Far
Tango is the northern-most of
Kyoto prefecture, forming
Tango peninsula. Concentrated there is more than 20% of silk and artificial silk factories and domestic industries, 10% of power-looms, and the greatest crape manufacturing region in Japan. The crape manufacturing region could be divided into two distinct subregions. One of them is the traditional region where
Tango crape has been manufactured since the latter half of the
Tokugawa era, and the other is the newly developed one which became a crape manufacturing region with the expansion of the
debata of the
Nishijin brocade in the last decade. The
Omeshi crêpe of
Nishijin is manufactured in both sub-regions, but the
Tango crape is manufactured in the former only. Whereas most of the latter is manufactured in factories which have the whole processes of manufacturing, the former is manufactured in houses of farmers or fishermen as
debata which employ a weaving process only.
The
debata is a system common to the
Nishijin brocade originally: the enterpriser gives the yarn to the weaver who has a few power-looms in his own house and make him to weave for piece-work wages. Sometimes we call the weaver in this system
debata too. The
debata had been confined to the
Nishijin district of
Kyoto city depending on cheap labourers in the city, but the rapid expansion of Japanese economy recently has eliminated such workers from the cities. On the other hand, small farmers and fishermen in
Tango were seeking a subsidiary income, since their livelihood were difficult by the
schere expanding. The enterpriser of the
Nishijin brocade employed them as
debata, for most women in
Tango have had experience in weaving as weavers of the
Tango crape.
Debata began to permeate into
Tango about 1947, but it increased markedly in the last decade, with the
kimono boom which has led to the use of wool. It was noticeable that the internal demand for
kimono made of wool but not silk enlarged far since it had of lower price and did not need so much skill in weaving. For this reason the
debata could expand rapidly. By 1955 the
debata had permeated gradually into the southern half of the traditional sub-region, and expanded to the northern half after 1958, and finally overflowed to form a newly developed sub-region since 1962. In spite of the fact that the
debata has few power-looms and are scattered throughout
Tango the enterpriser wants to gather from 30 to 50 powerlooms as a operating unit. So middle-men group many small
debata and administrate them in place of the enterpriser. They have made a great contribution to the expansion of the
debata by this (invention) in order to increase their commission.
The writer inquired in detail into the process of the expansion of the
debata and especially some changes to meet it in fishing villages. We have no report about the
debata in fishing villages. As a sample I took
Tango-cho which comprises two sub-regions and some diffrent types of fishing villages:
Taiza, in the western-most region, was a center of manufacture of
Tango crape, (and of fishing on northern shores of
Tango peninsula)
Takano, adjacent to
Taiza, and
Nakahama, near to
Kyoga-misaki, tip of
Tango peninsula, are fishing villages on the northern shore of the
Tango peninsula and are both included in the new sub-region, though the former was a half-farming and half-fishing village, where people got a livelihood half from farming and fishing respectively, and the latter was a pure fishing village where people engaged in fishery exclusively.
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