입장료
무료
다카토리정, 나라현 현
한눈에
Toyotomi Hideyoshi prayed here for a son, and when his wish was granted, his son Hideyori rebuilt the entire shrine in 1605 as an act of gratitude to the water goddess.
The shrine's main hall is architecturally bizarre: three separate buildings sit under one bark roof with three dormer gables, blending two different classical shrine styles.
이 신사은 다양한 고슈인 디자인 1가지를 제공합니다
일반
무료
300m 이내 600m 이내
편의 시설
Arrive by mid-afternoon since the shrine closes at 16:00 (17:00 only in April), and the forest canopy gets quite dark as evening approaches.
Plan for a 70-minute uphill walk from Yoshinoyama Station if arriving by ropeway, so wear sturdy hiking boots with good ankle support rather than casual sneakers.
If you're praying here, understand that many visitors come specifically to pray to Ameno Mikumari for fertility and safe childbirth, so approach the main altar with quiet reverence and avoid loud conversations.
Look for the mysterious wooden owl sculpture near the shrine's exit, which locals say appeared mysteriously with no documented origin. Take a moment to examine its unusually lifelike carving, as it's a small detail many visitors miss while leaving.
방문 경험을 공유해 다른 여행자를 도와주세요.
이 장소에 대한 흥미로운 사실
Toyotomi Hideyoshi prayed here for a son, and when his wish was granted, his son Hideyori rebuilt the entire shrine in 1605 as an act of gratitude to the water goddess.
The shrine's main hall is architecturally bizarre: three separate buildings sit under one bark roof with three dormer gables, blending two different classical shrine styles.
Every April, the shrine hosts a little-known festival called 'Taue' (rice planting) on its wooden performance stage, connecting the water goddess to agricultural fertility.
A mysteriously lifelike wooden owl sculpture sits near the shrine's exit, and no one knows how it got there or who carved it.
이 장소와 연결된 다른 페이지입니다.