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As of February 1, 2006, the district has an estimated
population of 12,039 with a
density of 49.94 persons per km2. The total area is now down to 241.04 km2.
Municipalities
The district consists of one town and one village:
January 14, 1879 - Due to the district, ward, town and village status enforcement, the district seat was located at the town of Ueda.
April 1, 1889 - Due to enforcing the town and village status, Chiisagata District formed the towns of Ueda, Nagakuboshin, and Nagakubofuru, and 32 villages (3 towns, 32 villages)
October 30, 1912 - The village of Maruko gained town status. (4 towns, 31 villages)
May 1, 1919 - The town of Ueda gained city status which lasted until March 6, 2006. (3 towns, 31 villages)
September 10, 1921 - (-) The village of Sakashita merged into the city of Ueda. (3 towns, 30 villages)
September 1, 1949 - The villages of Higashishiota and Fujisan merged to form the village of Higashishiota. (3 towns, 29 villages)
October 1, 1953 - The village of Sagata gained town status and changed the name to Tanaka. (4 towns, 28 villages)
April 1, 1954 - (-) The villages of Shiojiri and Kawabe merged into the city of Ueda (4 towns, 26 villages)
October 1, 1954 - The villages of Higashiuchi and Nishiuchi merged into the town of Maruko (4 towns, 24 villages)
April 1, 1955 - The villages of Yoda and Nagase merged into the town of Maruko. (4 towns, 22 villages)
May 1, 1956 - The villages of Nishishiota, Bessho, Higashishiota, and Nakashiota merged to form the town of Shiota. (5 towns, 18 villages)
September 30, 1956 (4 towns, 11 villages)
The town of Tanaka and the villages Netsu and Wa merged to form the town of
Tōbu.
The village of Toyosato and Tonoshiro merged to form the village of Toyotono.
The towns of Nakakuboshin and Nakakubofuru and the village of Daimon merged to form the town of Nagato.
(-) The villages of Kamigawa and Izumida merged into the city of Ueda.
The village of Shiokawa merged into the town of Maruko
March 31, 1957 (4 towns, 10 villages)
Parts of the village of Urazato merged into the village of Aoki.
*The village of Muroga and the remaining parts of the village of Urazaro merged to form the village of Kawanishi.
August 1, 1957 - (-) The village of Kamishina merged into the city of Ueda (4 towns, 9 villages)
April 1, 1958 - (-) The village of Toyotono merged into the city of Ueda (4 towns, 8 villages)
April 10, 1958 - The village of Shino merged into the town of Tōbu. (4 towns, 7 villages)
October 1, 1958 - The villages of Naga, Hoyo, and Motohara merged to form the town of Sanada. (5 towns, 4 villages)
April 1, 1959 - (-) Parts of the town of
Tōbu was merged into the city of
Komoro.
April 1, 1970 - (-) The town of Shiota was merged into the city of
Ueda.(4 towns, 4 villages)
April 1, 1973 - (-) The village of Kawanishi was merged into the city of
Ueda.(4 towns, 3 villages)
Recent mergers
April 1, 2004 - (-) The town of Tōbu was merged with the village of
Kitamimaki (from
Kitasaku District) to form the new city of
Tōmi. (3 towns, 3 villages)
October 1, 2005 - The town of
Nagato and the village of
Wada were merged to form the new town of
Nagawa. (3 towns, 2 villages)
March 6, 2006 - (-) The towns of
Maruko and
Sanada, and the village of
Takeshi were merged with the former city of
Ueda to form the new city of
Ueda.[1] (1 town, 1 village)
You can help expand this article with text translated from
the corresponding article in Japanese. (May 2023) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
View a machine-translated version of the Japanese article.
Machine translation, like
DeepL or
Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
Consider adding a topic to this template: there are already 3,691 articles in the
main category, and specifying|topic= will aid in categorization.
Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
You must provide
copyright attribution in the
edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an
interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Japanese Wikipedia article at [[:ja:小県郡]]; see its history for attribution.
You may also add the template {{Translated|ja|小県郡}} to the
talk page.
As of February 1, 2006, the district has an estimated
population of 12,039 with a
density of 49.94 persons per km2. The total area is now down to 241.04 km2.
Municipalities
The district consists of one town and one village:
January 14, 1879 - Due to the district, ward, town and village status enforcement, the district seat was located at the town of Ueda.
April 1, 1889 - Due to enforcing the town and village status, Chiisagata District formed the towns of Ueda, Nagakuboshin, and Nagakubofuru, and 32 villages (3 towns, 32 villages)
October 30, 1912 - The village of Maruko gained town status. (4 towns, 31 villages)
May 1, 1919 - The town of Ueda gained city status which lasted until March 6, 2006. (3 towns, 31 villages)
September 10, 1921 - (-) The village of Sakashita merged into the city of Ueda. (3 towns, 30 villages)
September 1, 1949 - The villages of Higashishiota and Fujisan merged to form the village of Higashishiota. (3 towns, 29 villages)
October 1, 1953 - The village of Sagata gained town status and changed the name to Tanaka. (4 towns, 28 villages)
April 1, 1954 - (-) The villages of Shiojiri and Kawabe merged into the city of Ueda (4 towns, 26 villages)
October 1, 1954 - The villages of Higashiuchi and Nishiuchi merged into the town of Maruko (4 towns, 24 villages)
April 1, 1955 - The villages of Yoda and Nagase merged into the town of Maruko. (4 towns, 22 villages)
May 1, 1956 - The villages of Nishishiota, Bessho, Higashishiota, and Nakashiota merged to form the town of Shiota. (5 towns, 18 villages)
September 30, 1956 (4 towns, 11 villages)
The town of Tanaka and the villages Netsu and Wa merged to form the town of
Tōbu.
The village of Toyosato and Tonoshiro merged to form the village of Toyotono.
The towns of Nakakuboshin and Nakakubofuru and the village of Daimon merged to form the town of Nagato.
(-) The villages of Kamigawa and Izumida merged into the city of Ueda.
The village of Shiokawa merged into the town of Maruko
March 31, 1957 (4 towns, 10 villages)
Parts of the village of Urazato merged into the village of Aoki.
*The village of Muroga and the remaining parts of the village of Urazaro merged to form the village of Kawanishi.
August 1, 1957 - (-) The village of Kamishina merged into the city of Ueda (4 towns, 9 villages)
April 1, 1958 - (-) The village of Toyotono merged into the city of Ueda (4 towns, 8 villages)
April 10, 1958 - The village of Shino merged into the town of Tōbu. (4 towns, 7 villages)
October 1, 1958 - The villages of Naga, Hoyo, and Motohara merged to form the town of Sanada. (5 towns, 4 villages)
April 1, 1959 - (-) Parts of the town of
Tōbu was merged into the city of
Komoro.
April 1, 1970 - (-) The town of Shiota was merged into the city of
Ueda.(4 towns, 4 villages)
April 1, 1973 - (-) The village of Kawanishi was merged into the city of
Ueda.(4 towns, 3 villages)
Recent mergers
April 1, 2004 - (-) The town of Tōbu was merged with the village of
Kitamimaki (from
Kitasaku District) to form the new city of
Tōmi. (3 towns, 3 villages)
October 1, 2005 - The town of
Nagato and the village of
Wada were merged to form the new town of
Nagawa. (3 towns, 2 villages)
March 6, 2006 - (-) The towns of
Maruko and
Sanada, and the village of
Takeshi were merged with the former city of
Ueda to form the new city of
Ueda.[1] (1 town, 1 village)