J-List is a wonderful toybox of things from Japan - come see
Every time you don't click over to J-List, God kills a kitten

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

Friday, November 20, 2009

Heisei Dates

The other day my wife asked me, "Is it 2008? Or 2009? I forget." This would probably be difficult to do outside of Japan, but here it's possible here due to the Japanese calendar system, which marks years by the current Emperor. The current year is Heisei 21, the 21st year of the reign of Emperor Akihito -- although don't expect any Japanese to know that name, as he's always called "Emperor Heisei" in Japanese -- and any kind of official document will always refer to this year as Heisei 21 rather than 2009. Having two systems to remember important dates in can be a challenge -- for example, I came to Japan in Heisei 3 (1991), my kids were born in Heisei 7 and 8 (1995 and 1996), and my car's sha-ken (a maintenance check-up you have to get every 2 years) is due in March of Heisei 23 (2011).

Former PM stud-muffin Obuchi was the one to announce the Heisei era name.

4 Comments:

Blogger Stephen said...

Hello,

Sorry if this isn't the proper place to post this. I didn't see anything on the website pertaining to this subject. I'm actually interested in a job at J-List. What, if anything, is available and what are the requirements? If nothing is available, when J-List is looking for work, where is the announcement generally made?

Thanks for taking the time to read this,
~Steve Boyda

8:21 PM

 
Blogger Peter in Japan said...

Unfortunately we don't have any openings at present. For positions in San Diego we sometimes post, but ususally find the positions locally. For any jobs in Japan, we look locally since it's never efficient for someone to move here from the other side of the world when it can be avoided ^_^ And we do have a kind of internal policy of only hiring foreigners who have lived in Japan for 2 years and who have passed Level 2 of the JLPT at least, FYI.

10:01 PM

 
Blogger Stephen said...

I've only been in Japan for about 9 months at this point and I'm currently studying for JLPT1, so I guess I'm a little less than halfway there. Anyhoo, thanks for the reply. I'm a big fan of J-List and the blog/newsletter, so please keep up the good work.

8:08 PM

 
Blogger 井上エイド said...

Sorry for the late post here. The emperor is only called Emperor Heisei upon his death.

Until that time he is Emperor Akihito.

3:31 AM

 

Post a Comment

<< Home

 


,