http://www.kyoto-u.ac.jp/notice/05_jim/logo/images/70.gif

14th International Conference

of Historical Geographers

23–27 August 2009, Kyoto, Japan

 

Programme

Last revised on 2 September 2009

 

[Session Titles and Chairs]  [Presentation Guide]  [Location Map]

 

Conference: 23–27 August 2009

 

23 Aug (Sun)

24 Aug (Mon)

25 Aug (Tue)

26 Aug (Wed)

27 Aug (Thu)

9:10

–10:40

 

Paper Session 1

Full-day Field Trip

 

Departure at 8:30

 

A: Kobe

B: Kyoto

C: Nara

D: Lake Biwa

Paper Session 5

Paper Session 9

 

coffee break

coffee break

coffee break

11:00

–12:30

Paper Session 2

Paper Session 6

Paper Session 10

 

13:20-

13:50

*Registration Desk

opens at 13:00

Poster Session
*first presentation time

Poster Session

*second presentation time

14:00

–15:30

Opening Session

Paper Session 3

Paper Session 7

Business Meeting

 

coffee break

coffee break

 

15:50

–17:20

A Short Museum Tour

Paper Sessions 4

Paper Sessions 8

 

 

 

 

 

18:00–

 

Icebreaker

 

Conference Dinner

 

 

Post-conference field trip: 28–30 August 2009

Central Mountainous Japan: Traditional Village Life in World Heritage Houses

 

 

The Opening Session and registration desk (23 Aug) will be at Centennial Hall, Clock Tower (not in the Graduate School of Letters). Paper sessions, the business meeting, and registration desk (24, 26, 27 Aug) will be in the main building of the Graduate School of Letters. The icebreaker (23 Aug) will be held at Yamauchi Hall, Shiran Kaikan. The conference dinner (26 Aug) is at International Conference Hall, Clock Tower. Departure of all field trips is at 8:30 at the main gate of Yoshida Campus, Kyoto University. (location map)

 

 

 

 

Paper Sessions

Special Session    *Chair

 

Room 1

Room 2

Room 3

Room 4

Room 5

Room 6

Room 7

Room 8

24th August (Mon)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Session 1

Migrants & Community

*Tachibana S.

Poster Session Room opens at 8:30

Environmental Change I

*P. Brown

Rural Landscape I

*Noma H.

Territory & Identity I

*D. Harvey

Urban & Culture I

*Mizuuchi T.

Knowledge & Representation I

*M. Harrison

Progress in the Empire I

*M. S. Kumar

Session 2

Demographic Transition

*Kawaguchi H.

 

Environmental Change II

*A. J. Amato

Rural Landscape II

*D. Niles

Territory & Identity II

*Mori M.

Urban & Culture II

*G. Kritikos

Indigenous

*Koyama S.

Progress in the Empire II

*S. A. Royle

Poster Session

 

Poster Session

first presentation time

 

 

 

 

 

 

Session 3

Migration Policy

*Y. Katz

 

Environmental Change III

*V. van Eetvelde

The Construction and Circulation of Geographical Knowledgec

*R. Butlin

Industry & Shopping

Cancelled

Gentrification & Migration

*C. Montès

Conservation & Heritage I

*D. Wood

Survey & Imperialism I

*G. M. Winder

Session 4

Colonization I

*R. Kark

 

Environmental Change IV

*J. Radkau

 

Local Food and Economy

*RII H.U.

Environmental Urban

*P. Chromý

Cartography & Knowledge I

*LI Xiaocong

Survey & Imperialism II

*S. J. Hornsby

26th August (Wed)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Session 5

Health & Disease I

*J. M. Shumway

 

Digital Humanities & Historical GIS I

*A. S. Fotheringham

Pre-modern City I

*An Jiesheng

 

Techniques & Theory

*F. Driver

Leisure & Tourism I

*J. C. Lehr

Survey & Imperialism III

*Oda M.

Session 6

Health & Disease II

*A. R. H. Baker

 

Digital Humanities & Historical GIS II

*P. Gammeltoft

Pre-modern City II

*I. G. Konovalova

 

Memory & Record

*I. Thomas

Environmental Change V

*A. Dix

Cartography & Knowledge II

*Yang Bokyung

Poster Session

 

Poster Session

second presentation time

 

 

 

 

 

 

Session 7

Colonization II

*G. Wynn

 

Digital Humanities & Historical GIS III

*P. Dam

Modern City I

*A. Harris

 

Conservation & Heritage II

*Que Weimin

Environmental Change VI

*Kobayashi S.

Knowledge & Representation II

*M. Jones

Session 8

Colonization III moves to Room 8

Poster Session Room will close at 16:00

Digital Humanities & Historical GIS IV

*Yano K.

Modern City II

*A. Golan

 

Conservation & Heritage III

*Fujita Y.

 

Industrialization

*M. Purvis

Colonization III

*J. H. Galloway

27th August (Thu)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Session 9

Colonization IV

*M. Heffernan

Leisure & Tourism II

*R. Jones

Digital Humanities & Historical GIS V

*D. S. Sprague

Urban Politics

*Oshiro N.

Marketing & Utilization

*Y. Ben-Artzi

Rural Landscape III

*F. Uekoetter

Landscape History in East Asian Inland Seas I

*Uchiyama J. and K. Lindström

Cartography & Knowledge III

*K. R. Robinson

Session 10

Colonization V

*S. M. Otterstrom

Digital Humanities & Historical GIS VI

*A. L. Griffin

Capital City

*J. Lafrenz

Rural Economy

*J. Renes

Identities of the Central European Landscapes

*P. Chromý

Landscape History in East Asian Inland Seas II

*Uchiyama J. and K. Lindström

Territory & Identity III

*W. G. Lovell

 

Presentation Guide

 

Oral Presentation

Each session will last 90 minutes, including three of 25 minutes of oral presentations in general, each to be followed by 5 minutes of questions or comments.

Each room has a MS Windows (XP or VISTA) computer (MS Power Point 2007 is available) and an over-head camera. The organizing committee recommends presenters to use Power Point in your presentation. Your Power Point files have to be sent into the computer at least fifteen minutes before the beginning of your session by a USB memory stick or a CD-R. Although your laptop computer can be connected through 15-pin connecter, operation in combination with your computer, especially with Mackintosh one, is not guaranteed.

 

Poster Presentation

Presentation time is offered two times: 13:20-13:50 on 24th August (the first presentation time) and 26th August (the second presentation time).

A poster board with 900 mm in width and 2000 mm in length is provided for each presentation. Each poster has to be posted up at Room 2 between 8:30 and 12:00 on 24th August and removed by 16:00 on 26th August.

 

 

 

 

 

23rd August (Sunday)

 

 

13:00- Registration Desk Opens

At the Centennial Hall, Clock Tower, Yoshida Campus, Kyoto University (location map)

 

 

14:00-15:30 Opening Session: Landscape History of Japan (Chair: HASEGAWA Koji)

At the Centennial Hall, Clock Tower, Yoshida Campus, Kyoto University

 

YANO Keiji Ritsumeikan University, JAPAN

Virtual Kyoto: Historical Virtual Geographic Environment

KINDA Akihiro National Institutes for the Humanities, JAPAN

Characteristics of the Japanese Cultural Landscapes

[A4 PDF Circular in Japanese]

*Opening Session is an open session to the public.

 

 

15: 50-17:20 A Short Tour in the Kyoto University Museum

Special Exhibition Map Culture in Japan: Map collections of Kyoto University

[A4 PDF Circular in Japanese]

 

 

18:00- Icebreaker at Yamauchi Hall, Shiran Kaikan, Kyoto University (location map)

A welcome party supported by Journal of Historical Geography, ELSEVIER. Drinks and snacks will be served. All participants in the ICHG are welcome without any extra fee.

 

 

 

 

 

24th August (Monday)

 

9:10-10:40 Paper Session 1 (oral presentations)

*Only the first authorfs affiliation is shown. Those who have already registered are asterisked.

 

Room 1: Migrants and Community (Chair: TACHIBANA Setsu)

Maayan HESS ASHKENAZI and Yossi KATZ Bar-Ilan University, ISRAEL

The Kibbutz and Community Neighborhoods: A New Israeli Settlement Model

HOU Yangfang Fudan University, CHINA

Chinese Population Geography Information System

NAKANISHI Yuji Kwansei Gakuin University, JAPAN

Domestic Migrants from the Borderlands to Mainland Japan: Settlement Process and Native-place Associations/Networks of Amami Migrants in Osaka and Kobe Area

 

Room 3: Environmental Change I (Chair: Philip BROWN)

Veerle VAN EETVELDE and Marc ANTROP Ghent University, BELGIUM

The Landscape Atlas of Flanders (Belgium): an instrument to implement landscape heritage in integrated spatial planning policy

YE Yu and FANG XiuQi Beijing Normal University, CHINA

Spatial pattern of land cover changes across Northeastern China over the past 300 years

Hele KIIMANN Uppsala University, SWEDEN

Landscape change in relation to human activity in the Baltic Sea Region: The population and land use changes in North West Estonia from the 17th to  the 19th centuries

 

Room 4: Rural Landscape I (Chair: NOMA Haruo)

Matheaus K. KAUTI Tohoku University, JAPAN

Coping and Adaptation Processes under Economic Liberalization and Agro-ecologic Changes by Smallholders in Central Kenya

Clas TOLLIN Swedish University of Agricultural Science, SWEDEN

The Swedish Agrarian Landscape 1640. A Time Travel with Help of 12 000 Large Scale Maps

Frank UEKOETTER Research Institute of the Deutsches Museum, GERMANY

Talking Dung: The Landscapes of Organic and Mineral Fertilization

 

Room 5: Territory and Identity I (Chair: David HARVEY)

CHIUNG, Wi-vun T. National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan

Cultural/Linguistic Landscapes and Political Regimes: A Survey on the Taiwanese Places Names

OSHIRO Naoki Kobe University, JAPAN

Lost in Historicity: Identity Politics in Contemporary Okinawa

Yossi KATZ Bar-Ilan University, ISRAEL

The Jews of China and their contribution to the establishment of the Jewish National Home in Palestine in the first half of the 20th century

 

Room 6: Urban and Culture I (Chair: MIZUUCHI Toshio)

QUE Weimin Peking University, CHINA

Heritage Buildings Protection in Cicheng Historic Town — Under the Vision of Historical Geography

RII Hae Un Dongguk University, KOREA

Preservation of Historic Urban Landscape in Seoul

Alan R. H. BAKER Emmanuel College, Cambridge, UK

Conserving the historic environment of Cambridge (UK)

 

Room 7: Knowledge and Representation I (Chair: Michael HARRISON)

FUKUDA Tamami Osaka Prefecture University, JAPAN

Visualization of gHomeland (Kyodo)h through Museums: A Geographical Interpretation of Museum Theory by Gentaro Tanahashi

Nicola THOMAS University of Exeter, UK

Exploring the Historical Geographies of Arid Zone Science: W. J. Harding Kingfs Ripples, Dunes and Depressions

Eliahu STERN and Orly RECHTMAN Ben Gurion University of the Negev, ISRAEL

Visual Discrimination of Urban Historic Landscapes

 

Room 8: Special Session Progress in the Empire I (Chair: M. Satish KUMAR)

John M. HEFFRON Soka University of America, USA

Progress without Prosperity: The Imperial Ambitions of an American Anti-Modernist Class

Deepak KUMAR Jawaharlal Nehru University, INDIA

Scientific Institutions as Sites for Dissemination and Contestation: Snippets from Colonial India

Stephen A. ROYLE Queenfs University Belfast, UK

Progress in the Empire: Vancouver Island Colony

 

 

 

11:00-12:30 Paper Session 2 (oral presentations)

 

Room 1: Demographic Transition (Chair: KAWAGUCHI Hiroshi)

J. Matthew SHUMWAY Brigham Young University, USA

The Origin and Diffusion of the Second Demographic Transition in the U.S.

Ruth KARK and Seth J. FRANTZMAN Hebrew University of Jerusalem, ISRAEL

Missions, Territories and Boundaries in Japan and the Middle East: Occidental Cooperation and Competition

HANASHIMA Makoto and TOMOBE Ken'ichi Institute for Areal Studies, JAPAN

Geospatial View of the Cause-Specified Death Statistics in Modern Japan

 

Room 3: Environmental Change II (Chair: Anthony J. AMATO)

Joachim RADKAU Bielefeld University, GERMANY

In search of the origins of sustainable forestry: A comparison between German and Japanese forest history

OGURA Jun-ichi Kyoto Seika University, JAPAN

Vegetation around Kyoto, Japan, in Edo Period (1603-1867) --- Studies of Historical Pictures ---

 

Room 4: Rural Landscape II (Chair: Daniel NILES)

Franci PETEK, Mimi URBANC, Drago PERKO, and Matija ZORN Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, SLOVENIA

The Perception of Common Land in the Context of Landscape Changes

Hans ANTONSON Swedish National Road and Transport Research Institute, SWEDEN

Strip fields in the cadastral maps of the 1640fs, in the province of Hälsingland, mid Sweden using a retrogressive method

Vanja DRAGIĆEVIĆ, Uglješa STANKOV, Tamara KOVAČEVIĆ, and Nataša DRAKULIĆ University of Novi Sad, SERBIA

Farm as a Form of Settlement in Vojvodina from 18th Century to World War II

 

Room 5: Territory and Identity II (Chair: MORI Masato)

Stuart ELDEN Durham University, UK

Bartolus of Sassoferrato and the Emergence of Territorial Sovereignty

KIM Sun-Bae Korea National University of Education, KOREA

The Cultural Politics of Place Name in Korea: A Historical Geography of Territorial Identity

NAKASHIMA Koji Kanazawa University, JAPAN

The contested nature of Hijudai: peoplesf struggles for nature in the Hijudai maneuver field, Japan

 

Room 6: Urban and Culture II (Chair: Giorgos KRITIKOS)

Isabel MARCOS New University of Lisbon, PORTUGAL

The Transoceanic Urbanity. Comparative Study: Lisbon, Macau (South China) and Ouro Preto (Brazil)

C. S. Stone SHIH, CHI Cheng Liang, HUANG Yin-Ling and CHIU Yuang-ting Soochow University, Taiwan

Digitalizing Taiwanfs Misora Hibari: The Singing Queen Chi Lu-shiya and the Reconstruction of her Music and Society in 1960s

OGATA Noboru Kyoto University, JAPAN

Comparative Studies of Classical City Planning Using Satellite Images

 

Room 7: Indigenous (Chair: KOYAMA Shuzo)

Ian THOMAS University of Melbourne, AUSTRALIA

Landscape Conservation in Tasmania: Reconciling an Aboriginal past with the Australian present

ENDO Masatoshi Iwate University, JAPAN

Sustainable Blood Kin Relationships among Settlement Dwellers through Fluid Residential Groupings of the Ainu as Hunter-Gatherers in the Mitsuishi District of Hokkaido, Japan, 1856-1869

Felix DRIVER and Lowri JONES University of London, UK

The Invisible Native? Indigenous Agency in the History of Geographical Exploration

 

Room 8: Special Session Progress in the Empire II (Chair: Stephen A. ROYLE)

Michael HEFFERNAN University of Nottingham, UK

Globalising the Map: The International Map of the World, 1890-1945

M. Satish KUMAR Queenfs University Belfast, UK

Spaces of Progress in the Empire: From the Moral to the Material

 

 

 

13:20-13:50 Poster Session (the first presentation time) at Room 2

List of presentations

 

 

 

14:00-15:30 Paper Session 3 (oral presentations)

 

Room 1: Migration Policy (Chair: Yossi KATZ)

Samuel M. OTTERSTROM Brigham Young University, USA

Migration and Settlement Impacts of Mormons in Californiafs Gold Country of the 1800s

Milka BUBALO-ŽIVKOVIĆ, Andjelija IVKOV, Djerčan BOJAN, and Aleksandra DRAGIN University of Novi Sad, SERBIA

Planned colonization rate in Vojvodina in the first half of the 20th century

KAWASHIMA Kazuhito Ritsumeikan University, JAPAN

The Distribution of the Seasonal Emigrant Blacksmiths in Owari and Mikawa, Japan, c.1739-1968

 

Room 3: Environmental Change III (Chair: Veerle VAN EETVELDE)

LAN Yong and KAN Jun Southwest University, CHINA

Research on the Index of Regression of Environment during the Historical Period – As an Example Subtropical Vegetation Succession of the Mountainous of Low-Hill in the Upper Reaches of the Yangtze River China nearly 500 Years

TACHIBANA Setsu Kobe Yamate University, JAPAN

Japanese Gardens in Britain throughout 20th Century

M. SAKTHIVEL University of Madras, INDIA

Sustainable Community Based Eco-Tourism Development: An Action Research in Kodayar River Basin Western Ghats Region of Kanyakumari District, South India

 

Room 4: Special Session The Construction and Circulation of Geographical Knowledge in a Colonial Situation (Chair: Robin A. BUTLIN)

Hélène BLAIS University of Paris Ouest Nanterre la Défense, FRANCE

Spatial Practices in a Colonial Situation: The Mapping of Algeria in the 19th Century

Florence DEPREST University of Bordeaux 3, FRANCE

French Academic Geographers and Nomadic Life in Colonial Algeria (end of 19th- beginning of 20th Century)

Isabelle SURUN University of Lille 3, FRANCE

Mapping, Conquering and the Colonial Project: French Military Officers as Cartographers in West Africa at the End of the 19th Century

 

Room 5: Industry and Shopping CANCELLED

ASAI Masataka Aichi University, Japan

The Processes and the Conditions of Small Scale Electricity Enterprises in Mountain Areas, Aichi Prefecture before World War II

Martin PURVIS University of Leeds, UK  moves to Session 9 Room 5: Marketing & Utilization

Economic uncertainties and retail geographies in 1920s and 1930s Britain

Ratna SARASWATI University of Indonesia, INDONESIA

Mapping of the Shopping Pattern in Depok, Indonesia

 

Room 6: Gentrification and Migration (Chair: Christian MONTÈS)

Andrew HARRIS University College London, UK

New and Old Urban Frontiers: Gentrification in Historical Perspective

YOSHIDA Masumi Ritsumeikan University, JAPAN

Heiankyo: From the Viewpoint of Aristocrat's Migration Pathway

 

Room 7: Conservation and Heritage I (Chair: David WOOD)

SUZUKI Chihei Agency for Cultural Affairs, JAPAN

Investigation of the Conservation System of Cultural Landscape in Japan

Carl Johan SANGLERT Lund University, SWEDEN

From Real Space to Idealized Place? The Historical Geography of Modern Swedish Heritage Conservation

Johannes RENES Utrecht University, NETHERLANDS

The Eerde Estate (the Netherlands): 60 Years of Landscape Protection

 

Room 8: Survey and Imperialism I (Chair: Gordon M. WINDER)

Nevena CURCIC, Lolita ZAKIC, and Tanja ARMENSKI University of Novi Sad, SERBIA

The Contribution of Jovan Cvijicfs Research to the Balkan Peninsula Population

KOBAYASHI Shigeru, WATANABE Rie, and NARUMI Kunitada Osaka University, JAPAN

Japanese Colonial Cartography in Taiwan, Korea and Kwantung Province, 1895-1924

Olga LAVRENOVA International Centre of the Roerichs, RUSSIA

Nicolas Roerichfs Central Asian Expedition

 

 

 

15:50-17:20 Paper Session 4 (oral presentations)

 

Room 1: Colonization I (Chair: Ruth KARK)

John C. LEHR University of Winnipeg, CANADA

Migration, Social Mobility and the Life Courses of Michael and Muriel Ewanchuk: Pioneers behind the Frontier

Haim GOREN and Mitia FRUMIN Tel-Hai Academic College, ISRAEL

Roads to War: Geographical Military Reconnaissance Missions in the Middle East in the 1830's

Tiina PEIL Tallinn University, ESTONIA

Secrecy and Control: Fieldwork in the Soviet Borderzone

 

Room 3: Environmental Change IV (Chair: Joachim RADKAU)

Andreas DIX University of Bamberg, GERMANY

The Alps as a Landscape of Risk

Anthony J. AMATO Southwest Minnesota State University, USA

Busy as Bees: the Honeybee, Nature, Connection, and Movement in Historical Geography and Environmental History

 

Room 5: Local Food and Economy (Chair: RII Hae Un)

SU Heng-an National Kaohsiung Hospitality College, Taiwan

The Coincidental Taste Pairing of Gang-shan Mutton and Spicy Soy Sauce: A Regional Study on Food Culture

SHIOMI Yugo Kobe University, JAPAN

The Movement of a Major Source of Kinki Province in the National Brewers Association in the middle of Meiji Japan

 

Room 6: Environmental Urban (Chair: Pavel CHROMÝ)

YUE Yunxiao Shaanxi Normal University, CHINA

Reach the Same Goal by Different Routes? Case Study on the Relation of Historical Geography and Environmental History

Shaphan COX Curtin University of Technology, AUSTRALIA

Fremantle – eWhose City is it?f

Maoz AZARYAHU University of Haifa, ISRARL

Tel Aviv: Anniversary Celebrations of the First Hebrew City 1929-1959

 

Room 7: Cartography and Knowledge I (Chair: LI Xiaocong)

KAWANISHI Takao Kyoto University, JAPAN

Kartograph in German Regional Absolutism Era – Johann Adam Riedigerfs Life and Works –

Mirčeta VEMIĆ Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts: SERBIA

Serbs in Kosovo and Metohija in the Second Half of the 19th Century According to the Ethnic Map of a Part of Old Serbia

Kenneth R. ROBINSON International Christian University, JAPAN

Mapping Japan in Korea in the Fifteenth Century

 

Room 8: Survey and Imperialism II (Chair: Stephen J. HORNSBY)

Oliver DUNNETT University of Nottingham, UK

The British Interplanetary Society and the Conceptualisation of British Outer Space, 1930 – 1970

SHIBATA Yoichi Kyoto University, JAPAN

Takuji Ogawa's Geographical Research on China and its Influence on the Chinese Academic World: The Fragile Border between Academia and Politics

Jose VERGARA LAGUNA El Colegio de Mexico, MEXICO

Publishing for the Nation. Japanfs Geography Textbooks as a Cultural Enterprise, 1868-1924

 

 

 

 

25th August (Tuesday)

 

 

Full-day Field Trip

 

Departure: 8:30 AM at the main gate of Yoshida Campus, Kyoto University (location map)

Option A Kobe: History and Industry of the Modern Port City

Option B The Memory of Kyoto, 794-2009: Historical Landscape of the Capital

Option C Nara: The Ancient Capital toward the 1,300th Anniversary in 2010

Option D Lake Biwa: Transformation of the Cultural Landscape

Field Trips in the Second Circular

 

*Participants in the trips have to be registered in advance. All of options are fully booked up (12th August).

 

 

 

 

 

26th August (Wednesday)

 

 

9:10-10:40 Paper Session 5 (oral presentations)

 

Room 1: Health and Disease I (Chair: J. Matthew SHUMWAY)

ZHANG Peiyao, LIN Hui, and Billy K. L. SO Chinese University of Hong Kong, CHINA

Spatial Analysis of Health Cultural Transition in Republican Beijing

WATANABE Rie Tsukuba University, JAPAN

The Spatial Process of Smallpox Diffusion at a Rural District in the Early Modern Japan — A Case Study of Nakatsugawa District in the Dewa Province —

 

Room 3: Digital Humanities and Historical GIS I (Chair: A. Stewart FOTHERINGHAM)

Peder DAM University of Copenhagen, DENMARK

Mapping the Unmapped — Challenges of and Prospects in GIS-mapping of Detailed and Nationwide Historical-statistical Data

KITAMOTO Asanobu and NISHIMURA Yoko The Graduate University for Advanced Studies, JAPAN

Information Infrastructure of Beijing Historical Space - Using Google Earth and Complete Map of Peking, Qianlong Period

David S. SPRAGUE and IWASAKI Nobusuke National Institute for Agro-Environmental Sciences, JAPAN

Historical GIS Analysis of Rural Land Use Change in the Kanto Plain of Japan

 

Room 4: Pre-modern City I (Chair: AN Jiesheng)

Johnny Grandjean Gøgsig JAKOBSEN Roskilde University, DENMARK

Mapping Mendicant Monasteries in Medieval Urban Geography

MINAMIDE Shinsuke Otemon Gakuin University, JAPAN

The Spatial Structure of the Port of Malacca in the Fifteenth Century and its Changes under European Sovereignties

 

Room 6: Techniques and Theory (Chair: Felix DRIVER)

J. Sophie VISSER University Utrecht, NETHERLANDS

Back to Basics - Cultural Landscape Analysis from an Information & Perception Perspective

John WYLIE University of Exeter, UK

Writing Place, Memory and Self: W.G. Sebald and the Practice of Historical Geography

Anita ZARIŅA University of Latvia, LATVIA

Historical Contingency and the Path Dependence in Landscape Studies

 

Room 7: Leisure and Tourism I (Chair: John C. LEHR)

ISHIKAWA Nao Hiroshima University Museum, JAPAN

Characters and Significances of Bullfighting in Japan

Michael HARRISON Birmingham City University, UK

Open-air Museums of Buildings, with Special Reference to Japan

H. John SELWOOD and Roy JONES University of Winnipeg, CANADA

From 'Shackies' to Silver Nomads. Coastal Recreation and Coastal Heritage in Western Australia

 

Room 8: Survey and Imperialism III (Chair: ODA Masayasu)

W. George LOVELL Queenfs University, CANADA

Between the Two Seas: Antonio de Herrera and the Mapping of Central America

Stephen J. HORNSBY University of Maine, USA

Surveyors of Empire: Samuel Holland, J.F.W. Des Barres, and the Making of the Atlantic Neptune

FUJITA Yoshihisa Aichi University, JAPAN

The Development of Toa-Dobun-Shoin College at Shanghai from 1901 to 1945, and their Great Trips for Regional Researches on China

 

 

 

11:00-12:30 Paper Session 6 (oral presentations)

 

Room 1: Health and Disease II (Chair: Alan R. H. BAKER)

Branislav S. DJURDJEV, Tamara KOVAČEVIĆ, and Milan CVETANOVIC University of Novi Sad, SERBIA

Household Composition and Well Being of Rural Serbia in the Second Part of XIX Century

MURAYAMA Satoshi and HIGASHI Noboru Kagawa University, JAPAN

Smallpox and Quarantine Policy in 18th and 19th Century Amakusa Islands, Kyusyu, Japan. A Geographical Analysis

Michael SUTTON Ritsumeikan University, JAPAN

Before Low Fertility: The Quiet Revolution in Japanese Demography (1948-1973)

 

Room 3: Digital Humanities and Historical GIS II (Chair: Peder GAMMELTOFT)

Amy L. GRIFFIN, Andrew ROSS and Bob HALL University of New South Wales-ADFA, AUSTRALIA

Using GIS to Identify Errors in an Historical Database

Andreas KUNZ Institute of European History, GERMANY

Towards a GIS-based Historical Information System on the Nations and States of Europe

 

Room 4: Pre-modern City II (Chair: Irina G. KONOVALOVA)

Jürgen LAFRENZ Universität Hamburg, GERMANY

The Metrological Analysis of Town-Plans of Early Modern Times

SHI Hongshuai Shaanxi Normal University, CHINA

Research on the Urban Landscape of Xifan Recorded by Westerners in Late Qing Dynasty — Mainly Based on English Literatures

YAMAMURA Aki Aichi Prefectural University, JAPAN

The Re-Making of Urban Landscape in Early-Modern Japan

 

Room 6: Memory and Record (Chair: Ian THOMAS)

Natalia APONIUK and John C. LEHR University of Manitoba, CANADA

Contested Memory: The Commemoration of the Past in Western Ukraine

David HARVEY University of Exeter, UK

Small Stories and Relational Experiences: Oral History and the Complication of Historical Landscape Knowledge

James A. DAVIS Brigham Young University, USA

Invisible Heritage: The Case of Japanese-American Internment Camps

 

Room 7: Environmental Change V (Chair: Andreas DIX)

Matija ZORN, Blaž KOMAC, and Mimi URBANC Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, SLOVENIA

Historical Cartographic Sources as a Key for Understanding Modern Environmental Changes (Julian Alps, Slovenia)

Tatjana M. KALININA Russian Academy of Sciences, RUSSIA

Easteuropean Area in the System of Climates of the Arabian Geography

 

Room 8: Cartography and Knowledge II (Chair: YANG Bokyung)

SHIMAZU Toshiyuki Wakayama University, JAPAN

Land Tax Reform and Cadastral Surveys in Meiji Japan: 1873-1890

KOSEKI Daiju Shiga Prefecture University, JAPAN

The Japanese Modernization and Cadastral Map in the Earlier Period of Meiji (1868-1889)

 

 

 

13:20-13:50 Poster Session (the second presentation time) at Room 2

List of presentations

 

 

 

14:00-15:30 Paper Session 7 (oral presentations)

 

Room 1: Colonization II (Chair: Graeme WYNN)

Peter KANG National Donghwa University, Taiwan

A Conceptual Framework on the Spatial Colonialism of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) on Taiwan in the 17c

YEH Er-Jian Durham University, UK

Exploring Formosa: Japanese Formation of Colonial Environmental Knowledge in the Highland Taiwan

 

Room 3: Digital Humanities and Historical GIS III (Chair: Peder DAM)

KAWAGUCHI Hiroshi Tezukayama University, JAPAN

Data Analysis System for Population and Family Studies in Japan during the 17th – 19th Centuries

KUO Chun-Lin National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan

Investigating the Spatial-Temporal Features of Epidemic with Historical GIS: A Case Study of Taiwanfs Cholera diffusion during 1919-1920

A. Stewart FOTHERINGHAM, Martin CHARLTON, Mary H. KELLY and Magda BIESADA National University of Ireland, Maynooth, IRLAND

Spatial Variations in Population Dynamics: A GIScience Perspective using a Case Study of Ireland 1821-2006

 

Room 4: Modern City (Chair: Andrew HARRIS)

Giorgos KRITIKOS Harokopion University, GREECE

Creating Towns within Towns in Interwar Athens

NGUYEN THI Ha Thanh Kansai University, JAPAN

The Historical Urban Development of Hue City in the 19th Century

Leandro MINUCHIN University College London, UK

The Material Margins of the Political: Architectural Thought in Buenos Aires, 1928-1947

 

Room 6: Conservation and Heritage II (Chair: QUE Weimin)

RYU Je-Hun Korea National University of Education, KOREA

The Neo-Confucian Representation of Cultural Heritages around the Ancient Royal Capital of Gyeongju in Korea

Robert SUMMERBY-MURRAY Mount Allison University, CANADA

But wherefs the Smoke? Visitor Attitudes and the Search for Authenticity and Entertainment in the Industrial Heritage Sites of Maritime Canada

Yossi BEN-ARTZI University of Haifa, ISRAEL

Why to preserve German (and Nazi's) Heritage in the Jewish state? Debate and Practice in preserving German –Templers Settlements in Israel

 

Room 7: Environmental Change VI (Chair: KOBAYASHI Shigeru)

Hrvoje PETRIĆ University of Zagreb, CROATIA

Fluvial-Aeolian Sands in South-East Europe (Case Study: Fluvial-Aeolian Sands in Croatia)

Irina G. KONOVALOVA Russian Academy of Sciences, RUSSIA

Rivers in Arab Medieval Geographical Sources: Problems of Identification

Carry VAN LIESHOUT Kingfs College London, UK

The Changing Waterscapes of Eighteenth Century London

 

Room 8: Knowledge and Representation II (Chair: Michael JONES)

Robin A. BUTLIN University of Leeds, UK

J. S. Keltie, the Royal Geographical Society, and Discourses of Imperialism c. 1880-1927

Gordon M. WINDER Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, GERMANY

The New York Times Reports Assassinations

HASEGAWA Koji Kobe University, JAPAN

Urbanization and Tourism projected on the Panoramic Maps in Modern Japan

 

 

15:50-17:20 Paper Session 8 (oral presentations)

 

Room 1: Colonization III moves to Room 8

 

Room 3: Digital Humanities and Historical GIS IV (Chair: YANO Keiji)

NISHIMURA Yoko, ONISHI Makoto, and KITAMOTO Asanobu National Institute of Informatics, JAPAN

Analysis and Assessment of Stein Maps Using Google Earth

Christof SCHUPPERT Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg, GERMANY

GIS-based Historical Geographical Studies at Early Celtic Princely Seats and their Hinterland in South-western Germany

 

Room 4: Modern City II (Chair: Arnon GOLAN)

LI Xiaocong Peking University, CHINA

Research Trends of Urban History in China

MIZUUCHI Toshio Osaka City University, JAPAN

Transformation of the Management of Urban Poverty in Japan: From Slum Clearance to Assistance for the Homeless

RATNAWATI YUNI SURYANDARI and Amriah BUANG Indonusa Esa Unggul University, INDONESIA

Development of Newtown Looked into from Perspective of the Indigenous People: Itfs as Development Model (Case Study: eBumi Serpong Damaif New Town, Banten Province, Indonesia)

 

Room 6: Conservation and Heritage III (Chair: FUJITA Yoshihisa)

David WOOD York University, CANADA

Critical Phases in the Evolution of Conservation Philosophy and Practice in Ontario, Canada, 1910-1950

Mehmet SOMUNCU and Turgut YIGIT Ankara University, TURKEY

Problems Related to Conservation of Historical Assets of Turkey on UNESCO World Heritage List

 

Room 7: Industrialization (Chair: Martin PURVIS)

YAMANE Hiroshi University of Toyama, JAPAN

The spatial experiences and recognitions of Toshimichi Okubo and the development of the national land making policy in the first phase of modern Japan

Tim REIFFENSTEIN Mount Allison University, CANADA

Language, Institutions and the Geographies of Japanese Inward Technology Transfer: An Historical Review

Christian MONTÈS Université de Lyon, FRANCE

Planning American State Capitals, between Democracy, Identity, and Boosterism

 

Room 8: Colonization III (Chair: J. H. GALLOWAY)

Caroline BRESSEY University College London, UK

Victorian Imperialism and the Questioning of Colonialism

Mary H. KELLY National University of Ireland, Maynooth, IRELAND

Imaginative Geographies and 19th Century Ireland: Re-examining the Irish Colonial Past

Kent McNEIL York University, CANADA

The Distinction Between De Facto and De Jure Sovereignty, and the Significance of the Distinction for Historical Geography

 

 

 

 

18:00- Conference Dinner

At International Conference Hall, Clock Tower, Yoshida Campus, Kyoto University (location map)

French restaurant La Tour is catering for the dinner party. Vegetarian and Japanese meals will be also provided. Participants who have paid the additional fee for the dinner in advance will receive invitation at the registration desk. Please present invitation at the entrance of the hall.

One scene of a performance, Funa-benkei, will be played by Mr. SAWADA Koji (Hôshô School of ). is one of major classical forms in Japanese musical drama.

 

 

 

 

 

27th August (Thursday)

 

 

9:10-10:40 Paper Session 9 (oral presentations)

 

Room 1: Colonization IV (Chair: Michael HEFFERNAN)

HUNG Chih-wen National Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan

Japanese Military Airfields in Taiwan during the World War II

Christy COLLIS Queensland University of Technology, Australia

Legal Geographies of Outer Space: A History

 

Room 2: Leisure and Tourism II (Chair: Roy JONES)

Elena PETROVA, AOKI Yoji, and Anastasia PETROVA Lomonosov Moscow State University, RUSSIA

Landscape Descriptions by Russian Visitors to Japan until 1900

Uglješa STANKOV, Vanja DRAGIĆEVIĆ, Nataša DRAKULIĆ, and Tamara PAVLOCIĆ University of Novi Sad, SERBIA

Internet History and Tourism Websites Evolution in Serbia from 1998 to 2008

Tanja ARMENSKI, Ivana BLESIC, Aleksanda DRAGIN, and Lukrecija DJERI University of Novi Sad, SERBIA

Historical Development of Health and Spa Tourism in Serbia

 

Room 3: Digital Humanities and Historical GIS V (Chair: David S. SPRAGUE)

KIRIMURA Takashi Ritsumeikan University, JAPAN

Spatial Changes of Residential Characteristics in 20th-Century Kyoto

Olof KARSVALL National Archives, SWEDEN

Social and Economical Differences within the Swedish Farming Society during First Half of 17th Century according to the Large-scale Maps

 

Room 4: Urban Politics (Chair: OSHIRO Naoki)

Arnon GOLAN University of Haifa, ISRAEL

Urban Postwar Transformation and Municipal Elections in Tel Aviv of the 1950s

YANG Tao Nagoya University, JAPAN

Story about Wangping Street: Media Map in Modern Shanghai

Yi-Chia CHEN Louisiana State University, USA

Hammering a Nail on the Edge: The Sisyphean Task in Constructing an Imperial Peripheral City, Quemoy

 

Room 5: Marketing and Utilization (Chair: Yossi BEN-ARTZI)

Erlend EIDSVIK University of Bergen, NORWAY

The Dynamics and Utilization of Global Networks among Nordic Entrepreneurs in South Africa Late 19th century

Veronica DELLA DORA University of Bristol, UK

Making Mobile Knowledges: The Educational Cruises of the Revue Générale des Sciences Pures et Appliquées to the Eastern Mediterranean, 1897-1911

Martin PURVIS University of Leeds, UK

Economic Uncertainties and Retail Geographies in 1920s and 1930s Britain

 

 

Room 6: Rural Landscape III (Chair: Frank UEKOETTER)

Daniel NILES Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, JAPAN

What Future for Traditional Landscapes? Thoughts on the Contemporary Sato-yama Landscape in Japan

Mats WIDGREN Stockholm University: SWEDEN

Mapping Global Agricultural History

MIYAMOTO Shinji, ANDO Kazuo and Abani Kumar BHAGABATI Lake Biwa Museum, JAPAN

Agricultural Land Formation Process and Deforestation in the Himalayas

 

Room 7: Special Session Landscape History in East Asian Inland Seas: Impacts on Present Landscape of Neolithisation and Modernisation I (Chairs: UCHIYAMA Junzo and Kati LINDSTRÖM)

J. Christopher GILLAM University of South Carolina, USA

Modeling Neolithic Cultural Landscapes in East Asia

SANO Shizuyo Shiga University, JAPAN

Traditional Use of Resources and the Resultant Management of Littoral Environments of Lake Biwa in Modern Japan

Leo Aoi HOSOYA Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, JAPAN

Surviving Tradition and Disappearing Tradition: eOld Daysf Landscape with Raised-floor Granaries in Bali and Amami Oshima Islands

 

Room 8: Cartography and Knowledge III (Chair: Kenneth R. ROBINSON)

Alexander V. PODOSSINOV Russian Academy of Sciences, RUSSIA

Europe as an Island in Ancient and Medieval Geocartography

ODA Masayasu Komazawa University, JAPAN

On the Pictorial Map of Yamato Province of Japan from the Siebold Collection of Leiden University Library

YANG Bokyung and YANG Yunjung Sungshin Women's University, KOREA

The Korea-related Maps of the US Library of Congress

 

 

11:00-12:30 Paper Session 10 (oral presentations)

 

Room 1: Colonization V (Chair: Samuel M. OTTERSTROM)

ZENG Zaozao Beijing Normal University, CHINA

Using Settlersf Names to interpret Land Cultivation in Jilin Province, Northeast China

John H. GALLOWAY University of Toronto, CANADA

The Changing Geography of the Sugar Cane Industry in the 20th Century

 

Room 3: Digital Humanities and Historical GIS (Chair: Amy L. GRIFFIN)

Peder GAMMELTOFT Copenhagen University, DENMARK

Historical Geography as Research Infrastructure. A Presentation of DigDag, the Digital Atlas of Denmarkfs Historical-administrative Geography

Pulla Rao KUDUPUDI University of Hyderabad, INDIA

Role of Geography in the Location of Buddhist Sites from Andhra Pradesh: A GIS Perspective

MAEZAKI Shinya Ritsumeikan University, JAPAN

Tracing Paths of Export Ceramics: Digital Archives of Japanese Art in the Western Collections

 

Room 4: Capital City (Chair: Jürgen LAFRENZ)

HU Fang Shaanxi Normal University, CHINA

Function Orientation Embodied in the Evolution of the Spatial Form of Changfan and Luoyang in the Sui and Tang Period

Brian MORRIS and Deb VERHOEVEN RMIT University, Australia

A Preliminary History of Urban Rivalry: Locating the Melbourne-Sydney Imaginary

AN Jiesheng Fudan University, CHINA

gGolden Triangleh: The Pivot Region in Political Geographical Structure of Tang Dynasty — Newly Assessment of the Status of Hedong (Shanxi) Region in Chinese History

 

Room 5: Rural Economy (Chair: Johannes RENES)

TAKAGI Hidekazu Aichi University, JAPAN

A Comparative Study of Relationship between Village System and Fishing Methods in Katada and Goza Settlements, Shima Peninsula, Central Japan

Philip BROWN The Ohio State University, USA

Japan Sinks: Floods, Drainage and the Impact of Modern Civil Engineering in the Echigo Plain

 

Room 6: Special Session Identities of the Central European Landscapes: The Landscape of Czechia in Changes of Time (Chair: Pavel CHROMÝ)

Eva SEMOTANOVÁ Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, CZECHIA

Towns in the Czech Historical Landscape – Image of Reconciliation or Confrontation?

Dana FIALOVÁ and Jiří VÁGNER Charles University in Prague, CZECHIA

Forming of the Recreational Landscape in Czechia at the Turn of 19th and the 20th Century

Pavel CHROMÝ, Zdeněk KUČERA, and Silvie KUČEROVÁ Charles University in Prague, CZECHIA

All Possible Meanings and Values – Landscape Heritage as Interface, or a Source of Conflicts?

 

Room 7: Special Session Landscape History in East Asian Inland Seas: Impacts on Present Landscape of Neolithisation and Modernisation II (Chairs: UCHIYAMA Junzo and Kati LINDSTRÖM)

Simon KANER and Andrew COCHRANE Sainsbury Institute for the Study of Japanese Arts and Cultures, UK

Rivers through the Landscape and through Time

Shuzo KOYAMA Suita City Museum, JAPAN

Making a Landscape by Fire: A History of Human-Nature Interactions with the Technology of Fire

Kati LINDSTRÖM and UCHIYAMA Junzo University of Tartu, ESTONIA

Affluent Foragers and Affluent Feudalism: The Idealised Landscapes of Past as Models for Sustainable Future

Caroline BORRÉ and Carlos ZEBALLOS Changchun University, CHINA

Evolution of Landscape during Modernisation Period in Central Japan: A GIS Approach of the Case of Lake Biwa

 

Room 8: Territory and Identity III (Chair: W. George LOVELL)

MORI Masato Mie University, JAPAN

Yielding National Emotion in Japan

Michael JONES Norwegian University of Science and Technology, NORWAY

Constructing a Norwegian National-Religious Landscape: Stiklestad and the Cult of St Olav

Inese STŪRE University of Latvia, LATVIA

Politics of Remembrance and Selfconceptualization of Nationfs Identity in Belorussian Landscape

 

 

 

14:00-15:30 Business Meeting

At Room 3 (Chairs: KINDA Akihiro and Graeme WYNN)

 

 

 

 

POSTER SESSION

13:20-13:50 at Room 2, 24th Aug (First Presentation Time) & 26th Aug (Second Presentation Time)

 

 

Methodology

P01: HU Axiang Nanjing University, CHINA

The Development and Thinking of the Area Studies

P02: HUA Linfu Renmin University of China, CHINA

Todayfs Theoretical Research on Historical Geography of China

 

Pre-modern

P03: Tarmiji MASRON and Mokhtar SAIDIN Universiti Sains Malaysia, MALAYSIA

Reconstructing the Paleo World of Prehistoric Archaeological Site in Lembah Lenggong, Hulu Perak, Malaysia

P04: REN Dong and LIU Yushuang Capital Normal University, CHINA

Origin, Dispersal and Paleogeographical Distribution of Siberioperlids (Insecta: Plecoptera)

P05: SOHMA Hidehiro, TIAN Ran, WEI Jien, MORIYA Kazuki, IGURO Shinobu, and ITO Toshio Nara Womenfs University, JAPAN

Unreported wall-surrounded ruins and their significance, in the case of the lower reaches of the Heihe River, Inner Mongolia, China

P06: KADOI Naoya Fukui University, JAPAN

The Ancient Landscape in Mikata District of Wakasa Province

P07: MATSUNAGA Kohei Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, JAPAN

Beyond the Conflict on the Genesis of Loess Landforms

P08: KOBORI Noboru and KAWANO Kazutaka Japan Map Center, JAPAN

Distribution and Pattern of Decorated Ancient Tomb in East Asia

P09: FURUTA Noboru Tokushima Bunri University, JAPAN

A Change of the Geomorphological Environment of the Historical Age and Human Activities

P10: TSUKAMOTO Akihiro, AKAISHI Naomi, WATANABE Yasutaka, ASADA Kenta, KATAOKA Shuta, YOSHIKOSHI Akihisa, and KATAHIRA Hirofumi Ritsumeikan University, JAPAN

GIS Analysis of Historical Urban Space Structure: Visualizing Fire Disasters in Heiankyo during the 12th and 13th Centuries

 

Early Modern

P11: DU Juan Shaanxi Normal University, CHINA

Agriculture Landscape and Soil Utilization in Guanzhong Area

P12: GAO Shengrong Shaanxi Normal University, CHINA

The Relationship between Policy and Development of Irrigation Works — Research on Guanzhong Area in Ming and Qing Dynasties

P13: FUKUJU Shino, TAMAI Tatsuya, and BABA Akira University of Tokyo, JAPAN

Reconstructing the Mental Images on Mt. Asama Eruption in 1783

P14: HASEGAWA Shogo Kobe University, JAPAN

"Miyako-Meisyozue" and the main sights in early modern Kyoto

P15: MIZOGUCHI Tsunetoshi Nagoya University, JAPAN

Historical Perspective of Environmental Differentiation in Japanfs Nineteenth Century

P16: NOMA Haruo Kansai University, Japan

The Development and the Spatial Diffusion of Floriculture in Edo/Tokyo Suburbs from 17th to 19th Century: Historical Geography of Chrysanthemum in Global and Local Perspectives

P17: Patrick SCHIELEIN University of Bamberg, GERMANY

Reconstruction and Dating of Landscape Development with Historical Data at the Confluence of the Rivers Danube and Lech (Germany)

 

Modern

P18: ARIZONO Shoichiro Aichi University, JAPAN

Daily Diets of Common People at the Modern Era in Japan

P19: ASO Tasuku Ritsumeikan University, JAPAN

The Process of Socio-Spatial Exclusion of Religious Groups —The "Mino Mission Incident" of the 1930s—

P20: NAKANISHI Ryotaro Tsukuba University, JAPAN

Policy and Planning of Agricultural Development in Hokkaido by the Meiji Government — Focus on Kiyotaka Kuroda and Horace Capron —

P21: HATTORI Ayumi Nagoya University, JAPAN

Migration Patterns of Herring Fishermen

P22: HUANG Wenchuan National Dong Hwa University, Taiwan

Colonial Economy and Landscape Transformation on the Taiwan Frontier (1895-1945)

P23: KOMEIE Taisaku Kyoto University, JAPAN

Colonial Tourism in Korean Heritage Spaces, 1910–1945

P24: Zdeněk KUČERA, Silvie KUČEROVÁ, and Pavel CHROMÝ Charles University in Prague, CZECHIA

Areal Preservation and Potential Landscape Change in Czechia

P25: Silvie KUČEROVÁ, Zdeněk KUČERA, and Pavel CHROMÝ Charles University in Prague, CZECHIA

Marginalization of Municipalities and Regions in the Context of Basic Schools Network Reduction in Czechia since a Mid 20th Century. Introduction of a Research Project

P26: MIKI Masafumi Nara University, JAPAN

Suspension and Abolition of Coal Mining and Forced Personnel Changes in Karafuto (South Sakhalin) in Late World War II

P27: MASUNO Takashi National Museum of Ethnology, JAPAN

Historical Land Use Change at Hillside Village in Northern Thailand: Focusing on the Farming Change from Shifting Cultivation to Sedentary Cultivation

P28: NAKAI Shinsuke National Museum of Ethnology, JAPAN

Historical changes in the pig husbandry system based on the natural resources of a hillside village in northern Thailand

P29: YANG Ching-Guei and LIN Su-Chin National Taipei University of Education, Taiwan

The Distribution and Historical Development Situations of Childrenfs Leisure Institutes in Taiwan

P29X: Ran AARONSOHN Hebrew University of Jerusalem, ISRAEL

One Manfs Land: Aaron Aaronsohn and the Modernization of the Levant 1882-1919

 

Mapping and Cartography

P30: IIZUKA Shuzo Iizuka Eye Clinic, JAPAN

An Old Clay Globe in 1843 years in Japan

P31: FUJITA Hirotsugu Kobe University, JAPAN

The Port of Hyogo and its Hinterland Described on the Pictorial Map Early in the 17th Century

P32: WAKAMA Toshiaki, SHIBA Masahito, and OKADA Yoshihiro Ryukoku University, JAPAN

Digital Conservation for the Kangnido, an Old World Map

P33: HIRAI Shogo University of Tokushima, JAPAN

Historical GIS of Sumoto Castle Town in the 17-19th Century, Awaji Province, Japan: Landuse and Structure

P34: UESUGI Kazuhiro Kyoto Prefectual University, JAPAN

Mapping the eaccuratef information: Geographical knowledge in the early modern Japan

P35: TOMATSURI Yumio Nara Womenfs University, JAPAN

Nineteenth Century Japanese Camps along the Ezo Province Coastline \ based on old pictorial maps \

P36: YAMACHIKA Kumiko, WATANABE Rie and KOBAYASHI Shigeru National Defense Academy of Japan, JAPAN

The Route Maps of the Korean Peninsula drawn by Japanese Army Officers during 1880s

 

 

 

28th - 30th August (Friday – Sunday)

 

Post-Conference Field Trip

Central Mountainous Japan: Traditional Village Life in World Heritage Houses

 

Departure at 8:30 AM at the main gate of Yoshida Campus, Kyoto University (location map).

Participants in the trips have to be registered in advance. All seats have been full-booked up.

Field Trips in the Second Circular

 

 

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