Onna (Japanese: 恩納村, Hepburn: Onna-son, Kunigami and Okinawan: Unna) is a village located in Kunigami District, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan.[1]
Onna
恩納村 Unna | |
---|---|
Village | |
Coordinates: 26°29′N 127°51′E / 26.483°N 127.850°E | |
Country | Japan |
Region | Okinawa (Okinawa) |
Prefecture | Okinawa Prefecture |
District | Kunigami |
Area | |
• Total | 50.77 km2 (19.60 sq mi) |
Population (October 1 2020) | |
• Total | 10,869 |
• Density | 210/km2 (550/sq mi) |
Time zone | UTC+09:00 (JST) |
Website | www |
As of 1 October 2020, the village had an estimated population of 10,869 and a population density of 210 people per km². The total area is 50.77 square kilometres (19.60 sq mi). Unlike other areas of Japan, Onna has had a sustained period of population growth in the post-war period. In 1965 the population of the village was 8,471, and by 2003 it had grown to over 10,000 residents.[2]
Onna is the site of the Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology, a research institute turned graduate university.
History
editOnna was first established as Unna Magiri (恩納間切) in 1673 by the Ryukyu Kingdom. Ryukyu was annexed by Japan in 1879. In 1908, the Japanese government dissolved Unna Magiri and replaced it with Onna Village.
The village is the site of the tomb of the Republic of China statesman Fang Chih, founder and Chairman of the Sino-Ryukyuan Cultural and Economic Association.[3]
Geography
editOnna is located in the central part of Okinawa Island, and occupies a long, narrow stretch of the western coast of the island. The village spans 27.4 kilometres (17.0 mi) from north to south but only 4.2 kilometres (2.6 mi) from east to west. The village is located in the rugged Sekiryo Mountains that run from the north to central Okinawa Island, with Mount Onna being the highest point in the village. Settlements in the village are located in the few flatter areas.[1][4]
The coastal areas of Onna was declared part of Okinawa Kaigan Quasi-National Park in 1972 after the reversion of Okinawa Prefecture to Japan. Onna is noted for its coastal scenery, notably Cape Manzamō and Cape Maeda.[1]
Administrative divisions
editThe village includes fifteen wards.[5]
- Afuso (安富祖)
- Fuchaku (冨着)
- Kisenbaru (喜瀬武原)
- Maeda (真栄田)
- Maeganeku (前兼久)
- Minamionna (南恩納)
- Nakadomari (仲泊)
- Nakama (名嘉真)
- Onna (恩納)
- Ōta (太田)
- Serakaki (瀬良垣)
- Shioya (塩屋)
- Tancha (谷茶)
- Ukaji (宇加地)
- Yamada (山田)
Neighboring municipalities
editOnna borders on six other municipalities in Okinawa prefecture.
Economy
editSince World War II Onna has been a small-scale center of sugarcane production but tourists from mainland Japan, China, Taiwan, S. Korea, Australia and many other countries stay in one of the many seaside resorts that have been built just before, and after, the beginning of the new millennium. In recent years pineapples and mikan, or satsuma mandarin, have been grown in the rugged hill areas of the village. Like other municipalities on Okinawa Island, cut flowers and greenhouse vegetables intended for the Japanese homeland have become important agricultural products.[1]
Tourism also plays an increasingly important part of the Onna, Okinawa economy and has grown significantly in the last decade.[6] Resort hotels were built along the coastal areas in Onna after the reversion of Okinawa Prefecture to Japan in 1972, and tourism remains an important part of the economy of the village and the Onna prefecture.[1]
Transportation
editRoads
editOnna is crossed by Japan National Route 58, which connects the village of Kunigami in the north of Okinawa to the prefectural capital of Naha in the south. Okinawa Prefectural Route 6 intersects Route 58 at Nakadomari Village and passes through the village before intersecting with 58 again at the north end of Nakadomari. Route 73 runs east–west through the narrowest portion of Okinawa and connects Nakadomari Village on the East China Sea (west) coast to Ishikawa on the Pacific (east) coast. Prefectural Routes 86 and 104 connect the north of Onna with the town of Kin.[4]
Education
editSchools include:
- Unna Junior High School (うんな中学校)
Cultural and natural assets
editOnna Village hosts twenty-four designated or registered tangible cultural properties and monuments, at the national, prefectural or municipal level.[7][8][9][10]
- Name (Japanese) (Type of registration)
- Former Higa Family Residence, main house (旧比嘉家住宅主屋) (National)
- Former Hirata Family Residence, pigpen latrines (旧平田家住宅フール) (National)
- Former Kokuba Family Residence, main house (旧國場家住宅主屋) (National)
- Former Nishishigaki Family Residence, main house (旧西石垣家住宅主屋) (National)
- Former Ōshiro Family Residence, main house (旧大城家住宅主屋) (National)
- Former Shimabukuro Family Residence, main house (旧島袋家住宅主屋) (National)
- Former Shimabukuro Family Residence, raised storehouse (旧島袋家住宅高倉) (National)
- Former Tamanaha Family Residence, main house (旧玉那覇家住宅主屋) (National)
- Maps of each village and aza of Onna Magiri in Kunigami District (国頭郡恩納間切各村全図及び字図等) (Municipal)
- Poems by Wang Wenzhi (Ō Bunchi) (王文治詩文) (Municipal)
- Poems by Xu Baoguang (Jo Hokō) (徐葆光詩文) (Municipal)
- Sanshin, Makabi type (三線真壁型) (Prefectural)
- Sanshin, Makabi type, inscribed "Amuro" (三線真壁型銘安室) (Prefectural)
- Survey stones (shirube-ishi) of Onna Village (恩納村の印部石) (Municipal)
- Tōjin Baka Tombstone (唐人墓の墓碑) (Municipal)
- Hamasaki Utaki (浜崎御嶽) (Municipal)
- Kanjagā spring (カンジャガー) (Municipal)
- Uduigama Cave (ウドゥイガマ) (Municipal)
- Kunigami Western Coast Road (国頭方西海道) (National)
- Maeda Ichirizuka Mound (真栄田の一里塚) (Municipal)
- Nakadomari Site (仲泊遺跡) (National)
- Yamada Castle Site (山田城跡) (National)
- Cape Manzamo (万座毛) (Prefectural)
- Cape Manza limestone plant community (万座毛石灰岩植物群落) (Prefectural)
Notable people
editReferences
edit- ^ a b c d e "恩納(村)" [Onna]. Nihon Daihyakka Zensho (Nipponika) (in Japanese). Tokyo: Shogakukan. 2013. OCLC 153301537. Archived from the original on 2007-08-25. Retrieved 2013-05-02.
- ^ 人口推移 [Population Change] (in Japanese). Onna, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan: Village of Onna. 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-03-26. Retrieved 2013-06-17.
- ^ 琉球之友. ryukyushimpo.jp/ (in Japanese). Ryukyu Shimpo. 1 December 2008. Archived from the original on 18 November 2015. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
恩納村の高台の木立に大きな墓苑がある。中央には東シナ海を遠く見つめる男性の胸像がありその背後の石碑には大きく琉球之友と記されている。在台湾の民間窓口である中琉文化経済協会初代理事長方治氏の墓苑である。方治氏は世界的に活躍するデザイナー「アナ・スイ」の実の祖父として知られており数年前には彼女自身が恩納村に墓参りに訪れ話題をよんだ。方治氏は台琉交流の旗頭として戦後ながきに渡り沖縄のために農業、産業、文化、人的交流、また台湾への多数の留学生の保証人としての受け入れにご尽力された。石碑には墓苑建立に携わり沖縄の戦後復興に力を注がれた偉大な方々の名前が刻まれている。琉球を熱愛し第二の故郷とした方治氏の墓苑そのものが、その当時の台湾と琉球の篤(あつ)き交流の形を今に伝える。 現在、方治氏の意志を受け継ぎ現任の理事長蔡雪泥女史(74)が台琉交流のために奔走されている。蔡女史は家政、服飾、美容等の分野で教鞭(きょうべん)をとられ成功を収めていたが44歳より児童教育事業への転身を決め、台湾で公文式教育の創始者となった。沖縄県第一号終身民間大使である蔡女史は台湾の教育、福祉におけるその豊富な経験を沖縄のために全力で注がれている。
- ^ a b c 恩納村概要 [Overview of Onna] (in Japanese). Onna, Okinawa Prefecture, Japan: Village of Onna. 2011. Retrieved 2013-06-17.
- ^ "沖縄県 国頭郡恩納村の郵便番号 - 日本郵便". www.post.japanpost.jp. Retrieved 2024-10-03.
- ^ "Number of tourists to Okinawa reaches new high in January 2014".
- ^ "沖縄県国頭郡恩納村の文化財一覧│日本文化財情報サイト│西日本広域観光連携文化財活用推進協議会". onna.staging.hiddenheritage.jp. Retrieved 2024-10-15.
- ^ "地域から見る 文化遺産オンライン". bunka.nii.ac.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2024-10-15.
- ^ "表1-6 沖縄島における文化財の状況(10)<恩納村>". www.pref.okinawa.jp. Retrieved 2024-10-15.
- ^ "観光スポット一覧|観光スポット|ココイコ!恩納村". www.vill.onna.okinawa.jp. Retrieved 2024-10-15.
External links
edit- Media related to Onna, Okinawa at Wikimedia Commons
- Geographic data related to Onna, Okinawa at OpenStreetMap
- Onna-son Prefecture on Google Maps
- Onna official website (in Japanese)