Hiroshima cruise port guide
Hiroshima means “wide island” in Japanese. The city was established in the 16th Century on Japan’s largest island, Honshu, and grew into an important shipping center and prefecture capital, boasting a fine castle. Although it was an important city in Japan throughout the imperial period, its reputation in the greater world was burned into history when it became to target of the first atomic bombing of a civilian target in August of 1945. The United States airplane Enola Gay dropped a nuclear device nicknamed “Little Boy” on the city that morning, obliterating everything within a two-kilometer radius and directly killing 80,000 people. Approximately 70 percent of Hiroshima’s buildings were destroyed. Within a year, injury and radiation illness had killed an additional 90, 000 to 116,000 citizens. The attacks on Hiroshima and nearby Nagasaki quickly led to the surrender of Japan and effectively precipitated the end of World War II in Asia. Within a few years, Hiroshima had begun to rebuild, and the city became the focus of an international movement to eliminate nuclear weapons from future wars. Relics of its past such as the impressive Hiroshima Castle and the tranquil Shukkeien Garden were rebuilt, and the city undertook the construction of a Memorial Peace Park, which today attracts visitors from around the world. The park, which holds a museum and a memorial “Atomic Dome” constructed on the closest remaining building to the blast site, is a moving and impactful place of pilgrimage in this re-born City of Peace. One notable feature is a colorful memorial to Sadako Sasaki, a young woman whose dying wishes for world peace were recounted in the story A Thousand Paper Cranes.
About Hiroshima
Hiroshima, a modern industrial city of more than 1.1 million on Japan's Seto Inland Sea coast, was the site of the world's first atomic bomb attack on August 6, 1945, and today anchors its identity to the UNESCO-listed Hiroshima Peace Memorial and A-Bomb Dome. Beyond its historical weight, the city offers Hiroshima Castle, three city-center art museums, Hiroshima-style okonomiyaki, and proximity to Miyajima Island's Itsukushima Shrine. Rebuilt from near-total devastation into a cosmopolitan center, Hiroshima is a welcoming destination where Peace Memorial exhibits are presented without blame
The Hiroshima Peace Memorial anchors every itinerary: the A-Bomb Dome, preserved as a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1996, is the only structure that survived near the hypocenter and remains in a state of deliberate ruin. Hiroshima Castle, built in 1591 and lost to Mōri Terumoto after the Battle of Sekigahara, provides layered feudal history; its surrounding park is a major cherry blossom destination each April. Peace Park serves as the city's communal memorial space. Miyajima Island's Itsukushima Shrine — accessible from the city — is a separately compelling cultural excursion. Three art museums in the city center are flagged as 'excellent' but not named in the sources consulted.
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Cruises visiting Hiroshima
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Grand Japan
Diamond Princess · Asia & Indian Ocean · 17 nights
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Japan Explorer
Diamond Princess · Asia · 10 nights
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12 Night Best Of Japan Cruise
Celebrity Millennium · Asia & Indian Ocean · 12 nights
from $2,814
$234 / night
Japan Explorer
Diamond Princess · Asia · 10 nights
from $2,046
$204 / night
Canada To New Zealand Grand Voyage
Azamara Pursuit · Australia · 114 nights
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Canada To Japan Grand Voyage
Azamara Pursuit · North America · 36 nights
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