Urigo Ruins Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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There was a pit house.
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One pit-house is reproduced, but I don't know the surroundings at all. I think there was a village, so please investigate your diet and past situation and explain it.
It is a short distance from National Highway 1. (There is an information signboard on National Highway 1 and it is easy to understand) The surrounding area is a residential area. Be careful as there is no parking lot. There is a bus stop in front of the ruins. The ruins are a small archaeological park. The residence has been restored and you can tour it. I went there on Sunday, but there were no tourists, so I was able to take a leisurely tour.
It is located in a park in a residential area. There is no parking lot. There is a restored Yayoi period residence and a stone monument. It's not something to take a closer look.
Probably the building was reproduced based on my imagination, but I can't imagine it was 2000 years ago. It is a valuable ruin and the excavated items seem to be in the Toyohashi Museum of Art. I saw such ruins for the first time, so I solidified without reaction. The ruins are located in a residential area just inside National Highway 1. There is no parking lot. It feels like a pot, but in spring, cherry blossoms bloom and it becomes one famous place. The stay time was about 10 minutes
This ruin I found by chance while walking on the old Tokaido. It is a restored pit-style residence in the Yayoi period, and excavated items such as earthenware, stone tools, and bone angles are exhibited at the Toyohashi City Museum of Art. It is about 100m from the old Tokaido.
There was a pit house.
One pit-house is reproduced, but I don't know the surroundings at all. I think there was a village, so please investigate your diet and past situation and explain it.
There is a bus stop in front of the ruins!
It is a short distance from National Highway 1. (There is an information signboard on National Highway 1 and it is easy to understand) The surrounding area is a residential area. Be careful as there is no parking lot. There is a bus stop in front of the ruins. The ruins are a small archaeological park. The residence has been restored and you can tour it. I went there on Sunday, but there were no tourists, so I was able to take a leisurely tour.
It's in a residential area.
It is located in a park in a residential area. There is no parking lot. There is a restored Yayoi period residence and a stone monument. It's not something to take a closer look.
it's called the ruins of the yayoi period.
Probably the building was reproduced based on my imagination, but I can't imagine it was 2000 years ago. It is a valuable ruin and the excavated items seem to be in the Toyohashi Museum of Art. I saw such ruins for the first time, so I solidified without reaction. The ruins are located in a residential area just inside National Highway 1. There is no parking lot. It feels like a pot, but in spring, cherry blossoms bloom and it becomes one famous place. The stay time was about 10 minutes
and restored the pit houses of the yayoi era.
This ruin I found by chance while walking on the old Tokaido. It is a restored pit-style residence in the Yayoi period, and excavated items such as earthenware, stone tools, and bone angles are exhibited at the Toyohashi City Museum of Art. It is about 100m from the old Tokaido.