Distrik (Jepang): Perbedaan antara revisi

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[[Kategori:Distrik di Jepang| API]]
[[Kategori:Pembagian administratif Jepang]]
 
[[ja:郡#日本の郡]]
 
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[[File:Japan districts.png|thumb|Distrik di [[Jepang]]. Perhatikan bahwa ini adalah area yang tersisa dari distrik-distrik yang sebelumnya besar, karena kota-kota kecil bergabung menjadi kota-kota yang terpisah dari distrik-distrik.]]
[[File:Government Office in Higashi Yamanashi.jpg|thumb|Bekas kantor pemerintah distrik [[Distrik Higashiyamanashi, Yamanashi | Higashi-Yamanashi ("Yamanashi Timur"), Yamanashi]]. Bangunan itu telah direkonstruksi di [[Meiji-mura|museum "Desa Meiji"]] di Aichi.]]
[[File:Kawabe District Assembly.jpg|thumb|Majelis distrik [[Distrik Kawabe, Akita | Kawabe, Akita]] sebentar sebelum dihapuskan]]
 
{{nihongo|'''Distrik'''|郡|gun}} saat ini merupakan unit geografis dan statistik yang terdiri dari satu atau beberapa kota pedesaan di Jepang. Distrik digunakan sebagai [[unit administrasi di Jepang]] di zaman dahulu dan antara 1878<ref>[http://hourei.ndl.go.jp/SearchSys/viewEnkaku.do?i=XYKEY1kBYnRZSZeTmxy0Uw%3d%3d Entry for the ''gun-ku-chō-son-hensei-hō''/"Law on the organization of ku (urban districts/cities&wards), gun (rural districts), chō (urban settlements/towns/neighbourhoods) and son (villages/rural settlements)"], the 1878 law that reactivated the districts as administrative units, in the [[National Diet Library]] ''Nihon hōrei sakuin''/"Index of Japanese laws and ordinances" (contains list of changes to the law, list of laws changed by it and links to full text in online archives)</ref> and 1921<ref>The governing law, the district code (''gunsei'', 郡制; [http://hourei.ndl.go.jp/SearchSys/viewEnkaku.do?i=DxKAtvm4IdXvIXi3Whor6Q%3d%3d Entry for the 1890 original] and [http://hourei.ndl.go.jp/SearchSys/viewEnkaku.do?i=OiivKKtBrai%2fawstWCxXyg%3d%3d entry for the revised 1899 ''gunsei''] in the [[National Diet Library]] ''Nihon hōrei sakuin''/"Index of Japanese laws and ordinances"), was abolished in 1921, but the district assemblies (''gunkai'', 郡会) existed until 1923, the district chiefs (''gunchō'', 郡長) and district offices (''gun-yakusho'', 郡役所) until 1926.</ref> and was roughly equivalent to the [[county]] of the [[United States]], ranking at the level below [[Prefectures of Japan|prefecture]] and above [[Towns of Japan|town]] or [[Villages of Japan|village]], same as [[Cities of Japan|city]].<ref>[http://www.statoids.com/yjp.html Japan Counties<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
 
== History ==
The district was initially called ''kōri'' and has ancient roots in Japan. Although the ''[[Nihon Shoki]]'' says they were established during the [[Taika Reform]]s, ''kōri'' was originally written {{nihongo2|評}}.<ref>{{cite book|author=Masashi Kinoshita 木下 正史|title=Fujiwara-kyō 藤原京|date=2003|publisher=Chūō Kōronsha|page=64|language=Japanese}} The discovery of thousands of ''[[wiktionary:木簡|mokkan]]'' wooden tablets in a buried moat around the ancient capital of [[Fujiwara-kyō]] confirmed the theory that ''kōri'' had originally been written with the character 評, and not the character 郡 that appears in the ''Nihon Shoki''.</ref> It was not until the [[Taihō Code]] that ''kōri'' came to be written as {{nihongo2|郡}} (imitating [[Jun (country subdivision)|the Chinese division]]). Under the Taihō Code, the administrative unit of {{nihongo4|province|国|kuni}} was above district, and the village ({{nihongo2|里}} or {{nihongo2|郷}} ''sato'') was below.
 
As the power of the central government decayed (and in some periods revived) over the centuries, the provinces and districts, although never formally abolished and still connected to administrative positions handed out by the Imperial court (or whoever controlled it), largely lost their relevance as administrative units and were superseded by a hierarchy of feudal holdings. In the Edo period, the primary subdivisions were the shogunate cities, governed by urban administrators ''([[machi-bugyō]])'', the shogunate domain (''[[Tenryō|bakuryō]]'', usually meant to include the smaller holdings of Hatamoto, etc.), major holdings ([[Han system|''han''/domains]]), and there was also a number of minor territories such as spiritual (shrine/temple) holdings; while the shogunate domain comprised vast, contiguous territories, domains consisted of generally only one castle and castle town, usually a compact territory in the surrounding area, but beyond that sometimes a string of disconnected exclaves and enclaves, in some cases distributed over several districts in several provinces. For this reason alone, they were impractical as geographical units, and in addition, Edo period feudalism was tied to the nominal income of a territory, not the territory itself, so the shogunate could and did redistribute territories between domains, their borders were generally subject to change, even if in some places holdings remained unchanged for centuries. Provinces and districts remained the most important geographical frame of reference throughout the middle and early modern ages up to the restoration and beyond – initially, the prefectures were created in direct succession to the shogunate era feudal divisions and their borders kept shifting through mergers, splits and territorial transfers until they reached largely their present state in the 1890s.
 
Cities ''(-shi)'', since their introduction in 1889, have always belonged directly to prefectures and are independent from districts. Before 1878, districts had subdivided the whole country with only few exceptions (Edo/Tokyo as shogunate capital and some island groups). In 1878, the districts were reactivated as administrative units, but the major cities were separated from the districts. All prefectures (at that time only ''-fu'' and ''-ken'') were – except for some remote islands – contiguously subdivided into [rural] districts/counties (''-gun'') and urban districts/cites (''-ku''), the precursors to the 1889 ''shi''. Geographically, the rural districts were mainly based on the ancient districts, but in many places they were merged, split up or renamed, in some areas, prefectural borders went through ancient districts and the districts were reorganized to match; urban districts were completely separated from the rural districts, most of them covered one city at large, but the largest and most important cities, the Edo period "three capitals" Edo/Tokyo, Kyoto, Osaka comprised several urban districts. (This refers only to the city areas which were not organized as a single administrative unit before 1889, not the prefectures Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka which had initially been created in 1868 as successor to the shogunate city administrations, but were soon expanded to surrounding shogunate rural domain and feudal holdings and by 1878 also contained rural districts and in the case of Osaka, one other urban district/city from 1881.)
 
District administrations were set up in 1878, but district assemblies were only created in 1890 with the introduction of the district code ''(gunsei)'' as part of the Prussian-influenced local government reforms of 1888-90. From the 1890s, district governments were run by a collective executive council (''gun-sanjikai'', 郡参事会), headed by the appointed district chief (''gunchō'') and consisting of 3 additional members elected by the district assembly and one appointed by the prefectural governor – similar to cities (''shi-sanjikai'', headed by the mayor) and prefectures (''fu-/ken-sanjikai'', headed by the governor).
 
In 1921, [[Hara Takashi]], the first non-oligarchic prime minister (although actually from a Morioka domain samurai family himself, but in a career as commoner-politician in the House of Representatives), managed to get his long-sought abolition of the districts passed – unlike the municipal and prefectural assemblies which had been an early platform for the [[Freedom and People's Rights Movement]] before the Imperial Diet was established and became bases of party power, the district governments were considered to be a stronghold of anti-liberal [[Yamagata Aritomo]]'s followers and the centralist-bureaucratic [[Home Ministry]] tradition. The district assemblies and governments were abolished a few years later.
 
== Districts today ==
As of today, towns and villages also belong directly to prefectures; the districts no longer possess any administrations or assemblies since the 1920s, and therefore also no administrative authority – although there was a brief de facto reactivation of the districts during the Pacific War in the form of prefectural branch offices (called ''chihō jimusho'', 地方事務所, "local offices/bureaus") which generally had one district in their jurisdiction. However, for geographical and statistical purposes, districts continue to be used and are updated for municipal mergers or status changes: if a town or village (countrywide: >15,000 in 1889, <1,000 today) is merged into or promoted to a [by definition: district-independent] city (countrywide: 39 in 1889, 791 in 2017)<ref>[[Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications|MIC]]: [http://www.soumu.go.jp/gapei/gapei2.html Change of the number of municipalities and characteristics of the Great Meiji and Shōwa mergers] {{ja}}</ref><ref>[http://www.mayors.or.jp/ ''Zenkoku shichōkai''] ("Japan Association of City Mayors" [special ward mayors are also members, but not part of the name]; title bar contains current/recent number of cities and special wards)</ref>, the territory is no longer counted as part of the district. In this way, many districts have become extinct, and many of those that still exist contain only a handful of or often only one remaining municipality as many of today's towns and villages are also much larger than in the Meiji era. The districts are used primarily in the [[Japanese addressing system]] and to identify the relevant geographical areas and collections of nearby towns and villages.
 
==Confusing cases in Hokkaidō==
Because district names had been unique within a single [[provinces of Japan|province]] and as of 2008 [[prefectures of Japan|prefecture]] boundaries are roughly aligned to provincial boundaries, most district names are unique within their prefectures.
 
[[Hokkaidō|Hokkaidō Prefecture]], however, came much later to the ''[[ritsuryō]]'' provincial system, only a few years before the prefectural system was introduced, so its eleven [[provinces of Japan|province]]s included several districts with the same names:
 
*Three Kamikawa Districts and two Nakagawa Districts in the [[Hokkaidō|Hokkaidō Prefecture]]. Each jurisdiction refers to its geographical position along the river from which the former province, and subsequent subprefecture, takes its name. "Kamikawa" means upper course of the river; "Nakagawa" means middle course.
**[[Kamikawa (Ishikari) District, Hokkaidō|Kamikawa Dist.]] ([[Ishikari Province|Ishikari]]), managed by the [[Kamikawa Subprefecture]]
**[[Kamikawa (Teshio) District, Hokkaidō|Kamikawa Dist.]] ([[Teshio Province|Teshio]]), managed by the [[Kamikawa Subprefecture]]
**[[Kamikawa (Tokachi) District, Hokkaidō|Kamikawa Dist.]] ([[Tokachi Province|Tokachi]]), managed by the [[Tokachi Subprefecture]]
**[[Nakagawa (Teshio) District, Hokkaidō|Nakagawa Dist.]] ([[Teshio Province|Teshio]]), managed by the [[Kamikawa Subprefecture]]
**[[Nakagawa (Tokachi) District, Hokkaidō|Nakagawa Dist.]] ([[Tokachi Province|Tokachi]]), managed by the [[Tokachi Subprefecture]]
*Abuta District, Rumoi District, Sorachi District, and Yufutsu District are similar, but each of them is a single district allotted to two [[subprefectures of Japan|subprefectures]].
**[[Abuta District, Hokkaidō|Abuta District]], managed by [[Iburi Subprefecture|Iburi]] and [[Shiribeshi Subprefecture]]s
**[[Sorachi District, Hokkaidō|Sorachi District]], managed by [[Kamikawa Subprefecture|Kamikawa]] and [[Sorachi Subprefecture]]s
**[[Teshio District, Hokkaidō|Teshio District]], managed by [[Rumoi Subprefecture|Rumoi]] and [[Sōya Subprefecture]]s
**[[Yūfutsu District, Hokkaidō|Yūfutsu District]], managed by [[Iburi Subprefecture|Iburi]] and [[Kamikawa Subprefecture]]s
 
==See also==
* [[List of dissolved districts in Japan]]
* [[郡 (disambiguation)|郡]], for divisions in other countries written with the same name
* [[Political divisions of Taiwan (1895–1945)#Shū and Chō (1920–1945)|Districts of Taiwan during 1920-1945]] under Japanese rule
 
==References==
{{Reflist}}
 
==Bibliography==
* Kurt Steiner (Stanford 1965): Local Government in Japan
 
==External links==
* [http://www.hindawi.com/journals/usr/2011/692764/ "Japan's Evolving Nested Municipal Hierarchy: The Race for Local Power in the 2000s,"] by A.J. Jacobs at ''Urban Studies Research,'' Vol. 2011 (2011); [[doi:10.1155/2011/692764]]
* [http://www3.grips.ac.jp/~coslog/en/activity/01/05/ Historical Development of Japanese Local Governance] (bilingual Japanese/English series of papers by the Institute for Comparative Studies in Local Governance, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies): [http://www3.grips.ac.jp/~coslog/activity/01/05/file/Seiritsu-1_en.pdf Volume 1: Akio Kamiko, The Start of Modern Local Government (1868 – 1880)], [http://www3.grips.ac.jp/~coslog/activity/01/05/file/Seiritsu-2_en.pdf Volume 2: Akio Kamiko, Implementation of the City Law and the Town and Village Law (1881 – 1908)] and [http://www3.grips.ac.jp/~coslog/activity/01/05/file/Seiritsu-3_en.pdf Volume 3: Hiroshi Ikawa, The Development of the Prewar Local Autonomy System (1909-1929)] (Links are to the English versions; English translations of Japanese administrative units and government institutions often vary [even within this series], in this case, one can refer directly to the Japanese articles which are accessible from the main page)
 
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[[ja:郡#日本の郡]]