is a special ward in the Tokyo Metropolis in Japan. The English translation of its Japanese self-designation is Meguro City. The ward was founded on March 15, 1947.
Meguro is predominantly residential in character, but is also home to light industry, corporate head offices, the Komaba campus of University of Tokyo as well as fifteen foreign embassies and consulates. Residential neighborhoods include Jiyugaoka, Kakinokizaka, and Nakameguro. As of May 1, 2015, the ward has an estimated population of 277,171 and a population density of 18,890 persons per km<sup>2</sup>. The total area is 14.67 km<sup>2</sup>.
Meguro is also used to refer to the area around Meguro Station, which is not located in Meguro ward, but in neighboring Shinagawa's KamiÃ
Âsaki district, 100 meters from the border with Meguro ward.
History
The Higashiyama shell mound in the north of the ward contains remains from the Paleolithic, JÃ
Âmon, Yayoi, and Kofun periods.
The area now known as Meguro was formerly two towns, Meguro proper and Hibusuma, all parts of the former Ebara District of Musashi Province. The two were merged into a Meguro ward for Tokyo City in 1932 and since then the ward has remained with no alterations to its territory.
The name "Meguro", meaning "black eyes", derives from the Meguro FudÃ
 (Black-eyed FudÃ
Â-myÃ
ÂÃ
Â) of RyÃ
«senji. The Meguro FudÃ
 was one of five FudÃ
Â-myÃ
ÂÃ
 statues placed at strategic points on the outskirts of Edo in the early seventeenth century by the abbot Tenkai, an advisor to Tokugawa Ieyasu, to provide protection for the new capital of the Tokugawa shogunate. Each statue had eyes of a different color. (Mejiro, a district in Toshima ward, is named for the white-eyed FudÃ
Â-myÃ
ÂÃ
Â).
Geography
Four other special wards surround Meguro. They are Shibuya (to the northeast), Setagaya (to the west), Ã
Âta (to the south), and Shinagawa (to the southeast).
Districts and neighborhoods
Hibusuma area
Meguro area
Politics and government
Meguro ward government is led by the city assembly with 36 elected members with current terms from May 1, 2011, to April 30, 2015. The chairman of the council is Yasuhiro Onose of the Liberal Democratic Party. The mayor is Eiji Aoki, an independent. His 6th term lasts until April 24, 2028.
Elections
Sightseeing and local landmarks
Green spaces
Cultural institutions
Religious institutions
Transportation
Rail
Highways
Education
Colleges and universities
Public schools
Metropolitan high schools are operated by the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Board of Education.
- (Kokusai means "International" in Japanese)
- Komaba High School
- Meguro High School
- Geijutsu High School (Closed in 2012)
In addition the metropolis operates a consolidated junior and senior high school in Meguro called Ã
ÂshÃ
«kan Secondary School.
Municipal elementary and junior high schools are operated by the Meguro City Board of Education.
Municipal junior high schools:
- Meguro 1st Junior High School ()
- Meguro 7th Junior High School ()
- Meguro 9th Junior High School ()
- Meguro 10th Junior High School ()
- Higashiyama Junior High School ()
- Meguro Chuo Junior High School ()
- Meguro Nishi Junior High School (ç®é»Â西ä¸Âå¦校)
- Otori Junior High School ()
Municipal elementary schools:
- Aburamen Elementary School ()
- Dendo Elementary School (ç°éÂÂå°Âå¦校)
- Fudo Elementary School ()
- Gekkohara Elementary School (æÂÂÃ¥Â
ÂÃ¥ÂÂå°Âå¦校)
- Gohongi Elementary School (äºÂæÂ¾Â¨å°Âå¦校)
- Haramachi Elementary School ()
- Higashine Elementary School ()
- Higashiyama Elementary School ()
- Ishibumi Elementary School ()
- Kamimeguro Elementary School ()
- Karasumori Elementary School (çÂÂ森å°Âå¦校)
- Komaba Elementary School ()
- Midorigaoka Elementary School (ç·Âã±ä¸Âå°Âå¦校)
- Miyamae Elementary School ()
- Mukaihara Elementary School (Ã¥ÂÂÃ¥ÂÂå°Âå¦校)
- Naka Meguro Elementary School ()
- Nakane Elementary School ()
- Ookayama Elementary School ()
- Shimomeguro Elementary School ()
- Sugekari Elementary School ()
- Takaban Elementary School ()
- Yakumo Elementary School ()
International schools
Economy
Company headquarters
International relations
Friendship cities
Diplomatic missions in Meguro
Notable people from Meguro
- Yumiko Fujita, actress
- Waka Inoue, model, actress
- Risa Tsubaki, voice actress
- Toru Iwatani, arcade game designer, most notable for Pac-Man and Pole Position
- Shigeru Izumiya, folk singer, entertainer (born in Aomori, Aomori, but raised in Meguro)
- Masako, Empress of Japan (born in Toranomon, but raised in Meguro)
- Yukio Sakaguchi, mixed martial arts fighter and professional wrestler
Notable residents
- Takuya Kimura, singer and actor in male idol group SMAP
- Shizuka Kudo, popular singer and wife of Takuya Kimura (Originally from Hamura, Tokyo)
- Keisuke Kuwata, singer with Southern All Stars (Originally from Chigasaki, Kanagawa)
- Nobuyo Ã
Âyama, voices the anime character Doraemon (Originally from Shibuya, Tokyo)
- Miyu Uehara, gravure idol, found dead in her Meguro apartment (Originally from Tanegashima, Kagoshima)
- Halca & Yucali of the hip-hop duo Halcali
- Shori Sato, singer and actor in male idol group Sexy Zone
- Suehiro Maruo, Manga artist, one of the best-known exponents of Ero Guro (Originally from Nagasaki, Nagasaki)
Notes
References
External links