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Hakodate (函館市, Hakodate-shi) (formerly written as Hakodadi) is a city and port located in Oshima Subprefecture, Hokkaido, Japan. It is the capital city of Oshima Subprefecture. As of January 31, 2024, the city had an estimated population of 239,813 with 138,807 households, and a population density of 354 persons per km² (920 persons per ...
The Former British Consulate of Hakodate (Japanese: 函館市旧イギリス領事館, Hepburn: Hakodate-shi kyū Igirisu ryōjikan), also officially known as the Opening-Port Memorial Hall and commonly called the Old British Consulate, is a historic house museum meant to preserve the now-defunct consulate of the United Kingdom to Hakodate, Japan, and memorialise the opening of Hokkaido to ...
The Kanemori red brick warehouses, renovations of the original warehouses built within the foreign settlement in 1869. Many of the stores and buildings built by the foreigners, while nonexistent today, have influenced some of Hakodate's architecture: there are many quasi-Western buildings built by local Japanese, especially clustered around the former settlements, to this day.
Today, Goryōkaku is a park declared as a Special Historical Site, being a part of the Hakodate city museum and a citizens' favorite spot for cherry-blossom viewing in spring. See also [ edit ]
(kept at Hakodate Jōmon Culture Center) known as Hollow Dogū ; one of five National Treasure dogū, alongside Jōmon Venus , Masked Goddess, Jōmon Goddess, and Palms Together Dogū [ 5 ] 41°55′40″N 140°56′42″E / 41.927892°N 140.944926°E / 41.927892; 140.944926 ( Hakodate Jōmon Culture
Hakodate, Hokkaido, Japan The Hollow Dogū ( 中空土偶 , chūkū dogū ) is a Japanese dogū or clay figurine of the Late Jōmon period (c. 1500–1300 BC). A chance find from what was to become the Chobonaino Site in Hakodate , Hokkaido , it is exhibited at the Hakodate Jōmon Culture Center .
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The site is in what is now part of the city of Hakodate in Oshima Subprefecture on the island of Hokkaido in northern Japan. It has been protected by the central government as a Historic Site since 13 August 2001. The site covers an area of 71.832 square kilometers (7,183.2 ha; 27.734 sq mi).