The Tsugaru Peninsula (津軽半島, Tsugaru Hantō) is a peninsula in Aomori Prefecture, at the northern end of Honshū island, Japan. The peninsula projects north into the Tsugaru Strait separating Honshū from Hokkaidō. The western coast is on the Sea of Japan, while on its eastern coast are Aomori Bay and Mutsu Bay. The peninsula is bisected from Cape Tappi at its northern end to the Hakkōda Mountains[citation needed] on its southern end by the Tsugaru Mountains. Across the Tsugaru strait to the north is Hokkaidō's Matsumae Peninsula, to which it is linked by the Seikan Tunnel.[1][2]
History
editIn the Edo period, the peninsula was part of the Hirosaki Domain and was ruled by the Tsugaru clan. Traditionally one of the poorest and remotest areas of Japan, Tsugaru is best known as the birthplace of writer Osamu Dazai, who wrote the mordant travelogue Tsugaru about his travels around the peninsula, and for the Tsugaru-jamisen, a distinctive local version of the Japanese string instrument shamisen. After the defeat of Aizu during the Boshin War, many of the last samurai were sent to prisoner-of-war camps on the Tsugaru Peninsula.
Transportation
editRail
edit- Hokkaido Shinkansen, Kaikyō Line, linked to Hokkaidō via the Seikan Tunnel
- Tsugaru Line
- Tsugaru Railway
As with Aizu in Fukushima Prefecture, JR East treats Tsugaru as a separate province from Mutsu, and stations in the area are marked "Tsugaru-" before their names.
Highways
editExternal links
edit- Tsugaru Peninsula travel guide from Wikivoyage
References
edit- ^ "津軽半島". kotobank.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-07-12.
- ^ Schattschneider, Ellen (2003). Immortal Wishes: Labor and Transcendence on a Japanese Sacred Mountain. Duke University Press. pp. 22–25. ISBN 0822330628.
40°57′35″N 140°28′59″E / 40.95972°N 140.48306°E