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Japan Countryside: Tatomi - Video 2 - Yamanashi Prefecture



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Author: athenathon77
Description: Uma cidade bem pequena em Yamanashi... estava visitando o Kio... Regiao com muitas construcoes antigas japonesas e forte ar rural. Tatomi (田富町, Tatomi-chō?) was a town located in Nakakoma District, Yamanashi, Japan. On February 20, 2006, Tatomi merged with Tamaho and Toyotomi to form the new city of Chūō. As of 2003, the town had an estimated population of 16,934 and a density of 1,678.30 persons per km². The total area was 10.09 km². Yamanashi: Pre-history to the 14th century People have been living in the Yamanashi area for about 30,000 years[citation needed]. As in most other Japanese regions, prehistoric society in Yamanashi progressed though the hunting, fishing and gathering stage of the Jōmon period, then the rice-producing stage of the Yayoi period and subsequent village and regional formation. The Maruyama and Choshizuka Kofun (earthen burial mounds) located on Sone Hill of Nakamichi Town (currently in southern Kōfu) are believed to have been built from the end of the 4th century. From these remains it can be assumed that the people of Sone Hill had great influence. [edit] 15th to 19th Centuries Among the many Kaigenji generations, those of the Takeda, Ogasawara, and Nanbu families were particularly prosperous. During the Sengoku period of the 16th century, Takeda Shingen attained the status of daimyō and built Tsuzuji Mansion and the Yōgai Castle in Kōfu. From this base, he attempted to unify and control Japan. After Takeda's death in 1582, Kai-no-Kuni came under the control of the Oda and Toyotomi Clans before being subsumed into the Tokugawa shogunate during the Edo period. Beneath the Edo shogunate, the Kofu Clan (based in Kuninaka, or Central and Western Yamanashi) and the Yamura Clan (based in Gunnai, or Eastern Yamanashi) were formed, but in 1724 the area came under the direct control of the Shogunate. With the development of the Koshu Kaidō (highway) and Fuji River transport, goods, materials and culture flowed into the region. By the mid-19th century, the contradictions of military government and clan system caused stability to erode and resistance to erupt across Japan, paving the way for the Meiji Restoration of 1868.
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