Map of Tokyo City before the1923 Great Kantō earthquakeTokyo Prefectural Office andTokyo City HallAdministrative map of "Greater Tokyo" (大東京Dai-Tōkyō), the merger of 82 municipalities into Tokyo City in 1932, and two smaller mergers in 1936
Tokyo City (東京市,Tōkyō-shi) was amunicipality in Japan and capital ofTokyo Prefecture (orTokyo-fu) which existed from 1 May 1889 until the establishment ofTokyo Metropolis on 1 July 1943.[1] The historical boundaries of Tokyo City are now occupied by thespecial wards ofTokyo. The defunct city and its prefecture became what is now Tokyo, also known as the Tokyo Metropolis or, ambiguously, Tokyo Prefecture.
In 1868, the city ofEdo, seat of theTokugawa government, was renamed Tokyo, and the offices ofTokyo Prefecture (-fu) were opened.[1] The extent of Tokyo Prefecture was initially limited to the former Edo city, but rapidly augmented to be comparable with the present Tokyo Metropolis. In 1878, the Meiji government's reorganization of local governments[a] subdivided prefectures intocounties or districts (gun, further subdivided intotowns andvillages, later reorganized similar toPrussian districts) and districts or wards (ku) which were in ordinary prefectures cities as a whole, e.g. today's Hiroshima City (-shi) was thenHiroshima-ku; the three major cities of Tokyo, Osaka and Kyoto were each subdivided into several such wards. In Tokyo Prefecture, this created 15 wards (listed below) and six counties/districts.[2]
In 1888, the central government created the legal framework for the current system ofcities (shi)[b] that granted some basic local autonomy rights – with some similarities toPrussia's system of local self-government as Meiji government advisorAlbert Mosse heavily influenced the organization of local government.[3] But under a special imperial regulation,[c] Tokyo City, like Kyoto City and Osaka City, initially did not maintain a separate mayor; instead, the (appointed) governor of Tokyo Prefecture served as mayor of Tokyo City. The Tokyocity council/assembly (Tōkyō-shikai) was first elected in May 1889.[2] Eachward also retained its own assembly. City and prefectural government were separated in 1898.,[2] and the government began to appoint a separate mayor of Tokyo City in 1898, but retained ward-level legislation, which continues to this day in the special ward system. From 1926, the mayor was elected by the elected city council/assembly from its own ranks. The city hall of Tokyo was located in theYūrakuchō district, on a site now occupied by theTokyo International Forum.[4]
Tokyo became the second-largest city in the world (population 4.9 million) upon absorbing several outlying districts in July 1932, giving the city a total of 35 wards.[1]
In 1943, the city was abolished along with Tokyo Prefecture to form Tokyo Metropolis andTokyo Metropolitan Government,[1] which was functionally a part of the central government of Japan: the governor of Tokyo became aCabinet minister reporting directly to thePrime Minister. This system remained in place until 1947 when the current structure of the Tokyo Metropolitan Government was formed.[1]
Tokyo's administrative structure before 1943 (not different from Ōsaka, Kyōto)
Tōkyō-fu ("Tokyo Prefecture")
Tōkyō-shi ("Tokyo City")
Other cities (shi)
towns (machi) and villages (mura) (until 1920s subordinate to counties/districts) (island municipalities subordinate to subprefectures)
^The郡区町村編制法 [ja]gun-ku-chō-son hensei-hō, of 1878, the law on the organization of gun (counties/districts), ku (cities/districts/wards), towns and villages, one of the "three new laws" on local government of 1878 that also created prefectural taxation rights and prefectural assemblies (地方三新法,chihō san-shinpō,地方三新法 [ja])
^市制,shi-sei市制 [ja], the municipal code for cities of 1888. In the same year, the municipal code for towns on villages, the 町村制,chō-son-sei町村制 [ja], was created. The county governments were reorganized in 1890 by the郡制 [ja] (gun-sei )
^abc"東京のあゆみ"(PDF). Tokyo Metropolitan Government. p. 225. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 29 October 2013.
^Akio Kamiko,Implementation of the City Law and the Town and Village Law (1881–1908)Archived 10 June 2015 at theWayback Machine.Historical Development of Japanese Local GovernanceArchived 24 January 2022 at theWayback Machine Vol. 2 (Note on translations: This work and others consistently use the translation "assembly" for theelected prefectural and municipal assemblies (today generally [shi/to/etc.]-gikai, but in the Empire sometimes only [shi/fu/etc.]-kai), and "council" for the partially or completelyunelected prefectural, county and municipalsanjikai (参事会). But other works follow modern usage and translate the elected body ofshikai (as it is still named in some major cities) as city "council", and use other translations such as "advisory council" for the sanjikai.)