Ten States List

Ten States List

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JR Hamakanaya Station → 8-minute walk ropeway saw mountain foot station → 4 minutes by ropeway, stop at Sawayama summit station, 11 minutes walk
From Futtsu Kanaya IC, Futtsu Kanaya Road, Route 127, 5km 10 minutes via the Sawayama Mountain Trail
50 units

Business Hours

8-17 o'clock (until sunset in winter)

Price

Japanese temple visit 600 yen, dwarf 400 yen

Spot Category

Tower and Observation Facilities

The information provided reflects the details available at the time of the survey.
Please note that facility details may change due to the facility’s circumstances, so please check for the latest information before visiting. This content has been translated using machine translation.

Information provided by: JTB Publishing

The content uses an automatic translation service, which is not always accurate.
The translated content may be different from the original meaning, so please understand and use it.

Related Spots

One Hundred Shaku Kannon

The 100-meter (30.3m) statue of the large Kanon stone stone was completed in 1966. It creates a mysterious atmosphere as a guardian of traffic safety.

Sawmountain

A large amount of stone was once cut out as a source of good quality stone, and the jagged rock face is unusual. On the southern slope of Mt. Pay a viewing fee and go around the highlights such as "Hell Peek" and the Tokai Senkoku Rakhan, Japan's largest cliff [Magai] Daibutsu.

East Sea Thousand Five Hundred Luhan

It is scattered along the middle of Sawayama in the precincts of Nihonji Temple. Descending from the observation deck of the Rope Way Sawashan summit station, and walking for about 30 minutes to get out on the Thousand Five Hundred and Five Hundred Roads, there are 1553 stone Buddhas in all lined up among several rock caves. It is a statue of arahan that was continued to be carved by Jingoro Ohno and others in the years of Yasunaga 8-Kansei 10 (1779-1798).

Suwa Shrine

On the occasion of the Ojō Kōki, who was appointed as the lord of Osugasō, Shimousa Province, he was invited by Shinano Suwa Taisha Shrine as the god of the lord of the territory. He has since been revered as the god of industrial development, the god of wisdom, and in recent years as the god of advanced learning. The present main shrine is of the 1853 (Kaei 6) construction, and the annual festival "Sawara no Taisai (Autumn Festival)", which takes place in October every year, is designated as a national important intangible folk cultural property.

Daishoji Temple

The temple of the Tendai sect, known as Narikiri (Namikiri), is a temple of the Tendai sect that collects the thick faith of the fishing people for great fishing prayers and sea protection. The main priest, Fudō Myōō, was reportedly picked up from the sea by the wives of the fishermen of the land during the middle Kamakura period and laid them here to rest. The thatched-roofed Fudō, which houses Fudō Myo, is designated as a national important cultural property, and is presumed to have been erected during the Muromachi period.

The bridge of glasses

Western-style Mie-bashi, a masonry method, on the lower Nagao River at Takiguchi, Shirahama. Because there are three arches, it is not really glasses, but it has come to be called a glasses bridge from the appearance of moving to the river. The bridge was built in Meiji 21 (1888) with a donation of 399 yen and 40 yen from the villagers. He said he had walked across the river before the construction. It is a sturdy bridge that, in wartime, tanks passed through it without being broken by the Great Kanto Earthquake. Repair work was carried out in 1977 and 1993, and the figure remains at the time of construction. Prefectural Designated Tangible Cultural Property. Japan's Meihashi Hyakusyo.

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