thumb|Ōiso-juku in the 1830s, as depicted by Hiroshige in the Hōeidō edition of [[The Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō (1831–1834)]] was the eighth of the fifty-three stations (shukuba) of the Tōkaidō. It is located in the present-day town of Ōiso, located in Naka District, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan.
thumb|Ōiso-juku in the 1830s, as depicted by Hiroshige in the Hōeidō edition of [[The Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō (1831–1834)]] was the eighth of the fifty-three stations (shukuba) of the Tōkaidō. It is located in the present-day town of Ōiso, located in Naka District, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan.
==History== Ōiso-juku was established in 1601, along with the other original post stations along the Tōkaidō, by Tokugawa Ieyasu. In 1604, Ieyasu planted a colonnade of pine and hackberry trees, to provide shade for the travelers.
2 mapped locations
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).