Manyan Biranen Japan da Yawan Jama'a Cikin Shekaru Goma
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Samfuri:No footnotes wannan labarin ya lissafa birane har guda goma mafi yawan jama'a a Japan cikin shekaru goma, wanda ya fara bayan Meiji Maidowa na 1868. Ba a gudanar da ƙidayar jama'a ta Japan ba har sai a shekarar 1920, amma an gudanar da ƙidayar yawan fararen hula da sojoji a shekarun baya tsakanin 1872 da 1918. kuma waɗanda suka samar da bayanan tushen wannan labarin. Lokacin da bayanai ba su samuwa daidai kan jujjuyar shekaru goma, ana amfani da shekara mafi kusa.
1873
gyara sasheA cikin 1868, Maidowa Meiji ya kori Tokugawa Shogunate kuma ya kafa Daular Japan. Yawancin manyan biranen sun yi asarar yawan jama'a tun zamanin Tokugawa, yayin da samurai ya bar tsoffin garuruwan kadarori bayan rushewar odar soja.
Bayani daga i"Nihon Chishi Teiyo" (日本地誌提要, the Japanese Topographical Outline)..
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 595,905 | Wanda aka fi sani da Edo, wanda aka kiyasta yawan mutanensa sama da miliyan daya a karkashin Tokugawa, amma bayan Maidowar Meiji, kusan rabin mutanen birnin sun yi hijira. Duk da haka, Tokyo ya ci gaba da riƙe matsayinsa na birni mafi girma a Japan, wanda ya riƙe tun tsakiyar karni na 17. |
2 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 271,992 | |
3 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 238,663 | |
4 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 125,193 | |
5 | 35 | Kanazawa | Ishikawa | 109,685 | |
6 | 11 | Hiroshima | Hiroshima | 74,305 | |
7 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 64,602 | |
8 | 55 | Wakayama | Wakayama | 61,124 | |
9 | 12 | Sendai | Miyagi | 51,998 | |
10 | 87 | Tokushima | Tokushima | 48,861 | Fitowar karshe ta Tokushima a cikin manyan goma, kuma na karshe na kowace karamar hukuma daga tsibirin Shikoku. |
1881
gyara sasheManyan birane da garuruwa da yawa sun yi hasarar yawan jama'a a cikin shekarun 1870, yayin da mutane suka ci gaba da yin hijira daga tsoffin garuruwan katafaren gini.
Bayanan tushe sun fito ne daga Rahoton Haɗin gwiwar Soja-Gwamnati na Hudu (第四回共武政表), takaddun buƙatun da ke jera yawan jama'ar birni da albarkatu da tanadi.
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 712,259 | + 19.53% | |
2 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 292,636 | + 7.59% | |
3 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 236,032 | - 1.10% | |
4 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 117,401 | - 6.22% | |
5 | 35 | Kanazawa | Ishikawa | 108,328 | - 1.24% | |
6 | 11 | Hiroshima | Hiroshima | 74,950 | + 0.87% | |
7 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 72,630 | + 12.43% | |
8 | 55 | Wakayama | Wakayama | 58,239 | - 4.72% | Bayyanar ƙarshe a cikin manyan goma. |
9 | 12 | Sendai | Miyagi | 54,496 | + 4.80% | |
10 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 48,786 | + 19.32% | Fitowar farko a cikin manyan goma. |
1891
gyara sasheA cikin 1888, gwamnati ta ƙaddamar da wani sabon tsari na tsarin mulkin gundumomi, wanda ɓangarensa ya haɗa da tsattsauran shirin haɗin gwiwar gundumomi. Gabaɗaya, "Great Meiji Mergers" ya rage yawan gundumomi a Japan da fiye da kashi uku, yayin da suke ƙara girman biranen da yawa yayin da suke mamaye garuruwan da ƙauyukan da ke kewaye.
Bayanan tushe sun fito ne daga Rahoton Gida na Jafananci Mai Rijista na 1891 (日本帝国民籍戸口表).
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 1,161,800 | + 63.11% | Tokyo ya wuce mutane miliyan, wanda ya dawo da birnin zuwa matakin yawan jama'a na zamanin Tokugawa. |
2 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 483,609 | + 65.26% | |
3 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 297,527 | + 26.05% | |
4 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 179,174 | + 52.62% | |
5 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 142,965 | +193.05% | |
6 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 132,627 | + 82.61% | |
7 | 35 | Kanazawa | Ishikawa | 93,531 | - 13.66% | A hankali yana raguwa a yawan jama'a tun daga Maidowar Meiji. |
8 | 11 | Hiroshima | Hiroshima | 90,154 | + 20.29% | |
9 | 12 | Sendai | Miyagi | 64,476 | + 18.31% | |
10 | 38 | Nagasaki | Nagasaki | 60,581 | + 89.32% | Fitowar farko a cikin manyan goma, kuma farkon bayyanar wani birni daga tsibirin Kyushu tun daga Tokugawa Shogunate. |
1898
gyara sasheBayanan tushe sun fito ne daga Kididdigar Yawan Jama'ar Jafananci na 1898 (日本帝国人口統計).
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 1,440,121 | + 23.96% | |
2 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 821,235 | + 69.81% | Osaka ya haɗu da gundumomin da ke kewaye da shi a cikin 1897, yana haɓaka girma da yawan jama'arta. |
3 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 353,139 | + 18.69% | |
4 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 244,145 | + 36.26% | |
5 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 215,780 | + 50.93% | |
6 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 193,762 | + 46.10% | |
7 | 11 | Hiroshima | Hiroshima | 122,306 | + 35.66% | |
8 | 38 | Nagasaki | Nagasaki | 107,422 | + 77.32% | |
9 | 35 | Kanazawa | Ishikawa | 83,662 | - 10.55% | Kanazawa ya rasa yawan jama'a a jeri na uku a jere. |
10 | 12 | Sendai | Miyagi | 83,325 | + 29.23% | Fitowar ƙarshe a cikin manyan goma har zuwa 1950. |
1909
gyara sasheBayanan tushe daga Kididdigar Yawan Jama'ar Jafananci na 1908 ne (日本帝国人口統計).
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 2,186,079 | + 51.80% | Garin Japan na farko da ya wuce mutane miliyan 2. |
2 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 1,226,647 | + 49.37% | Garin Japan na biyu da ya wuce mutane miliyan 1, bayan Edo/Tokyo. |
3 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 442,462 | + 25.29% | |
4 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 394,303 | +103.50% | Yokohama ya haɗu da ƙananan hukumomi na 1901, yana ƙara girma da yawan jama'a. |
5 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 378,231 | + 54.92% | |
6 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 378,197 | + 75.27% | |
7 | 38 | Nagasaki | Nagasaki | 176,480 | + 64.29% | |
8 | 11 | Hiroshima | Hiroshima | 142,763 | + 16.73% | |
9 | 35 | Kanazawa | Ishikawa | 110,994 | + 32.67% | Bayyanar ƙarshe a cikin manyan goma. |
10 | 95 | Kure | Hiroshima | 100,679 | n/a | Fitowar farko a cikin manyan goma. Wani sabon birni, wanda aka ƙirƙira a cikin 1902 ta hanyar haɗuwa da ƙananan ƙananan hukumomi. |
1920
gyara sasheSource data is from the 1920 Census (国勢調査), the first formal census to be taken in Japan.
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 2,173,201 | - 0.59% | Tokyo's growth stalled throughout the 1920s. |
2 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 1,252,983 | + 2.15% | |
3 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 608,644 | + 60.93% | |
4 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 591,323 | + 33.64% | |
5 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 429,997 | + 13.69% | |
6 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 422,938 | + 7.26% | |
7 | 38 | Nagasaki | Nagasaki | 176,534 | + 0.03% | |
8 | 11 | Hiroshima | Hiroshima | 160,510 | + 12.43% | |
9 | 81 | Hakodate | Hokkaido | 144,749 | + 64.67% | First appearance in the top ten, and first appearance of any city from Hokkaido. |
10 | 94 | Kure | Hiroshima | 130,362 | + 29.48% | Last appearance in the top ten. |
1930
gyara sasheSource data is from the 1930 Census.
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 2,453,973 | + 95.85% | Osaka merged with more surrounding municipalities in 1925, bringing the city to roughly its current size. The second Japanese city to pass 2 million people, and the new most populous city in Japan. |
2 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 2,070,913 | - 4.71% | Population briefly dipped below 2 million in the mid-1920s. For the first time since the early 17th century, Tokyo was no longer Japan's most populous city. |
3 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 907,404 | +111.03% | |
4 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 787,616 | + 29.41% | |
5 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 765,142 | + 29.39% | |
6 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 620,306 | + 46.67% | |
7 | 11 | Hiroshima | Hiroshima | 270,417 | + 68.47% | |
8 | 8 | Fukuoka | Fukuoka | 228,289 | +139.30% | First appearance in the top ten. |
9 | 38 | Nagasaki | Nagasaki | 204,626 | + 15.91% | Last appearance in the top ten. |
10 | 81 | Hakodate | Hokkaido | 197,252 | + 36.27% | Last appearance in the top ten. |
1940
gyara sasheSource data is from the 1940 Census.
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 6,778,804 | +227.33% | Tokyo merged with its surrounding municipalities in 1932, radically increasing its size and population. |
2 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 3,252,340 | + 32.53% | Osaka reached its peak population, becoming the second Japanese city to exceed 3 million people, alongside Tokyo. It has not yet surpassed its 1940 population. |
3 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 1,328,084 | + 46.36% | The third Japanese city with over a million people. |
4 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 1,089,726 | + 42.42% | The fourth Japanese city with over a million people. |
5 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 968,091 | + 56.07% | |
6 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 967,234 | + 22.81% | |
7 | 11 | Hiroshima | Hiroshima | 343,968 | + 27.20% | Last appearance in the top ten until 1960. |
8 | 8 | Fukuoka | Fukuoka | 306,763 | + 34.37% | |
9 | 9 | Kawasaki | Kanagawa | 300,777 | +189.21% | First appearance in the top ten. |
10 | Nonexistent | Yahata | Fukuoka | 261,309 | + 55.54% | First and last appearance in the top ten. Yahata was merged into the new city of Kitakyushu in 1963. |
1950
gyara sasheJapan emerged from the Second World War in defeat, under temporary American administration. Many cities had been attacked by American bomber forces, and many of the largest cities suffered further loss as residents evacuated to more rural regions of the country. Cities, though, were already recovering quickly from their wartime lows.
Source data is from the 1950 Census.
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 5,385,071 | - 20.56% | In 1943, the imperial government dissolved the City of Tokyo into its constituent wards, but the Census has continued to treat it as one municipality ever since. Tokyo lost more than a million people to bombing and evacuation. |
2 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 1,956,136 | - 39.85% | Osaka lost more than a million people, and the city has never completely regained its prewar population to date. |
3 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 1,101,854 | + 1.11% | Kyoto was not attacked severely during the war. |
4 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 1,030,635 | - 22.39% | |
5 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 951,189 | - 1.75% | Population briefly passed a million in 1944. Almost recovered its prewar population, despite war losses. |
6 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 765,435 | - 20.86% | |
7 | 8 | Fukuoka | Fukuoka | 392,649 | +28.00% | Significant population gain, despite war losses. |
8 | 12 | Sendai | Miyagi | 341,685 | +52.54% | Second and last appearance in the top ten. Significant population gain, despite war losses. |
9 | 9 | Kawasaki | Kanagawa | 319,226 | + 6.13% | Recovered its prewar population, despite war losses. |
10 | 5 | Sapporo | Hokkaido | 313,850 | +52.35% | First appearance in the top ten. Sapporo was not severely attacked during the war. |
1960
gyara sasheA series of municipal mergers throughout the 1950s known as the "Great Showa Mergers" cut the number of municipalities in Japan by almost two thirds, significantly increasing the size of many cities in the process. By this time, almost all of Japan's largest cities had recovered war losses and exceeded their prewar populations.
Source data is from the 1960 Census.
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 8,310,027 | + 54.32% | |
2 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 3,011,563 | + 53.95% | Osaka passed 3 million people for the second time, but population remained short of the prewar record. |
3 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 1,591,935 | + 54.46% | |
4 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 1,375,710 | + 44.63% | Population passed a million for the second time. |
5 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 1,284,818 | + 16.61% | |
6 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 1,113,977 | + 45.54% | Population passed a million people for the first time. |
7 | 8 | Fukuoka | Fukuoka | 647,122 | + 64.81% | |
8 | 9 | Kawasaki | Kanagawa | 632,975 | + 98.28% | |
9 | 5 | Sapporo | Hokkaido | 523,839 | + 66.91% | |
10 | 11 | Hiroshima | Hiroshima | 431,336 | + 50.82% | Second appearance in the top ten, and last appearance until 1990. |
1970
gyara sasheTokyo and Osaka began to experience a trend of suburbanization, as people left the cities for the less densely peopled surrounding municipalities. Other major cities continued to grow rapidly.
Source data is from the 1970 Census.
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 8,840,942 | + 6.39% | Reached a population peak in 1965. |
2 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 2,980,487 | - 1.03% | Reached its postwar population record in 1965, but subsequently dropped below 3 million people. |
3 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 2,238,264 | + 62.70% | Third Japanese city to pass 2 million people. |
4 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 2,036,053 | + 27.90% | Fourth Japanese city to pass 2 million people. |
5 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 1,419,165 | + 10.46% | |
6 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 1,288,937 | + 13.67% | |
7 | 13 | Kitakyushu | Fukuoka | 1,042,321 | n/a | First appearance in the top ten. A brand new city, formed in 1963 through the merger of five area cities, including former top ten city Yahata. |
8 | 5 | Sapporo | Hokkaido | 1,010,123 | + 92.83% | Population passed a million for the first time. |
9 | 9 | Kawasaki | Kanagawa | 973,486 | + 53.80% | |
10 | 8 | Fukuoka | Fukuoka | 853,270 | + 31.86% |
1980
gyara sasheSource data is from the 1980 Census.
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 8,351,893 | - 5.53% | |
2 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 2,773,674 | + 23.92% | Surpassed Osaka's population to become Japan's new second most populous Japanese city. |
3 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 2,648,180 | - 11.15% | |
4 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 2,087,982 | + 2.55% | |
5 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 1,473,065 | + 3.80% | |
6 | 5 | Sapporo | Hokkaido | 1,401,757 | + 38.77% | |
7 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 1,367,390 | + 6.09% | |
8 | 8 | Fukuoka | Fukuoka | 1,088,588 | + 27.58% | Population passed a million for the first time. |
9 | 13 | Kitakyushu | Fukuoka | 1,065,078 | + 2.18% | Last appearance in the top ten. To date, 1980 is the city's population record. Kitakyushu subsequently began losing people, dropping below a million by 2005. |
10 | 9 | Kawasaki | Kanagawa | 1,040,802 | + 6.91% | Population passed a million for the first time. |
1990
gyara sasheBy 1990, almost all the largest Japanese cities had assumed their present-day population ranking.
Source data is from the 1990 Census.
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 8,163,573 | - 2.25% | |
2 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 3,220,331 | + 16.10% | The third Japanese city to pass 3 million people. |
3 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 2,623,801 | - 0.92% | |
4 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 2,154,793 | + 3.20% | |
5 | 5 | Sapporo | Hokkaido | 1,671,742 | + 19.26% | |
6 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 1,477,410 | + 8.05% | |
7 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 1,461,103 | - 0.81% | Kyoto reached its record population in 1985, and has been fluctuating just below that level ever since. |
8 | 8 | Fukuoka | Fukuoka | 1,237,062 | + 13.64% | |
9 | 9 | Kawasaki | Kanagawa | 1,173,603 | + 12.76% | |
10 | 11 | Hiroshima | Hiroshima | 1,085,705 | + 20.77% | Third appearance in the top ten. Population passed a million for the first time. |
2000
gyara sasheA shekara ta 2002, ci gaba da zana mazauna birni daga Tōkyō da Ọsaka yana nuna alamun raguwa, tare da sannu a hankali mutane suna komawa cikin biranen daidai.
Bayanan tushe daga ƙidayar 2000 ne.
Rank | 2010 Rank | Municipality | Current Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | 1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 8,134,688 | - 0.35% | Population reached its post-1965 low in 1995, dipping just under 8 million people, but began rising afterwards. |
2 | 2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 3,426,651 | + 6.41% | |
3 | 3 | Osaka | Osaka | 2,598,774 | - 0.95% | Osaka's post-1965 population low. |
4 | 4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 2,171,557 | + 0.78% | |
5 | 5 | Sapporo | Hokkaido | 1,822,368 | + 9.01% | |
6 | 6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 1,493,398 | + 1.08% | |
7 | 7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 1,467,785 | + 0.46% | |
8 | 8 | Fukuoka | Fukuoka | 1,341,470 | + 8.44% | |
9 | 9 | Kawasaki | Kanagawa | 1,249,905 | + 6.50% | |
10 | 11 | Hiroshima | Hiroshima | 1,126,239 | + 8.21% | Last appearance in the top ten to date. |
2010
gyara sasheIn the mid-2000s, another series of municipal mergers was enacted. The "Great Heisei Mergers" nearly halved the number of municipalities in Japan, once again increasing the size of some cities significantly and creating new towns and cities. Despite a mounting population loss in rural areas and some smaller cities, Japan's major cities continue to grow.
Source date is from the 2010 Census.
Rank | Municipality | Prefecture | Population | % Change | Notes |
1 | Tokyo | Tokyo | 8,945,695 | + 9.63% | |
2 | Yokohama | Kanagawa | 3,688,773 | + 7.67% | |
3 | Osaka | Osaka | 2,665,314 | + 2.60% | |
4 | Nagoya | Aichi | 2,263,894 | + 4.25% | |
5 | Sapporo | Hokkaido | 1,913,545 | + 5.05% | Record population. |
6 | Kobe | Hyogo | 1,544,200 | + 3.45% | |
7 | Kyoto | Kyoto | 1,474,015 | + 0.46% | |
8 | Fukuoka | Fukuoka | 1,463,743 | + 9.12% | |
9 | Kawasaki | Kanagawa | 1,425,512 | + 14.06% | |
10 | Saitama | Saitama | 1,222,434 | n/a | First appearance in the top ten. A brand new city, formed in 2001 through the merger of area cities. |
Manazarta
gyara sasheMahada Ta Waje
gyara sashe- Japanese Topographical Survey- Hiroshima University Library. For 1873 populations. Japanese language.
- Historical Data Downloads- Tsukuba University Spatial Information Science. For 1881 populations. Japanese language.
- Imperial Registered Household Report, 2nd Ed. Archived 2012-03-12 at the Wayback Machine- National Archives Meiji Digital Library. For 1891 populations. Japanese language.
- Imperial Japanese Population Statistics Archived 2021-05-14 at the Wayback Machine- National Archives Meiji Digital Library. For 1898 populations. Japanese language.
- Imperial Japanese Population Statistics, 2nd Ed.[permanent dead link]- National Archives Meiji Digital Library. For 1908 populations. Japanese language.
- Government Statistics Portal- For all Census data, 1920–2010. Japanese language.