Hasedera Temple

Hasedera Temple

Info

JR Ueda Station → Ueda Bus 30 minutes to Sugadaira Kogen via Sanada, bus stop: Sanada ride, 15 minutes on foot
8km 15 minutes from Joshinetsu Road Ueda Sugadaira IC via National Route 144
30 cars

Business Hours

Precinct Freedom

Price

Precinct Freedom

Spot Category

Shrines・Temples・Churches

The information provided reflects the details available at the time of the survey.
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Yakushido

The Chūzenji Yakushido, which has a thatched roof, is a historic building built in the early Kamakura period. Inside the temple, there is a statue of Yakushi Nyorai (an important cultural monument) and a statue of a handless deity. The Yakushi Nyoraiza statue is reportedly a work of the early Kamakura period, and is famous as a gentle, well-arranged and graceful Buddha statue.

Large hot water

Ōyu, which also appears in Eiji Yoshikawa's "The New Heike Story", is one of the Sōsho Onsen communal bathhouses (tōyu). The building is a quaint three-tiled roof that stands in a corner of the spa town. It was once also called "Aoi no Yu" because Kiso Yoshinaka had come to the sanatorium with Akinori Aoi, and "Hōjō Yu" later because of the fact that Hōjō Yoshimasa had built a bathroom. At present, it has been changed to "Oyu" due to the large amount of hot water. The hot springs of the simple sulfur springs that are drawn to the bathhouse are naturally spring-fed Ōyu sources. Good for neuralgia and joint pain, also smooth skin. There is also an open-air bath, and the stone monument of "Aoi no Yu" standing in front of the entrance serves as a drinker's place, allowing a drinker.

Joraku-ji Temple

An ancient temple of the Tendai sect, which is the Honbo of Kitamu Kannon. It was one of the Sengaku-ji temples, and was opened by the Tengan Year (824-834) Ennin Jikaku Daishi. There is a stone treasure tower (Important Cultural Property) behind the main hall. I am struck by the 350-year-old "Mifune no Matsu", the main hall with a roofed roof. A must see the pictorial picture of Katsushika Hokusai and the statue of Sengyin, as well as the collection of old tiles, which are displayed in the attached museum.

Kōtoku-ji Temple

An ancient temple of the Rinzai sect, located on a high ground overlooking the townscape. Kaesan was in the year of Meiyo 9 (1500). In Kyoho 10 (1725), the main hall, which was erected by the Hayashi family, includes the Uguisu-tsuku corridor, the Yamaoka Tetsushu flat-profile, and the Owari Tokugawa family's basket. The back of the back [kuri] next to the main hall houses a basket with a car devised by the priest in the Tenpo years. In the shrine under the entrance stone steps, Enmei Jizo, which is said to save women, is celebrated. As the festival approaches in April, the stone gets wet at night due to the temperature difference between day and night. The Honson Yakushi Nyorai was by a Buddhist master, Kiyama, of Gyeongsang 4 (1599). Chubu 49 Yakushi No. 21.

Myokaku-ji Temple

The ancient temple of the Rinzai Myoshin-ji school, which is lined with the main temple and the Jōō-dō and the bell-roomon. It is said to be about 700 years ago, but was rebuilt in Kyoho 11 (1726) after it was destroyed by fire. The gardens are well-maintained, and the flowers of the four seasons add color. The main hall was rebuilt in 2018 for aging.

Hakusan Shrine

Natural wood of cypress and cedar thrives on the grounds. The four shrines (important cultural property) of Kumano, Izu, Hakusan, and Zao, which are about 1m away from the side where the bills of the first year of Kenbu (1334) remain inside the Okiya in Ishigaki (Oiya). All of them are considered to be the oldest Kamakura architecture in Nagano Prefecture, which is characterized by the roof of Ichikensha style cypress skin. The entrance with the inscription of 1439 was left behind, indicating that it was the center of the culture of Kiso Valley.

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