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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  





2 Demographics  





3 Notable people  





4 See also  





5 References  














Japanese people in Belgium







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


  • Japanese Belgians
  • 日系ベルギー人 (Japanese)
  • Belgisch Japans (Dutch)
  • Japonais en Belgique (French)
  • Total population
    4,931 (2017)
    Regions with significant populations
  • Antwerp
  • Languages
  • Dutch
  • Japanese
  • Religion
  • Buddhism
  • Christianity
  • Irreligion
  • Related ethnic groups
    Overseas Japanese

    Japanese people in BelgiumorJapanese Belgians (Japanese: 日系ベルギー人) are Belgian citizensofJapanese ancestry.

    History

    [edit]

    The Japanese started to arrive in considerable numbers in Brussels in the 1950s. At this time the Belgian-Japanese economic partnerships had started. By 1992, the Brussels Japanese community was already one of the largest in Europe.[1]

    The Japanese Garden of Hasselt

    InHasselt there is a Japanese garden, donated to the Flemish city by the city of Itami, Japan.[2][3] It is the largest Japanese garden in Western Europe, extending for 2.5 hectares.[4] There are other Japanese gardens in Belgium, such as the one in the city of Ostend.[5][6] There is a good relationship between the city of Ostend and the Japanese company Daikin, located in the industrial area of Ostend, and whose company buildings can be seen along the Ostend-Brussels highway.[7]InLaeken, Brussels, there is a Japanese tower, built between 1900 and 1904 by order of King Leopold II.[8][9] Also in Brussels there is a Japanese international school, the Japanese School of Brussels, founded in 1979[10] over a Japanese Saturday school opened in 1974.[11]InAuderghem, near the Japanese School, there is a street named Avenue Nippone [fr] ("Nipponic Avenue"—Nippon means "Japan" in Japanese),[12] opened and named thus in 1986, due to its proximity to the school.[12] There are Japanese magazines published for Japanese Belgians.[13]

    Demographics

    [edit]

    As of 2021 there were about 6,000 Japanese living in Belgium.[14] In 2016 there were 2,754 Japanese in Brussels alone.[1] In 2016, most (71%) of the Brussels Japanese lived in the southeast of the Brussels Region, more precisely in Woluwe-Saint-Lambert, Woluwe-Saint-Pierre, Auderghem and Watermael-Boitsfort.[1] 62% of the Japanese community in Belgium lives in Brussels.[1]

    The Japanese community of Belgium was by 1992 one of the largest in Europe.[1] The number of Japanese in Belgium is currently stagnating compared to the rising numbers of other Asian nationalities such as the Chinese and Indians.[1]

    Notable people

    [edit]
    Yumi Lambert

    See also

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ a b c d e f Casier, Charlotte (November 2017). "Chinezen, Indiërs en Japanners in het Brussels Hoofdstedelijk Gewest" (PDF). FOCUS. 21. Brussels instituut voor Statistiek en analyse: 1–9.
  • ^ "A Japanese garden in Belgium". www.cruisetotravel.com.
  • ^ "Japanese Garden of Hasselt". www.smarksthespots.com.
  • ^ "The Japanese Garden, the perfect spot for a peaceful and cultured meeting". www.visithasselt.be.
  • ^ "Japanese Garden Shin Kai Tei - Nature". www.oostende.org.
  • ^ "Japanese Garden". www.visitoostende.be.
  • ^ "Takashi Sawano 's Shin Kai Tei". www.royalpalaces.be (in Dutch).
  • ^ "The Japanese Tower at the Royal Domain in Laeken: A remarkable application of Japanese lacquer techniques in Belgium". www.iiconservation.org. Retrieved 16 March 2023.
  • ^ "A ing's Dream: The Chinese Paviliion and the Japanese Tower in Laeken (Brussels)". www.theartssociety.org. 7 February 2023.
  • ^ "沿革史." (Archive) The Japanese School of Brussels. Retrieved on 9 January 2014. Table: 西暦: 1979, 元号: 4, 月, 4: "全日制日本人学校開校 文部省派遣 脇坂譲校長着任(3代)(本目英世氏は全日制教頭とする)この年より全日制校長が補習校の校長を兼務する"
  • ^ Conte-Helm, Marie. The Japanese and Europe: Economic and Cultural Encounters (Bloomsbury Academic Collections). A&C Black, 17 December 2013. ISBN 1780939809, 9781780939803. p. 104.
  • ^ a b "L'avenue Nippone - 1160 Auderghem". EBRU.
  • ^ "Aoitori het medium voor de Japanse gemeenschap". www.aoitori.be.
  • ^ "Number of residents from Japan living in Belgium from 2013 to 2021". Statista.
  • ^ Satenstein, Liana (1 December 2014). "Meet 7 New Faces of the Victoria's Secret Fashion Show". Vogue. Retrieved 25 March 2023.
  • flag Belgium

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Japanese_people_in_Belgium&oldid=1235478843"

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    This page was last edited on 19 July 2024, at 13:22 (UTC).

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