This full-day private guided tour takes visitors around Kashihara, Japan, where they will learn about the rich history and culture of the area. The tour includes visits to the Kashihara-jingu Shrine, built in 1889 to reaffirm the emperor's power and the Mausoleum of Emperor Jinmu, with many gates and a central mount where the emperor is resting. Visitors will also explore Imai-cho, a traditional town from the Edo period, where they can see the traditional side of Japan. Some of the highlights of the tour include: learning about Japanese protohistory and Meiji era at Kashihara-jingu, visiting the Hanairaka information center, the Shonen-ji temple and the Imai Machiya Hall where visitors can go inside some of the traditional houses, like Yometani residence, Imai-Machiyakan and Kawai residence, and see what a bedroom from the Edo Period looked like. The tour is wheelchair accessible, strollers and pets are allowed, and public transportation is nearby. The tour does not include food, drinks, transportation and entrances fees.
Kashihara-jingu is built where were held Emperor Jinmu's first government of Imperial Japan (660 to 585 BC), in Kashihara, Prefecture of Nara and old Province of Yamato, where turning capitals of Japan were located.
A 20 minute walk from Kashihara-jingu, we have the mausoleum of Emperor Jinmu, with many gates and a central mount where the emperor is resting. We can stand behind the main gate to greet him.
After visiting Japanese protohistory then Meiji in Kashihara-jingu, we go to Imai-cho, Japanese traditional town from Edo period.
Arrived to Imai-cho, we can visit Hanairaka information center with it half-western and half-japanese architecture. We will have more information about the town Imai-cho.
The town was first a temple town built between 1532 and 1555 during the Warring States Period. Shonen-ji (Hongan-ji), old town master, is based in its center and we can visit it.
Some of the houses are open, as Yometani residence, Imai-Machiyakan and Kawai residence. We can visit them and we can even go upstairs in Imai-Machiyakan and see what was like a bedroom from Edo Period.