Kōbe of the Ōsaka-Kōbe metropolitan area
The history of Kōbe is as old as that of Ōsaka. In ancient times the name Kōbe was applied to a small fishing village separated by the Minato River from the town of Hyōgo, the chief port of the area. Hyōgo, also known as Ōwada and Muko, was an important port for trade with China and Korea as early as the 8th century. For many centuries it continued to be Japan’s chief port for foreign trade, prospering especially during the 15th and 16th centuries, and the government maintained patrol boats there to control piracy in the Inland Sea. Briefly during the 12th century Taira Kiyomori made it the capital instead of Kyōto.
During the Tokugawa period, Hyōgo served as the outer port of Ōsaka until in 1868 it was reopened to foreign trade. Soon it was outstripped and absorbed by Kōbe, which has a deeper harbour. The combined ports have been called the port of Kōbe since the establishment of the Kōbe customhouse in 1872. Hyōgo and Kōbe were incorporated as the city of Kōbe in 1889. The many foreigners who settled there in the 19th century gave it an international and cosmopolitan atmosphere.
The size of the city increased in the late 19th and early 20th centuries through the absorption of adjacent communities. During World War II, air raids destroyed much of the city. It was rebuilt quickly after the war, its size again increasing by annexation. Kōbe has become one of the largest cities in Japan. Its port facilities, which have undergone tremendous expansion since the war, have been combined administratively with those of Ōsaka since the early 1970s. The earthquake that struck the region in 1995 destroyed large areas of Kōbe and several of its suburbs, caused damage on nearby Awaji Island, and killed some 5,500 people. Kōbe’s port facilities and transportation systems also were severely damaged.