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Awaji IslandOoaj Travel Guide, tourism, hotel reservation, residence, plane, cheap pension for you holidays in awaji islandFree Travel guide Ooaj.com A free travel guide for holidays. Hotels in awaji island, Bed and Breakfast!![]() ![]() Awaji Island (淡路島 Awajishima in Japanese) is a not-terribly-large island - about the same size as Singapore - that marks the eastern boundary of the Seto Inland Sea of Japan. Thanks to a set of new bridges and a cross-island expressway, most visitors just zip through on their way from Honshu to Shikoku.
![]() Understand![]() HistoryAwajishima has some claim to being the oldest settled area in Japan; the Kojiki mentions it under the name "Onokoroshima" and burial mounds (kofun) dating back thousands of years have been found on the island. The ningyo joruri puppet theater, which has evolved into bunraku, seems to originate from Awajishima. Awajishima made a highly unusual but brief appearance on the world stage as the epicenter of the Great Hanshin Earthquake of 1995 that killed over 6000 people. However, Awajishima was (and remains) far less built up than the suburbs of Kobe across the bay, which took the brunt of the damage. It was also the island where the England soccer team stayed during the World Cup in 2002. ![]() GeographyThe southern tip lies a mere kilometer off the coast of Shikoku, and a bridge now straddles the Naruto Strait, famed for the whirlpools that form as the tide flows in an out. In fact, the very name "Awaji" means "road to Awa", the former name of current Shikoku prefecture of Tokushima. Some 50 kilometers away, the northern tip is not far from the port city of Kobe on Honshu, and the immense 3.5 km Akashi Kaikyo Bridge — the world's longest — now connects Awaji to the mainland. Politically (and in geographic terms somewhat oddly), despite its proximity to Shikoku, Awaji is a part of Honshu's Hyogo prefecture. ![]() Get in![]() By planeA high-speed ferry links ![]() By carBy far the most popular option is the cross-island expressway, which will get you from ![]() By busA more affordable option than private cars are highway buses, which charge around 600 yen for crossing the bridge and e.g. 1600 for a one-way trip from Kobe to ![]() By ferryEven cheaper and more scenic, but available for the northern crossing only, are
ferries that cross from Akashi to ![]() Get aroundPublic transport is limited to very occasional buses. Unusually for Japan, there are no trains on the island. If you don't have your own set of wheels, hitchhiking is a viable option. ![]() SeeVery little evidence of Awaji's history remains though, and today's Awajishima is a typically Japanese densely populated but still rural area, known primarily for its onions. The current total population hovers around 150,000, and (unlike most rural areas in Japan) is slowly on the rise due to the improved connections to the mainland, and these days Awaji's most impressive structures are its bridges.
Scattered here and there are a number of herb and biwa (loquat) farms. The southern coast, however, is essentially one long semi-urban sprawl filled with the ![]() SleepAwaji has a scattering of ryokan and minshuku, concentrated in the hot spring areas. There are also a number of campsites, especially on the less populated western coast.
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