The Yodogawa, or Yodo River, starts where the
Kamo River
,
Seta River
,
Kizu River
, and
Katsura River
meet, just south of
Kyoto
, and flows into
Osaka Bay
. As Kyoto's main connection to the sea, the Yodogawa has been a vital transportation route since ancient times: the city of
Osaka
developed at the river's
mouth
from a collection of smaller trading villages.
Once Osaka began to seriously grow in the 1500's, flooding became a problem:
typhoon
s would often fill the Yodo's banks to overflowing.
Toyotomi Hideyoshi
, the lord of
Osaka Castle
(located adjacent to the Yodogawa), started a project in 1596 to build embankments along the river that proved to be successful in stopping periodic overflows.
After the
Meiji Restoration
of the late 1800's, the government commissioned Dutch hydrologist
Johannis de Rijke
to examine and fix a growing problem of
sedimentation
that was threatening to stop the flow of the Yodogawa. In 1897, the government decided to divert the river, and began to dig a 10km channel about 1km wide, just north of the original Yodogawa's flow through the city of Osaka. The portion of the Yodogawa flowing through central Osaka by
Nakanoshima
is now known as the "Old Yodogawa."
During the
Great Hanshin Earthquake
, some of the
levee
s holding the Yodo in place began to fail. Fortunately, the levees were fixed and there was ultimately no major flooding in Osaka.
Yodogawa is also a residential ward in Osaka around
Hankyu
Juso
and
JR
Shin-Osaka
stations. It is on the other side of the river from
Umeda
and the center city.