Hida ruins (斐太遺跡群, Hida isekigun) is a group of archaeological sites containing the ruins of late Yayoi to early Kofun period (approximately 3rd century AD) settlements located in what is now part of the cities of Myōkō and Jōetsu, Niigata in the Hokuriku region of Japan. The site includes the Hida ruins (斐太遺跡), Fukiage ruins (吹上遺跡) and the Kamabuta ruins (釜蓋遺跡). The Hida ruins were designated a National Historic Site of Japan in 1977 and the Fukiage ruins and Kamabuta ruins followed in 2005.[1]
^"斐太遺跡群" (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Retrieved August 20, 2020.
Hida ruins (斐太遺跡群, Hida isekigun) is a group of archaeological sites containing the ruins of late Yayoi to early Kofun period (approximately 3rd century...
Hida Folk Village, Hida no Sato (飛騨民俗村, 飛騨の里, Hida Minzoku Mura, Hida no Sato) is an open-air museum of close to 30 old farmhouses illustrating the traditional...
Hida Province (飛騨国, Hida-no-kuni) was a province of Japan in the area that is today the northern portion of Gifu Prefecture in the Chūbu region of Japan...
The Hida dialect (飛騨弁, Hida-ben) is a Japanese dialect spoken in the Hida region of Gifu Prefecture, Japan. Along with the Mino dialect in the south,...
military exercise ground of the Austrian federal army. Currently it is also the site of Bruck an der Leitha railway station, an important railway station near...
mountainous Hida region contains the Hida Mountains, which are referred to as the "Northern Alps" in Japan. The Ryōhaku Mountains are also in the Hida region...
Kamioka neighborhood of the city of Hida, Gifu Prefecture, Japan. The ruins have been protected as a National Historic Site since 1980. The Ema clan were a...
Onigawara tiles, all of which are identical to shards found at the site of the Hida Kokubun-ji provincial temple established in the Nara period. The tile...
Web site: http://www.hida-hachiman.org/en/05_yataikaikan/index.html Retrieved August 8, 2009, from Hida-Takayama Sakurayama Hachimangu Shrine Web site: http://www...
stone base, earthen walls and a surrounding moat. During the Sengoku period, Hida Province was nominally under the control of the Kyōgoku clan, but in reality...
The Alpine Route goes through Tateyama (Mt. Tate) in the Hida Mountains with many scenic sites as well as walking trails, including Japan's largest dam...
route to Shinano Province. The lower portion of Shiroyama contains the HidaSites, the ruins of a Yayoi period fortified settlement, which indicates that...
a rolling die, and embossed pottery. These pottery shards were from the Hida, Shinano, Kinki and Tōkai regions indicating long range trade routes from...
Terumoto, and received from Toyotomi Hideyoshi the title of Hida no kami (Governor of Hida Province). He is listed as one of the eighteen Generals of the...