was a district located in Rikuzen Province (formerly in the central part of Mutsu Province) in Miyagi Prefecture.
History
From Ancient Establishment to Pre-modern Alignment (7C - 19C)
Many kofuns had been built in the area of the future Natori district since the 5th century. Especially Raijinyama Kofun was the largest in the TÃ
Âhoku region of Honshu.
The district was founded in the 7th century. KÃ
Âriyama Site had been the capital of Mutsu province since the end of the 7th century until 724.
Natori Dan (Natori Battalion) had been long maintained as one of two, six or seven battalions of the province.
HeijÃ
Â-kyÃ
 excavation team discovered a wood tag attaching kombu (sea grass) tribute in 729 from "Natori district of Mutsu province" to the palace. And although date and year are unknown, a word Notori was written on a cup excavated at the KÃ
Âriyama Site. The first appearance in reliable literature is in Shoku Nihongi when Kimikobe Okina, a person of Natori District, was permitted to change his family name (kabane) in 769.
Northern border with Miyagi District changed several times. Originally Natori River and its branch Hirose River were the border of their east side. Sendai Domain fixed the district borders in the end of the 16th century or the beginning of the 17th century. Then the boundary around Sendai are changed to Tatsunokuchi River, where is a small branch of the Hirose. This arrangement gave the Sendai Castle to the Miyagi district. Natori district was divided to 61 villages. The Nagamachi office (Nagamachi daikansho) administrated 31 villages of Northern (Kitakata, Ã¥ÂÂæÂ¹) Natori and the Masuda office did 30 villages of Southern (Minamikata, Ã¥ÂÂæÂ¹) Natori.
Start of the Municipal Law System (1886)
When Municipal Law was enforced to Natori on April 1 of 1889, 1 town and 14 villages' municipalities were established from 61 old villages.
- The town of Iwanuma (岩沼) from Iwanuma-HongÃ
Â(岩沼æÂŽÂ·).
- The village of Masuda (å¢Âç°) from Masuda, TakÃ
 (ç°é«Â), Tekurada (æÂÂÃ¥ÂÂç°) and ä¸Âä½Âç° (Shimo-yÃ
Âden).
- The village of Mogasaki (èÂÂã¶å´Â) from Nagamachi (é·çº) and KÃ
Âriyama (é¡山).
- The village of RokugÃ
 (Ã¥Â
Âé·) from Iida (飯ç°), Imaizumi (ä»Âæ³Â), Okino (æ²ÂéÂÂ), Tanetsugi (種次), Nippe (æÂ¥è¾º), Futagi (äºÂæÂ¨), Ido-hama (äºÂæÂ¸æµÂ) and Fujizuka-hama (è¤å¡ÂæµÂ).
- The village of Higashi-taga (æÂ±å¤Âè³Â) from Yuriage (éÂÂä¸Â), Ushino (çÂÂéÂÂ),Ã
 magari (大æÂ²), Kotsukahara (å°Âå¡ÂÃ¥ÂÂ), Takayanagi (é«ÂæÂ³).
- The village of Shimo-masuda (ä¸Âå¢Âç°) from Shimo-masuda and Sugigafukuro (æÂÂã¶è¢Â).
- The village of Tatekoshi (館èÂ
°) from Uematsu (æ¤ÂæÂ¾), Iinozaka (飯éÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ), Horiuchi (å ÂÃ¥ÂÂ
) and HongÃ
 (æÂŽÂ·).
- The village of Tamaura (çÂÂ浦) from ShimonogÃ
 (ä¸ÂéÂÂé·), Oshiwake (æÂ¼åÂÂ), Hayamata (æÂ©è¡) and Terashima (寺島).
- The village of Sengan (Ã¥ÂÂ貫) from Kita-hase (Ã¥ÂÂé·谷), Minami-hase (Ã¥ÂÂé·谷), Ogawa (å°Âå·Â), Shiga (å¿Âè³Â), Nagaoka (é·岡) and Miiroyoshi (ä¸Âè²åÂÂ).
- The village of Medeshima (æÂÂå³¶) from Kitame (Ã¥ÂÂç®), Shiote (å¡©æÂÂ), Kasashima (笠島) and Azukishima (å°Âè±Âå³¶).
- The village of Takadate (é«Â館) from Yoshida (Ã¥ÂÂç°), Kawakami (å·Âä¸Â) and KumanodÃ
 (çÂÂéÂÂå Â).
- The village of Nakada (ä¸Âç°) from Maeda (Ã¥ÂÂç°), ShirÃ
Âmaru (Ã¥ÂÂéÂÂ丸), Fukurohara (è¢ÂÃ¥ÂÂ) and Yanagiu (æÂ³çÂÂ).
- The village of Nishi-taga (西å¤Âè³Â) from Tomizawa (å¯Âæ²¢), Ã
Ânoda (大éÂÂç°), Kagitori (é¤åÂÂ), Tomita (å¯Âç°) and Yamada (å±±ç°).
- The village of Oide (çÂÂåº) from Moniwa (èÂÂåºÂ) and Tsubonuma (åª沼).
- The village of Akiu (ç§Âä¿Â) from Nagafukuro (éÂᏢÂ), Sakaino (å¢ÂéÂÂ), Baba (馬場), Yumoto (湯åÂ
Â) and Nikkawa (æÂ°å·Â).
Merging History to Dissolve (1886 - 1988)
Japanese district exclude city status municipality. So the Natori district had gradually diminished with incorporation or promotion of its municipalities to cities . Finally the original area had been divided to three cities of Sendai, Natori and Iwanuma by 1988.
- June 30, 1896 The village of Masuda gained town status. (2 towns and 13 villages)
- February 1, 1915 The village of Mogasaki gained town status and renamed to Nagamachi (é·çº). (3 towns and 12 village)
- April 1, 1928 The town of Nagamachi merged into the city of Sendai. The village of Higashi-taga gained town status and renamed to the town of Yuriage. (3 towns, 11 villages)
- October 1, 1932 The village of Nishi-taga merged into the city of Sendai. (3 towns, 10 villages)
- September 15, 1941 the villages of Nakada and Rokugo merged into the city of Sendai. (3 towns and 8 villages)
- April 1, 1955
- The towns of Masuda and Yuriage, and the villages of Shimomasuda, Tatekoshi, Takadate, and Aishiwa merged to form the town of Natori. (2 towns, 4 villages)
- The town of Iwanuma and the villages of Sengan(Ã¥ÂÂ貫æÂÂ), and Tamaura(çÂÂ浦æÂÂ) merged to become the town of Iwanuma.(2 towns, 2 villages)
- Nikkawa, a part of the village of Akiu merged into the village of Miyagi.
- April 1, 1956 The village of Oide merged into the city of Sendai. (2 towns and 1 village)
- 1958 The town of Natori granted city status to become the city of Natori.(1 town, 1 village)
- April 1, 1967 The village of Akiu granted town status to become the town of Akiu.(2 towns)
- 1971 The town of Iwanuma granted city status to become the city of Iwanuma.(1 town)
- March 1, 1988 The town of Akiu merged into the city of Sendai and Natori District dissolved.
Table of Merging
See also
References
Bibliography
- Aoki Kazuo (éÂÂæÂ¨åÂÂ夫), Inaoka Koji (稲岡èÂÂäºÂ), Sasayama Haruo (笹山æÂ´çÂÂ) and Shirafuji Noriyuki (ç½è¤禮幸) edits, Shoku Nihongi (ç¶ÂæÂ¥æÂ¬ç´Â) 4, Shin Nihon Koten Bungaku Taikei, (æÂ°æÂ¥æÂŒÂ¤åÂ
¸æÂÂå¦大系 New Japan Classic Literature), Iwanami Shoten (岩波æÂ¸åºÂ), 1995.
- Natori-shishi Hensan Iinkai (Ã¥ÂÂÃ¥ÂÂå¸Âå²編çºÂå§Âå¡ä¼Â, Editing Committee of Natori City History), Natori Shishi (Ã¥ÂÂÃ¥ÂÂå¸Âå², Nator City History), Natori City, 1977.
- Nagashima Eiichi (é·島榮ä¸Â), Koriyama Iseki (é¡山éº跡, Koriyama Site), Nihon no Iseki 35 (æÂ¥æÂ‹Â®éº跡35, Sites of Japan 35), Doseisha (Ã¥ÂÂæÂÂ社), 2009.
- Baba "Mutsu-koku Nifuda no `Hakken'" (é¸奥å½è·æÂÂã®ãÂÂçºè¦ÂãÂÂDiscaver of a sendng plate of Mustu Province)ãÂÂ, Nara Bunkazai Kenkyusho Kiyo (å¥Âè¯æÂÂÃ¥ÂÂ財ç Âç©¶æÂÂç´Âè¦Â). 2004å¹´.
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