2005 in Japan explained
Events in the year 2005 in Japan.
Incumbents
Governors
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- Gifu Prefecture: Taku Kajiwara (until 5 February); Hajime Furuta (starting 6 February)
Harumi Takahashi
Masanori Tanimoto
Shirō Asano (until 21 November); Yoshihiro Murai (starting 21 November)
Keiichi Inamine
-
- Yamaguchi Prefecture: Sekinari Nii Yamanashi Prefecture: Takahiko Yamamoto
Events
January
February
March
April
May
June
- June 23
- 60th anniversary of the Battle of Okinawa - a ceremony to remember the dead is held at the Okinawa Prefectural Peace Park.
- The first case of the H5N2 virus in Japan is discovered on a chicken farm in Jōsō, Ibaraki.
July
- July 15: Two tankers collide in the Kumano Sea, with one bursting into flames, resulting in one death.
August
- August 8: Postal service privatization, the keystone of Prime Minister Koizumi's platform, is voted down in the House of Councillors. Later in the day, Koizumi announces the dissolution of the House of Representatives and snap elections to be held the following month.7
- August 24: The Tsukuba Express line opens.
September
October
- October 1: Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group is formed by the merger of two Japanese banking conglomerates.
- October 14: The Postal Privatisation Bill enters the Diet.
- October 17: Koizumi visits Yasukuni Shrine for the first time since 2004.
- October 31: Koizumi reshuffles his cabinet, naming Shinzo Abe as Chief Cabinet Secretary, Heizo Takenaka as Minister of Internal Affairs and Taro Aso as Minister of Foreign Affairs.
November
December
Date unknown
Japanese official abandoned national project and development of superconducting passenger ferry Techno Superliner, due to high fuel cost.
Births
Deaths
- January 4: Kishibe Shigeo, musicologist (born 1912)
- January 14: Takeshi Suzuki, professor of Urdu (born 1932)
- January 16: Yoshito Matsushige, photojournalist (born 1913)
- January 23: Mutsuko Sakura, actress (born 1921)
- February 19: Kihachi Okamoto, film director (born 1924)
- February 28: Yukio Koshimori, politician (born 1930)
- March 6: Sadako Kurihara, poet (born 1913)
- March 22: Kenzo Tange, architect (born 1913)
- April 20: Fumio Niwa, author (born 1904)
- May 23: Tetsuya Ishida, painter (born 1973)
- June: Satoru Anabuki, flying ace (born 1921)
- June 10: Yumiko Kurahashi, writer (born 1935)
- June 28: Yumika Hayashi, AV idol and pink film actress (born 1970)
- July 11: Shinya Hashimoto, wrestler (born 1965)
- July 16: Gu, Prince Imperial Hoeun (born 1931)
- July 19: Toku Nishio, actor and voice actor (born 1939)
- August 12: Teruo Ishii, film director (born 1924)
- November 4: Hiro Takahashi, singer, lyricist, and composer (born 1964)
- November 4: Mana Nishiura, drummer (born 1971)
- November 6: Minako Honda, idol pop star and singer (born 1967)
- November 22: Airi Kinoshita, murder victim (born 1998)
- November 25: Yoshio Shiga, fighter ace (born 1914)
- November 26: Takanori Arisawa, composer and arranger (born 1951)
- Undated: Masao Sasakibara, fighter ace (born 1921)
See also
Statistics
- Wealthiest person in Japan: Nobutada Saji (net worth US$5.8 billion)
Notes and References
- Web site: McCurry . Justin . Akihito to become first Japanese emperor to abdicate in 200 years . the Guardian . 10 June 2018 . en . 1 December 2017.
- Web site: Powerful Earthquake in Japan . Fox News . 10 June 2018 . 20 March 2005.
- Web site: Skateboarding NAKAYAMA Funa - Tokyo 2020 Olympics . Olympics.com . 26 July 2021 . en-us . 26 July 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210726052443/https://olympics.com/tokyo-2020/olympic-games/en/results/skateboarding/athlete-profile-n1315686-nakayama-funa.htm . dead .