Kigajuku Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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Remember the past.
Original Text
It used to be a place that would have prospered as a post town on the Himekaido. Currently, it is only a place where a stone monument stands. There are places where pine trees are reproduced and the remains of Kiga Sekisho in the surrounding area.
Do you know "Kiga-juku"? Kiga-juku, which was located on the north side of Lake Hamana, was destroyed by fire that occurred during the Sengoku period, and the barriers that escaped the fire remained in the 1930s. Unfortunately, it was dismantled. Currently, some private houses and museums are newly built, so you can see the materials at that time.
It is a post town located on the Himeji Kaido that runs through the present Hamamatsu City, but there are few traces as a post town. I think the highlights are the rows of pine trees planted along the Himeji Kaido and the restored Kiga Sekisho.
Kiga-juku and Himekaido post towns prospered, isn't it? The Kiga-no-Sekisho has now been restored and opened to the public. I think that the traces of Kiga-juku are near the four corners of Kiga on National Highway 362. There was no scene that reminded me of those days, but there was an explanation and a stone monument.
Hime Kaido (Honzaka Road) avoids the barriers of the Tokaido, which are strictly controlled, and some pine forests remain on the side road of the Tokaido, which was set up to Oyu in Aichi Prefecture ~ in Iwata City. Kiga-juku has explanation boards such as the remains of Jinya and the remains of the main camp, the fortress moat, the side Akaike-sama Park, and the traces of the cherry blossoms. A part of the building of Kiga Sekisho remains just a short walk into the shopping street near the four corners of Kiga. There is a trace of the dog-kuguri road that avoided the investigation of Kiga Sekisho. There is Hosoe Shrine, Torinji Temple, and the Himekaido Museum next to it, remembering those days ...
Remember the past.
It used to be a place that would have prospered as a post town on the Himekaido. Currently, it is only a place where a stone monument stands. There are places where pine trees are reproduced and the remains of Kiga Sekisho in the surrounding area.
it was a post station on the hime road
Do you know "Kiga-juku"? Kiga-juku, which was located on the north side of Lake Hamana, was destroyed by fire that occurred during the Sengoku period, and the barriers that escaped the fire remained in the 1930s. Unfortunately, it was dismantled. Currently, some private houses and museums are newly built, so you can see the materials at that time.
Shao Hexuan や Songhemu が See どころ
It is a post town located on the Himeji Kaido that runs through the present Hamamatsu City, but there are few traces as a post town. I think the highlights are the rows of pine trees planted along the Himeji Kaido and the restored Kiga Sekisho.
Kiga's town was once a post town.
Kiga-juku and Himekaido post towns prospered, isn't it? The Kiga-no-Sekisho has now been restored and opened to the public. I think that the traces of Kiga-juku are near the four corners of Kiga on National Highway 362. There was no scene that reminded me of those days, but there was an explanation and a stone monument.
Qiqi Street の Hostel
Hime Kaido (Honzaka Road) avoids the barriers of the Tokaido, which are strictly controlled, and some pine forests remain on the side road of the Tokaido, which was set up to Oyu in Aichi Prefecture ~ in Iwata City. Kiga-juku has explanation boards such as the remains of Jinya and the remains of the main camp, the fortress moat, the side Akaike-sama Park, and the traces of the cherry blossoms. A part of the building of Kiga Sekisho remains just a short walk into the shopping street near the four corners of Kiga. There is a trace of the dog-kuguri road that avoided the investigation of Kiga Sekisho. There is Hosoe Shrine, Torinji Temple, and the Himekaido Museum next to it, remembering those days ...