Population"/> the population of Karuizawa has been increasing over the past 60 years. Template:Historical populations

Economy

Since one of the origins of the Seibu Group is in Karuizawa (see also Yasujiro Tsutsumi), Seibu is still developing big businesses in this town such as Prince Hotels.

Hoshino Resorts is headquartered in Karuizawa.<ref>"Company Overview of Hoshino Resort Co., Ltd. (Archive). Bloomberg Businessweek. Retrieved on September 22, 2013. "2148, oazanagakura karuizawa-machi Kitasaku, 389-0111 Japan"</ref>

Education

Karuizawa has three public elementary school and one public middle school operated by the town government, and one public high school is operated by the Nagano Prefectural Board of Education. The UWC ISAK Japan international school is also located in the town.

Transportation

Railway

Highway

International relations

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Local attractions

File:軽井沢ショー記念礼拝堂正面.jpg
Shaw Memorial Church
File:Old Karuizawa ginza04s3200.jpg
Kyu-Karuizawa Ginza
File:160729 Kumoba-ike Karuizawa Japan05s3.jpg
Kumoba Pond
File:Mikasa-Dori, Karuizawa.jpg
Mikasa Street
File:Shiraito (89665647).jpeg
Shiraito Falls

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With its comparatively cool summer weather, its cold refreshing nights, its heavy air-clearing showers, its southern aspect, and its position close to some of the most picturesque mountain scenery of Japan, Karuizawa leaves little to be desired as a summer retreat.{{#if:|

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... while quite recently even Japanese gentlemen of high degree have begun to build houses and introduce their families. As in so many other cases, the world followed the lead of the missionaries. Foreigners are now the raison d’étre of Karuizawa, and no echo of Feudalism haunts the hills.{{#if:|

|}}{{#if:Ernest Foxwell, "A Tale of Karuizawa", 1903<ref>Ernest Foxwell, A Tale of Karuizawa, The Living Age, Vol. 236, Boston : Living Age Company, 1903, p.107</ref>|

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Karuizawa, the most popular summer resort in the whole of the Far East […] .{{#if:|

|}}{{#if:Arthur Lloyd, "Every-day Japan", 1909<ref>Arthur Lloyd, Every-day Japan, London, New York, Toronto and Melbourne: Cassell and Company Limited, 1909, p.281</ref>|

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Karuizawa was developed as a European-style resort town by a Scottish-Canadian missionary in 1888. In the following decades, the town attracted visitors from across the country seeking to escape the heat of summer and enjoy vacations, as well as a significant number of Westerners. Unlike many other hill stations, Karuizawa was actively open to the natives from the beginning, and many Japanese aristocrats (Kazoku), scholars, artists and others had already built "Western-style" villas in the town by the early 20th century. The Japanese and Western communities interacted well with each other through summer recreation activities and the like.<ref>Anne Shannon, Lana Okerlund, "Finding Japan: Early Canadian Encounters with Asia”, p.56, Heritage House, 2012.</ref> In the 21st century the town retains significant Western cultural influence,<ref>Edging Toward Japan: My Karuizawa Dreams, The Mainichi, 12 February 2022.</ref><ref>Resort town links East with West, The Japan Times, 5 May 2019.</ref> and its alpine beauty and cool summer climate (similar to parts of Europe) continue to draw visitors.

More recently, Karuizawa has become a popular year-round resort for mainly Japanese, offering many outdoor sports, hot springs and recreational activities. Convenient road and rail access from central Tokyo has ensured Karuizawa's popularity as a location for second homes and resort hotels since the Meiji era.

Karuizawa is known for its historic shopping street known as "Ginza dōri" or "Kyū-dō" (Ginza Street, or the Old Road) and association with both Japanese royalty and visitors such as John Lennon and Yoko Ono.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> As a side note, The Crown Prince Akihito met Michiko Shoda for the first time on a tennis court in Karuizawa in August 1957,<ref>Former emperor, empress visit Karuizawa tennis court where they first met in 1957 The Japan Times, 25 August 2019.</ref> and John Lennon spent several summers in Karuizawa with his family in the late 1970s.<ref>William Horsley, Roger Buckley, "Nippon New Superpower: Japan Since 1945”, p.85, BBC Books, 1990.</ref>

Karuizawa hosted equestrian events in the 1964 Summer Olympics as well as curling in the 1998 Winter Olympics. It is the first city in the world to host both Summer and Winter Olympic events.<ref>“The Olympian Volume 24", p.29, United States Olympic Committee, 1998.</ref>

Since 1997, Karuizawa has been accessible via the JR East Nagano Shinkansen. New high speed rail links has resulted in modest population growth and the development of large outlet style shopping malls.

Karuizawa appeared in a part of the film.
The model of the mansion that appeared in the film is the villa in Karuizawa.
The story is based on the premise that Sherlock Holmes was in Karuizawa in the "missing years (1891–1894)".
Episodes 15 and 16 are set in Karuizawa.

Notable residents

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And now I am writing in the most lovely study in the world. Over my head the pine branches meet in arches of kindly green; […].{{#if:|

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There followed a delightful few days in Karuizawa, our last for the summer. Douglas Fairbanks was a most acceptable guest, […]. {{#if:|

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Summers in Karuizawa were not just a break in the year but seemed a whole lifetime in themselves. I have far more memories of the minutiae of life there than I do of the much longer periods of time spent in Tokyo.{{#if:|

|}}{{#if:Edwin O. Reischauer, "My Life Between Japan and America", 1986<ref>Karuizawa, c. 1920. Template:WebarchiveOld Tokyo.com</ref>|

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Karuizawa is an old summer resort in Japan very much like the Hamptons except it's in the mountains. There is a coffee house in a pine forest near Karuizawa. John & I fell in love with the place, and found ourselves going there almost every day with Sean.{{#if:|

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They (Olivia's parents) had two properties up in Karuizawa in the mountains for the summer. People fled Tokyo in the summer because the heat is quite extreme.{{#if:|

|}}{{#if:Olivia de Havilland, Interview, 2006<ref>Dame Olivia de Havilland, Academy of Achievement</ref>|

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Summer residents

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Evacuees of World War II

References

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