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view--hakodate port at night
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 From this picture, you can see the port, the Hakodate JR train station and Toyoko Inn (the hotel I stayed).

CEMETERY FOR FOREIGNERS is on the north eastern side of Hakodate (not on this picture). I paste the text here merely because I have lost the photos I took in the graveyard.

The cemetery area, which used to be called Yamasedomari, was the original cemetery for sailors who died during their port call at Hakodate, and for foreign residents of Hakodate.

Gravestones for late sailors of Perry's fleet and the first British fleet were placed there back in 1854 and 1855 respectively. In addition, according to some records, French sailors who died of illness were buried there after the ship had to be rushed into port at Hakodate despite no diplomatic relations with Japan at the time.

By the year 1870, Britain and Russia already had their own cemeteries there. Following a new demand for Catholic cemeteries Hokkaido settlers decided to lend France a part of the area as a Catholic cemetery. It is currently a cemetery for the Congregation of the Sisters of St. Paul de Chartres.

In 1876 the cemetery for Chinese people, now called the Chinese Graveyard, became part of the larger Foreign Cemetery.
Text by City of Hakodate
 
  
  
 
modelCanon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XT
dateTue 2006-10-31 19:39:04
focal85.0mm (35mm equivalent: 138mm)
exposureaperture priority (semi-auto)
cityBangkok, Hong Kong, Vancouver
distantwalk 0.02 km SE from last photo
locationMap of "view--hakodate port at night"
width800 height533
flashNo timing4.000 s
aperturef/5.6 iso100
whitebalanceAuto latitudeN 41d 45.56m 0s
longitudeE 140d 42.27m 0s elevation0.00m
continentAsia countryThailand
regionSouth East Asia itineraryExit Bangkok
activityHome - End of trip weatherRain
 
  
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