Nagasaki City
Nagasaki City (Nagasaki City, Culture: Nagasaki City) is a city in the northwest of Kyushu, Japan. It is also the prefectural capital of Nagasaki Prefecture and is designated as the national key city of Japan. It is a port city that has been developed as a foreign gateway since ancient times. In the Edo period, there was a large number of historical sites that conveyed the traces of the time as a port city that traded overseas with the official Edo shogunate's official name in Japan (Holland, China, and Korea). Dejima, the first trade port in Japan, has Dutch officials, and there are remains of Chinese settlements in the Okubu area. It has a different view from other cities in Japan, including the influences of foreign culture and sloppy street scenery. It was also the second city after Hiroshima on August 9, 1945, when it was attacked by atomic bombs. It is a central city with the largest population in Nagasaki Prefecture, and 78% of the city's population is inhabited by the city because of the rough urban landscape, and the population density of the city area is overcrowded at 7900 people / km².