Kasaishi Shrine Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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MINOMUSHI_seikatsu
A shrine with national treasure
Original Text
It is said that it is a shrine with a stone monument designated as a national treasure, but there is nothing else to see. The shrine is quite small, and at first glance I didn't know it was such a valuable shrine.
If you pay the admission fee 500 yen at the shrine office, you can hear a polite and easy-to-understand explanation about Mr.'s stone monument. This stone monument was a national treasure in the Meiji period, and of course it became a national treasure under the new postwar system (at first the value of art as calligraphy, and then the historical value as an old document). And I was informed that it was a substitute for the World Heritage level, such as the connection with the Korean Peninsula as well as in Japan. Also, Mitsuhiko Mito has a deep relationship with this stone monument and shrine ...
The shrine itself was nothing but an ordinary shrine
Original Text
Here is the stone monument called the famous national treasure "Nasu Kunizo Monument". The stone monument is much more famous than the shrine. Photography is also prohibited on this stone monument. Maybe if you take a picture, it will decrease or burn down (laughs)? .. Or is it set in AI so that you don't like the stone monument and look back (laughs)? By the way, this stone monument seems to be 1300 years ago. When it was discovered, it seems that stones were piled up in an umbrella shape on this stone monument, this ...
A national treasure of rare old documents: Nasu no Kuni no Miyatsukohi is the divine body of the shrine here. If you have Miyaji, the admission fee is 300 yen, and after listening to the commentary, you can see the divine body up close. According to Mr. Miyaji, there are three points to see. 1. The characters "Koori" (in the later era, Koori = was replaced with county characters, so it is valuable) 2. Some scholars say "Japan's most beautiful" (when you look at it, it is carved, but for some reason it floats ...
A shrine with national treasure
It is said that it is a shrine with a stone monument designated as a national treasure, but there is nothing else to see. The shrine is quite small, and at first glance I didn't know it was such a valuable shrine.
World Heritage Class の(Yushenti の Stone Stele が)
If you pay the admission fee 500 yen at the shrine office, you can hear a polite and easy-to-understand explanation about Mr.'s stone monument. This stone monument was a national treasure in the Meiji period, and of course it became a national treasure under the new postwar system (at first the value of art as calligraphy, and then the historical value as an old document). And I was informed that it was a substitute for the World Heritage level, such as the connection with the Korean Peninsula as well as in Japan. Also, Mitsuhiko Mito has a deep relationship with this stone monument and shrine ...
The shrine itself was nothing but an ordinary shrine
Here is the stone monument called the famous national treasure "Nasu Kunizo Monument". The stone monument is much more famous than the shrine. Photography is also prohibited on this stone monument. Maybe if you take a picture, it will decrease or burn down (laughs)? .. Or is it set in AI so that you don't like the stone monument and look back (laughs)? By the way, this stone monument seems to be 1300 years ago. When it was discovered, it seems that stones were piled up in an umbrella shape on this stone monument, this ...
you have to hold down three points to see
A national treasure of rare old documents: Nasu no Kuni no Miyatsukohi is the divine body of the shrine here. If you have Miyaji, the admission fee is 300 yen, and after listening to the commentary, you can see the divine body up close. According to Mr. Miyaji, there are three points to see. 1. The characters "Koori" (in the later era, Koori = was replaced with county characters, so it is valuable) 2. Some scholars say "Japan's most beautiful" (when you look at it, it is carved, but for some reason it floats ...