Although Tsuruga promotes itself as the leading city of the
"Wakasa region", the city was actually part of ancient
Echizen Province. A settlement at Tsuruga is mentioned in the
Nara period and
Nihon Shoki chronicles.
Kanagasaki Castle was the site of major battles during the early
Muromachi period and the
Sengoku period, Under the
Edo period Tokugawa shogunate, large portions of the city were part of the holdings of
Obama Domain and
Tsuruga Domain, and prospered as a major port on the
kitamaebune shipping routes between western Japan and
Hokkaido. Following the
Meiji restoration, the area became part of
Tsuruga District of
Fukui Prefecture. With the creation of the modern municipalities system, the town of Tsuruga was founded on April 1, 1889. An Imperial decree in July 1899 established Tsuruga as an open port for trading with the
United States and the
United Kingdom. Tsuruga merged with the neighboring village of Matsubara and was incorporated as a city on April 1, 1937. Tsuruga was the only Japanese port opened to the Polish orphans in 1920, and to the Jewish refugees in 1940 thanks to
Jan Zwartendijk, the Dutch Consul in
Kaunas, who issued visa for Curaçao and Surinam, Mr.
Chiune Sugihara, Vice-Consul for the Empire of Japan in Lithuania who issued transit visa for Japan. These events are detailed at the Port of Humanity Tsuruga Museum. However, much of the city center was destroyed in 1945 during the
Bombing of Tsuruga during World War II, The city expanded on January 15, 1955 by annexing the neighboring villages of Arachi, Awano, Togo, Nakago and Higashiura. ==Government==