Japan Prefectures (original) (raw)

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Updates:

I've added population figures from the 2010 census.

Update 10 to Geopolitical Entities and Codes (formerly FIPS 10-4) is dated 2012-12-31. All it does for Japan is add a macron to the final "o" of Hokkaido.

Country overview:

Short name JAPAN
ISO code JP
FIPS code JA
Language Japanese (ja)
Time zone +9
Capital Tokyo

In 1900, Japan consisted of its present territory plus two major components. Taiwan, then more often called Formosa, with the Pescadores Islands, had been conquered from China and made a Japanese colony in 1895. The Kuril Islands, known to the Japanese as Chishima, had been annexed from Russia in 1875. Japan acquired additional lands as a result of the Russo-Japanese war of 1905: the southern half of Sakhalin Island (Karafuto in Japanese), the Kwantung peninsula, and other strongholds in Manchuria. Korea became a Japanese protectorate in 1905-12, then a colony on 1910-08-22. In 1920, by the terms of the Treaty of Versailles, Japan picked up the former German islands of Micronesia, making them its territory of Nanyo. In 1931, it invaded Manchuria, and set up the puppet state of Manchukuo there the following year. As World War II drew near and broke out, Japan extended its military occupation to much of the Far East and the Pacific. When the war ended in 1945, all of these conquests were taken from Japan, and restored, as far as possible, to their former status. Some of the islands in the southern chains, notably Okinawa, were placed under U.S. military administration, but later reintegrated into Japan. Nanyo became a trust territory of the United States on 1947-04-02. Japan still asserts its claim to the southern Kuril Islands, including Etorofu, Kunashiri, Shikotan, Shibotsu, and Suisho, which have been administratively part of Russia since the war's end.

Spelling note: Although several different transliteration methods have been used to convert from Japanese characters to the Roman alphabet, there is a surprising degree of unanimity about the Romanized form of Japanese place names, even in the other languages covered here. In some references, macrons are used to indicate long vowels. ISO standard 3166-2 is an exception; it uses a different transliteration method (and uses circumflex accents instead of macrons). Names as shown by ISO will be found under "Other names of subdivisions". (ISO also appends the generic -Ken, -Do, -Fu, or -To to the prefecture name, as in Aichi-Ken or Osaka-Fu. This form often appears in postal addresses, too.)

Other names of country:

  1. Danish: Japan
  2. Dutch: Japan
  3. Finnish: Japani
  4. French: Japon m
  5. German: Japan n
  6. Icelandic: Japan
  7. Italian: Giappone m
  8. Japanese: Nihon (formal), Nippon (formal)
  9. Norwegian: Japan
  10. Portuguese: Jap�o m
  11. Russian: Япония
  12. Spanish: Jap�n m
  13. Swedish: Japan
  14. Turkish: Japonya (formal)

Origin of name:

Chinese ri: sun, ben: origin (i.e. land of the rising sun)

Primary subdivisions:

Japan is divided into 43 ken (prefectures), one to (metropolis - Tokyo), one do (territory - Hokkaido), and two fu (urban prefectures - Kyoto and Osaka). The four words are combined in one, todofuken, to denote a division of any type.

Prefecture HASC ISO FIPS Population Area(km.�) Area(mi.�) Region Capital
Aichi JP.AI 23 JA01 7,410,719 5,105 1,971 Chubu Nagoya
Akita JP.AK 05 JA02 1,085,997 11,609 4,482 Tohoku Akita
Aomori JP.AO 02 JA03 1,373,339 9,614 3,712 Tohoku Aomori
Chiba JP.CH 12 JA04 6,216,289 5,103 1,970 Kanto Chiba
Ehime JP.EH 38 JA05 1,431,493 5,664 2,187 Shikoku Matsuyama
Fukui JP.FI 18 JA06 806,314 4,188 1,617 Chubu Fukui
Fukuoka JP.FO 40 JA07 5,071,968 4,934 1,905 Kyushu Fukuoka
Fukushima JP.FS 07 JA08 2,029,064 13,781 5,321 Tohoku Fukushima
Gifu JP.GF 21 JA09 2,080,773 10,596 4,091 Chubu Gifu
Gumma JP.GM 10 JA10 2,008,068 6,356 2,454 Kanto Maebashi
Hiroshima JP.HS 34 JA11 2,860,750 8,453 3,264 Chugoku Hiroshima
Hokkaido JP.HK 01 JA12 5,506,419 78,515 30,315 Hokkaido Sapporo
Hyogo JP.HG 28 JA13 5,588,133 8,362 3,229 Kinki Kobe
Ibaraki JP.IB 08 JA14 2,969,770 6,087 2,350 Kanto Mito
Ishikawa JP.IS 17 JA15 1,169,788 4,196 1,620 Chubu Kanazawa
Iwate JP.IW 03 JA16 1,330,147 15,277 5,898 Tohoku Morioka
Kagawa JP.KG 37 JA17 995,842 1,877 725 Shikoku Takamatsu
Kagoshima JP.KS 46 JA18 1,706,242 9,149 3,532 Kyushu Kagoshima
Kanagawa JP.KN 14 JA19 9,048,331 2,384 920 Kanto Yokohama
Kochi JP.KC 39 JA20 764,456 7,106 2,744 Shikoku Kochi
Kumamoto JP.KM 43 JA21 1,817,426 7,383 2,851 Kyushu Kumamoto
Kyoto JP.KY 26 JA22 2,636,092 4,612 1,781 Kinki Kyoto
Mie JP.ME 24 JA23 1,854,724 5,774 2,229 Kinki Tsu
Miyagi JP.MG 04 JA24 2,348,165 7,288 2,814 Tohoku Sendai
Miyazaki JP.MZ 45 JA25 1,135,233 7,734 2,986 Kyushu Miyazaki
Nagano JP.NN 20 JA26 2,152,449 13,585 5,245 Chubu Nagano
Nagasaki JP.NS 42 JA27 1,426,779 4,098 1,582 Kyushu Nagasaki
Nara JP.NR 29 JA28 1,400,728 3,692 1,425 Kinki Nara
Niigata JP.NI 15 JA29 2,374,450 12,577 4,856 Chubu Niigata
Oita JP.OT 44 JA30 1,196,529 6,331 2,444 Kyushu Oita
Okayama JP.OY 33 JA31 1,945,276 7,079 2,733 Chugoku Okayama
Okinawa JP.ON 47 JA47 1,392,818 2,244 866 Ryukyu Naha
Osaka JP.OS 27 JA32 8,865,245 1,845 712 Kinki Osaka
Saga JP.SG 41 JA33 849,788 2,416 933 Kyushu Saga
Saitama JP.ST 11 JA34 7,194,556 3,799 1,467 Kanto Saitama
Shiga JP.SH 25 JA35 1,410,777 4,016 1,551 Kinki Otsu
Shimane JP.SM 32 JA36 717,397 6,627 2,559 Chugoku Matsue
Shizuoka JP.SZ 22 JA37 3,765,007 7,770 3,000 Chubu Shizuoka
Tochigi JP.TC 09 JA38 2,007,683 6,414 2,476 Kanto Utsunomiya
Tokushima JP.TS 36 JA39 785,491 4,144 1,600 Shikoku Tokushima
Tokyo JP.TK 13 JA40 13,159,388 2,145 828 Kanto Tokyo
Tottori JP.TT 31 JA41 588,667 3,492 1,348 Chugoku Tottori
Toyama JP.TY 16 JA42 1,093,247 4,252 1,642 Chubu Toyama
Wakayama JP.WK 30 JA43 1,002,198 4,722 1,823 Kinki Wakayama
Yamagata JP.YT 06 JA44 1,168,924 9,325 3,600 Tohoku Yamagata
Yamaguchi JP.YC 35 JA45 1,451,338 6,090 2,351 Chugoku Yamaguchi
Yamanashi JP.YN 19 JA46 863,075 4,463 1,723 Chubu Kofu
47 divisions 128,057,352 372,273 143,732
ISO: Codes from ISO 3166-2. These codes are used in Japanese governmentpublications, which list prefectures sequentially by code. They basically run fromnorth to south. FIPS: Codes from FIPS PUB 10-4. Region: The prefectures are grouped into the regions listed below. HASC: Hierarchical administrative subdivision codes. Population: 2010-10-01 census.

Regions have no administrative function. Hokkaido, Kyushu, and Shikoku correspond to three of the main islands of Japan. Ryukyu consists of smaller islands in the south. The other five regions correspond to the largest island, Honshu.

Region Population Area(km.�) Chief town
Chubu 21,715,822 66,732 Nagoya
Chugoku 7,563,428 31,741 Hiroshima
Hokkaido 5,506,419 78,515 Sapporo
Kanto 42,604,085 32,288 Tokyo
Kinki 22,757,897 33,023 Osaka
Kyushu 13,203,965 42,045 Fukuoka
Ryukyu 1,392,818 2,244 Naha
Shikoku 3,977,282 18,791 Matsuyama
Tohoku 9,335,636 66,894 Sendai
9 regions 128,057,352 372,273
Population: 2010-10-01 census.

Postal codes:

Japan uses seven-digit postal codes, with a hyphen between the third and fourth digits. Earlier versions of the current system used only the first three or first five digits.

Further subdivisions:

See the Counties of Japan page.

The prefecture-level units are subdivided into gun (counties), shi (cities), shicho (branch administration), and one "area", which corresponds to the 23 wards of Tokyo.

Alan Pritchard writes that the divisions of Japan are on six levels. He has received some of this information from a Japanese organization, the Council of Local Authorities for International Relations.

On the highest level, below Japan itself, come the 43 ken (prefectures), one to (metropolis), one do (territory), two fu (urban prefectures), and twelve serei shitei toshi (specially designated cities; Saitama's website says that it is now the thirteenth). They are all listed in "Administrative Subdivisions of Countries" except for the specially designated cities, which are commonly grouped with the prefectures in which they are located. The Japanese word for the type of division is normally suffixed to the name of the division, e.g., "Aomori-ken".

On the second level are gun (counties) and shi (cities). The counties have no administrative function. They are groups of rural municipalities that are used for postal purposes. Each prefecture is completely subdivided into counties and cities.

On the third level are shi (cities), machi and cho (both translated as towns), mura and son (villages), and ku (wards; in Tokyo only). I have seen it stated that the name Tokyo doesn't represent a city, but only a prefecture (Tokyo-to). Japanese use the phrase "the twenty-three wards" to refer to what outsiders think of as the city of Tokyo. Each of these wards has its own local administrations, similar to a city's. "Municipalities" is a generic term comprehending cities, towns, and villages.

On the fourth level are ku (wards) outside of Tokyo. I assume that these are divisions of cities, and not found in towns or villages.

The fifth level includes machi and cho. In some cases, machi and cho on the fifth level are subdivisions of machi and cho on the third level. If my understanding is correct, the fourth-level wards and the fifth-level machi and cho are mutually exclusive, so it would also make sense to combine them into a single level.

Finally, on the sixth level are chome (districts). Most of them are numbered rather than named: 3-chome, etc.

This account omits the nine regions, which are groups of prefectures, but don't have any administrative function.

Territorial extent:

Each prefecture except Okinawa lies mainly on one of the four large islands: Hokkaido, Honshu, Kyushu, and Shikoku. (The island locale of each prefecture can be deduced from the region column above.) Most prefectures also contain some smaller islands. This list shows these additional islands roughly in decreasing order of size. ('Island' may be represented by -shima, -jima, or -to.)

  1. Aichi: Saku-shima, Shino-shima, Himaga-shima
  2. Aomori: Kyuroku-jima
  3. Ehime: Omi-shima, O-shima, Naka-jima, Hakata-jima, Nuwa-jima, Gogo-shima, Hiburi-shima, Uo-shima, Shisaka-jima
  4. Fukuoka: O-shima, Jino-shima, Aino-shima
  5. Hiroshima: Eta-jima, Kurahashi-jima, Osaki-kami-jima, Itsuku-shima, Inno-shima, Ikuchi-shima, Osaki-shimo-jima, Hashiri-jima
  6. Hokkaido: Okushiri-shima, Rishiri-to, Rebun-to, O-shima, Ko-jima
  7. Hyogo: Awaji-shima, Nu-shima, and the Ieshima-shoto group
  8. Ishikawa: Noto-jima, Hekura-jima, and the Nanatsu-shima group
  9. Kagawa: Shodo-shima, Te-shima, Hiro-shima, Hon-jima, Nao-shima (part), Awa-shima, Megi-jima, Ibuki-jima
  10. Kagoshima: Amami-o-shima, Yaku-jima, Tanega-shima, Tokuno-shima, Koshikijima Retto (including Kamikoshiki-jima and Shimokoshiki-jima), Okino-erabu-shima, Naga-shima, Shishi-jima, Kikai-shima, Yoron-jima, and other islands of the Satsunan-shoto group
  11. Kochi: Okino-shima, Uguru-shima
  12. Kumamoto: Amakusa-shoto group
  13. Mie: Toshi-jima, Suga-jima, Kami-shima
  14. Miyagi: Kinkazan-to, Aji-shima, Miyato-shima, Tashiro-jima
  15. Miyazaki: Shimaura-to
  16. Nagasaki: Tsu-shima (actually two main islands), Fukue-jima, Nakadori-jima, Iki-shima, Hirado-shima, Azuchi-oshima, and other islands of the Goto Retto group
  17. Niigata: Sado-shima, Awa-shima
  18. Oita: Hime-shima, Onyu-jima, Muku-shima, Hoto-jima, Fuka-shima
  19. Okayama: Kono-shima, Kitagi-shima, Kakui-shima, Naga-shima, Nao-shima (part)
  20. Okinawa consists of the Okinawa-shoto group. It includes several smaller groups, such as Sakishima-shoto, Senkaku-shoto, and Daito-shoto (Borodino Islands). Some of the larger islands are Okinawa-jima, Miyako-jima, Iriomote-jima, Ishigaki-jima, Kume-jima, and Iheya-jima. The most remote are Yonaguni-jima in the west and Okidaito-jima in the southeast. The name Ryukyu Islands, or Nansei-shoto, encompasses both Okinawa and Satsunan-shoto, the islands of Kagoshima prefecture.
  21. Saga: Madara-shima, Kakara-shima
  22. Shimane: Okino-Shima (the Oki Islands), consisting of Dogo and Dozen, where Dozen in turn consists of Nishino-shima, Nakano-shima, and Chiburi-jima; also the islands of Yatsuka village, in the inlet of Nakano-umi
  23. Tokushima: Oge-jima, O-shima, I-shima, Ao-shima
  24. Tokyo includes a long string of islands stretching almost due south for about 800 km. Among the largest islands are O-shima, Hachijo-jima, Miyake-jima, Nii-jima, Io-jima (Iwo Jima), and Chichi-jima. Island groups in Tokyo prefecture include Izu-shoto, Ogasawara-gunto (Bonin Islands), and Kazan Retto (Volcano Islands). The most remote islands from the Japanese mainland are Okino-tori-shima (Parece Vela) to the southwest, Minami-iwo-jima to the south, and Minami-tori-shima (Marcus) to the southeast.
  25. Wakayama: O-shima, Chino-shima, Okino-shima; Wakayama also has two exclaves on the border between Mie and Nara, containing the villages of Kitayama and Tamakiguchi.
  26. Yamagata: Tobi-shima
  27. Yamaguchi: Yashiro-jima, Heigun-to, Kasado-shima, Omi-shima, Naga-shima, Otsu-shima, Mi-shima, Muko-shima, Ya-shima, Iwai-shima, Tsuno-shima, Futai-jima, Hashira-jima, Aino-shima, O-shima

The UN LOCODE page for Japan lists locations in the country, some of them with their latitudes and longitudes, some with their ISO 3166-2 codes for their subdivisions. This information can be put together to approximate the territorial extent of subdivisions.

Origins of names:

  1. Akita: Japanese for field of ripe rice
  2. Aomori: Japanese for green forest
  3. Chiba: Japanese for a thousand leaves
  4. Ehime: Japanese ai: to love, hime: princess
  5. Fujisawa: Japanese fuji: wisteria, sawa: valley
  6. Fukui: Japanese fuku: luck, i: good
  7. Fukuoka: Japanese fuku: luck, oka: hill
  8. Fukushima: Japanese fuku: luck, shima: island
  9. Fukuyama: Japanese fuku: luck, yama: mountain
  10. Funabashi: Japanese fune: ship, hashi: bridge (i.e. floating bridge)
  11. Gumma: Japanese gun: group, ma: horse
  12. Hiroshima: Japanese hiro: broad, shima: island
  13. Hokkaido: Japanese hoku: north, kai: sea, do: province
  14. Hyogo: Japanese hyo: army, ko: storehouse
  15. Ibaraki: Japanese ibara: thorn, ki: castle
  16. Ishikawa: Japanese ishi: stone, kawa: river
  17. Iwate: Japanese iwa: rock, te: hand
  18. Kyoto: Japanese for capital
  19. Nagasaki: Japanese naga: long, saki: cape
  20. Tokyo: Japanese to: east, kyo: capital

Change history:

The division into prefectures dates from 1871, as the Meiji restoration eliminated fiefs.

  1. 1947-07-19: Nanyo became a trust territory of the United States.
  2. 1968-06-26: United States restored the Ogasawara (Bonin), Kazan Retto, Rosario, Parece Vela, and Minami-Tori (Marcus) Islands to Japan.
  3. 1972-05-15: Okinawa restored to Japan, becoming its 47th prefecture.
  4. 2001-05-01: Capital of Saitama prefecture (Urawa) merged with Omiya and Yono, forming the new city Saitama.

Other names of subdivisions:

  1. Aichi: Aiti (variant)
  2. Chiba: Tiba (variant)
  3. Fukui: Hukui (variant)
  4. Fukuoka: Hukuoka (variant)
  5. Fukushima: Hukusima (variant)
  6. Gifu: Gihu (variant)
  7. Gumma: Gunma (variant)
  8. Hiroshima: Hirosima (variant); Хиросима (Russian)
  9. Hokkaido: Ezo, Yeso, Yezo (obsolete)
  10. Hyogo: Hiogo (variant)
  11. Ishikawa: Isikawa (variant)
  12. Kochi: Koti (variant)
  13. Kyoto: Kioto (variant)
  14. Mie: Miye (variant)
  15. Shiga: Siga (variant)
  16. Shimane: Simane (variant)
  17. Shizuoka: Sizuoka (variant)
  18. Tochigi: Totigi (variant)
  19. Tokushima: Tokusima (variant)
  20. Tokyo: Edo, Yedo (obsolete); Tokio (Spanish, variant); T�quio (Portuguese); Токио (Russian)
  21. Yamaguchi: Yamaguti (variant)
  22. Yamanashi: Yamanasi (variant)

Population history:

Division 1896 1920 1930 1940 1950-10-01 1960-10-01 1970-10-01 1980-10-01 1990-10-01 2000-10-01 2010-10-01
Aichi 1,557,000 2,090,000 2,567,000 3,166,592 3,390,585 4,206,000 5,386,000 6,222,000 6,690,440 7,043,300 7,410,719
Akita 755,000 899,000 988,000 1,052,275 1,309,031 1,336,000 1,241,000 1,257,000 1,227,491 1,189,279 1,085,997
Aomori 593,000 756,000 880,000 1,000,509 1,282,867 1,427,000 1,428,000 1,524,000 1,482,935 1,475,728 1,373,339
Chiba 1,247,000 1,336,000 1,470,000 1,588,425 2,139,037 2,306,000 3,367,000 4,735,000 5,555,467 5,926,285 6,216,289
Ehime 972,000 1,047,000 1,142,000 1,178,705 1,521,878 1,501,000 1,418,000 1,507,000 1,515,027 1,493,092 1,431,493
Fukui 632,000 599,000 618,000 643,904 752,374 753,000 744,000 794,000 823,595 828,944 806,314
Fukuoka 1,314,000 2,188,000 2,527,000 3,094,132 3,530,169 4,007,000 4,027,000 4,553,000 4,811,179 5,015,699 5,071,968
Fukushima 1,028,000 1,363,000 1,508,000 1,625,521 2,062,394 2,051,000 1,946,000 2,035,000 2,104,119 2,126,935 2,029,064
Gifu 981,000 1,070,000 1,178,000 1,265,024 1,544,538 1,638,000 1,759,000 1,960,000 2,066,579 2,107,700 2,080,773
Gumma 749,000 1,053,000 1,186,000 1,299,027 1,601,380 1,578,000 1,659,000 1,849,000 1,966,287 2,024,852 2,008,068
Hiroshima 1,400,000 1,542,000 1,692,000 1,869,504 2,081,967 2,184,000 2,436,000 2,739,000 2,849,822 2,878,915 2,860,750
Hokkaido 508,000 2,359,000 2,812,000 3,272,718 4,295,567 5,039,000 5,184,000 5,576,000 5,643,715 5,683,062 5,506,419
Hyogo 1,618,000 2,302,000 2,646,000 3,221,232 3,309,935 3,906,000 4,668,000 5,145,000 5,405,090 5,550,574 5,588,133
Ibaraki 1,101,000 1,350,000 1,487,000 1,620,000 2,039,418 2,047,000 2,144,000 2,558,000 2,845,411 2,985,676 2,969,770
Ishikawa 782,000 747,000 757,000 757,676 957,279 973,000 1,002,000 1,119,000 1,164,627 1,180,977 1,169,788
Iwate 701,000 846,000 976,000 1,095,793 1,346,728 1,449,000 1,371,000 1,422,000 1,416,960 1,416,180 1,330,147
Kagawa 685,000 678,000 733,000 730,394 946,022 919,000 908,000 1,000,000 1,023,434 1,022,890 995,842
Kagoshima 1,076,000 1,416,000 1,557,000 1,589,467 1,804,118 1,963,000 1,729,000 1,785,000 1,797,766 1,786,194 1,706,242
Kanagawa 754,000 1,323,000 1,620,000 2,188,974 2,487,665 3,443,000 5,472,000 6,924,000 7,980,421 8,489,974 9,048,331
Kochi 600,000 671,000 718,000 709,286 873,874 855,000 787,000 831,000 825,063 813,949 764,456
Kumamoto 1,112,000 1,233,000 1,354,000 1,368,179 1,827,582 1,856,000 1,700,000 1,790,000 1,840,383 1,859,344 1,817,426
Kyoto 914,000 1,287,000 1,553,000 1,729,993 1,832,934 1,993,000 2,250,000 2,527,000 2,602,520 2,644,391 2,636,092
Mie 976,000 1,069,000 1,157,000 1,198,783 1,461,197 1,485,000 1,543,000 1,687,000 1,792,542 1,857,339 1,854,724
Miyagi 817,000 962,000 1,143,000 1,271,238 1,663,442 1,743,000 1,819,000 2,082,000 2,248,521 2,365,320 2,348,165
Miyazaki 439,000 651,000 760,000 840,357 1,091,427 1,135,000 1,051,000 1,152,000 1,168,922 1,170,007 1,135,233
Nagano 1,212,000 1,563,000 1,717,000 1,710,729 2,060,831 1,982,000 1,957,000 2,084,000 2,156,656 2,215,168 2,152,449
Nagasaki 796,000 1,136,000 1,233,000 1,370,063 1,645,492 1,760,000 1,570,000 1,591,000 1,563,015 1,516,523 1,426,779
Nara 526,000 565,000 596,000 620,509 763,883 781,000 930,000 1,209,000 1,375,478 1,442,795 1,400,728
Niigata 1,797,000 1,776,000 1,933,000 2,064,402 2,460,997 2,442,000 2,361,000 2,451,000 2,474,602 2,475,733 2,374,450
Oita 822,000 860,000 946,000 972,975 1,252,999 1,240,000 1,156,000 1,229,000 1,236,924 1,221,140 1,196,529
Okayama 1,109,000 1,218,000 1,284,000 1,329,358 1,661,099 1,670,000 1,707,000 1,871,000 1,925,913 1,950,828 1,945,276
Okinawa 440,000 572,000 578,000 574,579 915,000 883,000 945,000 1,107,000 1,222,458 1,318,220 1,392,818
Osaka 1,280,000 2,588,000 3,540,000 4,792,966 3,857,047 5,505,000 7,620,000 8,473,000 8,734,670 8,805,081 8,865,245
Saga 602,000 674,000 692,000 701,517 945,082 943,000 838,000 866,000 877,865 876,654 849,788
Saitama 1,149,000 1,320,000 1,459,000 1,608,039 2,146,445 2,431,000 3,866,000 5,420,000 6,405,319 6,938,006 7,194,556
Shiga 702,000 651,000 692,000 703,679 861,180 843,000 890,000 1,080,000 1,222,401 1,342,832 1,410,777
Shimane 713,000 715,000 740,000 740,940 912,551 889,000 774,000 785,000 781,005 761,503 717,397
Shizuoka 1,173,000 1,550,000 1,798,000 2,017,860 2,471,472 2,756,000 3,090,000 3,447,000 3,670,891 3,767,393 3,765,007
Tochigi 759,000 1,046,000 1,142,000 1,206,657 1,550,462 1,514,000 1,580,000 1,792,000 1,935,186 2,004,817 2,007,683
Tokushima 688,000 670,000 717,000 718,717 878,511 847,000 791,000 825,000 831,582 824,108 785,491
Tokyo 1,468,000 3,699,000 5,409,000 7,354,971 6,277,500 9,684,000 11,408,000 11,618,000 11,854,987 12,064,101 13,159,388
Tottori 414,000 455,000 489,000 484,390 600,177 599,000 569,000 604,000 615,741 613,289 588,667
Toyama 789,000 724,000 779,000 822,569 1,008,790 1,033,000 1,030,000 1,103,000 1,120,182 1,120,851 1,093,247
Wakayama 666,000 750,000 831,000 865,074 982,113 1,002,000 1,043,000 1,087,000 1,074,321 1,069,912 1,002,198
Yamagata 808,000 969,000 1,080,000 1,119,338 1,357,347 1,321,000 1,226,000 1,252,000 1,258,404 1,244,147 1,168,924
Yamaguchi 967,000 1,041,000 1,136,000 1,294,242 1,540,882 1,602,000 1,511,000 1,587,000 1,572,645 1,527,964 1,451,338
Yamanashi 491,000 583,000 631,000 663,026 811,369 782,000 762,000 804,000 852,980 888,172 863,075
Total 42,682,000 55,962,000 64,451,000 73,114,308 84,114,637 94,302,000 104,663,000 117,058,000 123,611,541 126,925,843 128,057,352

Data for 1896 are from source [6]. Data for 1920-1990 are from source [1], except that the 1950 census is from source [3]. Source [1] agrees with source [3] when rounded to the nearest 1,000, but source [3] doesn't include Okinawa; therefore, I took the 1950 Okinawa population from source [1], and combined it into the total, which is therefore an approximation. Data for 2000 are from source [5]. Data for 2010 are from source [8], which matches the more official source [7] except that figures in source [7] are rounded to the nearest thousand.

Sources:

  1. [1] Japan Statistical Yearbook 1992. Statistics Bureau, Management and Coordination Agency.
  2. [2] Webster's New Geographical Dictionary, 1969 edition. G. & C. Merriam, Springfield, MA, 1969.
  3. [3] Demographic Yearbook , 7th Ed. Statistical Office of the United Nations, New York, 1955 (retrieved 2011-08-20).
  4. [4] Japan Almanac (several editions).
  5. [5] Population Census : First basic statistical results: Summary of results - Main demographic items: major administrative entities (2000). Japanese Statistics Bureau website (retrieved 2004-02-09).
  6. [6] The Century Atlas of the World, Benjamin E. Smith, ed., New York, 1906.
  7. [7] 2010 Census of Japan (download Excel spreadsheet), Statistics Bureau, Japan (retrieved 2013-09-14).
  8. [8] City Population website by Thomas Brinkhoff (retrieved 2013-09-14).