Lista de Personas Famosas nacidas en prefectura de Kagoshima
Miyuki Maeda
Miyuki Maeda –en japonés, 前田美順, Maeda Miyuki– es una deportista japonesa que compitió en bádminton, en la modalidad de dobles.
Keisaburo Tanoue
Keisaburo Tanoue is a former Nippon Professional Baseball pitcher.
Shunichi Ikenoue
Shun'ichi Ikenoue es un exfutbolista japonés que se desempeñaba como centrocampista.
Yuya Wakamatsu
Yuya Wakamatsu is a Japanese martial artist from Satsumasendai City, Japan. His nickname "Little Piranha" came from his coach and mentor, Ryo "Piranha" Chonan. He has competed for promotions such as Pancrase, ZST, Vale Tudo Japan, and currently ONE Championship.
Kohei Hattanda
Kohei Hattanda es un futbolista japonés que se desempeña como centrocampista.
Teruaki Masumoto
Teruaki Masumoto is the secretary general of the Japanese Association of the Families of Victims Kidnapped by North Korea, which advocates for the return of Japanese citizens kidnapped by North Korea and calls for the Japanese government to impose sanctions on the country. His older sister Rumiko is one of the victims. On February 1, 2007, he married actress Yuuko Wakamiya. in May 2012 he testified at North Korean human rights in European Parliament about his sister and other abductees including Megumi Yokota and Yaeko Taguchi
Yutaka Tahara
Yutaka Tahara es un exfutbolista japonés. Jugaba de delantero y su último club fue el Kagoshima United FC de Japón.
Kyokudōzan Kazuyasu
Kyokudōzan Kazuyasu is a former sumo wrestler and politician from Kagoshima Prefecture, Japan. He began his sumo career in 1980, reaching the top division in 1989. He was one of the lightest men in makuuchi. but he nevertheless reached the fourth highest rank of komusubi and won four special prizes. After retiring in 1996 he was elected to the Japanese Diet, serving until 2000. He is now a businessman.
Nagasawa Kanaye
Kanaye Nagasawa was a prominent California winemaker, the first Japanese national to live permanently in the United States, a recipient of the Order of the Rising Sun, and a disciple of Thomas Lake Harris, the self-proclaimed "Father and Pivot and Primate and King of the Brotherhood of the New Life." Nagasawa followed Harris from New York out to Santa Rosa, California, where he eventually took over Harris' Fountaingrove estate, producing wines that earned him international renown. Nagasawa died in 1934, but the round barn he constructed at Fountaingrove was a landmark in Sonoma County.