Share to:

 

List of records of Japan

List of records of Japan is an annotated list of Japanese records organised by category.

Geography

Political entities

  • The largest prefecture-level entity: Hokkaidō, 83,455 km².
  • The smallest prefecture-level entity: Kagawa, 1,862 km².
  • The largest municipality: Takayama City, Gifu, 2,179 km². (Larger than Kagawa or Osaka.)
  • The largest ward: Aoi Ward, Shizuoka City, Shizuoka, 1,073 km².
  • The smallest municipality: Funahashi Village, Toyama, 3.5 km².
  • Prefecture-level entity with the largest population: Tokyo, 12,678,395 residents.
  • Prefecture-level entity with the smallest population: Tottori, 607,046 residents.
  • Municipality with the largest population: Yokohama City, Kanagawa, 3,607,125 residents.
    • Tokyo proper consists of the 23 special districts.
  • Town with the largest population: Miyoshi, Aichi, 55,570 residents.
  • Village with the largest population: Takizawa, Iwate, 53,523 residents.
  • Municipality with the least population: Aogashima Village, Tokyo, 192 residents.
    • Municipality with the least population, excluding those in remote islands: Ōkawa Village, Kōchi. 527 residents.
  • City with the least population: Utashinai, Hokkaidō, 5,170 residents.
  • Town with the least population: Hayakawa, Yamanashi, 1,479 residents.
  • Municipality with the highest population density: Warabi, Saitama. (Also geographically the smallest city.) 13,744 residents per km².
  • Municipality with the lowest population density: Hinoemata, Fukushima, 1.6 residents per km².
  • Prefecture-level entity with the most municipalities: Hokkaidō, 180 municipalities. (Excluding those in the Northern Territories.)
  • Prefecture-level entity with the fewest municipalities: Toyama, 15 municipalities.
  • Prefecture-level entity with the most cities: Saitama, 40 cities.
  • Prefecture-level entity with the fewest cities: Tottori, 4 cities.
  • Prefecture-level entity with the most road bridges: Hokkaidō, 11,770 bridges.
  • Prefecture-level entity with the most road tunnels: Ōita, 488 tunnels.
  • Municipality with the longest name:

Buildings

Hakogi Family House, the residence built in 806

Transportation

Aviation

Rail transportation

Road

The "full view" of National Route 174, the shortest highway
  • The longest expressway: Tōhoku Expressway, 679.5 km.
  • The longest national highway: Route 4, 743.7 km.
    • The longest national highway, in the official count: Route 58, 857.6 km. (Only 255.5 km is on land.)
  • The shortest national highway: Route 174, 187m.
  • The shortest prefectural road: Hiroshima Prefectural Route 204, length 7m. (Width 14m.)
  • The widest road: Ōsaka Chūō Loop Line, 122m at its widest point.
  • The longest road tunnel: Kanetsu Tunnel, 11,055m.
  • The longest road bridge: Tokyo Bay Aqua-Line, Tokyo Bay Aqua-Bridge, 4424m.
  • The longest suspension bridge in the world: Akashi Kaikyō Bridge, 1,991m.
  • Road with the highest altitude: Hida Nokkoshi mountain path, Gifu and Nagano, 3,020m.
    • Road with the highest altitude, accessible by normal vehicles: Ōdarumi Path, Nagano and Yamanashi, 2,360m.
  • Road with the lowest altitude: Tokyo Bay Aqua-Line, Tokyo Bay Aqua-Tunnel, -60m.

Bus

Magarikane-Shizuoka-Shikakutokubetsushien-Gakko-Shizutetsufudosan-Shizuokaminamiten-Mae
  • Bus operator with the most buses: Nishi-Nippon Railroad, approx. 2,000 buses. (2,900 buses by the entire group.)
  • Bus operator with the least buses: Onigashima Kankō Jidōsha in Megijima Island, Kagawa, 2 buses.
  • Bus line with the longest distance: Hakata-gō, from Shinjuku, Tokyo to Fukuoka, Fukuoka. Approx. 1,150 km, for 14 hours and 20 minutes.
  • Bus stop with the longest name: Magarikane-Shizuoka-Shikakutokubetsushien-Gakko-Shizutetsufudosan-Shizuokaminamiten-Mae (曲金静岡視覚特別支援学校静鉄不動産静岡南店前, "Magarikane, Shizuoka Special Needs Education School for the Visually Impaired, Shizutetsu Real Estate Shizuoka-Minami Shop"), Shizutetsu-Justline, Suruga-ku, Shizuoka-city, Shizuoka.

Literature

Entertainment

  • Highest selling music act and band: B'z. More than 82 million records. (according to Oricon)
  • Highest selling solo artist: Ayumi Hamasaki. More than 50 million records.[4] (according to Oricon)
  • Biggest selling single: Subete No Hito No Kokoro Ni Hana Wo by Shoukichi Kina. More than 30 million.[5]
  • Best-selling album: First Love by Hikaru Utada.
  • Best-selling album by a male solo artist: Love by Ryuichi Kawamura[6]
  • Most Number 1 recorded hits by a band (singles, albums, DVD/VHS): B'z, Singles: 49, Albums: 25, EPs: 3, DVD/VHS: 12
  • Most Number 1 recorded hits by a solo artist (singles, albums, DVD): Ayumi Hamasaki, Singles: 41, Albums: 16, DVD: 10
  • First artist to top all three Oricon Charts (Singles, albums, DVDs) in the same week: Ayumi Hamasaki
  • Musician who dominated Oricon Top 100 chart with multiple songs in the same week: Southern All Stars, 44 songs.
  • Musician who dominated Oricon Top 10 chart with multiple songs in the same week: B'z, 9 songs.
  • Only person with a number one album for 13 consecutive years: Ayumi Hamasaki.[4]
  • Single which took the longest time to become Oricon No.1: Katte ni Sinbad by Southern All Stars, released on June 25, 1978, Oricon No.1 in July 2003.
  • Musician with the most songs played in a single live performance: Ichirō Mizuki, 1,000 songs, sung for 24 hours.
  • Largest-ticketed concert ever held by a single act: Glay Expo'99 Survival, by the band Glay, 200,000 people.[7][8]
  • Biggest selling video game software: Super Mario Bros., 6,810,000 copies domestically.
  • The longest-running television program: Kyō no Dekigoto ("Today's News"), Nippon Television, from 1954 to 2006.
  • The most-watched television program: Boxing Fly Weight World Match, Yoshio Shirai versus Pascual Perez, 1954, 96.1% according to Dentsu.
  • The highest-grossing film: Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba the Movie: Mugen Train, ¥38,78 billion (ongoing).[9]
  • Movie series with the most installments in the world: Otoko wa Tsurai yo series.
  • Movies with the largest credited cast in the world: Kamen Rider 555: Paradise Lost, 4070 members.
  • Pop group with the most members: AKB48, a total of 90 members

Others

Jōmon Sugi, the oldest living being in Japan
Nintokuryō Tomb is the largest tomb in the world.
  • The oldest living being naturally grown: Jōmon Sugi, the cryptomeria tree in Yakushima Island, Kagoshima, more than 2,170 to 7,200 years old.
  • The oldest living being deemed planted by human: Sugi no Osugi, the cryptomeria tree in Otoyo, Kochi with an estimated age of about 3,000 years.
  • The oldest hotel in the world: Hōshi, Komatsu, Ishikawa, opened in 718.
  • The largest tomb in the world: Nintokuryō Tomb, Sakai, Ōsaka, 46ha. See Daisen Kofun, as this is the official name of the complex of tombs considered the burial place of Emperor Nintoku (Kofun is Japanese for this type of burial mound).
  • The tallest statue: Ushiku Daibutsu, Ushiku, Ibaraki, 120m.
  • The largest screen in the world: Turf Vision of Tokyo Racecourse, Fuchū, Tokyo, 11.2x66.4m, 743.68m2.
  • The shortest festival: Enrei-no-Onodachi Memorial Festival, Okaya, Nagano. It takes approx. 5 seconds to complete the festival.
  • The company with the longest history in the world: Kongō Gumi, from 578 till 2006.
  • The oldest political party still active: Japanese Communist Party, from 1922. The only surviving Japanese political party from the pre-war times.
  • The fastest battery electric vehicle in the world: Eliica, 370 km/h.
  • Best selling motorcycle in the world: Honda Super Cub, more than 50 million.
  • The shortest escalator in the world: the one in Okadaya More-s, Kawasaki, Kanagawa, 5 seconds a ride.[10]
  • Theme park with the 3rd most visitors in the world: Tokyo Disneyland, Urayasu, Chiba.
  • Roller coaster with the longest track in the world: Steel Dragon 2000, Nagashima Spa Land, Kuwana, Mie.
  • Roller coaster with the most inversions in the world: Ējanaika, Fuji-Q Highland, Fujiyoshida, Yamanashi.
  • The most expensive coin regularly used in the world: 500 yen coin.
  • The most complex character in the world: 龘. Taito is a rare 84 stroke character, made of two kanji ("cloud" (雲) and "dragon" (龘)) repeated three times each. It means "the appearance of a dragon in flight". It has also been pronounced daito (だいと) and otodo (おとど).
  • Law with the longest name: 平成十三年九月十一日のアメリカ合衆国において発生したテロリストによる攻撃等に対応して行われる国際連合憲章の目的達成のための諸外国の活動に対して我が国が実施する措置及び関連する国際連合決議等に基づく人道的措置に関する特別措置法, roughly meaning "Special measures law concerning the measures which our nation will enforce for the activities that foreign nations take to accomplish the objective of the charter of the United Nations corresponding the attacks by terrorists occurred on September 11, Heisei 13, on the United States of America, as well as the humanitarian measures based on the related decisions of the United Nations and other factors". Usually called テロ対策特別措置法 (special anti-terrorism law).
  • The longest song: Ishizaka Masao Hitori Tabi-shite — Zenkoku Waga-machi Ondo ("Ishizaka Masao Travelling Alone — All Japan 'Our Towns' Ondo"), 3355 chorus in total.
  • The shortest Citizen's Charter: 和 (Wa, "Harmony"), Katano, Ōsaka.
  • The longest address: Ōaza Tobishimashinden Aza Takenogō Yotare Minaminowari, Tobishima Village, Ama District, Aichi Prefecture. (愛知県海部郡飛島村大字飛島新田字竹之郷ヨタレ南ノ割)
  • The shortest address: Ro 1, Asahi City, Chiba Prefecture. (千葉県旭市ロ1番地)
  • The shortest place name: O (績), Omi, Nagano.

References

  1. ^ Mateo, Alex (February 3, 2021). "One Piece Manga Has Over 480 Million Copies in Circulation Worldwide". Anime News Network. Anime News Network. Archived from the original on February 3, 2021. Retrieved March 26, 2017.
  2. ^ "Kochikame Earns Guinness World Record For Most Volumes Published For Single Manga Series". Anime News Network. September 11, 2016. Retrieved January 18, 2017.
  3. ^ "Most strips published for the same yonkoma manga series". Guinness World Records. Retrieved 2021-03-26.
  4. ^ a b "Total sales for Hamasaki Ayumi's singles & albums reach 50 million mark".
  5. ^ 喜納昌吉&チャンプルーズWEBSITE Archived May 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ 平井堅、男性ソロ史上3人目の快挙!べスト盤が200万枚突破! (in Japanese). Oricon. 2006-04-10. Retrieved 2011-05-08.
  7. ^ "10年ぶりの『GLAY EXPO』をWOWOWで独占生中継!". Oricon (in Japanese). Retrieved 2016-12-08.
  8. ^ "GLAY、デビュー15周年の"特別な1年"の内容とは?" (in Japanese). Barks. 2009-01-05. Retrieved 2009-01-06.
  9. ^ "歴代ランキング - CINEMAランキング通信". www.kogyotsushin.com. Retrieved 2021-03-26.
  10. ^ "川崎モアーズ".
Kembali kehalaman sebelumnya