Formally named the National Ainu Museum and Park, Upopoy opened in July in Shiraoi, Hokkaido. The facility is designed to serve as the “national center” for restoring and promoting Ainu culture.
According to Upopoy, the national Ainu museum on Hokkaido, the roots of the Ainu go back about 30,000 years. No one is sure how many Ainu live in Japan today; there are no official tallies and ...
The Penn Museum, in collaboration with the Penn Libraries, recently launched various Ainu-themed programming, including a documentary screening and an ongoing exhibit on Ainu representation in media.
A new national museum is putting the spotlight on Japan’s Ainu indigenous people. Upopoy, a sprawling complex also known as the Symbolic Space for Ethnic Harmony, opened in the northernmost ...
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The Ainu Are the Forgotten Indigenous People of JapanThe pride is especially evident in the centre's small, well-kept museum, where Ainu artefacts, such as traditional clothing ...
During a repatriation ceremony held in Australia, a senior museum official reportedly met representatives of the Ainu people and apologized for the pain inflicted on people because the remains ...
The immediate predecessors of the Ainu, who are the native people of northeastern Japan, occupied the site. Many archeologists consider the Ainu to be the last living descendants of the Jomon ...
Located within the expansive Expo Memorial Park, the National Museum of Ethnology is Japan’s largest humanities and social sciences research institute. Its inte ...
A manga spotlights the Ainu One of the world's biggest manga exhibitions will be held at the British Museum in May 2019. The museum chose an Ainu character from the comic "Golden Kamuy" by Satoru ...
The Ainu believe that the world rests on the back of a giant trout, that otters caused human beings to be flawed, and that seeing an owl fly across the face of the moon at night is cause for great ...
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