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The village was designed as a model for Japanese settlers to practice scientific agriculture. Settlers were distributed land through a lottery system, creating a structured but often isolated community.

Research Paper Draft: The Socio-Political Evolution of Yoshino-mura

Whether representing a sacred mountain refuge or a colonial agricultural experiment, the name Yoshino-mura reflects Japan's expansionist and cultural narratives throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Digital archives labeled yosino_Mura.7z often contain the genealogy, land maps, and administrative logs necessary to reconstruct these historical transitions.

Villages named Yoshino-mura also existed in other prefectures, such as Kumamoto and Fukui. Most have since been merged into modern municipal structures like Yoshino-cho in Nara or larger city wards.

Following the Pacific War, many Japanese villages (muras) were amalgamated into larger towns (chos) or cities (shis).

In the early 20th century, the Japanese government established "Yoshino-mura" in Hualien, Taiwan, as its first official overseas immigrant village.

The name "Yoshino-mura" appears across several historical contexts, ranging from the sacred cherry-blossom mountains of Nara Prefecture to government-managed immigrant villages in colonial Taiwan. This paper examines the evolution of Yoshino-mura as both a localized Japanese administrative unit and a model for agricultural colonization, analyzing how these disparate locations share a common thread of Japanese cultural identity and land management. 1. The Domestic Core: Yoshino-mura, Nara

From Sacred Highlands to Colonial Frontiers: A Multi-Regional Study of Yoshino-mura

File: Yosino_mura.7z ... File

The village was designed as a model for Japanese settlers to practice scientific agriculture. Settlers were distributed land through a lottery system, creating a structured but often isolated community.

Research Paper Draft: The Socio-Political Evolution of Yoshino-mura

Whether representing a sacred mountain refuge or a colonial agricultural experiment, the name Yoshino-mura reflects Japan's expansionist and cultural narratives throughout the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Digital archives labeled yosino_Mura.7z often contain the genealogy, land maps, and administrative logs necessary to reconstruct these historical transitions. File: yosino_Mura.7z ...

Villages named Yoshino-mura also existed in other prefectures, such as Kumamoto and Fukui. Most have since been merged into modern municipal structures like Yoshino-cho in Nara or larger city wards.

Following the Pacific War, many Japanese villages (muras) were amalgamated into larger towns (chos) or cities (shis). The village was designed as a model for

In the early 20th century, the Japanese government established "Yoshino-mura" in Hualien, Taiwan, as its first official overseas immigrant village.

The name "Yoshino-mura" appears across several historical contexts, ranging from the sacred cherry-blossom mountains of Nara Prefecture to government-managed immigrant villages in colonial Taiwan. This paper examines the evolution of Yoshino-mura as both a localized Japanese administrative unit and a model for agricultural colonization, analyzing how these disparate locations share a common thread of Japanese cultural identity and land management. 1. The Domestic Core: Yoshino-mura, Nara Digital archives labeled yosino_Mura

From Sacred Highlands to Colonial Frontiers: A Multi-Regional Study of Yoshino-mura