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Osaka (大阪
Ōsaka?) About this sound listen (help·info) is a designated city in the
Kansai region of
Japan. It is the capital city of
Osaka Prefecture and the largest component of the
Keihanshin Metropolitan Area, the second largest metropolitan area in Japan and among the largest in the world with nearly 19 million inhabitants. Situated at the mouth of the
Yodo River on
Osaka Bay, Osaka is Japan's second largest city by the daytime population after the
Tokyo 23 wards, and serves as a major economic hub.
Historically a merchant city, Osaka has also been known as the "nation's kitchen" (天下の台所 tenka no daidokoro?) and served as a center for the rice trade during the
Edo period.[
1][2][3][4]
Some of the earliest signs of habitation in the area of Osaka were found at the Morinomiya remains (森の宮遺跡 Morinomiya iseki?), with its shell mounds, including sea oysters and buried human skeletons from the 5th–
6th centuries BC. It is believed that what is today the Uehonmachi area consisted of a peninsular land, with an inland sea in the east. During the
Yayoi period, permanent habitation on the plains grew as rice farming became popular.[1]
By the
Kofun period, Osaka developed into a hub port connecting the region to the western part of Japan. The large numbers of increasingly larger tomb mounds found in the plains of Osaka are seen as evidence of political-power concentration, leading to the formation of a state.[1][5]
In 645,
Emperor Kōtoku built his
Naniwa Nagara-Toyosaki Palace in what is now Osaka[6] making it the then-capital of Japan (Naniwa-kyō). The city now known as Osaka was at this time referred to as "Naniwa", and this name and derivations of it are still in use for districts in central Osaka such as Naniwa (浪速) and
Namba (難波).[7] Although the capital was moved to
Asuka (in
Nara Prefecture today) in 655, Naniwa remained a vital connection, by land and sea, between
Yamato (modern day Nara Prefecture),
Korea, and
China.[1][8]
Naniwa was declared the capital again in 744 by order of
Emperor Shōmu, and remained so until 745, when the
Imperial Court moved back to
Heijō-kyō (now
Nara). By the end of the
Nara period Naniwa's seaport roles had been gradually taken over by neighboring areas, but it remained a lively center of river, channel, and land transportation between
Heian-kyō (
Kyoto today) and other destinations.In 1496, the
Jōdo Shinshū Buddhist sect set up their headquarters in the heavily fortified
Ishiyama Hongan-ji, on the site of the old Naniwa imperial palace.
Oda Nobunaga began a decade-long siege campaign on the temple in 1570 which ultimately resulted in the surrender of the monks and subsequent razing of the temple.
Toyotomi Hideyoshi constructed
Osaka Castle in its place.
Osaka was long considered Japan's primary economic center,[9] with a large percentage of the population belonging to the merchant class (see
Four divisions of society). Over the course of the Edo period (1603–1867), Osaka grew into one of Japan's major cities and returned to its ancient role as a lively and important port. Its popular culture[10] was closely related to ukiyo-e depictions of life in Edo. By 1780 Osaka had cultivated a vibrant arts culture, as typified by its famous Kabuki and
Bunraku theaters.[11] In 1837
Ōshio Heihachirō, a low-ranking samurai, led a peasant insurrection in response to the city's unwillingness to support the many poor and suffering families in the area. Approximately one-quarter of the city was razed before shogunal officials put down the rebellion, after which Ōshio killed himself.[12] Osaka was opened to foreign trade by the government of the Bakufu at the same time as
Hyōgo (modern
Kobe) on 1 January 1868, just before the advent of the
Boshin War and the
Meiji Restoration.[13]
Osaka residents were stereotyped in Edo literature from at least the
18th century. Jippenisha Ikku in 1802 depicted Osakans as stingy almost beyond belief. In 1809 the derogatory term "Kamigata zeeroku" was used by Edo residents to characterize inhabitants of the Osaka region in terms of calculation, shrewdness, lack of civic spirit, and the vulgarity of
Osaka dialect. Edo writers aspired to samurai culture, and saw themselves as poor but generous, chaste, and public spirited. Edo writers by contrast saw "zeeroku" as obsequious apprentices, stingy, greedy, gluttonous, and lewd. To some degree Osaka residents are stigmatized by
Tokyo observers in much the same way down to the present, especially in terms of gluttony. As a famous saying has it, "Osaka wa kuidaore" (Osaka people eat 'til they drop)
- published: 11 Feb 2015
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