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Chatan, Okinawa

Coordinates: 26°19′12″N 127°45′50″E / 26.32000°N 127.76389°E / 26.32000; 127.76389
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Chatan
北谷町
Town
Montage of Chatan
Flag of Chatan
Official seal of Chatan
Location of Chatan in Okinawa Prefecture
Location of Chatan in Okinawa Prefecture
Chatan is located in Japan
Chatan
Chatan
Location in Japan
Coordinates: 26°19′12″N 127°45′50″E / 26.32000°N 127.76389°E / 26.32000; 127.76389
CountryJapan
RegionKyushu
PrefectureOkinawa Prefecture
DistrictNakagami
Government
 • MayorMasashi Toguchi
Area
 • Total
13.62 km2 (5.26 sq mi)
Population
 (October 2016)
 • Total
28,578
 • Density2,100/km2 (5,400/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+09:00 (JST)
Websitewww.chatan.jp

Chatan (北谷町, Chatan-chō, Okinawan: Chatan, Northern Ryukyuan: きたたん Kitatan) is a town located in Nakagami District, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan.[1] As of October 2016 the town had an estimated population of 28,578 and the density of 2,100 per km².[2] The total area of Chatan is 13.62 square kilometres (5.26 sq mi). 53.5% of the land area of the town is covered by United States military bases.[1][3]

Name

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"Chatan" is an Okinawan name. In Japanese, the Han character for the city's name are normally read as Kitatani (北谷). Also unfamiliar in Japanese is that the "-tan" syllable of "Chatan" is emphasized in Okinawan, although many non-Okinawans place emphasis on "cha-" instead.

Geography

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Araha Beach

Chatan is located in the central part of Okinawa Island. The town sits on the western coast of the island on the East China Sea. The east of Chatan is hilly and made up of Okinawan limestone. The hills of the eastern part of the town give way to low-lying land towards the coast.[1][3]

Two rivers run through Chatan west into the East China Sea: the Shiruhi River to the north, and the Futenma River at the south.[3]

Chatan, prior to World War II, was a noted area of rice production in Okinawa. The area was known as Chatan taa-bukkwa, a term in the Okinawa language for a "large area of rice paddies". Much of the land formerly used for rice cultivation is now utilized by military bases.[1][4]

Chatan primarily runs along Route 58 and a largely man-made coastline which includes the area of what used to be the U.S. Marine Corps base of Camp Hamby (now Camp Foster). The northern half of Kitamae is nicknamed "Hamby Town" in recognition of this, and the Hamby Post Office is one of the first Japanese Postal offices to have an English name. Parts of Camp Foster and Camp Lester are in Chatan.

The American Kadena Air Base is located on and forms the northern boundary of Chatan which is further demarcated by Route 23 - also known locally as Kokutai Road. The U.S. air base also encompasses much land which was once part of Chatan's area including most of the ward once named Shimoseido.

Administrative divisions

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The town includes sixteen wards.[5]

  • Chatan (北谷)
  • Hamagawa (浜川)
  • Ihei (伊平)
  • Kamiseido (上勢頭)
  • Kitamae (北前)
  • Kuwae (桑江)
  • Mihama (美浜)
  • Minato (港)
  • Miyagi (宮城)
  • Ōmura (大村)
  • Shimoseido (下勢頭)
  • Sunabe (砂辺)
  • Tamagami (玉上)
  • Tōbaru (桃原)
  • Ujibaru (宇地原)
  • Yoshihara (吉原)

Kitamae, Mihama, and Sunabe enjoy great popularity among locals and tourists alike - for their many recreational and shopping destinations. Kamiseido, Ihei, and Kuwae are primarily local business and residential wards.

Neighboring municipalities

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History

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The town does not count any archaeological site dated of the Palaeolithic. Fossil human bones found in 1966 in Tōbaru Cave had first been dated of 16,000 yBP but recent surveys have attributed them to the Gusuku Period. [6]: 4 

Chatan includes many sites from the Kaizuka Period, dated as soon as the Early Kaizuka Phase I (Ireibaru) and for all the duration of the culture, with many sites of the Late Kaizuka Culture Phase I concentrating in the low lands of Hanzan and Kuwae. Important sites, in addition to Ireibaru, include

  • Sunabe Shellmound (Early Kaizuka Period Phase IV and V) with a settlement at the top of the hill and the shell midden at the bottom,
  • Kumayā Cave (Early Kaizuka Period Phase V) with a cemetery of at least fifty individuals in secondary burials,
  • Kumuibaru (Late Kaizuka Period Phase II to Gusuku Period) with remains of barley, rice and foxtail millet dated of the 10th to 12th centuries,
  • Hanzanbaru B (Late Kaizuka Period Phase II) with an iron adze of the 10th century.[6]: 4 

Chatan includes many sites of the Gusuku period such as settlements with the characteristic association of residential buildings and raised-floor granaries (Kushikanikubaru) or even one gusuku (Chatan Gusuku).[6]: 4 

The oldest mention of the name of Chatan (Kitatan) has been found on the dedicatory inscription on a funerary urn dated of 1492 where it is written in hiragana.[7] The name written with the current ideograms can be traced in historical documents back to the 16th century (Genealogical Records of the Ōso Family of the Yu Clan Japanese: 兪性大宗家家譜).[6]: 4 

Chatan Magiri figures on the 1649 "Map Villages Register" (Japanese: 絵図郷村帳) and includes the nine villages of Chatan, Kuwai (Kuwae), Hanzan, Sunahe (Sunabe), Noguni, Yara, Kadena, Yamauchi and Akina (Aniya). Between 1660 and 1670, with a number of administrative reforms, the village of Yamauchi was reattributed to Goeku Magiri and Akina to Ginowan Magiri. New villages were also created: Tamēshi, Rindō, Irei, Hamagawa and Nosato. By 1700, with the population rise in Shuri and the lack of administrative posts to give to all the members of the nobility, impoverished members of the nobility are authorised to practice agricultural activities, which leads to an exodus from the urban centre to the countryside and the creation of many new settlements called ‘yādui’. In 1840, the English ship Indian Oak wrecked on the shoals on Chatan coast and the sailors were rescued by the inhabitants who helped them build another ship to leave the island. [6]: 5 

In 1908 a reform replaced the administrative divisions of the Ryūkyū Kingdom by Japanese ones and Chatan Magiri became Chatan Village. Chatan was heavily fortified during the war by the Japanese forces. Several tunnels of the Shirahi-gawa River Suicide Boat Secret Tunnel Complex are conserved on the cliff below Chatan Gusuku. The landscape was heavily modified after the war by the construction of the U.S. bases (Kadena Air Base, Camp Zukeran, Camp Kuwae). In 1948, the northern part of Chatan was used to create Kadena Village. In 1980, Chatan Village became Chatan Town. [6]: 5 

Economy

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Shopping and recreation

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Much of the Hamby area is home to the "Hamby Free Zone". Though the name is misleading due to romanization errors, it is a large flea market that is scattered over an area of several blocks, though much of the land it is on is constantly relocated or bought for expansion of businesses. With the expansion of shopping/recreational businesses in the Mihama area, Chatan has become one of the most popular destinations for recreation. It is home to a small convention center, several shopping plazas, arcades, karaoke parlors, a 25-story hotel named "The Beach Tower" and several beaches. Sunabe is famous for a large sea wall which attracts many SCUBA divers and surfers.

The Chunichi Dragons of Nippon Professional Baseball have their spring training camp in Chatan.

Education

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The Town of Chatan maintains four elementary schools: Chatan [ja] (北谷町立北谷小学校), Chatan Number Two [ja] (北谷町立北谷第二小学校), Kitatama (北谷町立北玉小学校), and Hamagawa (北谷町立浜川小学校); each elementary school has an associated nursery school. The town also maintains two junior high schools: Chatan Junior High School (北谷町立北谷中学校) and Kuwae Junior High School [ja] (北谷町立桑江中学校).

Chatan Senior High School [ja] (沖縄県立北谷高等学校), a prefectural senior high school of the Okinawa Prefectural Board of Education, is located directly north of the town hall.[8]

Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA) schools:

Transportation

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Delta Air Lines ticket office

Chatan is crossed from north to south by Japan National Route 58, which runs parallel to the coastal area of the town.[1]

Delta Air Lines has a city ticket office in the Towa Building #1 (東和第一ビル Tōwa Daiichi Biru) in Chatan.[12] Northwest Airlines previously operated a city ticket office in Chatan.[13]

Cultural and natural assets

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Chatan Town hosts eight designated or registered tangible cultural properties and monuments, at the national or municipal level. [14]

  • Name (Japanese) (Type of registration)
  • Chatan Uchinā-yā residence main house (北谷町うちなぁ家主屋) (National)
  • Chatan Uchinā-yā residence pig pen latrines (北谷町うちなぁ家ふーる) (National)
  • Chibugā Spring (ちぶ川) (Municipal)
  • Agari-no-Utaki Sacred Site (inside Chatan Gusuku) (北谷城内「東ノ御嶽」) (Municipal)
  • Tun Sacred Site (inside Chatan Gusuku) (北谷城内「殿」)(Municipal)
  • Ireibaru Site (伊礼原遺跡) (National)
  • Chatan Castle Site (北谷城跡) (National)
  • Hamagawa Ugan Site (浜川ウガン遺跡) (Municipal)

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e "北谷(町)" [Chatan]. Nihon Daihyakka Zensho (Nipponika) (in Japanese). Tokyo: Shogakukan. 2013. OCLC 153301537. Archived from the original on 2007-08-25. Retrieved 2013-04-19.
  2. ^ 住民基本台帳法による世帯人口表 (PDF) (in Japanese). Chatan, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan: Town of Chatan. 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-09-23. Retrieved 2013-04-19.
  3. ^ a b c d "北谷町" [Chatan]. Nihon Rekishi Chimei Taikei (in Japanese). Tokyo: Shogakukan. 2013. OCLC 173191044. Archived from the original on 2007-08-25. Retrieved 2013-01-19.
  4. ^ Sakihara, Mitsugu (2006). Okinawan-English wordbook : a short lexicon of the Okinawan language with English definitions and Japanese cognates. Honolulu: University of Hawaiʻi Press. p. 169. ISBN 9780824831028.
  5. ^ "沖縄県 中頭郡北谷町の郵便番号 - 日本郵便". www.post.japanpost.jp. Retrieved 2024-10-02.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Matsuhara Tetsushi [松原哲志], Ōta Natsumi [太田菜摘美], Yamashiro Yasuo [山城安生], Agarijō Kenji [東門研治], Uechi Chikako [上地千賀子], Tōma Shiichi [當眞嗣一], Akamine MMasanobu [赤嶺政信], Palynosurney Inc. [パリノ・サーヴェイ㈱] (2020). Chatan Town Board of Education (Chatan BOE) [北谷町教育委員会] (ed.). Chatan Gusuku -Comprehensive Report- [北谷城 ー総括報告書ー] [Chatan gusuku -sōkatsu hōkokusho-]. Chatan Town Cultural Properties Survey Reports [北谷町文化財調査報告書] [Chatan-chō bunkazai chōsa hōkoku]. Chatan Town Board of Education.
  7. ^ Naha Municipal Tsuboya Pottery Museum [那覇市立壺屋焼物博物館], ed. (2014). The essence of Okinawan religious art: zushi funerary urns, memorial report for the Shūei and Chieko Kadogami Collection [沖縄宗教藝術の精華 厨子 門上秀叡・千恵子コレクション収蔵記念報告書] [Okinawa shūkyō geijutsu no seika zushi kadogami shūei ・chieko korekushon shūzō kinen hōkokusho]. Naha Municipal Tsuboya Pottery Museum.
  8. ^ 学校施設 [Educational Facilities] (in Japanese). Chatan, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan: Town of Chatan. 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-12-13. Retrieved 2013-04-19.
  9. ^ https://killines.dodea.edu/ [bare URL]
  10. ^ https://zukeranes.dodea.edu/ [bare URL]
  11. ^ https://kubasakihs.dodea.edu/ [bare URL]
  12. ^ "Ticket Office Locations > Asia." Delta Air Lines. Retrieved on November 19, 2012. "Okinawa International Express Company Towa Building #1 411-1 Aza Ihei Chatan-Cho Okinawa, Japan" - Japanese: "デルタ航空沖縄営業支店 沖縄県中頭郡北谷町字伊平 411-1東和第一ビル"
  13. ^ "Ticket Offices and Phone Numbers." Northwest Airlines. June 13, 1998. Retrieved on November 20, 2012. "Northwest Airlines 411-3 Aza-Ihei Chatan-cho Okinawa 904-01 Japan "
  14. ^ "北谷町の指定・登録文化財 北谷町公式ホームページ". www.chatan.jp. Retrieved 2024-10-04.
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