The oldest known Japantown featuring a Japanese cemetery is in Ayutthaya, Thailand, which was established between the 14th and 18th centuries. The oldest known Japanese national recorded by name and buried outside Japan is the early explorer Yamada Nagamasa.
Cemetery in Comilla District, Chittagong Division and other locations; Search and collect the remains project learned 43 tombs are Japanese, searching since 2014. Bangladesh government granted permission to Japan for the collection of remains of war dead in July 2024, then the first collection from tomb of Cemetery in Comilla District to be scheduled for 24 war dead remains in November 2024.[3]
Kampong Thom City, Kampong Thom Province: Atsu Elementary and Junior High School and monument A in a garden bearing the name Atsuhito Nakata. It was built by his father with donations from Japanese people and based on the wishes of the local people (instead of the initial idea of using it for food supplies after a flood in 1998).[4]
Worli, Mumbai: Mumbai Japanese cemetery; 3000 Japanese lived in the Mumbai area to procure cotton in the early Shōwa period. Most of the remains and property of the deceased were brought back to Japan, and the remains of only 30 people remain in Mumbai as of 2008.[8]
Vientiane Province, Nam Ngum Dam: The grave site of several Japanese engineers surveying possible dam locations who died in December 1960 when their boat overturned. The burial site is in close proximity to the dam.[9]
Labuan, Borneo, Labuan Peace Park: Monument for war casualties in the Borneo war (ボルネオ戦没者の碑, Boruneo senbotsusha no hi) for the 12,000 men who died during the war in Borneo and the surrounding ocean area. Constructed by the Japanese government with the cooperation of government of Malaysia and the government of Sabah in September 1982.[11]
Miri Japanese cemetery (in Tun Datu Tuanku Haji Bujang College)[10]
To resolve the lack of labor, the Mongolian government requested to transfer POWs in October and December 1945, and approximately 12,318 Japanese prisoners were forced to work, from which more than 1,600 have died.[12] There are 16 Japanese cemeteries including those listed below.
Ulaanbaatar, Cenotaph of Japanese at Danbadalja (ダンバダルジャー日本人慰霊碑, Danbadarujya Nihonjin ireihi) and Cenotaph of Japanese (日本人死亡者慰霊碑, Nihonjin shibousha ireihi), for approximately 1,700 POWs who died after the war ended. They were constructed by the Japanese government in October 2001.)[13]
Yangon Japanese cemetery: For Karayuki-san and Pacific War casualties. Monument of Peace, Burma (ビルマ平和記念碑, Biruma heiwa kinen hi), a peace memorial to the approximately 190,000 Japanese who died during war. It was constructed by the Japanese government in March 1981 before being moved and expanded in size by the Myanmar government in March 1998.)
Cemetery and burial place of Japanese who lived in the South Korea area before and after World War II. There are 71 cemeteries and burial places in North Korea.[14]
Suburb of Pyongyang: Yongsan cemetery (龍山墓地); 2,421 people evacuated to Pyongyang after the end of World War II, August 15, 1945, and died in the period of October 1945 to April 1946 due to cold temperatures and/or illness.[15]
One of the bloodiest battlefields of the Pacific War; there are many cenotaphs.[17]
Luzon: Approximately 270 cenotaphs in various locations.
Kalayaan – Cenotaph of those who died in the Philippine war (比島戦没者の碑, fuiripin senbutsusha no hi), to commemorate approximately 518,000 Japanese war dead in the Battle of Luzon. Constructed by the Japanese government in March 1973.[18]
Leyte: Cenotaph in Tacloban, Ormoc and various locations. approximately 80,000 Japanese killed in action out of 520,000 casualties in the Battle of Leyte. Guanyin, Madonna Maria (マドンナマリア観音, Madonna Maria Kanon), is a peace commemoration statue between Asia, including the Philippines, and Japan in the Kanfuraw Hill where TaclobanCity hall is located. There is Isao Yamazoe (山添 勇夫) Shrine in Dulag Airfield.
Smirnykh, Sakhalin Oblast: Cenotaph for Sakhalin-Kuril Islands war casualties (樺太・千島戦没者慰霊碑, Karafuto・Chishima Senbotsusha ireihi) (Constructed by the Japanese government in November 1996.[21]
Former Maokacho (真岡町, Maokacho), Kholmsk, Sakhalin Oblast: Cenotaph constructed at the location of a former Japanese cemetery, by affiliatedMaokacho in August 1995.[22]
Tainan: Houkakuji temple (宝覚寺)'s Japanese columbarium. The former Japanese cemetery (Chinese: 三板橋墓地) before was exhumed and displacement took place in 1997. The tomb of Akashi Motojiro was then moved to the cemetery (福音山基督教墓地) in Sanzhi District, Taipei, other remains were moved to Houkakuji temple in Taichung.
Hualien County: Japanese cemetery of Houden immigration village (豊田移民村日本人墓地)
Hualien County: Konohon company communal cemetery (コノホン社共同墓地)
Pingtung County Chouonji temple (潮音寺): At Bashi Channel, Imperial Japanese NavydestroyerKuretake (呉竹), transportTamatsu Maru and many other ships that were attacked by the United States Navy during Pacific War time. This area was called the Cemetery of Ships (船の幕場の, Fune no hakaba) in Japan, where more than 100,000 were killed in action. Japanese veteran Hidetsugu Nakajima (中嶋秀次, died 2013) survived for 12 days and was saved in August 1944. He self-funded the construction of the Chouonji temple in 1981 to memorialize compatriots. In August 2015, sixty families of the deceased, Taiwanese, and Japanese attended the ceremony.[25]
Hội An: Hội An Japanese cemetery memorializing 30 years after the Sakoku and the Japanese started foreign trade by the red seal ships. As a result, Japanese residents of Vietnam could not return to Japan and died there.[clarification needed]
Two cenotaphs of four Japanese Imperial Japanese Navy killed in Battle of Madagascar in Antsiranana, named Diego-Suarez prior to 1975. First cenotaph for two of four Japanese was constructed in 1976 by the Japanese embassy. Second cenotaph of four was constructed by voluntary efforts of war veterans in 1997.[clarification needed]
Banzai Cliff, North end of Saipan: Cenotaph for war casualties in the central Pacific Ocean (中部太平洋戦没者の碑, Chubu taiheiyou senbotsusha no hi) for 43,000 Japanese killed in action and 12,000 citizens killed in the war regardless of nationality including Japanese migrants to the Saipan, Tinian, Guam islands until the end of the war in 1945. It was constructed by the Japanese government with the cooperation of the Northern Mariana Islands government in March 1974.
Wewak: Cenotaph for war casualties in the New Guinea campaign (ニューギニア戦没者の碑, Nyuginia senbotsusya no hi), It commemorates 130,000 Japanese killed in action and 50,000 residents killed in the war. It was constructed by the Japanese government with the cooperation of Papua New Guinea in September 1980.[32]
Rabaul, New Britain, Bismarck Archipelago: Cenotaph of Japanese killed in action in South Pacific Ocean (南太平洋戦没者の碑, Minami taiheiyo senbotsusha no hi), 200,000 killed in action at the Battle of Rabaul. It was constructed by the Japanese government and the Comrades Association in Arms (戦友会, Senyukai) in September 1980.[32]
Majuro: Cenotaph for war casualties in the Pacific Ocean (東太平洋戦没者の碑, Higasi taiheiyou senbotsusha no hi). It was constructed by the Japanese government with the cooperation of the government of Republic of the Marshall Islands in March 1984.[32][33]
Guadalcanal: Solomon Peace Commemorative Park, Cenotaph for war casualties in the Solomon Islands (ソロモン諸島方面戦没者慰霊碑, Soromon houmen senbutsusha ireihi) built in 1998.[40]
Manzanar, Owens Valley, Inyo County, California: Tomb and cenotaph is near to the visitor center. The cenotaph was built on 15 cent donations from each family in the camp in August 1943. It also holds the remains of six unidentified people.
Queens, New York City: Mount Olivet Cemetery. Tomb of Toyohiko Takami (高見 豊彦), who founded the Japanese American Welfare Society (紐育共済会) with Jōkichi Takamine in 1914.
Moscow: Donskoy Japanese cemetery in Donskoy Monastery. Tomb of Yasunao Yoshioka (吉岡 安直), HarbinConsul Funao Miyagawa (宮川 舩夫) who died as a POW in Moscow in 1950, and others.
Wales: Cenotaph of the Hirano-maru [ja] that was shipwrecked by U-boat on December 5, 1918. The wooden cenotaph was renewed with stone cenotaph on its 100th anniversary on October 4, 2018.[42]
^Japanese blog site, back side monumental inscription is ‘’県級重点文物保護単位 滇西抗日戦争松山戦役主戦場遺址之一’’, ホーム > 海外 >アジア >中国 >雲南省 > 雲南省 旅行記 >詳細, 雲南省旅行記(ブログ) 一覧に戻る, 2007/05/06 - 2007/05/15, visit battle site in Yunnan (雲南省の戦跡を訪ねて、2007 May 9 No. 2)
^ラオス発展貢献の知られざる日本人 [Not widely known Japanese contributed to Laos development] (in Japanese). 2014-03-24. Archived from the original on 2014-03-27. Retrieved 2016-06-06.:
^ abcdefghijk"マレーシア日本人墓地を訪ねて" [Visit a Japanese cemetery in Malaysia]. www.eva.hi-ho.ne.jp (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2019-09-06.:
^慰霊碑を訪ねる [Visiting cenotaph] (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2005-04-24. Retrieved 2016-06-06.:
^ abcモンゴル慰霊団参紀行記 [memorial journey in Mongolia] (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2023-02-08. Retrieved 2016-06-06.:
^平壌郊外の日本人墓地、遺族が初の墓参り [Bereaved family first visit to Suburb of Pyongyang Japanese cemetery] (in Japanese). 2012-10-01. Archived from the original on 2012-10-02. Retrieved 2016-06-06.:
^ abc在ウラジオストク日本領事館、4.我が国との関係、(10)日本人墓地 [Consulate-General of Japan in Vladivostok, 4. Relation to Japan (10)Japanese cemetery Japanese] (in Japanese). Archived from the original on 2012-12-11. Retrieved 2016-06-06.:In Japanese:
^ abc戦没者慰霊事業:ニューギニア戦没者の碑 [Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare, implementation of commemorative project for war dead] (in Japanese). 2016-01-01. Archived from the original on 2024-05-22. Retrieved 2016-06-06.:In Japanese; Page titled; “War dead memorial activities”, page lower half side; “Situation of construction for war dead cenotaphs” in South Pacific Ocean & New Guinea (ja: 南太平洋戦没者の碑 & ニューギニア戦没者の碑) “ (ja: 戦没者慰霊碑建立状況, ニューギニア戦没者の碑 -
A member of Japan Overseas Cooperation Volunteers found the stone in front of a house in 2016, but it is the stele, then placed near by Japanese War Remains and Bones Search Group (ja:日本國戦死者遺体収容団: "Japanese NPO") in 2018. Reference photo copy: 2020, July 2, Japanese Japanese Nagasaki News Paper (ja:長崎新聞) page 17.
^Kyodo News, (共同通信社, Kyōdō Tsūshinsha) (2020-08-17). "南洋の島の慰霊碑、民家の踏み石に" [Photo of Cenotaph in island in southern Pacific Ocean, Step stone at entrance of house] (in Japanese). Tokyo. Archived from the original on 2021-08-09. Retrieved 2022-08-16.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link):
^ニューカレドニア日本人移民120周年 [120 anniversary of Japanese Immigrants to New Caledonia] (in Japanese). 2012-08-05. Archived from the original on 2013-03-12. Retrieved 2017-01-18.: