
''
Ume'' Festival at Kairaku-en in Mito
'Mito' (水戸市; -shi) is the capital of
Ibaraki Prefecture,
Japan and has a central location, moderately offset towards the coast in that prefecture. As of 2005, the city has an estimated
population of 263,748 and a total area is 217.45 km², giving a
density of 1,212.91 persons per
km². Mito
natto is the city's culinary speciality and is well-known across Japan.
Mito is the site of the
Japanese garden Kairaku-en, located near
Senba lake and counted as one of the
Three Great Gardens of Japan. Constructed by
Tokugawa Nariaki in 1842, the park is known nationwide for its breathtaking ''
ume'' trees. Many people come to the park in spring to view the spectacular blossoms, particularly during the Ume Festival. In summer, Mito also holds the
Mito Koumon Festival.
Mito was the seat of the so-called
Mito School, a congregation of nativist scholars of
Confucian persuasion led by
Aizawa Seishisai (会沢æ£å¿—æ–Ž), who during the eigthteenth and nineteenth centuries advocated Western learning as a means not only to further Japanese technological development and international strength, but as means to prove Japanese uniqueness and superiority among nations.
History
The
Yamato people settled in Mito around the fourth century CE. Around the end of the
Heian period,
Baba Sukemoto, a warlord of the
Heike family, moved to Mito and built a castle there. Mito Castle changed hands several times after that: a
daimyo named
Satake Yoshinobu won it in the mid-1500s, but he was forced to surrender it to
Tokugawa Ieyasu in 1603 after the epic
Battle of Sekigahara. Ieyasu's son
Tokugawa Yorifusa then took over Mito Castle, becoming one of the three "gosanke" family members fortified outside of
Edo. The Tokugawas directly ruled Mito until the mid-1800s, when the
bakufu in Edo was overthrown.
The modern city of Mito was formed on
April 1,
1889, with a population of 25,000. It was designated as the prefectural capital. By 1900, the
Joban Line connected it to Tokyo, and by 1910, telephones and electric lighting were available throughout the city. Although more than three-quarters of the city burned to the ground near the end of
World War II, the population rebounded to 70,000 just two years later, and has continued to grow ever since.
Today, Mito is primarily a commercial and administrative city: most industry in Ibaraki is concentrated around the nearby city of
Tsukuba. Mito has a modest but thriving
tourism industry, centered on Kairaku-en (park) and local museums dedicated to the Tokugawa family. Mito is also the site of
Ibaraki University, and is sister city to
Anaheim, California.
Mito will grow further in 2007 as the neighboring town of
Ibaraki will merge with Mito on December 8, 2007. This merger will raise Mito's population to over 300,000, and qualify it to a status of
core city over its current status of
special city.
Transportation

The Mito Tower
Mito is located on the
Joban Line (
Mito Station) and
Joban Expressway, which connect it to
Tokyo and
Tsukuba to the south and
Hitachi and
Iwaki to the north. The
Suigun Line runs north to
Koriyama, and the
Mito Line runs west to
Oyama. The closest major airport is
Narita International Airport. An airport offering domestic service will be completed in nearby
Omitama in 2009.
Professional Sports
Mito is the home city of the
J-League professional
soccer team,
Mito HollyHock.
Famous residents
★
Aizawa Seishisai (1782-1863)
★
Stomu Takeishi (b. 1964, jazz bass player)
Tourist Attractions
★
Kodokan School
★
Mito Castle
★
Lake Senba
★
Kairakuen Park
★
Ibaraki Museum of Modern Art
★
Art Tower Mito
★
Ibaraki Prefectural Museum of History
★
The Tokugawa Museum
External links
★
Mito official website in English
★
Mito official website in Japanese
★
Seifu-Meitokukai Foundation: The Tokugawa Museum
★