Kamiina District, Nagano

Kamiina (上伊那郡, Kamiina-gun) is a district located in Nagano Prefecture, Japan.

As of May, 2008, the district has an estimated Population of 86,453 and a Density of 168 persons/km². The total area is 514.55 km².

There are 3 towns and 3 villages within the district.

On the other hand, if the cities of Ina and Komagane were included, the area will be known as the Kamiina Region.

History

  • 1878 - The district was founded by the division of Ina District. The seat was located at Ina.
  • April 1, 1954 - The towns of Ina merged with the villages of Tomigata, Midori, Shura, Higashiharuchika, and Nishiminowa to form the city of Ina.
  • July 1, 1954 - The towns of Akaho and Miyada merged with the villages of Ina and Nakazawa to form the city of Komagane.
  • January 1, 1955 - The town of Nakaminowa merged with the villages of Minowa and Higashiminowa to form the town of Minowa.
  • April 1, 1955-The town of Tatsuno merged with the village of Asahi to form the new town of Tatsuno.
  • September 30, 1956 -
  • April 1, 1958 - The town of Takatō absorbed the village of Fujisawa.
  • August 1, 1958 - The villages of Nanko and Katado merged to form the village of Nakagawa.
  • April 1, 1959 - The villages of Inari and Miwa merged to form the town of Hase.
  • March 31, 1961 - The town of Tatsuno absorbed the village of Ono.
  • April 1, 1965 - The town of Takatō absorbed the village of Kawanan.
  • April 1, 1965 - The city of Ina absorbed the village of Nishiharuchika.
  • March 31, 2006 - The town of Takatō and the village of Hase merged with the city of Ina (1st) to form the city of Ina (2nd).

gollark: Switches, unless they're at stupidly high temperature?
gollark: They could kill the coronavirus by firing relativistic protons at it.
gollark: Star Trek isn't *remotely* realistic, so almost certainly not as they portray it. The closest vaguely plausible thing is probably the Alcubierre drive, which IIRC could maybe exist, isn't remotely practical, and comes with its own exciting problems.
gollark: They can't be conveniently converted to metres or... anything, really, and don't work with SI prefixes.
gollark: Miles are still an awful unit even if you're used to them.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.