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| See also: | Other events of 1949 History of Japan • Timeline • Years  | ||||
Events in the year 1949 in Japan.
Incumbents
- Supreme Commander Allied Powers: Douglas MacArthur
 - Emperor: Hirohito[1]
 - Prime Minister: Shigeru Yoshida (L–Kōchi, 3rd term from February 16)
 - Chief Cabinet Secretary: Eisaku Satō (not Diet member→L–Yamaguchi) until February 16, Kaneshichi Masuda (L–Nagano)
 - Chief Justice of the Supreme Court: Tadahiko Mibuchi
 - President of the House of Representatives: vacant until February 11, Kijūrō Shidehara (L–Ōsaka)
 - President of the House of Councillors: Tsuneo Matsudaira (Ryokufūkai–Fukushima) until November 14, Naotake Satō (Ryokufūkai–Aomori) from November 15
 - Diet sessions: 5th (special, February 11 to May 31), 6th (extraordinary, October 25 to November (?)), 7th (regular, December 4 to 1950, May 2)
 
Governors
- Aichi Prefecture: Hideo Aoyagi
 - Akita Prefecture: Kosaku Hasuike
 - Aomori Prefecture: Bunji Tsushima
 - Chiba Prefecture: Tamenosuke Kawaguchi
 - Ehime Prefecture: Juushin Aoki
 - Fukui Prefecture: Harukazu Obata
 - Fukuoka Prefecture: Katsuji Sugimoto
 - Fukushima Prefecture: Kan'ichirō Ishihara (until 30 November); vacant thereafter (starting 30 November)
 - Gifu Prefecture: Kamon Muto
 - Gunma Prefecture: Yoshio Iyoku
 - Hiroshima Prefecture: Tsunei Kusunose
 - Hokkaido Prefecture: Toshifumi Tanaka
 - Hyogo Prefecture: Yukio Kishida
 - Ibaraki Prefecture: Yoji Tomosue
 - Ishikawa Prefecture: Wakio Shibano
 - Iwate Prefecture: Kenkichi Kokubun
 - Kagawa Prefecture: Keikichi Masuhara
 - Kagoshima Prefecture: Kaku Shigenari
 - Kanagawa Prefecture: Iwataro Uchiyama
 - Kochi Prefecture: Wakaji Kawamura
 - Kumamoto Prefecture: Saburō Sakurai
 - Kyoto Prefecture: Atsushi Kimura
 - Mie Prefecture: Masaru Aoki
 - Miyagi Prefecture: Saburō Chiba (until 3 January); Kazuji Sasaki (starting 25 February)
 - Miyazaki Prefecture: Tadao Annaka
 - Nagano Prefecture: Torao Hayashi
 - Nagasaki Prefecture: Sōjirō Sugiyama
 - Nara Prefecture: Mansaku Nomura
 - Niigata Prefecture: Shohei Okada
 - Oita Prefecture: Tokuju Hosoda
 - Okayama Prefecture: Hirokichi Nishioka
 - Osaka Prefecture: Bunzō Akama
 - Saga Prefecture: Gen'ichi Okimori
 - Saitama Prefecture: 
- until 28 March: Mizo Nishimura
 - 28 March-17 May: Yoshida Tadakazu
 - starting 17 May: Yuuichi Oosawa
 
 - Shiga Prefecture: Iwakichi Hattori
 - Shiname Prefecture: Fujiro Hara
 - Shizuoka Prefecture: Takeji Kobayashi
 - Tochigi Prefecture: Juukichi Kodaira
 - Tokushima Prefecture: Goro Abe
 - Tokyo Prefecture: Seiichirō Yasui
 - Tottori Prefecture: Aiji Nishio
 - Toyama Prefecture: Kunitake Takatsuji
 - Wakayama Prefecture: Shinji Ono
 - Yamagata Prefecture: Michio Murayama
 - Yamaguchi Prefecture: Tatsuo Tanaka
 - Yamanashi Prefecture: Katsuyasu Yoshie
 
Events
- January 23 - 1949 Japanese general election[2]
 - January 26 – A fire breaks out at Hōryū-ji temple in Ikaruga, Nara Prefecture, destroying several murals.[3]
 - March Unknown date – Mens Shop Ogori, as predecessor of Uniqlo was founded in Ube, Yamaguchi Prefecture.
 - May 16: Opening of Tokyo, Osaka and Nagoya Stock Exchanges.
 - May 25: Ministry of International Trade and Industry formed.
 - June 1: Japanese National Railways become independent of the Ministry of Transportation.
 - June 22: A Typhoon Della, torrential massibie rain and landslide hit, many ship and fishing boat plunged around Uwa Sea, Ehime Prefecture, 468 person were human fatalities, including a passenger ferry Aoba Maru, and 367 persons were hurt, according to Japanese government official confirmed report.
 - July 5 - Shimoyama incident
 - July 15 - Mitaka incident
 - August 17 - Matsukawa derailment
 - September 15: First limited express trains begin operation on JNR lines.
 - October: Hideki Yukawa becomes the first Japanese winner of a Nobel Prize.
 - December 1
- Izumi Real Estate, later, Sumitomo Realty & Development was founded.
 - Marubeni was established that separate from Itochu.
 
 - December 16 – Auto parts company Denso established.[4]
 
Films
Births
- January 12: Haruki Murakami, author
 - January 15: Rumi Tama, film director, actress, and screenwriter
 - January 24: Rihoko Yoshida, voice actress
 - January 28: Masachika Ichimura, voice actor and musical singer
 - February 2: Yasuko Namba, mountaineer, summited the Seven Summits (d. 1996)
 - March 3: Hiroshi Kajikawa, archer
 - March 23: Aruno Tahara, voice actor
 - April 26
- Morio Kazama, actor
 - Issei Sagawa, murderer
 
 - May 9: Kenji Shimaoka, volleyball player
 - May 11: Terumi Niki, actress
 - May 12: Moto Hagio, manga artist
 - May 25: Yuki Katsuragi, singer (d. 2022)
 - June 5: Guts Ishimatsu, boxer
 - June 20: Arase Nagahide, sumo wrestler (d. 2008)
 - June 27: Norio Nagayama, spree killer (d. 1997)
 - July 14: Toyokazu Nomura, judoka
 - August 18: Takeshi Shudo, scriptwriter (d. 2010)
 - September 19: Sayoko Yamaguchi, model and actress (d. 2007)
 - September 20: Yutaka Higuchi, figure skater
 - September 21: Yūsaku Matsuda, actor (d. 1989)
 - October 5: Takajin Yashiki, singer and television celebrity (d. 2014)
 - October 7: Yuji Katsuro, Nordic combined skier
 - October 21: Masao Ohba, boxer (d. 1973)
 - November 17: Yoshito Yasuhara, actor and voice actor
 - November 21: Kazumasa Hirai, weightlifter
 - November 24: Tamanofuji Shigeru, sumo wrestler (d. 2021)
 - November 28: Kyoko Mizuki, author and manga artist
 - December 2: Shūichi Ikeda, voice actor
 - December 16: Kensaku Morita, actor, singer and governor of Chiba Prefecture
 - December 20: Takao Okawara, film director, writer and producer
 - December 28: Kaoru Kitamura, writer
 
Deaths
- January 8: Yoshijirō Umezu, war leader
 - January 20: Iwata Nakayama, photographer
 - February 6: Hiroaki Abe, admiral
 - May 5: Hideo Nagata, poet and playwright
 - May 6: Kunihiko Hashimoto, composer, violinist, conductor, and musical educator
 - May 17: Unno Juza, founding father of Japanese science fiction
 - June 30: Harukazu Nagaoka, diplomat
 - July 1: Isamu Takeshita, admiral
 - July 10: Moritake Tanabe
 - August 7: Uemura Shōen, artist
 - August 15: Kanji Ishiwara, war leader
 - October 5: Yoshio Kodaira, rapist and serial killer (executed) (born 1905)[5]
 - October 12: Kiyoshi Kawakami, journalist
 - November 3: Hidemitsu Tanaka, author
 - November 14: Matsudaira Tsuneo, diplomat
 - November 20: Wakatsuki Reijirō, former prime minister
 - November 25: Kazuo Mizutani, chief of staff
 - December 14: Morita Sōhei, author
 
Statistics
- Yen value: US$1 = ¥360 (fixed)
 
See also
References
- ↑ "Hirohito | Biography, Accomplishments, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
 - ↑ Pharr, Susan J. (8 January 2021). Political Women in Japan: The Search for a Place in Political Life. Univ of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-35664-1.
 - ↑ Jones, Murray (1966). "The Burned Murals of Hōryū-ji. A Transformation of the Gods". Art Journal. 25 (3): 238–240. doi:10.2307/774980. ISSN 0004-3249. JSTOR 774980.
 - ↑ Hong, Paul; Park, YoungWon (19 December 2014). Building Network Capabilities in Turbulent Competitive Environments: Business Success Stories from the BRICs. CRC Press. p. 134. ISBN 978-1-4665-1576-5.
 - ↑ "Peace, It's Wonderful". Time. 17 October 1949. Archived from the original on 30 October 2009. Retrieved 9 February 2008.
 
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