was a city located in eastern Shizuoka Prefecture. On November 1, 1966, Yoshiwara was merged with the city of Fuji.
During the Edo period, Yoshiwara was a post town known as Yoshiwara-juku on the TÃ
ÂkaidÃ
 (road). At the time of its merger, the town had an estimated population of 90,224 and a density of 516.86 persons per km<sup>2</sup>. The total area was 174.56 km<sup>2</sup>. The town was served by both the TÃ
ÂkaidÃ
 Main Line and the Gakunan Railway.
History
- April 1, 1889 â Due to the municipal status enforcement, Yoshiwara-juku, Fuji District becomes Yoshiwara Town.
- April 1, 1940 â The village of Shimada (å³¶ç°æÂÂ) merged into the city of Yoshiwara
- April 3, 1941 â The village of DenbÃ
 (ä¼Âæ³ÂæÂÂ) merged into the city of Yoshiwara
- June 14, 1942 â Imaizumi Village (ä»Âæ³ÂæÂÂ) merged into Yoshiwara.
- April 1, 1948 â The town of Yoshiwara becomes the city of Yoshiwara.
- February 11, 1955 â The city merged with the villages of Motoyoshiwara (Ã¥Â
ÂÃ¥ÂÂÃ¥ÂÂæÂÂ), Sudo (é Âæ´¥æÂÂ), Yoshinaga (Ã¥ÂÂæ°¸æÂÂ), and Harada (Ã¥ÂÂç°æÂÂ) to form the city of Yoshiwara.
- April 1, 1955 â Ã
Âbuchi Village (大淵æÂÂ) merged into the city of Yoshiwara.
- April 1, 1956 â Funazu, Nishifunazu, and Sakai neighborhoods in the village of Hara in SuntÃ
 District merge into the city of Yoshiwara.
- November 1, 1966 â The city merged with the city of Fuji and the town of Takaoka (鷹岡çº) to form the city of Fuji.
See also
Notes