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Arakurayama Sengen Park

With one of the most iconic views of Mount Fuji, Arakurayama Sengen Park shouldn’t be misSed on trips to Yamanashi Prefecture...

Hasedera Temple (Nara)

Hasedera Temple in Nara Prefecture is the main temple of the Buzan sect of Shingon Buddhism, giving rise to 3000 member temples in Japan...

Nara

The relics are well-supervised by the city’s famous deer, who use their protected status as godly messengers to their advantage, regularly harassing tourists for local shika senbei (rice crackers for deer) especially near Todaiji...

Taito

Taito is a ward in Tokyo that is synonymous with tradition, and consequently, tourists...

Gion

The original Japanese pleasure quarter, Gion is Kyoto condensed into a scene straight out of Memoirs of a Geisha...

Ryogoku

The spiritual and physical home of sumo, Ryogoku is where centuries of Japanese tradition continue to live and breathe right in the whirl of modern Tokyo...

Kawagoe

You'll find little shops selling sweets, tea leaves and other souvenirs lining the stone-paved streets...

Otoyo Shrine

While Komainu statues, regal lion-dogs who stand guard at the gates of shrines and temples, are a familiar sight throughout Japan, Otoyo Shrine has an altogether different security detail...

Hamanomachi Arcade

Although sometimes referred to as a shopping street, the arcade sprawls over several blocks...

Kokusai Dori (International Street)

Stretching roughly two kilometers through the heart of downtown Naha, Kokusai Dori Street - literally “International Road” - is a shopping strip that’s as unbeatably colorful as the capital city itself...

Tsuboya Pottery Street

It’s no exaggeration to say that Tsuboya Pottery District is the bona fide birthplace of yachimun - a regional word describing all pottery made by Okinawan artisans that uses only indigenous soil...

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