Amalfi Dolce

Italian sweets shop, a sister store of the famous "Ristorante Amalfii" store in Shichirigahama, and offers products with Italian scents, using a selection of materials, including durum semolina.

Italian sweets shop, a sister store of the famous "Ristorante Amalfii" store in Shichirigahama, and offers products with Italian scents, using a selection of materials, including durum semolina.

Handmade charcoal-grilled pork, which is pickled in a secret sauce and then savorly baked on a charcoal fire, is a good choice of products, such as charcoal-grilled chicken and pork miso, which make use of the connoisseur and technology unique to the butcher shop from 1949.

The store collects products with the scent of the sea, such as imported sundries and accessories from Hawaii and other original products. Small items made of shells and cute bags that line up in the storefront or in the store are around 1000 yen. A woman who likes the sea is a must. Ware and jewelry are also abundant.

It sells mainly antique miscellaneous items from the early Showa era that are simple and easy to use. There are chairs and wooden small shelves that give you a sense of nostalgia.

Kamakura and Shichirigahama, known as one of the best locations in Shonan, are filled with general merchandise and apparel selected from Japan and abroad.

The complex was opened based on the concept of the lifestyle of surfers living in the city. "bills" opened from Sydney and "Cher Shore", a popular select shop, are popular.

About 20 pagodas line up in a quiet residential corner. It is reported that the Wada Yoshimori [Wadayoshimori] clan, who was an entourage of Yoritomo, was buried in the first year of Kenpo (1213) after losing a battle with Yoshiki Hōjō (Hōjō Yoshiki).

One of the Kamakura Shichikiri connects Sakanoshitari to the Kyuraku-ji Temple; it is said that the Kaisan Ninjitesvado of the Kyuraku-ji Temple was opened up; and in Nitta Yoshisada's attack on Kamakura, a fierce battle was fought over this cut-through.

Standing next to Kōkoku-in Kamakura Daibutsu's Kanzetsu-do. It is inscribed with a tanka "Kamakuraya Mihoto Kenari Narado Sakyamuni [Shakamuni] is a beautiful man," written by the female poet Akiko Yosano at the sight of the Daibutsu.

It is located within the Haya-ji Temple, and is enshrined in Bengeoten, which is said to have been carved by the Kōho-Daishi (now housed in the Kōnen Museum). Inside the dark Benten cave behind Benten-do is a fantastic atmosphere with the flames of the candles fluttering. The walls are engraved with Benten and Jukurodoji.