The Great Kanto Earthquake
The Great Kanto Earthquake occurred on September 1, 1923, at 11:58 a.m. (Japan Standard Time, hereafter referred to as "the Great Kanto Earthquake"), and caused extensive damage in the southern Kanto region and adjacent areas. An estimated 105,000 people were killed or missing, making it the largest earthquake disaster in Japan since the Meiji era (1868-1912).
The Great Kanto Earthquake Korean Massacre
The massacre of Koreans in the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923 was an incident in which government officials and vigilantes massacred many Koreans and communists who believed false rumors that Koreans and communists had poisoned wells and that Koreans had set fires during the confusion caused by the Great Kanto Earthquake of 1923 in Japan.
Fukuda Village Incident.
On September 6, 1923, amid the social unrest [Note 1] created by the confusion and false rumors following the Great Kanto Earthquake, a group of 15 medicine peddlers from Kagawa Prefecture were assaulted by local vigilantes from Fukuda Village and Tanaka Village (now Kashiwa City) in Mitsubori, Higashikatsushika County (now Noda City), Chiba Prefecture, and nine people were killed. Nine of them were killed.
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