The area around Narashino has been inhabited since prehistoric times. Archaeologists have found
shell middens and numerous other remains from
Jōmon period, as well as
burial tumuli from the
Kofun period. However, for most of its history, the area was a sparsely populated wetland and swamp along the northern shore of
Edo Bay. After the
Meiji Restoration, was founded within
Chiba District on April 1, 1889 on the merger of five small hamlets with a total population of 4500 people. The area only began to develop with the coming of the railway, and Tsudanuma was raised to town status on March 3, 1903, with a population of 6000. The Narashino area of Tsudanuma was used for cavalry maneuvers by the
Imperial Guard and the early
Imperial Japanese Army, and was visited by the
Meiji Emperor early in the
Meiji period (1868 – 1912). A
prisoner of war camp was built in 1904 to house
POWs from the
Russo-Japanese War of 1904-1905 and
World War I. The Imperial Japanese Army Narashino School was the main training school for cavalry, and later for
tank warfare. On August 1, 1954, Tsudanuma merged with a portion of the neighboring city of Chiba (the former town of Makuhari) to form the new city of Narashino. ==Neighborhoods==