Image search results - "kashiwabara" |
Kashiwabara-juku is the sixtieth station or post town (shukuba) of the sixty-nine stations on the Nakasendo Road. It is the first Nakasendo station in Shiga (following Imasu-juku in Gifu), and one of ten Nakasendo stations in Shiga.
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JR Kashiwabara Station on the Tokaido Line and Mt. Ibuki. Kashiwabara is about 15 min. from Maibara Station.
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Tourist map in front of Kashiwabara Station. Most sights are within walking distance.
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Signs pointing the way to sights in Kashiwabara.
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Site of Kashiwabara-juku's Honjin, now a private home. Many of the homes have signs indicating where the typical shukuba buildings were. MAP
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Site of Kashiwabara-juku's Honjin lodge. Decorated for Yaito Matsuri. The original Honjin building became a primary school during the Meiji Period until it was moved to Tarui, Gifu to become the Nangu Shrine priest's residence.
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Signboard for Kashiwabara-juku's Honjin. Says that Shogun Tokugawa Iemochi once stayed here.
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Site of Kashiwabara-juku's Waki-Honjin lodge. Now a post office and ordinary private home. Decorated for Yaito Matsuri.
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Stone lantern where the bulletin board was. Kashiwabara-juku was most famous for mogusa (moxa cautery) picked from Mt. Ibuki.
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Hiroshige's Kashiwabara woodblock print in his Kisokaido series. It depicts Kameya, a shop selling mugwort from Mt. Ibuki used for moxa. Notice the Fukusuke statue on the right inside the shop.
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This is the shop depicted in Hiroshige's print. Called Ibuki-do. It is the last surviving maker of moxa cautery in Kashiwabara. 伊吹堂亀屋佐京商店
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Approaching Ibuki-do on the left. A side entrance on the left opens to a private garden as seen in Hiroshige's print. 伊吹堂亀屋佐京商店
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Ibuki-do on the left. The current Fukusuke statue is the second one made by the 6th-generation shop owner Shichibei. The original statue was hand-carved on the order of 2nd-generation shop owner. 伊吹堂亀屋佐京商店
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Ibuki-do on the right. Fukusuke (福助) is based on an actual person who was a shop clerk at the Kameya moxa shop. He had a large head and big ears and was honest, friendly, and a hard worker.
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Yaito-juku faces Ibuki-do.
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Site of a sake brewer.
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History and old map of Kashiwabara.
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Yaito Matsuri sign
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Former site of Kashiwabara's village hall. Now a medical clinic seen in the rear. The traditional-looking building on the left is a public toilet.
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Kashiwabara-juku History Museum in a beautiful Japanese-style home with a garden and kura storehouse. Besides exhibits of local history, there is a restaurant and gift shop. 柏原宿歴史館
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Kashiwabara-juku History Museum's mini theater shows a short movie about Kashiwabara-juku's history. The museum was a private residence built in 1917. The local government bought it and made this museum.
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Kashiwabara-juku layout in the old days. Kashiwabara-juku was Shiga's longest post town (shukuba-machi) extending to about 1.4 km. 柏原宿歴史館
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Kashiwabara-juku History Museum has more exhibits in the detached kura storehouse.
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Fukusuke statues at Kashiwabara-juku History Museum (2nd floor). Fukusuke (福助) is based on an actual person who was a shop clerk at the Kameya moxa shop. He had a large head and big ears and was honest, friendly, and a hard worker
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Kashiwabara-juku History Museum also preserves this former Japanese-style home built in 1917.
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Hotaru (firefly) udon served by the Kashiwa restaurant inside Kashiwabara-juku History Museum in Maibara, Shiga. Firefly made of eggplant with the light from an egg slice.
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Yaito udon served by the Kashiwa restaurant inside Kashiwabara-juku History Museum. The light green pile is tororo-kombu (seaweed shavings) shaped like moxa, topped with a red dot (ginger) as the burning flame.
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Yaito udon served by the Kashiwa restaurant inside Kashiwabara-juku History Museum in Maibara, Shiga. Yaito is moxa. The red dot (red ginger) is the burning flame.
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Kashiwabara holds a summer festival on a weekend in late July called Yaito Matsuri. "Yaito" means mogusa or moxa cautery. 柏原宿やいとまつり
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Stage entertainment at Yaito Matsuri at night.
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Yaito Matsuri at Kashiwabara-juku, Maibara.
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Yaito Matsuri also features rickshaw rides.
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Yaito Matsuri stage entertainment by local kindergarteners.
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All-girl rock band at Yaito Matsuri.
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Main venue of Yaito Matsuri next to Ibuki-do, the moxa shop.
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Kami-shibai (picture card) story-telling.
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During the Yaito Matsuri, the Ibuki-do has an open house and sells their moxa. 伊吹堂亀屋佐京商店
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Moxa made by Ibuki-do in Kashiwabara. 伊吹堂亀屋佐京商店
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Free moxa cautery treatments at Ibuki-do during Yaito Matsuri, Kashiwabara-juku. You can hardly feel anything. 伊吹堂亀屋佐京商店
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Kashiwabara has one long main street called Nakasendo.
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Toward the west end of Kashiwabara is this site called Ochaya Goten, a small palace built for shoguns to rest. 御茶屋御殿跡
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Site of Ochaya Goten, a small palace built for shoguns to rest during the early Edo Period. Tokugawa Ieyasu, Hidetada, and Iemitsu all stayed here. 御茶屋御殿跡
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All that remains of Ochaya Goten is this well.
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Sign and stone marker indicating the site of the Ochaya Goten in Kashiwabara-juku.
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About Ochaya Goten. 御茶屋御殿跡
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Ochaya Goten well.
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Road markers are commonly found at intersections to tell travelers which way to go.
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Road marker
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Road marker
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Map of Kashiwabara-juku
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Former Kashiwabara Bank being renovated.
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Former Kashiwabara Bank after being renovated. It is now a daytime elderly care center.
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Former Kashiwabara Bank
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Former Kashiwabara Bank
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Kashiwabara Bank opened in 1901 by local merchants. There were other branches nearby such as Omi-Nagaoka and Imasu. The bank merged with Shiga Bank and closed in 1943.
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Kashiwabara has been converting its buildings into a traditional look.
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Kashiwabara Ichirizuka distance marker or milestone used by travelers to gauge how far they have traveled.
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Kashiwabara Ichirizuka distance marker or milestone used by travelers to gauge how far they have traveled. This is a reconstruction in the approximate location.
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Kashiwabara-juku Ichirizuka distance marker.
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Kashiwabara Ichirizuka distance marker.
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About Kashiwabara Ichirizuka distance marker.
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Rice fields in autumn.
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Mt. Ryosen in the distance.
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Rice field in autumn.
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West end of Kashiwabara-juku where there was a West Guard Gate.
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About the West Guard Gate.
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West end of Kashiwabara-juku in spring.
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Kashiwabara-juku stone marker.
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Kashiwabara-juku sign.
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Directions
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Cherry blossoms and Amanogawa River famous for fireflies in June.
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Cherry blossoms next to Kashiwabara Junior High School sports ground.
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Mt. Ibuki as famed haiku poet Basho must have seen it.
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Haiku poem by Basho Matsuo about Mt. Ibuki.
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Way to Kitabatake Tomoyuki-kyo Grave 北畠具行卿墓
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Kiyotaki in the background.
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Path to Kitabatake Tomoyuki-kyo Grave
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Way to Kitabatake Tomoyuki-kyo Grave
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Path to Kitabatake Tomoyuki-kyo Grave
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Kitabatake Tomoyuki-kyo Grave 北畠具行卿墓
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Kitabatake Tomoyuki-kyo Grave. Kitabatake Tomoyuki (1290-1332) was a high-ranking Imperial Court official during the late Kamakura Period. National Historic Site 北畠具行卿墓
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Kitabatake Tomoyuki-kyo Grave 北畠具行卿墓
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Way to Tokugen-in temple in Kiyotaki during cherry blossom season in April.
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Kiyotaki Tokugen-in temple used to be Kashiwabara Castle. 清滝 徳源院
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Tokugen-in is famous for two beautiful cherry blossoms trees. This one is a weeping cherry tree.
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Tokugen-in's other cherry tree.
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Tokugen-in main hall. 清滝 徳源院
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Inside Tokugen-in's main hall.
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Tokugen-in's garden. Admission 300 yen.
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Tokugen-in is also famous for the graves of the Kyogoku Clan.
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The most famous is Kyogoku Takatsugi. This is his grave.
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Other Kyogoku Clan graves.
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Cross the train tracks to visit another temple.
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Gate to Jobodai-in temple founded by Saicho in 815. It later became a betsuin temple of Enryakuji temple. 成菩提院
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Gate to Jobodai-in temple during open house when we could tour inside the temple.
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Temple treasure tour is held in autumn in Maibara.
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Jobodai-in temple belongs to the Tendai Buddhist Sect. It was founded in 815 by priest Saicho who built a shack here to lodge while on his way to eastern Japan. The temple's resident priests include many famous ones like Tenkai Daisojo.
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Steps to Jobodai-in temple's main hall in Kashiwabara-juku, Maibara, Shiga.
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Jobodai-in temple's Hondo main hall. This temple served as lodging for the likes of Oda Nobunaga, Toyotomi Hideyoshi, Azai Nagamasa, and Kobayakawa Hideaki. 成菩提院
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Jobodai-in temple's Bell tower
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Jobodai-in temple in its heyday around 1665, it had 64 affiliate temples (末寺) and 109 priests. Oda Nobunaga and Tokugawa Ieysau even donated land to the temple.
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Priest of Jobodai-in temple who conducted tours inside the temple during the open house.
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Jobodai-in temple
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Water spring called Shirashozu. 白清水
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Shirashozu. Note that this water has not been certified for safe drinking. 白清水
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About Shirashozu. This might be the spring where Yamato Takeru healed himself after being poisoned by the evil god on Mt. Ibuki. 白清水
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Terutehime-kasa Jizo
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Terutehime-kasa Jizo 照手姫笠地蔵
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Terutehime-kasa Jizo is the smaller statue on the right. 照手姫笠地蔵
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East end of Kashiwabara-juku.
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Kashiwabara-juku stone marker.
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Cross the train tracks here on the east end of Kashiwabara.
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Large stone marker pointing the way to Kashiwabara and a neighboring village.
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Hiroshige's woodblock print of Imasu-juku next to Kashiwabara-juku shows the border between Imasu and Kashiwabara. There is an inn on the Imasu side (left, called Ryogokuya Inn) and Kashiwabara side (called Kameya Inn).
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Nemonogatari-no-Sato is where the prefectural boundary between Gifu (Imasu) and Shiga is located. The inns are no longer here, but guests at both inns used to talk to each other across the border before sleeping.
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Gifu side.
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Prefectural boundary between Gifu (Imasu) and Shiga (Kashiwabara) is this narrow groove. The cross-border bedtime chatter in the old days gave this place the name Nemonogatari-no-Sato.
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Shiga side
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Nemonogatari-no-Sato (Bedtime Story Town) momument. 寝物語の里
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Basho haiku monument
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Entrance to Takekurabe Castle on a mountain. 長比
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Hiking path to Mt. Ryosen. Best not to hike alone.
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In Tarui in Gifu, the building which served as Kashiwabara's Honjin still exists.
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Kashiwabara-juku's Honjin in Tarui, Gifu. The former Honjin served as the Nangu Shrine priest's residence.
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Kashiwabara-juku's Honjin in Tarui, Gifu. During the Meiji Period while still in Kashiwabara, the former Honjin was used as a primary school before it was moved to Tarui.
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The Honjin was where VIPs such as daimyo lodged.
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Inside Kashiwabara-juku's former Honjin in Tarui, Gifu. On the left is the Jodan-no-Ma where the daimyo lord stayed.
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Inside Kashiwabara-juku's former Honjin in Tarui, Gifu.
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Inside Kashiwabara-juku's former Honjin in Tarui, Gifu.
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Kiyotaki Tokugen-in temple (Seiryuji Tokugen-in) is a pleasant 20-min. walk from JR Kashiwabara Station on the Tokaido Line. In April, it is noted for cherry blossoms. You will also see these cherry trees next to Kashiwabara Junior High School on the way.
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Mt. Ibuki and cherry trees near Kiyotaki.
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Approaching Kiyotaki, a small settlement next to a mountain.
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Cherry blossoms greet you at the entrance to Kiyotaki.
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Kiyotaki welcome sign.
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Stone lantern and Kiyotaki welcome sign.
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Path to Tokugen-in temple in Kiyotaki.
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The path to Tokugen-in temple in Kiyotaki is lined with cherry blossoms.
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This path used to be lined with secondary temples affiliated with Tokugen-in.
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Path to Tokugen-in temple in Kiyotaki in spring.
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Front wall of Tokugen-in temple in Kiyotaki.
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Tokugen-in temple's weeping cherry tree. The shape and color are outstanding and it's a noted tourist attraction in spring. MAP
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Tokugen-in temple has two weeping cherry trees. This is the older one, about 300 years old. The original cherry tree was planted by Kyogoku Doyo in the 14th century.
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This older cherry tree is about 10 meters high and a trunk 2.3 meters in diameter.
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Supporting poles prop up the branches of this grand old sakura tree.
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This was still not in full bloom. Maybe 80%.
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You can see the second weeping cherry tree in the distance. Both cherry trees are called "Doyo Sakura" since the original tree was planted by Kyogoku Doyo.
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The two Doyo Sakura trees at Kiyotaki Tokugen-in temple in Maibara, Shiga. The left tree is older.
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This is Tokugen-in temple's second Doyo cherry tree, planted in 1977. It is the third-generation tree.
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Even the second cherry tree has a beautiful shape.
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Weeping cherry tree at Kiyotaki Tokugen-in temple, Maibara, Shiga.
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Weeping cherry tree at Kiyotaki Tokugen-in temple, Maibara, Shiga.
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Benches for viewing the cherry trees, made by the local Kashiwabara Jr. High School.
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The second cherry tree and the Three-story Pagoda at Kiyotaki Tokugen-in temple, Maibara, Shiga.
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The second cherry tree and the Three-story Pagoda at Kiyotaki Tokugen-in temple, Maibara, Shiga.
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Three-story Pagoda at Kiyotaki Tokugen-in temple, Maibara, Shiga. The pagoda was built by Kyogoku Takatoyo, the 22nd Kyogoku Clan leader. in 1672.
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Weeping cherries and Tokugen-in temple building in the background.
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Road to Kiyotaki Tokugen-in Temple in autumn. Tokugen-in is also noted for autumn leaves.
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Path to Tokugen-in Temple. The temple bell indicates that there was a temple here. Tokugen-in had a number of subordinate temples here. They have all gone.
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Cherry tree path to Tokugen-in Temple.
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Temple wall
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Tokugen-in Temple is also famous for autumn leaves in mid-November.
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Stone marker
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Red maples near the entrance to Kiyotaki Tokugen-in temple.
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Red maples at the temple entrance.
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Entrance to Kiyotaki Tokugen-in temple.
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Front entrance to temple grounds.
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Tokugen-in temple's Hondo main hall. Tokugen-in belongs to the Tendai Buddhist sect, Enryakuji School. It was founded by 1283 when Kyogoku Ujinobu built the original Hondo Hall. Ujinobu started the Kyogoku Clan. 本堂
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View of Tokugen-in Temple's garden in autumn.
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Kiyotaki Tokugen-in Temple garden in autumn.
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View of Tokugen-in Temple's garden in autumn.
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View of Tokugen-in Temple's garden in autumn.
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View of Tokugen-in Temple's garden in autumn.
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Kiyotaki Tokugen-in Temple's garden in autumn.
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Kiyotaki Tokugen-in Temple's garden in autumn.
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Kiyotaki Tokugen-in Temple's garden in autumn.
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Kiyotaki Tokugen-in Temple's garden in autumn.
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Kiyotaki Tokugen-in Temple's garden in autumn.
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Kiyotaki Tokugen-in Temple's garden in autumn.
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Kiyotaki Tokugen-in Temple's garden in autumn.
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They also serve tea to guests.
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Nice place to relax and talk while viewing the garden. Tourists maycome by the busloads in autumn though.
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Tokugen-in is the family temple of the Kyogoku Clan. Inside the Kyakuden (Guest Hall). 客殿
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The Guest Hall has this veranda where we can sit and admire the garden. They also served us tea.
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Guest Hall and garden at Tokugen-in temple.
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Garden of Tokugen-in temple in April. The temple was named after Kyogoku Ujinobu's posthumous Buddhist name。庭園
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Garden of Tokugen-in temple in April. 庭園
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After viewing the garden, you can see inside the temple.
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Inside Tokugen-in temple's Hondo main hall. There's not much room in front of the altar.
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Altar inside Tokugen-in temple's Hondo main hall.
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Statue of Saicho on the right side of the main altar.
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Altar on the left of the main altar in the Hondo with Fudomyoo at center. In the background on the right is the famous "ghost scroll painting." The ghost seems like it's stepping out of the picture. 絹本淡彩(けんぽんたん�Like Sadako stepping out of your TV...
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The famous "ghost scroll painting" by Shimizu Setsudo. The ghost seems like it's stepping out of the picture. The scroll is displayed only during certain months.清水節堂(1876–1951) 幽霊図
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The famous "ghost scroll painting" by Shimizu Setsudo at Tokugen-in Temple in Kiyotaki, Maibara, Shiga.清水節堂(1876–1951) 幽霊図
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"Ghost scroll painting" by Shimizu Setsudo from Higashi-Azai, Shiga Prefecture. 清水節堂(1876–1951) 幽霊図
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Corridor from the Hondo to the Mortuary Hall (Ihaido). 位牌堂
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The Corridor displayed some objects of worship that were kept by Tokugen-in's secondary temples that were nearby. Those temples are no more, but these statues were saved.
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