City in Kyushu, Japan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Urasoe (浦添市, Urasoe-shi, Okinawan: Urashii) is a city located in Okinawa Prefecture, Japan. The neighboring municipalities are Naha to the south, Ginowan to the north, and Nishihara to the east. As of February 2024, the city has an estimated population of 115,518 and a population density of 6,051.2 persons per km2. The total area is 19.09km2.[1]
The name "Urasoe" is made up of two kanji characters. The first, 浦, means "a coastal area", and the second, 添, means "ruling" or "uniting". The name is a reference to "ruling over many areas".[2][3][needs update]
However, what appears to be an older form of this word is attested in Old Okinawan under the forms *uraosoi うらおそい and *uraosoe うらおそへ.[4]
Urasoe sits to the south of Okinawa Island. Urasoe is rugged and hilly to the east, and the city slopes gently to the East China Sea in the west.[3] Urasoe, while formerly agricultural, has become heavily urbanized due to its proximity to the prefectural capital of Naha.[2][3]
Urasoe was the original capital of the Okinawan kingdom of Chūzan for several centuries until it was supplanted by Shuri in the late 14th or early 15th century. Shunten (1166–1237), the first known king of the Chuzan Kingdom, located in the central region of the island of Okinawa, ruled from Urasoe, as did his son and grandson.[6][7] For much of the 14th century, Urasoe Castle was the largest on the island of Okinawa. The castle now contains the remains of several kings of the Ryukyu Kingdom.[7][8]
Urasoe was completely razed during the Battle of Okinawa in 1945 at the end of World War II. 45% of the population, 4,117 residents, died during the battle. The village office of Urasoe was re-established in 1946 to conduct basic administrative functions, settle refugees returning to the village, and restore agricultural land.[3] The village saw a significant increase in U.S. military presence in 1950 in the western coast of the village, which eventually became Camp Kinser. The population of Urasoe rapidly from 1956, and the city became a bedroom community of Naha in this period.[2][3][7] Urasoe was elevated to city status on July 1, 1970.[2]
Urasoe is the hometown of Japanese actress, musician and former idol Yukie Nakama.[13]
Urasoe City hosts seventy-two designated or registered tangible cultural properties and monuments, at the national, prefectural or municipal level, including forty-four items of Ryūkyū lacquerware.[14]
Black lacquer agarwood box with hishi leaves and shippōtsunagi pattern, raden technique (黒漆菱七宝繋螺鈿伽羅箱) (Municipal)
Black lacquer box with aoimon patterns and chrysanthemums, raden technique (黒漆葵紋菊螺鈿箱) (Prefectural)
Black lacquer box with figures on horseback, raden technique (黒漆騎馬人物螺鈿箱) (Municipal)
Black lacquer box with grapes and squirrels, raden technique with gold leaf (黒漆葡萄栗鼠螺鈿箔絵箱) (Municipal)
Black lacquer box with kisshōmon patterns, raden technique with gold leaf (黒漆吉祥文螺鈿箔絵箱) (Municipal)
Black lacquer central table with landscape with pavilions, raden technique (黒漆山水楼閣螺鈿中央卓) (Municipal)
Black lacquer cupboard with shelves with pavilions and human figures, raden technique (黒漆楼閣人物螺鈿飾棚) (Municipal)
Black lacquer flower-shaped tray with landscape with human figures, raden technique (黒漆山水人物螺鈿輪花盆) (Municipal)
Black lacquer food container with peacocks, peonies and karakusa scrolls, chinkin technique (黒漆孔雀牡丹唐草沈金食籠)
Black lacquer large tray with clouds and dragons, raden technique (黒漆雲龍螺鈿大盆) (Prefectural)
Black lacquer long writing box with clouds, dragons and phoenixes, raden technique (黒漆雲龍鳳凰螺鈿長文箱) (Municipal)
Black lacquer octagonal food container with algae, fishes and plovers, raden technique (黒漆藻魚千鳥螺鈿八角食籠) (Municipal)
Black lacquer octagonal food container with grapes and squirrels, gold leaf (黒漆葡萄栗鼠箔絵八角食籠) (Municipal)
Black lacquer octagonal food container with landscape with human figures, raden technique (黒漆山水人物螺鈿八角食籠) (Municipal)
Black lacquer octagonal food container with pavilions and human figures, raden technique (黒漆楼閣人物螺鈿八角食籠) (Municipal)
Black lacquer octagonal food container with the "twenty-four paragons of filial piety" and karakusa scrolls, raden and chinkin techniques (黒漆二十四孝唐草螺鈿沈金八角食籠) (Municipal)
Black lacquer plaque with Sima Guang Family Precepts, raden technique (黒漆司馬温公家訓螺鈿掛板) (Municipal)
Black lacquer pumpkin-shaped tobacco container with landscape with human figures, raden technique (黒漆山水人物螺鈿阿古陀形煙草入) (Municipal)
Black lacquer screen with landscape with human figures, raden technique (黒漆山水人物螺鈿衝立) (Municipal)
Black lacquer table with peonies and karakusa scrolls, raden technique (黒漆牡丹唐草螺鈿卓) (Prefectural)
Black lacquer three-level incense container with kirin mythical animal, grapes and squirrels, raden technique (黒漆麒麟葡萄栗鼠螺鈿重香合) (Municipal)
Black lacquer tray with clouds and dragon, raden technique (黒漆雲龍螺鈿盆) (Municipal)
Black lacquer tray with flowers and birds, raden technique with gold leaf and mitsudae painting (黒漆花鳥螺鈿箔絵密陀絵盆) (Municipal)
Black lacquer tundābun serving tray with paulownias and phoenixes, raden technique (黒漆桐鳳凰螺鈿東道盆) (Municipal)
Black lacquer writing paper box with grapes and squirrels, raden technique with gold leaf (黒漆葡萄栗鼠螺鈿箔絵料紙箱) (Municipal)
Byakudannuri lacquer tākū hot water pail with landscape with pavilions, gold leaf technique (白檀塗楼閣山水箔絵湯庫) (Municipal)
"Eight Views of Ryūkyū", ukiyo-e prints by Hokusai (琉球八景) (Municipal)
"Flowers and birds", painting (花鳥図) (Municipal)
Genealogic records of the Shō Clan (向姓家譜) (Municipal)
Green lacquer round chest with phoenixes, clouds and checkered lattice, chinkin technique (緑漆鳳凰雲点斜格子沈金丸櫃) (Municipal)
Green lacquer serving tray with peonies, karakusa scrolls and stone pavement, chinkin technique (緑漆牡丹唐草石畳沈金膳) (Municipal)
"浦添"[Uraose]. Nihon Daihyakka Zensho (Nipponika) (in Japanese). Tokyo: Shogakukan. 2012. OCLC153301537. Archived from the original on 2007-08-25. Retrieved 2013-01-02.