In the
Edo period, Urawa-ku flourished as
Urawa-shuku, a
post station on the
Nakasendō highway, which connected
Edo with
Kyoto. Following the
Meiji restoration, Urawa Prefecture was established, and in 1871 merged with Iwatsuki, Urawa, and Oshi Prefectures merged to form
Saitama Prefecture, and Urawa as the capital. The modern town of Urawa was officially created within
Kitaadachi District, Saitama with the establishment of the municipalities system on April 1, 1889. After the
1923 Great Kantō earthquake many intellectuals, especially painters, moved to Urawa from Tokyo,
Yokohama, and other cities in southern
Kantō region. In 1932, Urawa annexed the neighboring villages of Yada and Kisaki, and was elevated to city status on February 11, 1934. Urawa expanded further by annexing the villages of Omagi and Mimuro on April 17, 1940 and town of Mutsuji on April 1, 1942. During
World War II, Urawa was bombed twice by
Allied forces in April and May 1945. Urawa continued to expand after the end of the war, absorbing the villages of Tsuchiai and Okubo on January 1, 1955 and part of the town of Toda on April 1, 1959 and part of the village of Misono on May 1, 1962. On May 1, 2001 Urawa merged with
Ōmiya and
Yono to form Saitama City. In April 2003 Saitama became a
city designated by government ordinance, and now the area of former Urawa City was divided between
Sakura-ku, Urawa-ku,
Minami-ku, and
Midori-ku. == Demographics ==