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Hokkaido Prefecture had 14 branch offices called 支庁 (shichō) in Japanese, which is often translated in English as subprefectures. Normally, a subprefecture consists of a few to a dozen cities, towns, and/or villages. From April 2010, Hokkaido has nine General Subprefecture Bureaus (総合振興局, sōgō-shinkō-kyoku, literally "Comprehensive Promotion Bureau") and five Subprefecture Bureaus (振興局, shinkō-kyoku, literally "Promotion Bureau")).

For historical reasons, some older people in Hokkaido use the subprefecture name suffixed by -kannai in their address.

HistoryEdit

1897 Nineteen shichō were placed under Hokkaido Agency (an agency of the national government): Sapporo, Hakodate, Kameda, Matsumae, Hiyama, Suttsu, Iwanai, Otaru, Sorachi, Kamikawa, Mashike, Souya, Abashiri, Muroran, Urakawa, Kushiro, Kasai, Nemuro, and Shana.
1899 Sapporo-ku, Hakodate-ku, and Otaru-ku were established as municipalities independent of shichō. Sapporo-shichō and Otaru-shichō were continued with remaining area, but Hakodate-shichō was dissolved. Previous Kameda-shichō was renamed Hakodate-shichō.
1903 Matsumae-shichō was merged with Hakodate-shichō. Shana-shichō was merged with Nemuro-shichō.
1910 Suttsu-shichō, Iwanai-shichō, and Otaru-shichō were merged to form Shiribeshi-shichō.
1914 Asahikawa-ku was established as a municipality independent of Kamikawa-shichō. Mashike-shichō was renamed as Rumoi-shichō.
1918 Muroran-ku was established as a municipality independent of Muroran-shichō.
1920 Kushiro-ku was established as a municipality independent of Kushiro-shichō.
1922 The six ku were restated as shi (cities). Sapporo-shichō was renamed Ishikari-shichō. Hakodate-shichō was renamed Oshima-shichō. Muroran-shichō was renamed Iburi-shichō.
1932 Urakawa-shichō was renamed Hidaka-shichō. Kasai-shichō was renamed Tokachi-shichō.
1947 Hokkaido Agency was abolished and Hokkaido Prefecture was established. Hokkaido Prefecture took over shichō.

List of subprefecturesEdit

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Subprefecture Japanese Capital Largest municipality Pop.
(2009)
Area
(km2)
Pop. Density Municipalities
Cities Towns Villages
1 Sorachi lang}} Iwamizawa Iwamizawa 338,485 5,791.19 58.45 10 14 0
a Ishikari lang}} Sapporo Sapporo 2,324,878 3,539.86 656.77 6 1 1
2 Shiribeshi lang}} Kutchan Otaru 234,984 4,305.83 54.57 1 13 6
3 Iburi lang}} Muroran Tomakomai 419,115 3,698.00 113.34 4 7 0
b Hidaka lang}} Urakawa Shinhidaka 76,084 4,811.97 15.81 0 7 0
4 Oshima lang}} Hakodate Hakodate 433,475 3,936.46 110.12 2 9 0
c Hiyama lang}} Esashi Setana 43,210 2,629.94 16.43 0 7 0
5 Kamikawa lang}} Asahikawa Asahikawa 527,575 10,619.20 49.68 4 17 2
d Rumoi lang}} Rumoi Rumoi 53,916 3,445.75 15.65 1 6 1
6 Sōya lang}} Wakkanai Wakkanai 71,423 4,625.09 15.44 1 8 1
7 Okhotsk lang}} Abashiri Kitami 309,487 10,690.62 28.95 3 14 1
8 Tokachi lang}} Obihiro Obihiro 353,291 10,831.24 32.62 1 16 2
9 Kushiro lang}} Kushiro Kushiro 252,571 5,997.38 42.11 1 6 1
e Nemuro lang}} Nemuro Nemuro 84,035 3,406.23 24.67 1 4 check|unknown=|preview=Page using Template:Center with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y| 1 | style }}
* Japan claims the southern part of Kuril Islands (Northern Territories), currently administered by Russia,
belong to Nemuro Subprefecture divided into six villages. However, the table above excludes these islands' data.

ReorganisationEdit

The prefectural government of Hokkaido planned to reorganise the current fourteen subprefectures into nine sub-prefectural bureaus. Five subprefectures, namely Hidaka, Hiyama, Ishikari, Nemuro, and Rumoi were subject to be cut down. The capital municipalities of these subprefectures opposed the plan, but on June 28, 2008, the prefectural council passed the ordinance of the reorganization.<ref>Template:In lang 釧路支庁が道東総合振興局に、道の支庁改革条例成立 (Kushiro Subprefecture will be Dōtō General Development Bureau, the ordinance for the sub-prefectural reformation is passed), by Kushiro Shinbun, June 29, 2008</ref> The change should have taken effect in April 2009.

However, it was impossible to make the reform on time. The Public Offices Election Act and the Election Law were not amended on April 1, 2009, but the amendment the Public Offices Election Act was passed in the prefectural assembly on March 31, 2009, and took effect from April 1, 2010.

List of subprefecture bureausEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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