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The personal log of Peter, owner of JLIST.com, the home of "wacky things from Japan"

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Gunma History Lesson from Iwajuku

J-List's home prefecture of Gunma isn't as famous as Kyoto or Nara, but it can hold its own when it comes to ancient history. For example, there are more than 8000 burial mounds from the Kofun Period (250-538 A.D.), indicating a high level of civilization in the past, even though Tokyoites consider us to be a quaint place only useful for hot springs and skiing. But our prefecture's history goes a lot farther back. By an amazing coincidence, J-List is located only a few kilometers from the Iwajuku Archeological Dig, which happens to contain the oldest record of human habitation in all Japan. In 1949, an archeology enthusiast named Aizawa Tadahiro was digging for pottery shardswhen he hit on something much older: hand-made tools of obsidian and flint. At first, Mr. Tadahiro's discovery was mocked by the establishment, but his findings were verified, essentially pushing the timeline of humans living in the Japanese islands from 10,000 years ago to more than 30,000. Sadly, almost nothing else is known about the previous residents of Iwajuku, due to the fact that the area lies at the foot of Mt. Akagi, an active volcano that spits out highly acidic ash, but it's interesting that such a famous place is only a stone hammer's throw away from us. By another amazing coincidence (there are a lot of them in Japan for some reason), when J-List's own Tomo was in the 4th grade, he was in the hospital getting his tonsils out, and the man in the next bed over was Tadahiro-sensei himself. So Tomo got to hear all about the discovery at Iwajuku first-hand.

Burial mounds contain cool stuff like Haniwa pottery and Magatama beads

3 Comments:

Blogger maglor said...

From Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gunma

Japan was without horses until around the early centuries AD, and present-day Gunma was a center of the horsebreeding and trading activities when continental peoples and Japanese began a strong trade in the animals.

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Your picture shows statue of horse, which happens to be related to some of the controversies in Ancient Japanese History, as even Japanese accepts that the first horses in Japan came from Korea.

9:22 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Yes, and Gunma is written 群馬 which means a herd of horses. Horses aren't really that big here these days, although people from other parts of Japan think of horses when they think of us due to the name.

10:44 PM

 
Blogger Rune said...

To me Gunma is also known as the setting of the best racing anime ever, Initial D =)

7:15 AM

 

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