Famous scenic spots
This is the database of famous scenic spots in INBE, AWA.
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Sezume Hachiman Shrine
In the center of the Sezume district, along the prefectural road, there is the Sezume Hachiman Shrine, dedicated to the gods Honetabetsun and Hime-Ookami. The main shrine is a Nagare structure, but it was so badly damaged that it was repaired in 1970-1946 by collecting donations from the shrine's parishioners.
The shrine was originally enshrined in Aoki, but was moved to its present location in 1857. Before the Yoshino River was repaired, the shrine was often flooded, so the main shrine was built on high ground.
Within the precincts of the shrine is the Emisu Shrine, dedicated to Okuninushi-no-Mikoto and Kotoyoshinushi-no-Mikoto, with a monument commemorating its rebirth on April 3, 1931. Facing the road, there is a monument to Matsuda Seiichi, whose poem "Dawn at the Shrine" was selected for the New Year's poetry contest in 1921.
In 1970, the old people's association of the Issansui-kai Sesume Club took the lead in completing the Ribana Shrine Office (Sesawa Central Meeting Hall). There are several large muku trees in the precincts of the shrine, which used to be a suitable playground for children when the Sezume Elementary School was located to the north of the Sezume Hachiman Shrine.
Near the torii (shrine gate), there is a stone inscribed with the word "sendo" (thousand times), which means that when someone was seriously ill at home, family members, relatives, and neighbors would gather and walk back and forth between the stone and the shrine hall a thousand times to pray for healing. In other shrines, there is a stone that is used a hundred times.
As a result of the integration of the festivals in the Sezume area, the date of the shrine's annual festival was unified to October 19. In addition to the parade of portable shrines, there used to be many yatai (food stalls) from each tribe on the festival day, making it very lively. There was an unusual tradition in the procession of the shrine. A cart called "Furugumi" from the Wakamiya tribe accompanies the portable shrine. This group was established in 1852 under the initiative of the headman Toyosaburo Abe, and used to participate in the festival of Miyanoshima Hachiman Shrine in Zenirishima, but moved to this shrine after the construction of the Setsuzume Hachiman Shrine.