Mitsuke Denshokan Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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See attached の History
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About 15 minutes walk from Mitsuke Station. Opened in 2010. Free admission. Jomon period earthenware and stone tools excavated from the ruins of Mitsuke City, weaving tools that were the industry representing Mitsuke from Edo to Taisho, commentary panel on the shipping of the Kariyata River connecting Mitsuke and Niigata, The materials of Tochio railway, which were discontinued in 1975, are exhibited.
JR It is about a 15-minute walk from Mitsuke Station. It's free. I was the only one in the hall, so it was reserved. Excavated items and weaving from the Otori ruins were exhibited. Photography was prohibited on exhibits.
Archaeological materials and folk materials are permanently installed. There is also a corner of the Otori Ruins. This time, materials related to the Manchurian Pioneering Group were on display, so I visited. I learned that many people 々 from Niigata Prefecture, including Mitsuke, were voluntarily or at the request of the government, in Manchuria, a vast land.
See attached の History
About 15 minutes walk from Mitsuke Station. Opened in 2010. Free admission. Jomon period earthenware and stone tools excavated from the ruins of Mitsuke City, weaving tools that were the industry representing Mitsuke from Edo to Taisho, commentary panel on the shipping of the Kariyata River connecting Mitsuke and Niigata, The materials of Tochio railway, which were discontinued in 1975, are exhibited.
I stopped by for the first time.
JR It is about a 15-minute walk from Mitsuke Station. It's free. I was the only one in the hall, so it was reserved. Excavated items and weaving from the Otori ruins were exhibited. Photography was prohibited on exhibits.
City の No materials Archive です
Archaeological materials and folk materials are permanently installed. There is also a corner of the Otori Ruins. This time, materials related to the Manchurian Pioneering Group were on display, so I visited. I learned that many people 々 from Niigata Prefecture, including Mitsuke, were voluntarily or at the request of the government, in Manchuria, a vast land.