Shingū, Japan
Shingū, Japan
Shingū, Japan has 16 documented cultural connections to places around the world. Below are 12 of the most distinctive.
Kuni no miyatsuko
Connects Shingū, Japan to: Wakayama (city), Japan | Shimanto, Japan
Kumano River
Connects Shingū, Japan to: Kihō, Japan | Tenkawa, Japan
Kishū Tokugawa family
Connects Shingū, Japan to: Wakayama (city), Japan | Kumano, Japan | Susami, Japan | Kihō, Japan | Mihama, Japan
Yoshino-Kumano National Park
Connects Shingū, Japan to: Kushimoto, Japan | Kumano, Japan | Susami, Japan | Matsusaka, Japan | Kihō, Japan
Kii Peninsula
Connects Shingū, Japan to: Nara Prefecture | Yokkaichi, Japan | Kushimoto, Japan | Katsuura, Japan | Suzuka, Japan
Nihon Shoki
Connects Shingū, Japan to: Niigata (city), Japan | Shimonoseki, Japan | Isumi, Japan | Itami, Japan | Suzuka, Japan
jōkamachi
Connects Shingū, Japan to: Hirosaki, Japan | Odawara, Japan | Kuwana, Japan | Matsuyama, Japan | Hamamatsu, Japan
Kamakura period
Connects Shingū, Japan to: Kobe, Japan | Aomori, Japan | Fujisawa, Japan | Misawa, Japan | Hirosaki, Japan
commercial fishing
Connects Shingū, Japan to: Northern Michigan | Tampa, Florida | Galveston Bay Area | Port Washington, Wisconsin | Aomori, Japan
Humid subtropical climate
Connects Shingū, Japan to: Wichita, Kansas | Montevideo, Uruguay | Newburgh, New York | Minas Gerais | Córdoba, Argentina
Meiji restoration
Connects Shingū, Japan to: Sendai, Japan | Nagano (city), Japan | Misawa, Japan | Kagoshima, Japan | Jōetsu, Japan
Edo period
Connects Shingū, Japan to: Tokyo, Japan | Nagoya, Japan | Osaka, Japan | Sendai, Japan | Chiba Prefecture