Awaji Island (淡路島,Awaji-shima) is anisland inHyōgo Prefecture,Japan, in the eastern part of theSeto Inland Sea between the islands ofHonshū andShikoku. The island has an area of 592.17 square kilometres (228.64 square miles).[1] It is the largest island of the Seto Inland Sea.
As a transit between those two larger islands,Awaji originally means "the road toAwa",[2] the historic province bordering the Shikoku side of theNaruto Strait, now part ofTokushima Prefecture.
TheNojima Fault, responsible for the 1995Great Hanshin earthquake, cuts across the island. A section of the fault was protected and turned into the Nojima Fault Preservation Museum in theHokudancho Earthquake Memorial Park (北淡町震災記念公園) to show how the movement in the ground cuts across roads, hedges and other installations. Outside of this protected area, the fault zone is less visible.[5] The Onaruto Bridge Memorial Museum (大鳴門橋記念館,Ōnarutokyō Kinenkan) and the Uzushio Science Museum (うずしお科学館,Uzushio Kagakukan) are located nearFukura.[6]
TheAwaji Ningyō-Jōruri, a more-than-500-year-old form of traditionalpuppet theater, orningyō-jōruri, daily performs several shows in the Awaji Ningyō-Jōruri Hall (人形浄瑠璃館) inMinamiawaji, Hyōgo in the southern part of the island and is designated anIntangible Cultural Heritage of Japan. The Awaji puppets perform popular traditional dramas but have their origins in religious rituals.[8]
Starting in the 1830s, the local potter Minpei started producing what would be then known asAwaji ware, a type of Japanese pottery also known as Minpei ware.
In 1995, this island was the epicenter of theKobe earthquake, which killed over 5,502 people. The earthquake caused enormous damage around the northern part of the island, which experienced a severe earthquake with a seismic intensity 7. The earthquake has a seismic fault called Nojima Fault. This fault is one of the closest faults to the epicenter and was designated as a national natural monument in 1998.[citation needed]
^Genji Shibukawa."Japanese Creation Myth".Tales from the Kojiki. Harcourt Brace Custom Publishing.Archived from the original on 15 April 2008. Retrieved2008-03-22.
^Hiroko Yamamoto."Awaji Ningyo Joruri". Asia-Pacific Database.Archived from the original on 6 April 2008. Retrieved2008-03-22.
^"About Yumebutai". Awaji Yumebutai The Westin Hotel and Resort and International Conference Center. 2006. Archived fromthe original on 2017-12-24. Retrieved2008-03-23.