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Mikawa Province (三河国, Mikawa no kuni) was an old province in the area that today forms the eastern half of Aichi Prefecture. [1] Its abbreviated form name was Sanshū ( 三州 or 参州 ) . Mikawa bordered on Owari , Mino , Shinano , and Tōtōmi Provinces.
Whether making the trip for a weekend brunch with family or a charming date night for two, this new Port Orange addition is worth the visit. Fly In Café is open from 8 a.m. - 10 p.m. Tuesday ...
yellow & green area=original extent in Meiji period; green=present area. 1=Mikawa, 2=Shōnai. Higashitagawa District (東田川郡, Higashitagawa-gun) is a rural district located in Yamagata Prefecture, Japan. As of October 2013, the district has an estimated population of 29,957 and an area of 282.47 km 2.
The park includes the coastal areas of Atsumi Peninsula, the Pacific shoreline of Chita Peninsula as well as islands and portion of the northern shoreline of Mikawa Bay. [5] It was founded on 10 April 1958 and has an area of 94.4 km 2. [6] Like all Quasi-National Parks in Japan, the park is managed by the local prefectural governments. [1
Mikawa, Niigata, former village in Niigata Prefecture; Surname. Gunichi Mikawa, admiral in the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II; Kenichi Mikawa, Japanese TV star, comedian and singer; Other uses. Mikawa dialect, dialect of Japanese spoken in Mikawa Province in eastern Aichi Prefecture. It is also known as "Mikawa-ben"
The mill sugar boiling kettles were no longer used to process sugar after the Civil War, but when two whales beached themselves below the newly built wooden Port Orange bridge in 1906, their carcasses were dragged to Dunlawton plantation where the furnaces were fired up and the oil from the whales' blubber rendered in the old kettles. [2]
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Ancient View of The Eight Bridges in Mikawa Province, from the series Remarkable Views of Bridges in Various Provinces.Katsushika Hokusai, c. 1834. The Eight Bridges (Japanese: 八橋, Hepburn: Yatsuhashi), in Japanese literature, was a historical and semi-legendary construction in Mikawa Province (modern-day Aichi Prefecture) mentioned in Japanese poetry.