群馬
Gunma (sometimes spelled "
Gumma") is a
prefecture in north-central
Japan, with most of its 2 million residents in a valley sandwiched between the
Echigo Mountains and
Kanto Mountains. It borders on
Saitama to the south,
Nagano to the west,
Niigata and
Fukushima to the north, and
Tochigi to the east. The largest cities are
Maebashi (283,000),
Takasaki (238,000),
Ota (140,000),
Kiryu (121,000), and
Isesaki (121,000).
What is now Gunma was once called Kozuke, and experienced its most rapid growth with the development of the Tosando road, which linked the northern coast of Japan to the eastern coast during its medieval period. However, it is known that the area has been settled since ancient times: the Nihon Shoki records a battle between Gunma and Saitama in the 500's CE, and digs in the area have revealed Stone Age implements, keys in unraveling prehistoric Japanese culture.
Today, Gunma's topography makes it a popular spot for tourists. Mount Tanigawa, at 1,978 meters, is something of a mecca for Japanese mountain climbers, and the three volcanoes known as Kamimitsuke (Mount Akagi, Mount Myogi, and Mount Haruna) give the area a wide array of breathtaking gorges and waterfalls, not to mention an equally wide array of relaxing onsen resorts. Out of the 80 onsen resorts in Gunma, the three "yokozuna" are at Kusatsu, Ikaho, and Minakami.
Major industries in Gunma include train building, automobile component manufacturing, textiles, and computers. Historically a major rice cultivation area, Gunma's agriculture is now directed toward crops and livestock that are sold to supermarkets in Tokyo and other heavily populated areas of the Kanto region.
Gunma is 90 minutes away from Ueno on JR's rapid service trains, or about an hour on the Shinkansen.