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nagasaki
Accommodation   Sightseeing   Restaurants   Shopping
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With trundling trams and a sunny disposition, Nagasaki has an international atmosphere derived from its rich and colourful history of contact with the outside world. Throughout the more than 200 years of isolation, finally ending in 1859, it was the only port open to foreign contact and even then, only to the Dutch and the Chinese. Many of the most interesting features of this enjoyable and easy-going city are signs of the foreign influence that have shaped it over the years.

Of course, Nagasaki is best known internationally for its tragic fate as the target of the second atomic bomb to be dropped on Japan in August 1945. Visitors to the city should all pay a pilgrimage to the Peace Park and the tremendously affecting Atomic Bomb Museum, all the more harrowing for being so objectively presented.

In the south of the city, Glover Park is a beautifully landscaped garden featuring a cluster of Meiji-era buildings. These were the homes of some of the first foreign residents to settle in Nagasaki in the 19th century. Among them is the oldest Western-style building in Japan, Glover Mansion, romanticised as the home of Puccini’s tragic heroine, Madame Butterfly.

Chinese influence has also left its mark on Nagasaki, not least in the bustling Chinatown but also in some exotic temples. Built in 1646, Sofuku-ji temple is the city’s oldest surviving building, distinctive with its colourful, Ming-style architecture. Its gate is said to be built in the image of the legendary Chinese underwater paradise. Another famous sight in the temple district is Kofuku-ji temple, founded by a Chinese Zen priest in 1623 and still visited by many Chinese pilgrims today. It was also a Chinese Zen priest who gave Nagasaki its most photographed sight, the Megane-bashi (Spectacles Bridge), so called because its two stone arches reflected in the river look just like a pair of glasses. China actually owns the land upon which the lavish, yellow-roofed Koshi-byo Confucian Temple is built.

Up 277 stone steps to the north however, beats the heart of Japanese tradition in cosmopolitan Nagasaki. Suwa Jinja shrine was originally established to promote Shinto when the Christian faith was getting too popular for the taste of the Shogun. This scenic and highly popular shrine is where all the different local dances are showcased before being performed in the streets during the famous Nagasaki Kunchi festival.
 
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Accommodation
ANA Hotel JR Huis Ten Bosch
ANA Hotel JR Huis Ten Bosch
0956-58-7111 0956-58-7159
10 Huis Ten Bosch-cho, Sasebo-shi, Nagasaki 859-3296, Japan
Modeled after Amsterdam's Central Railway Station, this 12 story hotel is the centerpiece of Nagasaki's Huis Ten Bosch (Dutch Village).
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ANA Hotel Nagasaki Gloverhill
ANA Hotel Nagasaki Gloverhill
095-818-6601 095-818-6110
1-18 Minamiyamate-machi, Nagasaki 850-0931, Japan
Located on a mountainside in Nagasaki-Minamiyamate, the southern part of Nagasaki City, ANA Hotel Nagasaki Gloverhill provides guests with first class service and refined facilities for their relaxation.
ANA has no control of how your personal information is handled by other sites. Please refer to the privacy statement on each new site you enter.
 
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Sightseeing
Sofukuji Temple
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095-823-2645
7-5 Kajiyamachi, Nagasaki-shi, Nagasaki
8:00-17:00
¥300 for adults, ¥150 for junior high/high students, ¥100 for primary students
In 1629, people from "Fukushu (Fuzhou)," China living in Nagasaki invited a Buddhist monk, "Chozen," from their homeland and built this temple. It contains two national treasures, the main hall and "Daiippo-mon" and five nationally important cultural properties, including the "Ryugu-mon."
Oura Catholic Church
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095-823-2628
5-3 Minamiyamatemachi, Nagasaki-shi, Nagasaki
8:30-17:00 (8:00-18:00 March to November)
¥250 for adults, ¥200 for junior high/high students, ¥150 for primary students
The oldest wooden Gothic church (still existing) in Japan built by the French priests Faure and Petitjean. The stained glass was made in France about 130 years ago.
Urakami Cathedral
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095-844-1777
1-79 Motoomachi, Nagasaki-shi, Nagasaki
9:00-17:00
By donation
After 200 years of prohibition of Christianity in Japan, Christians returned from the "journey" (they were forced into hard labor in other domains and they called it the "journey") to this land. They took 30 years to complete this Cathedral.
Glover Garden
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095-822-8223
8-1 Minamiyamatemachi, Nagasaki-shi, Nagasaki
8:00-17:40 (20:30 July 20 to October 9)
¥600 for adults, ¥300 for high students, ¥180 for primary/junior high students
Western-style buildings in the city built from the end of the Tokugawa era to the Meiji era have been relocated and gathered here. There are nine western-style buildings in the garden. This is one of the best tourist spots in Nagasaki.
Dutch Slope
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Higashiyamatemachi, Nagasaki-shi, Nagasaki
Always open
Free
A long time ago, people in Nagasaki called all western people "Oranda san (Dutch person)" and all sloping streets in western settlements "Oranda-zaka (Dutch slope)." The most famous is a stone-paved street with a gentle slope leading to Kwassui Women´s College.
 
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Restaurants
Steakhouse Okano
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095-824-3048
6-8 Motoshikkuimachi, Nagasaki-shi, Nagasaki
12:00-14:00, 17:00-22:00
"Ajisai course" ¥5,000, "osusume course (recommended course)" from ¥7,500, lunch from ¥1,000
The counters and tables are equipped with steel hotplates where beefsteak, produced in Nagasaki, and seafood are cooked and served. Various courses and lunch dishes are also popular here.
Kouzanrou (Chuka-gai honten)
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095-821-3735
12-2 Shinchimachi, Nagasaki-shi, Nagasaki
11:00-20:30
Set meals ¥2,000 to ¥3,000, full courses ¥4,000 to ¥10,000, "champon (a soup noodle)" ¥700, "jo-champon (deluxe champon)" ¥900, "gokujo-champon (super-deluxe champon)" ¥1,500
A Chinese restaurant located in Nagasaki´s Chinatown. Dishes using ingredients imported from China and local seafood are popular here. The famous "champon" has a delicious light soup cooked with lots of chicken bones.
Shikairo
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095-822-1296
4-5 Matsugaemachi, Nagasaki-shi, Nagasaki
11:30-15:00, 17:00-20:00
"Champon" ¥950, "sara-udon (fried noodle)" ¥900
The founder, Mr. "Chin Heijun (Chen Ping Shun)," is known as the originator of "champon." He created this dish for Chinese students and residents in Nagasaki and founded this restaurant in 1899.
Kyokaen
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095-821-1507
9-7 Shinchimachi, Nagasaki-shi, Nagasaki
11:00-15:00, 17:00-20:30
Courses from ¥4,000, "kakuni-don (braised pork on rice)" ¥1,200.
This restaurant with a richly colored Chinese style exterior serves "champon" and "sara-udon," as well as this restaurant´s specialty, "kakuni-don" with thick tasty sauce.
 
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Shopping
Fukusaya
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095-821-2938
3-1 Funadaikumachi, Nagasaki-shi, Nagasaki
8:30-20:00
"Castella (sponge cake)" (size-1) ¥1,400, "Oranda cake (Dutch cake)" (size-1) ¥1,400, "tezukuri monaka (wafer cake)" from ¥600
This is an very old and traditional castella shop founded in 1624. They have been using traditional Portuguese cooking methods since its foundation. Fukusaya´s castella has sugar grains at the bottom of the moist sponge.
 
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