Southern Samurai's Cemetery Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
Write a Review
Trip.com
(1 Reviews)TripAdvisor
1 Review
LTB511
The southern feudal retainer who pioneered the emishi sleeps
Original Text
About 15 minutes walk from Hakodate tram before Hakodate. A tombstone stands quietly on the outskirts of the foreigner's graveyard. When the Edo Shogunate directly controlled Ezo in 1854, the Nanbu clan pioneered and guarded it, but many feudal retainers died of accidents and illness. 12 of them are enshrined here. Many tourists visit foreign cemeteries as a spot with an exotic atmosphere, but please also look at the tombs of feudal retainers who have become the foundation of Hokkaido today.
The southern feudal retainer who pioneered the emishi sleeps
Original Text
About 15 minutes walk from Hakodate tram before Hakodate. A tombstone stands quietly on the outskirts of the foreigner's graveyard. When the Edo Shogunate directly controlled Ezo in 1854, the Nanbu clan pioneered and guarded it, but many feudal retainers died of accidents and illness. 12 of them are enshrined here. Many tourists visit foreign cemeteries as a spot with an exotic atmosphere, but please also look at the tombs of feudal retainers who have become the foundation of Hokkaido today.
The southern feudal retainer who pioneered the emishi sleeps
About 15 minutes walk from Hakodate tram before Hakodate. A tombstone stands quietly on the outskirts of the foreigner's graveyard. When the Edo Shogunate directly controlled Ezo in 1854, the Nanbu clan pioneered and guarded it, but many feudal retainers died of accidents and illness. 12 of them are enshrined here. Many tourists visit foreign cemeteries as a spot with an exotic atmosphere, but please also look at the tombs of feudal retainers who have become the foundation of Hokkaido today.
The southern feudal retainer who pioneered the emishi sleeps
About 15 minutes walk from Hakodate tram before Hakodate. A tombstone stands quietly on the outskirts of the foreigner's graveyard. When the Edo Shogunate directly controlled Ezo in 1854, the Nanbu clan pioneered and guarded it, but many feudal retainers died of accidents and illness. 12 of them are enshrined here. Many tourists visit foreign cemeteries as a spot with an exotic atmosphere, but please also look at the tombs of feudal retainers who have become the foundation of Hokkaido today.