Yamada Daio Shrine Reviews: Insider Insights and Visitor Experiences
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Masaki13
Thatched roof
Original Text
It's a shrine with a strange name, but it seems that this place used to be Yamada Village, and it is said that it is named "Yamada Daio" because it enshrines the Jito at that time. A symbolic thatched roof is also used for shrines in the area around here. The thatched-roof hall of worship is rare in Japan and I think it is a valuable building.
The main hall and the shrine are also important in the medieval period of thatched roof in the main hall and the thatched roof in the late Muromachi period
Original Text
Rather than Chinju no Mori, I was surprised that it was located in a small precinct of 30mx40m, and it was built in 1587 in the late Muromachi period, and it was built in the thatched roof of the Sanmasha style. The hall of worship built in front of the main shrine is a long plane with a long depth, and the shrine is connected to the right hand of the front to the key, creating a series of thatched roofs that are unique to this region. These and torii gates are also designated as national important cultural properties. It is interesting that the shape of the wooden fence surrounding the main shrine is sharp. Like a fence in the Kofun period?
Thatched roof
It's a shrine with a strange name, but it seems that this place used to be Yamada Village, and it is said that it is named "Yamada Daio" because it enshrines the Jito at that time. A symbolic thatched roof is also used for shrines in the area around here. The thatched-roof hall of worship is rare in Japan and I think it is a valuable building.
The main hall and the shrine are also important in the medieval period of thatched roof in the main hall and the thatched roof in the late Muromachi period
Rather than Chinju no Mori, I was surprised that it was located in a small precinct of 30mx40m, and it was built in 1587 in the late Muromachi period, and it was built in the thatched roof of the Sanmasha style. The hall of worship built in front of the main shrine is a long plane with a long depth, and the shrine is connected to the right hand of the front to the key, creating a series of thatched roofs that are unique to this region. These and torii gates are also designated as national important cultural properties. It is interesting that the shape of the wooden fence surrounding the main shrine is sharp. Like a fence in the Kofun period?