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Tange

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Tange
NameTange

Tange

Tange is a term appearing as a surname, toponym, and cultural signifier across multiple regions and disciplines. It is associated with individuals in politics, arts, and science, with places ranging from rural settlements to geographic features, and with architectural discourse due to the influential modernist architect Kenzo Tange. The term recurs in historical documents, literary works, cartography, and transportation nomenclature, linking to events, institutions, and creative productions.

Etymology

The name appears in linguistic records tied to Japanese language, Persian language, Swahili language, and Punjabi language contexts, suggesting polygenetic origins. In Old Japanese onomastics the form resembles locative surnames found in Heian period registers, while in Iranian languages cognates align with toponyms attested in Safavid dynasty cartography. Comparative onomastic studies reference parallels in Bantu languages naming conventions and in Indo-Aryan languages patronymic systems documented in Mughal Empire administrative rolls. Etymologists cite connections to place-based surnames recorded by scholars of Meiji era census compilations and by researchers at institutions such as the British Museum and the National Diet Library.

People and Surnames

Several notable individuals bear the surname in international records. Among them are politicians and diplomats who engaged with entities like the United Nations, the League of Nations archives, and national legislatures including the Diet of Japan and the Parliament of Pakistan. Academics with the surname have published in journals affiliated with Harvard University, University of Oxford, and the University of Tokyo, contributing to fields intersecting with institutions such as the Smithsonian Institution and the Royal Society. Artists and musicians with the name have exhibited at venues including the Museum of Modern Art, the Tate Modern, and the Pergamon Museum, and have collaborated with ensembles represented by the Berlin Philharmonic and the Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra. The surname appears in legal records adjudicated by courts such as the International Court of Justice and national supreme courts; entrepreneurs with the name have founded firms that interact with markets monitored by the Tokyo Stock Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange.

Places and Geography

The toponym occurs in multiple countries as village names, districts, and geographic features. Instances are recorded on maps produced by the Ordnance Survey and the Geological Survey of Pakistan, and in gazetteers maintained by the United States Geological Survey and the Geospatial Information Authority of Japan. Some sites bearing the name sit near rivers cataloged by hydrologists from the International Hydrological Programme and lay within administrative divisions analogous to prefectures of Japan, provinces of Iran, and counties of Kenya. Coastal locales with the name are mentioned in maritime logs of the British Admiralty and shipping registries of the International Maritime Organization. Place entries appear in travel literature alongside mention of routes such as the Silk Road, the Khyber Pass, and island chains cataloged by the Cook Islands authorities.

Architecture and Design (Kenzo Tange)

Kenzo Tange, the distinguished Japanese architect, is central to architectural references tied to the name. His projects and pedagogy engaged with institutions such as the University of Tokyo, the Harvard Graduate School of Design, and the International Union of Architects. Tange's work is linked to landmark constructions like the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park, the Tokyo Metropolitan Government Building projects, and the Yoyogi National Gymnasium. His collaborations and competitions involved figures and organizations including Le Corbusier, the Congrès International d'Architecture Moderne, and the Pritzker Architecture Prize jury. Scholarly analysis of his oeuvre appears in publications from the Royal Institute of British Architects, the American Institute of Architects, and the Docomomo International registry; exhibitions of his drawings and models have been staged at the National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, the Centre Pompidou, and the Smithsonian Institution.

Cultural References and Uses

The name surfaces in literature, film, music, and visual arts. It appears in novels reviewed by outlets like the New York Review of Books and serialized in periodicals such as The Times Literary Supplement and Granta. Filmmakers referencing the term have screened works at festivals including the Cannes Film Festival, the Berlin International Film Festival, and the Venice Film Festival. Musicians have used it as a title or motif in releases distributed by labels associated with the Deutsche Grammophon catalogue and the Universal Music Group. Visual artists have included it in installations shown at the Venice Biennale and the Documenta exhibition. The name also figures in documentary projects produced by broadcasters like the BBC, NHK, and PBS.

Transportation and Infrastructure

The term is applied to stations, routes, and facilities documented in transport networks overseen by authorities such as the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (Japan), the Pakistan Railways, and the Kenya Railways Corporation. It designates stops listed on timetables coordinated with systems such as the Tokyu Corporation, the JR East, and metropolitan transit agencies like the Tokyo Metropolitan Bureau of Transportation. Infrastructure projects bearing the name appear in planning records of the Asian Development Bank, the World Bank, and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, and are discussed in engineering journals affiliated with the Institution of Civil Engineers and the American Society of Civil Engineers.

Category:Place name disambiguation pages