| The population of the province as a whole, at its [[Edo period]] peak in [[1718]], was around 372,000. Following the [[1732]] [[Kyoho famine|Kyôho famine]], the population stabilized around 307,000, and then stagnated. Only around 1800 did the population begin to recover, reaching pre-famine levels by the 1860s. In the meantime, unlike in many other areas, little new land was brought under cultivation.<ref>Kalland, 54-55.</ref> | | The population of the province as a whole, at its [[Edo period]] peak in [[1718]], was around 372,000. Following the [[1732]] [[Kyoho famine|Kyôho famine]], the population stabilized around 307,000, and then stagnated. Only around 1800 did the population begin to recover, reaching pre-famine levels by the 1860s. In the meantime, unlike in many other areas, little new land was brought under cultivation.<ref>Kalland, 54-55.</ref> |
| + | According to certain records, more than half of all households in coastal villages in Chikuzen in the Edo period were officially designated as "fishing households." Whether this actually reflects which families did and did not engage in fishing is unlikely to be precisely accurate, but may give some indication. Whatever the proportions, it is known that many of these coastal villages were also home to a considerable amount of shipping and other commercial activities. The domain authorities funded the construction of lighthouses and other improvements to harbors, ostensibly to help fishermen, but also to provide for ''[[sankin kotai|sankin kôtai]]'' missions and [[Korean embassies to Edo]], which passed through some of these ports. |
| + | Small islands in the [[Genkai Sea]] including [[Ainoshima]], [[Himeshima]], [[Oronoshima]], [[Genkaishima]], [[Oshima (Fukuoka)|Ôshima]], [[Okinoshima]], and [[Jinoshima]], served as harbors for Korean embassies, as sites for the exile of criminals, and as sites for guard posts against foreign ships. Small though they were, each of these islands as a result required at least some shipping activity, to bring in food and other supplies, among other purposes; thus, inns, warehouses, and the like sprang up on each of these islands, as they did in coastal villages elsewhere in the province, and throughout the Japanese archipelago. |