Sukagawa Ichirizuka

The Sukagawa Ichirizuka (須賀川一里塚) is a historic Japanese distance marker akin to a milestone, comprising a pair of earthen mounds located in what is now part of the city of Sukagawa, Fukushima Prefecture in the Tōhoku region of Japan. It was designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 1936.[1]

Sukagawa Ichirizuka
須賀川一里塚
Sukagawa Ichirizuka
Sukagawa Ichirizuka
Sukagawa Ichirizuka (Japan)
LocationSukagawa, Fukushima, Japan
RegionTōhoku region
Coordinates37°16′28″N 140°21′47″E
History
PeriodsEdo period
Site notes
OwnershipNational Historic Site
Public accessYes

Overview

During the Edo period Tokugawa shogunate established ichirizuka on major roads, enabling calculation both of distance travelled and of the charge for transportation by kago or palanquin.[2] These mounds, denoted the distance in ri (3.927 kilometres (2.440 mi)) to Nihonbashi, the "Bridge of Japan", erected in Edo in 1603.[3]

In the case of the Sukagawa ishirizuka, the mounds flank the Ōshū Kaidō, and were the 59th marker from Nihonbashi. The mounds are approximately three meters in height and four to five meters in diameter, with trees planted on the top. While the mounds were in good preservation, they were substantially repaired and enlarged in 1984. The site is about 10 minutes by car from Sukagawa Station on the JR East Tōhoku Main Line.

gollark: _cars about nothing knows_
gollark: Well, not most pictures as such, just most of everyday thingies.
gollark: Show people a cat, they'll say "oh cute", usually.
gollark: I mean, given most pictures, people will describe the same feeling about them in some sense?
gollark: How do you know that you *actually* saw it and didn't imagine it or whatever?

See also

References

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