Kanagawa

Kanagawa

(känä`gäwä), prefecture (1990 pop. 7,980,421), E central Honshu, Japan. Yokohama is the capital. Other important cities include Kawasaki, Yokosuka, and Kamakura (a religious center). The urban belt of the eastern part of the prefecture merges with Tokyo to the north. Flowers and dairy products are produced in Kanagawa, and fishing is an important industry.

Kanagawa

 

a prefecture in Japan, in the southeastern part of the island of Honshu. Area, 2, 400 sq km; population, 5, 472, 000 (1970), of which 90 percent was urban. The administrative center is the city of Yokohama.

Kanagawa is part of Japan’s largest industrial region, Kanto. Kanagawa Prefecture accounts for more than 10 percent of Japan’s total industrial production (in terms of value). The main branches of industry include machine building, (particularly transportation—ships and motor vehicles; approximately 22 percent of Kanagawa’s industrial output) and electrical engineering (21 percent), as well as chemistry (18 percent), metallurgy (12 percent), and the food industry (10 percent). The cities of Yokohama, Tsurumi, and Kawasaki are the main industrial centers. Agriculture includes the cultivation of rice, wheat, and tobacco. Tangerines, vegetables, and flowers are grown, and beef and dairy cattle and poultry are raised. There is fishing off the coast of the Miura Peninsula. The area also has tourism.