4-8 Higashioi, Shinagawa 140-0011 Tokyo PrefectureMap
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For the serious Japanese history buff
At the rear of Oi park and up some precipitous stone steps lies the secluded grave of Yamauchi Toyoshige (commonly known as Yōdō) the hard drinking 15th and last Lord of the Tosa Domain alongside his ...
It is the tomb of Yamanotodo, the lord of the Tosa feudal lord. If you like the end of the Edo period, you can visit it. Please note that the entrance is difficult to understand and is located different from the park.
It is located on a hill just a short walk from Suzu Station, on the south side of Oi Park . There is a guide board when you head from Suzu Station, so it is a straight road . It seems that it is released from 9 am to 5 pm . From here The view is good .
If you like the end of the Edo period, it may mean going.
Original Text
It is located in a difficult place to get from the main street. There is also a toilet in the nearby park. It's a pretty sober spot, but you can feel the romance because it's a grave that was active as an important key man at the end of the Edo period. There is nothing around, so I recommend going when renewing at the license center. I did.
It stands quietly in the back of Oi Park near Keikyu Sasu Station, where you climb the stone steps, and you can't reach it without an information board. Adjacent to the standing elementary school, you can only enter during the daytime. Yamatochido is the lord of the Tosa domain at the end of the Edo period, and is said to be the "four wise princes at the end of the Edo period" along with Yoshinaga Matsudaira in Fukui, Hisamitsu Shimazu in Satsuma, and Muneshiro Date in Uwajima. , It is said that it had a great influence on the shogunate government. He is one of the directors of Taisei Hokan, but his name is generally unknown. ...
For the serious Japanese history buff
At the rear of Oi park and up some precipitous stone steps lies the secluded grave of Yamauchi Toyoshige (commonly known as Yōdō) the hard drinking 15th and last Lord of the Tosa Domain alongside his ...
Park とは Don't の Entrance
It is the tomb of Yamanotodo, the lord of the Tosa feudal lord. If you like the end of the Edo period, you can visit it. Please note that the entrance is difficult to understand and is located different from the park.
Good view
It is located on a hill just a short walk from Suzu Station, on the south side of Oi Park . There is a guide board when you head from Suzu Station, so it is a straight road . It seems that it is released from 9 am to 5 pm . From here The view is good .
If you like the end of the Edo period, it may mean going.
It is located in a difficult place to get from the main street. There is also a toilet in the nearby park. It's a pretty sober spot, but you can feel the romance because it's a grave that was active as an important key man at the end of the Edo period. There is nothing around, so I recommend going when renewing at the license center. I did.
Stand quietly in a difficult place
It stands quietly in the back of Oi Park near Keikyu Sasu Station, where you climb the stone steps, and you can't reach it without an information board. Adjacent to the standing elementary school, you can only enter during the daytime. Yamatochido is the lord of the Tosa domain at the end of the Edo period, and is said to be the "four wise princes at the end of the Edo period" along with Yoshinaga Matsudaira in Fukui, Hisamitsu Shimazu in Satsuma, and Muneshiro Date in Uwajima. , It is said that it had a great influence on the shogunate government. He is one of the directors of Taisei Hokan, but his name is generally unknown. ...