Demographics

Per Japanese census data, the population of Tsuruga peaked around the year 2000 and has declined slightly since.

History

Although Tsuruga promotes itself as the leading city of the "Wakasa region", the city was actually part of ancient Echizen Province. A settlement at Tsuruga is mentioned in the Nara period and Nihon Shoki chronicles. Kanagasaki Castle was the site of major battles during the early Muromachi period and the Sengoku period, Under the Edo period Tokugawa shogunate, large portions of the city were part of the holdings of Obama Domain and Tsuruga Domain, and prospered as a major port on the kitamaebune shipping routes between western Japan and Hokkaido. Following the Meiji restoration, the area became part of Tsuruga District of Fukui Prefecture. With the creation of the modern municipalities system, the town of Tsuruga was founded on April 1, 1889.

An Imperial decree in July 1899 established Tsuruga as an open port for trading with the United States and the United Kingdom.

Tsuruga merged with the neighboring village of Matsubara and was incorporated as a city on April 1, 1937. Tsuruga was the only Japanese port opened to the Polish orphans in 1920, and to the Jewish refugees in 1940 thanks to Jan Zwartendijk, the Dutch Consul in Kaunas, who issued visa for Curaçao and Surinam, Mr. Chiune Sugihara, Vice-Consul for the Empire of Japan in Lithuania who issued transit visa for Japan. These events are detailed at the Port of Humanity Tsuruga Museum. However, much of the city center was destroyed in 1945 during the Bombing of Tsuruga during World War II,

The city expanded on January 15, 1955 by annexing the neighboring villages of Arachi, Awano, Togo, Nakago and Higashiura.

Government

Tsuruga has a mayor-council form of government with a directly elected mayor and a unicameral city legislature of 26 members.

Economy

Tsuruga has a very healthy mixed economy focused on providing services to the Wakasa region, and also features a container port, a bulk terminal, a coal-fired power plant, two textile mills, a large furniture factory, a playground equipment manufacturer, and a Panasonic (Matsushita) facility. Education and energy research also drive the economy.

Tsuruga is also known for its two nuclear power facilities - the Monju demonstration nuclear plant and the Tsuruga Nuclear Power Plant.

Education

Tsuruga has 13 public elementary schools and five middle schools operated by the city government, and two public high schools operated by the Fukui Prefectural Board of Education. There is also one private high school and one private middle/high school. Tsuruga Nursing University is also located in the city.

Transportation

thumb|Tsuruga Port

Railway

High speed rail service to Tsuruga Station on the Hokuriku Shinkansen began on 16 March 2024.

  • 20px JR West - Hokuriku Shinkansen
  • 20px JR West - Hokuriku Main Line (Kosei Line)
  • Tsuruga,
  • 20px JR West - Obama Line
  • , ,
  • 18px Hapi-line Fukui
  • Tsuruga

Highway

  • 20px Hokuriku Expressway
  • 25px|link=|alt= Maizuru-Wakasa Expressway

Seaport

  • Tsuruga Port

Air

The city does not have its own airport. The nearest airports are:

  • Komatsu Airport, located north east.
  • Chubu Centrair International Airport, located south east.

Sister cities

thumb|Port of Humanity Tsuruga Museum, Tsuruga, Fukui Prefecture, Japan (2023).

thumb|Kehi no Matsubara beach

  • Donghae, South Korea, since April 13, 1981
  • Nakhodka, Primorsky Krai, Russia, since October 11, 1982
  • Taizhou, Zhejiang, China, since November 13, 2001

Local attractions

  • Grave of Takeda Kounsai, a National Historic Site
  • Kanagasaki Castle site, a National Historic Site
  • Kanegasaki-gū, a Shinto shrine
  • Kehi Shrine, a large shrine complex built in 702. It hosts Kehi festival every year. Kehi shrine was also visited by the poet Matsuo Basho in 1689.
  • Nakagō Kofun Cluster, a National Historic Site
  • Port of Humanity Tsuruga Museum, local history museum dedicated to the 20th century arrivals of Polish orphans and Jewish refugees
  • Tsuruga Red Brick Warehouse, Meiji-period port building
  • About twenty or so bronze statues – each perhaps four or five feet tall – of characters and scenes from the popular 1970s anime Uchū Senkan Yamato (Space Battleship Yamato or, in the United States, Star Blazers) and Galaxy Express 999 were erected in the city's downtown area in 1999. Though the creator of these shows, Leiji Matsumoto, was born elsewhere, an exhibit of his artwork was held in the city in 1999 as part of the city's 100th anniversary celebration, accompanied by the erection of the statues.

References

.

  • <!--Japanese--> Galaxy Express 999 and Space Battleship Yamato statues in Tsuruga