The first stop of Lushun is also a must-see place for Lushun. The Lushun Prison was first built by the Russians, not as a prison at first, but as a battlefield hospital and barracks. The part built by the Russians is not very big. It is the Y-shaped part of the core, which is grey in color. Later, it is the Japanese "achievement" that forms the scale of the present prison. The Japanese expanded the building on the basis of the Russians, that is, the red brick building part seen now is Japan. I built it. The Museum has well preserved facilities such as prisons, dungeons, reform-through-labour factories, hanging rooms and so on. After watching, the mood is complex. Especially the recovery scenes such as hanging rack and corpse barrel. Fortunately, it's sunny. If it's cloudy, I don't know how to suppress it. The museum also has historical exhibitions of the war between Japan and Russia. The lighthouses, cannons, old photographs, and stone tablets carved in Chinese by the Japanese commander-in-chief, Hidden, are memorials of the humiliation of that period. In addition, a special exhibition hall records the deeds of the Korean anti-Japanese volunteers, the most famous of which was the assassination of Ito Bowen's Anchonggen volunteers, whose final place of detention and righteousness was in this prison, which was preserved and displayed. The Prison Museum is large enough to follow the prescribed route.