Login Box






Password dimenticata?
Nessun account? Registrati

Negozio Online

Mostra Carrello
Il carrello è vuoto.

CHI E' ONLINE

Statistiche

Visitatori: 640916

Skype Status

Siamo correntemente... Non in linea 

NOTIZIE FLASH

Tokyo, 17 giu - Il ministero della Giustizia giapponese ha fatto sapere di aver giustiziato tre condannati a morte, fra cui un noto serial killer cannibale. Il serial killer Tsutomu Miyazaki, noto per aver bevuto il sangue delle proprie vittime, uccise negli anni '80 quattro bambine. Nel frattempo il primo ministro Yasuo Fukuda ha dichiarato che ''in Giappone la maggioranza delle persone e' del parere che la pena capitale non deve essere abolita e, considerato questo, non sento il bisogno di apportare cambiamenti''. Il Giappone non intende eliminare la condanna a morte ''ma prestiamo ascolto all'orientamento dell'opinione del resto del mondo'', ha tuttavia aggiunto Fukuda.
 

Ultimissime

Japan National News Japan's No. 1 source of news in English
Japan to pledge extra US$50 million in food aid at upcoming G8 summit

Japan will pledge to give an additional 50 million dollars in food assistance by October in the face of a rapid rise in food prices during the upcoming G8 summit in Hokkaido, Foreign Minister Masahiko Komura said.

Cigarette vending machines with face-recognition technology approved

The Ministry of Finance has approved cigarette vending machines that use face recognition technology to determine whether the purchaser is a minor or not.

Nursing home worker sacked for pinching, slapping elderly residents

KUSHIMOTO, Wakayama -- A 30-year-old worker at a special nursing home for the elderly has been sacked for physically abusing 21 residents aged between 65 and 100, it has been learned.

Police hunt for pair who crashed stolen motorcycle while fleeing from owner

SAKAI, Osaka -- Police have launched a search for two men who stole a motorcycle here and crashed it, injuring a woman, while fleeing from the owner, law enforcers said.

Body of missing high school boy found near river mouth in Kanagawa

HIRATSUKA, Kanagawa -- A high school boy who went missing while playing near the mouth of the Sagami River here was found dead in the sea on Saturday, police said.

Japanese marine adventurer Horie completes 7,000 km voyage from Hawaii

Japanese marine adventurer Kenichi Horie arrived in the Kii channel off Wakayama Prefecture on Friday night, successfully completing a 7,000 kilometer voyage from Hawaii.

UN chief to G-8: food and climate linked

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands (AP) -- The global food crisis will only worsen because of climate change, the U.N.

Uohide president ordered warehouse contractor to cover up eel deliveries

TOKUSHIMA -- The company at the center of the eel mislabeling scandal ordered a contractor to cover up any shipping or receiving of eels from their warehouse, its parent company has revealed.

Book by North Korea abduction victim's mother translated into English

"North Korea Kidnapped My Daughter," an English translation of an account of the abduction of Megumi Yokota written by the victim's mother, will go on sale in the United States early next year.

Frankfurter photo finish: Reigning champ wins NYC hot-dog eating contest after tiebreaker

NEW YORK (AP) -- American Joey Chestnut achieved frankfurter immortality Friday, outdueling his celebrated Japanese rival, Takeru Kobayashi, in an epic hot-dog eating contest that pushed both of the gluttonous gladiators to the brink.

Indigenous peoples say G-8's economic agenda responsible for global warming, food crisis

SAPPORO, Japan (AP) -- A gathering of indigenous peoples on Friday blamed the Group of Eight's economic agenda for global warming and rising food and fuel prices -- the very problems the G-8 leaders plan to tackle at their summit next week.

Instructor convicted of negligence over fatal crash with truck

KIMITSU, Chiba -- A female instructor at a facility for the mentally disabled was convicted Friday over a fatal collision between a van she was driving and a large truck, which killed four residents of the facility.

NewsOnJapan.com Latest News On Japan
Mainichi suspends reporter over 'vulgar' English column

The Mainichi Shimbun newspaper Friday suspended a reporter for three months and reprimanded four executives including President Yutaka Asahina over a column on its English language website that was closed following criticism for being "too vulgar." (Kyodo)

Japan punishes bureaucrats over 'pub taxi' scandal

Japan's finance minister will return 20 percent of one month's salary to try to regain public trust after 600 ministry officials were found to have taken cash, coupons and beer from taxi drivers on late-night rides home. (Reuters)

Japan aims to restart solar subsidies in 2009

A Japanese ministry aims to reintroduce subsidies on solar power equipment in 2009 to help boost Japanese firms' shrinking share in a 1 trillion yen ($9.25 billion) market, just as Germany cuts state support for such gear. (Daily Times)

Japanese student scrawled on world heritage cathedral in Italy

A female junior college student in Gifu Prefecture scrawled the nicknames of herself and her classmates, as well as an abbreviation of her school, on the wall of a world heritage cathedral in Florence, Italy, during a study trip in February, college officials revealed Tuesday. (Kyodo)

Heavy rain, thunderstorms may hit areas of southwestern-eastern Japan

Heavy rain and thunderstorms may hit wide areas of southwestern to eastern Japan later Saturday through Sunday as a seasonal rain front stalls over areas from Kyushu to the Kanto region, the Japan Meteorological Agency said. (Kyodo)

Kitano receives lifetime achievement award at Moscow film festival

Takeshi Kitano, a globally well-known Japanese film director, was granted Thursday a lifetime achievement award for the outstanding contribution to film arts in the 30th Moscow International Film Festival at its opening day. (Kyodo)

Japan, seeking trimmer citizens, decides to measure millions of waistlines

Japan, a country not known for its overweight people, has undertaken one of the most ambitious campaigns ever by a nation to slim down its citizenry. (International Herald Tribune)

Let 10% of Japan be foreigners: Nakagawa

Liberal Democratic Party lawmakers made an ambitious proposal Thursday to raise the ratio of immigrants in Japan to about 10 percent over the next 50 years. (Japan Times)

ANA, JAL planes have scrape at Haneda airport, no one injured

A minor collision occurred at Haneda airport Thursday between an All Nippon Airways Boeing 777 and a Japan Airlines jumbo jet, but none of the over 600 passengers on the two planes was injured, transport ministry officials said. (Kyodo)

Poor households to get free digital TV tuners

The government plans to distribute free digital TV tuners to about 1.07 million households on welfare before Japan's terrestrial TV broadcasting services switch to digital format in July 2011, sources said. (Asahi)

Kitajima breaks 200m breaststroke world record

Japan's Kosuke Kitajima, Athens Olympic double gold medallist, broke a world record Sunday in the men's 200-meter breaststroke at the Japan Open. (Xinhua)

Japanese melon sells for more than $6,000

A marine products dealer in Japan plunked down a record $6,125 Friday for a black Densuke watermelon -- grown only on the northern Japanese island of Hokkaido. (CNN)

Sumo stars live large in L.A.

For the first time in 27 years, Grand Sumo -- the All-Star Game of this ancient sport -- has come to Los Angeles. And with it, 40 or so of Japan's biggest and brightest sumo celebrities. (Los Angeles Times)

Japanese lawmakers want to triple cigarette prices

A group of Japanese lawmakers on Friday called for a tripling of cigarette prices to nearly 10 dollars a pack in a bid to cover swelling social security costs. (AFP)

Guinness: Japanese TV host is world's busiest

Flick through a few channels on Japanese TV and Monta Mino is most likely there. And the world's most prolific television presenter, who just broke his own record for the most hours of live television in one week, says he wants to work even more. (AP)

In landmark move, Japan to recognise indigenous people

Japan is set this week to recognise the Ainu as an indigenous people, in a landmark move for a nation that has long prided itself as ethnically homogeneous. (AFP)

In warming war, Japanese urged to bathe faster

Speedier family baths could help Japanese cut their burgeoning energy consumption and reduce greenhouse gas emissions tied to global warming, the government said Tuesday. (MSNBC)

34 Japanese evacuated from apartment as man commits suicide with poisonous fumes

Japanese police evacuated 34 people from an apartment building Wednesday after a man apparently killed himself by mixing chemicals and inhaling the deadly fumes, the latest in a string of similar suicides nationwide. (AP)

Japanese woman found hanged on Korean Air flight

A 29-year-old Japanese woman was found hanged inside the toilet of a Korean Air flight as the plane was preparing to land at Incheon airport near Seoul, the airline said Thursday. (AFP)

Japanese customs reunited with lost dope

Japanese customs have been reunited with the 142g of cannabis they mislaid at Tokyo's Narita airport during a drugs-busting test operation. (The Register)

Home arrow FAQ arrow FAQ arrow Notizie Utili sul Giappone 1
Notizie Utili sul Giappone 1 PDF Stampa E-mail
mercoledì 12 maggio 2004

Il Giappone è un arcipelago di oltre 300 isole, di cui le quattro piú estese ed importanti sono: Hokkaido a nord; Honshu, la più vasta, al centro; Shikoku e Kyushu a Sud. Il Paese conta una popolazione di circa 120.000.000 di abitanti su un area poco più vasta di quella dell'Italia. La superficie è prevalentemente montuosa, mentre le pianure occupano solamente il 20% del territorio.Il sistema montuoso, la cui vetta più alta è il monte Fuji, è di origine vulcanica.

 

TokyoTOKYO fu fondata nel XV secolo col nome di Edo. Intorno al 1600 fu scelta come residenza del primo Shogun Tokugawa, sotto la cui influenza si sviluppò rapidamente. Nel 1868, dopo il passaggio dei poteri dallo Shogun all'Imperatore, la città assunse l'attuale nome di Tokyo diventando la capitale dell'Impero. A più riprese devastata da incendi e terremoti, fu inoltre distrutta dai bombardamenti del 1945; dopo la seconda guerra mondiale venne sottoposta ad imponenti opere di restauro, riedificazione e ampliamento. Tokyo è ora la capitale del Giappone, non solo politicamente, ma anche in senso culturale, commerciale ed economico. Conta una popolazione di 12 milioni di abitanti ed è oggi considerata una delle più moderne e popolose metropoli del mondo.

 

KyotoKYOTO, antica capitale del Giappone dal 794 al 1868, fu la culla della raffinata cultura del periodo Heian. È ricca di tradizioni storiche e culturali come testimoniano i numerosissimi templi, monumenti e palazzi sparsi ovunque nella città ed i numerosi festivals che vi si svolgono durante l'anno. Kyoto è inoltre un importante centro di attività artigianali e artistiche: le sue sete, le porcellane ed il legno laccato sono infatti rinomati ovunque.

 

 

 

Osaka OSAKA, la città più antica del Giappone, si è sviluppata attraverso il commercio e gli scambi con i paesi stranieri. Oggi è il più importante centro industriale e commerciale del Giappone occidentale. secondo nel Paese dopo Tokyo. Osaka è considerata anche un centro culturale molto attivo ed è inoltre famosa in tutto il mondo per la l'ottima cucina.

 

 

 

 

 

 

NagoyaNAGOYA, a circa 360 Km a Ovest di Tokyo, è una delle più importanti città industriali del Giappone, ed insieme a Tokyo e Osaka costituisce il fulcro delle attività economiche del paese.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FukuokaFUKUOKA, situata nell'isola di Kyushu, è una moderna città industriale e punto di partenza per escursioni turistiche in altre località dell'isola.

 











NikkoNIKKO, è uno splendido parco nazionale a circa 150 Km da Tokyo. Di notevole interesse il santuario Toshogu, il lago Chuzenji e la spettacolare cascata Kegon, che precipita tra le montagne circostanti ad un'altezza di 100 metri.

 

 

 

 


FujiIl MONTE FUJI, simbolo del Giappone, è il più alto del paese con i suoi 3775 metri. Raggiungibile da Tokyo in due ore circa di pullman, costituisce una grande attrazione turistica per la sua maestosità.

 

 


 

HakoneHAKONE, a 90 Km da Tokyo, è una delle più famose e frequentate località termali del Giappone. Situata nel parco nazionale di Fuji-Hakone-Izu, sorge sulle sponde del Lago Ashi, che costituisce una delle maggiori attrazioni del posto per la sua bellezza e per la sua posizione all'interno della forest.

 








IseNel PARCO NAZIONALE DI ISE-SHIMA sorge il tempio di Ise-Jingu, il più venerato santuario della religione shintoista. Nelle vicinanze sono situate Toba, importante località di villeggiatura, e l'isola delle perle Mikimot.

 

 

 

Nara NARA, situata a circa 40 km a Sud di Kyoto, è stata la capitale del Giappone prima di Kyoto e la culla della cultura giapponese dell'VIII secolo. Anche Nara è ricca di monumenti e templi, che fanno ancora oggi rivivere l'atmosfera della più vera tradizione giapponese.

 

 

 

 

KamakuraKAMAKURA, una delle antiche capitali del Giappone offre una vasta opportunità di visite fra cui il celeberrimo grande Budda. Situata sul mare, a meno di un'ora di treno da Tokyo, offre anche la possibilità di un giorno di relax fra i famosi templi zen ed i numerosi ristoranti sulla baia.

 
< Prec.   Pros. >

Copyright Il Giappone.com © 2008 - All Rights Reserved
Design by eSoleMio.com Website Design Japan ホームページ制作会社