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Charles wrote:Seems pretty clear to me. I think it is up to you to prove Kongo Gumi isn't a company.
amdg wrote:Charles wrote:Seems pretty clear to me. I think it is up to you to prove Kongo Gumi isn't a company.
No, it's up to you to prove it's the oldest company in the world, as you claim in your original post.
Buraku wrote:...this oldest company being made when Nippon didn't even exist sounds like a shit story to me.
Mulboyne wrote:Nikkei (No Link) Takamatsu To Take Over Business Of Long-Lived Kongo Gumi
TOKYO --Midsize general contractor Takamatsu Corp. said Wednesday that it will take over business in January 2006 of Osaka temple and shrine builder Kongo Gumi Co. Kongo Gumi, which is Japan's oldest company, will likely be liquidated. Takamatsu will take over operations of the roughly 1,400-year-old firm through a new company established in November. Employees, orders and a portion of liabilities will be transferred to the new firm, also named Kongo Gumi, on Jan. 16.Takamatsu hopes that taking over the operations of the long-established firm will boost its brand strength. Kongo Gumi was founded in 578 by carpenters invited to Japan from Korea by Prince Shotoku to build Shitennoji, a temple in Osaka. During Japan's bubble-economy era, Kongo Gumi's borrowings ballooned with land purchases, making recovery under its own efforts difficult. Its sales in the fiscal year ended April 2005 came to roughly 7.5 billion yen.
Jack wrote:I bellieve the Hudson Bay Company of Canada is the oldest incorporated company in the world still in business today.
james wrote:in our town there's a family run sake brewery and i know them quite well (i teach their daughter and his wife). they're 14th generation and have apparently been in operation since 1712.
if you've never taken a tour through a sake brewery, i highly recommend doing so. really quite interesting.
Hikami Seishu
FG Lurker wrote:The original post claims that it is the oldest family run enterprise in the world. At 1400+ years old, this does not seem terribly unlikely.
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