List of Japanese prefectures by population
Encyclopedia
This is a list of Japanese prefectures
by population.
For details of administrative divisions of Japan
, see Prefectures of Japan
.
as of October 1, 2008, except for the census population held on October 1, 2005. Population is given according to the de jure population concept for enumerating the people. That is, a person was enumerated at the place where he or she usually lived, and was counted as the population of the area including the place. Ranks are given by the estimated population as of October 1, 2008.
As for prefectural population before 1945, prefectures that constituted are only given. or Southern Sakhalin
was officially incorporated into Japan Proper since March 26, 1943 until the end of the World War II
, while Taiwan
, Kwantung Leased Territory
, Korea
and South Pacific Mandate
were treated as . At the end of war, Japan lost possessions of Southern Sakhalin
(Karafuto-fu), Kuril Islands
(part of Hokkaidō), Ogasawra Islands (part of Tōkyō-to), Amami
and Tokara Islands
(part of Kagoshima-ken) and Ryukyu Islands
(Okinawa-ken). For the population of the colonies of the former Empire of Japan
, see Demographics of Imperial Japan.
and the Abolition of the han system
, though not thoroughly surveyed. Prefectural system was only introduced to which the Meiji government gained from Tokugawa shogunate
or the revolted , while many areas still belonged to local lordship governments.
The table below shows demographic data for major prefectures and domains (over 100,000 persons) from two sources. For the demographic data of less populous areas, see in Japanese wikipedia page, for example.
Source: (1): Kokudaka
and Population Table of fu, han and ken (Ōkuma Shigenobu
collection; population as of February 2, 1869 (1st day of the 1st month, Meiji 2)),
It is quite apparent that the above demographic data contain many textual errors, but could not be corrected because the original unpublished reports preserved at the office of the Ministry of Interior of Japan were burned by a fire after the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake
.
For demographic data during the Edo period
, see Demographics of Japan before Meiji Restoration
.
Prefectures of Japan
The prefectures of Japan are the country's 47 subnational jurisdictions: one "metropolis" , Tokyo; one "circuit" , Hokkaidō; two urban prefectures , Osaka and Kyoto; and 43 other prefectures . In Japanese, they are commonly referred to as...
by population.
For details of administrative divisions of Japan
Japan
Japan is an island nation in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south...
, see Prefectures of Japan
Prefectures of Japan
The prefectures of Japan are the country's 47 subnational jurisdictions: one "metropolis" , Tokyo; one "circuit" , Hokkaidō; two urban prefectures , Osaka and Kyoto; and 43 other prefectures . In Japanese, they are commonly referred to as...
.
Prefectures of Japan ranked by population as of October 1, 2008
Figures here are according to the official estimates of JapanJapan
Japan is an island nation in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south...
as of October 1, 2008, except for the census population held on October 1, 2005. Population is given according to the de jure population concept for enumerating the people. That is, a person was enumerated at the place where he or she usually lived, and was counted as the population of the area including the place. Ranks are given by the estimated population as of October 1, 2008.
Rank | Prefectures | Japanese | Estimated Total Population |
Estimated Male Population |
Estimated Female Population |
Annual Change (Oct 1, 2007 to Sep 30, 2008) |
Estimated Population of Japanese nationality |
Latest Census Population (Oct 1, 2005) |
Estimated Area (km²) |
Population Density (/km²) |
Capital |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Tōkyō-to Tokyo , ; officially , is one of the 47 prefectures of Japan. Tokyo is the capital of Japan, the center of the Greater Tokyo Area, and the largest metropolitan area of Japan. It is the seat of the Japanese government and the Imperial Palace, and the home of the Japanese Imperial Family... |
12,838,435 | 6,392,907 | 6,445,528 | 80,064 | 12,551,986 | 12,576,601 | 2,187.65 | 5,868.60 | Shinjuku-ku, Tōkyō-to Shinjuku, Tokyo is one of the 23 special wards of Tokyo, Japan. It is a major commercial and administrative center, housing the busiest train station in the world and the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building, the administration center for the government of Tokyo.As of 2008, the ward has an estimated population... |
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2 | Kanagawa-ken Kanagawa Prefecture is a prefecture located in the southern Kantō region of Japan. The capital is Yokohama. Kanagawa is part of the Greater Tokyo Area.-History:The prefecture has some archaeological sites going back to the Jōmon period... |
8,917,182 | 4,499,721 | 4,417,461 | 37,120 | 8,784,308 | 8,791,597 | 2,415.84 | 3,691.13 | Yokohama-shi Yokohama is the capital city of Kanagawa Prefecture and the second largest city in Japan by population after Tokyo and most populous municipality of Japan. It lies on Tokyo Bay, south of Tokyo, in the Kantō region of the main island of Honshu... |
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3 | Ōsaka-fu Osaka Prefecture is a prefecture located in the Kansai region on Honshū, the main island of Japan. The capital is the city of Osaka. It is the center of Osaka-Kobe-Kyoto area.- History :... |
8,806,016 | 4,263,263 | 4,542,753 | −5,637 | 8,639,152 | 8,817,166 | 1,897.85 | 4,640.00 | Ōsaka-shi | |
4 | Aichi-ken Aichi Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūbu region. The region of Aichi is also known as the Tōkai region. The capital is Nagoya. It is the focus of the Chūkyō Metropolitan Area.- History :... |
7,403,409 | 3,723,088 | 3,680,321 | 43,514 | 7,202,589 | 7,254,704 | 5,164.57 | 1,433.50 | Nagoya-shi Nagoya, Aichi is the third-largest incorporated city and the fourth most populous urban area in Japan.Located on the Pacific coast in the Chūbu region on central Honshu, it is the capital of Aichi Prefecture and is one of Japan's major ports along with those of Tokyo, Osaka, Kobe, Yokohama, Chiba, and Moji... |
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5 | Saitama-ken Saitama Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Kantō region of the island of Honshu. The capital is the city of Saitama.This prefecture is part of the Greater Tokyo Area, and most of Saitama's cities can be described as suburbs of Tokyo, to which a large amount of residents commute each day.- History... |
7,112,636 | 3,579,707 | 3,532,929 | 22,304 | 7,019,489 | 7,054,243 | 3,797.25 | 1,873.10 | Saitama-shi Saitama, Saitama ' is the capital and the most populous city of Saitama Prefecture in Japan, situated in the south-east of the prefecture. Its area incorporates the former cities of Urawa, Ōmiya, Yono and Iwatsuki. It is a city designated by government ordinance... |
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6 | Chiba-ken Chiba Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Kantō region and the Greater Tokyo Area. Its capital is Chiba City.- History :Chiba Prefecture was established on June 15, 1873 with the merger of Kisarazu Prefecture and Inba Prefecture... |
6,122,113 | 3,058,269 | 3,063,844 | 23,898 | 6,039,211 | 6,056,462 | 5,156.60 | 1,187.24 | Chiba-shi Chiba, Chiba is the capital city of Chiba Prefecture, Japan. It is located approximately 40 km east of the center of Tokyo on Tokyo Bay. Chiba City became a government designated city in 1992. Its population as of 2008 is approximately 960,000.... |
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7 | Hyōgo-ken Hyogo Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Kansai region on Honshū island. The capital is Kobe.The prefecture's name was previously alternately spelled as Hiogo.- History :... |
5,586,033 | 2,673,769 | 2,912,264 | −2,704 | 5,504,410 | 5,590,601 | 8,395.84 | 665.33 | Kōbe-shi | |
8 | Hokkaidō Hokkaido , formerly known as Ezo, Yezo, Yeso, or Yesso, is Japan's second largest island; it is also the largest and northernmost of Japan's 47 prefectural-level subdivisions. The Tsugaru Strait separates Hokkaido from Honshu, although the two islands are connected by the underwater railway Seikan Tunnel... |
5,535,486 | 2,615,966 | 2,919,520 | −34,963 | 5,517,450 | 5,627,737 | 83,456.58 | 70.59 | Sapporo-shi Sapporo, Hokkaido is the fourth-largest city in Japan by population, and the largest city on the island of Hokkaido. It is the capital of Hokkaidō Prefecture, located in Ishikari Subprefecture, and an ordinance-designated city of Japan.... |
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9 | Fukuoka-ken Fukuoka Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on Kyūshū Island. The capital is the city of Fukuoka.- History :Fukuoka Prefecture includes the former provinces of Chikugo, Chikuzen, and Buzen.... |
5,054,255 | 2,391,694 | 2,662,561 | −1,595 | 5,012,983 | 5,049,908 | 4,976.97 | 1,015.53 | Fukuoka-shi Fukuoka, Fukuoka is the capital city of Fukuoka Prefecture and is situated on the northern shore of the island of Kyushu in Japan.Voted number 14 in a 2010 poll of the World's Most Livable Cities, Fukuoka is praised for its green spaces in a metropolitan setting. It is the most populous city in Kyushu, followed by... |
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10 | Shizuoka-ken Shizuoka Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūbu region on Honshu island. The capital is the city of Shizuoka.- History :Shizuoka prefecture was formed from the former Tōtōmi, Suruga and Izu provinces.The area was the home of the first Tokugawa Shogun... |
3,799,930 | 1,874,530 | 1,925,400 | −680 | 3,712,339 | 3,792,377 | 7,780.33 | 488.40 | Shizuoka-shi Shizuoka, Shizuoka is the capital city of Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan, and the prefecture's second-largest city in terms of both population and area. It became one of Japan's 19 "designated cities" in 2005.-Geography:... |
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11 | Ibaraki-ken Ibaraki Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan, located in the Kantō region on the main island of Honshu. The capital is Mito.-History:Ibaraki Prefecture was previously known as Hitachi Province... |
2,963,990 | 1,474,555 | 1,489,435 | −4,751 | 2,922,545 | 2,975,167 | 6,095.69 | 486.24 | Mito-shi Mito, Ibaraki is the capital of Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan and has a central location, moderately offset towards the coast in that prefecture. As of 2005, the city has an estimated population of 263,748 and a total area is 217.45 km², giving a population density of 1,212.91 persons per km²... |
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12 | Hiroshima-ken Hiroshima Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūgoku region on Honshu island. The capital is the city of Hiroshima.- History :The area around Hiroshima was formerly divided into Bingo Province and Aki Province. This location has been a center of trade and culture since the beginning of Japan's recorded... |
2,868,756 | 1,386,641 | 1,482,115 | −4,594 | 2,835,743 | 2,876,642 | 8,479.05 | 338.33 | Hiroshima-shi | |
13 | Kyōto-fu Kyoto Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Kansai region of the island of Honshu. The capital is the city of Kyoto.- History :Until the Meiji Restoration, the area of Kyoto prefecture was known as Yamashiro.... |
2,628,864 | 1,261,862 | 1,367,002 | −6,464 | 2,586,798 | 2,647,660 | 4,613.01 | 569.88 | Kyōto-shi | |
14 | Niigata-ken Niigata Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on the island of Honshū on the coast of the Sea of Japan. The capital is the city of Niigata. The name "Niigata" literally means "new lagoon".- History :... |
2,390,976 | 1,155,734 | 1,235,242 | −13,818 | 2,380,083 | 2,431,459 | 12,583.48 | 190.01 | Niigata-shi Niigata, Niigata is the capital and the most populous city of Niigata Prefecture, Japan. It lies on the northwest coast of Honshu, the largest island of Japan, and faces the Sea of Japan and Sado Island.... |
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15 | Miyagi-ken Miyagi Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan in the Tōhoku Region on Honshu island. The capital is Sendai.- History :Miyagi Prefecture was formerly part of the province of Mutsu. Mutsu Province, on northern Honshu, was one of the last provinces to be formed as land was taken from the indigenous Emishi, and became the... |
2,340,167 | 1,134,777 | 1,205,390 | −7,204 | 2,328,861 | 2,360,218 | 7,285.75 | 321.20 | Sendai-shi Sendai, Miyagi is the capital city of Miyagi Prefecture, Japan, and the largest city in the Tōhoku Region. In 2005, the city had a population of one million, and was one of Japan's 19 designated cities... |
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16 | Nagano-ken Nagano Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūbu region of the island of Honshū. The capital is the city of Nagano.- History :Nagano was formerly known as the province of Shinano... |
2,170,691 | 1,055,353 | 1,115,338 | −9,723 | 2,135,497 | 2,196,114 | 13,562.23 | 160.05 | Nagano-shi Nagano, Nagano , the capital city of Nagano Prefecture, is located in the northern part of the prefecture near the confluence of the Chikuma and the Sai rivers, on the main Japanese island of Honshū.As of April 1, 2011 the city has a population of 387,146... |
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17 | Gifu-ken Gifu Prefecture is a prefecture located in the Chūbu region of central Japan. Its capital is the city of Gifu.Located in the center of Japan, it has long played an important part as the crossroads of Japan, connecting the east to the west through such routes as the Nakasendō... |
2,100,375 | 1,017,342 | 1,083,033 | −3,567 | 2,052,794 | 2,107,226 | 10,621.17 | 197.75 | Gifu-shi Gifu, Gifu is a city located in the south-central portion of Gifu Prefecture, Japan, and serves as the prefectural capital. The city has played an important role in Japan's history because of its location in the middle of the country. During the Sengoku period, various warlords, including Oda Nobunaga, used... |
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18 | Fukushima-ken Fukushima Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Tōhoku region on the island of Honshu. The capital is the city of Fukushima.-History:Until the Meiji Restoration, the area of Fukushima prefecture was known as Mutsu Province.... |
2,052,495 | 996,203 | 1,056,292 | −14,149 | 2,042,504 | 2,091,319 | 13,782.75 | 148.92 | Fukushima-shi Fukushima, Fukushima is the capital city of Fukushima Prefecture in the Tōhoku Region of Japan. As of May 2011 the city has an estimated population of 290,064 and an area of 746.43 km².It lies about 250 km north of Tokyo and 80 km south of Sendai.-History:... |
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19 | Gunma-ken Gunma Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the northwest corner of the Kantō region on Honshu island. Its capital is Maebashi.- History :The remains of a Paleolithic man were found at Iwajuku, Gunma Prefecture, in the early 20th century and there is a public museum there.Japan was without horses until... |
2,012,275 | 990,473 | 1,021,802 | −3,898 | 1,974,773 | 2,024,135 | 6,363.16 | 316.24 | Maebashi-shi Maebashi, Gunma is the capital city of Gunma Prefecture, Japan.The city was founded on April 1, 1892, by the samurai Makuba Kawai.On December 5, 2004 the town of Ōgo, and the villages of Kasukawa and Miyagi, all from Seta District, were merged into Maebashi.... |
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20 | Tochigi-ken Tochigi Prefecture is a prefecture located in the Kantō region on the island of Honshū, Japan. The capital is the city of Utsunomiya.Nikkō, whose ancient Shintō shrines and Buddhist temples UNESCO has recognized by naming them a World Heritage Site, is in this prefecture... |
2,011,276 | 1,000,072 | 1,011,204 | −2,479 | 1,981,300 | 2,016,631 | 6,408.28 | 313.86 | Utsunomiya-shi Utsunomiya, Tochigi is the capital and most populous city of Tochigi Prefecture, Japan. In October 2010 the city had an estimated population of 510,416 and a population density of 1,224.49 people per square kilometer. The total area is 416.84 km². had a population of 888,005 in the 2000 Census... |
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21 | Okayama-ken Okayama Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūgoku region on Honshū island. The capital is the city of Okayama.- History :During the Meiji Restoration, the area of Okayama Prefecture was known as Bitchū Province, Bizen Province and Mimasaka Province.- Geography :... |
1,948,196 | 934,307 | 1,013,889 | −4,328 | 1,929,759 | 1,957,264 | 7,113.21 | 273.88 | Okayama-shi Okayama, Okayama is the capital city of Okayama Prefecture in the Chūgoku region of Japan.The city was founded on June 1, 1889. As of August 2010, the city has an estimated population of 705,224 and a population density of 893 persons per km². The total area is 789.88 km².... |
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22 | Mie-ken Mie Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan which is part of the Kansai regions on Honshū island. The capital is the city of Tsu.- History :Until the Meiji Restoration, Mie prefecture was known as Ise Province and Iga Province.... |
1,875,464 | 913,062 | 962,402 | −536 | 1,828,020 | 1,866,963 | 5,777.19 | 324.63 | Tsu-shi Tsu, Mie is the capital of Mie Prefecture, Japan. The city of Tsu is located on Ise Bay, east of the city. Tsu is bounded to the north by Suzuka and Kameyama; to the west by Iga, Nabari, and Nara Prefecture; and to the south by Matsuzaka city.-History:... |
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23 | Kumamoto-ken Kumamoto Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on Kyushu Island. The capital is the city of Kumamoto.- History :Historically the area was called Higo Province; and the province was renamed Kumamoto during the Meiji Restoration. The creation of prefectures was part of the abolition of the feudal system... |
1,820,942 | 856,157 | 964,785 | −6,996 | 1,813,335 | 1,842,233 | 7,405.80 | 245.88 | Kumamoto-shi Kumamoto, Kumamoto is the capital city of Kumamoto Prefecture on the island of Kyushu, Japan. Greater Kumamoto has a population of 1,460,000, as of the 2000 census... |
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24 | Kagoshima-ken Kagoshima Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on the island of Kyushu. The capital is the city of Kagoshima.- Geography :Kagoshima Prefecture is located at the southwest tip of Kyushu and includes a chain of islands stretching further to the southwest for a few hundred kilometers... |
1,717,330 | 800,413 | 916,917 | −13,092 | 1,712,865 | 1,753,179 | 9,188.67 | 186.90 | Kagoshima-shi Kagoshima, Kagoshima is the capital city of Kagoshima Prefecture at the southwestern tip of the Kyūshū island of Japan, and the largest city in the prefecture by some margin... |
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25 | Yamaguchi-ken Yamaguchi Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan in the Chūgoku region on Honshū island. The capital is the city of Yamaguchi, in the center of the prefecture. The largest city, however, is Shimonoseki.- History :... |
1,463,077 | 688,839 | 774,238 | −10,529 | 1,451,524 | 1,492,606 | 6,113.81 | 239.31 | Yamaguchi-shi Yamaguchi, Yamaguchi is the capital city of Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan.As of February 1, 2010, the city has an estimated population of 198,971 and a population density of 194.44 persons per km²... |
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26 | Ehime-ken Ehime Prefecture is a prefecture in northwestern Shikoku, Japan. The capital is Matsuyama.-History:Until the Meiji Restoration, Ehime prefecture was known as Iyo Province... |
1,443,927 | 679,350 | 764,577 | −8,049 | 1,436,439 | 1,467,815 | 5,677.73 | 254.31 | Matsuyama-shi Matsuyama, Ehime is the capital city of Ehime Prefecture on the Shikoku island of Japan. It is located on the northeastern portion of the Dōgo Plain. Its name means "pine mountain." The city was founded on December 15, 1889.... |
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27 | Nagasaki-ken Nagasaki Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on the island of Kyūshū. The capital is the city of Nagasaki.- History :Nagasaki Prefecture was created by merging of the western half of the former province of Hizen with the island provinces of Tsushima and Iki... |
1,440,207 | 671,277 | 768,930 | −13,250 | 1,433,899 | 1,478,632 | 4,104.48 | 350.89 | Nagasaki-shi | |
28 | Nara-ken Nara Prefecture is a prefecture in the Kansai region on Honshū Island, Japan. The capital is the city of Nara.-History:The present-day Nara Prefecture was created in 1887, making it independent of Osaka Prefecture.... |
1,403,686 | 665,675 | 738,011 | −6,363 | 1,395,121 | 1,421,310 | 3,691.09 | 380.29 | Nara-shi Nara, Nara is the capital city of Nara Prefecture in the Kansai region of Japan. The city occupies the northern part of Nara Prefecture, directly bordering Kyoto Prefecture... |
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29 | Shiga-ken Shiga Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan, which forms part of the Kansai region on Honshu Island. The capital is the city of Ōtsu.- History :Shiga was known as Ōmi Province or Gōshū before the prefectural system was established... |
1,402,032 | 693,740 | 708,292 | 6,024 | 1,374,518 | 1,380,361 | 4,017.36 | 348.99 | Ōtsu-shi Otsu, Shiga is the capital city of Shiga, Japan. The city was founded on October 1, 1898. As of October 1, 2010, the city has an estimated population of 338,629 with an average age of 40.7 years and a population density of 905.28 persons per km²... |
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30 | Aomori-ken Aomori Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Tōhoku Region. The capital is the city of Aomori.- History :Until the Meiji Restoration, the area of Aomori prefecture was known as Mutsu Province.... |
1,391,834 | 654,249 | 737,585 | −15,094 | 1,388,386 | 1,436,657 | 9,607.11 | 144.88 | Aomori-shi Aomori, Aomori is the capital city of Aomori Prefecture, in the northern Tōhoku region of Japan. As of 2009, the city had an estimated population of 302,068 and a density of 366 persons per km². Its total area was 824.52 km².- History :... |
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31 | Okinawa-ken Okinawa Prefecture is one of Japan's southern prefectures. It consists of hundreds of the Ryukyu Islands in a chain over long, which extends southwest from Kyūshū to Taiwan. Okinawa's capital, Naha, is located in the southern part of Okinawa Island... |
1,375,993 | 673,835 | 702,158 | 2,821 | 1,368,613 | 1,361,594 | 2,275.91 | 604.59 | Naha-shi Naha, Okinawa is the capital city of the Japanese prefecture of Okinawa.Naha is a coastal city located on the East China Sea coast of the southern part of Okinawa Island, the largest of the Ryukyu Islands... |
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32 | Iwate-ken Iwate Prefecture is the second largest prefecture of Japan after Hokkaido. It is located in the Tōhoku region of Honshū island and contains the island's easternmost point. The capital is Morioka. Iwate has the lowest population density of any prefecture outside Hokkaido... |
1,351,890 | 645,067 | 706,823 | −12,134 | 1,346,660 | 1,385,041 | 15,278.86 | 88.48 | Morioka-shi Morioka, Iwate is the capital city of Iwate Prefecture, Japan.As of 2005, the city has an estimated population of 300,740 and a population density of 588.11 persons per km². The total area is 489.15 km².... |
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33 | Ōita-ken Oita Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan on Kyūshū Island. The prefectural capital is the city of Ōita.- History :Around the 6th century Kyushu consisted of four regions: Tsukushi-no-kuni 筑紫国, Hi-no-kuni 肥国, and Toyo no kuni... |
1,200,188 | 565,660 | 634,528 | −2,867 | 1,192,098 | 1,209,571 | 6,339.54 | 189.32 | Ōita-shi Oita, Oita is the capital city of Ōita Prefecture located on the island of Kyushu, Japan.- Demographics and geography :Ōita is the most populous city in Ōita Prefecture... |
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34 | Yamagata-ken Yamagata Prefecture -Fruit:Yamagata Prefecture is the largest producer of cherries and pears in Japan. A large quantity of other kinds of fruits such as grapes, apples, peaches, melons, persimmons and watermelons are also produced.- Demographics :... |
1,188,229 | 570,187 | 618,042 | −10,139 | 1,181,996 | 1,216,181 | 9,323.46 | 127.45 | Yamagata-shi Yamagata, Yamagata is the capital city of Yamagata Prefecture in Japan.As of July 1, 2011, the city has an estimated population of 253,951 with 97,457 households and a population density of 665.94 persons per km². The total area is 381.34 km². The city was founded on April 1, 1889.-Culture:The , one of Tōhoku's... |
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35 | Ishikawa-ken Ishikawa Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūbu region on Honshū island. The capital is Kanazawa.- History :Ishikawa was formed from the merger of Kaga Province and the smaller Noto Province.- Geography :Ishikawa is on the Sea of Japan coast... |
1,167,892 | 563,590 | 604,302 | −2,071 | 1,158,070 | 1,174,026 | 4,185.54 | 279.03 | Kanazawa-shi Kanazawa, Ishikawa is the capital city of Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan.-Geography, climate, and population:Kanazawa sits on the Sea of Japan, bordered by the Japan Alps, Hakusan National Park and Noto Peninsula National Park. The city sits between the Sai and Asano rivers. Its total area is 467.77 km².Kanazawa's... |
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36 | Miyazaki-ken Miyazaki Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on the island of Kyushu. The capital is the city of Miyazaki.- History :Historically, after the Meiji Restoration, Hyūga Province was renamed Miyazaki Prefecture.... |
1,136,191 | 533,022 | 603,169 | −6,465 | 1,133,156 | 1,153,042 | 7,734.80 | 146.89 | Miyazaki-shi Miyazaki, Miyazaki is the capital city of Miyazaki Prefecture on the island of Kyūshū in Japan. Located on the coast and perforated by several rivers, Miyazaki City enjoys scenic views of both ocean and nearby, verdant mountains... |
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37 | Akita-ken Akita Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Tōhoku Region of northern Honshu, the main island of Japan. The capital is the city of Akita.- History :The area of Akita has been created from the ancient provinces of Dewa and Mutsu.... |
1,107,828 | 520,674 | 587,154 | −12,818 | 1,104,635 | 1,145,501 | 11,612.28 | 95.40 | Akita-shi Akita, Akita is the capital city of Akita Prefecture in the Tohoku region of Japan.As of June 11, 2005, with the merger of the former Kawabe District , the city has an estimated population of 323,310 and density of... |
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38 | Toyama-ken Toyama Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Hokuriku region on Honshū island. The capital is the city of Toyama.Toyama is the leading industrial prefecture on the Japan Sea coast, and has the industrial advantage of cheap electricity due to abundant water resources.... |
1,101,342 | 530,661 | 570,681 | −4,362 | 1,087,555 | 1,111,729 | 4,247.55 | 259.29 | Toyama-shi Toyama, Toyama is the capital city of Toyama Prefecture, Japan, located on the coast of the Sea of Japan in the Chūbu region on central Honshū, about 200 km north of the city of Nagoya and 300 km northwest of Tokyo.... |
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39 | Wakayama-ken Wakayama Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on the Kii Peninsula in the Kansai region on Honshū island. The capital is the city of Wakayama.- History :Present-day Wakayama is mostly the western part of the province of Kii.- 1953 Wakayama Prefecture flood disaster :... |
1,011,556 | 475,063 | 536,493 | −7,873 | 1,007,263 | 1,035,969 | 4,726.29 | 214.03 | Wakayama-shi Wakayama, Wakayama is the capital city of Wakayama Prefecture in the Kansai region of Japan.-Background:Wakayama occupies 4% of the land area and has 40% of Wakayama prefecture's population. The city was founded on April 1, 1889.... |
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40 | Kagawa-ken Kagawa Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on Shikoku island. The capital is Takamatsu.- History :Kagawa was formerly known as Sanuki Province.For a brief period between August 1876 and December 1888, Kagawa was made a part of Ehime Prefecture.-Battle of Yashima:... |
1,002,514 | 481,207 | 521,307 | −3,189 | 995,796 | 1,012,400 | 1,876.51 | 534.24 | Takamatsu-shi Takamatsu, Kagawa is a city located in central Kagawa Prefecture on the island of Shikoku in Japan, and is the seat of the prefectural government. It is designated a core city by the Japanese Government. It is a port city located on the Seto Inland Sea, and is the closest port to Honshu from Shikoku island... |
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41 | Yamanashi-ken Yamanashi Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūbu region of the island of Honshū. The capital is the city of Kōfu.-Pre-history to the 14th century:People have been living in the Yamanashi area for about 30,000 years... |
870,694 | 425,895 | 444,799 | −6,119 | 856,923 | 884,515 | 4,465.37 | 194.99 | Kōfu-shi Kofu, Yamanashi is the capital city of Yamanashi Prefecture in Japan.As of May 1, 2011, the city had a estimate population of 197,540, with 85,794 households. The total area is 212.41 km².-History:Kōfu's name means "capital of Kai Province"... |
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42 | Saga-ken Saga Prefecture is located in the northwest part of the island of Kyūshū, Japan. It touches both the Sea of Japan and the Ariake Sea. The western part of the prefecture is a region famous for producing ceramics and porcelain, particularly the towns of Karatsu, Imari, and Arita... |
855,832 | 402,297 | 453,535 | −3,455 | 852,304 | 866,369 | 2,439.60 | 350.81 | Saga-shi Saga, Saga is the capital of Saga Prefecture, located on the island of Kyūshū, Japan.Saga was the capital of Saga Domain in the Edo period, and largest city of former Hizen Province.... |
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43 | Fukui-ken Fukui Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūbu region on Honshū island. The capital is the city of Fukui.- Prehistory :The Kitadani Dinosaur Quarry, on the Sugiyama River within the city limits of Katsuyama, has yielded the Fukuiraptor kitadaniensis and Fukuisaurus tetoriensis as well as an unnamed... |
812,395 | 392,977 | 419,418 | −3,551 | 800,774 | 821,592 | 4,189.54 | 193.91 | Fukui-shi Fukui, Fukui is the capital of Fukui Prefecture, Japan. The city is located in the north-central part of the prefecture on the coast of the Sea of Japan.-Demographics:... |
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44 | Tokushima-ken Tokushima Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on Shikoku island. The capital is the city of Tokushima.- Tokushima Prefecture and Myodo Prefecture :Long ago, Tokushima City belonged to a region known as Myōdō-gun... |
794,128 | 376,716 | 417,412 | −5,788 | 790,341 | 809,950 | 4,146.55 | 191.52 | Tokushima-shi Tokushima, Tokushima is the capital city of Tokushima Prefecture on Shikoku island in Japan.As of May 1, 2011, the city had an estimated population of 263,372, with 114,325 households, and a population density of 1,377.25 persons per km². Its total area is 191.23 km².... |
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45 | Kōchi-ken Kochi Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located on the south coast of Shikoku. The capital is the city of Kōchi.- History :Prior to the Meiji Restoration, Kōchi was known as Tosa Province and was controlled by the Chosokabe clan in the Sengoku period and the Yamauchi family during the Edo period.- Geography... |
773,436 | 362,180 | 411,256 | −8,149 | 770,852 | 796,292 | 7,105.13 | 108.86 | Kōchi-shi Kochi, Kochi is the capital city of Kōchi Prefecture on Shikoku island of Japan.Kōchi is the main city of the prefecture with over 40% of its population. As of May 31, 2008, the city had an estimated population of 340,515 and a density of... |
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46 | Shimane-ken Shimane Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūgoku region on Honshū island. The capital is Matsue. It is the second least populous prefecture in Japan, after its eastern neighbor Tottori. The prefecture has an area elongated from east to west facing the Chūgoku Mountain Range on the south side and to... |
724,918 | 345,182 | 379,736 | −6,126 | 720,115 | 742,223 | 6,707.86 | 108.07 | Matsue-shi Matsue, Shimane is the capital city of Shimane Prefecture in the Chūgoku region of Japan.As of August, 2011, the city has an estimated population of 207,000, following its most recent merging with Higashi-Izumo... |
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47 | Tottori-ken Tottori Prefecture is a prefecture of Japan located in the Chūgoku region. The capital is the city of Tottori. It is the least populous prefecture in Japan.- History :Before the Meiji Restoration, Tottori encompassed the old provinces of Hōki and Inaba... |
595,192 | 283,796 | 311,396 | −4,697 | 591,314 | 607,012 | 3,507.26 | 169.70 | Tottori-shi Tottori, Tottori is the capital city of Tottori Prefecture in the Chūgoku region of Japan.As of 2006, the city has an estimated population of 200,974 and a density of 262.48 persons per km². The total area is 765.66 km².... |
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|align=left|Japan | 127,692,273 | 62,251,004 | 65,441,269 | −78,521 | 125,947,146 | 127,767,994 | 377,943.57 | 342.42 | Tōkyō | ||
Historical demography of prefectures of Japan
Population before 1920 was calculated based on information of , while door-to-door censuses have been held every 5 years as of October 1 since 1920 in Japan except for the year of 1945.As for prefectural population before 1945, prefectures that constituted are only given. or Southern Sakhalin
Sakhalin
Sakhalin or Saghalien, is a large island in the North Pacific, lying between 45°50' and 54°24' N.It is part of Russia, and is Russia's largest island, and is administered as part of Sakhalin Oblast...
was officially incorporated into Japan Proper since March 26, 1943 until the end of the World War II
World War II
World War II, or the Second World War , was a global conflict lasting from 1939 to 1945, involving most of the world's nations—including all of the great powers—eventually forming two opposing military alliances: the Allies and the Axis...
, while Taiwan
Taiwan
Taiwan , also known, especially in the past, as Formosa , is the largest island of the same-named island group of East Asia in the western Pacific Ocean and located off the southeastern coast of mainland China. The island forms over 99% of the current territory of the Republic of China following...
, Kwantung Leased Territory
Kwantung Leased Territory
The Kwantung Leased Territory was a territory in the southern part of the Liaodong Peninsula in Inner Manchuria that existed from 1898 to 1945. It was one of the numerous territorial concessions that the Empire of China was compelled to award to foreign countries at the end of the 19th century...
, Korea
Korea
Korea ) is an East Asian geographic region that is currently divided into two separate sovereign states — North Korea and South Korea. Located on the Korean Peninsula, Korea is bordered by the People's Republic of China to the northwest, Russia to the northeast, and is separated from Japan to the...
and South Pacific Mandate
South Pacific Mandate
The was the Japanese League of Nations mandate consisting of several groups of islands in the Pacific Ocean which came under the administration of Japan after the defeat of the German Empire in World War I.-Early history:Under the terms of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, after the start of World...
were treated as . At the end of war, Japan lost possessions of Southern Sakhalin
Sakhalin
Sakhalin or Saghalien, is a large island in the North Pacific, lying between 45°50' and 54°24' N.It is part of Russia, and is Russia's largest island, and is administered as part of Sakhalin Oblast...
(Karafuto-fu), Kuril Islands
Kuril Islands
The Kuril Islands , in Russia's Sakhalin Oblast region, form a volcanic archipelago that stretches approximately northeast from Hokkaidō, Japan, to Kamchatka, Russia, separating the Sea of Okhotsk from the North Pacific Ocean. There are 56 islands and many more minor rocks. It consists of Greater...
(part of Hokkaidō), Ogasawra Islands (part of Tōkyō-to), Amami
Amami Islands
The are a group of islands that is part of the Satsunan Islands, which are then part of the Nansei Islands. The islands are part of Kagoshima Prefecture, in the Kyūshū region of Japan...
and Tokara Islands
Tokara Islands
The Tokara Islands is a group of islands in part of the Satsunan Islands, which is part of the Nansei Islands. The whole island group belongs to Toshima Village, Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan....
(part of Kagoshima-ken) and Ryukyu Islands
Ryukyu Islands
The , also known as the , is a chain of islands in the western Pacific, on the eastern limit of the East China Sea and to the southwest of the island of Kyushu in Japan. From about 1829 until the mid 20th century, they were alternately called Luchu, Loochoo, or Lewchew, akin to the Mandarin...
(Okinawa-ken). For the population of the colonies of the former Empire of Japan
Empire of Japan
The Empire of Japan is the name of the state of Japan that existed from the Meiji Restoration on 3 January 1868 to the enactment of the post-World War II Constitution of...
, see Demographics of Imperial Japan.
1948 to 2000
Population in the following table is given according to the de jure population concept for enumerating the people.- Source: Census of Japan (as of October 1 for the years of 2000, 1995, 1990, 1985, 1980, 1975, 1970, 1965, 1960, 1955 and 1950),
-
- De jure Population Census of Japan (as of August 1, 1948),
- Census of Ryūkyū (as of October 1, 1970, December 1, 1960 and December 1, 1950),
- Extraordinary Census of Ryūkyū (as of October 1, 1965 and December 1, 1955).
Prefectures | Oct 1, 2000 |
Oct 1, 1995 |
Oct 1, 1990 |
Oct 1, 1985 |
Oct 1, 1980 |
Oct 1, 1975 |
Oct 1, 1970 |
Oct 1, 1965 |
Oct 1, 1960 |
Oct 1, 1955 |
Oct 1, 1950 |
Aug 1, 1948 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hokkaidō | 5,683,062 | 5,692,321 | 5,643,647 | 5,679,439 | 5,575,989 | 5,338,206 | 5,184,287 | 5,171,800 | 5,039,206 | 4,773,087 | 4,295,567 | 4,021,050 |
Aomori-ken | 1,475,728 | 1,481,663 | 1,482,873 | 1,524,448 | 1,523,907 | 1,468,646 | 1,427,520 | 1,416,591 | 1,426,606 | 1,382,523 | 1,282,867 | 1,218,325 |
Iwate-ken | 1,416,180 | 1,419,505 | 1,416,928 | 1,433,611 | 1,421,927 | 1,385,563 | 1,371,383 | 1,411,118 | 1,448,517 | 1,427,097 | 1,346,728 | 1,294,203 |
Miyagi-ken | 2,365,320 | 2,328,739 | 2,248,558 | 2,176,295 | 2,082,320 | 1,955,267 | 1,819,223 | 1,753,126 | 1,743,195 | 1,727,065 | 1,663,442 | 1,596,307 |
Akita-ken | 1,189,279 | 1,213,667 | 1,227,478 | 1,254,032 | 1,256,745 | 1,232,481 | 1,241,376 | 1,279,835 | 1,335,580 | 1,348,871 | 1,309,031 | 1,283,710 |
Yamagata-ken | 1,244,147 | 1,256,958 | 1,258,390 | 1,261,662 | 1,251,917 | 1,220,302 | 1,225,618 | 1,263,103 | 1,320,664 | 1,353,649 | 1,357,347 | 1,346,492 |
Fukushima-ken | 2,126,935 | 2,133,592 | 2,104,058 | 2,080,304 | 2,035,272 | 1,970,616 | 1,946,077 | 1,983,754 | 2,051,137 | 2,095,237 | 2,062,394 | 2,026,482 |
Ibaraki-ken | 2,985,676 | 2,955,530 | 2,845,382 | 2,725,005 | 2,558,007 | 2,342,198 | 2,143,551 | 2,056,154 | 2,047,024 | 2,064,037 | 2,039,418 | 2,044,578 |
Tochigi-ken | 2,004,817 | 1,984,390 | 1,935,168 | 1,866,066 | 1,792,201 | 1,698,003 | 1,580,021 | 1,521,656 | 1,513,624 | 1,547,580 | 1,550,462 | 1,557,860 |
Gunma-ken | 2,024,852 | 2,003,540 | 1,966,265 | 1,921,259 | 1,848,562 | 1,756,480 | 1,658,909 | 1,605,584 | 1,578,476 | 1,613,549 | 1,601,380 | 1,608,894 |
Saitama-ken | 6,938,006 | 6,759,311 | 6,405,319 | 5,863,678 | 5,420,480 | 4,821,340 | 3,866,472 | 3,014,983 | 2,430,871 | 2,262,623 | 2,146,445 | 2,132,221 |
Chiba-ken | 5,926,285 | 5,797,782 | 5,555,429 | 5,148,163 | 4,735,424 | 4,149,147 | 3,366,624 | 2,701,770 | 2,306,010 | 2,205,060 | 2,139,037 | 2,140,511 |
Tōkyō-to | 12,064,101 | 11,773,605 | 11,855,563 | 11,829,363 | 11,618,281 | 11,673,554 | 11,408,071 | 10,869,244 | 9,683,802 | 8,037,084 | 6,277,500 | 5,417,871 |
Kanagawa-ken | 8,489,974 | 8,245,900 | 7,980,391 | 7,431,974 | 6,924,348 | 6,397,748 | 5,472,247 | 4,430,743 | 3,443,176 | 2,919,497 | 2,487,665 | 2,317,551 |
Niigata-ken | 2,475,733 | 2,488,364 | 2,474,583 | 2,478,470 | 2,451,357 | 2,391,938 | 2,360,982 | 2,398,931 | 2,442,037 | 2,473,492 | 2,460,997 | 2,435,451 |
Toyama-ken | 1,120,851 | 1,123,125 | 1,120,161 | 1,118,369 | 1,103,459 | 1,070,791 | 1,029,695 | 1,025,465 | 1,032,614 | 1,021,121 | 1,008,790 | 998,349 |
Ishikawa-ken | 1,180,977 | 1,180,068 | 1,164,628 | 1,152,325 | 1,119,304 | 1,069,872 | 1,002,420 | 980,499 | 973,418 | 966,187 | 957,279 | 941,772 |
Fukui-ken | 828,944 | 826,996 | 823,585 | 817,633 | 794,354 | 773,599 | 744,230 | 750,557 | 752,696 | 754,055 | 752,374 | 733,374 |
Yamanashi-ken | 888,172 | 881,996 | 852,966 | 832,832 | 804,256 | 783,050 | 762,029 | 763,194 | 782,062 | 807,044 | 811,369 | 815,485 |
Nagano-ken | 2,215,168 | 2,193,984 | 2,156,627 | 2,136,927 | 2,083,934 | 2,017,564 | 1,956,917 | 1,958,007 | 1,981,433 | 2,021,292 | 2,060,831 | 2,079,682 |
Gifu-ken | 2,107,700 | 2,100,315 | 2,066,569 | 2,028,536 | 1,960,107 | 1,867,978 | 1,758,954 | 1,700,365 | 1,638,399 | 1,583,605 | 1,544,538 | 1,524,812 |
Shizuoka-ken | 3,767,393 | 3,737,689 | 3,670,840 | 3,574,692 | 3,446,804 | 3,308,799 | 3,089,895 | 2,912,521 | 2,756,271 | 2,650,435 | 2,471,472 | 2,407,102 |
Aichi-ken | 7,043,300 | 6,868,336 | 6,690,603 | 6,455,172 | 6,221,638 | 5,923,569 | 5,386,163 | 4,798,653 | 4,206,313 | 3,769,209 | 3,390,585 | 3,226,116 |
Mie-ken | 1,857,339 | 1,841,358 | 1,792,514 | 1,747,311 | 1,686,936 | 1,626,002 | 1,543,083 | 1,514,467 | 1,485,054 | 1,485,582 | 1,461,197 | 1,451,100 |
Shiga-ken | 1,342,832 | 1,287,005 | 1,222,411 | 1,155,844 | 1,079,898 | 985,621 | 889,768 | 853,385 | 842,695 | 853,734 | 861,180 | 872,775 |
Kyōto-fu | 2,644,391 | 2,629,592 | 2,602,460 | 2,586,574 | 2,527,330 | 2,424,856 | 2,250,087 | 2,102,808 | 1,993,403 | 1,935,161 | 1,832,934 | 1,784,753 |
Ōsaka-fu | 8,805,081 | 8,797,268 | 8,734,516 | 8,668,095 | 8,473,446 | 8,278,925 | 7,620,480 | 6,657,189 | 5,504,746 | 4,618,308 | 3,857,047 | 3,515,225 |
Hyōgo-ken | 5,550,574 | 5,401,877 | 5,405,040 | 5,278,050 | 5,144,892 | 4,992,140 | 4,667,928 | 4,309,944 | 3,906,487 | 3,620,947 | 3,309,935 | 3,156,888 |
Nara-ken | 1,442,795 | 1,430,862 | 1,375,481 | 1,304,866 | 1,209,365 | 1,077,491 | 930,160 | 825,965 | 781,058 | 776,861 | 763,883 | 778,677 |
Wakayama-ken | 1,069,912 | 1,080,435 | 1,074,325 | 1,087,206 | 1,087,012 | 1,072,118 | 1,042,736 | 1,026,975 | 1,002,191 | 1,006,819 | 982,113 | 979,982 |
Tottori-ken | 613,289 | 614,929 | 615,722 | 616,024 | 604,221 | 581,311 | 568,777 | 579,853 | 599,135 | 614,259 | 600,177 | 592,863 |
Shimane-ken | 761,503 | 771,441 | 781,021 | 794,629 | 784,795 | 768,886 | 773,575 | 821,620 | 888,886 | 929,066 | 912,551 | 903,576 |
Okayama-ken | 1,950,828 | 1,950,750 | 1,925,877 | 1,916,906 | 1,871,023 | 1,814,305 | 1,707,026 | 1,645,135 | 1,670,454 | 1,689,800 | 1,661,099 | 1,650,285 |
Hiroshima-ken | 2,878,915 | 2,881,748 | 2,849,847 | 2,819,200 | 2,739,161 | 2,646,324 | 2,436,135 | 2,281,146 | 2,184,043 | 2,149,044 | 2,081,967 | 2,045,923 |
Yamaguchi-ken | 1,527,964 | 1,555,543 | 1,572,616 | 1,601,627 | 1,587,079 | 1,555,218 | 1,511,448 | 1,543,573 | 1,602,207 | 1,609,839 | 1,540,882 | 1,505,532 |
Tokushima-ken | 824,108 | 832,427 | 831,598 | 834,889 | 825,261 | 805,166 | 791,111 | 815,115 | 847,274 | 878,109 | 878,511 | 869,290 |
Kagawa-ken | 1,022,890 | 1,027,006 | 1,023,412 | 1,022,569 | 999,864 | 961,292 | 907,897 | 900,845 | 918,867 | 943,823 | 946,022 | 934,123 |
Ehime-ken | 1,493,092 | 1,506,700 | 1,515,025 | 1,529,983 | 1,506,637 | 1,465,215 | 1,418,124 | 1,446,384 | 1,500,687 | 1,540,628 | 1,521,878 | 1,481,106 |
Kōchi-ken | 813,949 | 816,704 | 825,034 | 839,784 | 831,275 | 808,397 | 786,882 | 812,714 | 854,595 | 882,683 | 873,874 | 866,385 |
Fukuoka-ken | 5,015,699 | 4,933,393 | 4,811,050 | 4,719,259 | 4,553,461 | 4,292,963 | 4,027,416 | 3,964,611 | 4,006,679 | 3,859,764 | 3,530,169 | 3,312,577 |
Saga-ken | 876,654 | 884,316 | 877,851 | 880,013 | 865,574 | 837,674 | 838,468 | 871,885 | 942,874 | 973,749 | 945,082 | 931,336 |
Nagasaki-ken | 1,516,523 | 1,544,934 | 1,562,959 | 1,593,968 | 1,590,564 | 1,571,912 | 1,570,245 | 1,641,245 | 1,760,421 | 1,747,596 | 1,645,492 | 1,565,558 |
Kumamoto-ken | 1,859,344 | 1,859,793 | 1,840,326 | 1,837,747 | 1,790,327 | 1,715,273 | 1,700,229 | 1,770,736 | 1,856,192 | 1,895,663 | 1,827,582 | 1,786,058 |
Ōita-ken | 1,221,140 | 1,231,306 | 1,236,942 | 1,250,214 | 1,228,913 | 1,190,314 | 1,155,566 | 1,187,480 | 1,239,655 | 1,277,199 | 1,252,999 | 1,245,689 |
Miyazaki-ken | 1,170,007 | 1,175,819 | 1,168,907 | 1,175,543 | 1,151,587 | 1,085,055 | 1,051,105 | 1,080,692 | 1,134,590 | 1,139,384 | 1,091,427 | 1,052,483 |
Kagoshima-ken | 1,786,194 | 1,794,224 | 1,797,824 | 1,819,270 | 1,784,623 | 1,723,902 | 1,729,150 | 1,853,541 | 1,963,104 | 2,044,112 | 1,804,118 | 1,766,514 |
Okinawa-ken | 1,318,220 | 1,273,440 | 1,222,398 | 1,179,097 | 1,106,559 | 1,042,572 | ||||||
Japan | 126,925,843 | 125,570,246 | 123,611,167 | 121,048,923 | 117,060,396 | 111,939,643 | 103,720,060 | 98,274,961 | 93,418,501 | 89,275,529 | 83,199,637 | 80,216,896 |
Ryūkyū | 945,111 | 934,176 | 883,122 | 801,065 | 914,937 | |||||||
Total | 126,925,843 | 125,570,246 | 123,611,167 | 121,048,923 | 117,060,396 | 111,939,643 | 104,665,171 | 99,209,137 | 94,301,623 | 90,076,594 | 84,114,574 | 80,216,896 |
1920 to 1947
Population in the following table is given according to the de facto population concept for enumerating the people.- Source: Extraordinary Census of Japan (as of October 1, 1947),
-
- Population Census of Japan (as of April 26, 1946, November 1, 1945 and February 22, 1944),
- Census of Japan (as of October 1 for the years of 1940, 1935, 1930, 1925 and 1920).
Prefectures | Oct 1, 1947 |
Apr 26, 1946 |
Nov 1, 1945 |
Feb 22, 1944 |
Oct 1, 1940 |
Oct 1, 1935 |
Oct 1, 1930 |
Oct 1, 1925 |
Oct 1, 1920 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hokkaidō | 3,852,821 | 3,488,013 | 3,518,389 | 3,256,157 | 3,272,718 | 3,068,282 | 2,812,335 | 2,498,679 | 2,359,183 |
Aomori-ken | 1,180,245 | 1,089,232 | 1,083,250 | 1,009,104 | 1,000,509 | 967,129 | 879,914 | 812,977 | 756,454 |
Iwate-ken | 1,262,743 | 1,217,154 | 1,227,789 | 1,104,049 | 1,095,793 | 1,046,111 | 975,771 | 900,984 | 845,540 |
Miyagi-ken | 1,566,831 | 1,462,100 | 1,462,254 | 1,275,862 | 1,271,238 | 1,234,801 | 1,142,784 | 1,044,036 | 961,768 |
Akita-ken | 1,257,398 | 1,195,813 | 1,211,871 | 1,048,769 | 1,052,275 | 1,037,744 | 987,706 | 936,408 | 898,537 |
Yamagata-ken | 1,335,653 | 1,294,934 | 1,326,350 | 1,083,569 | 1,119,338 | 1,116,822 | 1,080,034 | 1,027,297 | 968,925 |
Fukushima-ken | 1,992,460 | 1,918,746 | 1,957,356 | 1,599,392 | 1,625,521 | 1,581,563 | 1,508,150 | 1,437,596 | 1,362,750 |
Ibaraki-ken | 2,013,735 | 1,940,833 | 1,944,344 | 1,656,678 | 1,620,000 | 1,548,991 | 1,487,097 | 1,409,092 | 1,350,400 |
Tochigi-ken | 1,534,311 | 1,503,619 | 1,546,355 | 1,203,679 | 1,206,657 | 1,195,057 | 1,141,737 | 1,090,428 | 1,046,479 |
Gunma-ken | 1,572,787 | 1,524,635 | 1,546,081 | 1,319,517 | 1,299,027 | 1,242,453 | 1,186,080 | 1,118,858 | 1,052,610 |
Saitama-ken | 2,100,453 | 2,028,553 | 2,047,261 | 1,647,625 | 1,608,039 | 1,528,854 | 1,459,172 | 1,394,461 | 1,319,533 |
Chiba-ken | 2,112,917 | 2,008,568 | 1,966,862 | 1,659,345 | 1,588,425 | 1,546,394 | 1,470,121 | 1,399,257 | 1,336,155 |
Tōkyō-to | 5,000,777 | 4,183,072 | 3,488,284 | 7,271,001 | |||||
Tōkyō-fu Tokyo , ; officially , is one of the 47 prefectures of Japan. Tokyo is the capital of Japan, the center of the Greater Tokyo Area, and the largest metropolitan area of Japan. It is the seat of the Japanese government and the Imperial Palace, and the home of the Japanese Imperial Family... |
7,354,971 | 6,369,919 | 5,408,678 | 4,485,144 | 3,699,428 | ||||
Kanagawa-ken | 2,218,120 | 2,019,943 | 1,865,667 | 2,474,354 | 2,188,974 | 1,840,005 | 1,619,606 | 1,416,792 | 1,323,390 |
Niigata-ken | 2,418,271 | 2,326,811 | 2,389,653 | 1,994,817 | 2,064,402 | 1,995,777 | 1,933,326 | 1,849,807 | 1,776,474 |
Toyama-ken | 979,229 | 932,669 | 953,834 | 819,614 | 822,569 | 798,890 | 778,953 | 749,243 | 724,276 |
Ishikawa-ken | 927,743 | 877,197 | 887,510 | 743,672 | 757,676 | 768,416 | 756,835 | 750,854 | 747,360 |
Fukui-ken | 726,264 | 695,703 | 724,856 | 621,933 | 643,904 | 646,659 | 618,144 | 597,899 | 599,155 |
Yamanashi-ken | 807,251 | 796,973 | 839,057 | 634,897 | 663,026 | 646,727 | 631,042 | 600,675 | 583,453 |
Nagano-ken | 2,060,010 | 2,028,648 | 2,121,050 | 1,650,511 | 1,710,729 | 1,714,000 | 1,717,118 | 1,629,217 | 1,562,722 |
Gifu-ken | 1,493,644 | 1,444,000 | 1,518,649 | 1,266,008 | 1,265,024 | 1,225,799 | 1,178,405 | 1,132,557 | 1,070,407 |
Shizuoka-ken | 2,353,005 | 2,260,059 | 2,220,358 | 2,027,856 | 2,017,860 | 1,939,860 | 1,797,805 | 1,671,217 | 1,550,387 |
Aichi-ken | 3,122,902 | 2,919,085 | 2,857,851 | 3,280,206 | 3,166,592 | 2,862,701 | 2,567,413 | 2,319,494 | 2,089,762 |
Mie-ken | 1,416,494 | 1,371,858 | 1,394,286 | 1,209,266 | 1,198,783 | 1,174,595 | 1,157,407 | 1,107,692 | 1,069,270 |
Shiga-ken | 858,367 | 831,306 | 860,911 | 691,972 | 703,679 | 711,436 | 691,631 | 662,412 | 651,050 |
Kyōto-fu | 1,739,084 | 1,621,998 | 1,603,796 | 1,635,528 | 1,729,993 | 1,702,508 | 1,552,832 | 1,406,382 | 1,287,147 |
Ōsaka-fu | 3,334,659 | 2,976,140 | 2,800,958 | 4,412,953 | 4,792,966 | 4,297,174 | 3,540,017 | 3,059,502 | 2,587,847 |
Hyōgo-ken | 3,057,444 | 2,826,192 | 2,821,892 | 3,224,376 | 3,221,232 | 2,923,249 | 2,646,301 | 2,454,679 | 2,301,799 |
Nara-ken | 779,935 | 744,381 | 779,685 | 606,789 | 620,509 | 620,471 | 596,225 | 583,828 | 564,607 |
Wakayama-ken | 959,999 | 933,231 | 936,006 | 847,388 | 865,074 | 864,087 | 830,748 | 787,511 | 750,411 |
Tottori-ken | 587,606 | 557,429 | 563,220 | 476,284 | 484,390 | 490,461 | 489,266 | 472,230 | 454,675 |
Shimane-ken | 894,267 | 848,995 | 860,275 | 729,819 | 740,940 | 747,119 | 739,507 | 722,402 | 714,712 |
Okayama-ken | 1,619,622 | 1,538,621 | 1,564,626 | 1,333,300 | 1,329,358 | 1,332,647 | 1,283,962 | 1,238,447 | 1,217,698 |
Hiroshima-ken | 2,011,498 | 1,901,430 | 1,885,471 | 1,962,950 | 1,869,504 | 1,804,916 | 1,692,136 | 1,617,680 | 1,541,905 |
Yamaguchi-ken | 1,479,244 | 1,375,496 | 1,356,491 | 1,357,368 | 1,294,242 | 1,190,542 | 1,135,637 | 1,094,544 | 1,041,013 |
Tokushima-ken | 854,811 | 829,405 | 835,763 | 703,260 | 718,717 | 728,748 | 716,544 | 689,814 | 670,212 |
Kagawa-ken | 917,673 | 872,312 | 863,700 | 713,134 | 730,394 | 748,656 | 732,816 | 700,308 | 677,852 |
Ehime-ken | 1,453,887 | 1,380,700 | 1,361,484 | 1,186,491 | 1,178,705 | 1,164,898 | 1,142,122 | 1,096,366 | 1,046,720 |
Kōchi-ken | 848,337 | 797,876 | 775,578 | 693,053 | 709,286 | 714,980 | 718,152 | 687,478 | 670,895 |
Fukuoka-ken | 3,178,134 | 2,906,644 | 2,746,855 | 3,066,472 | 3,094,132 | 2,755,804 | 2,527,119 | 2,301,668 | 2,188,249 |
Saga-ken | 917,797 | 856,692 | 830,431 | 705,651 | 701,517 | 686,117 | 691,565 | 684,831 | 673,895 |
Nagasaki-ken | 1,531,674 | 1,417,977 | 1,318,589 | 1,490,890 | 1,370,063 | 1,296,883 | 1,233,362 | 1,163,945 | 1,136,182 |
Kumamoto-ken | 1,765,726 | 1,631,976 | 1,556,490 | 1,371,005 | 1,368,179 | 1,387,054 | 1,353,993 | 1,296,086 | 1,233,233 |
Ōita-ken | 1,233,651 | 1,149,501 | 1,124,513 | 973,707 | 972,975 | 980,458 | 945,771 | 915,136 | 860,282 |
Miyazaki-ken | 1,025,689 | 957,856 | 913,687 | 839,556 | 840,357 | 824,431 | 760,467 | 691,094 | 651,097 |
Kagoshima-ken | 1,746,305 | 1,629,760 | 1,538,466 | 1,594,009 | 1,589,467 | 1,591,466 | 1,556,690 | 1,472,193 | 1,415,582 |
Okinawa-ken | 590,480 | 574,579 | 592,494 | 577,509 | 557,622 | 571,572 | |||
Karafuto-fu Karafuto Prefecture , commonly called South Sakhalin, was the Japanese administrative division corresponding to Japanese territory on Sakhalin from 1905 to 1945. Through the Treaty of Portsmouth, the portion of Sakhalin south of 50°N became a colony of Japan in 1905... |
391,825 | ||||||||
Japan Proper | 78,101,473 | 73,114,136 | 71,998,104 | 73,456,141 | 73,114,308 | 69,254,148 | 64,450,005 | 59,736,822 | 55,963,053 |
1884 to 1918
Population in the following tables is given according to the A-type de facto population concept for enumerating the people, based on koseki registration systems.- Source: Imperial Japan Static Population Statistics (as of December 31 for the years of 1918, 1913, 1908 and 1903),
-
- Imperial Japan Population Statistics (as of December 31, 1898),
- Imperial Japan Registered Household Tables (as of December 31 for the years of 1897, 1896, 1895, 1894, 1893, 1892, 1891, 1890, 1889, 1888, 1887 and 1886),
- Japan Registered Household Tables (as of January 1, 1886),
- Japan Household Tables (as of January 1 for the years of 1885 and 1884).
Prefectures | Dec 31, 1918 |
Dec 31, 1913 |
Dec 31, 1908 |
Dec 31, 1903 |
Dec 31, 1898 |
Dec 31, 1897 |
Dec 31, 1896 |
Dec 31, 1895 |
Dec 31, 1894 |
Dec 31, 1893 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hokkaidō | 2,177,700 | 1,817,705 | 1,459,424 | 1,089,503 | 859,534 | 755,837 | 698,144 | 647,883 | 594,143 | 537,953 |
Aomori-ken | 797,841 | 764,485 | 721,127 | 665,691 | 617,531 | 600,294 | 589,557 | 584,459 | 574,235 | 567,002 |
Iwate-ken | 869,652 | 835,415 | 776,714 | 748,752 | 718,737 | 702,750 | 694,867 | 702,915 | 693,730 | 690,456 |
Miyagi-ken | 954,571 | 927,337 | 893,365 | 905,883 | 851,210 | 833,113 | 821,257 | 817,805 | 802,927 | 790,079 |
Akita-ken | 977,212 | 943,628 | 892,650 | 837,665 | 781,129 | 757,041 | 748,358 | 737,922 | 726,974 | 720,871 |
Yamagata-ken | 987,053 | 965,356 | 913,445 | 879,564 | 827,138 | 811,039 | 800,831 | 790,779 | 781,727 | 778,280 |
Fukushima-ken | 1,389,609 | 1,303,501 | 1,234,281 | 1,175,224 | 1,098,002 | 1,061,013 | 1,041,294 | 1,022,780 | 1,005,381 | 994,825 |
Ibaraki-ken | 1,407,735 | 1,328,329 | 1,259,995 | 1,200,475 | 1,149,594 | 1,115,269 | 1,101,540 | 1,085,445 | 1,069,316 | 1,058,369 |
Tochigi-ken | 1,103,333 | 1,044,177 | 977,437 | 912,274 | 829,630 | 798,946 | 781,864 | 767,478 | 751,874 | 744,426 |
Gunma-ken | 1,082,141 | 1,020,853 | 961,026 | 904,046 | 830,223 | 806,277 | 797,870 | 792,575 | 778,729 | 766,687 |
Saitama-ken | 1,391,712 | 1,343,674 | 1,284,502 | 1,240,280 | 1,175,697 | 1,152,823 | 1,147,133 | 1,137,773 | 1,119,126 | 1,109,604 |
Chiba-ken | 1,395,746 | 1,401,587 | 1,358,445 | 1,316,547 | 1,275,376 | 1,245,874 | 1,239,660 | 1,230,385 | 1,221,631 | 1,215,742 |
Tōkyō-fu | 3,719,335 | 3,145,365 | 3,053,946 | 2,532,677 | 2,101,784 | 1,948,581 | 1,907,174 | 1,867,913 | 1,829,583 | 1,790,731 |
Kanagawa-ken | 1,323,026 | 1,228,254 | 1,178,098 | 1,051,433 | 926,884 | 870,256 | 852,283 | 834,624 | 811,986 | 799,862 |
Niigata-ken | 1,916,017 | 1,911,308 | 1,822,239 | 1,780,123 | 1,745,625 | 1,733,629 | 1,736,456 | 1,731,329 | 1,719,562 | 1,713,384 |
Toyama-ken | 803,191 | 805,613 | 770,665 | 776,851 | 766,407 | 754,799 | 762,892 | 764,399 | 763,450 | 764,196 |
Ishikawa-ken | 802,835 | 805,266 | 780,150 | 768,155 | 751,320 | 749,775 | 755,734 | 754,120 | 752,202 | 753,871 |
Fukui-ken | 636,847 | 651,513 | 630,439 | 635,881 | 621,468 | 612,620 | 619,273 | 618,203 | 613,486 | 610,550 |
Yamanashi-ken | 633,224 | 608,969 | 573,341 | 540,657 | 506,497 | 492,689 | 489,412 | 482,349 | 474,959 | 471,480 |
Nagano-ken | 1,564,354 | 1,484,205 | 1,402,072 | 1,348,556 | 1,264,918 | 1,231,859 | 1,221,113 | 1,210,435 | 1,189,936 | 1,179,234 |
Gifu-ken | 1,120,482 | 1,094,961 | 1,031,156 | 1,020,765 | 977,922 | 960,713 | 960,502 | 960,062 | 949,235 | 941,523 |
Shizuoka-ken | 1,591,772 | 1,483,712 | 1,376,048 | 1,293,470 | 1,200,322 | 1,175,982 | 1,162,613 | 1,148,653 | 1,128,584 | 1,117,127 |
Aichi-ken | 2,140,077 | 2,073,224 | 1,886,739 | 1,752,042 | 1,639,611 | 1,592,733 | 1,577,320 | 1,553,447 | 1,529,349 | 1,512,420 |
Mie-ken | 1,114,891 | 1,101,573 | 1,077,295 | 1,044,323 | 996,646 | 967,406 | 963,668 | 960,773 | 950,038 | 943,376 |
Shiga-ken | 703,944 | 697,369 | 694,370 | 716,920 | 694,606 | 688,343 | 689,723 | 690,043 | 686,715 | 682,455 |
Kyōto-fu | 1,383,890 | 1,288,213 | 1,155,671 | 1,055,119 | 997,488 | 957,260 | 957,775 | 951,825 | 937,383 | 924,093 |
Ōsaka-fu | 2,888,492 | 2,461,067 | 2,144,030 | 1,823,456 | 1,600,923 | 1,503,771 | 1,456,176 | 1,422,750 | 1,400,308 | 1,380,768 |
Hyōgo-ken | 2,321,053 | 2,143,791 | 1,982,983 | 1,833,957 | 1,717,634 | 1,652,366 | 1,631,241 | 1,610,829 | 1,595,428 | 1,581,525 |
Nara-ken | 594,482 | 600,711 | 569,772 | 558,314 | 535,619 | 524,562 | 521,918 | 518,025 | 512,181 | 508,963 |
Wakayama-ken | 795,400 | 770,293 | 723,357 | 697,766 | 672,225 | 656,025 | 651,021 | 644,983 | 636,699 | 634,494 |
Tottori-ken | 465,281 | 470,674 | 441,142 | 435,959 | 421,020 | 412,965 | 411,585 | 407,650 | 404,111 | 404,321 |
Shimane-ken | 717,530 | 758,754 | 738,048 | 731,295 | 716,586 | 709,065 | 706,028 | 705,674 | 700,921 | 702,301 |
Okayama-ken | 1,285,590 | 1,261,142 | 1,223,207 | 1,188,244 | 1,135,826 | 1,108,393 | 1,100,984 | 1,094,551 | 1,083,743 | 1,084,423 |
Hiroshima-ken | 1,687,926 | 1,691,699 | 1,598,755 | 1,508,713 | 1,449,622 | 1,405,674 | 1,388,193 | 1,367,820 | 1,346,327 | 1,342,484 |
Yamaguchi-ken | 1,099,048 | 1,089,791 | 1,044,926 | 1,015,156 | 979,596 | 961,065 | 952,300 | 948,234 | 939,940 | 938,158 |
Tokushima-ken | 744,088 | 742,320 | 720,888 | 707,545 | 688,123 | 676,694 | 675,570 | 674,976 | 670,745 | 679,046 |
Kagawa-ken | 714,374 | 759,556 | 729,563 | 711,603 | 694,280 | 676,681 | 673,378 | 674,600 | 671,638 | 675,237 |
Ehime-ken | 1,128,039 | 1,097,989 | 1,057,547 | 1,034,962 | 995,441 | 971,955 | 964,079 | 956,166 | 945,101 | 942,632 |
Kōchi-ken | 708,710 | 693,548 | 670,910 | 646,008 | 622,950 | 609,005 | 600,865 | 598,011 | 590,875 | 587,428 |
Fukuoka-ken | 2,112,596 | 1,926,417 | 1,721,084 | 1,571,158 | 1,425,625 | 1,357,777 | 1,333,423 | 1,313,777 | 1,285,082 | 1,275,050 |
Saga-ken | 679,322 | 693,611 | 671,531 | 654,593 | 618,679 | 599,679 | 596,275 | 587,287 | 579,844 | 577,175 |
Nagasaki-ken | 1,230,249 | 1,134,700 | 1,103,590 | 1,015,364 | 902,455 | 845,441 | 832,616 | 820,338 | 803,713 | 795,461 |
Kumamoto-ken | 1,311,325 | 1,303,405 | 1,236,361 | 1,198,486 | 1,156,270 | 1,122,068 | 1,108,802 | 1,105,932 | 1,097,299 | 1,084,165 |
Ōita-ken | 920,994 | 926,936 | 880,290 | 854,982 | 835,917 | 819,996 | 814,064 | 805,374 | 796,456 | 794,050 |
Miyazaki-ken | 651,151 | 597,472 | 542,088 | 501,926 | 464,510 | 455,535 | 450,416 | 447,126 | 439,273 | 436,067 |
Kagoshima-ken | 1,462,497 | 1,397,387 | 1,275,465 | 1,184,143 | 1,104,220 | 1,083,745 | 1,069,752 | 1,058,171 | 1,042,962 | 1,036,863 |
Okinawa-ken | 580,940 | 534,415 | 502,309 | 476,230 | 460,221 | 449,112 | 442,834 | 439,578 | 432,078 | 421,769 |
Japan Proper | 58,087,277 | 55,131,270 | 51,742,486 | 48,542,736 | 45,403,041 | 43,978,495 | 43,499,833 | 43,048,226 | 42,430,985 | 42,060,976 |
Prefectures | Dec 31, 1892 |
Dec 31, 1891 |
Dec 31, 1890 |
Dec 31, 1889 |
Dec 31, 1888 |
Dec 31, 1887 |
Dec 31, 1886 |
Jan 1, 1886 |
Jan 1, 1885 |
Jan 1, 1884 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hokkaidō | 493,024 | 452,152 | 414,430 | 378,188 | 347,950 | 326,614 | 309,121 | 284,040 | ||
Nemuro-ken Former Provinces of Hokkaido In 1869, the island of Hokkaidō, Japan was divided into 11 provinces and 86 districts. The majority of Japan's former provinces were converted into prefectures by the Meiji government between 1870 and 1876.... |
17,224 | 13,172 | ||||||||
Sapporo-ken Former Provinces of Hokkaido In 1869, the island of Hokkaidō, Japan was divided into 11 provinces and 86 districts. The majority of Japan's former provinces were converted into prefectures by the Meiji government between 1870 and 1876.... |
109,781 | 95,744 | ||||||||
Hakodate-ken Former Provinces of Hokkaido In 1869, the island of Hokkaidō, Japan was divided into 11 provinces and 86 districts. The majority of Japan's former provinces were converted into prefectures by the Meiji government between 1870 and 1876.... |
146,335 | 140,959 | ||||||||
Aomori-ken | 559,391 | 551,389 | 545,026 | 538,110 | 530,292 | 523,226 | 515,779 | 499,549 | 495,182 | 493,137 |
Iwate-ken | 682,996 | 676,665 | 671,956 | 667,115 | 656,047 | 651,989 | 641,395 | 628,591 | 622,426 | 615,616 |
Miyagi-ken | 776,378 | 758,013 | 751,830 | 760,291 | 736,628 | 720,075 | 688,124 | 665,345 | 651,401 | 644,417 |
Akita-ken | 712,738 | 703,482 | 697,298 | 690,122 | 682,928 | 662,917 | 654,037 | 644,367 | 639,259 | 640,575 |
Yamagata-ken | 773,015 | 764,701 | 756,909 | 750,840 | 741,896 | 732,913 | 722,978 | 717,252 | 709,145 | 705,507 |
Fukushima-ken | 980,310 | 964,578 | 952,489 | 934,449 | 913,459 | 893,954 | 870,822 | 855,079 | 861,428 | 857,833 |
Ibaraki-ken | 1,046,682 | 1,034,620 | 1,025,497 | 1,014,354 | 998,976 | 980,803 | 967,480 | 948,161 | 938,377 | 929,747 |
Tochigi-ken | 731,893 | 722,510 | 713,362 | 699,121 | 684,341 | 670,042 | 655,880 | 641,420 | 635,751 | 627,441 |
Gunma-ken | 759,617 | 749,030 | 738,061 | 722,865 | 718,215 | 690,880 | 667,931 | 648,329 | 640,871 | 636,082 |
Saitama-ken | 1,098,947 | 1,087,361 | 1,081,121 | 1,069,144 | 1,054,483 | 1,039,376 | 1,015,824 | 1,004,020 | 994,704 | 985,889 |
Chiba-ken | 1,205,153 | 1,196,785 | 1,191,353 | 1,184,062 | 1,172,138 | 1,159,287 | 1,141,621 | 1,125,375 | 1,118,109 | 1,113,651 |
Tōkyō-fu | 1,519,583 | 1,500,026 | 1,486,671 | 1,628,551 | 1,559,517 | 1,509,757 | 1,455,647 | 1,276,506 | 1,233,843 | 1,217,542 |
Kanagawa-ken | 1,015,481 | 992,047 | 979,756 | 960,069 | 947,766 | 923,178 | 896,948 | 865,976 | 848,682 | 831,151 |
Niigata-ken | 1,711,968 | 1,700,427 | 1,693,727 | 1,681,985 | 1,665,378 | 1,652,736 | 1,632,257 | 1,628,650 | 1,601,796 | 1,589,304 |
Toyama-ken | 763,105 | 759,040 | 754,105 | 745,248 | 738,445 | 726,078 | 715,384 | 712,532 | 706,014 | 701,622 |
Ishikawa-ken | 753,886 | 753,445 | 753,337 | 751,605 | 745,110 | 737,224 | 728,974 | 739,141 | 740,362 | 735,478 |
Fukui-ken | 607,450 | 605,014 | 603,444 | 602,342 | 596,704 | 590,548 | 585,776 | 592,331 | 591,669 | 583,065 |
Yamanashi-ken | 467,337 | 463,263 | 458,534 | 452,781 | 445,182 | 437,475 | 430,996 | 425,898 | 419,444 | 416,497 |
Nagano-ken | 1,171,819 | 1,158,936 | 1,146,071 | 1,128,690 | 1,111,946 | 1,095,998 | 1,074,069 | 1,057,494 | 1,048,065 | 1,043,341 |
Gifu-ken | 936,219 | 930,604 | 932,658 | 918,456 | 909,226 | 899,311 | 889,739 | 884,848 | 880,277 | 873,020 |
Shizuoka-ken | 1,105,875 | 1,094,476 | 1,084,562 | 1,070,841 | 1,058,226 | 1,038,941 | 1,019,301 | 1,002,693 | 991,127 | 982,512 |
Aichi-ken | 1,497,791 | 1,483,744 | 1,473,099 | 1,456,294 | 1,444,011 | 1,429,486 | 1,404,106 | 1,386,473 | 1,373,419 | 1,370,576 |
Mie-ken | 936,465 | 931,687 | 926,376 | 918,369 | 909,702 | 901,698 | 892,654 | 883,462 | 879,353 | 877,666 |
Shiga-ken | 681,145 | 678,775 | 677,502 | 671,788 | 667,563 | 661,323 | 654,558 | 648,339 | 645,519 | 639,634 |
Kyōto-fu | 914,700 | 903,189 | 894,928 | 887,031 | 875,084 | 866,743 | 849,362 | 848,761 | 853,058 | 851,246 |
Ōsaka-fu | 1,370,232 | 1,357,358 | 1,348,317 | 1,324,216 | 1,281,150 | 1,245,695 | 1,695,196 | 1,691,243 | 1,681,935 | 1,653,157 |
Hyōgo-ken | 1,576,970 | 1,562,323 | 1,551,367 | 1,541,731 | 1,521,817 | 1,499,704 | 1,480,685 | 1,466,102 | 1,458,647 | 1,448,199 |
Nara-ken | 506,304 | 502,033 | 500,742 | 498,871 | 496,431 | 489,213 | ||||
Wakayama-ken | 633,771 | 630,667 | 630,373 | 627,332 | 623,842 | 621,554 | 613,862 | 619,343 | 618,026 | 612,505 |
Tottori-ken | 405,725 | 403,589 | 401,697 | 399,060 | 394,333 | 390,061 | 386,083 | 383,241 | 381,838 | 381,300 |
Shimane-ken | 703,256 | 700,665 | 697,878 | 695,782 | 692,101 | 688,127 | 684,257 | 684,856 | 682,536 | 678,813 |
Okayama-ken | 1,082,745 | 1,076,391 | 1,072,706 | 1,068,086 | 1,062,155 | 1,051,333 | 1,043,029 | 1,045,669 | 1,040,280 | 1,037,239 |
Hiroshima-ken | 1,336,145 | 1,324,538 | 1,319,507 | 1,303,457 | 1,289,109 | 1,278,537 | 1,276,461 | 1,272,876 | 1,272,105 | 1,259,148 |
Yamaguchi-ken | 937,036 | 929,629 | 927,015 | 922,497 | 914,083 | 911,859 | 897,557 | 899,606 | 900,339 | 897,296 |
Tokushima-ken | 682,398 | 682,225 | 683,994 | 681,863 | 676,154 | 670,963 | 661,548 | 656,064 | 651,731 | 651,109 |
Kagawa-ken | 675,940 | 673,004 | 672,557 | 668,548 | 660,484 | |||||
Ehime-ken | 940,009 | 933,510 | 926,972 | 921,708 | 906,414 | 1,557,257 | 1,533,988 | 1,529,375 | 1,527,562 | 1,511,820 |
Kōchi-ken | 584,569 | 580,330 | 577,937 | 575,852 | 569,874 | 562,066 | 557,776 | 552,513 | 548,638 | 546,977 |
Fukuoka-ken | 1,258,058 | 1,244,912 | 1,236,015 | 1,224,551 | 1,209,295 | 1,188,877 | 1,159,294 | 1,148,328 | 1,139,986 | 1,135,496 |
Saga-ken | 569,831 | 568,925 | 565,568 | 560,594 | 553,423 | 547,832 | 534,981 | 527,244 | 522,697 | 519,712 |
Nagasaki-ken | 786,416 | 776,779 | 773,095 | 762,812 | 752,402 | 739,825 | 729,042 | 719,082 | 712,631 | 707,604 |
Kumamoto-ken | 1,075,301 | 1,064,885 | 1,057,646 | 1,052,478 | 1,042,281 | 1,030,261 | 1,020,460 | 1,003,777 | 1,000,911 | 1,001,011 |
Ōita-ken | 792,912 | 790,063 | 792,085 | 788,635 | 781,554 | 773,101 | 762,275 | 761,476 | 757,747 | 752,161 |
Miyazaki-ken | 431,693 | 424,033 | 416,824 | 412,729 | 407,827 | 403,810 | 394,261 | 386,299 | 383,769 | 381,879 |
Kagoshima-ken | 1,024,598 | 1,014,560 | 1,005,816 | 998,153 | 985,271 | 962,219 | 943,088 | 941,063 | 933,196 | 935,094 |
Okinawa-ken | 419,970 | 412,354 | 406,622 | 381,142 | 374,266 | 375,280 | 378,809 | 373,587 | 367,874 | 364,701 |
Japan | 41,696,847 | 41,268,732 | 40,968,835 | 40,692,808 | 40,105,479 | 39,510,146 | 38,833,415 | 38,276,376 | 37,975,069 | 37,687,645 |
1872 to 1883
Population in the following table is given according to the population concept for enumerating the people, based on koseki registration system.- Source: Japan Household Tables (as of January 1 for the years of 1883, 1882, 1878 and 1877),
-
- Japan Population Tables (as of January 1 for the years of 1881 and 1880),
- Japan Gun Ku Population Tables (as of January 1, 1879),
- Japan Registered Population Tables (as of January 1, for the years of 1876, 1875, 1874 and 1873; and as of March 8, 1872).
Prefectures | Japanese | Jan 1, 1883 |
Jan 1, 1882 |
Jan 1, 1881 |
Jan 1, 1880 |
Jan 1, 1879 |
Jan 1, 1878 |
Jan 1, 1877 |
Jan 1, 1876 |
Jan 1, 1875 |
Jan 1, 1874 |
Jan 1, 1873 |
Mar 8, 1872 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nemuro-ken | 5,642 | ||||||||||||
Sapporo-ken | 61,144 | ||||||||||||
Hakodate-ken | 117,063 | ||||||||||||
Kaitaku-shi Hokkaido , formerly known as Ezo, Yezo, Yeso, or Yesso, is Japan's second largest island; it is also the largest and northernmost of Japan's 47 prefectural-level subdivisions. The Tsugaru Strait separates Hokkaido from Honshu, although the two islands are connected by the underwater railway Seikan Tunnel... |
177,901 | 168,084 | 163,355 | 158,615 | 151,735 | 150,667 | 149,554 | 149,008 | 146,443 | 123,668 | 123,668 | ||
Aomori-ken | 488,505 | 487,687 | 484,274 | 475,413 | 468,517 | 464,985 | 462,865 | 489,245 | 484,428 | 473,098 | 473,317 | 473,244 | |
Iwate-ken | 611,735 | 605,538 | 598,132 | 591,881 | 592,294 | 579,249 | 578,297 | 327,924 | 323,434 | 321,871 | 320,731 | 319,486 | |
Iwai-ken | 385,031 | ||||||||||||
Mizusawa-ken | 380,409 | 379,170 | 376,079 | 372,562 | |||||||||
Miyagi-ken | 633,194 | 629,286 | 625,332 | 619,120 | 616,881 | 594,684 | 591,524 | 421,960 | 419,135 | 410,437 | 408,088 | 404,577 | |
Akita-ken | 633,203 | 628,435 | 625,506 | 618,833 | 621,130 | 616,148 | 613,389 | 609,420 | 604,114 | 596,641 | 581,859 | 582,297 | |
Tsurugaoka-ken | 207,939 | ||||||||||||
Sakata-ken | 207,902 | 208,107 | 206,859 | 203,676 | |||||||||
Yamagata-ken | 695,533 | 693,360 | 687,718 | 682,929 | 681,180 | 662,913 | 657,613 | 312,313 | 309,837 | 307,535 | 302,743 | 299,291 | |
Okitama-ken | 132,341 | 131,935 | 131,910 | 131,162 | 130,293 | ||||||||
Fukushima-ken | 840,241 | 829,990 | 823,120 | 808,937 | 804,866 | 774,707 | 765,115 | 281,824 | 281,302 | 270,679 | 268,959 | 268,576 | |
Iwasaki-ken | 258,080 | 249,553 | 244,703 | 242,941 | 242,906 | ||||||||
Wakamatsu-ken | 215,624 | 212,052 | 209,671 | 206,053 | 203,722 | ||||||||
Ibaraki-ken | 920,876 | 916,739 | 906,073 | 894,376 | 887,957 | 875,491 | 867,701 | 858,927 | 378,269 | 375,172 | 368,560 | 366,505 | |
Niihari-ken | 485,119 | 478,940 | 474,170 | 470,509 | |||||||||
Tochigi-ken | 609,000 | 600,627 | 593,383 | 581,358 | 570,843 | 550,271 | 543,245 | 665,724 | 648,503 | 636,348 | 392,106 | 388,934 | |
Utsunomiya-ken | 234,888 | 234,124 | |||||||||||
Gunma-ken | 613,410 | 604,182 | 593,625 | 581,556 | 573,984 | 554,888 | 547,991 | 384,796 | 382,697 | ||||
Kumagaya-ken | 842,717 | 828,420 | 808,913 | ||||||||||
Saitama-ken | 970,598 | 962,717 | 952,689 | 933,955 | 929,939 | 912,528 | 901,714 | 455,891 | 440,433 | 435,436 | 429,094 | 426,989 | |
Iruma-ken | 414,824 | 410,952 | |||||||||||
Chiba-ken | 1,124,085 | 1,117,696 | 1,108,678 | 1,103,292 | 1,099,676 | 1,078,635 | 1,071,142 | 1,061,664 | 1,055,373 | 1,043,189 | |||
Inba-ken | 578,927 | 574,652 | |||||||||||
Kisarazu-ken | 458,619 | 456,689 | |||||||||||
Tōkyō-fu | 999,623 | 987,911 | 979,109 | 957,144 | 953,776 | 881,443 | 877,049 | 873,646 | 855,270 | 830,935 | 813,504 | 779,361 | |
Ogasawara-tō Ogasawara Islands The Bonin Islands, known in Japan as the are an archipelago of over 30 subtropical and tropical islands, some directly south of Tokyo, Japan. Administratively, they are part of Ogasawara Municipality of Ogasawara Subprefecture, Tokyo... |
156 | 194 | |||||||||||
Kanagawa-ken | 800,925 | 790,735 | 772,903 | 757,462 | 754,610 | 715,258 | 707,272 | 497,677 | 507,928 | 502,504 | 479,180 | 492,714 | |
Ashigara-ken | 355,880 | 353,609 | 344,132 | 342,298 | 339,582 | ||||||||
Niigata-ken | 1,586,599 | 1,581,168 | 1,564,312 | 1,546,338 | 1,530,712 | 1,504,601 | 1,500,061 | 1,388,812 | 1,388,353 | 1,368,782 | 637,576 | 635,484 | |
Aikawa-ken | 104,764 | 104,630 | 104,405 | 103,553 | 103,098 | ||||||||
Kashiwazaki-ken | 719,646 | 718,249 | |||||||||||
Niikawa-ken | 649,458 | 638,822 | 629,006 | 623,977 | 480,638 | ||||||||
Ishikawa-ken | 1,428,073 | 1,412,802 | 1,856,402 | 1,833,778 | 1,852,811 | 1,825,507 | 1,806,509 | 696,429 | 691,735 | 686,249 | 669,647 | 403,357 | |
Nanao-ken | 397,511 | ||||||||||||
Fukui-ken | 582,210 | 577,717 | |||||||||||
Tsuruga-ken | 553,425 | 548,833 | 547,582 | 200,832 | 199,819 | ||||||||
Asuwa-ken | 339,210 | 346,700 | |||||||||||
Yamanashi-ken | 410,246 | 409,929 | 404,299 | 395,447 | 391,123 | 381,229 | 377,944 | 374,250 | 369,255 | 364,345 | 362,973 | 360,068 | |
Nagano-ken | 1,033,969 | 1,022,408 | 1,012,142 | 1,000,414 | 986,077 | 973,959 | 965,677 | 486,812 | 481,351 | 474,141 | 469,032 | 466,652 | |
Chikuma-ken | 570,701 | 564,332 | 556,959 | 554,657 | 550,841 | ||||||||
Gifu-ken | 868,333 | 855,575 | 849,221 | 839,613 | 831,887 | 818,984 | 806,158 | 692,218 | 683,050 | 672,627 | 668,148 | 660,896 | |
Shizuoka-ken | 985,881 | 980,793 | 972,265 | 970,022 | 980,766 | 976,405 | 968,814 | 382,814 | 378,076 | 372,674 | 369,731 | 368,505 | |
Hamamatsu-ken | 421,342 | 420,513 | 414,721 | 416,543 | 414,928 | ||||||||
Aichi-ken | 1,354,996 | 1,332,050 | 1,317,792 | 1,303,812 | 1,295,452 | 1,267,206 | 1,250,839 | 1,244,711 | 1,234,003 | 1,217,521 | 1,217,444 | 604,116 | |
Nukata-ken | 606,252 | ||||||||||||
Mie-ken | 870,137 | 857,887 | 850,791 | 842,113 | 834,893 | 830,415 | 818,877 | 429,986 | 427,831 | 417,439 | 419,068 | 413,865 | |
Watarai-ken | 380,475 | 369,479 | 363,563 | 364,565 | 363,732 | ||||||||
Shiga-ken | 639,961 | 633,447 | 745,133 | 738,211 | 729,893 | 721,099 | 711,802 | 589,747 | 584,756 | 579,704 | 578,099 | 305,232 | |
Inukami-ken | 271,332 | ||||||||||||
Kyōto-fu | 840,951 | 835,227 | 831,012 | 822,112 | 814,273 | 798,911 | 792,042 | 574,918 | 571,192 | 572,763 | 569,733 | 567,334 | |
Ōsaka-fu | 1,585,696 | 1,572,333 | 586,729 | 582,668 | 578,270 | 553,777 | 551,950 | 549,280 | 545,035 | 535,409 | 530,885 | 530,885 | |
Sakai-ken | 960,711 | 957,407 | 955,748 | 923,030 | 911,738 | 470,596 | 466,048 | 455,450 | 451,442 | 446,852 | |||
Hyōgo-ken | 1,433,355 | 1,419,421 | 1,406,613 | 1,391,928 | 1,370,720 | 1,357,377 | 1,343,758 | 204,141 | 201,389 | 197,512 | 200,058 | 198,559 | |
Toyo'oka-ken | 513,079 | 508,027 | 507,815 | 507,465 | 505,073 | ||||||||
Shikama-ken | 659,643 | 651,033 | 641,946 | 639,576 | 635,791 | ||||||||
Nara-ken | 433,938 | 430,734 | 427,635 | 423,004 | 418,326 | ||||||||
Wakayama-ken | 610,182 | 606,754 | 603,723 | 601,236 | 602,075 | 591,668 | 584,976 | 579,112 | 572,436 | 565,696 | 562,410 | 556,919 | |
Tottori-ken | 379,747 | 380,915 | 395,632 | 392,589 | 388,861 | 386,186 | 385,531 | ||||||
Shimane-ken | 674,984 | 669,410 | 1,043,865 | 1,037,260 | 1,034,581 | 1,023,678 | 1,017,361 | 342,621 | 340,398 | 340,065 | 340,222 | 340,042 | |
Hamada-ken | 270,804 | 268,455 | 263,955 | 262,035 | 259,611 | ||||||||
Okayama-ken | 1,029,567 | 1,019,674 | 1,007,054 | 1,000,570 | 1,001,220 | 984,621 | 976,774 | 961,035 | 335,592 | 333,575 | 333,714 | 387,459 | |
Hokujō-ken | 218,605 | 217,362 | 215,792 | 215,676 | 215,602 | ||||||||
Oda-ken | 619,647 | 608,353 | 605,666 | 546,430 | |||||||||
Hiroshima-ken | 1,252,811 | 1,243,032 | 1,225,057 | 1,213,152 | 1,207,947 | 1,197,835 | 1,190,069 | 964,337 | 942,827 | 941,978 | 925,962 | 919,047 | |
Yamaguchi-ken | 897,370 | 888,442 | 883,885 | 877,614 | 875,607 | 855,618 | 850,608 | 844,550 | 838,946 | 836,419 | 830,060 | 827,536 | |
Tokushima-ken | 649,616 | 642,172 | 637,550 | ||||||||||
Myōdō-ken | 787,160 | 1,349,672 | 1,335,364 | 755,533 | 750,985 | ||||||||
Kagawa-ken | 591,584 | 564,351 | 559,712 | ||||||||||
Ehime-ken | 1,491,614 | 1,472,680 | 1,453,472 | 1,438,895 | 1,432,627 | 1,403,693 | 1,394,091 | 793,214 | 791,522 | 786,408 | |||
Ishizuchi-ken | 420,303 | 418,561 | |||||||||||
Kamiyama-ken | 358,253 | 357,413 | |||||||||||
Kōchi-ken | 549,184 | 546,642 | 550,686 | 1,179,247 | 1,185,764 | 1,164,723 | 1,160,235 | 534,070 | 531,863 | 528,728 | 526,285 | 524,511 | |
Fukuoka-ken | 1,128,289 | 1,118,652 | 1,109,475 | 1,097,215 | 1,087,604 | 1,070,244 | 1,064,050 | 457,335 | 450,965 | 448,628 | 445,278 | 441,175 | |
Kokura-ken Kokura Prefecture The short-lived Kokura Prefecture of Japan was founded separately from Fukuoka prefecture in December 1871 after the clan system was abolished earlier that year... |
322,156 | 317,108 | 312,539 | 307,535 | 304,574 | ||||||||
Mizuma-ken | 400,504 | 396,903 | 396,371 | 393,656 | 391,535 | ||||||||
Saga-ken | 491,260 | 487,008 | 486,946 | 480,034 | 506,667 | ||||||||
Nagasaki-ken | 1,212,157 | 1,204,449 | 1,196,065 | 1,190,335 | 1,192,134 | 1,173,263 | 1,167,367 | 672,278 | 668,974 | 668,482 | 665,123 | 630,487 | |
Kumamoto-ken | 997,830 | 993,373 | 995,673 | 986,695 | 981,341 | 980,976 | 980,642 | ||||||
Shirakawa-ken | 976,753 | 965,242 | 957,790 | 950,389 | 513,593 | ||||||||
Yatsushiro-ken | 439,444 | ||||||||||||
Ōita-ken | 746,411 | 741,201 | 740,009 | 731,964 | 728,115 | 718,816 | 714,234 | 583,740 | 580,347 | 578,163 | 565,460 | 562,318 | |
Miyazaki-ken | 388,508 | 384,071 | 388,083 | 382,564 | |||||||||
Mimitsu-ken | 201,798 | ||||||||||||
Miyakonojō-ken | 310,121 | ||||||||||||
Kagoshima-ken | 1,291,586 | 1,290,281 | 1,279,631 | 1,270,463 | 1,261,909 | 1,219,942 | 1,218,383 | 820,654 | 813,692 | 812,327 | 806,902 | 670,864 | |
Okinawa-ken | 360,770 | 358,880 | 356,801 | 310,545 | 310,545 | ||||||||
Ryūkyū-han Ryukyu Kingdom The Ryūkyū Kingdom was an independent kingdom which ruled most of the Ryukyu Islands from the 15th century to the 19th century. The Kings of Ryūkyū unified Okinawa Island and extended the kingdom to the Amami Islands in modern-day Kagoshima Prefecture, and the Sakishima Islands near Taiwan... |
168,064 | 167,822 | 167,572 | 167,320 | 167,073 | 166,789 | 166,789 | ||||||
Japan | 37,017,302 | 36,700,118 | 36,358,994 | 35,928,821 | 35,768,556 | 34,898,576 | 34,628,365 | 34,338,404 | 33,997,449 | 33,625,678 | 33,300,675 | 33,110,825 | |
1868 to 1871
Several demographic data remain for three ,(i.e. Kyōto-fu, Ōsaka-fu and Tōkyō-fu), 266 , 40 and one (i.e. Kaitaku-shi only in Hokkaidō) that existed for short time between Meiji RestorationMeiji Restoration
The , also known as the Meiji Ishin, Revolution, Reform or Renewal, was a chain of events that restored imperial rule to Japan in 1868...
and the Abolition of the han system
Abolition of the han system
The was an act, in 1871, of the new Meiji government of the Empire of Japan to replace the traditional feudal domain system and to introduce centralized government authority . This process marked the culmination of the Meiji Restoration in that all daimyo were required to return their authority...
, though not thoroughly surveyed. Prefectural system was only introduced to which the Meiji government gained from Tokugawa shogunate
Tokugawa shogunate
The Tokugawa shogunate, also known as the and the , was a feudal regime of Japan established by Tokugawa Ieyasu and ruled by the shoguns of the Tokugawa family. This period is known as the Edo period and gets its name from the capital city, Edo, which is now called Tokyo, after the name was...
or the revolted , while many areas still belonged to local lordship governments.
The table below shows demographic data for major prefectures and domains (over 100,000 persons) from two sources. For the demographic data of less populous areas, see in Japanese wikipedia page, for example.
Source: (1): Kokudaka
Kokudaka
refers to a system for determining land value for tribute purposes in Edo period Japan and expressing this value in koku of rice. This tribute was no longer a percentage of the actual quantity of rice harvested, but was assessed based on the quality and size of the land...
and Population Table of fu, han and ken (Ōkuma Shigenobu
Okuma Shigenobu
Marquis ; was a statesman in the Empire of Japan and the 8th and 17th Prime Minister of Japan...
collection; population as of February 2, 1869 (1st day of the 1st month, Meiji 2)),
-
- (2): Bunzo Kure, "Estate population Table of fu, han and ken" Tōkei Shūshi (Statistics Bulletin) no. 8 pp. 96–107 (1882) (statistical date uncertain, but probably as of July 28, 1870 (1st day of the 7th month, Meiji 3)). Naotarō Sekiyama noted that the population of Japan as of July 28, 1870 was 32,773,698 (Kinsei Nihon jinkō-no kenkyū (Study of the Population of Japan in the Early Modern Period) (1948)).
Fu, han and ken | Japanese | Feb 2, 1869 | Jul 28, 1870 (uncertain) |
---|---|---|---|
Kyōto-fu | 374,496 | 373,705 | |
Ōsaka-fu | 427,395 | 427,499 | |
Tōkyō-fu | 674,447 | 674,440 | |
Three urban prefectures (fu) total | 1,476,338 | 1,475,644 | |
Kōriyama-han | 102,420 | 102,430 | |
Tsu-han | 224,418 | 244,252 | |
Nagoya-han Owari Domain The was a feudal domain of Japan in the Edo period. Located in what is now the western part of Aichi Prefecture, it encompassed parts of Owari, Mino, and Shinano provinces. Its headquarters were at Nagoya Castle. At its peak, it was rated at 619,500 koku, and was the largest holding of the... |
921,517 | 918,143 | |
Shizuoka-han Sunpu Domain ' was a Japanese feudal domain intermittently during the Edo period. It was centered in Suruga Province, in what is now the city of Shizuoka, but at times included Kai and parts of Tōtōmi Provinces. In 1869 the domain was renamed .-History:... |
813,886 | 876,840 | |
Oshi-han Oshi Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, located in Musashi Province. It was headquartered in Oshi Castle.-List of Daimyo:* Matsudaira clan # Ietada* Matsudaira clan # Tadayoshi... |
110,305 | 114,009 | |
Sakura-han Sakura Domain was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, located in Shimōsa Province , Japan. It was centered on Sakura Castle in what is now part of the city of Sakura... |
119,129 | 119,150 | |
Mito-han Mito Domain was a prominent feudal domain in Japan during the Edo period. Its capital was the city of Mito, and it covered much of present-day Ibaraki Prefecture. Beginning with the appointment of Tokugawa Yorifusa by his father, Shogun Tokugawa Ieyasu, in 1608, the Mito branch of the Tokugawa clan... |
364,256 | 281,239 | |
Hikone-han Hikone Domain The was a feudal domain of Japan during the Edo period. It was established in 1600 with Ii Naomasa as the first daimyo. All fifteen daimyo were from the Ii clan.A large fudai domain, Hikone was initially rated at 180,000 koku... |
173,691 | 189,954 | |
Matsushiro-han Matsushiro Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, located in Shinano Province. It was ruled for the majority of its history by the Sanada clan.-List of lords:*Mori clan #Tadamasa... |
149,143 | 148,642 | |
Matsumoto-han Matsumoto Domain The ' was a Japanese feudal domain in Shinano Province . Home to a major strategic center in the form of Matsumoto Castle, it was ruled by various families during the course of its history, the Hotta among them.-List of Daimyo:... |
127,739 | 123,159 | |
Maebashi-han | 176,149 | 178,324 | |
Sendai-han Sendai Domain was a Japanese domain of the Edo period. Most of its holdings were contiguous, covering all of modern-day Miyagi Prefecture, small portions of southern Iwate Prefecture, and a portion of northeastern Fukushima Prefecture. The domain's capital, and the ruling family's castle, were located in what... |
204,902 | 239,906 | |
Hirosaki-han Hirosaki Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, located in northern Mutsu Province . It was ruled by the Tsugaru clan... |
288,842 | 255,133 | |
Yonezawa-han Yonezawa Domain Yonezawa Domain was a feudal domain of Tokugawa Japan, controlled by daimyō of the Uesugi clan. Covering the Okitama district of Dewa province, in what is today southeastern Yamagata Prefecture, the territory was ruled from Yonezawa castle in Yonezawa city... |
129,753 | 128,786 | |
Akita-han Kubota Domain The was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, located in Dewa Province . Its main castle was in modern-day Akita, Akita. The Kubota Domain was also known as the . It was governed for the whole of its history by the Satake clan. In the Boshin War of 1868-69, it joined the Ōuetsu Reppan Dōmei, the... |
435,267 | 412,652 | |
Obama-han Obama Domain The Obama Domain was a Japanese feudal domain of the Edo period, based at Obama Castle in Wakasa Province .... |
105,434 | 113,612 | |
Fukui-han Fukui Domain The was a feudal domain in Echizen Province of Japan during the Edo period. It is also sometimes called '. The family name of the heads of the domain is "Matsudaira".- List of heads :# Hideyasu# Tadanao... |
279,529 | 284,545 | |
Kanazawa-han Kaga Domain The was a powerful feudal domain in Kaga, Noto and Etchū Provinces of Japan during the Edo period. The domain was founded by Maeda Toshiie and headed by the Maeda clan. Its income rating, over 1,000,000 koku, was the highest in the nation after the Tokugawa shogunate itself... |
1,080,210 | 1,086,164 | |
Toyama-han Toyama Domain The was a Japanese feudal domain of the Edo period, located in Etchū Province . It was ruled by a branch of the Maeda clan of Kaga.The domain was founded by Maeda Toshitsugu, the grandson of Maeda Toshiie.-References:... |
132,415 | 116,755 | |
Takada-han | 171,056 | 168,844 | |
Shibata-han | 192,591 | 192,604 | |
Tottori-han Tottori Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, located in Inaba and Hōki Provinces . It was ruled by different branches of the Ikeda clan.-List of lords:*Ikeda clan, 1600-1617 #Nagayoshi#Nagayuki... |
373,065 | 371,669 | |
Matsue-han Matsue Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo period. It was headquartered in what is now Matsue, Shimane.-List of lords:*Horio clan, 1600-1633 #Horio Yoshiharu#Horio Tadauji#Horio Tadaharu*Kyōgoku clan, 1634-1637... |
291,694 | 295,829 | |
Himeji-han Himeji Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo Period, located in Harima Province .-List of lords:*Ikeda clan #Terumasa#Toshitaka#Mitsumasa*Honda clan #Tadamasa#Masatomo#Masakatsu... |
222,661 | 223,762 | |
Tsuyama-han Tsuyama Domain The was a feudal domain in Mimasaka Province of Japan during the Edo period.- History :In 1600, the territory that became the Tsuyama domain formed part of the territory ruled from Okayama by Kobayakawa Hideaki... |
106,437 | 106,464 | |
Okayama-han Okayama Domain The ' was a Japanese feudal domain of the Edo period, located in modern-day Okayama Prefecture. The domain sided with the Kyoto government during the Boshin War.-List of Daimyo:*Kobayakawa clan, 1600-1602 #Hideaki... |
358,337 | 350,909 | |
Fukuyama-han Fukuyama Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, located in Bingo and Bitchū provinces.-List of lords:*Mizuno clan, 1619-1698 #Katsunari#Katsutoshi#Katsusada#Katsutane#Katsumine*Tenryō, 1698-1700... |
180,534 | 185,863 | |
Hiroshima-han Hiroshima Domain Hiroshima Domain was a han, or feudal domain, of Edo period Japan. Based at Hiroshima castle in the city of Hiroshima, the domain encompassed Aki province and parts of neighboring Bingo province.... |
514,157 | 914,174 | |
Yamaguchi-han | 552,671 | 565,368 | |
Wakayama-han Wakayama Domain The was a han or Japanese feudal domain in Kii Province , with income of 555,000 koku. The domain was also known as or . The heads of the domain were Kishu-Tokugawa clan, one of Gosanke... |
528,408 | 540,969 | |
Tokushima-han Tokushima Domain The was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, located in Awa Province and Awaji Province in Shikoku. Ruled by the Hachisuka family, it was rated at an income of 256,000 koku... |
714,022 | 123,046 | |
Takamatsu-han Takamatsu Domain The was a han or feudal domain in Sanuki Province , Japan during the Edo period. The domain was governed first by the Ikoma family then by the Mito-Matsudaira clan.-History:... |
293,775 | 305,197 | |
Marugame-han | 135,096 | 134,285 | |
Iyo Matsuyama-han Iyo-Matsuyama Domain The was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, with its holdings centered in modern-day Matsuyama, Ehime.-History:The Iyo-Matsuyama domain passed through several hands before settling as the fief of a branch of the Hisamatsu-Matsudaira. In the Bakumatsu period, the domain took part in the Tokugawa... |
211,882 | 211,882 | |
Uwajima-han Uwajima Domain The was a feudal domain in Iyo Province of Japan during the Edo period. It was ruled from 1608 to 1613 by the Tomita clan. After a brief period as Tokugawa-controlled tenryō territory, the domain passed into the hands of the Date clan. The founder was Date Hidemune , first-born son of Date Masamune... |
169,512 | 169,526 | |
Ōzu-han Ozu Domain was a Japanese han or fief centered on Ōzu in Iyo Province . It was governed from Ōzu Castle.Ōzu Domain was abolished, along with all the other han, in 1871.-House of Katō:#Katō Sadayasu #Katō Yasuoki... |
104,248 | 97,758 | |
Kōchi-han Tosa Domain The was a feudal domain in Tosa Province of Japan during the Edo period. Its official name is . Some from the domain played important roles in events in the late Tokugawa shogunate... |
516,866 | 516,545 | |
Fukuoka-han Fukuoka Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, located in Chikuzen Province .-List of lords:*Kuroda clan, 1600-1871 #Nagamasa#Tadayuki#Mitsuyuki#Tsunamasa#Nobumasa... |
366,924 | 367,478 | |
Kurume-han Kurume Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, ruled by the Arima clan. It was located in Chikugo Province .The Arima clan became viscounts in the Meiji era.-List of lords:* Arima clan 1620-1871... |
262,085 | 241,495 | |
Yanagawa-han Yanagawa Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, located in Chikugo Province . It was ruled for most of its history by the Tachibana clan.-List of lords:*Tanaka clan, 1600-1620 #Yoshimasa#Tadamasa... |
120,180 | 127,326 | |
Toyotsu-han Kokura Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo period. It was headquartered what is now the city of Kokura, in Kyūshū. In the late Edo period, it was also called "Kawara-han" and then "Toyotsu-han" .-List of lords:... |
111,397 | 117,843 | |
Nakatsu-han Nakatsu Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo period. It was headquartered at Nakatsu Castle in what is now Nakatsu, Oita, in Kyushu.The Meiji-era scholar Fukuzawa Yukichi was a former samurai of the Nakatsu domain.-List of lords:... |
100,403 | 99,148 | |
Saga-han Saga Domain Saga Domain was a han, or feudal domain, in Tokugawa period Japan. Largely contiguous with Hizen Province on Kyūshū, the domain was governed from Saga Castle in the capital city of Saga by the Nabeshima clan of tozama daimyō... |
425,762 | 0 | |
Shimabara-han Shimabara Domain The ' was a feudal domain of Edo period Japan, located in Hizen Province, Kyūshū, occupying most of Shimabara Peninsula.-History:The Arima clan, who were Kirishitan daimyō, ruled over Shimabara Domain in the late Muromachi period from Hinoe Castle and Hara Castle... |
174,296 | 175,055 | |
Hirado-han Hirado Domain was a tozama han of Edo period Japan, with its territory extending from northern Hizen Province to the offshore Iki Province... |
149,143 | 145,826 | |
Ōmura-han Omura Domain ' was a Japanese feudal domain of the Edo period, located in Hizen Province. Ōmura was a tozama domain.Ōmura was settled in ancient times, and was controlled by the Ōmura clan since the 12th century. The Ōmura clan claimed descent from Fujiwara no Sumitomo... |
122,174 | 120,553 | |
Kumamoto-han Kumamoto Domain The was han or a Japanese feudal domain that was located in Higo Province apart from Kuma District and Amakusa District and part of Bungo Province . It was also known as... |
719,990 | 730,531 | |
Nobeoka-han | 122,277 | 125,750 | |
Kagoshima-han | 772,354 | 896,817 | |
Other 217 domains han | 7,054,375 | 6,760,944 | |
265 Domains (han) total | 22,077,377 | 21,317,155 | |
Nara-ken | 158,728 | 158,733 | |
Gojō-ken | 136,060 | 136,065 | |
Sakai-ken | 249,523 | 249,534 | |
Hyōgo-ken | 224,124 | 224,159 | |
Kōfu-ken | 352,900 | 352,939 | |
Nirayama-ken | 250,708 | 250,633 | |
Kanagawa-ken | 421,690 | 421,701 | |
Urawa-ken | 280,530 | 280,285 | |
Shinagawa-ken | 188,650 | 188,652 | |
Kosuge-ken | 106,267 | 162,093 | |
Miyazaku-ken | 281,077 | 281,081 | |
Katsushika-ken | 230,614 | 229,724 | |
Wakamori-ken | 149,976 | 17,692 | |
Ōtsu-ken | 211,334 | 211,343 | |
Kasamatsu-ken | 188,139 | 188,140 | |
Ina-ken | 188,999 | 189,901 | |
Iwahana-ken | 358,640 | 358,695 | |
Nikkō-ken | 415,796 | 217,588 | |
Shirakawa-ken Shirakawa Domain The ' was a Japanese domain of the Edo period, located in Mutsu Province. Its most famous ruler was Matsudaira Sadanobu, the architect of the Kansei Reforms.Shirakawa was also the scene of one of the battles of the Boshin War.-List of lords:... |
106,388 | 106,309 | |
Wakamatsu-ken | 199,211 | 199,249 | |
Fukushima-ken | 119,666 | 119,666 | |
Tome-ken | 115,874 | 222,523 | |
Isawa-ken | 138,167 | 138,167 | |
Esashi-ken | 237,550 | 1 | |
Morioka-ken Morioka Domain The was a han or feudal domain that encompasses present-day the middle-northern part of Iwate Prefecture and eastern part of Aomori Prefecture. It is sometimes colloquially called . The domain was tozama daimyo and was governed by the Satake clan. Its income was 100,000... |
137,825 | 137,826 | |
Yamagata-ken Yamagata Domain Yamagata Domain was a Japanese fief , located in Dewa province, in the Tōhoku region . Modern-day Yamagata Prefecture is roughly contiguous with the domain, and its capital city, also called Yamagata, grew up out of the daimyo's castle town... |
331,941 | 32,262 | |
Kashiwazaki-ken | 418,711 | 418,724 | |
Niigata-ken | 259,600 | 259,613 | |
Sado-ken | 102,337 | 102,337 | |
Kumihama-ken | 166,586 | 166,593 | |
Hamada-ken | 228,863 | 228,863 | |
Kurashiki-ken | 237,506 | 214,597 | |
Hita-ken | 195,455 | 195,456 | |
Nagasaki-ken | 265,946 | 264,259 | |
Other 6 prefectures (ken) | 569,499 | 371,199 | |
40 Prefectures (ken) total | 8,224,880 | 7,296,602 | |
Total (except Kaitaku-shi) | 31,778,595 | 30,089,401 | |
It is quite apparent that the above demographic data contain many textual errors, but could not be corrected because the original unpublished reports preserved at the office of the Ministry of Interior of Japan were burned by a fire after the 1923 Great Kantō earthquake
1923 Great Kanto earthquake
The struck the Kantō plain on the Japanese main island of Honshū at 11:58:44 am JST on September 1, 1923. Varied accounts hold that the duration of the earthquake was between 4 and 10 minutes...
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For demographic data during the Edo period
Edo period
The , or , is a division of Japanese history which was ruled by the shoguns of the Tokugawa family, running from 1603 to 1868. The political entity of this period was the Tokugawa shogunate....
, see Demographics of Japan before Meiji Restoration
Demographics of Japan before Meiji Restoration
This article is about the demographic features of the population of Japan before Meiji Restoration.-Total population:Before the establishment of system by the Tokugawa shogunate, several less reliable sources remain upon which an estimate of the population of Japan can be made...
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See also
- Government of JapanGovernment of JapanThe government of Japan is a constitutional monarchy where the power of the Emperor is very limited. As a ceremonial figurehead, he is defined by the 1947 constitution as "the symbol of the state and of the unity of the people". Power is held chiefly by the Prime Minister of Japan and other elected...
- Prefectures of JapanPrefectures of JapanThe prefectures of Japan are the country's 47 subnational jurisdictions: one "metropolis" , Tokyo; one "circuit" , Hokkaidō; two urban prefectures , Osaka and Kyoto; and 43 other prefectures . In Japanese, they are commonly referred to as...
- List of Japanese prefectures ranked by area
- List of Japanese prefectures by GDP
- List of Japanese cities by population
- List of Provinces of Japan
- ISO 3166-2 codes for Japan
External links
- Statistics Bureau of Japan
- Kindai Digital Library at the National Diet Libray of Japan (original texts in Japanese)
- Imperial Japan Static Population Statistics as of December 31, 1918 (with French notations)
- Imperial Japan Static Population Statistics as of December 31, 1913 (with French notations)
- Imperial Japan Static Population Statistics as of December 31, 1908 (de facto populations since 1885 with French notations)
- Japan Registered Population Tables as of January 1, 1874 (Japanese only)
- DSpace at Waseda University
- Kokudaka and population Table (Okuma Shigenobu Collection, original text in Japanese)