• About
  • Featured
  • Home
 
Muza-chan's Gate to Japan
12 years of travel throughout Japan
Discover Japan through the eyes of a seasoned traveler
  • A Japan photo per day
  • Travel in Japan
  • Customs & traditions
  • Japanese food
  • Japanese history
  •  Anime & otaku
  • Did you know?

Pages: << 1 ... 4045 4046 4047 4048 4049 4050 4051 4052 4053 4054 4055 ... 4255 >>

The Soya

Thu, November 26, 2009

I wrote a few months ago about the Karafuto dogs statue nearby the Tokyo Tower, erected to commemorate the 15 Sakhalin Husky dogs that were part of the Japanese research expedition to Antarctica in 1958.

Museum of Maritime Science - Soya

The ship which brought home the explorers is called Sōya (宗谷) and it was the first Japanese ship used for exploration in Antarctica.
Sōya went again in Antarctica the next year, when the survivor dogs, Taro and Jiro, were saved and brought back to Japan.

Today, Sōya is opened for visitors, exhibited at the Museum of Maritime Science from Odaiba.

Museum of Maritime Science - Soya

Sōya was born as an icebreaker cargo ship ordered by the Soviet Union in 1938, named Volochaevets. After the World War II broke out, it was requisitioned by the Japanese Navy and renamed first Chiryou-maru and two years later Sōya.

Museum of Maritime Science - Soya

During the World War II, Sōya served as an auxiliary ammunition and surveillance ship.
After the war, it was one of the ships used for repatriation, so it received the nickname “Santa Claus of the Sea".

In 1956, Sōya became a research vessel and it ended its active career in 1978, when it became the today’s museum ship.

Museum of Maritime Science - Soya

For more information, visit:

  • Fune no Kagakukan
  • Wikipedia

Scriam acum câteva luni despre statuia de lângă Tokyo Tower ridicată în amintirea celor 15 câini Karafuto (Sakhalin husky) care au făcut parte din expediţia japoneză din Antarctica din anul 1958.

Museum of Maritime Science - Soya

Nava cu care s-au întors acasă exploratorii se numeşte Sōya (宗谷) şi este prima navă a Japoniei folosită pentru explorare în Antarctica.
Tot cu ea au fost aduşi acasă în anul următor cei doi câini care au reuşit să supravieţuiască singuri în Antarctica, Taro şi Jiro.

Astăzi, Sōya este expusă la Museum of Maritime Science din Odaiba şi este deschisă spre vizitare.

Museum of Maritime Science - Soya

Sōya a fost construită în 1938, la comanda Uniunii Sovietice, ca spărgător de gheaţă, numit Volochaevets.
După izbucnirea celui de al doilea război mondial, a fost rechiziţionată de marina japoneză şi redenumită mai întâi Chiryou-maru şi doi ani mai târziu Sōya.

Museum of Maritime Science - Soya

În timpul celui de-al doilea război mondial, Sōya a servit ca vas auxiliar de supraveghere şi depozit de muniţie. După război a fost una din navele folosite pentru repatriere şi pentru transport de materiale pentru faruri, de aici primind şi numele de “Moş Crăciun al mării".

A devenit navă de cercetare în anul 1956 şi şi-a încheiat activitatea în 1978, când a devenit nava muzeu de astăzi.

Museum of Maritime Science - Soya

Pentru mai multe informaţii, vizitaţi:

  • Fune no Kagakukan
  • Wikipedia

Tags: Odaiba, ships 

  • Muza-chan mascot
    • # Kyoto travel

    • # Travel tips for visiting Japan

    • # Zen gardens

    • # Tokyo travel

    •  
    • # Modern Japanese architecture

    • # Japanese gardens

    • # Japanese manhole covers

    •  
    • # Castles in Japan

    • # Traditional Japanese house

    • # Trains in Japan

    •  
    • # Night time photos from Japan

    • # Sakura, cherry blossoms

    • # Traditional Japanese architecture

  • Traveled areas 2007-2017
  • Creative Commons License
    Photos and text by Muza-chan are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
    If you quote or use photos from this site, you must give appropriate credit and a link to the site:
    "Based on a work at muza-chan.net"
    Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available by contacting us (privacy policy).