Akasaka-juku (赤坂宿, Akasaka-juku) était la cinquante-sixième des soixante-neuf stations du Nakasendō. Elle est située dans la ville moderne d'Ōgaki, préfecture de Gifu au Japon. Elle était florissante durant la période Edo car elle se trouvait dans une vallée fertile et près d'une rivière. En 1843, la station comptait 1 129 résidents et 292 bâtiments dont un honjin, un honjin secondaire et 17 hatago.
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Akasaka-juku was the fifty-sixth of the sixty-nine stations of the Nakasendō connecting Edo with Kyoto in Edo period Japan. It is located in former Mino Province in what is now Akasaka neighborhood of the city of Ōgaki, Gifu Prefecture, Japan.
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Mino-Akasaka Station is a train station in the city of Ōgaki, Gifu Prefecture, Japan operated by the Central Japan Railway Company. It is also a freight terminal for the Japan Freight Railway Company.
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The Battle of Kuisegawa was a decisive battle during the Sekigahara Campaign, this battle gave Ishida Mitsunari's Western Army the initial advantage at the Battle of Sekigahara while Tokugawa Ieyasu's Eastern Army suffered heavy losses and had to retreat to Sekigahara.
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The Hiruiōzuka Kofun is a kofun burial mound located in what is now part of the city of Ōgaki, Gifu in the Chubu region of Japan. The site was designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 2000.
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Higashi-Akasaka Station is a railway station in the town of Gōdo, Anpachi District, Gifu Prefecture Japan, operated by the private railway operator Yōrō Railway.