1959 in Japan
  | |||||
| Decades: |  
  | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| See also: | |||||
Events in the year 1959 in Japan.
Incumbents
Governors
- Aichi Prefecture: Mikine Kuwahara
 - Akita Prefecture: Yūjirō Obata
 - Aomori Prefecture: Iwao Yamazaki
 - Chiba Prefecture: Hitoshi Shibata
 - Ehime Prefecture: Sadatake Hisamatsu
 - Fukui Prefecture: Seiichi Hane (until 22 April); Eizō Kita (starting 23 April)
 - Fukuoka Prefecture: Taichi Uzaki
 - Fukushima Prefecture: Zenichiro Satō
 - Gifu Prefecture: Yukiyasu Matsuno
 - Gunma Prefecture: Toshizo Takekoshi
 - Hiroshima Prefecture: Hiroo Ōhara
 - Hokkaido: Toshifumi Tanaka (until 22 April); Kingo Machimura (starting 23 April)
 - Hyogo Prefecture: Masaru Sakamoto
 - Ibaraki Prefecture: Yoji Tomosue (until 29 March); Nirō Iwakami (starting 23 April)
 - Ishikawa Prefecture: Jūjitsu Taya
 - Iwate Prefecture: Senichi Abe
 - Kagawa Prefecture: Masanori Kaneko
 - Kagoshima Prefecture: Katsushi Terazono
 - Kanagawa Prefecture: Iwataro Uchiyama
 - Kochi Prefecture: Masumi Mizobuchi
 - Kumamoto Prefecture: Saburō Sakurai (until 10 February); Kōsaku Teramoto (starting 11 February)
 - Kyoto Prefecture: Torazō Ninagawa
 - Mie Prefecture: Satoru Tanaka
 - Miyagi Prefecture: Yasushi Onuma (until 12 January); Yoshio Miura (starting 4 March)
 - Miyazaki Prefecture: Jingo Futami (until 22 April); Hiroshi Kuroki (starting 23 April)
 - Nagano Prefecture: Torao Hayashi (until 22 April); Gon'ichirō Nishizawa (starting 26 April)
 - Nagasaki Prefecture: Katsuya Sato
 - Nara Prefecture: Ryozo Okuda
 - Niigata Prefecture: Kazuo Kitamura
 - Oita Prefecture: Kaoru Kinoshita
 - Okayama Prefecture: Yukiharu Miki
 - Osaka Prefecture: Bunzō Akama (until 22 April); Gisen Satō (starting 23 April)
 - Saga Prefecture: Naotsugu Nabeshima (until 16 April); Sunao Ikeda (starting 23 April)
 - Saitama Prefecture: Hiroshi Kurihara
 - Shiga Prefecture: Kyujiro Taniguchi
 - Shiname Prefecture: Yasuo Tsunematsu (until 29 April); Choemon Tanabe (starting 30 April)
 - Shizuoka Prefecture: Toshio Saitō
 - Tochigi Prefecture: Kiichi Ogawa (until 4 February); Nobuo Yokokawa (starting 5 February)
 - Tokushima Prefecture: Kikutaro Hara
 - Tokyo: Seiichirō Yasui (until 18 April); Ryōtarō Azuma (starting 22 April)
 - Tottori Prefecture: Jirō Ishiba
 - Toyama Prefecture: Minoru Yoshida
 - Wakayama Prefecture: Shinji Ono
 - Yamagata Prefecture: Tōkichi Abiko
 - Yamaguchi Prefecture: Taro Ozawa
 - Yamanashi Prefecture: Hisashi Amano
 
Events
- April 1 – Kyoto Ceramic (now Kyocera) has founded.
 - April 10 – The Crown Prince Akihito, the future Emperor of Japan, weds Michiko Shōda, the first commoner to marry into the Japanese Imperial Family.
 - June 2 – Mori Building was founded.
 - June 30 – Twenty-one students are killed and more than a hundred injured when an American North American F-100 Super Sabre jet crashes into Miamori Elementary School on the island of Okinawa. The pilot ejected before the plane struck the school.[3]
 - July 22 – A Kumamoto University medical research group studying Minamata disease concludes that it is caused by mercury.
 - September 26 – According to Japanese government official confirmed report, Typhoon Vera with tidal wave hit around Ise Bay, total 5,098 person were lives, 38,921 person were hurt.
 
Births
- January 3 – Dankan, actor and director
 - January 16 – Kimiko Ikegami, actress
 - January 17 – Momoe Yamaguchi, actress
 - February 8 – Amy Yamada, writer
 - February 20 – Tomomi Inada, politician
 - March 23 – Kazue Ikura, actress, voice actress and narrator
 - May 19 – Michiru Shimada, screenwriter (d. 2017)
 - May 23 – Ryuta Kawashima, neuroscientist
 - June 17 – Kazuki Yao, voice actor and actor
 - July 17 – Kiyotaka Sugiyama, singer-songwriter
 - August 11 – Yoshiaki Murakami, investor
 - August 17 – Chika Sakamoto, voice actress
 - September 8 – Saeko Shimazu, voice actress
 - October 13 – Denny Tamaki, governor of Okinawa Prefecture
 - October 21 – Ken Watanabe, actor
 - November 21 – Naoko Watanabe, voice actress
 - November 24 – Akio Ōtsuka, actor and voice actress
 - December 5 – Yoshitomo Nara, artist
 - December 6 – Satoru Iwata, video game designer, businessman (d. 2015)
 
Deaths
- March 7 – Ichirō Hatoyama, politician and 35th Prime Minister of Japan (b. 1883)
 - April 30 – Kafū Nagai, author, playwright, essayist, and diarist (b. 1879)
 - June 20 – Hitoshi Ashida, politician and 35th Prime Minister of Japan (b. 1887)
 - August 9 – Noboru Ishizaki, admiral (b. 1893)
 
References
- ^ "Hirohito | Biography, Accomplishments, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 27 March 2019.
 - ^ Helms, Ludger (2012). Poor Leadership and Bad Governance: Reassessing Presidents and Prime Ministers in North America, Europe and Japan. Edward Elgar Publishing. p. 178. ISBN 978-0-85793-273-0.
 - ^ "21 Die as Jet Hits School On Okinawa", Oakland Tribune, June 30, 1959, p1
 
.svg.png)