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Noritoyamahachiman Shrine

Noritoyamahachiman Shrine is located about a 12-minute walk from Kazahaya Station on the JR Kure Line. The shrine is said to have been built about 1,200 years ago and enshrines a local deity who protects the town of Akitsu. Around the same time as the shrine was built, an aristocrat who held great power at the time composed a waka poem at the site of the shrine. The content of the waka poem has been turned into a stone monument in the shrine grounds, conveying the long history of Noritoyamahachiman Shrine to the present day.

address
739-2403354 Kazahaya, Akitsu-cho, Higashihiroshima City, Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan729-0416
tel
0846-45-2239
Open
Open 24 hours (Only within the Shrine grounds)
Closed
Open all year round
No English Support
No Reservation

Noritoyamahachiman Shrine was built about 1,200 years ago, and has one of the longest histories of any shrine in Japan. As a result, there are many old and rare structures in the shrine grounds, such as stone statues of ball-riding komainu (guardian dogs) made in the mid-19th century, and set-sha (sub-gods worshipped together with the main god) of major Japanese shrines such as Itsukushima Shrine and Gion Shrine. Noritoyamahachiman Shrine also holds a festival every October. A unique festival culture has developed here, with parades of portable shrines and dances by people wearing masks.