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Large areas from five surrounding districts were merged into the city in 1932 and organized in 20 new wards, bringing the total to 35; the expanded city was also referred to as "Greater Tokyo" (大東京, Dai-Tōkyō). By this merger, together with smaller ones in 1920 and 1936, Tokyo City came to expand to the current city area.
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on ca.wikipedia.org Tòquio; Usage on en.wikivoyage.org Talk:Tokyo/Archive 2003-21; Usage on en.wiktionary.org
District Areas included Number of constituents [8] Current representative Party represented Map 1st district [changed 1] Tokyo, wards of Chiyoda and Shinjuku: 332,256 Banri Kaieda [16] CDP 2nd district [changed 1] Tokyo, wards of Chūō and Taitō: 312,165 Kiyoto Tsuji [10] LDP 3rd district [changed 1] Tokyo, the ward of Shinagawa.
Talk:Tokyo/Archive 2003-21; Usage on es.wikipedia.org Barrios especiales de Tokio; Usage on fa.wikipedia.org مناطق ویژه توکیو; Usage on ja.wikipedia.org 東京都区部; Usage on min.wikipedia.org Distrik Kota Khusus Tokyo; Usage on pt.wikipedia.org Bairros de Tóquio; Usage on ro.wikipedia.org Sectoarele speciale din Tokio
A map with Nishi-Tama District in green A map of the Izu Islands with black labels A map of the Ogasawara Islands with black labels. Since the completion of the Great Mergers of Heisei in 2001, Tokyo consists of 62 municipalities: 23 special wards, 26 cities, 5 towns and 8 villages. All municipalities in Japan have a directly elected mayor and ...
The 1718 municipalities (792 cities, 743 towns, and 183 villages) [1] and 23 special wards of Tokyo are the lowest level of government; the twenty most-populated cities outside Tokyo Metropolis are known as designated cities, and are subdivided into wards.
A ward (区, ku) is a subdivision of the cities of Japan that are large enough to have been designated by government ordinance. [1] Wards are used to subdivide each city designated by government ordinance ("designated city").
Cities (white areas) are not part of districts. Former district government office of Higashiyamanashi, Yamanashi (reconstruction at Meiji-mura museum) District assembly of Kawabe, Akita in 1923. All assemblies would be abolished by 1926. In Japan, a district (郡, gun) is composed of one or more rural municipalities (towns or villages) within a ...