The Habomai Islands (Japanese: 歯舞群島, romanized: Habomai guntō; Russian: Хабомаи, romanized: Khabomai) are a group of uninhabited islets (but for the Russian guards stationed there)[1] in the southernmost Kuril Islands.

Quick Facts Disputed islands, Other names ...
Habomai Islands
Disputed islands
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Habomai Rocks from space
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Habomai Islands
Other names歯舞群島 (Japanese)
Малые Курилы (Russian)
Geography
LocationPacific Ocean
Coordinates43°30′N 146°8′E
ArchipelagoKuril Islands
Total islands10 + several rocks
Area100 km2 (39 sq mi)
Administration
Federal subjectSakhalin Oblast
DistrictYuzhno-Kurilsky
Claimed by
PrefectureHokkaido
SubprefectureNemuro
Demographics
Population0
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The islands have been under Soviet/Russian administration since the 1945 invasion by the Soviet Union near the end of World War II. But together with Iturup (Etorofu), Kunashir (Kunashiri), and Shikotan, the islands are claimed by Japan.

History

Summarize
Perspective
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Russian administered Yuzhno-Kurilsky District. The bottom left of the red-shaded area is the Habomai Islands. The dark grey area is Hokkaido, while the light grey area is the Kamchatka Peninsula.
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Map including Habomi Shotō (DMA, 1990)

In the fifteenth century, the Matsumae clan made efforts to administer the islands; by 1644 the islands had been mapped as Japanese territories.[2]

In 1732 the islands were mapped during the Russian Great Eastern Expedition.

The Treaty of Shimoda, signed by Russia and Japan in 1855, recognised Japanese ownership of Iturup, Kunashir, Shikotan, and the Habomai Islands.[3]

The Habomai Islands were occupied by Soviet forces in the last few days of World War II. The islands were eventually annexed by the Soviet Union, which deported all the island residents to Japan.[3] Moscow claimed the islands as part of a war-time agreement between the Allies (Yalta Agreement), which provided for the transfer of the Chishima (Kurile) Islands to the USSR in return for its participation in the Pacific War. However, Japan maintains that the Habomai Islands are not part of the Kuriles and are in fact part of Hokkaido prefecture. On May 26, 1955, the United States submitted an application for proceedings against the Soviet Union. As part of the proceedings, the United States questioned the validity of the Soviet Union's claim to the Habomai Islands.[4]

In 1956, after difficult negotiations, the Soviet Union agreed to cede the Habomai to Japan, along with Shikotan, after the conclusion of a peace treaty between the two countries.[5] As the treaty was never concluded, the islands remained under Soviet jurisdiction. However, the promise of a two-island solution (for the purpose of simplicity, the Habomai rocks count as one island) has been renewed in the Soviet-Japanese, and later Russo-Japanese negotiations. Formerly home to a Japanese fishing community, the islands are now uninhabited except for the Russian border guard outpost.

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View of the Habomai Islands from Cape Nosappu (March 26, 2005).

List of islands

More information Island, Japanese name ...
Island Japanese name Russian name Ainu transcription(s) Area
km2
Highest point
m
Latitude N Longitude E Distance from Cape Nosappu[6]
km
Shikotan 色丹島
しこたんとう
Shikotan tō
Остров Шикотан si-kotan (Big village) 255412.643°47'146°44'73.3
Spangberg channel (Habomai islands are shown below.)
Shikotan channel
Oskolki 海馬島
かいばじま、とどじま
Kaibajima, Todojima
Остров Осколки todo-mosir (Steller sea lion island) 1.53843°34'146°24'
Polonskogo 多楽島
たらくとう
Taraku tō
Остров Полонского torar-uk (Take in the strap) 11.692543°37'146°19'45.5
Chayka rock カブ島
かぶとう
Kabu tō
Скала Чайка
Petsernaya カナクソ岩
かなくそいわ
Kanakuso iwa
Скала Пещерная
Shishki カブト島
かぶととう
Kabuto tō
Острова Шишки
Polonskogo channel
Taraku channel
Zelyony 志発島
しぼつとう
Shibotsu tō
Остров Зелёный sipe-op (A place where a shoal of Chum salmon) 58.34543°29'146°09'25.5
Vojeikov channel
Shibotsu channel
Demina 春苅島
はるかるとう
Harukaru tō
Острова Дёмина haru-kar-kotan (Village of harvesting Cardiocrinum cordatum bulbs) 23443°25'146°10'
Yuri 勇留島
ゆりとう
Yuri tō
Остров Юрий urir (Cormorant island) 1043°25'146°04'16.6
Yuri channel
Anuchina 秋勇留島
あきゆりとう
Akiyuri tō
Остров Анучина aki-urir (Yuri's young brother) 53343°21'146°00'13.7
Tanfilyeva 水晶島
すいしょうとう
Suishō tō
Остров Танфильева si-so (Big bare rock) 211543°26'145°55'7.2
Goyōmai channel
Sovetskiy channel
Storozhevoy 萌茂尻島
もえもしりとう
Moemoshiri tō
Остров Сторожевой moi-mosir (A calm island) 0.0711.843°23'145°53'6.0
Rifovy オドケ島
おどけとう
Odoke tō
Остров Рифовый 0.0013.643°23'145°52'
Signalny 貝殻島
かいがらじま
Kaigarajima
Остров Сигнальный kay-ka-ra-i (Low thing above the wave) 43°23'145°51'3.7
Cape Nosappu, Hokkaido
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See also

References

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