1950
in
Japan

Decades:
  • 1930s
  • 1940s
  • 1950s
  • 1960s
  • 1970s
See also:Other events of 1950
History of Japan   Timeline   Years

Incumbents

Governors

  • Aichi Prefecture: Hideo Aoyagi
  • Akita Prefecture: Kosaku Hasuike
  • Aomori Prefecture: Bunji Tsushima
  • Chiba Prefecture: Tamenosuke Kawaguchi (until 25 October); Hitoshi Shibata (starting 15 December)
  • Ehime Prefecture: Juushin Aoki
  • Fukui Prefecture: Harukazu Obata
  • Fukuoka Prefecture: Katsuji Sugimoto
  • Fukushima Prefecture: Sakuma Ootake (starting 28 January)
  • Gifu Prefecture: Kamon Muto
  • Gunma Prefecture: Yoshio Iyoku
  • Hiroshima Prefecture:
    • until 29 November: Tsunei Kusunose
    • 29 November-25 December: Tetsuo Wakuda
    • starting 25 December: vacant
  • Hokkaido Prefecture: Toshifumi Tanaka
  • Hyogo Prefecture: Yukio Kishida
  • Ibaraki Prefecture: Yoji Tomosue
  • Ishikawa Prefecture: Wakio Shibano
  • Iwate Prefecture: Kenkichi Kokubun
  • Kagawa Prefecture: Keikichi Masuhara (until 25 July); Masanori Kaneko (starting 11 September)
  • Kagoshima Prefecture: Kaku Shigenari
  • Kanagawa Prefecture: Iwataro Uchiyama
  • Kochi Prefecture: Wakaji Kawamura
  • Kumamoto Prefecture: Saburō Sakurai
  • Kyoto Prefecture: Atsushi Kimura (until 2 April); Torazō Ninagawa (starting 20 April)
  • Mie Prefecture: Masaru Aoki
  • Miyagi Prefecture: Kazuji Sasaki
  • Miyazaki Prefecture: Tadao Annaka
  • Nagano Prefecture: Torao Hayashi
  • Nagasaki Prefecture: Sōjirō Sugiyama
  • Nara Prefecture: Mansaku Nomura
  • Niigata Prefecture: Shohei Okada
  • Oita Prefecture: Tokuju Hosoda
  • Okayama Prefecture: Hirokichi Nishioka
  • Osaka Prefecture: Bunzō Akama
  • Saga Prefecture: Gen'ichi Okimori
  • Saitama Prefecture: Yuuichi Oosawa
  • Shiga Prefecture: Iwakichi Hattori
  • Shiname Prefecture: Fujiro Hara
  • Shizuoka Prefecture: Takeji Kobayashi
  • Tochigi Prefecture: Juukichi Kodaira
  • Tokushima Prefecture: Goro Abe
  • Tokyo Prefecture: Seiichirō Yasui
  • Tottori Prefecture: Aiji Nishio
  • Toyama Prefecture: Kunitake Takatsuji
  • Wakayama Prefecture: Shinji Ono
  • Yamagata Prefecture: Michio Murayama
  • Yamaguchi Prefecture: Tatsuo Tanaka
  • Yamanashi Prefecture: Katsuyasu Yoshie

Events

  • January 1: The old practice of advancing one's age every New Year's Day (regardless of one's date of birth) is replaced by the western style of advancing one's age on each anniversary of one's date of birth. Under the old system, someone born on November 1, for example, would turn one on January 1, two months later.
  • February 11: According to Japan National Police Agency official confirmed report, a regular route bus plunge into ravine in Hōtaku District, Kumamoto Prefecture, (now Kumamoto City), Kyushu Island, 22 persons were lost to lives, 31 persons were hurt.
  • July 5: Bandaiya, later Bandai Namco Holdings founded in Asakusa, Tokyo.
  • July 7: Kinkaku-ji in Kyoto is burned to the ground by a 22-year-old novice monk.
  • September 4: Typhoon Jane, tidal wave and flash flood hit around Osaka Bay, official death toll was 539 persons, with 26,062 persons were wounded, according to Japanese government official confirmed report.
  • September 14: Typhoon Kezia, tidal wave hit around Island Sea of Seto, with lost Kintai Bridge and Miyajima Torii gate. According to Japan Fire and Disaster Management Agency official confirmed report, 49 persons were fatalities, 35 persons were hurt.
  • November 7: According to JNPA official confirmed report, a regular route bus plunge into Monobe River, Mirabu, (now Kami, Kochi), Shikoku Island, 34 persons were human fatalities and 29 persons were wounded.
  • December 12: Hayato Ikeda, future Prime Minister of Japan, remarks in the National Diet that "the poor should eat barley".
  • December 20: A dormitory of Okayama Prfectural Deaf School fire, according to JFDMA official announced, 16 persons were lost to lives in Okayama City.[2]
  • Undated:

Births

Deaths

See also

References

  1. "Hirohito | Biography, Accomplishments, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
  2. ja:岡山県立聾学校寄宿舎火災 (Japanese language edition) Retrieved on 9 May 2020.
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