Port of Moji

E461694

The Port of Moji is a historic Japanese seaport in Kitakyushu that serves as a key maritime gateway and transport hub at the Kanmon Straits between Honshu and Kyushu.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Surface forms Statements Referenced by

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Port of Moji canonical 2

Statements (46)

Predicate Object
instanceOf port
seaport
transport hub
adjacentTo Moji Port Retro District NERFINISHED
connectsTo Honshu ports via Kanmon Straits
Shimonoseki NERFINISHED
country Japan
function cargo transport hub
maritime gateway between Honshu and Kyushu
passenger transport hub
governedBy City of Kitakyushu NERFINISHED
Fukuoka Prefecture authorities
hasActivity bulk cargo handling
container handling
passenger embarkation and disembarkation
hasFacility cargo terminal
customs facilities
ferry terminal
passenger terminal
historicalRole key node for trade with the Asian continent
major port in Japan’s modernization period
historicSignificance historic Japanese seaport
language Japanese
locatedBetween Honshu NERFINISHED
Kyushu NERFINISHED
locatedIn Fukuoka Prefecture NERFINISHED
Kitakyushu NERFINISHED
Moji-ku, Kitakyushu NERFINISHED
locatedInTimeZone Japan Standard Time
locatedOnWaterbody Kanmon Straits NERFINISHED
nearby Mojiko Retro Observation Room NERFINISHED
Mojiko Station NERFINISHED
partOf Port of Kitakyushu NERFINISHED
partOfNetwork East Asian maritime trade routes
Japanese coastal shipping network
regionServed Seto Inland Sea area NERFINISHED
northern Kyushu NERFINISHED
strategicLocation gateway to the Inland Sea and Sea of Japan routes
tourismRole gateway to Mojiko Retro tourist area
transportConnection rail connections via Mojiko Station
road connections via Kanmon Roadway routes
usedFor cruise ship calls
domestic shipping
ferry services
international shipping
waterway Kanmon Straits shipping lane NERFINISHED

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Kanmon Straits hasPort Port of Moji
ports of Japan hasPart Port of Moji