伊勢本街道マップ

伊勢本街道マップ thumbnail


この地図は、伊勢本街道の最大の難所 大和高原「うだの難所を行く」と、三重県の発行する「みえ歴史街道ウォーキングマップ(伊勢本街道及び伊勢街道)」を結合して調整し、奈良県の桜井から三重県の伊勢神宮に至る伊勢本街道のルートを1枚の地図にまとめたものです。


「みえ歴史街道ウォーキングマップ」については、三重県知事の承諾(平成25年12月13日付環生第12-266号及び平成26年
2月27日付環生第12-339号並びに同第12-340号)、並びに三重県市町総合事務組合管理者の承認を得て、同組合所管の「2006三重県共有デジタル地図(数値地形図縮尺10,000)」を使用し調整しました。(承認番号:三総合地第276号)本成果を複製あるいは使用して地図調整する場合は、同組合の承認を必要とします。


update date: 2025.06.09

このマップ(地図)を見る

Number of spots : 39spots

  • Recommended applications

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    Recommended applications IseBurari I will show you around Ise Shrine and Futami area in Ise City. Please enjoy the modern Ise visit.(only Japanese.) Please check the AppStore for details.

  • Recommended applications

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    Recommended applications IseBurari I will show you around Ise Shrine and Futami area in Ise City. Please enjoy the modern Ise visit.(only Japanese.) Please check the AppStore for details.

  • Gold meteorite

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    Gold meteorite On this stone, every year New Year's Day morning, a golden chicken rings.

  • Kobo-ido (well)

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    Kobo-ido (well) When a traveling monk dug with a cane, spring water came out. It is said that the monk was a Kobo Daishi.

  • Miraculous spring or fountain

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    Miraculous spring or fountain It is said that only this water has never been depleted even in summer.

  • Meoto Iwa (the Married Couple Rocks)

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    Meoto Iwa (the Married Couple Rocks) It is said that even if it is made high by avoiding the soil, it will sink in the meantime or in love. Also, even if you carry it to another place, be sure to return to the original place, They say that they cry when they are separated.

  • Rock looking at the moon

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    Rock looking at the moon It is said that Yamatohime-no-mikoto was seen "the harvest moon" from the top of this rock.

  • A stone that grants a wish (gives a child)

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    A stone that grants a wish (gives a child) Aqueous rock He said that he gave birth to many pebbles.

  • Maruyama Park

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    Maruyama Park It is a famous spot of about 100 wild cherry trees that are over 100 years old. The best season is around mid-April. Above the hill is the En no Gyōja statue.

  • Signpost and Nightlight

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    Signpost and Nightlight Ojingu Nightlight built in 1826.

  • Stone monument

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    Stone monument This is a stone monument in the early Edo period with the name of “Namu Amida Butsu” and 1686, a lotus pedestal. It is said that it was built by offering a traveler who fell down.

  • Signpost

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    Signpost Hase on the right, Ise on the left, and Kabata on the south.

  • Stone monument

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    Stone monument A stele with an inscription in 1711. Once upon a time, when Momomata-mura was hit by a great famine, it was said that it was erected in honor of the character of the lawyer who devotedly helped the people.

  • Rokubutsuka

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    Rokubutsuka Also called Trailokyavijaya. Surrounded by six or seventy corner stone towers, there was a stone in it, and six parts turned down the object. It is alleged that the sound of the gongs was finally lost after about a week of striking the gongs in the soil.

  • Kubikiri-jizo

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    Kubikiri-jizo It is a so-called "neck cut Jizo" whose head is damaged and stacked. When the Meiji Restoration abandoned the abandoned Buddha, he was thrown away along the side of the road and was damaged and broken into three. It is said that there is illness for the sickness from the neck to the upper part.

  • Signpost and Nightlight

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    Signpost The 1832 Taijingu nightlight. It tells us that this area used to be the Ise Sangu Main Road. "Left Ise Road, Right Hase Road"

  • Komatsunagi-bashi (Bridge)

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    Komatsunagi-bashi (Bridge) In the past, there was a single cedar called Kamidaimatsu / Komatsusugi.It is said that Yamatohime-no-mikoto was searching for the land of Shinkyo with a horse on the way to Ise.

  • Anno-ji temple

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    Anno-ji temple It was said that Koyama Daishi was built between 810 and 824 years ago, and it is said that it was a separate temple of Muro-ji Temple. The main gate, which also serves as a bell tower, is designated as a cultural property of Nara Prefecture. In spring, cherry blossoms bloom near the gate.

  • Himeshi Myojin

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    Himeshi Myojin The rock that looks like the buttocks of a woman is a god. It is said that Yamatohime-no-mikoto came to be called "Himeishi" after praying for the recovery of gynecological diseases. In addition to benefits for gynecological diseases and safe delivery, it is said that connecting a piece of blank paper with the left little finger and thumb to a thicket growing from the back of Oiwa in the back is a good match.

  • michinoeki-Ise Honkaido Mitsue

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    michinoeki-Ise Honkaido Mitsue There will be a Mitsue Onsen "Himeishi-no-Yu" and an agricultural product sales shop "Kaido Mitsue". Mitsue Onsen "Himeishi no Yu" is a gentle hot spring with the quality of a hot spring called "Beautiful skin hot water" and "warmth hot water". In addition to the two large public baths, there are open-air baths, pot baths, barrel baths, bubble baths, hot water baths, baths, saunas, and a free resting room where you can relax. In addition, you can enjoy the seasonal specialties of “Furusato no Tate” at “Restaurant Yamazakura”, and the adjacent “Kaido Market / Mitsue” is full of local specialties.

  • Kasuga Shrine

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    Kasuga Shrine There are giant cedar and zelkova trees beside the shrine.

  • Kasuga Shrine

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    Kasuga Shrine There is a large ginkgo of 20m high designated as a protected tree in the prefecture. The tip of the leaf is wrapped like a trumpet, so it is called a trumpet ginkgo.

  • Shisha Shrine

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    Shisha Shrine The shrine is Shinmeizo Shima Shrine, also known as Shisha Daimyojin. There is a “hand-washing well” on the grounds, where it is said that Waimei washed his hands.

  • Mitsue Shrine

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    Mitsue Shrine A legendary land where Yamatohime-no-mikoto , who had traveled in search of a place to worship "Amaterasu Ōmikami (Sun Goddess)", left his cane as a sign of a candidate site. The village name is derived from this tradition.

  • Jion-ji Temple Amidado

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    Jion-ji Temple Amidado Many stone Buddhas and signposts from the nearby Ise Kaido are enshrined in the grounds. It was Jinguji Temple of Tamami Shrine. The keyaki giant tree at the entrance of the precinct is said to be 400 years old.

  • Tamatsura Shrine

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    Tamatsura Shrine. There are many large camellia trees in the shrine precincts and in the mountains behind, and a camellia festival is held every March.

  • Houki-in

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    Houki-in It is 33 extra places in western Japan. It is a temple where Tokumichi who relocated to Hase-dera and started a pilgrimage to the Saikoku Kannon Sacred Ground in his later years. It is reported that it was opened in 734.

  • Twelve pillar shrine

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    Twelve pillar shrine A five-storied pagoda of Nomi-jukuya is built on the grounds. A rare sumo wrestling doll can be seen on the pedestal of the guardian dog at the top of the stone steps on the approach to the shrine, with four members each supporting a large guardian dog.

  • Hakusan Shrine

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    Hakusan Shrine In the southeast corner of the precinct, there is a monument to the “Myoyo Shuya Yosou Monument,” praising the Manyoshu started from here. Aside from this, there is a monument to the opening of the Manyoshu, the emperor Yuji Emperor's Manyo Monument.

  • Hasedera Temple

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    Hasedera Temple It is the headquarters of the Shingon sect Toyoyama school and the eighth bill of the 33 locations in western Japan. After passing through the Niomon Gate, a 399-step corridor leads to the main hall. The rare 11-faced Kanzeon Bodhisattva with a tin cane on the right is the largest wooden Buddha in Japan with a height of 10m, made in the Muromachi period. From the stage of the main hall (national treasure) protruding from the middle of the mountain, you can see the mountain gate and five-storied pagoda, etc., for a superb view. In addition, you can enjoy cherry blossoms, botan, hydrangea, autumn leaves, and cold botan, which are suitable for the “Temple of Flowers” ​​throughout the four seasons.

  • Morokino Sekisho Ruins

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    Morokino Sekisho Ruins In the Middle Ages, there were several checkpoints from Nishi Pass to Ishiwari Pass. It was abolished when the Ise Honkaido flourished, but it is a space where you can take a break while confirming that the deep mountain road was a historical road.

  • Aburaya

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    Avuraya It is an old inn at the branch of "Ise Honkaido" and "Hatsuse Kaido over Aka", in Tsuji of the bill. It is not clear, but it is said that Motoori Norinaga also stayed in the local area. It has been renovated and is now open to the public. It is popular as the only building that conveys the atmosphere of the old post town.

  • Takai Senbonsugi (cedar trees)

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    Takai Senbonsugi It is a huge tree with a dozen cedars along the Ise Honkaido. Originally, it was planted as a well cedar with the role of planting cedar around the well and collecting water. There is a legend that Kobo Daishi and Kukai ate lunch at this place, and the chopsticks grew, and it is praised locally as a spirit tree.

  • Butsuryū-ji Temple

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    Butsuryū-ji Temple Butsuryū-ji Temple was founded in 850 by Kukai's high brother, Kenkie, and belongs to the Shingon sect Muromuji-ji Temple. It is a splendid temple of Shichido Garan, and it has a relationship between Kyoji Temple and Suezoji Temple as the south gate of Muro-ji Temple, that is, the front gate. It is also the birthplace of Yamato tea, and Kukai brought the seeds when he returned home.

  • Sumisaka Shrine

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    Sumisaka Shrine It is written in the Nihon Shoki that the emperor Sujin worshiped the gods of Sumisaka and Osaka to relieve the sickness of Yamato's sickness. The main shrine was relocated to the main shrine of Kasuga Grand Shrine in Nara, and the color of the vermilion shines beautifully on green trees.

  • Sada's palace

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    Sada's palace There is the ruins of Sada's palace, which used to be a shrine for Takamitsu Ooto (the only thing in Omunachi). It is a lore where Taira no koremori hides and hides temporarily, and there is a Sanskrit rock shop engraved in a cave while Kukai is training.

  • Isehonkaido Signpost

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    Isehonkaido Signpost Remains of the old Ise Kaido lodging house.

  • Kuratori Pass

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    Kuratori Pass It is a pass at the border when crossing from Soni-mura / Yamakasu to Momomata. The horse saddle flew on this hill when Yamatohime-no-mikoto passed to Ise with a sacred mirror. So it came to be called Kuratori Pass. In addition, it is sung, "Where to visit Ise, scary cousins ​​somewhere, Kaizaka, Hitsukaka, Kuratorizaka, Tsurunowatashi or Miyagawa?" One of the difficulties.

  • Kasuga Shrine

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    Kasuga Shrine Located on the Ise main road of Yamakasu, there are large cedar and ginkgo trees in the shrine. We worship the four gods of Tengo roof life, Keitsu chief life, Takemitsu hammer life, and Hibiki. We enshrine Sada Shrine in 1910 and Atago Shrine before and after it. Every year in early October, children's mikoshi parade and a grand autumn festival is held.