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・ Plaza de toros Real de San Carlos
・ Plaza de Toros, Calatayud
・ Plaza Degetau
・ Plaza del Caribe
・ Plaza del Carmen Mall
・ Plaza del Coso
・ Plaza del Cristo de La Laguna
・ Plaza del Emperador Carlos V
・ Plaza del Lago
・ Plaza del Mercado de Ponce
・ Plaza del Norte
・ Plaza del Potro
・ Plaza del Sol
・ Plaza del Sol (disambiguation)
・ Plaza del Sol (Puerto Rico)
Plaza Dilao
・ Plaza Dorrego
・ Plaza Dos de Mayo
・ Plaza Egaña metro station
・ Plaza El Coliseo (Huancayo)
・ Plaza El Coliseo (Trujillo)
・ Plaza Elíptica (Madrid Metro)
・ Plaza España metro station
・ Plaza Fabini
・ Plaza Ferdinand VII
・ Plaza Fiesta
・ Plaza Fiesta San Agustín
・ Plaza Francia
・ Plaza Francia (band)
・ Plaza Francia (Caracas)


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Plaza Dilao : ウィキペディア英語版
Plaza Dilao

Plaza Dilao is a public square in Paco, Manila, bounded by Quirino Avenue to the east, and the rest of the plaza surrounded by the Plaza Dilao Road and Quirino Avenue Extension. It is one of two open public spaces in Paco, the other being Paco Park.
Currently, Plaza Dilao is one of five freedom parks in the City of Manila, where protests and rallies may be held without requiring permission from local authorities.
==History==
In Spanish colonial times, Paco (originally Dilao) was home to one of two Japanese settlements in Manila, with the other located in San Miguel. While the Japanese community of Plaza Dilao began with Dom Justo Takayama and his family settling in the surrounding area after they were exiled from Japan in 1615, most Japanese in Manila at the time were settled around the area now presently occupied by the Philippine Normal University.〔 However, in 1762, the Japanese residents of Manila were later relocated here by the Spanish authorities, although after then the community's population began to decline owing to reduced Japanese immigration to the Philippines and Japan's policy of ''sakoku''. It is believed that the presence of the Japanese community around the plaza eventually led it to being called "Plaza Dilao", referring to the yellowish (''dilaw'' in Tagalog) skin tone of the area's inhabitants.
During the American period, Plaza Dilao became a transport center with the construction of the Paco railway station in 1915, directly across from the plaza. During World War II, the area was the site of an intense battle between Japanese and joint Filipino and American forces led by Cleto Rodriguez. The plaza is still considered a transport center today: when former President Joseph Estrada became Mayor of Manila in 2013, he ordered a ban on city buses entering Manila, with buses for a while terminating at the plaza instead of their usual terminus at the Liwasang Bonifacio.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Plaza Dilao」の詳細全文を読む



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