The area of modern Asaka developed as a series of four
post stations on the Kawagoe Kaidō highway from the
Muromachi period onwards. During the
Edo Period, the area was noted as a center for copper crafts. Following the
Meiji restoration, the village of Hizaori was created within Niikura District, Saitama with the establishment of the modern municipalities system on April 1, 1889. Niikura District was abolished in 1894 and became part of
Kitaadachi District. It was raised to town status on May 1, 1921, and renamed Asaka after
Prince Yasuhiko Asaka who was an honorary chairman of the Tokyo Golf Club, which relocated to the area at that time. On April 1, 1955, Asaka annexed the neighboring village of Uchimagi. At the
1964 Summer Olympics in neighboring Tokyo, the town hosted the riding part of the
modern pentathlon event at Asaka Nezu Park. Asaka was elevated to city status on March 15, 1967. In 2005, a proposal to merge Asaka with Shiki, Wako, and Niiza to form a new city with a combined population sufficient to qualify for
core city status was defeated in a referendum, largely due to opposition from Wako. ==Government==