Suzuka, as a place name, is mentioned in the
Nara period chronicle
Nihon Shoki. The ancient
Tōkaidō passed through Suzuka, and the Nara-period
provincial capital was within its borders. During the
Sengoku period, the area was controlled by
Oda Nobutaka, the third son of
Oda Nobunaga, who ruled from
Kanbe Castle. During the
Edo period, much of the area was under the control of the 15,000
koku Kanbe Domain, ruled by the
Honda clan from 1732 until the
Meiji restoration in 1871. During this period, two
post stations were within the modern city limits:
Ishiyakushi-juku and
Shōno-juku, which prospered due to pilgrimage traffic to the
Ise Grand Shrine. After the start of the
Meiji period, the area was organized as part of
Suzuka District in 1889 and the town of Kanbe was established with the creation of the modern municipalities system on April 1, 1889. On December 1, 1942, Kanbe merged with the villages of Shirako, Inau, Iino, Kawano, Ichinomiya, Mida, Tanagaki, Wakamatsu, Ko, Shono, Takatsuse, Makita, and Ishiyakushi to form the city of Suzuka. The city further expanded in 1954 by annexing the villages of Sakae, Amana and Aikawa and portions of neighboring Kameyama. ==Government==