The area of the modern city of Habikino was within ancient
Kawachi Province and is located on the route of the Take-no-uchi Kaidō, a highway which connected the ancient capitals of
Asuka and
Heijō-kyō with the coast. Numerous
kofun burial mounds were built in the area during the
Kofun period, including many attributed to early Emperors. During the
Heian period, the area was controlled by the
Kawachi Genji clan, the ancestors of the
Minamoto clan who dominated Japan during the
Kamakura period. After the
Meiji restoration, the area became part of Osaka Prefecture from 1881. The villages of Furuichi, Imagatani, and Nishiura were created with the establishment of the modern municipalities system on April 1, 1889. On April 1, 1896 the area became part of
Minamikawachi District, Osaka. Furuichi was elevated to town status on October 1, 1916. On September 30, 1956, Furuichi merged with the town of Takawashi and the villages of Nanyu, Nishiura, Imagatani, and Tanpi to form the town of . On April 1, 1957, Minami-Osaka annexed the neighboring village of Mihara. On January 15, 1959, Minami-Osaka was elevated to city status, and took the name of Habikino. ==Government==